Barrel of land explained

A barrel of land (Danish: tønde land,[1] Norwegian: tønneland,[2] Swedish: tunnland,[3] Finnish: tynnyrinala) is a Scandinavian unit of area. The word may originate from the area of fields one could seed with a barrel of grain seeds. The acre is the equivalent Anglo-Saxon unit. Because the barrel sizes varied by country, the area unit does too. One barrel can be approximated as half a hectare.

Per country

Denmark

In Denmark, the tønde was used as an official area unit until the introduction of the metric system in 1907. A tønde was divided in 8 skæpper,[4] a skæppe was divided into 4 fjerdingkar, and a fjerdingkar into 3 album.

Norway

A tønneland was divided in 4 mål. Nowadays, a mål corresponds to 1,000 square meters in everyday speech.

Sweden

The unit was officially surveyed and standardized in the 1630s, and set to 14,000 Swedish square ells, i.e. 56,000 Swedish square feet. One tunnland was divided into 56 kannland, 32 kappland, 6 skäppland, or 2 lopsland.[5]

Finland

In Finland, the Swedish units that were officially defined in the 1630s were used, but with Finnish names: one tynnyrinala (tunnland) corresponding to 32 kapanala (kappland) or 2 panninala (lopsland).

In modern units

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: tønde. Gyldendal - Den Store Danske.
  2. Web site: tønne – arealenhet. Store Norske Leksikon. 2016-02-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20160305090107/https://snl.no/t%C3%B8nne/arealenhet. 2016-03-05. dead.
  3. Web site: tunnland. Nationalencyklopedin AB.
  4. Book: Rejnholdt Kristensen, Evald. 471. Danmark Og Det Danske Folk. 1920. A.H. Anderson.
  5. Web site: kappland. Nationalencyklopedin AB.