| Spanish | English | Relationship | Length in SI units |
|---|---|---|---|
| punto | "point" | 1 linea = 12 punto | 0.1613 mm |
| linea | "line" | 1 pulgada = 12 lineas | 1.935 mm |
| pulgada | "inch" | 1 pie = 12 pulgadas | 23.22 mm |
| pie | "foot" | 1 vara = 3 pies | 27.86 cm |
| vara | "yard" | 1 vara = 36 pulgadas | 0.8359 m |
| paso | "pace" | 1 paso = 60 pulgadas | 1.3932 m |
| legua | "league" | 1 legua = 5,000 varas | 4.1795 km |
In Texas, a vara was defined as 33 1/3 inches. The vara and the corresponding unit of area, the square vara, was introduced in the 19th centure to measure Spanish land grants. In Texas, Austin's early surveying contracts required that they use the vara as a standard unit. An acre is equivalent to 5,645.376 Texan square varas.
Standardization of measurement in Texas came with the introduction of varas, cordels, and leagues.
In Argentina a league is a distance of 5 km.
In Brazil the league has fallen into disuse, but it used to be described as equivalent to 6 km.
In Yucatan and other parts of rural Mexico the league is still commonly used in the original sense of the distance that can be covered on foot in an hour, so that a league along a good road on level ground is a greater distance than a league on a difficult path over rough terrain.
A common Texas land grant size, discussed in James Michener's Texas, was a "labor and a league": one labor of good riparian land, and a (square) league of land away from the river.
The (square) league is still encountered in modern real estate transactions.
Systems of units | Obsolete units of measure | Units of length | Units of area
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Obsolete Spanish and Portuguese units of measurement".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world