APPENDIX- 41 



5. GREAT TITHES are chiefly of wood, corn, or hay ; and SMALL TITHES are in general, un- 

 lefs there has been an immemorial ufage to the contrary, all other praedial tithes, befides corn, 

 hay, and wood ; and likewife thofe tithes which are mixed and perfonal. 



6. OF THE PRODUCE of THE EARTH ; The tithes are to be fet out and taken in manner 

 following : 



Wheat and rye : by the tenth (hock, and by the tenth fheaf. 

 Barley and oats : by the tenth cock, or (hock, and aifo the tenth (heaf. 

 Beans, peafe, tares, and all other pulfe, by the tenth cock, heap or bundle. 

 Stubble: wheat ftubble, employed in purpofes of hufbandry and tillage of the lands of 

 the farm on which it grew, yields notithe,but if fold, orotherwife difpofedof, then by the tenth 

 of its value. 



Hay, clover, and other artificial grajjes ; by the tenth cock of the firft mowing, and, alfo 

 of the fecond when made into hay. 



After-mowth ofgrafs; clover, or other artificial grafts ; if eaten by barren and unprofitable 

 flock, by an agiftment tithe. 



llobbings ofgrafs in pajlurc : by the tenth cock. 



Seeds of clover, artificial grajfes, and alfo turnip, cole, and rape-feed; if grown for feed, 

 by the tenth meafure of the feed when thremed out ; or if fold, by the tenth of what it fold 

 for. 



Turnips ; if pulled, by every tenth turnip or heap. 



Turnips rape and cole ; if eaten, whether by profitable or unprofitable ftock, by an agiftment 

 tithe ; if fold, by the tenth of their value, 

 Barren lands ; tithe able when cultivated. 



Flax, hemp and madder. The tithes thereof are afcertained at five fliillings per acre, and/o 

 in proportion for fmall quantities. 



Wcad or woald ; by the tenth heap or gathering. 

 Saffron ; by a tenth when gathered, though only once in three years. 

 Hops ; by a tenth part of the whole after picking ; that is after pulled from the bine. 

 Potatoes and other roots growing injields ; by a tenth of their produce when taken up. 

 Gardens ; by a tenth of their produce. 



Orchards ; by a tenth of their produce, whether windfalls or gathered. 

 Nurfery grounds. Their produce whether fruits or plants, indigenous or exotic, if fold in the 

 way of trade, by a tenth, or tenth of their value. 



Timber-wood, or charcoal; that is, oak, afti and elm, above twenty years growth, yield no 

 tithe, except when cut down and fold as fire-wood, or converted into charcoal. 



Other wood. All other wood of any growth, by a tenth according to the quantity cut down, 

 whether fold or not, except in counties where timber- wood is fcarce, and any other wood is 

 fubftituted, as beech and the like. 



Ofiers and willows ; by the tenth bundle or pole, when cut. 



Underwood. Underwood, coppice- wood, loppings and toppings of old bowlings, loppings 



I 



