THE LONDON LAY SUBSIDY OF 1332
I The Tax and its Assessment
The London Lay Subsidy Roll of 1332 is to be found in
the Public Record Office It consists of seven sheets of
parchment, the entries are made in double columns, and all
the sheets, except the seventh, are written on both sides The
roll is in a state of good preservation, only eleven items are
missing In Cordwainer Ward the pence are torn off in two
of the amounts, in Farringdon Without the sums paid by
four persons, and in Cripplegate Within, those of five people
are wanting
The value of the roll may be realized when it is stated that
there is only one subsidy roll of London in print-that of the
lay subsidy of 1411-12 (fn. 1) The earlier roll is of greater importance
since it shows the incidence of the normal form of taxation-
a fraction of moveables, while the later one is a record of an
exceptional impost on rents
The year 1332 is memorable in the history of taxation
The disputed right of the King to tallage was then probably
claimed for the last time Tallage had not been expressly
forbidden in the "Confirmatio Cartarum," and was levied
in 1304 apparently without opposition In 1312, however,
London and Bristol made a strong resistance to a similar
demand by Edward II The Londoners finally escaped
payment by raising two loans amounting to £1,400, which
were to be allowed for in the collection of the next general aid
The tax apparently proved unprofitable, and was not revived
for twenty years (fn. 2) Then Edward III issued letters for the
collection of tallage on June 25th, 1332 (fn. 3) The next Parliament
did not meet till September 9th, and the subject of taxation
was almost immediately opened up "They granted the
King one Disme and one Fifteenth to be levied of the Laity,
so as the King will live of his own, without grieving his
subjects with outragious prises and such like." (fn. 4) The King
in return recalled the commissions for the collection of tallage (fn. 1)
The grant that replaced the tallage was a fraction of
moveables, which, known in England as early as 1166, had
been a frequent form of taxation since Henry III's reign (fn. 2)
But whilst in similar grants previous to 1332 the fractions
had varied from a fortieth to a fourth, after that date they
were always a tenth and a fifteenth, as in 1332 Moreover
this was the last time that in London (fn. 3) and many other
places the amount of taxation due from them was fixed by
the valuation of goods In 1334 (professedly owing to
complaints of the strictness of the 1332-3 collection, more
probably in order that the King might know beforehand how
much a subsidy would yield, and not be the loser through
any misdeeds of the collectors, since the fixed amount could
be demanded from each district), the writ ordered, that in
place of assessment, the royal commissioners should treat
with the men of the different districts for a composition for
a tenth and a fifteenth The method of assessment was only
to be used in case of a refusal to compound, and the amount
levied was not to exceed the sum assessed in 1332 (fn. 4) The
settlement made in 1334 proved permanent, and accordingly
the fractions of moveables were stereotyped as a tenth and a
fifteenth This arrangement made the tenth and fifteenth
merely a name for a tax levied as in 1334, and known to yield
from £38,000 to £39,000
The difference in the fractional amounts of the subsidies
originated in the payment of tallage (fn. 5) The ancient demesne
of the Crown with the boroughs contributed in a larger
proportion than the counties London, however, obtained the
privilege from Edward III in 1327 of being assessed with
the counties at a lower rate (fn. 6)
Edward maintained the concession, though he seems to
have regretted his generosity In a writ to the Mayor and
Aldermen in 1335 he signified his readiness to accept the sum
fixed according to the county rating, "although inadequate" (fn. 1)
There were other advantages in being assessed with the
counties The exemption of goods from taxation was much
larger in their case In the boroughs the only exemptions in
1332 were "a dress for the man, and one for the woman, and
a bed for both, a ring and a chain of gold or silver, and a
girdle of silk that they use every day, and also a goblet of
silver or mazer from which they drink" (fn. 2) But in the
counties, armour and riding horses, all the jewels and dresses
of the man and his wife, and their vessels of gold and silver
were exempted
These exemptions were considerable when we remember that
people spent their money in the middle ages on ostentatious
