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10 - Law and order in local communities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Scott L. Waugh
Affiliation:
University of California, Los Angeles
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Summary

Secular government faced the same problem as the church: how to get its subjects to live by its rules. Royal administration was hierarchically organized, from the village to the king, with sophisticated systems of accounting, adjudication, and communication. But for all its expertise, it had trouble collecting taxes and raising troops, catching criminals and executing judgements, and even getting its officials to perform their duties properly and impartially. The crown, moreover, did not have a monopoly on governing institutions at the local level. Ordinary individuals found themselves in overlapping, sometimes complementary, sometimes competing jurisdictions. The crown was only one authority in their lives; landlords, church, and community likewise commanded respect.

Four trends are discernible in fourteenth-century local government. One was the increasing activity of royal administrators because of war, crime, and a proliferation of legislation. A second trend was an effort by local elites to exert even greater control over local government than they already had, by determining appointments and the terms and duties of office-holding. More than ever before, to govern effectively the crown had to work through influential leaders, notably at the county level. Tout pointed out that the crown had a central bureaucracy but not a local one. It deputized elites in villages, towns, and counties to look after its interests and enforce its laws and commands. Since these agents were recruited from the very communities which they governed, they maintained a double allegiance that sometimes compromised their effectiveness.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

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