CHAPTER III.
Glamorgan Plea Rolls.
In our second volume we have a
large number of records of the
Court of Great Sessions for the
County of Glamorgan, viz.,
Calendar Rolls, Gaol Files and
Miscellaneous Papers. We have
now to consider the Plea Rolls
of the same Court. These comprise the pleadings in the civil
actions, and a few records of
Gaol Delivery. The Plea Rolls,
though voluminous and complete,
contain comparatively little of
sufficient general interest to be
included in this work. The matters it records are for the most part
of little importance to anyone except the parties concerned, and are
entered in so condensed and technical a style as to make but the
driest of reading. Diligent examination of the rolls resulted in some
few finds of interesting matter, which is here set out; but in view of
the great expenditure of time involved in going through the Plea
Rolls, and the comparatively insignificant literary profit, I have not
felt justified in continuing the search later than the year 1574. From
the first two rolls I have given a couple of samples of the abbreviated
Latin in which the originals are drawn up, together with translations.
These documents will perhaps be of greater use to students of
Glamorgan genealogies than to any other class of readers. The
various branches of the Mathew family figure very largely here,
and instances occur of the practice (for which genealogists are so
grateful) of challenging jurymen on the ground of kinship with the
opposite party to an action—a legal usage which resulted in
recording a number of long and perfectly authentic pedigrees.