Canonum De Ius Rex
Canons of Sovereign Law

one heaven iconII.   Sovereign

2.10 Anglo-Saxon Law Form

Article 124 - Domusde (Day Book)

Canon 6402 (link)

The Domusde, also known as the “Domesday Book”, also known as the “Doomsday Book” or “Day Book” is a formal title invented by the Carolingians in the 8th Century CE to describe the requirement each year for every Baron to provide a detailed survey and accounting of property and tenements of their session (estate).

Canon 6403 (link)

Beginning from 738 CE, the Domusde was required to be recorded by Barons within the Carolingian Empire in relation to the same period usually around the end of February and beginning of March each year before the great meetings and was confined to a handful of pages per property.  The pages were then stitched together by region to create a set of Doomsday Books listing all property across all regions and the Empire.

Canon 6404 (link)

The Domusde Book system invented by the Carolingians in the 8th Century is the origin of the obligation for all land holders and nobles to provide an annual good accounting on the same day of their tenements, income and holdings as well as to provide some donation, called “tax” to the church as a share of the proceeds of the year.  This system of annual accounting was resurrected in the 16th Century.

Canon 6405 (link)

From the creation of the first Domusde (Doomsday) Books in the 8th Century until the collapse of the Carolingian Empire at the end of the 9th Century, at least seventy (70) or more sequential sets of Doomsday Books were created. However, this priceless collection was destroyed along with most official records of the Empire at its collapse and the rise of lords loyal to the Venetian - Roman system.

Canon 6406 (link)

The Domesday Book claimed to have been commissioned by William the Conquerer in 1085; is an attempt to reference Sacré Loi (Sacred Law) and the requirement for lords to survey their sessions (estates) every year.  However, apart from the seeming failure to produce an annual survey of property and accounts, the alleged text of 1085 “magically” references the form of “allodium” title which was not invented until the late 16th Century.  Therefore, the Domesday Book being a copy of Carolingian law must be regarded as a deliberate fraud designed to solidify claimed ownerships of estates by backdating them to the “conquest” or pre-conquest of England.

Canon 6407 (link)

As the Domesday Book of England created in the 16th Century but claimed from the 11th Century is a deliberate fraud, all claimed noble titles, land claims and ownership of property contained within it are therefore illegal, unlawful, having no force or effect and therefore null and void ab initio (from the beginning).