cuius sapientia
conditae
sunt leges subscriptae quas Anglicanas vocamus.
Cambridge Medieval History - v5 - Contest of Empire and the Papacy
The re-organisation
of the Exchequer is unnoticed. From the second year of the reign, the
Pipe Roll of each year, or, as it was more properly called, the Great
Roll of the Exchequer, records the financial administration of the year.
The early rolls are small. They shew that the king and his ministers had
to contend with the financial difficulties presented by land wasted in the
anarchy, or granted away to buy support for the king. Nigel, Bishop
of Ely, nephew of Roger, Bishop of Salisbury, remained treasurer until
he bought the office for his son Richard, who was to become the author
of the treatise known as the Dialogus de Scaccario', and who continued
as treasurer into the reign of Richard I. To these men is due the honour
of elaborating the system of the Exchequer. Richard is not known
to have taken an active part in any other administrative work; unlike
most Exchequer officials, he did not act regularly as a judge. He writes
of the Exchequer as a man writes whose life-work lies in the subject of
which he treats. When he wrote the Dialogus, the business of the
Exchequer was transacted at two great annual sessions at Easter and
Michaelmas, over which the Justiciar presided. Already in Henry's fifth
1 The dates of both the beginning and end of Richard's official career are un-
certain. The date generally accepted for the purchase of the office on his behalf by
Nigel is 1158, but at the Easter session of the Exchequer in 1162 a quittance from
Danegeld was attested by Nigel, Bishop of Ely, Robert, Earl of Leicester, and the
other barons (Lincoln Cathedral, Registrum Antiquissimum, f. 36). It is generally
stated that Richard held the office until his death, but at some date after 1194 he
granted certain houses in Westminster to his beloved kinsman William, the king's
treasurer (Cott. Faust. A. in f. 248). The word consanguineus is important as
proving kinship between William of Ely and Richard Fitz Nigel.
CH. XVII.
## p. 574 (#620) ############################################
574 The Exchequer and the Barons of the Exchequer
year, John, the king's Marshal, when granting land, states that his
charter was sealed at the Exchequer in the Easter term and before Robert,
Earl of Leicester, and Richard de Luci.
This great department of State was inherited from Henry I and Roger,
Bishop of Salisbury. Each officer of high rank had his definite seat there.
The Justiciar sat at the head of the exchequer board, a rectangular table,
five feet by ten, covered with a chequered cloth; on his left sat the
Chancellor, and on his right, when Richard wrote, the Bishop of Win-
chester, Richard of Ilchester, sat by the king's command. These three
filled the head of the table. On the Chancellor's left, though not at the
table, sat the Constable, the Chamberlains, and the Marshal. Along
the side of the table to the right of the Bishop of Winchester sat the
Treasurer and the clerks. At the foot of the table, opposite the Bishop
of Winchester, sat another skilled financier, master Thomas Brown, and
next to him, opposite the Justiciar, sat the sheriff or other person who
was rendering account. Along the remaining side sat the tally-cutter,
the calculator, and the clerk who was at the head of the writing office.
At the same side of the table sat other “discreet men sent by the king,
a phrase which must have had a wide application. Most men who were
employed on the king's business did at times sit at the Exchequer. It
was far more than a financial office; it was the heart of the government.
Becket's biographer, William Fitz Stephen, says of the Exchequer that
there the pleas of the king were wont to be heard; and the surviving final
concords of Henry's reign illustrate the judicial business that was done
there. Many if not most of the judges employed by Henry in his latter
years were Exchequer officials, “barons of the Exchequer,” men who
normally sat there; such persons must be understood by the phrase "dis-
creet men sent by the king. ” They were barons of the Exchequer, although
they did not hold any definite office there or have any definite seat.
The duties of such men were doubtless undefined; they took their share
in whatever work there was to do, judicial, financial, or adıninistrative.
Exemption from fiscal burdens per libertatem sedendi ad scaccarium was
enjoyed by men who are not known to have held any of the definite
offices of state.
The Justiciar presided over the Exchequer, because by origin it was
a session of the king's court and the Justiciar was the man who represented
the king in his absence. By the end of Henry's reign, the dignity and
work of the office of Justiciar were well defined. He was second to the
king in the kingdom, and governed the country when the king was
abroad in accordance with the directions sent him by the king. At such
times he disposed of every sort of business that arose, whether it concerned
the Church, the State, or the king's private affairs. He presided at the
election of bishops; he saw to the fortification of castles; he sat as a
judge; he provided for the sending of necessaries to the king for his
hunting, or for other purposes. His duties were less onerous when the
## p. 575 (#621) ############################################
The Justiciar
575
king was in England, but even then there was much routine work to be
done. The Pipe Rolls shew that throughout the late twelfth century the
Justiciar actually sat at the Exchequer for the ordinary business of the
session. By the middle of Henry's reign it was established that he alone
among
officials could issue writs in his own name to authorise the payment
of the king's moneys out of the king's treasury. To the end of John's
reign, the Justiciar normally presided over the king's court of justice at
Westminster. From the sixth year of Richard I, the Feet of Fines, which
begin at that date, shew the Justiciar sitting there, day after day, the
chief among the judges. Difficult cases were referred to him by the
justices itinerant in the shires. The evidence which has survived from
the reign of Henry II suggests that the same practice was already usual
in Henry's later years. From time to time, the Justiciar himself led
parties of justices itinerant. His title, Capitalis Iusticiarius Regis,
expresses the truth; he was the chief justice in actual fact. But he was also
at the same time a politician, a soldier, and a financier. The king's
service in the twelfth century did not admit of specialisation.
It is in the conception of the position and duties of the Justiciar that
the difference between the earlier and later parts of Henry's reign is most
clearly shewn. It is doubtful if the idea of a permanent head of the
administration was fully developed in 1154. Under Henry I, Bishop
Roger of Salisbury had held a position comparable to that of the later
Justiciar. But in that reign, although Roger used the definite title
Procurator, applied by some chroniclers to the Justiciars of Henry II, it
was possible for Henry I's queen to do work which later in the century
would have fallen to the Justiciar. Moreover, although Roger presided
at the Exchequer, Ralf and Richard Basset, father and son, seem to have
acted in turn as the head of the judicial body. There is no record of
the appointment by Henry II of his first two Justiciars, Robert, Earl of
Leicester, and Richard de Luci, nor is it easy to find evidence of their
labours in the early years of the reign. The fact that they were presiding
together over the Easter Exchequer of Henry's fifth year shews that the
control of finance was already an essential part of their duties. Both of
them had served Stephen, and Richard had served him consistently to the
end; both were past their youth in 1154. It was natural that Henry
should have been unwilling to allow them in the early years of the reign
the wide powers which belonged to the later Justiciars. They were
mainly occupied with routine work; the king's confidence was given to
Thomas of London, his Chancellor.
Viceregal power did not automatically belong to the Justiciar. That
Queen Eleanor should act in Henry's place in Aquitaine was natural, for the
land was her inheritance, but, like the queens of William I and Henry I
before her, she seems to have acted in a similar capacity in England.
The Pipe Rolls of Henry's earliest years contain numerous entries of
money paid out or pardoned on her writ. In one instance, the writ of "the
1
CH. XVII.
## p. 576 (#622) ############################################
576
Development of the office
queen and the Justiciar” is said to be the authority. A writ of the king
from over-sea was her authority for issuing a writ at Oxford forbidding
that the abbey of St Benet of Holme should be impleaded in the king's
absence! The queen's writ was attested by Richard de Luci. Later in
the reign, the young king had his brief period of delegated power.
Although its limitations caused him to rebel, he certainly exercised
some of the powers of a Justiciar? The king wrote to him to announce
the end of the Becket quarrel, and to command him to cause the archbishop
to be put into possession of his lands. In writs of which copies have
survived, the young king commands Peter of Studley to observe the
agreement which he has made with Godwine of Warwicks, and commands
Roger Foliot to warrant to the monks of Biddlesden the land which he
has given them“. When a collection of the young king's writs has been
made, it will certainly shew him to have been entrusted with considerable
administrative responsibility in England in the time immediately preceding
his rebellion.
