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this document was supplied by the depositor and has been modified by the HDS SN 6880 - Credit Finance in the Middle Ages: Loans to the English Crown, 1272-1340 In 2007 the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) awarded Professors Adrian Bell and Chris Brooks a major research grant (RES-062-23-0733) to investigate the early and innovative use of credit finance by a succession of English medieval monarchs, working with a full time Research Associate, Dr Tony Moore. The credit arrangements between the three Edwards and Italian merchants were crucial for financing England’s ambitious foreign policies and providing for the smooth running of governmental administration. Such loans enabled the Crown to protect itself against predicted and unpredicted fluctuations in future taxation revenues. Substantial data on the credit system during this period survive mainly within the well-kept records of the English Exchequer. The master dataset presented here gives details of all the transactions between the English kings and the Italian merchant societies extracted from these sources. For more information about the project, or to use the online historical interest rate calculator developed to analyse this data, see http://www.icmacentre.ac.uk/medievalcredit/ Structure of the dataset Field id reference date_range_start date_range_end date_range_standard description notes merchants credit_debit total value_£ value_s value_d value_m Description Unique identifying number for this transaction Reference to the relevant historical source. See table below for key The earliest possible date for the transaction (often the date of issue of the historical source, for instance where the king ordered a payment to be made by the merchants) or the start of a date range The latest possible date for the transaction (often the date of issue of the historical source where it acknowledges a payment already made) or the end of a date range Either the date_range_start or date_range_end, if only one of those two is known, or the mid-point of a date range Text description of the transaction Any further information about the source or the transaction This field denotes whether the transaction involves: the Ricciardi; the Frescobaldi; the Bardi; the Peruzzi; or the Bardi and Peruzzi jointly. Whether the transaction involved a payment from the king to the merchants (CR - i.e. a credit to the royal account) or a payment made by the merchants to the king or to a third party on the king’s behalf (DB - i.e. a debit against the royal account) The sum involved in the transaction, expressed in the units used in the source (usually £, s, d, ob (halfpence) and qd (farthings) sterling but sometimes in other currencies such as florins or livres tournois). All values have been converted into their sterling equivalents, either using the exchange rates quoted within the historical document, or a suitable rate for that period, as set out in the notes field The number of £ sterling involved in the transaction The number of shillings sterling involved in the transaction The number of pence sterling involved in the transaction The number of marks sterling involved in the transaction (the mark was a unit of account equivalent to two-third of £1/13s 4d/160d) value_modern The value of the transaction expressed as an integer (to two decimal places), using the formula value_£ + (value_s/20) + (value_d/240) + (value_m/1.5). This is intended to facilitate calculations. Principles of the dataset A systematic search of the relevant classes within The National Archives (TNA) at Kew for all sources pertaining to loans made to both sovereign and private borrowers has now been completed. The details of all the transactions between the kings and the merchants were identified, transcribed and entered into a number of separate databases tailored to the particular historical sources and merchant societies. These were used to track the advancing of loans and subsequent repayments and thus to estimate the balance of the king’s account over time. They formed the basis for our reconstruction of the relationship between the king and each of the merchant societies. Subsequently, the key details of every single unique transaction were then entered into a master dataset, made available here. The key principle was to divide the interactions between the king and the merchants into distinct transactions, each of which was classified as either a credit to the king’s account or a debit against the king’s account. We aimed to collate all the sources to avoid double-counting the same transaction. Where we are sufficiently confident that two or more sources refer to the same transaction, these are combined into one entry in the dataset with references to all the sources. Unfortunately, the surviving sources are not complete. There are substantial gaps in the chronological coverage. Moreover, some of the enrolled accounts give periodic totals for money advanced by or repaid to the merchants. These will include many (of not all, depending on the accounting conventions in use) of the individual transactions datable to that time period. In this master dataset, we have not attempted to integrate the evidence for individual transactions with these accounting totals, since this would be a subjective exercise. Users wishing to calculate advances/repayments in a given time period will need to take account of the potential for double-counting, based on their own scholarly understanding of the sources and of the accounting practices. Source material used The most obvious source for the relationship between the English Crown and its Italian bankers is the final accounts themselves, which were generally enrolled on the Pipe Roll (TNA E 372) and its duplicate, the Chancellor’s Roll (TNA E 352). The more legible of these two texts have been selected for inclusion in this volume. Unfortunately, there are perhaps surprisingly few comprehensive accounts between the king and the merchants to be found. These are the Ricciardi account for 12901294; the