Memoires van successie Auke Lourens Engels

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Memoir of declaration of the inheritance of Auke Lourens van der Meij died in Berlikum on the 16th November 1859

The undersigned:

  1. Lourens Aukes van der Meij brick manufacturer etc. living at Berlikum
  2. Gerhard Aukes van der Meij brick manufacturer etc. there
  3. Jan Aukes van der Meij, Master baker there
  4. Liefke Aukes van der Meij, wife of Gerrit Piers de Jong, Master baker co-resident in Berlikum, assisted by her husband and made responsible for this declaration, together domicilie selected at the offices of Mr. and Master of Laws Johan Klasing Schonegevel, registrar at Berlikum, declare:
that on the sixteenth of November 1809 at Berlikum where he had his last domicile, Mr. Auke Lourens van der Meij died, leaving his sole heirs, his legal children, the declarants in this, that by the survivors the following real estate has been left known as:
  1. Half in: a field orchard located under Berlikum at the Land Registry known in Section A: No. 925 to the size of thirty rods[1] and seventy ell[2].
  2. A piece of gardener's land, located under the village of Berlikum, known at the land register of the municipality of Berlikum in section A: No. 926 by the size of twenty-two rods and twenty ell.
  3. A piece of gardenier land located there is known as cadastral as in section A: No. 926a, the size of seven rods.
  4. A garden located there, known as cadastral in section A: No. 609 by the size of two rods forty ell
  5. A piece of pasture located there is known as cadastral in section A under No. 133, the size of a bunder three and fifty rod and twenty ell
  6. House and yard located there, known as cadastral in section A: No. 1003 to the size of sixty ell
  7. A Water pond located there, cadastral known as in section A under No. 1083 by the size of six rods and ten ell
  8. A carpenter's yard and yard there are known cadastrally as in section A: under No.1109, the size of three rods and ninety ell.
  9. A section of road located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 1112 to the size of three rods and eighty ell
  10. A house and yard located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 1175 by the size of three rods and seventy ell
  11. A house and yard located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 1176 to the size of five and seventy ell.
  12. A piece of gardener's land located there is known as cadastral as in section A under No. 923 by the size of five and fifty rods and seventy ell.
  13. An avenue located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 929 large and eleven rods and seventy ell
  14. A house and yard standing and located there is known as cadastral in section A under No. 1177, the size of five and seventy ell
  15. A house standing and located there, recorded in the land register as in section A under No. 1184 to the size of twenty-four ell.
  16. A sawmill standing and located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 1185, the size of seven rods and sixteen ell.
  17. A piece of arable land located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 295 to the size of six and eighty rods.
  18. A piece of pasture located there is known as cadastral in section A under No. 296 by the size of nine and twenty rods and twenty ell.
  19. A woodshed and yard standing and located there is known cadastrally as before in section A under No. 1174 to the size of three rods.
  20. A house and yard standing and located there is known as cadastral in section A under No. 1216 to the size of two rods and thirty ell
  21. A house and yard standing and located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 1362 for the sake of fourteen bars five and seventy ell.
  22. A dry barn standing there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 1363 by the size of eight bars and seventy ell.
  23. A piece of arable land located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 1364 by the size of eighteen rods and ninety ell
  24. A chicory factory standard, known as cadastral in section A under No. 1228, to the size of five and fifty ell.
Furthermore for the whole:
  1. A piece of arable land located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 1443 by the size of seven rods and fifteen ell.
  2. An orchard located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 149 to the size of twenty-eight rods and thirty ell.
  3. A piece of guards is located there, known as cadastral in section A under No. 186 to the size of three and fifty rods and twenty ell:
and that as a result of reported ab intestato death no usufruct or periodical distributions have expired or passed nor fideicommis evolved once ??? that paying by the heirs mentioned is nothing from the legacy of the deceased.
Thus done at Berlikum den
ninth February 1800 and sixty

Notes

  1. The rod or perch or pole is a surveyor’s tool and unit of length equal to ​5 1⁄2 yards, 16​1⁄2 feet, ​1⁄320 of a statute mile or one-fourth of a surveyor's chain and 5.0292 meters. The rod is useful as a unit of length because whole number multiples of it can form one acre of square measure. The 'perfect acre' is a rectangular area of 43,560 square feet, bounded by sides of length 660 feet and 66 feet (220 yards and 22 yards) or, equivalently, 40 rods and 4 rods. An acre is therefore 160 square rods. Since the adoption of the international yard on 1 July 1959, the rod has been equal to exactly 5.0292 meters.
  2. An ell (from Proto-Germanic *alinō, cognate with Latin ulna) is a unit of measurement, originally a cubit, i.e., approximating the length of a man's arm from the elbow (elbow literally meant the bend (bow) of the arm (ell)) to the tip of the middle finger, or about 18 inches (457 mm); in later usage, any of several longer units.[2][3] In English-speaking countries, these included (until the 19th century) the Flemish ell (​3⁄4 of a yard), English ell (​1 1⁄4 yards) and French ell (​1 1⁄2 yards), some of which are thought to derive from a "double ell".