Word Study
salic
CIDE DICTIONARY
salic, a. [F. salique, fr. the Salian Franks, who, in the fifth century, formed a body of laws called in Latin leges Salicæ.].
Of or pertaining to the Salian Franks, or to the Salic law so called. [1913 Webster]
OXFORD DICTIONARY
salic, adj. = SALIAN.
Idiom
Salic law hist.
1 a law excluding females from dynastic succession, esp. as the alleged fundamental law of the French monarchy.
2 a Frankish law-book extant in Merovingian and Carolingian times.
1 a law excluding females from dynastic succession, esp. as the alleged fundamental law of the French monarchy.
2 a Frankish law-book extant in Merovingian and Carolingian times.
Etymology
F Salique or med.L Salicus f. Salii (as SALIAN)
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