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as much land as a team of oxen could plough in a season.
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originally an amount of land such as one team of oxen could plough in a season.
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(before the Norman Conquest it was called a hide in Yorkshire). In theory it was the amount of land which a single eight ox plough team could plough in a year. EITHER 90 to 120 acres or 120 to 180 acres (see HIDE below).
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A plowland; as much land as one team can plow in a year and a day; -- by some said to be about 100 acres.
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A measurement of land, equal to a hide (used in Danelaw). Also known as a ploughland.
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A measurement of land equal to the amount a team of eight oxen could plough in one year. Usually between 160 and 180 acres.
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the equivalent of the HIDE, both as a unit of 120 acres for assessing DANGELD in DOMESDAY BOOK and as a real land measure, in the DANELAW; also used elsewhere in ENGLAND in DOMESDAY BOOK as a real measure of land exempt from DANEGELD
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An ancient land measure: the amount of land that one team of oxen could plough in a season.
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carucata Derived from the Latin word caruca, meaning plough, this is a measure of land used in Danelaw (North and Eastern) counties in Domesday. Equivalent to a hide and represented the amount of land which could be ploughed by one plough team. Also used in Domesday for customary assessment. See also bovate.
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The amount of land that can be ploughed with one plough and eight oxen in one year.
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The carucate was a unit of assessment for tax found in most of the Danelaw counties of England. The word derives from caruca, Latin for a plough. It is analogous to the hide, the measurement of land for tax assessment used outside the Danelaw counties.
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