In the early years of the reign, the Justiciar was not, as at a later
time, the only officer whose writ could authorise the payment of money
from the Treasury. The establishment of this Exchequer rule seems to
coincide with Becket's resignation of secular power. Becket himself took
an important part in the business of financial administration. The Pipe
Roll of 1162, the last year of his chancellorship, records no less than nine
writs by which Becket either authorises the payment of money from the
Treasury or pardons debts. The Earl of Leicester issued only one such
writ in this year, while Richard de Luci issued none, though three sepa-
rate payments are said to have been made “through” him-per Ricardum
de Lui. Although in each year previous to 1162 payments were made
either “through” Richard de Luci or by his command-precepto Ricardi
de Luci- it is not until 1163 that the Roll records a financial writ issued
in the joint names of the two justiciars. In the years before 1162 it was
not Richard de Luci but the queen or the Earl of Leicester who issued
the recorded writs on which the Treasury officials took action. The rolls
of those years record many payments made “through" or "by command of"
other persons—the Chancellor, or, on rare occasions, Nigel, Bishop of Ely.
Payments on the Earl of Leicester's writ are recorded on each successive
roll from 1159 to 1163. The king's presence in England between January
1163 and March 1166 meant that the Pipe Rolls offer little evidence of
the financial authority of his justiciars, but the roll for 1167 shews the
earl and Richard in full control of the administration; it records fourteen
writs issued by Richard and twenty-one issued by the earl. The king
1 Cott. MSS. Galba E. i f. 33 d.
? He presided over a session of the Exchequer at Winchester. EHR, vi (1891),
P. 364.
3 P. R. O. Exchequer K. R. Misc. Bks. 22 f. xxxix.
4 Harl. MSS. 3688 f. 20.
## p. 577 (#623) ############################################
Power of the Justiciar
577
was sending his writs to them, and they were acting on the commands
contained therein. The impression created by the Pipe Rolls is that in the
early years of the reign the control of finance was not yet concentrated
in the hands of the justiciars.
With few exceptions, the chroniclers say little of the Justiciar's work
in the early years of the reign. Gervase of Canterbury speaks of the Earls
of Leicester and Cornwall as wise, famous, and most powerful in the
kingdom, but he nowhere gives to the Earl of Leicester the title of
justiciar. Of Richard de Luci, Gervase states, under the year 1166, that
he had the rule in England-prefecturam agebat in Anglia. Roger of
Howden records an assertion by Becket that the barons of the Exchequer
and Richard de Luci,“Justiciar of England," had given him quittance of
his accounts before he was elected archbishop. Ralph de Diceto applies
the phrase justiciarius regis to both the Earl of Leicester and Richard de
Luci. The judicial work of the justiciars had little interest for the
ordinary chronicler, unless his own house was concerned in a plea. The
most familiar illustrations of their activity come from the History of
Abingdon and the Chronicle of Battle. Between 1160 and 1164, the
Earl of Leicester presided over a plea in the shire-court of Berkshire
touching the right of the Abbot of Abingdon to hold a market there.
The earl first heard the plea by virtue of the king's writ from over-sea.
When Henry returned in January 1163, the case came up again before
his justices at Oxford. Opinions varied, and the earl, who was present as
justiciarius et judex, did not presume to give judgment, but went to con-
sult the king. Between 1139 and 1171, Richard de Luci's brother Walter
was Abbot of Battle. The Chronicle of that house describes at length
an important plea which he prosecuted against the Bishop of Chichester
in 1157. The Earl of Leicester was present among the barons, but his
office is not mentioned, nor does he appear to have taken a prominent
part in the discussion; Richard de Luci acted on his brother's behalf.
The Chancellor seems to have led the debate, and the suit ended in a
compromise to the abbot's advantage, arranged by the king. In a suit
against Gilbert de Balliol, the abbot, though his brother was Justiciar,
had some trouble in obtaining a hearing in the king's court. At last it
was heard at Clarendon before the king. Richard de Luci, vir magnificus
et prudens, “at that time chief justice of the king," was present, but only
appears in the account of the plea as the advocate of his brother's cause.
When the king sat in person, the Justiciar was present in court as a
baron, not as a judge. Isolated administrative documents which illustrate
the Justiciar's activity suggest that his position was more important than
would be gathered from the accounts of famous pleas before the king.
Between 1156 and 1165, the Earl of Leicester presided over the knights
of Nottinghamshire when they defined the boundary between the land of
the Archbishop of York and the king's forest of Sherwood'. By virtue
1 Thoroton, History of Nottinghamshire, ed. 1790, Vol. 11, p. 160.
C. MED, H. vOL. v. CH. XVII.
37
## p. 578 (#624) ############################################
578
Richard de Luci and Ranulf de Glanville
of the king's writ from over-sea, he commanded “the king's barons of
Hastings to allow the Abbot of St Benet of Holme peaceable possession
of his lands in Yarmouth. "" The king laid on him the duty of constraining
the Earl of Norfolk to do the castle-guard at Norwich which he held of
St Edmund'. Magnus fuit hic.
Until within a year of his death in 1179, Richard de Luci continued
to perform the duties of Justiciar. No discreditable tales are told of him.
The worst that can be said is that he supported his brother, the Abbot of
Battle, in his efforts to give effect to the claims of his house, and it is very
doubtful if he went beyond the law in his support. He was honest enough
to oppose the king when Henry began to prosecute men for forest offences
which he had himself allowed at the time of the rebellion of 1174. Richard
must have been an able administrator and a skilled judge; many of the
reforms of Henry's reign in legal and administrative matters were initiated
while he was Justiciar. His successor was a man no less able but more
unscrupulous, Ranulf de Glanville, who was appointed Justiciar in 1180.
Of an East Anglian family of no special importance, Ranulf early entered
the king's service, and already in 1164 was sheriff of Yorkshire. His
conduct as sheriff cannot have been beyond reproach, for he was deprived
of his office between 1170 and 1175, doubtless as a result of the Inquest
of Sheriffs in 1170, but he was reinstated after the rebellion of 1174. The
part which he took in the capture of the King of Scots may well have
been the cause of his reinstatement. The Pipe Roll of 1177 contains a
curious entry that Ranulf has accounted for more than fifteen hundred
pounds derived partly from the county and partly from the lands of
Everard de Ros which he had held in custody. The king pardoned the
whole amount, but the entry suggests that there may have been good
reason for Ranulf's removal from his sheriffdom. Further light is cast on
the Justiciar's character by a story told by the chronicler known as Benedict
of Peterborough and corroborated by entries on the Pipe Roll of 1184.
There seems little doubt that Ranulf strained the law in the hope of
securing the execution of Gilbert de Plumpton, in order that his widow,
an heiress, might become the wife of Reiner of Waxham, Ranulf's steward.
Whatever his faults, Ranulf suited Henry, whose service demanded ability
and fidelity rather than too strict an honour, and during the last ten years
of Henry's reign Ranulf was the dominating figure in English administra-
tion. That he wrote the legal treatise which bears his name is most probable;
it must have been written while he was Justiciar. It has been suggested
that it was written by his nephew Hubert Walter, himself afterwards
Justiciar and Archbishop of Canterbury. Hubert had been brought up
by Ranulf de Glanville and his wife, and that he should write an account
of the practice of the king's court at his patron's request is not in itself
unlikely. Yet even if the words in which Roger of Howden, the chronicler
and judge, introduces the earliest text of the treatise do not prove that
i Cott. Galba E. 11 f. 33d.
2 Brit. Mus. Add. MSS. 14847 f. 37.
## p. 579 (#625) ############################################
Chancellor, Treasurer, and curiales
579
Glanville himself wrote it, they certainly imply that it was written at his
inspiration and, in all probability, under his guidance'.
Between the earlier and later parts of Henry's reign there occurred a
remarkable change in the personnel of the administration. Richard de
Luci was one of the last men in constant touch with the king who had
shared in the early labours of re-organisation. There was, in particular, a
definite break in the development of the office of Chancellor. Throughout
the twelfth century, the importance of any individual curialis depended
rather upon his relations with the king than upon the office which he held.
The peculiar importance of the chancellorship in the early years of the
reign was due to Becket's intimacy with Henry. Between the time of
Becket's resignation and the spring of 1173, the king's seal was apparently
kept by Geoffrey Ridel, Becket's successor as Archdeacon of Canterbury.
Although Geoffrey seems to have done the Chancellor's work, it is not
certain that he was ever appointed to the office. In 1173, Henry appointed
Ralf de Warneville Chancellor. This appointment coincides nearly, though
not precisely, with a remarkable change in the royal style. Until at least
May 1172, charters composed in the royal chancery uniformly style the
king Rex Anglorum et dux Normannorum et Aquitannorum et comes
Andegavorum. In charters known to issue from the chancery after May
1173 these titles are preceded by the formula dei gratia. It is difficult
to find evidence of Ralf's presence in England, where he seems normally
to have been represented by Walter of Coutances, then Archdeacon of
Oxford, afterwards Bishop of Lincoln, Archbishop of Rouen, and for a
short time Justiciar of England. The last Chancellor of the reign was
Geoffrey, the king's illegitimate son, who in 1181 resigned the see of
Lincoln before consecration in order to take the office.
