The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2001, Qupperneq 40

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2001, Qupperneq 40
166 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Vol. 56 #3 Book Reviews LAWS OF EARLY ICELAND Gragas II Translated and edited by ^ ANDREW DENNIS PETER FOOTE RICHARD PERKINS Laws of Early Iceland: Gragas II translated by Andrew Dennis, Peter Foote and Richard Perkins University of Manitoba Press, 2000, Winnipeg $74.95 Reviewed by DeLloyd J. Guth In 1980 these three scholars translated and published Gragas I, which selected parts of the Codex Regius, the original manuscript now located in the Old Royal Collection, Copenhagen, and known to Icelanders as Konungsbok. The collecting of these laws began about 1117, their writ- ing down in the Codex Regius was about 1260, and it was put into Icelandic print by Vilhjalmur Finsen (3 vols., 1852-1883). The first English volume (1980) gave us sections of the Gragas that are crucial to under- standing Iceland’s medieval institutions and criminal law procedures: how the Assembly operated, the duties of the Lawspeaker and Law Council, the wergild (man-price) system and the law of homi- cide. There is also the Christian Laws Section, which dates from about 1122, fol- lowing on the mandatory baptism of all Icelanders in 999/1000. Now Gragas II gives us the rest of Codex Regius, with the remaining focus on civil matters and procedures: rules of inher- itance, kinship, betrothal and marriage, possessory rights in land and chattels, con- tracts, titles, defamation (“mocking” or unsolicited “love poetry”), and even “bites from a dog” (p. 201). Medieval Icelanders certainly loved the rule of law. But did they live the rule of law? We can never know, if it is law enforcement evidence that we require: the medieval equivalencies of police and judicial records. These do not survive, even if the institutions producing such records ever then existed. But if we read carefully the legal cul- ture in the Gragas, alongside of the magnif- icent medieval sagas, we encounter a uniquely sophisticated jurisprudential world. Its characteristics match any mod- ern model for a fully participatory legal system, operating eight centuries ago on an isolated North Atlantic island: it expressed substantive law within the “if ..., then ...” logical dialectic, starting from a condition- al or suppositional statement (i.e., if one does this, then the law will do that); for its authority, it did not rely on some moral imperative (i.e., do right and do not do wrong) or some transcendant source (i.e., the gods and goddesses so command!), and thus each law’s authority rested on the community’s positivist command; it con-

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