ojärrade
Ojärrade is a historical term in Swedish agrarian language describing land that has not been tilled or prepared for sowing. The word combines a negative prefix with järr, an archaic or dialect form related to tillage or fallow, yielding a meaning akin to not tillage or uncultivated land. In practice, ojärrade land was often left fallow as part of crop-rotation systems or used as grazing, a common arrangement in rural areas where labor and resources were limited. The designation could reflect soil fertility, terrain, or economic choices rather than a permanent category; land could be ojärrade in one season and tilled in the next.
Historical usage and interpretations vary by region. In parish records and land registers from the early modern
Today, ojärrade is primarily of interest to linguists, historians, and scholars of agrarian practices. It is
See also: Fallow, Crop rotation, Land-use history, Parochial records.
This overview remains neutral and concise; for precise regional usage and historical examples, consult historical Swedish