BOOKLAND

“In all discussions on Anglo-Saxon law bookland is contrasted with ‘folkland.’ The most

recent and probably the most correct view is that folkland simply means land subject to customary

law, as opposed to land which was held under the terms of a charter. It would seem that the view

that folkland means public land or land of the people, though till recently generally accepted, must

be abandoned as resting on insufficient evidence. It appears that folkland might either be land

occupied by individuals or families or communities, or it might be waste or unoccupied land. The

only characteristic which can be universally ascribed to it is, that it is not bookland.” Kenelm E.

Digby, An Introduction to the History of the Law of Real Property 15 (5th ed. 1897).[Blacks Law 8th]