Law
Law appears to have been so far advanced among them that the forms were not merely established, but the slightest breach of the legal forms of proceeding involved the loss of the case
Law appears to have been so far advanced among them that the forms were not merely established, but the slightest breach of the legal forms of proceeding involved the loss of the case (Heimskringla, Heimskringla > part in the government with his brother Hardaknut. In the same autumn > 17. Of The Free-Speaking Song ("Bersoglisvisur").)
Heimskringla
- attestation: Law appears to have been so far advanced among them that the forms were not merely established, but the slightest breach of the legal forms of proceeding involved the loss of the case (Heimskringla > part in the government with his brother Hardaknut. In the same autumn > 17. Of The Free-Speaking Song ("Bersoglisvisur").)
"Law appears to have been so far advanced among them that the forms were not merely established, but the slightest breach of the legal forms of proceeding involved the loss of the case."
Njál's Saga
- relationship: Law is the child of Storolf was (The Story Of Burnt Njal > 1. Of Fiddle Mord > Endnotes:)
"Law, the son of Storolf was"
Appears in: Beings, Cross-Source Entities, Norse Tradition