The office of Treasurer remained with the kin of Roger of Salisbury
not only throughout Henry's reign but into the reign of Henry III? . The
Treasurer's work was more specialised than that of any other official, and
he was essentially a financial officer. Until the appointment of Eustace
de Fauconberg early in the reign of Henry III, the treasurers were not
much concerned with general administration; Richard Fitz Nigel rarely
appears among the persons who attest the writs and charters of Henry II.
The names which are most prominent in the attestation clauses of Henry's
charters belong to a small number of men who, in the strict sense of the
word, may be styled curiales. Few of them held high baronial rank, and
most of them possessed definite office in the king's household. In the first
years of the reign, Thomas Becket, the Chancellor, was generally with the
1 “. . .
cuius sapientia conditae sunt leges subscriptae quas Anglicanas vocamus. "
Howden, 11, 215. Maitland's doubt as to Glanville's authorship of the treatise rests
on an unusual translation of the verb condo. The normal translation of condo in
this context would be to write down or compile. A comparison of the treatise with
the surviving judicial records of the early thirteenth century shews that it is the
work of a practised judge.
2 Cf. supra p. 573, note.
CH. XVII.
37-2
## p. 580 (#626) ############################################
580
The Sheriffs
king. Manasser Biset the steward, Warin Fitz Gerald the chamberlain,
Richard de Humez the constable, were his constant companions. Until
his disgrace, Henry of Essex, as constable, was constantly attendant on the
king. Unlike his fellows of the household, he was of baronial rank. His
forfeited honour was given by the king to Henry Fitz Gerald, brother
of Warin, and like him a chamberlain. In the later years of the reign, the
personnel of the court was more varied; judges, and other men who served
the king without definite office, appear beside the regular household
officials. Much research remains to be done upon the curiales of Henry II.
That he reposed great confidence in them is certain. He rewarded them
with land, but not lavishly, though some of them have left their names
to English villages: Manasser Biset is immortalised in the name of Preston
Bisset in Buckinghamshire. Before the end of the reign there are definite
traces of the organisation which was to develop into the wardrobe of the
thirteenth century. The names of many chamber-clerks appear on twelfth-
century Pipe Rolls. They were already employed in administrative work
as well as in purely household functions. It is only from the examination of
unprinted documents that more can be learned of their origin and status.
If the men in the king's immediate service are as a body obscure, his
sheriffs are all known by name, and their territorial position can often
be ascertained precisely. The office still gives a field for research, but it
is certain that during the reigns of Henry II and his sons the sheriff
took the first and all-important steps towards his present position of
forgotten dignity. The Norman kings had suffered from the over-mighty
sheriff, and had tried to check his power. Henry I had often put his
own curiales into sheriffdoms and united several counties in the hands
of one or two trusted ministers. But the lists of sheriffs in Henry II's
early years still shew baronial names. In Devonshire, the earl was sheriff
until 1157. Northumberland was held by William de Vesci from 1157
to 1170, and by Roger de Stuteville from 1170 to 1185. William de
Beauchamp was sheriff of Worcestershire from 1155 to 1169, of Glou-
cestershire from 1157 to 1163, and of Herefordshire from 1160 to
1169. Wiltshire was held by Patrick, Earl of Salisbury, from 1155 to
1160. Throughout the reign, Shropshire was held by local magnates.
A baron was not inevitably the king's opponent, and a baronial sheriff
may have been as good an officer as any curialis. Moreover, many
sheriffs of baronial rank held their offices because they had become
curiales, and were competing for the prizes which the king's service
offered. Ranulf de Glanville was the chief among many such men.
Many of Henry's sheriffs were undistinguished knights in the counties
they held. Adam de Catmere, sheriff of Berkshire from 1160 to 1170,
and of Oxfordshire from 1164 to 1170, held half a knight's fee at Cat-
more in Berkshire of William, Earl of Derby. The south Lincolnshire
knight, Alfred of Pointon, sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1166 and 1167, and
again from 1170 to 1174, held three knight's fees of Maurice de Craon,
.
## p. 581 (#627) ############################################
The Sheriff's work
581
and was his steward. Even at the beginning of the reign, some shires
were held by curiales. The important county of Hampshire was held
by a succession of them. Turstin, sheriff until 1160, had been the clerk
of a chamberlain in the reign of Henry 11. His son succeeded him, and
was followed from 1170 to 1179 by Hugh de Gundeville. From 1174
to 1177 Hugh was also sheriff of Northamptonshire, from 1177 to 1179
he was sheriff of Devon, and his name frequently occurs in lists of
Henry's judges. From 1155 to 1160 Northamptonshire was held by
another minister who often served as judge, Simon son of Peter of Brix-
worth in that county. By the end of the reign it was the rule rather
than the exception that the sheriffs should be ministeriales. The change
was probably the result of Henry's policy rather than the policy itself.
Henry was controlling the excesses of sheriffs, and at the same time
increasing their work, so that barons may have become less anxious to
hold the office. The large sums offered, though not always paid, for
shrievalties at the beginning of Richard's reign may suggest that the
buyers hoped for laxer administrative control under a new king-a hope
that was not realised.
The judicial reforms introduced by Henry II materially increased the
labours of the sheriff. In addition to the financial and military responsi-
bilities which had lain upon him in the Norman time, he was now required
to give effect to an elaborate system of centralised justice. The earliest
rolls of the itinerant justices reveal the unceasing labours of the sheriff
in the time of Henry's sons. He was responsible for the most minute
details of judicial administration; he must receive and produce the writs
which began the innumerable pleas resulting from Henry's legal re-
forms; he was responsible for summoning every person necessary for the
conduct of a plea; he had to give effect to the justices' decisions, and
keep a record of his action; he must answer for the most meagre chattels
of criminals that had fallen in to the king. Any failure in the perform-
ance of these duties meant that he would be called to account before the
justices. It is not remarkable that curiales appear in increasing numbers
among the sheriffs of Henry's later years. Unless the sheriffs were brought
into close relations with the king, his plan of a judicial organisation
extending over the whole land and centring upon his court was bound to
be fruitless.
In 1170 Henry sent bodies of commissioners or justices round the
country to inquire touching the behaviour of the sheriffs, their bailiffs,
and all who were doing the king's business in the shires. Generally
known as the “Inquest of Sheriffs," the inquiry had a much wider scope.
)
It entered into the financial relationship between lords and their men,
with which the king had normally no concern. It covered only the
four years of Henry's recent absence abroad. Two fragments of the
original returns have survived, relating respectively to East Anglia and
1 Round, The Rise of the Pophams, in The Ancestor, vii, 59.
CH. XVII.
## p. 582 (#628) ############################################
582
The Inquest of Sheriff's
the borough of Worcester. The East Anglian fragment relates almost
exclusively to the payments made to the Earl of Arundel and other barons
by the men on their own land and on land held in custody. Payments
were made to the earl to help him in his work on the Marches of Wales,
in his expedition to France, in his difficulties with the Jews, in his con-
tribution to the aid for marrying the king's daughter, and in his journey
to Saxony with her. The Worcester fragment, on the other hand, deals
almost entirely with payments to the sheriff. It shews that the sheriff,
William de Beauchamp, took from the borough forty-two pounds in the
first two years in question, and fifty pounds in the last two years. The
farm of the borough was fixed at twenty-four pounds when, at a later
time, the burgesses were allowed to pay it direct into the Exchequer.
The burgesses also made payments to him for the conveyance of treasure
and prisoners, and on the occasion of his daughter's marriage. William
de Beauchamp was one of the sheriffs removed before the inquiry was
made, and many others were removed afterwards. Only in Cumberland,
Devon, Kent, Rutland, Staffordshire, Surrey, and Wiltshire, was the
custody of the shire in the same hand for any appreciable period before
and after 1170. Of these counties, Rutland was held by the king's
constable, Richard de Humez, and Surrey and Kent were in the custody
of Gervase of Cornhill, a member of a family which owed its wealth to
London trade and had entered the king's service. It is evident from the
fact of the enquiry that the king did not intend the government of the
shires through sheriffs and other officers to rest on exploitation. No
other enquiry was made in this reign with the principal object of dis-
covering the abuses in local government, but, when the king's justices
went round the country, people had the opportunity, if they dared to use
it, of expressing their grievances. On the Lincoln Assize Roll of 1202
occurs an entry to the effect that certain sums of money have been taken
from merchants to the use of the sheriff, his bailiff, and his bailiff's clerk,
for the right of leading corn from county to county through England.
