High Middle Ages · Europe · Politics

1166

Assize of the Forest extended

1166

Henry II expanded the reach of royal forest law to cover nearly a third of England. The legal distinction between forest - where the king's deer ruled - and cultivated land became one of the deepest grievances of the baronial and peasant classes alike. Violators faced mutilation rather than fines, and the special forest courts operated outside the common law, creating a parallel legal system that many regarded as tyrannical.