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Pipe rolls

The Pipe rolls, sometimes called the Great rolls[1] or the Great Rolls of the Pipe, are a collection of financial records maintained by the English Exchequer, or Treasury, and its successors,as well as the Exchequer of Ireland. The earliest date from the 12th century, and the series extends, mostly complete, from then until 1833.[2] They form the oldest continuous series of records concerning English governance kept by the English, British, Irish and United Kingdom governments, covering a span of about 700 years. The early medieval ones are especially useful for historical study, as they are some of the earliest financial records available from the Middle Ages. A similar set of records was developed for Normandy, which was ruled by the English kings from 1066 to 1205, but the Norman Pipe rolls have not survived in a continuous series like the English.

Pipe rolls
Extract from the 1194 Pipe roll
LanguageMedieval Latin, Middle English, English
Date1130–1833
ProvenanceEnglish Exchequer
Exchequer of Ireland
SeriesPipe rolls
GenreAccounting documents
SubjectRecords of the audits of the English Exchequer and Exchequer of Ireland
Period covered1130–1833

They were the records of the yearly audits performed by the Exchequer of the accounts and payments presented to the Treasury by the sheriffs and other royal officials; and owed their name to the shape they took, as the various sheets were affixed to each other and then rolled into a tight roll, resembling a pipe, for storage. They record not only payments made to the government, but debts owed to the crown and disbursements made by royal officials. Although they recorded much of the royal income, they did not record all types of income, nor did they record all expenditures, so they are not strictly speaking a budget. The Pipe Roll Society, formed in 1883, has published the Pipe rolls for the period up to 1224.

Composition edit

The Pipe rolls are named after the "pipe" shape formed by the rolled-up parchments on which the records were originally written.[3] There is no evidence to support the theory that they were named pipes for the fact that they "piped" the money into the Treasury, nor for the claim that they got their name from resembling a wine cask, or pipe of wine.[4] They were occasionally referred to as the roll of the treasury, or the great roll of accounts, and the great roll of the pipe.[4]

The Pipe rolls are the records of the audits of the sheriffs' accounts, usually conducted at Michaelmas by the Exchequer, or English treasury.[5] Until the chancery records began in the reign of King John of England, they were the only continuous set of records kept by the English government.[2] They are not a complete record of government and royal finances, however, as they do not record all sources of income, only the accounts of the sheriffs and a few other sources of income. Some of the payments that did not regularly fall under the Exchequer were occasionally recorded in a Pipe roll. Neither do the Pipe rolls record all payments made by the exchequer.[2] They were not created as a budget, nor were they strictly speaking records of receipts, but rather they are records of the audit of the accounts rendered.[6] Although the rolls use an accounting system, it is not one that would be familiar to modern accountants; for instance until the end of the 12th century, no record was made of the total amount taken in by the sheriff of each shire.[2] In their early form, they record all debts owed to the Crown, whether from feudal dues or from other sources. Given that many debts to the king were allowed to be paid off in instalments, it is necessary to search more than one set of rolls for a complete history of a debt.[7] If a debt was not paid off completely in one year, the remainder of the amount owed was transferred to the next year. They did not record the full amount of debts incurred in previous years, only what was paid that year and what was still owed.[8] Besides the sheriffs, others who submitted accounts for the audit included some bailiffs of various honours, town officials, and the custodians of ecclesiastical and feudal estates.[9]

The earliest surviving Pipe roll, already in a mature form, dates from 1129–30,[10][a] and the continuous series begins in 1155–56,[3] and continued for almost seven hundred years.[4]

Combined with the Domesday Book of 1086, the Pipe rolls contributed to the centralisation of financial records by the Norman kings (reigned 1066–1154) of England that was ahead of contemporary Western European monarchies; the French, for instance, did not have an equivalent system of accounting until the 1190s.[11] The exact form of the records, kept in a roll instead of a book, was also unique to England,[12] although why England kept some of its administrative records in this form is unclear.[13] A set of Norman rolls, drafted differently, are extant in a few years for the reigns of Kings Henry II (reigned 1154–1189) and Richard I (reigned 1189–1199), who also ruled the Duchy of Normandy in France.[14][15] It is believed that the Norman rolls were started about the same time as the English, but due to lack of survival of the earlier Norman rolls, it is unclear exactly when they did start.[16] An Irish Exchequer produced Irish Pipe rolls, and much like the English Pipe rolls, the earliest surviving Irish Pipe roll, that of 1212, does not appear to be the first produced.[17]

 
Extract from the pipe rolls of Cloyne, Ireland, for the year 1354.

The Dialogus de Scaccario or Dialogue concerning the Exchequer, written in about 1178, details the workings of the Exchequer and gives an early account of how the Pipe rolls were created.[18] The Dialogue was written by Richard FitzNeal, the son of Nigel of Ely, who was Treasurer for both Henry I and Henry II of England.[5] According to the Dialogue, the Pipe rolls were the responsibility of the clerk of the Treasurer, who was called the Clerk of the Pipe and later the clerk of the pells.[18] FitzNeal wrote his work to explain the inner workings of the Exchequer, and in it he lists a number of different types of rolls used by the Treasury. He also describes the creation of the Pipe rolls and how they are used.[19] The Dialogue also states that the Pipe rolls, along with Domesday Book and other records, were kept in the treasury, because they were required for daily use by the Exchequer clerks.[20]

The main source of income recorded on the Pipe rolls was the county farm, or income derived from lands held by the king.[21] Occasional sources of revenue, such as from vacant bishoprics or abbeys or other sources, were also recorded.[22] The payments were made both in coin, or in objects, such as spurs, lands, spices, or livestock.[23] The only surviving roll from Henry I's reign also records payments of geld, a form of land tax dating from Anglo-Saxon times,[24] although after 1161 the Pipe rolls no longer record any payments of geld.[25][b] By 1166, the fines and other monetary income of the Assizes, or royal courts, began to be recorded in the Pipe rolls.[26][27] Scutage payments, made by knights in lieu of military service, were also recorded in the Pipe rolls from the reign of Henry II on.[28][29][c]

Although they recorded all income that came through the Exchequer, not all sources of income went through that office, so the Pipe rolls are not a complete record of royal income. They did include both regular income from the royal lands and judicial profits, as well as more occasional income derived from feudal levies, wardships, and ecclesiastical vacancies.[32] Another source of income recorded in the rolls was from feudal reliefs, the payment made by an heir when inheriting an estate.[33][34] A major source of income in the roll of 1130 is from the forests, under the Forest Law,[35] which was the royal law covering the restrictions imposed on non-royals hunting in areas of the country declared royal forest.[36] However, royal income from taxation that was not annually assessed was not usually recorded in the Pipe rolls, nor were his receipts from lands outside England. Some payments went directly to the king's household, and because they did not pass through the Exchequer, they were not recorded in the Pipe rolls.[37]

Expenditures were also subject to documentation in the Pipe rolls. Among the recorded expenditures are payments for carts and cart horses,[38] wages for royal servants, payments for improvements to royal manors and houses, royal gifts to persons,[39] hunting expenses,[36] payments to acquire a governmental office,[40] payments to mercenaries,[41] and the costs of bags and casks to transport silver pennies about the kingdom.[42]

Information about other subjects besides revenues also is contained in the rolls, including the movement of prisoners, which helps to identify which medieval castles were used as prisons.[43] The Pipe rolls also allow the identification of the custodians of royal lands and castles.[44] The clerks writing the rolls also used them as places to deride officials of the government, such as William Longchamp, who was the object of derision in the 1194 Pipe roll.[45]

