tr.  Palladius  		(Duke Humfrey)	 		(1896)	  i. 62 (MED)  				Se not the swerd al nakid..Nor hungry cley, ner stonys ful vche rene [rhyme vnclene, lene].
1577    Customary Statutes in  W. W. Gill  		(1934)	 96  				That all Tyth Corn be received by the Tenth Stoke for casting the Tenth Shefe in the Rean or Furrow was never used or heard of.
1591						 (?a1425)						    Adam & Eve 		(Huntington)	 in  R. M. Lumiansky  & D. Mill  		(1974)	 I. 32  				Cornes fayre and cleane that growes one ridges out of reane.
1671    H. Herbert Narr. in   		(1990)	 XXX. 302  				The soile..is soe dry that they make no ridges or rean as in England.
1688    R. Holme   iii. iii. 73  				A Reean, is the distance between two Buts.
1729    J. Lewis  & H. Thomas   i. xii. 57  				A tender Nos'd Dog hunting by Pease will feel a good Sceint from the Rean to the Ridge.
1801    W. Coxe  I. 72  				The water..runs in perpetual streams called rheens.
1829    J. L. Knapp  142  				A pale blue shrew..has been seen about the margin of our reenes, and the deep marsh ditches.
1867     June 164  				It is intersected..by several large dykes, called in the language of the country ‘rhines’ or ‘rheens’.
1878    S. Smiles  vii. 112  				He had a run of about an hour and a quarter during which we had to cross about 20 rheins, or water jumps.
1891     7 Mar. 332/3  				The country intersected with rhenes, most of which take some doing.
1934    A. W. Boyd  		(1946)	 69  				The digger plough starts with a central ridge, and the ploughman finishes his plot of ground with a ‘reean’ or hollow on either side [sc. in a ploughing match].
1974    W. Leeds  91  				Rean, reen, an open furrow.
2001     32 143  				The land [sc. southeast Wales] is flat, low-lying and wet, and is drained by a system of field drains, or reens.