Oxgang
Encyclopedia : O : OX : OXG : Oxgang
An Oxgang (Scottish Gaelic: Damh-imir, Latin: bovate) is an old Scottish land measurement. It averaged around 20 acres (English), but was based on land fertility and cultivation, and could be as low as 15 English acres.
Skene in Celtic Scotland says:
- "in the eastern district there is a uniform system of land denomination consisting of 'dabhachs', 'ploughgates' and 'oxgangs', each 'dabhach' consisting of four 'ploughgates' and each 'ploughgate' containing eight 'oxgangs'.
- "As soon as we cross the great chain of mountains [the Grampian Mountains] separating the eastern from the western waters, we find a different system equally uniform. The 'ploughgates' and 'oxgangs' disappear, and in their place we find 'dabhachs' and 'pennylands'. The portion of land termed a 'dabhach' is here also called a 'tirung' or 'ounceland', and each 'dabhach' contains 20 pennylands."
The name is retained in one of the southern suburbs of Edinburgh, "Oxgangs".
See also
- Acre (Scots)
- Daugh
- Ounceland
- Pennyland
- Feddan, an Arabic measurement based on similar thinking.
Reference
This article incorporates text from “Dwelly’s [Scottish] Gaelic Dictionary” (1911)((Dabhach) with corrections and additions)
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