Certain areas did not report their income to the Exchequer, so they do not usually appear in the Pipe rolls, unless the lands were in the king's custody through a vacancy. These included the palatinates of Durham and Chester.[46] The county of Cornwall also did not usually appear in the Pipe rolls, but it was not a palatinate.[47] Another problem with using the Pipe rolls for historical study is the fact that the chronological limits for the financial year varied from roll to roll.[48] In theory, they only recorded revenues from the previous Easter to Michaelmas of that financial year. However, the Pipe rolls often record payments made past Michaelmas, often up until the date the roll was actually compiled. Also, a few debts were not audited annually, but would instead have a number of consecutive years be investigated in one sitting and thus several years of payments would be recorded in one Pipe roll.[49]

History edit

 
Entrance to The National Archives, where the Pipe rolls are now held

Although the earliest Pipe roll dates from 1130, the 31st year of King Henry I's reign, it is clear that they were being produced by the Exchequer before then, as the 1130 roll is not an experiment. It shows no hesitancy in its use of accounts, or lack of continuity from previous years.[50] An extract from an earlier Pipe roll, from the 25th regnal year of Henry I or 1124, has been found in a 14th-century manuscript now in the Cotton Library at the British Museum.[51][d] The exact time of the first production of Pipe rolls is debated amongst historians. Some hold that they date from Henry I's reign, whether early or late in the reign,[50] but others feel that they were introduced by King William I (reigned 1066–1087).[20] The precursors of the records probably date to the Anglo-Saxon period, as the historian Pauline Stafford argues that financial records must have been kept in some form during the reigns of Cnut (reigned 1016–1035), Æthelred II (reigned 978–1016), and Edgar the Peaceable (reigned 959–975).[52] There is a reference to the king's "rolls" in a writ from 1110, which purports to be a grant from Henry I to the abbot of Westminster of ten shillings, but the writ may be a forgery, or parts of it may be genuine with some interpolations. The writ only exists in a copy in a later cartulary, and the Abbey of Westminster is also known to have forged a number of other writs or charters, so the writ is not a solid source for royal rolls being kept as early as 1110.[53]

After the one surviving roll from Henry I's reign, no further Pipe rolls survived from his reign, nor are any preserved from the reign of his successor, King Stephen (reigned 1135–1154). But by the second year of King Henry II's reign, or 1155, they once more survive.[4] It is unclear whether Pipe rolls were actually created during Stephen's reign and did not survive, or whether the conditions during Stephen's reign precluded the creation of Pipe rolls.[54][55] Continuously from the early years of King Henry II's reign, most Pipe rolls survive, with only a break in the last years of King John's reign (reigned 1199–1216).[56][e]

The surviving Pipe roll from 1130 records an income of £24,500.[37] This figure is dwarfed by the amount recorded on the Pipe roll that was actually owed to the king, which totals £68,850.[57] The income that they record in the early years of Henry II is much smaller than that of the one surviving year for Henry I. Those early Pipe rolls of Henry I record an income about £10,000 to £15,000. By the end of Henry II's reign, royal income recorded in the Pipe rolls had risen to £20,000. The end of John's reign saw a recorded income of about £30,000, but Henry III's reign recorded only £8,000 in the early years, rising to £16,500 by 1225.[58] Not only do the rolls from the early years of Henry II's reign show less income reaching the Exchequer than during Henry I's reign, those early rolls were haphazard and not as accurate and detailed as rolls dating from the later part of the reign. Nor are they as carefully produced as either the later rolls or the roll of 1130.[59]

By the time of King John, the Pipe rolls were growing unwieldy, as too many fines and fees were being recorded, making the finding of information in the rolls difficult. Eventually, after some experimentation, by 1206 a system was settled on whereby the actual detailed receipts were recorded in a set of receipt rolls and only aggregates were entered in the Pipe rolls.[60] A further reform in 1236 resulted in debts being recorded in separate Estreat rolls, and only the totals entered into the Pipe rolls.[61] In 1284 the Statutes of Rhuddlan were issued, which further reformed the accounting systems, and further reduced the detail contained on the Pipe rolls.[62] At this time, a large number of unrecoverable debts were also removed from the rolls, a process that had also been attempted in 1270. The attempt in 1270 had marked old debts with a "d" and stipulated that they were not to be re-entered into future Pipe rolls unless they were paid off. But this had not worked, and so in 1284 old debts were to be recorded on a separate roll. The statutes in 1284 also laid out a procedure where debtors whose documentation of payment of debt that hadn't been accepted in the past would have that documentation accepted, thus helping to clear out some of the backlogged debts on the books.[63]

Yet more extraneous details were removed from the Pipe rolls under the Cowick Ordinance of June 1323,[64] along with further ordinances in 1324 and 1326, all of which were done during the time that Walter de Stapledon held the office of Treasurer.[65] Prior to this reform the rolls had become clogged with debts, and clauses 2 through 8 of the Cowick Ordinance attempted to return the rolls to an exposition of accounts.[66] Another attempted reform at this time was the removal of customs receipts, as well as military accounts, from the rolls.[67] New offices in the Exchequer were also created, in an attempt to speed up the auditing process and lessen the time it took to prepare the Pipe rolls and other financial records.[68] The attempt to remove non-Exchequer accounts did completely remove those types of records from the Pipe rolls; further reforms in 1368 created a set of foreign rolls, and all extraneous records in the Pipe rolls were transferred to those rolls.[67]

In 1462, the Exchequer was told to no longer summon for audit any farms or feefarms worth over 40 shillings per year, as these would be supervised by a newly appointed board of receivers or approvers.[69]

The Pipe rolls series ended in 1834 when the office that was in charge of their creation, the Pipe Office, was abolished.[70]

Creation edit

They were created by taking the shire, or other governmental districts, accounts and writing them on two strips of parchment, usually about 14 inches (36 cm) wide.[4] The two pieces were then attached end to end to form one long sheet. Then, the various sheets from all the shires were piled together and affixed together at the top, and the resulting document would be rolled into a tight roll resembling a pipe.[3] They were not formed into one long continuous roll, as the Patent Rolls were, however. The sheets for each county have a heading at the top giving the name of the county the account is for, in Latin. If more than one sheet was required for a county, the county name would be amended on secondary sheets to indicate the order the sheets were in.[71]

Sometimes they are referred to, in Latin, as magnus rotulus pipae.[72] Several sources for the actual idea of making the rolls as rolls have been suggested, including Jews, Adelard of Bath, who was a royal clerk and was familiar with Arabic practices of using rolls, or the royal clerk Thurkil, who studied under a mathematician who may have been from Sicily.[73]

The rolls were written in Latin until 1733, except for a short time around 1650.[74] During the reign of Henry II, a duplicate copy of the year's Pipe roll was made for the Chancellor, and was called the Chancellor's roll. This was created at the same time as the regular Pipe roll, and was written by a clerk of the Chancellor.[75] The Chancellor rolls survive from 1163 to 1832, but are basically duplicates of the corresponding Pipe rolls, except for the occasional addition of a private charter or other material.[76]

Influence on other records edit

The example of the royal Exchequer's records eventually influenced others to keep similar records. The earliest surviving non-royal Pipe rolls are those of the Bishop of Winchester, which are extant from 1208,[77] and form a continuous series from that date. They started under Peter des Roches, who was also a royal clerk and administrator.[78] They record monies coming in as well as expenses and payments made, in detail, but like the royal records, they do not show profits or losses as a sum total. Most private rolls resembling the Pipe rolls are from monasteries. The household rolls, which closely resemble the Pipe rolls, for Eleanor of England, wife of Simon de Montfort, survive for part of the year 1265.[77]

