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Scutage
View on WikipediaThis article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (February 2012) |
| English feudalism |
|---|
| Manorialism |
| Feudal land tenure in England |
| Feudal duties |
| Feudalism |
Scutage was a medieval English tax levied on holders of a knight's fee under the feudal land tenure of knight-service. Under feudalism the king, through his vassals, provided land to knights for their support. The knights owed the king military service in return. The knights were allowed to "buy out" of the military service by paying scutage (a term derived from Latin scutum, "shield").
As time passed the kings began to impose a scutage on holders of knight's fees, whether or not the holder was actually a knight.
General information
[edit]The institution existed under Henry I (reigned 1100–1135) and Stephen (reigned 1135–1154), when it occurs as scutagium, scuagium or escuagium. The creation of fractions of knights' fee probably hastened its introduction: the holders of such fractions could only discharge their obligation via scutage.[1] The increasing use of mercenaries in the 12th century would also make a money payment of greater use to the crown.[1]
Separate levies of scutage received the names of the campaigns for which they were raised, as "the scutage of Toulouse" (or "great scutage"), "the scutage of Ireland", and so forth.[1] The levy demanded from each fee one mark (13s. 4d., two thirds of a pound), one pound or two marks, but anything above a pound seemed abnormal until John (reigned 1199–1216) imposed levies of two marks in most years without even the excuse of a war.[1] The irritation caused by these exactions reached a climax in 1214, when John demanded three marks.[1] Taxation through scutage became a prominent cause among the many that led to the rebellion of 1215, which culminated in the proclamation of Magna Carta of 1215. Its provisions prohibited the crown from levying any scutage save by "the common counsel of our realm".[1]
The reissued Charter of 1217 provided, instead of this, that scutage levies should remain at the rate as of the reign of Henry II. In practice, however, under Henry III (reigned 1216–1272), scutage rates usually amounted to three marks, but required the assent of the barons, and levies occurred only on adequate occasions.[1]
Meanwhile, a practice had arisen, possibly as early as Richard I's reign (1189–1199), of accepting from great barons special "fines" for permission not to serve in a campaign. This practice appears to have rested on the crown's right to decide whether to exact personal service or to accept scutage in lieu of service. A system of special composition thus arose which largely replaced the old one of scutage. As between the tenants-in-chief, however, and their under-tenants, the payment of scutage continued. The terms of charters of subinfeudation, which specified the quota of scutage due rather than the proportion of a knight's fee granted, often stereotyped scutage. For the purpose of recouping themselves by levying from their under-tenants, the tenants-in-chief received from the crown writs de scutagio habendo. Under Edward I (reigned 1272–1307) the new system developed so completely that the six levies of the reign, each as high as two pounds on the fee, applied in practice only to the under-tenants, their lords compounding with the crown by the payment of large sums, though their nominal assessment, somewhat mysteriously, became much lower (see Knight service).[1]
Scutage rapidly became obsolescent as a source of revenue, Edward II (reigned 1307–1327) and Edward III (reigned 1327–1377) imposing only one levy each and relying on other more uniform and direct modes of taxation. The lengths to which subinfeudation had gone also hastened its rapid decay; increasing subinfeudation led to constant dispute and litigation as to which of the holders in the descending chain of tenure remained liable for the payment. Apart from its financial aspect it had possessed a legal importance as the test, according to Bracton, of tenure by knight-service, its payment, on however small a scale, proving the tenure to be "military" with all the consequences involved.[1]
Scholarship
[edit]J. F. Baldwin's The Scutage and Knight Service in England (1897), a dissertation printed at the University of Chicago Press, offers a major monograph on the subject (though not wholly free from error). Madox's History of the Exchequer formerly formed the standard authority. J. H. Round in Feudal England (1895) first set forth a more modern view. In 1896 appeared the Red Book of the Exchequer (Rolls series), which, with the Book of Fees (Public Record Office) and the Pipe Rolls (published by the Record Commission and the Pipe Roll Society), provides the chief record authority on the subject; but the editor misdated many of the scutages, and JH Round in his Studies on the Red Book of the Exchequer (privately issued) and his Commune of London and other Studies (1899) severely criticized his conclusions. See also Pollock and Maitland's History of English Law (1895) and McKechnie's Magna Carta (1905). Scargill Bird's "Scutage and Marshal’s Rolls" in Genealogist (1884), vol. i., has important coverage of later records.[1]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Scutage
