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The King's Secretary in The Fifteenth Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 February 2009
Extract
The term secretanus was employed in England from the beginning of the thirteenth century in the varying meanings of a confidential clerk, an ambassador, or a member of the king's council. This undifferentiated use of the word had, however, practically ceased by the reign of Richard II, if not earlier, and from 1377 the secretanus regis is the holder of a definite office in the king's household, the king's confidential clerk a whose primary function is the custody of the king's signet.
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References
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page 90 note 1 In All Souls' College, Oxford, MS. 182. I am indebted to the generosity of the Warden and Fellows of the College, who deposited the manuscript in the Public Record Office so that I might study it, and also to the late Miss M. V. Clarke of Somerville College, who in spite of her prior claim to the manuscript consented to my making use of it for this paper. An edition of the manuscript begun under her direction is being completed by Miss D. Legge of Somerville College.
page 90 note 2 MS. Royal 10 B. IX. This manuscript is of very mixed composition, but ff. 1–8 contain letters identical with, though less abbreviated, and in almost the same order as letters on ff. 207–12 of the All Souls' MS. This section and ff. 254–6 were evidently part of a much larger compilation of secretarial origin, but contain letters as late as 1411, while the secretarial portions of the All Souls' MS. are not later than the reign of Richard II. Although fragmentary in its present form, this formulary gives the sealing clauses which are frequently omitted, without which it is impossible to determine whether a letter was issued under the signet or under the privy seal.
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page 91 note 6 Ibid., f. 265.
page 91 note 7 Ibid., f. 206d.
page 91 note 8 Ibid., f. 233d.
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