Tron (Scotland)

A tron was a weighing beam in medieval Scotland, usually located in the marketplaces of burghs. There are various roads and buildings in several Scottish towns that are named after the tron. For example, Trongate in Glasgow and Tron Kirk in Edinburgh. Etymologically the word is derived from the Old French tronel or troneau, meaning "balance".[1]

Reconstructed tron in the village of Stenton, East Lothian

Measurement of weight in medieval Scotland

From the 12th century the city fathers of Scottish burghs needed to standardise weights and measures, partly to collect the correct taxation on goods, and partly to stop unscrupulous merchants shortchanging citizens. Trons were set up in marketplaces throughout Scotland. Each burgh had its own set of weights, which sometimes differed from those of other burghs.[1] Some burghs had more than one tron; in Edinburgh a butter tron was located at the head of the West Bow, while a salt tron was located further down the Royal Mile.[2][3]

gollark: I have an inverted <:transistor:717746226925404181> in the osmarks.tk emoji library, but it's not used anywhere.]
gollark: The error messages *are* quite helpful.
gollark: Presumably, as long as you are already to magically write perfect C code, you won't run into borrow checking issues.
gollark: Well, the under-18 one here, and apparently most run on similar principles.
gollark: You get a bunch of facts you have to memorize, which are never wrong™.

See also

  • Obsolete Scottish units of measurement
  • Tolbooth

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.