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      • The meaning of KING'S PEACE is the special protection secured by the monarch in Anglo-Saxon and medieval England to particular persons (as members of the royal household) or places (as the king's highway) and occasionally to specific periods of time (as coronation days) —used when the British monarch is a king.
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  2. The meaning of KING'S PEACE is the special protection secured by the monarch in Anglo-Saxon and medieval England to particular persons (as members of the royal household) or places (as the king's highway) and occasionally to specific periods of time (as coronation days) —used when the British monarch is a king.

  3. The King's Peace was the idea that, within the realm of the king, there is supposed to be no violence, and the king guarantees that. The guarantee means that the king, or his agents, had the right to enforce the peace, either through violence to stop unauthorized violence or through retributive justice after the unauthorized violence was committed.

  4. (in early medieval England) the protection secured by the king for particular people or places

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Peace_(law)Peace (law) - Wikipedia

    The concept of the king's peace originated in Anglo-Saxon law, where it initially applied the special protections accorded to the households of the English kings and their retainers. A breach of the king's peace, which could be either a crime or a tort, was a serious matter.

  6. 6 days ago · 1. (in early medieval England) the protection secured by the king for particular people or places. 2. (in medieval England) the general peace secured to the entire realm by the law administered in the king's name. Collins English Dictionary.

  7. 1. The "king's peace" In Anglo-Saxon England, three forms of peace can be dis-tinguished. First there is the "frith," of which Professor Sayles has said:5 Used in a general way, as when kings refer to trespasses against their peace (frith), it denotes a political conception of public order, a general state of peacefulness, and it does not ...

  8. One of the most useful and most-used powers that criminal courts1 have is the power to bind people over to be of good behaviour or to keep the peace. Magistrates form the view that a person (“the principal”), who might be a person of previously unblemished reputation, is likely to breach the peace or commit criminal offences.

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