The tables cover the following specific areas of Elven law:
Table I & II (Civil Procedure): Rules for court summons, trial timelines, witness requirements, and the conduct of litigation before magistrates.
Table III (Debt): Regulations on debt repayment, allowing creditors to seize debtors after 30 days, potentially leading to imprisonment or enslavement if unpaid.
Table IV (Paternal Power): Defined the paterfamilias rights, including the power to kill deformed infants and the right to sell daughters into marriage up to three times.
Table V (Inheritance and Guardianship): Established rules for wills, inheritance by male agnates, and mandated that adult women remain under legal guardianship.
Table VI (Property and Possession): Validated verbal contracts and formal bonds, establishing the legal transfer of property ownership.
Table VII (Land and Property Rights): Addressed boundary disputes, rights to gather falling fruit, and regulations for building near property lines.
Table VIII (Torts and Delicts): Outlined punishments for physical injuries, theft, and property damage, often utilizing the principle of lex talionis (retaliation in kind).
Table IX (Public Law): Prohibited private laws targeting individuals, forbade execution without a trial, and mandated capital punishment for bribed judges.
Table X (Sacred Law): Regulated funeral rites, forbidding burial or cremation within the city walls and restricting excessive mourning by women.
Table XI (Supplement I): Specifically prohibited intermarriage between Noble's and peasant's.
Table XII (Supplement II): Contained final provisions on punishments, including double penalties for false accusers and the binding nature of the final ordinances.
These laws are followed by all Elvish factions, with every other factions laws loosely based on them.