The name
furlong derives from the
Old English words '
(furrow) and ' (long). Dating back at least to early
Anglo-Saxon times, it originally referred to the length of the furrow in one
acre of a ploughed
open field (a medieval communal field which was divided into strips). The furlong (meaning furrow length) was the distance a team of oxen could plough without resting. This was standardised to be exactly 40 rods or 10 chains. The system of long furrows arose because turning a team of oxen pulling a heavy plough was difficult. This offset the drainage advantages of short furrows and meant furrows were made as long as possible. An acre is an area that is one furlong long and one
chain (66 feet or 22 yards) wide. For this reason, the furlong was once also called an '''acre's length''', though in modern usage an area of one acre can be of any shape. The term furlong, or shot, was also used to describe a grouping of adjacent strips within an open field. Among the early Anglo-Saxons, the rod was the fundamental unit of land measurement. A furlong was 40 rods; an acre 4 by 40 rods, or 4 rods by 1 furlong, and thus 160 square rods; there are 10 acres in a square furlong. At the time, the Saxons used the
North German foot, which was about 10 percent longer than the foot of the
international 1959 agreement. When England
changed to a shorter foot in the late 13th century, rods and furlongs remained unchanged, since property boundaries were already defined in rods and furlongs. The only thing that changed was the number of feet and yards in a rod or a furlong, and the number of square feet and square yards in an acre. The definition of the rod went from 15 old feet to new feet, or from 5 old yards to new yards. The furlong went from 600 old feet to 660 new feet, or from 200 old yards to 220 new yards. The acre went from 36,000 old square feet to 43,560 new square feet, or from 4,000 old square yards to 4,840 new square yards. The furlong was historically viewed as being equivalent to the
Roman stade (stadium), which in turn derived from the
Greek system. In the Roman system, there were 625 feet to the
stadium, eight
stadia to the mile, and 1½ miles to the
league. A league was considered to be the distance a man could walk in one hour, and the mile (from
mille, meaning "thousand") consisted of 1,000
passus (paces, five feet, or double-step). After the fall of the
Western Roman Empire, medieval Europe continued with the Roman system, which the people proceeded to diversify, leading to serious complications in trade, taxation, etc. Around the year 1300, by royal decree, England standardized a long list of measures. Among the important units of distance and length at the time were the
foot,
yard,
rod (or pole), furlong, and the
mile. The rod was defined as yards or feet, and the mile was eight furlongs, so the definition of the furlong became 40 rods and that of the mile became 5,280 feet (eight furlongs/mile times 40 rods/furlong times feet/rod). The invention of the
measuring chain in the 1620s led to the introduction of an intermediate unit of length, the chain of 22 yards, being equal to four rods, and to one-tenth of a furlong. A description from 1675 states, "Dimensurator or Measuring Instrument whereof the mosts usual has been the Chain, and the common length for English Measures four Poles, as answering indifferently to the Englishs Mile and Acre, 10 such Chains in length making a Furlong, and 10 single square Chains an Acre, so that a square Mile contains 640 square Acres." The official use of the furlong was abolished in the United Kingdom under the
Weights and Measures Act 1985, an act that also abolished the official use of many other traditional units of measurement. ==Use==