ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1970, this volume examines the history of the Yorkist and early Tudor royal landed estate, conducted in the light of its role in earlier medieval history and especially in Lancastrian government. It provides material with which to understand the nature and origins of the changes that took place in the late 15th and early 16th centuries in Tudor chamber finance. Many of the documents had not been previously published when this book first appeared. The book also questions fundamental assumptions in the wider field of English constitutional history, for example, that the revenues of medieval kings of England were divided into ‘ordinary’ and ‘extra-ordinary’ and that they were expected to ‘live of their own’ on their ‘ordinary’ revenues.

part |109 pages

Documents

chapter 3|2 pages

The First Act of Resumption, 1450

chapter 7|5 pages

John Milewater’s Account, 1461 to 1463

chapter 8|1 pages

The King’s Speech to Parliament, 1467

chapter 9|2 pages

Edward IV’s Act of Resumption, 1467

chapter 11|2 pages

Edward IV’s financial policies from 1475