In Anglo-Saxon law, backberend (also spelled backberende or back-berande) and handhabend (also spelled hand-habend or hand-habende) were terms applied to a thief who was found having the stolen goods in his possession. [1] The terms are respectively derived from "bearing [a thing] upon the back" and "having [a thing] in the hand". [2] [3]
The thief himself was a hontfongenethef, meaning "a thief taken with handhabend"; i.e., captured while holding the stolen item in his hand, later described as "red-handed". [4]
By extension, handhabend and backberend also means the jurisdiction to try a thief caught with the property in question. [4] A thief so caught could be given a trial of a more summary nature. [5] Almost any theft could be a felony, and the death penalty might be applied. [4]