|
Welsh units of measurement are those in use in Wales between the Sub-Roman period (prior to which the Britons used Roman units) and the 13th-century Edwardian conquest (after which English units were imposed). Modern Wales no longer employs these units even for customary purposes but instead follows the custom as elsewhere in Britain of using a mixture of metric and Imperial units. ==Length== In the Venedotian Code used in Gwynedd, the units of length were said to have been codified by Dyfnwal Moelmud but retained unchanged by Hywel Dda. The code provided for computing the units variously, as well as deriving them from grains of barley. In measuring milk and its legal worth ('), disputes over the length of the inch used in the container were to be resolved by the width of the judge's thumb. The code notes that in some areas of Wales, the rod used to compute the Welsh acre (') was not reckoned from feet but taken to be "as long as the tallest man in the (), with his hand above his head". * 3 barleycorns ( ', ') = 1 inch * 3 inches (Med. ', Mod. ') = 1 palm * 3 palms (Med. ', Mod. ') = 1 foot * 3 feet (Med. ', Mod. ', "footlength") = 1 pace * 4 feet = 1 short yoke (Med. ' or ', Mod. ') * 3 paces (') = 1 leap * 8 feet = 1 field yoke (Med. ') or second yoke (Med. ') * 12 feet = 4 paces = 1 lateral yoke (Med. ' or ') * 3 leaps (Med. ', Mod. ') = 1 land * 16 feet = 1 long yoke (Med. ', Mod. ') = rod (Med. ', Mod. ') * 1000 lands (Med. ', Mod. ') = 1 mile (Med. ', Mod. ') 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Welsh units」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|