personal display, on rich garments and jewels and vessels of
gold and silver, rather than on costly furniture (fn. 3) This is
proved by the wills of the Londoners A bed is almost the
only piece of furniture which was ever bequeathed Their
treasured possessions appear to have been exactly those
mentioned in the list of exemptions, with the exception of
riding horses and perhaps armour (fn. 4) To take one example
Richard Constantyn left to his son two goblets of silver, a
silver water vessel, a sapphire of value and a silver ring with
a precious stone To his daughters he bequeathed a silver
goblet each, and to his wife all his vessels of silver (fn. 5) The
value of the Londoners' clothes may be judged by the fact
that a third best robe sometimes formed a separate bequest
An additional privilege which London secured in being
taxed with the counties was that no payment was demanded
from those whose possessions were worth less than ten
shillings, whereas the limit in the boroughs was six shillings (fn. 6)
in 1332
The ways of the mediæval taxgatherer were marked by a
leisureliness which must have been trying to a King in need
of supplies In the case of the grant made in September
1332, although Edward was in great need of money owing
to the Scotch war, the tax was not paid into the Exchequer
till 1334 The dates for the delivery of the money at the
Exchequer were fixed in the first place as February 3rd and
May 31st, 1333 These were the times named in the writs of
appointment of collectors, issued on September 16th, 1332 (fn. 1)
But the writs ordering the assessment were not issued
apparently till 1333, and in them the dates for the payment
of the tenth and fifteenth were postponed to April 4th and
September 30th, 1334 (fn. 2)
The method of assessing the taxation was the same for the
boroughs and counties It was usual to have two chief taxers
for each district, but in 1332 the first intention seems to have
been to associate two high officials with two men of the city
John de Stonore, second justice of the King's Bench, and
William de Denum, baron of the Exchequer, were appointed
with Richard de Hakeney and John de Preston, (fn. 3) aldermen
of London (fn. 4) as collectors of the fifteenth for London But
eventually the two latter were alone entrusted with the duty (fn. 5)
The chief taxers were commanded to choose four or six, or
more if required, from the most lawful and most esteemed men
of each district (fn. 6) The administrative divisions of London
naturally formed the districts for the assessment of the taxation
The wards, at this time twenty-four in number, presented no
great inequality of size, except those which stretched beyond
the walls of the city With regard to those to the east of the
Walbrook (the natural division of the city), the scantiness
of the population counteracted the extent of the wards But
in the west, the large size and population of Farringdon and
Cripplegate made it convenient to divide them into a ward
within and a ward without for the purposes of taxation (fn. 1)
The size of the ward would doubtless determine the number
of collectors, in 1319, six or more were selected from each
ward for the collection of a twelfth (fn. 2)
The status of the taxers seems to have varied considerably
Henry de Preston, collector for Dowgate in 1334, possessed
goods of the value of £20 in 1332, but William de
Sabrichesworth in Limestreet (fn. 3) had moveables worth only
twenty shillings
The deputy assessors had to swear by the Holy Evangelists
to state fully what goods the inhabitants of each district
possessed and to tax them at their true value The Parliamentary grant was a fraction of the moveables possessed on
September 29, 1332, but in the writ for the collection it was
stated that all goods acquired since that date had also to be
taxed The collectors were to proceed hastily with the
assessment, and "reduce it into writing and put it in a roll
written quite plainly" They were to deliver one roll to the
chief taxers and retain a duplicate themselves
The business of the chief taxers was to check the work of
their subordinates, and report any misdeeds to the Treasurer
and Barons of the Exchequer As soon as they received the
indentures of the collectors they were to cause the tax to be
raised The chief taxers drew up two rolls, one they retained
to raise the taxation, the other was presented at the Exchequer
with the first payment of the tax It is one of these two rolls
that has survived The collectors were taxed by the chief
taxers, and their names are doubtless entered in the roll But
