• The Danelaw was the part of England between the early tenth century and the Norman Conquest in which the laws of the Danes held sway.
  • Thus, in Danelaw, the penalty for killing a person was determined by his social status, and not the social status of his senior, as in other regions of the country.
  • The term Danelaw refers to areas of England where Danish (Viking) law was subject, i.e., the areas of Anglo-Saxon England conquered by the Vikings.
  • Danelaw, the northern, central, and eastern region of Anglo-Saxon England colonized by invading Danish armies in the late 9th century.
  • Maps illustrating this territory imply that the route of the Great North Road might have been significant since the Danelaw area neatly straddles it.
  • Danelaw'da gözlenen büyük özgür köylü ( socmen ) yoğunluğu, çok sayıda yerleşimcinin tezini desteklemek için öne sürülen argümanlardan biridir.
  • The term Danelaw first appears in the time of Canute (1016–35) to distinguish the area’s different legal system, but it is incorrect to categorize Danelaw as a...
  • The Danelaw was established as a result of King Alfred the Great’s efforts to avoid further Viking raids in the Anglian Kingdom of Wessex.