CEORL
- noun [ masculine ]
-
Ceorles weorþig sceal beón betýned
a churl's close must be fenced,
- L. In. 40 ;
- Th. i. 126, 13 .
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Se ceorl,
- 60 ;
- Th. i. 140, 8 .
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Swá we eác settaþ be eallum hádum, ge ceorle ge eorle
so also we ordain for all degrees, whether to churl or earl [gentle or simple ],
- L. Alf. pol. 4 ;
- Th. i. 64, 3 .
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Twelfhyndes mannes áþ forstent vi ceorla áþ
a twelve hundred man's oath stands for six churls' oaths,
- L. O. 13 ;
- Th. i. 182, 19 .
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Be ceorlesgærstúne
of a husbandman's meadow,
- L. In. 42 ;
- Th. i. 128, 4, 5 .
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Landes [MS. londes] ceorl
a land's man,
- Bt. Met. Fox 12, 54 ;
- Met. 12, 27 .
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Ceorla cyngc
king of the commons,
- Chr. 1020 ;
- Erl. 160, 23 .
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Ealdan ceorlas wilniaþ
old men wish,
- Bt. 36, 5 ;
- Fox 180, 7 .
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Clypa ðínne ceorl
voca virum [husband] tuum,
- Jn. Bos. 4, 16, 17 .
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Ðú hæfdest fíf ceorlas
thow hast had five husbands,
- 4, 18 .
- —
We witan ðæt, þurh Godes gyfe, þrǽl wearþ to þegene, and ceorl wearþ to eorle, sangere to sacerde, and bócere to biscope
we know that, by the grace of God, a slave has risen to a thane, and a ceorl [free man] has risen to an earl, a singer to a priest, and a scribe to be a bishop
,- L. Eth. vii. 21 ;
- Th. i. 334, 7-9 .
Gif ceorl geþeáh, ðæt he hæfde fullíce fíf hída ágenes landes, cirican and cycenan [MS. ky-cenan ], bell-hús and burh-geat-setl, and sunder-note on cynges healle, ðonne wæs he ðonon-forþ þegen-rihtes weorþe
if a free man thrived, so that he had fully five hides of his own land, church and kitchen, bell-house and a city-gate-seat, and special duty in the king's hall, then was he thenceforth worthy of thane-right,
- L. R. 2 ;
- Th. i. 190, 14-17 .
Bosworth, Joseph. “CEORL.” In An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary Online, edited by Thomas Northcote Toller, Christ Sean, and Ondřej Tichy. Prague: Faculty of Arts, Charles University, 2014. https://bosworthtoller.com/6049.
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