Category
page 1Commotes

Hope
village and community in Flintshire, Wales

Kerry
village and community in Powys, Wales, UK
Dogfeiling
thumb|250px|right|Post-Roman Welsh kingdoms. Dogfeiling is in the north center, between Rhos (north Wales)|Rhos and [[Tegeingl. The modern Anglo-Welsh border is also shown.]]
Dogfeiling was a minor sub-kingdom and later a commote in north Wales.
Edeirnion
thumb|A map of Wales with Merionethshire highlighted. Edeirnion Rural District is the protrusion in the north east of Meirionnydd.|class=notpageimage
commote
right|thumb|Note that some areas are shown as reorganised by the Normans, for hundred (administrative division)|hundred-style purposes, or in a manner that is not chronologically consistent
A commote (, sometimes spelt in older documents as , plural , less frequently ) was a secular division of land in Medieval Wales. The word derives from the prefix ("together", "with") and the noun ("home, abode"). The English word "commote" is derived from the Middle Welsh .
Gwrtheyrnion
thumb|right|250px|Map of the lands west of Offa's Dyke; Gwrtheyrnion can be seen in the centre