No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
The King's Penny: the Headquarters Paymasters under Edward I, 1295-1307
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2014
Extract
By his skillful use of England's resources, more than by his generalship in the field, Edward I became one of the most effective military commanders England produced between the Conqueror and Oliver Cromwell. King of a country rich in men, money, and resources, he was well provided with raw materials, but it was Edward's accomplishment to use them to create and support a large and tenacious army. He called for fighting men from all classes of the population, regardless of tenure; he required all sections of the realm to send provisions; and he required all people in his kingdom to support his wars by granting subsidies. Organization of this nature called all of Edward's political acumen into play, for it implied the existence of a corporate nature for England, one where the people not only must approve measures that touched them, they must also contribute to them. When the matter touching them was the defense of the realm, they responded to royal leadership by forming a proto-national army.
In spite of the importance and implications of this subject, there has been sparse treatment of it by historians. A handful of articles and a few books deal with the subject of military organization directly, while it forms a small part of a number of general works. William Stubbs described the make-up and use of both the militia and the mounted forces of England as pieces in the great game between king and barons and as evidence for the growing sense of nationality in England. J. E. Morris's Welsh Wars of Edward the First is a careful analysis of Edwardian armies based largely upon Exchequer sources.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 1966
References
1. Edwards, J. G., “The Battle of Maes Madog and the Welsh Campaign of 1294–5,” E.H.R., XXXIX (1924), 1–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Keeney, B. C., “Military Service and the Development of Nationalism in England, 1272–1327,” Speculum, XXII (1947), 534–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lewis, N. B., “An Early Fourteenth Century Contract for Military Service,” Bull. Iust. Hist. Res., XX (1943–1945)Google Scholar; N. B. Lewis, “An Early Indenture of Military Service, 27 July 1287,” ibid., XIII (1935-36); Lewis, N. B., “The English Forces in Flanders, August-November, 1297,” Studies in Medieval History Presented to Frederick Maurice Powicke, ed. Hunt, R. W., Pantin, W. A., and Southern, R. W. (Oxford, 1948)Google Scholar; Morris, J. E., “Cumberland and Westmorland Military Levies in the Time of Edward I and Edward II,” Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, new series, III (1903)Google Scholar; Morris, J. E., “Mounted Infantry in Mediaeval Warfare,” Trans. Roy. Hist. Soc., third series, VIII (1914)Google Scholar; Powicke, M. R., “Distraint of Knighthood and Military Obligation under Henry III,” Speculum, XXV (1950)Google Scholar; M.-R. Powicke, “Obligations to Cavalry Service under Edward I,” Ibid., XXVIII (1953).
2. Stubbs, William, The Constitutional History of England (4th ed.; Oxford, 1906), II, 220–22, 290–99Google Scholar.
3. Morris, J. E., Welsh Wars of Edward the First (Oxford, 1901)Google Scholar.
4. Oman, C. W. C., A History of the Art of War in the Middle Ages (Edinburgh, 1923)Google Scholar.
5. Tout, T. F., Chapters in the Administrative History of Medieval England (Manchester, 1920–1933)Google Scholar.
6. Powicke, Sir Maurice, The Thirteenth Century (Oxford, 1953)Google Scholar.
7. Powicke, M. R., Military Obligation in Medieval England (Oxford, 1962)Google Scholar.
8. The best analysis of distraints of knighthood in England is by M. R. Powicke. See note 1.
9. Calendar of Chancery Rolls (Various), 1277–1326 (London, 1912)Google Scholar.
10. Tout, , Administrative History, IIGoogle Scholar, Sec. 6, “The Wardrobe in War Time.”
11. Ibid., II, 143.
12. Gough, Henry (ed.), Scotland in 1298 (London, 1888), p. 58Google Scholar.
13. Chancery Miscellany C47/2/16/5, 5 Aug. 1297.
14. Tout, , Administrative History, VI, 30Google Scholar.
15. Ibid., VI, 28.
16. Ibid.
17. Ibid., VI, 20.
18. Powicke, Sir Maurice and Fryde, E. B. (eds.), Handbook of British Chronology (2nd ed.; London, 1961), p. 234Google Scholar.
19. Ramsay, J. H., Dawn of the Constitution (Oxford, 1908), p. 479Google Scholar.
20. Stubbs, , Constitutional History, II, 157.Google Scholar For a detailed outline of Langton's career, see Beardwood, Alice, “The Trial of Walter Langton, Bishop of Lichfield, 1307–1312,” Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc., new series, LIV (1964), Pt. 3Google Scholar.