It must have been possible for the sheriff to make considerable profits
in a legitimate way. The amounts of his profits from the local courts of
justice must have depended on the justice he gave, and a period of peace
and careful management meant that the value of the royal land farmed
by the sheriff increased considerably. That Henry II had no intention
of allowing the sheriff to obtain the whole of this increment is shewn by
the fact that he had to account for variable amounts, known later as
incrementa, apart from and in addition to his farm. Even so, the sheriff
must have made money on his farm. The incrementa were unpopular
alike with the sheriffs and the people, and the first issue of Magna Carta
declared that counties should be at their old farms, without any incre-
ment, a clause that, for obvious financial reasons, it was impossible to
retain. When lands escheated to the king, they were generally farmed
by the sheriff or by some magnate or curialis who was recompensed for
## p. 583 (#629) ############################################
The Sheriff's aid
583
his trouble by the amount he raised beyond the sum for which he farmed
the escheat. But sometimes escheated lands were held in custodia, that
is, the holder strictly accounted for them to the king. Like that of his
father, the reign of Richard I was a time of administrative reform. The
large amount of land that came in to the king in 1194, mainly as a
result of his brother's rebellion, necessitated fresh arrangements. Two
escheators were appointed, William de Sanctae Mariae Ecclesia, and
Hugh Bardolf, who held the escheats in custody, and rendered detailed
accounts for them. William held the escheated lands in the southern
and Hugh in the northern part of England. It was doubtless experi-
ments like this, compelled by the pressure of increasing business, which
suggested the practice, developed in the next century, of sometimes
letting shires themselves to their sheriffs in custodia instead of ad firmam.
In addition to profits of uncertain amount and diverse origin, the
sheriff was entitled to a customary payment from the men of the shire,
known as the sheriff's aid. This payment enters into general history as
one of the causes of dispute between Henry II and Becket in 1163. The
king is said to have wished to annex the money given to the sheriffs to
his own revenues. It is probable that he intended the sheriffs to account
at the Exchequer for the sheriff's aid as for the money which they col-
lected on the king's behalf. The significance of his proposals can only
be conjectured, for they were abandoned in face of the archbishop's
protest. That Henry wished to take possession of the sheriff's aid with-
out compensation to the sheriffs for its loss is highly improbable; he
depended too much on his sheriffs to alienate them by an arbitrary
measure of confiscation. He may well have been feeling his way towards
an increased centralisation of local government, and wished, as a step
towards this end, to appropriate the ancient sheriff's aid and compensate
the sheriff's by a payment direct from the treasury. It is also probable
that his proposals were suggested by the close resemblance between the
sheriff's aid and the Danegeld. The sheriff's aid was a geld, a tax laid upon
land according to the assessment which determined the incidence of the
Danegeld; it descended from the fiscal system of King Edward's day.
Various passages in private charters shew that it was paid four times a year.
A Lincolnshire charter of the reign of Henry II refers to it as the “four
aids of the sheriff,” a Leicestershire charter as the “four gelds of the
shire. " It was natural that Henry should wish the sheriff's aid to follow
the other ancient gelds into his treasury. Had it done so, its amount
and incidence would be less obscure at the present day. In the reign of
Edward I, the sheriff's aid in the counties of Cambridge and Huntingdon
seems to have brought in approximately thirty pounds a year. It was not
an adequate recompense for the sheriff's manifold labours, but the
income which it brought him was not negligible.
Stenton, Danelaw Charters, p. 127. Haverholme Cartulary, Lincs. Notes and
Queries, Vol. xvii, p. 48.
1 יי
1
CH. XVII.
## p. 584 (#630) ############################################
584
Local justiciars
t
Even under the Norman kings, the sheriffs had not been the sole
dispensers of royal justice in the shires. Apart from the sporadic ap-
pearance of royal officials sent round the country to do justice, there is
evidence that already in the reign of William II local officers known as
justiciars were in existence. The local justiciarship can be traced through
the reigns of Henry I and Stephen, but it is not generally realised that
the office still existed in the reign of Henry II. In writs of Henry II,
few of which have yet been printed, there are definite references to the
justiciars of Lincoln', Norfolk”, Warwick*, Sussex`, York, and Notting-
ham'. It is probably to these officers that William of Newburgh refers
when he states, under the year 1154, that Henry “appointed in all the
districts of his kingdom ministers of right and law, to coerce the bold-
ness of the wicked, and do justice to those seeking it, according to the
merits of the cases. ” The relation of the local justiciar to the sheriff
and the shire-court is uncertain, but it is certain that he took precedence
of the sheriff in the shire.
The little that is known of these local justiciars suggests that Henry
did not long continue the practice of appointing them. In matters of
justice, he seems in his earliest years to have adopted his grandfather's
expedients, both employing local justices and sending out officers of his
court to do justice over a great stretch of the country. The year 1166
may be regarded as a turning-point. The Assize of Clarendon, issued in
that year, opens a new phase in the history of criminal jurisdiction in
England. The king then commanded that twelve lawful men of every
hundred and four lawful men of every village should declare on oath if any
in their hundred or village had been accused or suspected of being a robber,
murderer, or brigand, or a harbourer of such, since Henry became king.
The presentments of these jurors were to be taken before the sheriffs
and again before the justices. Those who were apprehended by reason
of such presentment were to have judgment before the king's justices
only, they were to go to the ordeal by water, and the chattels of the
guilty were to go to the king. Men of ill repute proved innocent by the
water were nevertheless to abjure the realm. Gaols were to be built in
counties where there were none, for the custody of prisoners awaiting the
coming of the justices. In the case of those apprehended in any other
way than through presentment, the procedure was to remain “as it was
and ought to be," a provision which allowed the sheriff' to deal with
crimes other than those specified, and with many minor offences, such
as petty assaults. This measure was a long stride towards centralisa-
tion. Ten years later, the Assize of Northampton, reinforcing that of
1 B. M. Harl. MSS. 742 f. 265. Cott. Vesp. E. xvi. f. 19b.
2 B. M. Cott. Galba E. 11 f. 31 d and 33d. Cott. Claud. D. xiu f. 41.
3 P. R. O. Exchequer K. R. Misc. Bks. 22 f. cxxv.
4 B. M. Cott. Faustina A. II f. 74b.
6 B. M. Cott. Vesp. E. xix f. 7.
## p. 585 (#631) ############################################
Judicial experiments
585
Clarendon, gave to the justices cognisance of other grave crimes which
had lain outside the scope of the earlier assize. For the first time in
English history, criminal justice was to be administered all over the
land in accordance with the same rules.
The years between 1166 and 1180 were years of experiment in the
centralisation of justice. The Assize of Clarendon was enforced by Earl
Geoffrey de Mandeville and Richard de Luci. The justiciarii or barones
errantes who conducted the Inquest of Sheriffs were large companies of
barons and clergy. But the judges who from 1168 onwards were doing
justice and assessing tallages in the shires were household and Exchequer
officials of the king. The Assize of Northampton of 1176 was put into
operation by six groups of three justices, whose work was made heavy
by the disturbance of the rebellion. When the king returned from
Normandy in 1178, he recalled the eighteen judges, and appointed five,
who were not to depart from his court but were to remain there to hear
complaints, so that if any matters needed special consideration they
could be determined by the king with the advice of his counsellors. This
provision originated no new court; it was an arrangement by which the
king, exercising his ancient prerogative of justice, might inspect the work
of his judges. He spent his time in England going from place to place,
and the five judges doubtless travelled with him. Richard de Luci retired
from the justiciarship in the next year, and Henry did not immediately
appoint a new Chief Justiciar. He divided the country into four districts
for the purpose of judicial administration. Ranulf de Glanville and
five other judges were placed in charge of the north; the three southern
districts were each put in charge of a bishop, who was also a curialis. In
1180 Glanville became Chief Justiciar. From that time, justices visited
the shires in almost every year. They inspected the local administration,
inquired into the king's rights, and assessed taxes; justice was only a
part of their work. These justices were intimately connected with the
Exchequer. It was thence they set out, and they returned there to hand
in their rolls; so the fact that the Exchequer was at Westminster
meant that Westminster became the centre of the judicial system. There,
judges sat almost continuously, for the Exchequer officials were the
judges. The justices de banco are the justices of the bench at West-
minster. They did not form a different court from that of the justices on
eyre; there was but one court, and that the king's.
of the Exchequer is unnoticed. From the second year of the reign, the
Pipe Roll of each year, or, as it was more properly called, the Great
Roll of the Exchequer, records the financial administration of the year.
