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    Several native system of weights and measures were used in Scotland. Many of these bore the same name as England's Imperial units, or have been conflated with them. The origins of the systems are many, some being continental, some Pictish, and some Gaelic.
    Many of the measurement systems were standardised by the Parliament of Scotland in 1661, but were technically abolished in 1824 by an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, and replaced with English units. Some of these continued in usage, informal or otherwise, well into the 20th Century. Others, however, were not so long lived.



        Obsolete Scottish units of measurement
            Length
            Area
                Area by size
                Area by production
                Dry volume
                Fluid
            Weight
            See also

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    Length
      Inch – 2.554 cm (approximately same length as English inch)
      Foot/Fit – 12 inches, 30.645 cm
      Ell – Elbow, 37 Scots inches. 94.5 cm
      Fall/Faw – 18 Scots feet
      Mile, A Scottish mile was the same length as the Royal Mile in Edinburgh. (320 falls, 1814.2 m) This is about a tenth longer then an English mile, and is referred to by Robert Burns in Tam o'Shanter - "We think na on the lang Scots miles".

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    Area
    A number of conflicting systems were used for area, sometimes bearing the same names in different regions, but working on different conversion rates. Because some of the systems were based on what land would produce, rather than the physical area, they are listed in their own section. Please see individual articles for more specific information.

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    Area by size
      Square inch
      Square ell
      Square Fall/Faw

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    Area by production
      Farthingland (Feòirling) – were equal to ¼ pennyland.

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    Dry volume
    Dry volume measures were slightly different for various types of grain, but often bore the same name.


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    Fluid

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    Weight
    Scottish weight is measured in a unit called stane.

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    See also



     


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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Obsolete Scottish units of measurement". link