21. Stevenson, Joseph (ed.), Documents Illustrative of the History of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1870), I, 204–08Google Scholar.
22. Calendar of Chancery Warrants Preserved in the Public Record Office, A.D. 1244–1326 (London, 1927), p. 44Google Scholar.
23. Ibid., p. 58.
24. Powicke, and Fryde, , Handbook of British Chronology, p. 100Google Scholar.
25. Bain, Joseph (ed.), Calendar of Documents relating to Scotland (Edinburgh, 1884), II, Nos. 645, 835Google Scholar.
26. Ramsay, , Dawn of the Constitution, p. 455Google Scholar.
27. Morris, , Welsh Wars, p. 254Google Scholar.
28. Palgrave, Francis (ed.), Parliamentary Writs and Writs of Military Summons, etc. (London, 1827), I, 29/3Google Scholar; Lords Report on the Dignity of a Peer (London, 1820–1829), III, 66Google Scholar.
29. Palgrave, , Parliamentary Writs, I, 270/15Google Scholar.
30. Ibid., I, 266/2.
31. Bain, , Calendar, II, Nos. 916, 917, 936, 943, 949Google Scholar.
32. Ibid., II, Nos. 936, 943, 949.
33. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 206–08Google Scholar.
34. Ibid.
35. Ibid., II, 204–05.
36. Ibid., II, 205.
37. Ibid., II, 221, 222.
38. Ramsay, , Dawn of the Constitution, p. 454Google Scholar.
39. Bain, , Calendar, II, No. 1597Google Scholar.
40. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 135Google Scholar.
41. Ibid., I, 204–05.
42. Ibid., I, 206.
43. Tout, , Administrative History, II, 16–17;Google ScholarPowicke, and Fryde, , Handbook of British Chronology, p. 78Google Scholar.
44. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 19Google Scholar.
45. Calendar of Chancery Rolls, pp. 67–75, passim.
46. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 20–21.Google Scholar This startling figure is a clear indication of the seriousness of Edward's purpose.
47. Ibid., II, 135.
48. Ibid., II, 195.
49. Ibid., II, 237.
50. Ibid., II, 242.
51. Ibid., II, 247.
52. Ibid., II, 252–53.
53. Ibid., II, 254–55.
54. Ibid., II, 252.
55. Ibid., II, 255–56.
56. Ibid., II, 260–61.
57. Calendar of Chancery Warrants, p. 91.
58. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 277–78Google Scholar.
59. Ibid., II, 278–79.
60. Calendar of Chancery Warrants, p. 94.
61. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 297Google Scholar.
62. Ibid., II, 313.
63. Ibid., II, 365–66; Bain, , Calendar, II, No. 1086Google Scholar.
64. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 387–88Google Scholar; Bain, , Calendar, II, No. 1081Google Scholar.
65. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 404–05Google Scholar.
66. Bain, , Calendar, II, No. 1133Google Scholar.
67. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 452–53Google Scholar.
68. Ibid.
69. Ramsay says that the Irish troops were in the pay of the Scots, but the sense of Valence's message comes clear only when the Irish are assumed to be in the pay of the English. In the passage, “et les gentz d'Irlaunde que sount de leur gages,” the pronoun “leur” refers to Richard de Bremmesgrave and Alexander de Bykenore, paymasters of Valence's forces. Ramsay, , Dawn of the Constitution, p. 490Google Scholar.
70. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 447Google Scholar.
71. Ibid., II, 475–76.
72. Ibid., II, 479–80.
73. Bain, , Calendar, II, No. 1575Google Scholar.
74. Ibid., II, No. 1578.
75. Ibid., II, No. 1587.
76. Ibid., II, No. 1590.
77. Ibid., II, No. 1595.
78. Stevenson, , Documents, II, 308–09Google Scholar.
79. Ibid., II, 520–21.
80. Bain, , Calendar, II, No. 1389Google Scholar.
81. Ibid., II, No. 1625.
82. Ibid., II, No. 1923.
83. Powicke, M. R., Military Obligation, ch. viiiGoogle Scholar.
84. Ibid., p. 157.
85. Prince, A. E., “The Army and Navy,” The English Government at Work, 1327–1336, I, ed. Willard, James F. and Morris, William A. (Cambridge, Mass., 1940), 344Google Scholar, for a muster that was almost a carbon copy of one of Edward I's.
86. Newhall, R. A., Muster and Review (Cambridge, Mass., 1940), pp. 15–96Google Scholar.