the taxation of the chief taxers and their clerks was reserved
to the Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer, so they were
not enrolled with other Londoners (fn. 4)
The collectors would probably proceed according to
parishes, but it is impossible to prove this, as the residences
of the men whose names are enrolled can seldom be discovered
They may have conducted their inquiries on a plan like that
adopted at Colchester in 1301 (fn. 1) The taxers there visited
the treasure-chest first, then the chamber and the rest
of the house, passing from the kitchen to the brewery, larder
and granary, when the houses contained these offices Afterwards they directed their attention to the stock-in-trade or
implements of handicraft, and, lastly, to the animals, hay and
fuel (fn. 2) The tax collectors valued each article separately in 1301;
in 1332 they probably made a rough estimate of the goods,
as the items are not enrolled The large number of round
sums suggests this Fractional amounts are not found in five
of the wards, and they only occur once in seven wards The
collectors in Bassishaw and Walbrook appear to have done
their work more thoroughly as fractional sums ranging from
£4 8s 10¾d to 9¾d are common
The assessment was apparently not strict, as the highest
amount paid was only £8, whereas in 1319 several citizens
paid £20 Also London paid only £670 7s 5¾d according
to the roll, although 1332 is supposed to have been a heavy
year, (fn. 3) and yet paid £733 6s 8d in later years The small
payment was not due to an inability to meet the demands of
the collectors, (fn. 4) as in the case of John de Triple, who at his
death owed £53 16s 8d for divers assessments, (fn. 5) since it has
already been seen that the rolls were drawn up from the
assessment and not the levy of the tax (fn. 6) This is further
proved by the 1319 roll (also probably by the 1334 roll), (fn. 7)
where there is a memorandum, at the end of the account of
some of the wards, of the amounts which had been assessed
and collected, and the sum which consequently still remained
to be paid The total of the separate items equals the amount
of the assessment The smallness of the amount paid may
be accounted for in the following ways Some of the wealthy
London citizens gained exemption from taxation, while the
aldermen seem to have been persistently guilty of attempts
at evasion Edward II and Henry IV had to command that
the property of aldermen should be taxed in aids, tallages and
contributions by men of the wards in which such aldermen
resided in the same manner as the property of other citizens (fn. 1)
The names of seven of the twenty-three secular aldermen of the city are absent from the 1332 roll The
assessors were also usually dishonest In 1334 there
were complaints that the collectors in 1332 had connived at evasion, and applied to their own use great
sums which they had extorted (fn. 2) This accusation has
no special reference to London, but the morals of the
city were evidently not superior to other parts of the country
In 1346 in the assessment for the loan of 3,000 marks to the
King, one hundred and sixty-two men, many of them assessors,
had their payments increased, or they were inserted where
they had previously been omitted, by order of the King's
writ (fn. 3)
Before leaving the taxation of London it is interesting to
consider the proportion which it bore to the taxation of the
whole country This cannot be definitely stated for 1332, as
there is no evidence how much the subsidy yielded in that
year But it is probable that the amounts paid by different
parts of England were in the same ratio as in later years
The average yield of a tenth and fifteenth after 1334 was
from £38,000 to £39,000 (fn. 4) and the amount which London had
compounded for in 1334 was £733 6s 8d (fn. 5) This is the sum
which the city paid in 1373 according to the subsidy roll of
that year, which is the only printed roll, showing the taxation
of the whole country under Edward III (fn. 6) It affords a means
of comparing the amounts contributed, and consequently the
wealth of London with other parts of England Only three
other towns were assessed separately, like the counties, and
their payments are insignificant in comparison The largest
city of the North, York, was assessed at £162, the flourishing
port of Kingston-on-Hull paid only £33 6s 8d, and Bath
£13 6s 8d It is with counties that London must be
compared, in the fourteenth century Leicestershire, the West
Riding of Yorkshire and Nottingham had almost the same
taxable capacity