THE CELTIC SYSTEM 1 97 



[i] De primo lecto [Wele Lauwargh' ap Kendelyk] . . . 

 fuerunt tria lecta seu tres gavelle videlicet 

 [a\ Wele Risshard ap Lauwargh' 

 [6] Wele Moridyk ap Law' et 

 [c] Wele Kandalo ap Lauwargh'. . , , 



[a\ De Wele Risshard ap Lauwargh' fiunt tres ga- 

 velle videlicet 



[i] gavella Madok ap Risshard 

 [2] gavella Kendalo ap Risshard et 

 [3] gavella Ken' ap Risshard. 



[i] Gronou ap Madok Vaghan, Eynon 

 Routh' frater eius, Heilyn ap Eynon 

 ap Risshard, Heilyn ap Gron' ap Ey- 

 non, Bleth' et Ithel fratres eius et 

 Heilyn ap Eynon Gogh' tenent ga- 

 vellam Madok ap Risshard integre, 

 redd, de Tung' inter se per annum . . . 

 [8 d. + 12 d. + 6 d. + 7^ d. + 6 d.]. 

 Et faciunt cetera servicia cum aliis 

 liberis istius commoti in communi, de 

 quibus patebit in fine istius commoti 

 inter communes consuetudines &c." 



[ii] Seven men, of whom three are brothers 

 of two others, hold Gavella Kendalo 

 ap Risshard " integre." 



[iii] Thirteen men, of whom seven are 

 brothers of five others and one is a guar- 

 dian of one other, hold three-fourths 

 of Gavella Ken' ap Risshard, and one- 

 fourth is escheat to the lord. 



The first of the lecta was in the hands of the descendants of a 

 certain Lauwarghe, from whom it derived its name. To his three 

 sons, Risshard, Moridyk, and Kandalo, it had passed as three 

 lecta or gavellae. The three sons of Risshard, named Madock, 

 Kendalo, and Ken', had in turn received their father's share as 

 three gavellae, and their cousins had inherited similarly. Thus 