Studies by historians edit

A number of historians have studied the surviving Pipe rolls, using them as the basis for study of financial and governmental history, especially of the medieval era.[79][80][81] A study from 1925 compiled the royal income that passed through the Exchequer for each year of Henry II and Richard I, as well as a sample of some years from John's reign, attempting to compare how the royal revenues compared in the various reigns.[82] Recent work by Nick Barratt on the reigns of Richard and John have updated the earlier research.[83][84] Historian David Carpenter has carried out further studies on the early years of King Henry III's reign.[82] The Pipe rolls have also been used to identify royal officials, especially those that were involved in local government and were not high-ranking.[85] Because they recorded judicial fines, the Pipe rolls also can be used to shed light on how the judicial system in medieval England worked, as well as identifying royal judges.[86][87] Although they don't provide exact revenue figures, most historians believe they represent a close approximation of revenue, and can be used to gain a general understanding of how much financial resources the English kings had available in the Middle Ages.[88]

The lone surviving Pipe roll from Henry I's reign, that of 1130, has been a popular subject of study. Recent investigations include Judith Green's search for evidence of Henry's financial system. Another historian, Stephanie Mooers Christelow, has studied the roll along with those from the reign of Henry II, looking for the exemptions and grants made by both kings to various royal favourites.[79] Christelow has also studied the 1130 roll to see what light it can shine on Henry I's judicial system, as well as on the growth of royal courts during Henry's reign.[80] The historian C. Warren Hollister used the 1130 Pipe roll to study the rewards of royal service during Henry's reign.[81]

The Pipe rolls from the 13th century onwards are less important for historical study because there are other surviving financial records. Some, such as the receipt rolls, were also kept by the Exchequer, and were used by the treasury clerks to prepare the Pipe rolls. Other surviving records were kept by the sheriffs for their own use in submitting accounts to the Pipe rolls.[89] However, the post 13th-century Pipe rolls are occasionally the sole source for historical facts such as William Shakespeare's residence in the parish of St Helen's Bishopsgate and in Southwark.[90]

Publication edit

 
Extract from the Pipe roll for 21 Henry II (1174–5), as published by the Pipe Roll Society in 1897 using record type

The earliest Pipe rolls were published by the Record Commission in 1833 (the isolated roll of 1130) and the Public Record Office in 1844 (the rolls for 1155–58).[76] The Commission's edition of the 1130 roll has now been superseded by a new edition (with English translation) published by the Pipe Roll Society in 2012.[91]

In 1883 the Pipe Roll Society (a text publication society) was founded by the Public Record Office, on the initiative of Walford Dakin Selby and his colleague James Greenstreet, to establish a systematic publishing programme for the Pipe rolls.[74] It published its first volume in 1884, and has now published all the rolls from 1158 to 1224.[92][93] Besides the continuous series, it has also published the roll for 1230. The rolls for 1241 were published in 1918 by Yale University Press.[76] Various county record societies have published parts of the rolls for various years that relate to their particular county. The Society's earliest volumes (to 1900) were printed in "record type", designed to produce a near-facsimile of the original manuscript, including its scribal abbreviations. This policy was abandoned in 1903, and all volumes since have been published in normal type with abbreviations extended.[94]

The Pipe Roll Society has also published numerous related texts, including the Chancellor's Roll for 1196 and the Norman Pipe Rolls of Henry II.[92][93] Rolls for the Irish Exchequer and the Norman Exchequer have also been published.[95]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Pipe Roll of 31 Henry I is "the earliest surviving comprehensive account of royal income in European history" according to C. Warren Hollister[10]
  2. ^ Whether geld was abolished in 1161 or later is a matter of debate among historians.[25]
  3. ^ It is unclear if the recording of scutage in the Pipe rolls was an innovation during Henry II's reign, or if it is just mischance that the lone surviving Pipe roll prior to his reign does not record any scutage payments.[30] The 1130 Pipe roll does allude to scutage payments, it just does not record any payment made.[31]
  4. ^ The extract is very short, but it shows that the Pipe rolls already recorded exemptions from danegeld. It is currently manuscript Tiberius E.vi part i.[51]
  5. ^ The 1213 roll does not exist, and the 1215 roll was compiled after John's death and is not contemporary with the actual financial investigation carried out in that year.[49]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Brown Governance pp. 54–56
  2. ^ a b c d Chrimes Administrative History pp. 62–63
  3. ^ a b c Coredon Dictionary of Medieval Terms p. 219
  4. ^ a b c d e Lyon Constitutional and Legal History pp. 112–113
  5. ^ a b Warren Governance pp. 73–74
  6. ^ Richardson and Sayles Governance pp. 216–217
  7. ^ Warren Governance pp. 76–77
  8. ^ Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p. 198
  9. ^ Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p. 262
  10. ^ a b Hollister Henry I p. 26
  11. ^ Chibnall Anglo-Norman England p. 126
  12. ^ Clanchy Memory to Written Record p. 136
  13. ^ Clanchy Memory to Written Record p. 141
  14. ^ Mason "Administration and Government" Companion to the Anglo-Norman World p. 139
  15. ^ Mason "Administration and Government" Companion to the Anglo-Norman World p. 150
  16. ^ Lyon Constitutional and Legal History pp. 220–221
  17. ^ Frame Political Development p. 87
  18. ^ a b Chrimes Administrative History p. 60
  19. ^ Clanchy From Memory to Written Record p. 136
  20. ^ a b Clanchy From Memory to Written Record p. 151
  21. ^ Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p. 164
  22. ^ Loyn (ed.) Middle Ages p. 266
  23. ^ Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p. 163
  24. ^ Warren Governance p. 68
  25. ^ a b Warren Governance p. 146
  26. ^ Warren Governance p. 111
  27. ^ Coredon Dictionary of Medieval Terms p. 23
  28. ^ Hollister "Significance of Scutage Rates" English Historical Review, p. 578
  29. ^ Coredon Dictionary p. 252
  30. ^ Hollister "1066" American Historical Review p. 717
  31. ^ Hollister "Irony of English Feudalism" Journal of British Studies, p. 9
  32. ^ Mortimer Angevin England p. 42
  33. ^ Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p. 164
  34. ^ Coredon Dictionary of Medieval Terms pp. 237–238
  35. ^ Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p. 170
  36. ^ a b Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings pp. 239–240
  37. ^ a b Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p. 159
  38. ^ Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p. 133
  39. ^ Bartlett, England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings, pp. 171–174
  40. ^ Huscroft, Ruling England, p. 159
  41. ^ Bartlett, England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings, p. 254
  42. ^ Bartlett, England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings, p. 373
  43. ^ Heiser "Castles, Constables and Politics" Albion p. 20 footnote 8
  44. ^ Heiser "Castles, Constables and Politics" Albion p. 22 footnote 22
  45. ^ Heiser "Castles, Constables and Politics" Albion p. 32
  46. ^ Alexander "New Evidence" English Historical Review p. 719
  47. ^ Alexander "New Evidence" English Historical Review p. 724 and footnote 2
  48. ^ Barratt "English Revenue of Richard I" English Historical Review p. 636
  49. ^ a b Barratt "Revenue of King John" English Historical Review p. 836 footnote 1
  50. ^ a b Chrimes Administrative History pp. 30–31
  51. ^ a b Hagger "Pipe Roll for 25 Henry I" English Historical Review
  52. ^ Stafford Unification and Conquest p. 149
  53. ^ Clanchy From Memory to Written Record pp. 137–138
  54. ^ Richardson and Sayles Governance p. 257 footnote 5
  55. ^ Yoshitake "Exchequer in the Reign of Stephen" English Historical Review pp. 950–959
  56. ^ Mortimer Angevin England pp. 66–68
  57. ^ Huscroft Ruling England p. 102
  58. ^ Mortimer Angevin England p. 51
  59. ^ Richardson and Sayles Governance p. 260
  60. ^ Chrimes Administrative History pp. 73–74
  61. ^ Chrimes Administrative History p. 119
  62. ^ Chrimes Administrative History p. 148
  63. ^ Prestwich Edward I pp. 242–243
  64. ^ Chrimes Administrative History p. 181
  65. ^ Prestwich Plantagenet England p. 59
  66. ^ Buck "Reform of the Exchequer" English Historical Review, p. 246
  67. ^ a b Graves Bibliography of English History p. 473
  68. ^ Prestwich Plantagenet England p. 208
  69. ^ Wolfee "Management of English Royal Estates" English Historical Review p. 2
  70. ^ "Pipe rolls entry 31 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine" Websters Online Dictionary
  71. ^ Ramsay "Origin of the Name Pipe Roll" English Historical Review pp. 329–220
  72. ^ Chrimes Administrative History p. 50
  73. ^ Clanchy From Memory to Written Record, p. 140
  74. ^ a b National Archives Research Guides: Early Pipe Rolls, 1130–c. 1300
  75. ^ Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p. 261
  76. ^ a b c Graves Bibliography of English History p. 474
  77. ^ a b Clanchy Memory to Written Record pp. 92–93
  78. ^ Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p. 201
  79. ^ a b Mason "Administration and Government" Companion to the Anglo-Norman World pp. 148–149
  80. ^ a b Mason "Administration and Government" Companion to the Anglo-Norman World p. 157
  81. ^ a b Mason "Administration and Government" Companion to the Anglo-Norman World p. 162
  82. ^ a b Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings pp. 175–176
  83. ^ Barratt "English Revenue of Richard I" English Historical Review pp. 835–856
  84. ^ Barratt "Revenue of King John" English Historical Review pp. 835–855
  85. ^ Huscroft Ruling England pp. 88–89
  86. ^ Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p. 191
  87. ^ Richardson and Sayles Governance pp. 176–177
  88. ^ Barratt "Revenue of King John" English Historical Review pp. 836–837
  89. ^ Lyon Constitutional and Legal History pp. 330–331
  90. ^ Hales "London Residences of Shakespeare" Athenaeum pp. 401-402
  91. ^ Green Great Roll of the Pipe
  92. ^ a b Pipe Roll Society "Pipe Roll Society Publications"
  93. ^ a b Royal Historical Society "Pipe Roll Society Publications"
  94. ^ Pipe Roll Society Great Roll of the Pipe pp. vii-viii
  95. ^ Graves Bibliography of English History pp. 475–477

