SCUTAGE

skyooˈtĭj, feudal payment, usually in cash, given in lieu of actual military service due from a vassal to an overlord. It applied especially to the vassals of the king. Scutage collection increased noticeably in the later 12th cent., no doubt partly because of the rise of a professional military class of knights, with the consequent trend to commutation of military service. Subinfeudation (the system by which a vassal himself became an overlord, granting part of his fief to one who in turn became his vassal) may also have complicated the collection of military service and made money payments more feasible. In England the wars of the king for his French territories in the 12th, 13th, and 14th cent. were a great drain on the kingdom. The king obtained the necessary funds by scutages on his vassals and their subvassals. The barons resisted the imposition of scutage, and one of their major demands against King John concerned scutage. In the Magna Carta (1215), John pledged himself to collect scutage only with the "common counsel" of his barons. In later times the more important vassals collected the scutage from their subvassals, acting as tax farmers. The growth of taxes after the time of Edward III of England entirely displaced the feudal tax of scutage.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Scutage
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books on: Scutage  - 246 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...the clerks in the Exchequer regarded the scutage and fine as in essence the same. They...listed under the same headings. The third scutage of King John, for example, levied in...Pipe Roll under the heading Of fines and scutage of knights of the third scutage 1 or simply...
scutage had to be collected, and the disparity...his obligations, for he could collect scutage from over ninety fees, though he might...On the other hand, if he had to pay scutage to the Crown, did he pass on the whole...
scutage had to be collected, and the disparity...his obligations, for he could collect scutage from over ninety fees, though he might...On the other hand, if he had to pay scutage to the Crown, did he pass on the whole...
...and the service of my lord, namely scutage, in respect of which the monks shall...the fourth penny when my lord shall take scutage in his land. 1 The exact interpretation...the reference to the fourth penny of scutage is ambiguous. But there is no ambiguity...
...Gervase had simply calculated the English scutage at sixty shillings sterling, the sum...raised for the war of Toulouse Another scutage was levied in the eleventh year for the...collected in exactly the same manner by scutage and talliage, but owing to several causes...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

journal articles on: Scutage  - 3 results

 
 
...below lists the scutages levied during Johns...the basis of the scutage was less valid and...which taxes such as scutage and taxes on movables were levied. Scutage before John had...1207 and the later scutages. These attempts...
...custom and of the king as a feudal lord" (Lyon 1980, 312). The king therefore was forced to agree, for instance, that no scutage (a tax in lieu of military service) would be levied without consent. More important, the kings confiscation through law...
...generations later. The document refers to the lands in both places being held per servicium dimidii militis. This shows that scutage must have been in place by this time. Depending on the amount of lands given in the gift, the requirement may be quite a...


 

magazine articles on: Scutage  - 1 result

 
 
...and America. From the historical summary page, users can also discover the meanings of "carucate," "danegeld," "scutage," and "tallage," as well as visit the Tax History Project via the provided external link General Tax Resources Tax information...


 

newspaper articles on: Scutage  - 1 result

 
 
...for a quarter of the value of their property, gold and silver treasures were confiscated from churches and money raised from scutage (in lieu of a knights military service) and carucage (a land levy). These are thought to have brought in 30 to 35 tons...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Scutage  - 5 results

 
 
SCUTAGE skyoo tij, feudal payment...the vassals of the king. Scutage collection increased noticeably...obtained the necessary funds by scutages on his vassals and their subvassals...resisted the imposition of scutage, and one of their major demands...
...disintegrated, knight service was with growing frequency commuted into cash payments. In England the payment was known as scutage . Many landowners found the duties of knighthood too onerous for their meager resources and contented themselves with the rank...
...had resorted to all means to secure men and money for his Poitou campaign, and after returning home he attempted to collect scutage from the barons who had refused to aid him on the expedition. Abuses of feudal customs and extortion of money from the barons...
...held his land in return for performing duties to the lord. These incidents of socage were essentially like the aids and scutage exacted of knights; like those, they were also eventually commutated into fixed money payments. In the development of the...
...these, except by the "common counsel" of the realm. It is difficult to distinguish aids from other feudal dues such as scutage and tallage . The term had a much wider scope than was indicated in the Magna Carta. In general, aids fell into disuse with...


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