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 from such rhandirs land borderers are called in law. There are three evidences for land : elders of a gwlad for ascertaining kin and descent to establish a person in his right as to land and soil. The second is ; a man from every rhandir of that trev constitutes the land borderers for ascertaining the mutual sharing between kindred and relatives. The third is ; when there shall be contention between two trevs, maers and canghellors and apparitors are to preserve boundaries, for it belongs to a king to meer. There are to be thirteen trevs in every maenor, and the thirteenth of these is the gorvodtrev. In each free trev with office and free trev without office, there are four rhandirs, three for occupancy and the fourth pasturage for the three rhandirs. There are three rhandirs in the taeogtrev ; in each of the two are three taeogs, and the third pasturage for the two. Seven trevs are to be in the maenor of the taeogtrevs.

Whoever shall breach a meer upon the land of another person, let him pay three kine camlwrw to the king and let him restore the meer to its former state. An impetuous large river is not a boundary between two cymwds save in its original channel. A stone cross,