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How are borders decided?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In England at least, many borders have been relatively unchanged since Anglo-Saxon times and in a few cases, the original documents exist. Boundaries are described as following the edge of a wood (which may not be in the same place today) or a river (which may now follow a different course) or the boundary of the local Manor, which would be well known to the locals. In some cases, they refer to the edge of a field or to a rock etc. These features would have been well known at the time, but can be meaningless today. Then of course there are the complications when a tribe steals a bit of land from another. In the Middle Ages, there was what we would see as confusion between the boundary of someone's land and the boundary of a parish or county; many of these anomalies have since been tidied up. The Enclosure Acts of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries had their effect on boundaries and are an interesting study in themselves.
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