Page:Welsh Medieval Law.djvu/83

 Triads on land and inheritance. Three lawful inheritances. . . . 25 a 9 Three means of suing land. . . . 25 a 16 Three wrong possessions. . . . . 25 a 20 Three kinds of status. . . 25 b 3 Three qualifications proper to every one. . . 25 b 5 Land measurements. Four rhandirs in trev whence king's gwestva is paid. 25 b 11 18 feet in Howel's rod. . . . . . 25 b 12 Erw is 18 rods long and 2 rods broad. . 25 b 13 312 erws in rhandir except in case of gorvodtrev; 'and from those rhandirs land borderers are called in law' 25 b 15 Three evidences for land. . . . . . 25 b 19 13 trevs in every maenor, the thirteenth of which is the gorvodtrev. . 26 a 1 Four rhandirs in free trev with or without office, three for occupancy and one for pasturage. . . . 26 a 3 Three rhandjrs in taeogtrev with three taeogs in each of two and the third for pasturage. . . 26 a 6 Seven trevs in a maenor of taeogtrevs. . . 26 a 8 ''Of meer breach. '' Breaching a meer on another's land. . . 26 a 10 River a boundary between two cymwds only in its original channel 26 a 12 Worth of stone cross, i. e. a boundary mark. . 26 a 14 Breaching meer between two trevs and ploughing a highway 26 a 16 Breadth of land between two trevs = 1 ½ fathoms. 26 a 19 Breadth of land between two rhandirs = 4 feet. . 26 a 20 Breadth of land between two erws = 2 furrows. . 26 a 21 Breadth of king's highway = 12 feet. . . . 26 a 22 Ebediw in case of two lands and one lord. . . 26 a 23

L AND D UES.

The king's gwestva. Its measure from every trev which pays it. . . 26 a 25