Feb. 14, 846

Various canons and decrees reissued by the Council of Paris [France]: “…[1] If one of the Jews should buy and circumcise a Christian slave or of any other sect, he shall be released from that Jew’s power and remain in liberty…[2] We deny to the Jews and to the pagans the permission to practice law and to serve in the state service; …[3]…that none of the Jews should accede to honors and dignities, …They shall not dare to construct anew any synagogue. …Any Jew who should dare transfer a slave or freeborn, either against his will or with a persuasion that deserves punishment, from the cult of the Christian religion to an abominable sect and rite should be punished by death and confiscation of property. …Any of them who should steal into offices of honor shall be considered, as before, of the lowest condition, lest we be seen to grant the privilege of exemption to men execrable with reprehensible ambition… [4] The Jews should be denied permission to stroll about in the street and in the forum, as though in provocation, from the Cena Domini until the first day in Pascha…[6] Christian slaves … who are imported or possessed by Jews, should either be delivered to the mandators  or positively sold to Christian buyers within forty days. …nor shall Christian slaves be permitted to live in the house of a Jew…[7] …As for the banquets of the Jews, our law prohibited even laymen to take part in them…[9] Jews should not be appointed judges over the Christian populace or permitted to be tax-collectors, …[10] That the Jews should be denied permission to stroll about in the streets and in the forum, as though in provocation, from the Cena Domini until the first day in Pascha, …and that they shall not dare to sit in front of priests unless ordered to do so. …[11] And that no Christian shall dare to take part in in banquets of Jews. …[12] …that henceforth no Christian should be obliged to serve a Jew …[13] …that if any Jew should be found guilty of persuading a Christian slave to join the Jewish rite, he shall both lose that slave and suffer the stator punishment. [14]  As we are governed, with God’s grace, by Catholic kings, the Jews shall not dare to go out among Christians or mix with the Catholic populace.”
Linder, Amnon: “The Jews in the Legal Sources of the Early Middle Ages.” Page 539-548