Page:Welsh Medieval Law.djvu/307

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from such rhandirs land borderers are called in law. [1]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. [2]There are to be thirteen trevs in every maenor, and the thirteenth of these is the gorvodtrev. [3]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. [4]There are three rhandirs in the taeogtrev ; in each of the two are three taeogs, and the third pasturage for the two. [5]Seven trevs are to be in the maenor of the taeogtrevs.

[6]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. [7]An impetuous large river is not a boundary between two cymwds save in its original channel. [8]A stone cross,

  1. V 25 b 19
  2. V 26 a 1
  3. V 26 a 3
  4. V 26 a 6
  5. V 26 a 8
  6. V 26 a 10
  7. V 26 a 12
  8. V 26 a 14