The early rolls are small. They shew that the king and his ministers had
to contend with the financial difficulties presented by land wasted in the
anarchy, or granted away to buy support for the king. Nigel, Bishop
of Ely, nephew of Roger, Bishop of Salisbury, remained treasurer until
he bought the office for his son Richard, who was to become the author
of the treatise known as the Dialogus de Scaccario', and who continued
as treasurer into the reign of Richard I. To these men is due the honour
of elaborating the system of the Exchequer. Richard is not known
to have taken an active part in any other administrative work; unlike
most Exchequer officials, he did not act regularly as a judge. He writes
of the Exchequer as a man writes whose life-work lies in the subject of
which he treats. When he wrote the Dialogus, the business of the
Exchequer was transacted at two great annual sessions at Easter and
Michaelmas, over which the Justiciar presided. Already in Henry's fifth
1 The dates of both the beginning and end of Richard's official career are un-
certain. The date generally accepted for the purchase of the office on his behalf by
Nigel is 1158, but at the Easter session of the Exchequer in 1162 a quittance from
Danegeld was attested by Nigel, Bishop of Ely, Robert, Earl of Leicester, and the
other barons (Lincoln Cathedral, Registrum Antiquissimum, f. 36). It is generally
stated that Richard held the office until his death, but at some date after 1194 he
granted certain houses in Westminster to his beloved kinsman William, the king's
treasurer (Cott. Faust. A. in f. 248). The word consanguineus is important as
proving kinship between William of Ely and Richard Fitz Nigel.
CH. XVII.
## p. 574 (#620) ############################################
574 The Exchequer and the Barons of the Exchequer
year, John, the king's Marshal, when granting land, states that his
charter was sealed at the Exchequer in the Easter term and before Robert,
Earl of Leicester, and Richard de Luci.
This great department of State was inherited from Henry I and Roger,
Bishop of Salisbury. Each officer of high rank had his definite seat there.
The Justiciar sat at the head of the exchequer board, a rectangular table,
five feet by ten, covered with a chequered cloth; on his left sat the
Chancellor, and on his right, when Richard wrote, the Bishop of Win-
chester, Richard of Ilchester, sat by the king's command. These three
filled the head of the table. On the Chancellor's left, though not at the
table, sat the Constable, the Chamberlains, and the Marshal. Along
the side of the table to the right of the Bishop of Winchester sat the
Treasurer and the clerks. At the foot of the table, opposite the Bishop
of Winchester, sat another skilled financier, master Thomas Brown, and
next to him, opposite the Justiciar, sat the sheriff or other person who
was rendering account. Along the remaining side sat the tally-cutter,
the calculator, and the clerk who was at the head of the writing office.
At the same side of the table sat other “discreet men sent by the king,
a phrase which must have had a wide application. Most men who were
employed on the king's business did at times sit at the Exchequer. It
was far more than a financial office; it was the heart of the government.
Becket's biographer, William Fitz Stephen, says of the Exchequer that
there the pleas of the king were wont to be heard; and the surviving final
concords of Henry's reign illustrate the judicial business that was done
there. Many if not most of the judges employed by Henry in his latter
years were Exchequer officials, “barons of the Exchequer,” men who
normally sat there; such persons must be understood by the phrase "dis-
creet men sent by the king. ” They were barons of the Exchequer, although
they did not hold any definite office there or have any definite seat.
The duties of such men were doubtless undefined; they took their share
in whatever work there was to do, judicial, financial, or adıninistrative.
Exemption from fiscal burdens per libertatem sedendi ad scaccarium was
enjoyed by men who are not known to have held any of the definite
offices of state.
The Justiciar presided over the Exchequer, because by origin it was
a session of the king's court and the Justiciar was the man who represented
the king in his absence. By the end of Henry's reign, the dignity and
work of the office of Justiciar were well defined. He was second to the
king in the kingdom, and governed the country when the king was
abroad in accordance with the directions sent him by the king. At such
times he disposed of every sort of business that arose, whether it concerned
the Church, the State, or the king's private affairs. He presided at the
election of bishops; he saw to the fortification of castles; he sat as a
judge; he provided for the sending of necessaries to the king for his
hunting, or for other purposes. His duties were less onerous when the
## p. 575 (#621) ############################################
The Justiciar
575
king was in England, but even then there was much routine work to be
done. The Pipe Rolls shew that throughout the late twelfth century the
Justiciar actually sat at the Exchequer for the ordinary business of the
session. By the middle of Henry's reign it was established that he alone
among
officials could issue writs in his own name to authorise the payment
of the king's moneys out of the king's treasury. To the end of John's
reign, the Justiciar normally presided over the king's court of justice at
Westminster. From the sixth year of Richard I, the Feet of Fines, which
begin at that date, shew the Justiciar sitting there, day after day, the
chief among the judges. Difficult cases were referred to him by the
justices itinerant in the shires. The evidence which has survived from
the reign of Henry II suggests that the same practice was already usual
in Henry's later years. From time to time, the Justiciar himself led
parties of justices itinerant. His title, Capitalis Iusticiarius Regis,
expresses the truth; he was the chief justice in actual fact. But he was also
at the same time a politician, a soldier, and a financier. The king's
service in the twelfth century did not admit of specialisation.
It is in the conception of the position and duties of the Justiciar that
the difference between the earlier and later parts of Henry's reign is most
clearly shewn. It is doubtful if the idea of a permanent head of the
administration was fully developed in 1154. Under Henry I, Bishop
Roger of Salisbury had held a position comparable to that of the later
Justiciar. But in that reign, although Roger used the definite title
Procurator, applied by some chroniclers to the Justiciars of Henry II, it
was possible for Henry I's queen to do work which later in the century
would have fallen to the Justiciar. Moreover, although Roger presided
at the Exchequer, Ralf and Richard Basset, father and son, seem to have
acted in turn as the head of the judicial body. There is no record of
the appointment by Henry II of his first two Justiciars, Robert, Earl of
Leicester, and Richard de Luci, nor is it easy to find evidence of their
labours in the early years of the reign. The fact that they were presiding
together over the Easter Exchequer of Henry's fifth year shews that the
control of finance was already an essential part of their duties. Both of
them had served Stephen, and Richard had served him consistently to the
end; both were past their youth in 1154. It was natural that Henry
should have been unwilling to allow them in the early years of the reign
the wide powers which belonged to the later Justiciars. They were
mainly occupied with routine work; the king's confidence was given to
Thomas of London, his Chancellor.
Viceregal power did not automatically belong to the Justiciar. That
Queen Eleanor should act in Henry's place in Aquitaine was natural, for the
land was her inheritance, but, like the queens of William I and Henry I
before her, she seems to have acted in a similar capacity in England.
The Pipe Rolls of Henry's earliest years contain numerous entries of
money paid out or pardoned on her writ. In one instance, the writ of "the
1
CH. XVII.
## p. 576 (#622) ############################################
576
Development of the office
queen and the Justiciar” is said to be the authority. A writ of the king
from over-sea was her authority for issuing a writ at Oxford forbidding
that the abbey of St Benet of Holme should be impleaded in the king's
absence! The queen's writ was attested by Richard de Luci. Later in
the reign, the young king had his brief period of delegated power.
Although its limitations caused him to rebel, he certainly exercised
some of the powers of a Justiciar? The king wrote to him to announce
the end of the Becket quarrel, and to command him to cause the archbishop
to be put into possession of his lands. In writs of which copies have
survived, the young king commands Peter of Studley to observe the
agreement which he has made with Godwine of Warwicks, and commands
Roger Foliot to warrant to the monks of Biddlesden the land which he
has given them“. When a collection of the young king's writs has been
made, it will certainly shew him to have been entrusted with considerable
administrative responsibility in England in the time immediately preceding
his rebellion.