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  • Heiser, Richard R. (Spring 2000). "Castles, Constables, and Politics in Late Twelfth-Century English Governance". Albion. 32 (1): 19–36. doi:10.2307/4053985. JSTOR 4053985.
  • Hollister, C.W. (October 1960). "The Significance of Scutage Rates in Eleventh- and Twelfth-Century England". The English Historical Review. 75 (297): 577–588. doi:10.1093/ehr/LXXV.297.577. JSTOR 558107.
  • Hollister, C.W. (May 1963). "The Irony of English Feudalism". Journal of British Studies. 2 (2): 1–26. doi:10.1086/385459. JSTOR 175246. S2CID 145547866.
  • Hollister, C.W. (February 1968). "1066: The "Feudal Revolution"". The American Historical Review. 73 (3): 708–723. doi:10.2307/1870668. JSTOR 1870668.
  • Hollister, C.W. (2001). Frost, Amanda Clark (ed.). Henry I. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-08858-2.
  • Huscroft, Richard (2005). Ruling England 1042–1217. London: Pearson/Longman. ISBN 0-582-84882-2.
  • Loyn, H.R., ed. (1991). The Middle Ages: A Concise Encyclopedia. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-27645-5.
  • Lyon, Bryce Dale (1980). A Constitutional and Legal History of Medieval England (second ed.). New York: Norton. ISBN 0-393-95132-4.
  • Mason, Emma (2002). "Administration and Government". In Harper-Bill, Christopher; Van Houts, Elizabeth (eds.). A Companion to the Anglo-Norman World. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell. pp. 135–164. ISBN 978-1-84383-341-3.
  • Mortimer, Richard (1994). Angevin England 1154–1258. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-16388-3.
  • Mullins, E.L.C. (1958). Texts and Calendars I: An Analytical Guide to Serial Publications. Royal Historical Society Guides and Handbooks No. 7. London: Royal Historical Society. OCLC 186242490.
  • Mullins, E.L.C. (1983). Texts and Calendars II: An Analytical Guide to Serial Publications 1957–1982. Royal Historical Society Guides and Handbooks No. 12. London: Royal Historical Society. ISBN 0-86193-100-9.
  • National Archives. "Research Guides: Early Pipe Rolls, 1130–c. 1300". www.nationalarchives.gov.uk. The National Archives. Retrieved on 17 January 2009
  • Pipe Roll Society. "Pipe Roll Society Publications". www.piperollsociety.co.uk. Pipe Roll Society. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
  • Pipe Roll Society (1904). The Great Roll of the Pipe for the Twenty-Second Year of the Reign of King Henry the Second: A.D. 1175–1176. Pipe Roll Society. Vol. 25. London. OCLC 25039201.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Prestwich, Michael (1997). Edward I. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07157-4.
  • Prestwich, Michael (2005). Plantagenet England 1225–1360. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-922687-0.
  • Ramsay, J.H. (April 1911). "The Origin of the Name Pipe Roll". The English Historical Review. 26 (102): 329–330. doi:10.1093/ehr/XXVI.CII.329. JSTOR 550492.
  • Richardson, H.G.; Sayles, G.O. (1963). The Governance of Mediaeval England: From the Conquest to Magna Carta. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. OCLC 504298.
  • Royal Historical Society. "Pipe Roll Society Publications" (PDF). Royal Historical Society. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
  • Stafford, Pauline (1989). Unification and Conquest: A Political and Social History of England in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries. London: Edward Arnold. ISBN 0-7131-6532-4.
  • Warren, W.L. (1987). The Governance of Norman and Angevin England 1086–1272. The Governance of England. London: Edward Arnold. ISBN 0-7131-6378-X.
  • . Websters Online Dictionary. Archived from the original on 31 December 2009. Retrieved 20 January 2009.
  • Wolffe, B. P. (January 1956). "The Management of English Royal Estates under the Yorkist Kings". The English Historical Review. 71 (268): 1–27. doi:10.1093/ehr/LXXI.CCLXXVIII.1. JSTOR 558623.
  • Yoshitake, Kenji (October 1988). "The Exchequer in the Reign of Stephen". The English Historical Review. 103 (409): 950–959. doi:10.1093/ehr/CIII.CCCCIX.950. JSTOR 570263.

Further reading edit

  • Amt, Emilie M. (May 1991). "The Meaning of Waste in the Early Pipe Rolls of Henry II". Economic History Review. 44 (2): 240–248. doi:10.2307/2598295. JSTOR 2598295.
  • Green, Judith A. (May 1982). "Praeclarum et Magnificum Antiquitatis Monumentum: The Earliest Surviving Pipe Roll". Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research. 55 (131): 1–17. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2281.1982.tb01140.x.
  • Green, Judith A. (June 1989). "Unity and Disunity in the Anglo-Norman State". Historical Research. 62 (148): 115–34. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2281.1989.tb00506.x.
  • Hagger, Mark (2009). "Theory and Practice in the Making of Twelfth-Century Pipe Rolls". In Vincent, Nicholas (ed.). Records, Administration and Aristocratic Society in the Anglo-Norman Realm: Papers Commemorating the 800th Anniversary of King John's Loss of Normandy. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press. pp. 45–74. ISBN 978-1-84383-485-4.
  • Keefe, Thomas K. (Autumn 1981). "King Henry II and the Earls: The Pipe Roll Evidence". Albion. 13 (3): 191–222. doi:10.2307/4048847. JSTOR 4048847.
  • Mooers, Stephanie L. (April 1988). "A Re-evaluation of Royal Justice under Henry I of England". American Historical Review. 93 (2): 340–58. doi:10.2307/1859922. JSTOR 1859922.
  • Moss, Vincent (1994). "Normandy and England in 1180: The Pipe Roll Evidence". In Bates, David; Curry, Anne (eds.). England and Normandy in the Middle Ages. London: Hambledon Press. pp. 185–195. ISBN 1-85285-083-3.

