The content consists of a series of
domas, "dooms" or judgments, and while providing historical information about Kentish compensation and management of public order, it focuses more on procedure than do the other two Kentish codes. There are eleven distinct groups of provisions according to the text's most recent editor Lisi Oliver, though F. L. Attenborough had previously broken it down into 15. Surprisingly, there are no provisions directly related to the church. The content of the law, by provision, is as follows: • 1. Compensation for the killing of a noble by a servant • 2. Compensation for the killing of a freeman by a servant • 3. Accusations of person-stealing and
compurgation for the accused • 4. Provision for the family of dead freemen: maternal custody and the assignment of a male guardian from the paternal kin until a child reaches age 10 • 5. How to deal with stolen property and those possessing it • 6. How to bring a charge: accusations, sureties and oaths • 7–9. Fines for insults and disturbing the peace • 10. Hospitality and responsibility for the behaviour of foreign guests • 11. Acquisition of property in London (
Lundenwic) The law, particularly provision 6, is important to historians' understanding of the Anglo-Saxon arbitration process. A person, once accused, must take an oath promising to abide by the decision of a judge or accept a fine of 12 shillings. The accuser and accused must try to seek out an arbitrator acceptable to both. Provision 11 rules that Kentish men buying property in London must do so in public in the presence of two or three freemen of good standing or else before the king's
wicgerefan, port-reeve. A predecessor of these kings,
Eadbald son of Æthelberht (died 640), had issued a coin in London earlier in the 7th century. ==Notes==