In the early years of the reign, the Justiciar was not, as at a later
time, the only officer whose writ could authorise the payment of money
from the Treasury. The establishment of this Exchequer rule seems to
coincide with Becket's resignation of secular power. Becket himself took
an important part in the business of financial administration. The Pipe
Roll of 1162, the last year of his chancellorship, records no less than nine
writs by which Becket either authorises the payment of money from the
Treasury or pardons debts. The Earl of Leicester issued only one such
writ in this year, while Richard de Luci issued none, though three sepa-
rate payments are said to have been made “through” him-per Ricardum
de Lui. Although in each year previous to 1162 payments were made
either “through” Richard de Luci or by his command-precepto Ricardi
de Luci- it is not until 1163 that the Roll records a financial writ issued
in the joint names of the two justiciars. In the years before 1162 it was
not Richard de Luci but the queen or the Earl of Leicester who issued
the recorded writs on which the Treasury officials took action. The rolls
of those years record many payments made “through" or "by command of"
other persons—the Chancellor, or, on rare occasions, Nigel, Bishop of Ely.
Payments on the Earl of Leicester's writ are recorded on each successive
roll from 1159 to 1163. The king's presence in England between January
1163 and March 1166 meant that the Pipe Rolls offer little evidence of
the financial authority of his justiciars, but the roll for 1167 shews the
earl and Richard in full control of the administration; it records fourteen
writs issued by Richard and twenty-one issued by the earl. The king
1 Cott. MSS. Galba E. i f. 33 d.
? He presided over a session of the Exchequer at Winchester. EHR, vi (1891),
P. 364.
3 P. R. O. Exchequer K. R. Misc. Bks. 22 f. xxxix.
4 Harl. MSS. 3688 f. 20.
## p. 577 (#623) ############################################
Power of the Justiciar
577
was sending his writs to them, and they were acting on the commands
contained therein. The impression created by the Pipe Rolls is that in the
early years of the reign the control of finance was not yet concentrated
in the hands of the justiciars.
With few exceptions, the chroniclers say little of the Justiciar's work
in the early years of the reign. Gervase of Canterbury speaks of the Earls
of Leicester and Cornwall as wise, famous, and most powerful in the
kingdom, but he nowhere gives to the Earl of Leicester the title of
justiciar. Of Richard de Luci, Gervase states, under the year 1166, that
he had the rule in England-prefecturam agebat in Anglia. Roger of
Howden records an assertion by Becket that the barons of the Exchequer
and Richard de Luci,“Justiciar of England," had given him quittance of
his accounts before he was elected archbishop. Ralph de Diceto applies
the phrase justiciarius regis to both the Earl of Leicester and Richard de
Luci. The judicial work of the justiciars had little interest for the
ordinary chronicler, unless his own house was concerned in a plea. The
most familiar illustrations of their activity come from the History of
Abingdon and the Chronicle of Battle. Between 1160 and 1164, the
Earl of Leicester presided over a plea in the shire-court of Berkshire
touching the right of the Abbot of Abingdon to hold a market there.
The earl first heard the plea by virtue of the king's writ from over-sea.
When Henry returned in January 1163, the case came up again before
his justices at Oxford. Opinions varied, and the earl, who was present as
justiciarius et judex, did not presume to give judgment, but went to con-
sult the king. Between 1139 and 1171, Richard de Luci's brother Walter
was Abbot of Battle. The Chronicle of that house describes at length
an important plea which he prosecuted against the Bishop of Chichester
in 1157. The Earl of Leicester was present among the barons, but his
office is not mentioned, nor does he appear to have taken a prominent
part in the discussion; Richard de Luci acted on his brother's behalf.
The Chancellor seems to have led the debate, and the suit ended in a
compromise to the abbot's advantage, arranged by the king. In a suit
against Gilbert de Balliol, the abbot, though his brother was Justiciar,
had some trouble in obtaining a hearing in the king's court. At last it
was heard at Clarendon before the king. Richard de Luci, vir magnificus
et prudens, “at that time chief justice of the king," was present, but only
appears in the account of the plea as the advocate of his brother's cause.
When the king sat in person, the Justiciar was present in court as a
baron, not as a judge. Isolated administrative documents which illustrate
the Justiciar's activity suggest that his position was more important than
would be gathered from the accounts of famous pleas before the king.
Between 1156 and 1165, the Earl of Leicester presided over the knights
of Nottinghamshire when they defined the boundary between the land of
the Archbishop of York and the king's forest of Sherwood'. By virtue
1 Thoroton, History of Nottinghamshire, ed. 1790, Vol. 11, p. 160.
C. MED, H. vOL. v. CH. XVII.
37
## p. 578 (#624) ############################################
578
Richard de Luci and Ranulf de Glanville
of the king's writ from over-sea, he commanded “the king's barons of
Hastings to allow the Abbot of St Benet of Holme peaceable possession
of his lands in Yarmouth. "" The king laid on him the duty of constraining
the Earl of Norfolk to do the castle-guard at Norwich which he held of
St Edmund'. Magnus fuit hic.
Until within a year of his death in 1179, Richard de Luci continued
to perform the duties of Justiciar. No discreditable tales are told of him.
The worst that can be said is that he supported his brother, the Abbot of
Battle, in his efforts to give effect to the claims of his house, and it is very
doubtful if he went beyond the law in his support. He was honest enough
to oppose the king when Henry began to prosecute men for forest offences
which he had himself allowed at the time of the rebellion of 1174. Richard
must have been an able administrator and a skilled judge; many of the
reforms of Henry's reign in legal and administrative matters were initiated
while he was Justiciar. His successor was a man no less able but more
unscrupulous, Ranulf de Glanville, who was appointed Justiciar in 1180.
Of an East Anglian family of no special importance, Ranulf early entered
the king's service, and already in 1164 was sheriff of Yorkshire. His
conduct as sheriff cannot have been beyond reproach, for he was deprived
of his office between 1170 and 1175, doubtless as a result of the Inquest
of Sheriffs in 1170, but he was reinstated after the rebellion of 1174. The
part which he took in the capture of the King of Scots may well have
been the cause of his reinstatement. The Pipe Roll of 1177 contains a
curious entry that Ranulf has accounted for more than fifteen hundred
pounds derived partly from the county and partly from the lands of
Everard de Ros which he had held in custody. The king pardoned the
whole amount, but the entry suggests that there may have been good
reason for Ranulf's removal from his sheriffdom. Further light is cast on
the Justiciar's character by a story told by the chronicler known as Benedict
of Peterborough and corroborated by entries on the Pipe Roll of 1184.
There seems little doubt that Ranulf strained the law in the hope of
securing the execution of Gilbert de Plumpton, in order that his widow,
an heiress, might become the wife of Reiner of Waxham, Ranulf's steward.
Whatever his faults, Ranulf suited Henry, whose service demanded ability
and fidelity rather than too strict an honour, and during the last ten years
of Henry's reign Ranulf was the dominating figure in English administra-
tion. That he wrote the legal treatise which bears his name is most probable;
it must have been written while he was Justiciar. It has been suggested
that it was written by his nephew Hubert Walter, himself afterwards
Justiciar and Archbishop of Canterbury. Hubert had been brought up
by Ranulf de Glanville and his wife, and that he should write an account
of the practice of the king's court at his patron's request is not in itself
unlikely. Yet even if the words in which Roger of Howden, the chronicler
and judge, introduces the earliest text of the treatise do not prove that
i Cott. Galba E. 11 f. 33d.
2 Brit. Mus. Add. MSS. 14847 f. 37.
## p. 579 (#625) ############################################
Chancellor, Treasurer, and curiales
579
Glanville himself wrote it, they certainly imply that it was written at his
inspiration and, in all probability, under his guidance'.
Between the earlier and later parts of Henry's reign there occurred a
remarkable change in the personnel of the administration. Richard de
Luci was one of the last men in constant touch with the king who had
shared in the early labours of re-organisation. There was, in particular, a
definite break in the development of the office of Chancellor. Throughout
the twelfth century, the importance of any individual curialis depended
rather upon his relations with the king than upon the office which he held.
The peculiar importance of the chancellorship in the early years of the
reign was due to Becket's intimacy with Henry. Between the time of
Becket's resignation and the spring of 1173, the king's seal was apparently
kept by Geoffrey Ridel, Becket's successor as Archdeacon of Canterbury.
Although Geoffrey seems to have done the Chancellor's work, it is not
certain that he was ever appointed to the office. In 1173, Henry appointed
Ralf de Warneville Chancellor. This appointment coincides nearly, though
not precisely, with a remarkable change in the royal style. Until at least
May 1172, charters composed in the royal chancery uniformly style the
king Rex Anglorum et dux Normannorum et Aquitannorum et comes
Andegavorum. In charters known to issue from the chancery after May
1173 these titles are preceded by the formula dei gratia. It is difficult
to find evidence of Ralf's presence in England, where he seems normally
to have been represented by Walter of Coutances, then Archdeacon of
Oxford, afterwards Bishop of Lincoln, Archbishop of Rouen, and for a
short time Justiciar of England. The last Chancellor of the reign was
Geoffrey, the king's illegitimate son, who in 1181 resigned the see of
Lincoln before consecration in order to take the office.