External links edit

  • The Anglo-American Legal Tradition hosts a large portion of the original Pipe rolls (1224 through 1642), see the E372 series under the various Monarchs.
  • The Pipe Roll Society

pipe, rolls, sometimes, called, great, rolls, great, rolls, pipe, collection, financial, records, maintained, english, exchequer, treasury, successors, well, exchequer, ireland, earliest, date, from, 12th, century, series, extends, mostly, complete, from, then. The Pipe rolls sometimes called the Great rolls 1 or the Great Rolls of the Pipe are a collection of financial records maintained by the English Exchequer or Treasury and its successors as well as the Exchequer of Ireland The earliest date from the 12th century and the series extends mostly complete from then until 1833 2 They form the oldest continuous series of records concerning English governance kept by the English British Irish and United Kingdom governments covering a span of about 700 years The early medieval ones are especially useful for historical study as they are some of the earliest financial records available from the Middle Ages A similar set of records was developed for Normandy which was ruled by the English kings from 1066 to 1205 but the Norman Pipe rolls have not survived in a continuous series like the English Pipe rollsExtract from the 1194 Pipe rollLanguageMedieval Latin Middle English EnglishDate1130 1833ProvenanceEnglish ExchequerExchequer of IrelandSeriesPipe rollsGenreAccounting documentsSubjectRecords of the audits of the English Exchequer and Exchequer of IrelandPeriod covered1130 1833They were the records of the yearly audits performed by the Exchequer of the accounts and payments presented to the Treasury by the sheriffs and other royal officials and owed their name to the shape they took as the various sheets were affixed to each other and then rolled into a tight roll resembling a pipe for storage They record not only payments made to the government but debts owed to the crown and disbursements made by royal officials Although they recorded much of the royal income they did not record all types of income nor did they record all expenditures so they are not strictly speaking a budget The Pipe Roll Society formed in 1883 has published the Pipe rolls for the period up to 1224 Contents 1 Composition 2 History 3 Creation 4 Influence on other records 5 Studies by historians 6 Publication 7 Notes 8 Citations 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksComposition editThe Pipe rolls are named after the pipe shape formed by the rolled up parchments on which the records were originally written 3 There is no evidence to support the theory that they were named pipes for the fact that they piped the money into the Treasury nor for the claim that they got their name from resembling a wine cask or pipe of wine 4 They were occasionally referred to as the roll of the treasury or the great roll of accounts and the great roll of the pipe 4 The Pipe rolls are the records of the audits of the sheriffs accounts usually conducted at Michaelmas by the Exchequer or English treasury 5 Until the chancery records began in the reign of King John of England they were the only continuous set of records kept by the English government 2 They are not a complete record of government and royal finances however as they do not record all sources of income only the accounts of the sheriffs and a few other sources of income Some of the payments that did not regularly fall under the Exchequer were occasionally recorded in a Pipe roll Neither do the Pipe rolls record all payments made by the exchequer 2 They were not created as a budget nor were they strictly speaking records of receipts but rather they are records of the audit of the accounts rendered 6 Although the rolls use an accounting system it is not one that would be familiar to modern accountants for instance until the end of the 12th century no record was made of the total amount taken in by the sheriff of each shire 2 In their early form they record all debts owed to the Crown whether from feudal dues or from other sources Given that many debts to the king were allowed to be paid off in instalments it is necessary to search more than one set of rolls for a complete history of a debt 7 If a debt was not paid off completely in one year the remainder of the amount owed was transferred to the next year They did not record the full amount of debts incurred in previous years only what was paid that year and what was still owed 8 Besides the sheriffs others who submitted accounts for the audit included some bailiffs of various honours town officials and the custodians of ecclesiastical and feudal estates 9 The earliest surviving Pipe roll already in a mature form dates from 1129 30 10 a and the continuous series begins in 1155 56 3 and continued for almost seven hundred years 4 Combined with the Domesday Book of 1086 the Pipe rolls contributed to the centralisation of financial records by the Norman kings reigned 1066 1154 of England that was ahead of contemporary Western European monarchies the French for instance did not have an equivalent system of accounting until the 1190s 11 The exact form of the records kept in a roll instead of a book was also unique to England 12 although why England kept some of its administrative records in this form is unclear 13 A set of Norman rolls drafted differently are extant in a few years for the reigns of Kings Henry II reigned 1154 1189 and Richard I reigned 1189 1199 who also ruled the Duchy of Normandy in France 14 15 It is believed that the Norman rolls were started about the same time as the English but due to lack of survival of the earlier Norman rolls it is unclear exactly when they did start 16 An Irish Exchequer produced Irish Pipe rolls and much like the English Pipe rolls the earliest surviving Irish Pipe roll that of 1212 does not appear to be the first produced 17 nbsp Extract from the pipe rolls of Cloyne Ireland for the year 1354 The Dialogus de Scaccario or Dialogue concerning the Exchequer written in about 1178 details the workings of the Exchequer and gives an early account of how the Pipe rolls were created 18 The Dialogue was written by Richard FitzNeal the son of Nigel of Ely who was Treasurer for both Henry I and Henry II of England 5 According to the Dialogue the Pipe rolls were the responsibility of the clerk of the Treasurer who was called the Clerk of the Pipe and later the clerk of the pells 18 FitzNeal wrote his work to explain the inner workings of the Exchequer and in it he lists a number of different types of rolls used by the Treasury He also describes the creation of the Pipe rolls and how they are used 19 The Dialogue also states that the Pipe rolls along with Domesday Book and other records were kept in the treasury because they were required for daily use by the Exchequer clerks 20 The main source of income recorded on the Pipe rolls was the county farm or income derived from lands held by the king 21 Occasional sources of revenue such as from vacant bishoprics or abbeys or other sources were also recorded 22 The payments were made both in coin or in objects such as spurs lands spices or livestock 23 The only surviving roll from Henry I s reign also records payments of geld a form of land tax dating from Anglo Saxon times 24 although after 1161 the Pipe rolls no longer record any payments of geld 25 b By 1166 the fines and other monetary income of the Assizes or royal courts began to be recorded in the Pipe rolls 26 27 Scutage payments made by knights in lieu of military service were also recorded in the Pipe rolls from the reign of Henry II on 28 29 c Although they recorded all income that came through the Exchequer not all sources of income went through that office so the Pipe rolls are not a complete record of royal income They did include both regular income from the royal lands and judicial profits as well as more occasional income derived from feudal levies wardships and ecclesiastical vacancies 32 Another source of income recorded in the rolls was from feudal reliefs the payment made by an heir when inheriting an estate 33 34 A major source of income in the roll of 1130 is from the forests under the Forest Law 35 which was the royal law covering the restrictions imposed on non royals hunting in areas of the country declared royal forest 36 However royal income from taxation that was not annually assessed was not usually recorded in the Pipe rolls nor were his receipts from lands outside England Some payments went directly to the king s household and because they did not pass through the Exchequer they were not recorded in the Pipe rolls 37 Expenditures were also subject to documentation in the Pipe rolls Among the recorded expenditures are payments for carts and cart horses 38 wages for royal servants payments for improvements to royal manors and houses royal gifts to persons 39 hunting expenses 36 payments to acquire a