Page:The statutes of Wales (1908).djvu/43

Rh had been granted in 1138 to Gilbert de Clare and was "in ancient tyme a County Palatyne and noe part of the Principalitie of " and these lordships "of which that of Glamorgan was the most complete, were something very like States, and the skill and strength of that mighty monarch, the First, was called in to undermine the too great independence of lords of his own race."

An excellent map of and the March at this period is published with volume iii. of the "Political History of England," by Professor Tout. "The Lordships of the March were not directly influenced by legislation. They continued to hold their position as franchises until the reign of  the Eighth, and under  the Third were declared by statute to be no part of the principality, but directly subject to the English Crown. Yet the removal of the pressure of a Native principality profoundly affected these districts. The policy of definition made its mark even here. The liberties of such Marches were defined and circumscribed, and whilst scrupulously respected, were incapable of further extension. The vague jurisdictions of the Sheriffs of the border shires were cleared up. Gradually the Marcher lordships passed by lapse into the royal hands, and even from the beginning there were regions, such as Montgomery and Builth, which knew no Lord but the King. All this was, however, an indirect result of the Edwardian conquest. Strictly speaking, it was no conquest of, but merely of the Principality, the ancient dominions of Llywelyn, to which most of the Crown lands in  were joined."

As the Statute of did not apply to the Lordship Marchers, law and justice was administered therein according to the laws and customs of each particular lordship by officers appointed by the lord. After that statute, the legal position of the Lords Marchers and their rights became a matter