“…Anglo-Saxon society regarded theft as a furtive act; in Tom Lambert's words, it left 'victims impotent, with no knowledge of where to direct their anger'. 39 Theft, unlike reaflac, was thus met with the death penalty from the seventh century onwards, as Ine's law code stated that captured thieves would be killed or pay their wergild to the king. 40 Roberts's study of the Old and Middle English vocabulary for theft and robbery reveals reaflac's enduring connection with its root, reaf, which later became 'reavery', 'robbing', 'rape', and 'robbers', while the Old English terms associated with theft (þeof, þeofend, stalung, and stalu) later became 'theft', 'thieving', 'stealth', and 'stealing'.…”