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Page 199:- 
  
into murders, maimings, fireraising, violent thefts, deadly  
feuds, cutting down trees, sowing corn in the opposite  
realm, depasturing cattle, hunting in the opposite realm,  
following stolen goods into the opposite realm, pursuit of  
hot trod [s] with hound and horn, hue and cry,  
reception of fugitives, loiterers, safe conduct, observance  
of truce, fouling and swearing of bills, baughling and  
reproving, perjury, over-swearing, offender rescuing  
himself, retaliation, &c. These several articles of the  
border laws, together with the several terms of procedure in 
the courts, may be seen at large in the introduction to Dr.  
Burns's history of Westmoreland, c.2, 3. and the state of  
the borders from the reign of Edward I. to that of James I.  
c. 4-9. What kind of achievements were performed in this  
peculiar kind of warfare may be learnt from the account of a 
forray from July 2d to November 17, 1544, wherein 192 
towns, towers, stedes, barnekyns [t], parish churches,  
bastel houses [u], were cast down or burned. 
  
  
403 Scots slain.  
816 prisoners taken.  
10386 nolt or horned cattle taken.  
12492 sheep.  
1296 nags and geldings.  
200 goats.  
890 bolls of corn.  
Insight (i.e. household furniture) not reckoned.  
In the next year's forray by the earl of Hertford between  
the 8th and 23d of September; 
  
  
Monasteries and friar houses burnt and destroyed 7  
Castles, towers, and piles, 16  
Market towns, 5  
Villages, 243  
Milns, 13  
Hospitals, 3 [q]  
The order of the watches on the West marshes made by lord  
Wharton 6 Edward VI. in Burn, I. lxxxiv. will shew the  
different stations where such watches were disposed from  
October to March. 
  
During the reign of Charles I. the borders were little  
attended to. Several acts of parliament passed after the  
Restoration for assessing the county of Cumberland and  
Northumberland, the former at not above £.200. the  
latter at not above £.500. a year for the safeguard  
of their inhabitants against the Moss troopers by the  
justices of the peace, who were to raise 30 men in  
Northumberland, and 12 in Cumberland, under a commander to  
apprehend such malefactors [x]. The accession of James I. to 
the crown of England, and both kingdoms thus devolving on  
one sovereign, was an event fruitful of blessing to each  
nation. The borders, which for many ages had been almost a  
constant scene of rapine and desolation, enjoyed a quiet and 
order which they had never before known. The king, in  
pursuance of his favourite purpose of extinguishing all  
memory of past hostilities between his kingdoms, and, if  
possible, of the places that had been the principal scenes  
of their hostilities, prohibited the name of borders  
any longer to be used, substituting in its stead that of  
middle marches. He ordered all the places of strength 
in these parts to be demolished except the habitations of  
nobles and barons, and broke the garrisons of Berwick and  
Carlisle. Natural prejudices and a mutual resentment owing  
to a series of wars between the two kingdoms carried on for  
centuries still however subsisted. From the same source  
arose frequent disputes and feuds upon the marches, which,  
by the attention of the sovereign, were soon easily  
composed. But it required almost 100 years, though England  
and Scotland were governed all the time by a succession of  
the same princes, to wear off the jealousies and  
prepossessions of the formerly hostile nations, and to work  
such a change in their tempers and views as to admit of an  
incorporating and effectual union[y]. 
  
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  Act of Union 1707 
  
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From the Union of 5 Anne hostilities have, by degrees,  
subsided; and as the then generation, which had been brought 
up in rapine and misrule, died away, their posterity, on  
both sides, have become humanized, the arts of peace and  
civil policy have been cultivated, and every man lives safe  
in his own possessions; felonies and other criminal offences 
are as seldom committed in these parts as in most other  
places of the united kingdoms; and their country, from  
having been the outskirt and litigated boundary of both  
kingdoms, is now become the centre of his Majesty's British  
dominions! Nevertheless the old wounds have left some scars  
behind. Much common and waste ground remains, which will  
require a length of time to cultivate and improve. The  
chuches near the Borders are many of them in a ruinous  
condition, and very meanly endowed. In many of the parishes  
there is not so much as an house for the incumbent to live  
in, and in some parishes no church. And some defects there  
are in the civil state, which nothing but the legislature  
can supply. Whilst the laws of the marche subsisted,  
criminal offences were speadily redressed by the power of  
the lords wardens or their deputies; and after the abolition 
of the laws of marche, the said offences were redressed by  
special commissioners appointed for the Borders, and matters 
of property of any considerable consequence were commonly  
determined at the court at York for the northern parts. The  
judges in their circuit came only once in the year, and  
sometimes much seldomer. They still come only once in the  
year to the bordering counties, which causes determinations  
of civil rights to be dilatory, and confines criminals (or  
perhaps innocent persons) in prison sometimes near 12 months 
before they can come to their trial [z]." 
  
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  Debateable ground. 
  
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  Debatable Land 
  
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The Debateable ground was a tract of land claimed by  
both kingdoms, which was the occasion of infinite troubles  
and vexations. The boundary of it in an old roll is thus  
described: "Beginning at the foot of the White Scyrke  
running into the sea, and so up the said water of Scyrke  
till it come to a place called Pyngilburne foot running into 
the said water of Scyrke and up the Pyngilburne till it come 
to Pyngilburne Know, from thence to the Righeads, from the  
Righeads to the Monke Rilande Burne, and from thence down to 
Har- 
  
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[s] 
Hot trod was a pursuit flagrante delicto, with 
red hand, as the Scots term it, by dogs called  
slough dogs, from their pursuing offenders called  
Moss troopers through the sloughs, mosses, and 
bogs, that were not passable but by those that were  
acquainted with the various and intricate byepaths and  
turnings. They were commonly named blood hounds, and  
were kept in use till within the memory of many of our  
forefathers. By a warrant 2 James I. it appears that nine of 
these dogs were provided and kept by the charge of the  
inhabitants of the different parishes. Burn, I. cxxx. 
  
 
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[t] 
The outer ward of a castle, containing the barns, stables,  
&c. 
  
 
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[u] 
supposed monasteries or hospitals. 
  
 
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[x] 
Haine's State Papers, p.51-54. 
  
 
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[y] 
Ridpath's Hist. of the Borders, p.706, in which may be seen  
an excellent detail of the transactions on the borders from  
the Conquest to the Union. 
  
 
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[z] 
Burn, cxxxiii. cxxxiv. 
  
 
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  "venburne 
  
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gazetteer links 
  
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-- Border Marches of England and Scotland 
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-- "Debatable Ground" -- Debatable Land 
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