Statutes of uncertain date

The statutes of uncertain date, also known as statuta incerti temporis or Certain Statutes made during the Reigns of K. Henry 3. K. Edward 1. or K. Edward 2. but uncertain when or in which of their times, are English statutes dating from the reigns of Henry III, Edward I or Edward II, and frequently listed in the statute books at the end of the reign of Edward II.[1][2]

Statutes of uncertain date

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Certain statutes do not include within their text the date on which they were made, or are otherwise considered to be of ambiguous or uncertain date (temp. incert.). These statutes are known to date generally from the reigns of Henry III, Edward I, or Edward II, and are therefore printed in The Statutes of the Realm immediately after those for Edward II.

Henry III

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Edward I

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Edward II

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Temp. incert. in The Statutes at Large

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These statutes were listed as of uncertain date in The Statutes at Large, but were assigned to dates by the research of the Record Commission in compiling The Statutes of the Realm.

  • Statutum quod vocatur de Ragman de Justitiariis assignatis — cited in The Statutes of the Realm as Statutum de Justic̃ assigñ quod vocatur Rageman (4 Edw. 1).
  • Statutum de Justiciariis Assignatis — cited in The Statutes of the Realm as Statutum de Justiciariis Assignatis (21 Edw. 1).
  • Statutum de brevi de inquisitionibus concedendo de terris ad manum mortuam ponendis — cited in The Statutes of the Realm as De brevi de Inquisicione concedena de terris ad manum mortuam ponend (20 Edw. 1).

Sources

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See also

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References

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Further reading

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