2) From a ship with a cargo of planks, one plank is given as
toll.
3) On three days of the week toll for cloth [is paid] on Sunday
and Tuesday and Thursday.
4) A merchant who came to the bridge with a boat containing fish
paid one half-penny as toll, and for a larger ship one penny."
5 - 8) Foreigners with wine or blubber fish or other goods and
their tolls.
Foreigners were allowed to buy wool, melted sheep fat [tallow], and three live pigs for their ships.
"3. If the town-reeve or the village reeve or any other official accuses anyone of having withheld toll, and the man replies that he has kept back no toll which it was his legal duty to pay, he shall swear to this with six others and shall be quit of the charge.
1) If he declares that he has paid toll, he shall produce the man to whom he paid it, and shall be quit of the charge.
2) If, however, he cannot produce the man to whom he paid it, he
shall pay the actual toll and as much again and five pounds to
the King.
3) If he vouches the tax-gatherer to warranty [asserting] that
he paid toll to him, and the latter denies it, he shall clear
himself by the ordeal and by no other means of proof.
4. And we [the king and his counselors] have decreed that a man who, within the town, makes forcible entry into another man's house without permission and commits a breach of the peace of the worst kind … and he who assaults an innocent person on the King's highway, if he is slain, shall lie in an unhonored grave.