The office of Treasurer remained with the kin of Roger of Salisbury
not only throughout Henry's reign but into the reign of Henry III? . The
Treasurer's work was more specialised than that of any other official, and
he was essentially a financial officer. Until the appointment of Eustace
de Fauconberg early in the reign of Henry III, the treasurers were not
much concerned with general administration; Richard Fitz Nigel rarely
appears among the persons who attest the writs and charters of Henry II.
The names which are most prominent in the attestation clauses of Henry's
charters belong to a small number of men who, in the strict sense of the
word, may be styled curiales. Few of them held high baronial rank, and
most of them possessed definite office in the king's household. In the first
years of the reign, Thomas Becket, the Chancellor, was generally with the
1 “. . .
cuius sapientia conditae sunt leges subscriptae quas Anglicanas vocamus. "
Howden, 11, 215. Maitland's doubt as to Glanville's authorship of the treatise rests
on an unusual translation of the verb condo. The normal translation of condo in
this context would be to write down or compile. A comparison of the treatise with
the surviving judicial records of the early thirteenth century shews that it is the
work of a practised judge.
2 Cf. supra p. 573, note.
CH. XVII.
37-2
## p. 580 (#626) ############################################
580
The Sheriffs
king. Manasser Biset the steward, Warin Fitz Gerald the chamberlain,
Richard de Humez the constable, were his constant companions. Until
his disgrace, Henry of Essex, as constable, was constantly attendant on the
king. Unlike his fellows of the household, he was of baronial rank. His
forfeited honour was given by the king to Henry Fitz Gerald, brother
of Warin, and like him a chamberlain. In the later years of the reign, the
personnel of the court was more varied; judges, and other men who served
the king without definite office, appear beside the regular household
officials. Much research remains to be done upon the curiales of Henry II.
That he reposed great confidence in them is certain. He rewarded them
with land, but not lavishly, though some of them have left their names
to English villages: Manasser Biset is immortalised in the name of Preston
Bisset in Buckinghamshire. Before the end of the reign there are definite
traces of the organisation which was to develop into the wardrobe of the
thirteenth century. The names of many chamber-clerks appear on twelfth-
century Pipe Rolls. They were already employed in administrative work
as well as in purely household functions. It is only from the examination of
unprinted documents that more can be learned of their origin and status.
If the men in the king's immediate service are as a body obscure, his
sheriffs are all known by name, and their territorial position can often
be ascertained precisely. The office still gives a field for research, but it
is certain that during the reigns of Henry II and his sons the sheriff
took the first and all-important steps towards his present position of
forgotten dignity. The Norman kings had suffered from the over-mighty
sheriff, and had tried to check his power. Henry I had often put his
own curiales into sheriffdoms and united several counties in the hands
of one or two trusted ministers. But the lists of sheriffs in Henry II's
early years still shew baronial names. In Devonshire, the earl was sheriff
until 1157. Northumberland was held by William de Vesci from 1157
to 1170, and by Roger de Stuteville from 1170 to 1185. William de
Beauchamp was sheriff of Worcestershire from 1155 to 1169, of Glou-
cestershire from 1157 to 1163, and of Herefordshire from 1160 to
1169. Wiltshire was held by Patrick, Earl of Salisbury, from 1155 to
1160. Throughout the reign, Shropshire was held by local magnates.
A baron was not inevitably the king's opponent, and a baronial sheriff
may have been as good an officer as any curialis. Moreover, many
sheriffs of baronial rank held their offices because they had become
curiales, and were competing for the prizes which the king's service
offered. Ranulf de Glanville was the chief among many such men.
Many of Henry's sheriffs were undistinguished knights in the counties
they held. Adam de Catmere, sheriff of Berkshire from 1160 to 1170,
and of Oxfordshire from 1164 to 1170, held half a knight's fee at Cat-
more in Berkshire of William, Earl of Derby. The south Lincolnshire
knight, Alfred of Pointon, sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1166 and 1167, and
again from 1170 to 1174, held three knight's fees of Maurice de Craon,
.
## p. 581 (#627) ############################################
The Sheriff's work
581
and was his steward. Even at the beginning of the reign, some shires
were held by curiales. The important county of Hampshire was held
by a succession of them. Turstin, sheriff until 1160, had been the clerk
of a chamberlain in the reign of Henry 11. His son succeeded him, and
was followed from 1170 to 1179 by Hugh de Gundeville. From 1174
to 1177 Hugh was also sheriff of Northamptonshire, from 1177 to 1179
he was sheriff of Devon, and his name frequently occurs in lists of
Henry's judges. From 1155 to 1160 Northamptonshire was held by
another minister who often served as judge, Simon son of Peter of Brix-
worth in that county. By the end of the reign it was the rule rather
than the exception that the sheriffs should be ministeriales. The change
was probably the result of Henry's policy rather than the policy itself.
Henry was controlling the excesses of sheriffs, and at the same time
increasing their work, so that barons may have become less anxious to
hold the office. The large sums offered, though not always paid, for
shrievalties at the beginning of Richard's reign may suggest that the
buyers hoped for laxer administrative control under a new king-a hope
that was not realised.
The judicial reforms introduced by Henry II materially increased the
labours of the sheriff. In addition to the financial and military responsi-
bilities which had lain upon him in the Norman time, he was now required
to give effect to an elaborate system of centralised justice. The earliest
rolls of the itinerant justices reveal the unceasing labours of the sheriff
in the time of Henry's sons. He was responsible for the most minute
details of judicial administration; he must receive and produce the writs
which began the innumerable pleas resulting from Henry's legal re-
forms; he was responsible for summoning every person necessary for the
conduct of a plea; he had to give effect to the justices' decisions, and
keep a record of his action; he must answer for the most meagre chattels
of criminals that had fallen in to the king. Any failure in the perform-
ance of these duties meant that he would be called to account before the
justices. It is not remarkable that curiales appear in increasing numbers
among the sheriffs of Henry's later years. Unless the sheriffs were brought
into close relations with the king, his plan of a judicial organisation
extending over the whole land and centring upon his court was bound to
be fruitless.
In 1170 Henry sent bodies of commissioners or justices round the
country to inquire touching the behaviour of the sheriffs, their bailiffs,
and all who were doing the king's business in the shires. Generally
known as the “Inquest of Sheriffs," the inquiry had a much wider scope.
)
It entered into the financial relationship between lords and their men,
with which the king had normally no concern. It covered only the
four years of Henry's recent absence abroad. Two fragments of the
original returns have survived, relating respectively to East Anglia and
1 Round, The Rise of the Pophams, in The Ancestor, vii, 59.
CH. XVII.
## p. 582 (#628) ############################################
582
The Inquest of Sheriff's
the borough of Worcester. The East Anglian fragment relates almost
exclusively to the payments made to the Earl of Arundel and other barons
by the men on their own land and on land held in custody. Payments
were made to the earl to help him in his work on the Marches of Wales,
in his expedition to France, in his difficulties with the Jews, in his con-
tribution to the aid for marrying the king's daughter, and in his journey
to Saxony with her. The Worcester fragment, on the other hand, deals
almost entirely with payments to the sheriff. It shews that the sheriff,
William de Beauchamp, took from the borough forty-two pounds in the
first two years in question, and fifty pounds in the last two years. The
farm of the borough was fixed at twenty-four pounds when, at a later
time, the burgesses were allowed to pay it direct into the Exchequer.
The burgesses also made payments to him for the conveyance of treasure
and prisoners, and on the occasion of his daughter's marriage. William
de Beauchamp was one of the sheriffs removed before the inquiry was
made, and many others were removed afterwards. Only in Cumberland,
Devon, Kent, Rutland, Staffordshire, Surrey, and Wiltshire, was the
custody of the shire in the same hand for any appreciable period before
and after 1170. Of these counties, Rutland was held by the king's
constable, Richard de Humez, and Surrey and Kent were in the custody
of Gervase of Cornhill, a member of a family which owed its wealth to
London trade and had entered the king's service. It is evident from the
fact of the enquiry that the king did not intend the government of the
shires through sheriffs and other officers to rest on exploitation. No
other enquiry was made in this reign with the principal object of dis-
covering the abuses in local government, but, when the king's justices
went round the country, people had the opportunity, if they dared to use
it, of expressing their grievances. On the Lincoln Assize Roll of 1202
occurs an entry to the effect that certain sums of money have been taken
from merchants to the use of the sheriff, his bailiff, and his bailiff's clerk,
for the right of leading corn from county to county through England.
