Page:Welsh Medieval Law.djvu/254

 The protection of a groom of the rein continues whilst the smith of the court is making four shoes and their complement of nails, and whilst he shall be shoeing the king's steed. Similar to that is the protection of a queen's groom of the rein. Whosoever's protection is violated, it is sarhad to him. What is paid as the sarhad of a chief of the household is a third of the king's sarhad without privileged gold and silver; and likewise his galanas. A Steward, Judge of a Court, Falconer, Chief Huntsman, Chief [A chasm in V supplied from W] groom, Page of a Chamber, [have] the same sarhad and the same galanas and the same ebediw; and their daughters the same status. For their sarhad, nine kine and nine score of silver are to be paid. For the galanas of every one of them, nine kine and nine score kine with three augmentations are paid. A pound is the ebediw of every one of them. A pound is the gobr of their daughters. Three pounds is their cowyll. Seven pounds is their agweddi. The sarhad of every one of all the other officers except the chief of the household and the priest of the household, who, although they be of the number of the officers,