governmental office 40 payments to mercenaries 41 and the costs of bags and casks to transport silver pennies about the kingdom 42 Information about other subjects besides revenues also is contained in the rolls including the movement of prisoners which helps to identify which medieval castles were used as prisons 43 The Pipe rolls also allow the identification of the custodians of royal lands and castles 44 The clerks writing the rolls also used them as places to deride officials of the government such as William Longchamp who was the object of derision in the 1194 Pipe roll 45 Certain areas did not report their income to the Exchequer so they do not usually appear in the Pipe rolls unless the lands were in the king s custody through a vacancy These included the palatinates of Durham and Chester 46 The county of Cornwall also did not usually appear in the Pipe rolls but it was not a palatinate 47 Another problem with using the Pipe rolls for historical study is the fact that the chronological limits for the financial year varied from roll to roll 48 In theory they only recorded revenues from the previous Easter to Michaelmas of that financial year However the Pipe rolls often record payments made past Michaelmas often up until the date the roll was actually compiled Also a few debts were not audited annually but would instead have a number of consecutive years be investigated in one sitting and thus several years of payments would be recorded in one Pipe roll 49 History edit nbsp Entrance to The National Archives where the Pipe rolls are now heldAlthough the earliest Pipe roll dates from 1130 the 31st year of King Henry I s reign it is clear that they were being produced by the Exchequer before then as the 1130 roll is not an experiment It shows no hesitancy in its use of accounts or lack of continuity from previous years 50 An extract from an earlier Pipe roll from the 25th regnal year of Henry I or 1124 has been found in a 14th century manuscript now in the Cotton Library at the British Museum 51 d The exact time of the first production of Pipe rolls is debated amongst historians Some hold that they date from Henry I s reign whether early or late in the reign 50 but others feel that they were introduced by King William I reigned 1066 1087 20 The precursors of the records probably date to the Anglo Saxon period as the historian Pauline Stafford argues that financial records must have been kept in some form during the reigns of Cnut reigned 1016 1035 AEthelred II reigned 978 1016 and Edgar the Peaceable reigned 959 975 52 There is a reference to the king s rolls in a writ from 1110 which purports to be a grant from Henry I to the abbot of Westminster of ten shillings but the writ may be a forgery or parts of it may be genuine with some interpolations The writ only exists in a copy in a later cartulary and the Abbey of Westminster is also known to have forged a number of other writs or charters so the writ is not a solid source for royal rolls being kept as early as 1110 53 After the one surviving roll from Henry I s reign no further Pipe rolls survived from his reign nor are any preserved from the reign of his successor King Stephen reigned 1135 1154 But by the second year of King Henry II s reign or 1155 they once more survive 4 It is unclear whether Pipe rolls were actually created during Stephen s reign and did not survive or whether the conditions during Stephen s reign precluded the creation of Pipe rolls 54 55 Continuously from the early years of King Henry II s reign most Pipe rolls survive with only a break in the last years of King John s reign reigned 1199 1216 56 e The surviving Pipe roll from 1130 records an income of 24 500 37 This figure is dwarfed by the amount recorded on the Pipe roll that was actually owed to the king which totals 68 850 57 The income that they record in the early years of Henry II is much smaller than that of the one surviving year for Henry I Those early Pipe rolls of Henry I record an income about 10 000 to 15 000 By the end of Henry II s reign royal income recorded in the Pipe rolls had risen to 20 000 The end of John s reign saw a recorded income of about 30 000 but Henry III s reign recorded only 8 000 in the early years rising to 16 500 by 1225 58 Not only do the rolls from the early years of Henry II s reign show less income reaching the Exchequer than during Henry I s reign those early rolls were haphazard and not as accurate and detailed as rolls dating from the later part of the reign Nor are they as carefully produced as either the later rolls or the roll of 1130 59 By the time of King John the Pipe rolls were growing unwieldy as too many fines and fees were being recorded making the finding of information in the rolls difficult Eventually after some experimentation by 1206 a system was settled on whereby the actual detailed receipts were recorded in a set of receipt rolls and only aggregates were entered in the Pipe rolls 60 A further reform in 1236 resulted in debts being recorded in separate Estreat rolls and only the totals entered into the Pipe rolls 61 In 1284 the Statutes of Rhuddlan were issued which further reformed the accounting systems and further reduced the detail contained on the Pipe rolls 62 At this time a large number of unrecoverable debts were also removed from the rolls a process that had also been attempted in 1270 The attempt in 1270 had marked old debts with a d and stipulated that they were not to be re entered into future Pipe rolls unless they were paid off But this had not worked and so in 1284 old debts were to be recorded on a separate roll The statutes in 1284 also laid out a procedure where debtors whose documentation of payment of debt that hadn t been accepted in the past would have that documentation accepted thus helping to clear out some of the backlogged debts on the books 63 Yet more extraneous details were removed from the Pipe rolls under the Cowick Ordinance of June 1323 64 along with further ordinances in 1324 and 1326 all of which were done during the time that Walter de Stapledon held the office of Treasurer 65 Prior to this reform the rolls had become clogged with debts and clauses 2 through 8 of the Cowick Ordinance attempted to return the rolls to an exposition of accounts 66 Another attempted reform at this time was the removal of customs receipts as well as military accounts from the rolls 67 New offices in the Exchequer were also created in an attempt to speed up the auditing process and lessen the time it took to prepare the Pipe rolls and other financial records 68 The attempt to remove non Exchequer accounts did completely remove those types of records from the Pipe rolls further reforms in 1368 created a set of foreign rolls and all extraneous records in the Pipe rolls were transferred to those rolls 67 In 1462 the Exchequer was told to no longer summon for audit any farms or feefarms worth over 40 shillings per year as these would be supervised by a newly appointed board of receivers or approvers 69 The Pipe rolls series ended in 1834 when the office that was in charge of their creation the Pipe Office was abolished 70 Creation editThey were created by taking the shire or other governmental districts accounts and writing them on two strips of parchment usually about 14 inches 36 cm wide 4 The two pieces were then attached end to end to form one long sheet Then the various sheets from all the shires were piled together and affixed together at the top and the resulting document would be rolled into a tight roll resembling a pipe 3 They were not formed into one long continuous roll as the Patent Rolls were however The sheets for each county have a heading at the top giving the name of the county the account is for in Latin If more than one sheet was required for a county the county name would be amended on secondary sheets to indicate the order the sheets were in 71 Sometimes they are referred to in Latin as magnus rotulus pipae 72 Several sources for the actual idea of making the rolls as rolls have been suggested including Jews Adelard of Bath who was a royal clerk and was familiar with Arabic practices of using rolls or the royal clerk Thurkil who studied under a mathematician who may have been from Sicily 73 The rolls were written in Latin until 1733 except for a short time around 1650 74 During the reign of Henry II a duplicate copy of the year s Pipe roll was made for the Chancellor and was called the Chancellor s roll This was created at the same time as the regular Pipe roll and was written by a clerk of the Chancellor 75 The Chancellor rolls survive from 1163 to 1832 but are basically duplicates of the corresponding Pipe rolls except for the occasional addition of a private charter or other material 76 Influence on other records editThe example of the royal Exchequer s records eventually influenced others to keep similar records The earliest surviving non royal Pipe rolls are those of the Bishop of Winchester which