The Pipe Rolls
The pipe
rolls of the Exchequer contain accounts of the royal income,
arranged by county, for each financial year. They represent
the earliest surviving series of public records, and are essentially
continuous from 1155 onwards until the 19th century; one roll
from 1129-30 also survives. A copy of each pipe roll - known
as the Chancellor's Roll - was also sent to the Chancery. (The
unusual name - officially it started out as the 'Great Roll
of the Exchequer' - comes from the distinctive way in which
the membranes were sewn together, which made them look like
pieces of piping when rolled up.) The sheriffs' accounts form
the core of the early pipe rolls.
The sheriff was the king's
representative in the county, and was responsible for collecting
revenues from the royal estates and other sources. The rolls
also record some items of expenditure by the sheriffs, and
include lists of lands formerly part of the royal estates,
which had been given to private individuals. In addition, there
are payments of feudal dues and taxes, 'offerings' to the king
in connection with legal disputes, records of penalties (amercements)
imposed by the itinerant justices, and miscellaneous items
such as enrolled charters.
As time went on and the volume of
administration increased, some of these categories were removed
into separate series of records (including, in the 14th century,
the accounts of the royal estates). The early pipe rolls provide
a useful source of information from a period when few other
records are available. Those from the late 12th and early 13th
century have been published with indexes, mainly by the Pipe
Roll Society. It is therefore fairly straightforward to search
the early pipe rolls for entries relating to particular names
(although see the note on surnames in early records).
However,
interpreting the entries may be less straightforward. Nearly
all the printed texts are in Latin, and many of the earlier
volumes use 'record type' to reproduce the highly abbreviated
style of the originals. Beyond this, while the significance
of many entries may be fairly clear, interpreting others may
require some knowledge of the administrative procedures.
One
other point to bear in mind is that many of the entries record
outstanding debts, which were presumably copied from roll to
roll until they were paid - and, of course, information copied
from year to year may easily become anachronistic.
Source: medievalgenealogy.org.uk |
Leebrick
Johannes
John
Daniel
George
William
Frank
Joyce Marie
|