Systems of land assessment in Scotland before 1400
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Authors
Easson, Alexis Rachel
Abstract
The earliest recorded system of assessment of land
(or other property) in Scotland is the house system of
seventh-century Dalriada. By the time documentary sources
become more readily available from c. 1100 the house unit
appears to have almost disappeared and between c. 1100 and
c. 1400 documentary record reveals the existence of
multifarious units of land assessment in Scotland. The
principal units recorded during this period were the
davach, the pennyland, the ounceland, the arachor and the
ploughgate. The situation, however, is not as complex
as it first appears. The basic framework for land assessment
over most of Scotland, except the south-east, can actually
be traced to the house system as recorded in seventh-century
Dalriada.
As regards their derivation the various land units can
be grouped into two broad classes, those whose terminology
implies an agrarian meaning and those which appear to have had
a fiscal meaning. Regardless of their derivation and their
diverse origins, which tend to reflect the influences of
different cultures at different times, by c. 1100 or soon
thereafter all the units were fulfilling a similar role in
society. In an agricultural sense they created a structured
framework within which settlement and arable developed.
Fiscally they provided a base for the organisation of such
fundamental prerequisites of early societies as military
service and taxation. Both in their capacity as agricultural
and as fiscal units the various land assessments found
in Scotland before 1400 formed an integral part of the
agricultural, economic and military organisation of
that society.
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