It must have been possible for the sheriff to make considerable profits
in a legitimate way. The amounts of his profits from the local courts of
justice must have depended on the justice he gave, and a period of peace
and careful management meant that the value of the royal land farmed
by the sheriff increased considerably. That Henry II had no intention
of allowing the sheriff to obtain the whole of this increment is shewn by
the fact that he had to account for variable amounts, known later as
incrementa, apart from and in addition to his farm. Even so, the sheriff
must have made money on his farm. The incrementa were unpopular
alike with the sheriffs and the people, and the first issue of Magna Carta
declared that counties should be at their old farms, without any incre-
ment, a clause that, for obvious financial reasons, it was impossible to
retain. When lands escheated to the king, they were generally farmed
by the sheriff or by some magnate or curialis who was recompensed for
## p. 583 (#629) ############################################
The Sheriff's aid
583
his trouble by the amount he raised beyond the sum for which he farmed
the escheat. But sometimes escheated lands were held in custodia, that
is, the holder strictly accounted for them to the king. Like that of his
father, the reign of Richard I was a time of administrative reform. The
large amount of land that came in to the king in 1194, mainly as a
result of his brother's rebellion, necessitated fresh arrangements. Two
escheators were appointed, William de Sanctae Mariae Ecclesia, and
Hugh Bardolf, who held the escheats in custody, and rendered detailed
accounts for them. William held the escheated lands in the southern
and Hugh in the northern part of England. It was doubtless experi-
ments like this, compelled by the pressure of increasing business, which
suggested the practice, developed in the next century, of sometimes
letting shires themselves to their sheriffs in custodia instead of ad firmam.
In addition to profits of uncertain amount and diverse origin, the
sheriff was entitled to a customary payment from the men of the shire,
known as the sheriff's aid. This payment enters into general history as
one of the causes of dispute between Henry II and Becket in 1163. The
king is said to have wished to annex the money given to the sheriffs to
his own revenues. It is probable that he intended the sheriffs to account
at the Exchequer for the sheriff's aid as for the money which they col-
lected on the king's behalf. The significance of his proposals can only
be conjectured, for they were abandoned in face of the archbishop's
protest. That Henry wished to take possession of the sheriff's aid with-
out compensation to the sheriffs for its loss is highly improbable; he
depended too much on his sheriffs to alienate them by an arbitrary
measure of confiscation. He may well have been feeling his way towards
an increased centralisation of local government, and wished, as a step
towards this end, to appropriate the ancient sheriff's aid and compensate
the sheriff's by a payment direct from the treasury. It is also probable
that his proposals were suggested by the close resemblance between the
sheriff's aid and the Danegeld. The sheriff's aid was a geld, a tax laid upon
land according to the assessment which determined the incidence of the
Danegeld; it descended from the fiscal system of King Edward's day.
Various passages in private charters shew that it was paid four times a year.
A Lincolnshire charter of the reign of Henry II refers to it as the “four
aids of the sheriff,” a Leicestershire charter as the “four gelds of the
shire. " It was natural that Henry should wish the sheriff's aid to follow
the other ancient gelds into his treasury. Had it done so, its amount
and incidence would be less obscure at the present day. In the reign of
Edward I, the sheriff's aid in the counties of Cambridge and Huntingdon
seems to have brought in approximately thirty pounds a year. It was not
an adequate recompense for the sheriff's manifold labours, but the
income which it brought him was not negligible.
Stenton, Danelaw Charters, p. 127. Haverholme Cartulary, Lincs. Notes and
Queries, Vol. xvii, p. 48.
1 יי
1
CH. XVII.
## p. 584 (#630) ############################################
584
Local justiciars
t
Even under the Norman kings, the sheriffs had not been the sole
dispensers of royal justice in the shires. Apart from the sporadic ap-
pearance of royal officials sent round the country to do justice, there is
evidence that already in the reign of William II local officers known as
justiciars were in existence. The local justiciarship can be traced through
the reigns of Henry I and Stephen, but it is not generally realised that
the office still existed in the reign of Henry II. In writs of Henry II,
few of which have yet been printed, there are definite references to the
justiciars of Lincoln', Norfolk”, Warwick*, Sussex`, York, and Notting-
ham'. It is probably to these officers that William of Newburgh refers
when he states, under the year 1154, that Henry “appointed in all the
districts of his kingdom ministers of right and law, to coerce the bold-
ness of the wicked, and do justice to those seeking it, according to the
merits of the cases. ” The relation of the local justiciar to the sheriff
and the shire-court is uncertain, but it is certain that he took precedence
of the sheriff in the shire.
The little that is known of these local justiciars suggests that Henry
did not long continue the practice of appointing them. In matters of
justice, he seems in his earliest years to have adopted his grandfather's
expedients, both employing local justices and sending out officers of his
court to do justice over a great stretch of the country. The year 1166
may be regarded as a turning-point. The Assize of Clarendon, issued in
that year, opens a new phase in the history of criminal jurisdiction in
England. The king then commanded that twelve lawful men of every
hundred and four lawful men of every village should declare on oath if any
in their hundred or village had been accused or suspected of being a robber,
murderer, or brigand, or a harbourer of such, since Henry became king.
The presentments of these jurors were to be taken before the sheriffs
and again before the justices. Those who were apprehended by reason
of such presentment were to have judgment before the king's justices
only, they were to go to the ordeal by water, and the chattels of the
guilty were to go to the king. Men of ill repute proved innocent by the
water were nevertheless to abjure the realm. Gaols were to be built in
counties where there were none, for the custody of prisoners awaiting the
coming of the justices. In the case of those apprehended in any other
way than through presentment, the procedure was to remain “as it was
and ought to be," a provision which allowed the sheriff' to deal with
crimes other than those specified, and with many minor offences, such
as petty assaults. This measure was a long stride towards centralisa-
tion. Ten years later, the Assize of Northampton, reinforcing that of
1 B. M. Harl. MSS. 742 f. 265. Cott. Vesp. E. xvi. f. 19b.
2 B. M. Cott. Galba E. 11 f. 31 d and 33d. Cott. Claud. D. xiu f. 41.
3 P. R. O. Exchequer K. R. Misc. Bks. 22 f. cxxv.
4 B. M. Cott. Faustina A. II f. 74b.
6 B. M. Cott. Vesp. E. xix f. 7.
## p. 585 (#631) ############################################
Judicial experiments
585
Clarendon, gave to the justices cognisance of other grave crimes which
had lain outside the scope of the earlier assize. For the first time in
English history, criminal justice was to be administered all over the
land in accordance with the same rules.
The years between 1166 and 1180 were years of experiment in the
centralisation of justice. The Assize of Clarendon was enforced by Earl
Geoffrey de Mandeville and Richard de Luci. The justiciarii or barones
errantes who conducted the Inquest of Sheriffs were large companies of
barons and clergy. But the judges who from 1168 onwards were doing
justice and assessing tallages in the shires were household and Exchequer
officials of the king. The Assize of Northampton of 1176 was put into
operation by six groups of three justices, whose work was made heavy
by the disturbance of the rebellion. When the king returned from
Normandy in 1178, he recalled the eighteen judges, and appointed five,
who were not to depart from his court but were to remain there to hear
complaints, so that if any matters needed special consideration they
could be determined by the king with the advice of his counsellors. This
provision originated no new court; it was an arrangement by which the
king, exercising his ancient prerogative of justice, might inspect the work
of his judges. He spent his time in England going from place to place,
and the five judges doubtless travelled with him. Richard de Luci retired
from the justiciarship in the next year, and Henry did not immediately
appoint a new Chief Justiciar. He divided the country into four districts
for the purpose of judicial administration. Ranulf de Glanville and
five other judges were placed in charge of the north; the three southern
districts were each put in charge of a bishop, who was also a curialis. In
1180 Glanville became Chief Justiciar. From that time, justices visited
the shires in almost every year. They inspected the local administration,
inquired into the king's rights, and assessed taxes; justice was only a
part of their work. These justices were intimately connected with the
Exchequer. It was thence they set out, and they returned there to hand
in their rolls; so the fact that the Exchequer was at Westminster
meant that Westminster became the centre of the judicial system. There,
judges sat almost continuously, for the Exchequer officials were the
judges. The justices de banco are the justices of the bench at West-
minster. They did not form a different court from that of the justices on
eyre; there was but one court, and that the king's.
