The Scutage and Knight Service in EnglandUniversity of Chicago Press, 1897 - 119 pages |
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Page xi
... were with him all the rich men over all England , archbishops , and suffragan bishops , abbots and earls , thegns and knights . " ( Ang . - Sax . Chron . , 1087. ) The conclusions from these premises , or rather lack of INTRODUCTION xi.
... were with him all the rich men over all England , archbishops , and suffragan bishops , abbots and earls , thegns and knights . " ( Ang . - Sax . Chron . , 1087. ) The conclusions from these premises , or rather lack of INTRODUCTION xi.
Page xiii
... Bishop Odo ; " 3 and of other barons the expression " his knights " is repeatedly used.4 The Abbot of Abingdon required a guard of knights to protect his person wherever he went and to defend his monastery . At first he hired ...
... Bishop Odo ; " 3 and of other barons the expression " his knights " is repeatedly used.4 The Abbot of Abingdon required a guard of knights to protect his person wherever he went and to defend his monastery . At first he hired ...
Page xv
... bishop- rick was vacant and in the custody of the king , the Treasury received more scutage than when the incumbent paid his servi- tium debitum . The Lord was not allowed to gain too much from the military tenures held of him , as he ...
... bishop- rick was vacant and in the custody of the king , the Treasury received more scutage than when the incumbent paid his servi- tium debitum . The Lord was not allowed to gain too much from the military tenures held of him , as he ...
Page 3
... Bishop of Norwich , who owed 40 knights , complains of the difficulty of paying 60 l . for his knights . The occasion , therefore , of a scutage in 1156 should not have created any surprise . John of Salisbury , the only writer who says ...
... Bishop of Norwich , who owed 40 knights , complains of the difficulty of paying 60 l . for his knights . The occasion , therefore , of a scutage in 1156 should not have created any surprise . John of Salisbury , the only writer who says ...
Page 8
... Bishop of Lincoln made opposi- tion on the ground that consent to the demand would be an * Ricardus de Reimes debet 10 7. de praedicto auxilio [ 1168 ] et de pluribus exer- citibus ; sed nondum potuit justiciare tenentes suos . ( Pipe R ...
... Bishop of Lincoln made opposi- tion on the ground that consent to the demand would be an * Ricardus de Reimes debet 10 7. de praedicto auxilio [ 1168 ] et de pluribus exer- citibus ; sed nondum potuit justiciare tenentes suos . ( Pipe R ...
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Common terms and phrases
20 librates 40 knights Abbot of St amount assessment auxilium barons Bellocamp Bishop Bishop of Lincoln Bishop of Norwich Bracton's N. B. campaign carucage Char charter Chron churchmen Comp counties Curia Regis debere Regi distrain distraint donum Earl England estates Exchequer exercitu expedition feodo Feud feudal fiefs fines Freeman fyrd granted held Henry Henry II hidage honor Ibid John king king's knight service knight tenure knight's fee knighthood knights quos land levy of scutage librates Lincoln Madox mesne lord military service military tenures milites militibus militum moneyers Norgate Normandy number of knights obligations old enfeofments owed paid pay scutage payment persons Pipe Roll Polluck and Maitland promissione quod quos recognoscit recognoscit se debere Red Book redd rendered account Richard scutage Scutagio scutagium serjeantry serjeants servitium debitum sheriffs socage Stubbs summons tallage tenants-in-chief terras thegn Toulouse towns undertenants vols William William Stubbs writ
Popular passages
Page xi - ... strong government. It is unnecessary to recapitulate here all the points in which the Anglo-Saxon institutions were already approaching the feudal model; it may be assumed that the actual obligation of military service was much the same in both systems, and that even the amount of land which was bound to furnish a mounted warrior was the same however the conformity may have been produced.
Page x - England, with very few exceptions, besides the royal demesnes, into baronies; and he conferred these, with the reservation of stated services and payments, on the most considerable of his adventurers. These great barons, who held immediately of the crown, shared out a great part of their lands to other foreigners, who were denominated knights or vassals, and who paid their lord the same duty and submission in peace and war, which he himself owed to his sovereign.
Page 34 - ... that, as in similar cases, they were called for throughout the realm, by one uniform writ. If we may deduce the purport of that writ from the collation of those returns which refer to it most explicitly, we must infer that the information asked for was to be given under four heads : — (1) How many knights had been enfeoffed before the death of Henry I. ? (2) How many have been enfeoffed since ? (3) How many (if any) remain to be enfeoffed to complete the " service
Page xi - And then were with him all the rich men over all England: archbishops and diocesan bishops, abbots and earls, thanes and knights.
Page 12 - At the moment no resentment seems to have been provoked by the measure ; its ultimate tendency was not foreseen, the sum actually demanded was not great, and the innovation was condoned on the ground of the king's lawful need and in the belief that it was only an isolated demand.2 A greater matter might well have been condoned in consideration of Henry's loyal redemption of his coronation-pledges, to which the Pipe Roll bears testimony. If the king had been prompt in resuming his kingly rights, he...
Page xiii - ... man for each five hides was probably the rate at which the newly endowed follower of the king would be expected to discharge his duty. The wording of the Domesday survey does not imply that in this respect the new military service differed from the old : the land is marked out not into knights...
Page xvi - Conqueror episcopatus quoque et abbatias omnes quae baronias tenebant, et eatenus ab omni servitute seculari libertatem habuerant, sub servitute statuit militari, inrotulans episcopatus et abbatias pro voluntate sua quot milites sibi et successoribus suis hostilitatis tempore voluit a singulis exhiberi (Historia Anglonan, i.
Page 10 - My will stands in the place of reason." Applied to a tyrant who governs capriciously. STATUIMUS ut omnes liberi homines foedere et sacramento affirment, quod intra et extra universum regnum...
Page 102 - It directed that in all future transfers of land, the purchaser, instead of becoming the feudal dependent of the alienor, should enter into the same relations in which the alienor had stood to the next lord. In this way the king and the chief lords would not lose the services and profits of feudal incidents, a danger with which the constant repetition of the process of sub-infeudation threatened them. But the operation of the statute had far wider consequences. As a part of...
Page 76 - ... mobilium suorum. AD 1204. MATT. PARIS, p. 209. In crastino Circumcisionis convenerunt ad colloquium apud Oxoniam rex et magnates Angliae, ubi concessa sunt regi auxilia militaria, de quolibet scuto scilicet duae marcae et dimidia ; nee etiam episcopi et abbates sive ecclesiasticae personae sine promissione recesserunt.