Frescobaldi accounts for 1294-1310, and the Bardi account for 1294-1313. This means that such accounts only exist for twenty-four of the seventy years covered by the project. It is clear that accounts were held at other times, as is amply demonstrated by the survival of documents produced during those accounts, as well as references in other sources. The absence of extant final accounts can be remedied, to some extent, by the survival of numerous rolls of particulars prepared during the course of the accounting process (mostly within the Exchequer Miscellanea, TNA E 101). The enrolled accounts themselves frequently refer to further details being given in such rolls (sicut continentur in rotulo de particulis). These rolls can contain valuable additional detail omitted in the more concise final accounts. These can be supplemented by enrolled accounts dealing with particular sources of revenue received by the Italian merchants, rather than comprehensive royal bank statements. Most of these can be found in the rotuli compotorum section of the Pipe and Chancellor’s Rolls and the enrolled Customs Accounts Rolls (TNA E 356). Moreover, the accounting process was only one part of the royal financial system. Although the royal clerks do not seem to have kept any kind of running balance for the king’s treasury, the Exchequer of Receipt had developed a series of documents recording incoming and outgoing monies. Monies received were recorded in the Receipt Rolls (TNA E 401). Since so much of the credit provided by the Italians was provided through the wardrobe, however, the Receipt Rolls do not provide a full picture of their loans. The Exchequer also kept records of payments made and received in the form of the Issue rolls (TNA E 403). Orders for payments to be made, including repayments to the merchants, were entered in the Liberate rolls (TNA C 62). Once a writ of liberate had been paid in full and returned, a copy was recorded in the Issue rolls, in a single-column format. Where a payment towards a writ of liberate had been made, but the writ had not been discharged in full, this was noted on the Memoranda of Issue rolls in a double column format). During Edward II’s reign, these two types of Issue roll were combined into a single roll. Later, the increasing use of tallies of assignment led to a closer correspondence between the Receipt and Issue rolls, since a tally issued to a royal creditor, for example, on the issues of the customs of London, would be entered both as a receipt and as an issue. Finally, numerous royal orders survive that provide more information about particular transactions. These include royal letters patent or close to the merchant societies either ordering them to make payments on the king’s behalf or acknowledging that such payments have been made, or similar letters to royal officials to deliver royal revenues to the merchants. Key to references Reference Accounts BL CCR CPR Roles Gascons TNA TNA C 47 TNA C 62 TNA E 101 TNA E 352 TNA E 356 TNA E 372 TNA E 401 TNA E 403 TNA E 404 Wardrobe 1285-1286 Wardrobe 1286-1289 Source Accounts of the English Crown with Italian Merchant Socities, 12721345, ed. A. R. Bell, C. Brooks and T. K. Moore (Kew, List and Index Society, 2009) British Library Calendar of Close Rolls Calendar of Patent Rolls Rôles Gascons, ed. F. Michel and C. Bémont (3 vols, Paris, 18851906) The National Archives Chancery Miscellanea Chancery Liberate Rolls Exchequer Miscellanea Exchequer Chancellors Rolls Exchequer Customs Accounts Rolls Exchequer Pipe Rolls Exchequer Receipt Rolls Exchequer Issue Rolls Exchequer Warrants for Issue Records of the Wardrobe and Household 1285-1286, ed. B. F. Byerley and C. R. Byerly (London, 1977); Records of the Wardrobe and Household 1286-1289, ed. B. F. Byerly and C. R. Byerly (London, 1986) Notes on currencies, units and measurements The pound sterling (£) consisted of 20 shillings (s) each of 12 pence (d). The accounts also refer to halfpennies (obolus) and farthings (quadrans), which could either be penny coins cut in half or into quarters, although the mints did issue a small number of such coins. The mark (m.) was a unit of account equivalent to 13s 4d, or two-thirds of £1. Although the royal accounts generally use pounds, shillings and pence, marks seem to have been frequently used by the merchants. For example, document 20, a list of payments made by the Frescobaldi, has columnar totals in marks rather than £. Most Exchequer accounts were converted into sterling but, as mentioned above, one of the main services provided by the merchants was balance transfers to the continent. As a result, they are numerous references to foreign currencies in the sources. The most frequently-occurring non-English currency in the documents is the livre tournois (Latin: libra turonensis), used in most of France. The livre tournois came in two forms; by far the most common was the petit tournois (libra parvorum turonensium or libra nigrorum turonensium). The French kings also issued a larger silver coin, the gros tournois (gros turonensis or just gros), which was supposed to be valued at 12d petit tournois. There are also several mentions of pollards and crockards (alternatively described as ballards), which were counterfeit English coins produced in the Low Countries that began to circulate in England in large quantities at the end of the thirteenth century. The rate of exchange between sterling and pollards/crockards was set at 1:2 by Edward I at Christmas 1299. The accounts also refer to transactions using a number of different gold currencies. The most common were gold florins of Florence (florenus or florens dor). One possible source of confusion is that florin could sometimes be used as a generic term to refer to any gold coin. Other identifiable gold coins were the French écu (Latin: florenus de scuto or scutus) and pavillons (florenus de pavilli). There is one reference, c.1299, to ‘deners dor de France’, valued at 6s 6d sterling, or equivalent to two florins. These can be identified with the Masse d’or, issued by Philip IV between 1296 and 1310.