Everything about Markland Scots totally explained
A
markland or
merkland (
Scottish Gaelic:
Marg-fhearainn) is an old
Scottish unit of land measurement.
There was some local variation in the equivalences, for example, in some places eight
ouncelands were equal to one markland, but in others, such as
Islay, a markland was twelve ouncelands. The markland derived its name from the old coin the
Merk Scots (cognate with
German mark and various other European coinages, see
Mark (money)), which was the annual rent paid on it, and so it was calculated by this, rather than its actual area. Originally a
Scots mark or merk was 13s 4d (160 pence), but the Scottish coinage depreciated against the
English, and by the 18th century a Scots merk was worth only 13
1/
3d sterling - one-twelfth of its original value. Although such coins were abolished by the
Acts of Union 1707, some stayed in circulation for decades, and the names themselves remained in common use for centuries.
Further Information
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