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turbary การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The bogs are threatened by grazing, turbary, burning and afforestation.
  • Turf could be cut for fuel for fires and was free to all local inhabitants under the custom known as Turbary.
  • The village itself lies along the road between common fen on which all the surrounding villages had rights of turbary, fowling and pasture.
  • Turbary was not always an unpaid right ( easement ), but, at least in Ireland, regulations governed the price that could be charged.
  • Sharpham Moor Plot is an area, predominantly of secondary woodland, on Turbary Moor Series Peat within the Somerset Moors managed by the Somerset Wildlife Trust.
  • The inhabitants had certain rights of'turbary'but were required to all use the same road so that they could be supervised in this operation.
  • It has been estimated that nearly half of the demesne lands were used for turf from marshes over which the priory had rights of turbary ( to cut turf ).
  • In the New Forest of southern England, a particular right of turbary belongs not to an individual person, dwelling or plot of land, but to a particular hearth and chimney.
  • The water which descends Rowten Pot sinks to the west of the pot on the other side of Turbary Road, into a shallow horizontal cave system, known as " Rowten Caves ".
  • Commons rights are attached to particular plots of land ( or in the case of turbary, to particular hearths ), and different land has different rights  and some of this land is some distance from the Forest itself.
  • The Chadderton family can be identified as having a presence in the area of Bradshaw as far back as Edward VI ( 1547 ) when Edmund Chadderton was a plaintiff in a civil court action against John Tonge and others for trespass on the common turbary of Tonge Moor.
  • When the Normans parceled up England in the 11th century, ordinary people retained common rights : to pasture, to " piscary " ( fishing ), " turbary " ( taking turf or peat ) and " estover " ( taking wood ).
  • He is credited for helping found the Industrial Estate in Gweedore, and also the turf burning station-a source of employment in his local parish, which allowed local people cut the turbary and sell it to the station operated by the Electrical Supply Board ( ESB ) . situated in Min a Cuing, He was survived by his wife, Antoinnette ( n閑 Willman ) and their nine children.
  • At a time when the royal forests were the most important potential source of fuel for cooking, heating and industries such as charcoal burning, and such hotly defended rights as pannage ( pasture for their pigs ), estover ( collecting firewood ), agistment ( grazing ), or turbary ( cutting of turf for fuel ), this charter was almost unique in providing a degree of economic protection for free men, who also used the forest to forage for food and to graze their animals.