Weird British laws still in effect today: Strange UK rules you won't believe are real
The UK has some truly bizarre laws still on the books. Like, genuinely bizarre. The kind of laws that make you wonder who thought these up and whether anyone ever bothered to remove them. Spoiler alert: they didn't. And some of these rules could theoretically still get you in trouble.
Under the Salmon Act 1986, Section 32, it's illegal to handle salmon in "suspicious circumstances." It's hard to imagine exactly how courts decide what counts as 'suspicious,' but this law continues to have practical effects in recent cases.
Yes, really. A man was actually fined for this. A 64-year-old angler got caught with a 79cm salmon sticking out of his coat sleeve at a fishery. The court wasn't convinced by his claim that he was just "holding" it casually. So if you're buying fish off someone in a back alley with no paperwork, you might technically be breaking the law. Even if it's completely innocent, if you look like you're up to no good with that salmon, you could face trouble. The law was meant to stop poaching, but it ended up being hilariously vague.
The Metropolitan Police Act says, "A plank of wood must not be carried along a pavement. It can only be moved if it is being unloaded from a vehicle or taken into a building." This law dates back to medieval times when carts were overloaded and wood kept falling into the street. Now it's just sitting there, preventing no one.
If you're thinking about carrying a bookshelf down the street yourself instead of hiring movers, you're technically breaking a law from 1839. Is anyone getting arrested for this? No. But technically you could be.
Remember that childhood prank where you'd ring someone's doorbell and run away? The Metropolitan Police Act 1839, section 54, part 16 states that it is illegal for "every person who shall wilfully and wantonly disturb any inhabitant by pulling or ringing any doorbell or knocking at any door without lawful excuse."
The Victorians apparently found this so annoying that they made it an actual law. It's still technically in place today. Your parents might have scolded you for doing this, but Parliament literally made it illegal. The punishment? You could technically be fined.
A Statute forbidding Bearing of Armour (1313) Act is still in effect today and makes it illegal in UK law to wear a full suit of armour in the Houses of Parliament. Edward II put into place the statute to stop the violence that had broken out between two factions of parliament.
This law has been around for over 700 years. Edward II was dealing with actual feuding politicians, so he decided nobody gets to show up in full armor. These days it's mostly a fun fact nobody thinks about, but it's still technically the law.
So if you're thinking about harming one, you're messing with royal property. The rule is old enough that it's hard to take seriously, but it's actually still enforced sometimes.
Victorian lawmakers were dealing with actual problems at the time. Dust clouds from carpet beating, carts with loose planks, and neighborhoods being terrorized by doorbell pranks. They solved these problems with laws that made sense then.
The takeaway? Probably don't handle salmon suspiciously, don't carry planks down the pavement, and definitely don't show up to Parliament in armor. Beyond that, you're probably fine.
Handling Salmon in suspicious circumstances
Under the Salmon Act 1986, Section 32, it's illegal to handle salmon in "suspicious circumstances." It's hard to imagine exactly how courts decide what counts as 'suspicious,' but this law continues to have practical effects in recent cases.
Yes, really. A man was actually fined for this. A 64-year-old angler got caught with a 79cm salmon sticking out of his coat sleeve at a fishery. The court wasn't convinced by his claim that he was just "holding" it casually. So if you're buying fish off someone in a back alley with no paperwork, you might technically be breaking the law. Even if it's completely innocent, if you look like you're up to no good with that salmon, you could face trouble. The law was meant to stop poaching, but it ended up being hilariously vague.
Furniture and planks: The Sidewalk Hazards Act
The knock, knock, ginger problem
Remember that childhood prank where you'd ring someone's doorbell and run away? The Metropolitan Police Act 1839, section 54, part 16 states that it is illegal for "every person who shall wilfully and wantonly disturb any inhabitant by pulling or ringing any doorbell or knocking at any door without lawful excuse."
The Victorians apparently found this so annoying that they made it an actual law. It's still technically in place today. Your parents might have scolded you for doing this, but Parliament literally made it illegal. The punishment? You could technically be fined.
No armor in Parliament
A Statute forbidding Bearing of Armour (1313) Act is still in effect today and makes it illegal in UK law to wear a full suit of armour in the Houses of Parliament. Edward II put into place the statute to stop the violence that had broken out between two factions of parliament.
This law has been around for over 700 years. Edward II was dealing with actual feuding politicians, so he decided nobody gets to show up in full armor. These days it's mostly a fun fact nobody thinks about, but it's still technically the law.
Swans belong to the Queen
While you might not get arrested for this, you could be fined if a police officer catches you doing it. It is actually illegal to kill or injure a swan as they belong to the Queen. This law dates back to the 12th century when the Crown claimed ownership of all swans in order to prevent people from eating them.So if you're thinking about harming one, you're messing with royal property. The rule is old enough that it's hard to take seriously, but it's actually still enforced sometimes.
Why do these laws still exist?
Victorian lawmakers were dealing with actual problems at the time. Dust clouds from carpet beating, carts with loose planks, and neighborhoods being terrorized by doorbell pranks. They solved these problems with laws that made sense then.
The takeaway? Probably don't handle salmon suspiciously, don't carry planks down the pavement, and definitely don't show up to Parliament in armor. Beyond that, you're probably fine.
end of article
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