- Birk (market place)
Birk ("biærk", "berck", "byrck") was during the Scandinavian
Middle Ages the name for a demarkated area, especially a town or a market place, with its own laws and privileges, theBjarkey laws .In
Denmark , the name was to be used also for other areas than towns and markets. These areas were excempted from the ordinary jurisdictions of the hundreds and the towns. There were royal, ecclesiastical and aristocratic birks with their own law courts and birk assemblies. After theProtestant reformation , the ecclesiastical birks passed to the king.The royal birks were after some time abolished, but more and more aristocratic ones were established, where the aristocratic landlord (the patronus) appointed "birk judges", "birk bailiffs" and "birk notaries" . The aristocratic birk privilege (known by the same name as "
Bjarkey laws ", "birkerett") was reduced in 1809 and it was completely abolished in 1849. The term "birk" was to endure for some time, however.In Norway, some counties, baronies and noble estates also had birk privileges, but they were abolished in 1821.
Some scholars have proposed that the place name
Birka would have origins in "birk", but this theory has not been generally accepted.ource
*The article "Birk" in "
Nationalencyklopedin ".ee also
*
Birkarls
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