are extant from 1208 77 and form a continuous series from that date They started under Peter des Roches who was also a royal clerk and administrator 78 They record monies coming in as well as expenses and payments made in detail but like the royal records they do not show profits or losses as a sum total Most private rolls resembling the Pipe rolls are from monasteries The household rolls which closely resemble the Pipe rolls for Eleanor of England wife of Simon de Montfort survive for part of the year 1265 77 Studies by historians editA number of historians have studied the surviving Pipe rolls using them as the basis for study of financial and governmental history especially of the medieval era 79 80 81 A study from 1925 compiled the royal income that passed through the Exchequer for each year of Henry II and Richard I as well as a sample of some years from John s reign attempting to compare how the royal revenues compared in the various reigns 82 Recent work by Nick Barratt on the reigns of Richard and John have updated the earlier research 83 84 Historian David Carpenter has carried out further studies on the early years of King Henry III s reign 82 The Pipe rolls have also been used to identify royal officials especially those that were involved in local government and were not high ranking 85 Because they recorded judicial fines the Pipe rolls also can be used to shed light on how the judicial system in medieval England worked as well as identifying royal judges 86 87 Although they don t provide exact revenue figures most historians believe they represent a close approximation of revenue and can be used to gain a general understanding of how much financial resources the English kings had available in the Middle Ages 88 The lone surviving Pipe roll from Henry I s reign that of 1130 has been a popular subject of study Recent investigations include Judith Green s search for evidence of Henry s financial system Another historian Stephanie Mooers Christelow has studied the roll along with those from the reign of Henry II looking for the exemptions and grants made by both kings to various royal favourites 79 Christelow has also studied the 1130 roll to see what light it can shine on Henry I s judicial system as well as on the growth of royal courts during Henry s reign 80 The historian C Warren Hollister used the 1130 Pipe roll to study the rewards of royal service during Henry s reign 81 The Pipe rolls from the 13th century onwards are less important for historical study because there are other surviving financial records Some such as the receipt rolls were also kept by the Exchequer and were used by the treasury clerks to prepare the Pipe rolls Other surviving records were kept by the sheriffs for their own use in submitting accounts to the Pipe rolls 89 However the post 13th century Pipe rolls are occasionally the sole source for historical facts such as William Shakespeare s residence in the parish of St Helen s Bishopsgate and in Southwark 90 Publication edit nbsp Extract from the Pipe roll for 21 Henry II 1174 5 as published by the Pipe Roll Society in 1897 using record typeThe earliest Pipe rolls were published by the Record Commission in 1833 the isolated roll of 1130 and the Public Record Office in 1844 the rolls for 1155 58 76 The Commission s edition of the 1130 roll has now been superseded by a new edition with English translation published by the Pipe Roll Society in 2012 91 In 1883 the Pipe Roll Society a text publication society was founded by the Public Record Office on the initiative of Walford Dakin Selby and his colleague James Greenstreet to establish a systematic publishing programme for the Pipe rolls 74 It published its first volume in 1884 and has now published all the rolls from 1158 to 1224 92 93 Besides the continuous series it has also published the roll for 1230 The rolls for 1241 were published in 1918 by Yale University Press 76 Various county record societies have published parts of the rolls for various years that relate to their particular county The Society s earliest volumes to 1900 were printed in record type designed to produce a near facsimile of the original manuscript including its scribal abbreviations This policy was abandoned in 1903 and all volumes since have been published in normal type with abbreviations extended 94 The Pipe Roll Society has also published numerous related texts including the Chancellor s Roll for 1196 and the Norman Pipe Rolls of Henry II 92 93 Rolls for the Irish Exchequer and the Norman Exchequer have also been published 95 Notes edit The Pipe Roll of 31 Henry I is the earliest surviving comprehensive account of royal income in European history according to C Warren Hollister 10 Whether geld was abolished in 1161 or later is a matter of debate among historians 25 It is unclear if the recording of scutage in the Pipe rolls was an innovation during Henry II s reign or if it is just mischance that the lone surviving Pipe roll prior to his reign does not record any scutage payments 30 The 1130 Pipe roll does allude to scutage payments it just does not record any payment made 31 The extract is very short but it shows that the Pipe rolls already recorded exemptions from danegeld It is currently manuscript Tiberius E vi part i 51 The 1213 roll does not exist and the 1215 roll was compiled after John s death and is not contemporary with the actual financial investigation carried out in that year 49 Citations edit Brown Governance pp 54 56 a b c d Chrimes Administrative History pp 62 63 a b c Coredon Dictionary of Medieval Terms p 219 a b c d e Lyon Constitutional and Legal History pp 112 113 a b Warren Governance pp 73 74 Richardson and Sayles Governance pp 216 217 Warren Governance pp 76 77 Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p 198 Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p 262 a b Hollister Henry I p 26 Chibnall Anglo Norman England p 126 Clanchy Memory to Written Record p 136 Clanchy Memory to Written Record p 141 Mason Administration and Government Companion to the Anglo Norman World p 139 Mason Administration and Government Companion to the Anglo Norman World p 150 Lyon Constitutional and Legal History pp 220 221 Frame Political Development p 87 a b Chrimes Administrative History p 60 Clanchy From Memory to Written Record p 136 a b Clanchy From Memory to Written Record p 151 Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p 164 Loyn ed Middle Ages p 266 Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p 163 Warren Governance p 68 a b Warren Governance p 146 Warren Governance p 111 Coredon Dictionary of Medieval Terms p 23 Hollister Significance of Scutage Rates English Historical Review p 578 Coredon Dictionary p 252 Hollister 1066 American Historical Review p 717 Hollister Irony of English Feudalism Journal of British Studies p 9 Mortimer Angevin England p 42 Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p 164 Coredon Dictionary of Medieval Terms pp 237 238 Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p 170 a b Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings pp 239 240 a b Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p 159 Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p 133 Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings pp 171 174 Huscroft Ruling England p 159 Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p 254 Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p 373 Heiser Castles Constables and Politics Albion p 20 footnote 8 Heiser Castles Constables and Politics Albion p 22 footnote 22 Heiser Castles Constables and Politics Albion p 32 Alexander New Evidence English Historical Review p 719 Alexander New Evidence English Historical Review p 724 and footnote 2 Barratt English Revenue of Richard I English Historical Review p 636 a b Barratt Revenue of King John English Historical Review p 836 footnote 1 a b Chrimes Administrative History pp 30 31 a b Hagger Pipe Roll for 25 Henry I English Historical Review Stafford Unification and Conquest p 149 Clanchy From Memory to Written Record pp 137 138 Richardson and Sayles Governance p 257 footnote 5 Yoshitake Exchequer in the Reign of Stephen English Historical Review pp 950 959 Mortimer Angevin England pp 66 68 Huscroft Ruling England p 102 Mortimer Angevin England p 51 Richardson and Sayles Governance p 260 Chrimes Administrative History pp 73 74 Chrimes Administrative History p 119 Chrimes Administrative History p 148 Prestwich Edward I pp 242 243 Chrimes Administrative History p 181 Prestwich Plantagenet England p 59 Buck Reform of the Exchequer English Historical Review p 246 a b Graves Bibliography of English History p 473 Prestwich Plantagenet England p 208 Wolfee Management of English Royal Estates English Historical Review p 2 Pipe rolls entry Archived 31 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine Websters Online Dictionary Ramsay Origin of the Name Pipe Roll English Historical Review pp 329 