Rím-áþ

Bosworth & Toller Anglo-Saxon Old English Dictionary - rím-áþ

According to the Old English Dictionary:

es;

rím-áþ
m. An oath taken by a person and by the number of persons he brings with him as compurgators (cf. the expressions in Norse law tylptar-, séttar-eiðr, oaths in which twelve, six persons respectively took part), L. Ath. i. 9; Th. i. 204, 15.

Related words: cyre-áþ. rim-aþ

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