Amongst the records of the house of Savoy preserved in the Archivio di Stato at Turin, in the repository known as the Sezioni Riunite, there are to be found what are probably some of the earliest quasi-royal household accounts now surviving outside this country. Dating from 1269 onwards, they include nine rolls of the years of Count Philip of Savoy (1268–85) and some twenty-five of his nephew Amadeus the Great (Count Amadeus V, 1285–1325). Five of the earlier group were printed by Mario Chiaudano before the Second World War, but so far as is known none of Amadeus's accounts are available for study except in the original. They are, however, of great interest, and by reason of the closeness of the Anglo-Savoyard relationship in the time of Edward I especially deserve the attention of English scholars. They record journeyings of the counts that add up to an itinerary second only to that of that much-travelled king himself, and the details of guests and messengers constantly underline the links between the two courts. Sometimes they help to fill in the background of diplomacy, as for instance when they tell us that amongst those dining with Count Amadeus at Cambrai on 27th December 1296 were the bishop of Chester, Sir Otto de Grandison, Master John of Berwick, and Sir Hugh le Despenser; sometimes they leave us guessing at lesser matters, for example, as to what construction should be placed on the payment, a few weeks later, of 13s. 10d. to a little Englishman (parvo Anglico) who carried the ‘moulds for the bells’ (aportanti modulos campanarum)—if that is indeed the meaning—from St. Quentin to Cambrai, and thence on from Cambrai to Chambéry. One of the longest and, from the point of view of its English content, most important of these accounts is that covering a period of more than a year in 1302–3, during which Amadeus crossed twice into England, spending liberally, on each occasion, on London-made purchases to send or take home to Savoy. Amongst them we find such choice acquisitions as nineteen gold rings bought for 76s. sterling by the count at Odiham on New Year's day (‘… in xix. anulis auri emptis per dominum apud Odiham die Martis anni novi’ (1st January 1303)) perhaps for immediate dispatch as seasonable gifts to friends at home, the very next entry being a sum of 50s. sterling paid to send a courier, Raymond de Festerna, from Farnham to Savoy and Geneva; or a gold private seal and chain (‘… in sigillo domini Comitis secreto aureo et cathena ipsius aurea et factura ipsius sigilli et cathene preter partem auri quod tradidit dominus… 31s. 3d. sterl' ’); or two paintings of the Trois Vifs et Trois Marts (‘… in duabus tabulis depictis trium mortuorum et vivorum emptis per dominum, 40s. 6d.’).