220 Chrimes Administrative History p 50 Clanchy From Memory to Written Record p 140 a b National Archives Research Guides Early Pipe Rolls 1130 c 1300 Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p 261 a b c Graves Bibliography of English History p 474 a b Clanchy Memory to Written Record pp 92 93 Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p 201 a b Mason Administration and Government Companion to the Anglo Norman World pp 148 149 a b Mason Administration and Government Companion to the Anglo Norman World p 157 a b Mason Administration and Government Companion to the Anglo Norman World p 162 a b Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings pp 175 176 Barratt English Revenue of Richard I English Historical Review pp 835 856 Barratt Revenue of King John English Historical Review pp 835 855 Huscroft Ruling England pp 88 89 Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p 191 Richardson and Sayles Governance pp 176 177 Barratt Revenue of King John English Historical Review pp 836 837 Lyon Constitutional and Legal History pp 330 331 Hales London Residences of Shakespeare Athenaeum pp 401 402 Green Great Roll of the Pipe a b Pipe Roll Society Pipe Roll Society Publications a b Royal Historical Society Pipe Roll Society Publications Pipe Roll Society Great Roll of the Pipe pp vii viii Graves Bibliography of English History pp 475 477References editAlexander James W October 1970 New Evidence on the Palatinate of Chester The English Historical Review 85 337 715 729 doi 10 1093 ehr LXXXV 337 715 JSTOR 563538 Barratt Nick September 1996 The Revenue of King John The English Historical Review fee required 111 443 835 855 doi 10 1093 ehr CXI 443 835 JSTOR 577564 Barratt Nick June 2001 The English Revenue of Richard I The English Historical Review fee required 116 467 635 656 doi 10 1093 ehr 116 467 635 JSTOR 579813 Bartlett Robert C 2000 England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings 1075 1225 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 822741 8 Brown A L 1989 The Governance of Late Medieval England 1272 1461 Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 1730 3 Buck M C April 1983 The Reform of the Exchequer 1316 1326 The English Historical Review 98 387 241 260 doi 10 1093 ehr XCVIII CCCLXXXVII 241 JSTOR 569436 Chibnall Marjorie 1986 Anglo Norman England 1066 1166 Oxford Basil Blackwell ISBN 0 631 15439 6 Chrimes S B 1966 An Introduction to the Administrative History of Mediaeval England third ed Oxford Basil Blackwell OCLC 270094959 Clanchy C T 1993 From Memory to Written Record England 1066 1307 second ed Malden MA Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 631 16857 7 Coredon Christopher 2007 A Dictionary of Medieval Terms amp Phrases reprint ed Woodbridge UK D S Brewer ISBN 978 1 84384 138 8 Frame Robin 1995 The Political Development of the British Isles 1100 1400 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 820604 6 Graves Edgar B ed 1975 A Bibliography of English History to 1485 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 822391 9 Green Judith A ed 2012 The Great Roll of the Pipe for the Thirty First Year of the Reign of King Henry I Michaelmas 1130 Pipe roll 1 A New Edition with a Translation and Images from the Original in the Public Record Office the National Archives Pipe Roll Society Vol 95 London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hagger Mark February 2007 A Pipe Roll for 25 Henry I The English Historical Review 122 495 133 140 doi 10 1093 ehr cel377 Hales John W January June 1904 London Residences of Shakespeare The Athenaeum 401 402 Heiser Richard R Spring 2000 Castles Constables and Politics in Late Twelfth Century English Governance Albion 32 1 19 36 doi 10 2307 4053985 JSTOR 4053985 Hollister C W October 1960 The Significance of Scutage Rates in Eleventh and Twelfth Century England The English Historical Review 75 297 577 588 doi 10 1093 ehr LXXV 297 577 JSTOR 558107 Hollister C W May 1963 The Irony of English Feudalism Journal of British Studies 2 2 1 26 doi 10 1086 385459 JSTOR 175246 S2CID 145547866 Hollister C W February 1968 1066 The Feudal Revolution The American Historical Review 73 3 708 723 doi 10 2307 1870668 JSTOR 1870668 Hollister C W 2001 Frost Amanda Clark ed Henry I New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08858 2 Huscroft Richard 2005 Ruling England 1042 1217 London Pearson Longman ISBN 0 582 84882 2 Loyn H R ed 1991 The Middle Ages A Concise Encyclopedia London Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 27645 5 Lyon Bryce Dale 1980 A Constitutional and Legal History of Medieval England second ed New York Norton ISBN 0 393 95132 4 Mason Emma 2002 Administration and Government In Harper Bill Christopher Van Houts Elizabeth eds A Companion to the Anglo Norman World Woodbridge UK Boydell pp 135 164 ISBN 978 1 84383 341 3 Mortimer Richard 1994 Angevin England 1154 1258 Oxford Blackwell ISBN 0 631 16388 3 Mullins E L C 1958 Texts and Calendars I An Analytical Guide to Serial Publications Royal Historical Society Guides and Handbooks No 7 London Royal Historical Society OCLC 186242490 Mullins E L C 1983 Texts and Calendars II An Analytical Guide to Serial Publications 1957 1982 Royal Historical Society Guides and Handbooks No 12 London Royal Historical Society ISBN 0 86193 100 9 National Archives Research Guides Early Pipe Rolls 1130 c 1300 www nationalarchives gov uk The National Archives Retrieved on 17 January 2009 Pipe Roll Society Pipe Roll Society Publications www piperollsociety co uk Pipe Roll Society Retrieved 6 April 2020 Pipe Roll Society 1904 The Great Roll of the Pipe for the Twenty Second Year of the Reign of King Henry the Second A D 1175 1176 Pipe Roll Society Vol 25 London OCLC 25039201 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Prestwich Michael 1997 Edward I New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 07157 4 Prestwich Michael 2005 Plantagenet England 1225 1360 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 922687 0 Ramsay J H April 1911 The Origin of the Name Pipe Roll The English Historical Review 26 102 329 330 doi 10 1093 ehr XXVI CII 329 JSTOR 550492 Richardson H G Sayles G O 1963 The Governance of Mediaeval England From the Conquest to Magna Carta Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press OCLC 504298 Royal Historical Society Pipe Roll Society Publications PDF Royal Historical Society Retrieved 6 April 2020 Stafford Pauline 1989 Unification and Conquest A Political and Social History of England in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries London Edward Arnold ISBN 0 7131 6532 4 Warren W L 1987 The Governance of Norman and Angevin England 1086 1272 The Governance of England London Edward Arnold ISBN 0 7131 6378 X Pipe Rolls entry Websters Online Dictionary Archived from the original on 31 December 2009 Retrieved 20 January 2009 Wolffe B P January 1956 The Management of English Royal Estates under the Yorkist Kings The English Historical Review 71 268 1 27 doi 10 1093 ehr LXXI CCLXXVIII 1 JSTOR 558623 Yoshitake Kenji October 1988 The Exchequer in the Reign of Stephen The English Historical Review 103 409 950 959 doi 10 1093 ehr CIII CCCCIX 950 JSTOR 570263 Further reading editAmt Emilie M May 1991 The Meaning of Waste in the Early Pipe Rolls of Henry II Economic History Review 44 2 240 248 doi 10 2307 2598295 JSTOR 2598295 Green Judith A May 1982 Praeclarum et Magnificum Antiquitatis Monumentum The Earliest Surviving Pipe Roll Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 55 131 1 17 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2281 1982 tb01140 x Green Judith A June 1989 Unity and Disunity in the Anglo Norman State Historical Research 62 148 115 34 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2281 1989 tb00506 x Hagger Mark 2009 Theory and Practice in the Making of Twelfth Century Pipe Rolls In Vincent Nicholas ed Records Administration and Aristocratic Society in the Anglo Norman Realm Papers Commemorating the 800th Anniversary of King John s Loss of Normandy Woodbridge UK Boydell Press pp 45 74 ISBN 978 1 84383 485 4 Keefe Thomas K Autumn 1981 King Henry II and the Earls The Pipe Roll Evidence Albion 13 3 191 222 doi 10 2307 4048847 JSTOR 4048847 Mooers Stephanie L April 1988 A Re evaluation of Royal Justice under Henry I of England American Historical Review 93 2 340 58 doi 10 2307 1859922 JSTOR 1859922 Moss Vincent 1994 Normandy and England in 1180 The Pipe Roll Evidence In Bates David Curry Anne eds England and Normandy in the Middle Ages London Hambledon Press pp 185 195 ISBN 1 85285 083 3 External links editThe Anglo American Legal Tradition hosts a large portion of the original Pipe rolls 1224 through 1642 see the E372 series under the various Monarchs The Pipe Roll Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pipe rolls amp oldid 1180941781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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