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compurgation
noun as in absolution
Strongest match
noun as in vindication
Strongest matches
Strong matches
Example Sentences
Sire de, sketch of, 312; biographer of St. Louis, 312.Judith of Bavaria, 149.Julian the Apostate, 271.Jurats, in Laon, 328.Jury, not provided for in Great Charter, 308.Justice, among the early Germans, 22; among the Franks, 61-67;among the Saxons, 121-123;Charlemagne's provision for in capitulary for the missi, 138-139;compurgation, 196;ordeal, 196-197;administration of in the universities, 342, 344, 349.Jutes, settle in Kent, 70.Karlmann, son of Charles Martel, 105.Kent,
Among the early Germans the settling of disputes and the testing of the guilt or innocence of an accused person were generally accomplished through the employment of one or both of two very interesting judicial practices—compurgation and the ordeal.
The persons brought forward to take this oath were known as compurgators, or "co-swearers," and the legal act thus performed was called compurgation.
Tithings and the process of compurgation came to the assistance of other criminals, but the ceorl could appeal to none, and expect neither pity nor aid.
Compurgation, kom-pur-gā′shun, n. the custom, in Anglo-Saxon law, of permitting the accused to call in witnesses to prove his innocency, by joining their oaths to his: evidence in favour of the accused: vindication.—n.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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