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Fundamentals
Etymology and Core Meaning
Scutage derives from the Medieval Latin scutagium, formed from Latin scutum ("shield"), denoting a monetary payment made in substitution for the feudal obligation of bearing a shield in knightly military service.[5] This etymological root underscores its function as a commutation of personal armed service, evolving from the core knight-service tenure where landholders owed specified periods of military attendance to their overlord, typically the king.[6] In essence, scutage constituted a tax assessed per knight's fee—units of land deemed sufficient to equip and sustain one knight—enabling tenants-in-chief and sub-tenants to avoid direct participation in royal campaigns by contributing a fixed sum, commonly two marks (26 shillings and 8 pence) or equivalents adjusted by writ.[7] It applied exclusively to lands held under knight-service, the military variant of feudal tenure, and required royal authorization via writs specifying the rate and purpose, distinguishing it as a wartime fiscal tool rather than a routine rent.[6] Unlike feudal aids, which were customary levies for exceptional lordly needs such as ransoming the king, knighting his eldest son, or marrying his eldest daughter, scutage tied directly to exemptions from active shield-bearing duties during specific military summonses, without the same customary limits on frequency.[8]Purpose and Mechanism in Feudal Tenure
Scutage functioned as a fiscal commutation for the knight-service dues embedded in feudal land tenure, whereby tenants-in-chief could discharge their obligation to furnish equipped knights for approximately 40 days of annual military campaigning by tendering a cash payment instead.[9] This mechanism addressed the practical limitations of feudal levies, which were constrained by fixed durations and the variable quality of vassal contingents, thereby permitting overlords—chiefly the crown—to procure more reliable and extended military capabilities through mercenary contracts or logistical support.[3] Assessment of scutage hinged on the quantum of knight's fees under a tenant's control, with each fee denoting a landholding notionally capable of sustaining one knight's arms, horse, and service.[9] Payment rates were calibrated per fee and modulated by the campaign's demands, commonly at two marks (equivalent to 26 shillings and 8 pence) under routine circumstances, though elevated to three marks or more amid pressing threats to reflect augmented costs.[3] [6] Sheriffs executed collection county-wide, compiling assessments from feudal records and remitting proceeds to the exchequer, where meticulous audits appeared in the pipe rolls alongside notations of debts, arrears, and exemptions granted to those who rendered actual service or equivalents.[1] [10] Such exemptions preserved the principle of alternative fulfillment, ensuring scutage supplemented rather than supplanted voluntary performance of tenure-bound duties.[1]Historical Origins and Early Development
Feudal Knight-Service Obligations
Following the Norman Conquest in 1066, landholders in England, known as tenants-in-chief, were required to provide military service to the king proportional to the fiefs they held, forming the basis of knight-service obligations.[11] This system bound vassals through oaths of fealty, which swore personal loyalty and committed them to render armed aid when summoned by their overlord. The scale of service was determined by the number of knight's fees, each theoretically comprising sufficient land—often estimated at an annual value of around £20—to support one mounted knight equipped for combat, with tenants owing typically forty days of service per annum without additional pay.[12] Sub-tenants mirrored these duties to their lords, creating a hierarchical chain of military readiness centered on heavy cavalry forces.[13] Personal fulfillment of these obligations imposed severe logistical strains, including the expense of maintaining warhorses, armor, and weapons, prolonged absences from estates that disrupted agricultural cycles, and challenges for lords with scattered or remote holdings requiring extensive travel.[13] These factors, evident from the early twelfth century, rendered direct service inefficient for many, fostering preferences for monetary equivalents to offset costs and enable hiring of more reliable professionals.[12] The Domesday Book of 1086 records early instances of partial commutations, where certain customary military liabilities were met through fixed money payments rather than full personal attendance, indicating nascent shifts away from rigid service demands even in the Conquest's immediate aftermath.[14] Such practices highlighted the practical limitations of universal knight-service, setting precedents for broader fiscal substitutions.[15]