Inquisition post mortem
An Inquisition post mortem (abbreviated to Inq.p.m. or i.p.m., and formerly known as an escheat)[1] (Latin, meaning "(inquisition) after death") is an English medieval or early modern record of the death, estate and heir of one of the king's tenants-in-chief, made for royal fiscal purposes. The process of making such inquisition was effected by the royal escheators in each county where the deceased held land. The earliest inq.p.m. was made in 1236, in the reign of King Henry III (1216–1272), and the practice ceased c. 1640, at the start of the English Civil War, and was finally abolished by the Tenures Abolition Act 1660, which ended the feudal system.
Purpose
The escheators were ordered by a writ from the king's
Avoidance measures
The practice arose amongst tenants-in-chief of transferring the legal title in their lands to feoffees to uses, which effectively established trusts enabling the tenant-in-chief to continue to use the land and its revenues, but to avoid being officially recognised in law as the legal holder. This exempted him from the scope of the Inquisition post mortem, as the legal holders were effectively an immortal corporation one or two of whose constituent feoffees could on occasion die, only to be replaced by others. Such avoidance devices were apparently tolerated by the crown for a considerable time, yet on the accession of King Henry VII (1485–1509) the king's ancient right to his feudal incidents was enforced with determination and ruthlessness.
Procedure
For an heir to inherit his paternal lands a formal and lengthy standard procedure had to be completed, only at the end of which he could "sue out his livery of seisin" (i.e. gain physical possession of his inheritance), so it was in his best interest to get the process started as soon as possible after the death. He himself, or his relatives if a minor, would generally inform the king's chancery that the death had occurred,[2] and this would prompt the production of a writ by the chancery under the king's great seal addressed to the various escheators of the counties in which the deceased held lands, known as a writ diem clausit extremum. This writ, the earliest identified example of which dates from 1254,[3] informed the escheator that the king had been informed (quia datum est nobis intelligi ("because it has been given to us to know")) that the tenant-in-chief named had "closed his last day", as the Latin phrase by which the writ has become known may be translated, and that he was ordered to hold an inquisition post mortem, and to send the resultant report back to the chancery, with his seal and with the writ diem clausit extremum sewn onto it. On receipt of the writ the escheator requested the sheriff of the county concerned to empanell a jury made up of local freeholders, that is to say persons of social standing, who could be relied upon to provide the standard information required in accurate form. Such information, termed "the jurors' 'verdict'"[4] comprised:
- Date of death
- Name of heir
- Age of heir
- Name of manors held in chief
- Name of manors held from other persons
- Extent (i.e. area/size) of manors
- Annual value of manors
- Nature of feudal tenuresand services due
The most immediate order in the writ however was that requiring the escheator to take control of all the deceased's demesne lands, i.e. those which had not been sub-enfeoffed to mesne tenants but had been managed in-hand directly by the deceased and his household officials. All revenues resulting from such lands whilst in the hands of the escheator had to be audited (i.e. accounted for before the Barons of the Exchequer) periodically at the treasury.
The end result of the inquisition would be one of the three following, depending on what the jury reported:
- If the vassal had died with an heir who was of age, then a fine was paid to the king for the right of the heir to inherit, namely his relief.
- If the heir was underage, that is to say under 21 for a male and under 14 for a female, then the heir and the lands were placed into royal wardship.
- If there was no heir, then the lands escheated (i.e. reverted) to the king's royal demesne.
Form of permanent record
Inquisitions post mortem (or "escheats") were recorded on two duplicate sheets of parchment. The original return was held in the records of the chancery, to which department the escheator had made his original return, the other by the treasury, which had caused a copy to be made for fiscal purposes, in order to verify the escheator's accounts[5] which were presented to the treasury periodically. Unlike some other series of records, they were not historically sewn together as rolls, but in modern times the parchment sheets have been bound in files with covers, and are today held at the National Archives in Kew. The documents formerly comprising the chancery records are classified under the initial letter "C", whilst those from the exchequer bear the class letter "E". After the establishment of the Court of Wards in 1540 a copy of the Inq.p.m. was also sent to that court, and these records also survive at the National Archives classified as "WARD 7". When an Inq.p.m. had been held not as a result of a writ from chancery but under the escheator's own authority, the verdict was sent to the exchequer only.[6]
Value as historical source documents
Inquisitions post mortem form a valuable source for historians and genealogists, as they not only detail the familial relationships of many of the English nobility and gentry, but also provide information on the history of individual manors, including their size and forms of tenure by which they were held.[7] They thus constitute "one of the most important sources for the social and economic history of mediaeval England".[8] They also provide summaries and terms of settlements made during the lifetime of the deceased, for example settlement to feoffees, the original copy of which has rarely survived.
Example
The following example of the abstracted Latin inq.p.m. of William Pagam (d.1422), published in 1995 as no. 932 in vol. 20, 6–10 Henry V, of the Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, illustrates many common elements:
Writ 24 July 1422. Hampshire. Inquisition. Alton, 26 Aug.
He held of the king in-chief in his demesne as of fee the manor of Drayton, annual value 8 marks, for 6s. 8d. paid to the king by the constable of Porchester Castle at Michaelmas and providing at his own expense for 15 days a hobbler to keep the castle in time of war. By an indenture of 26 Oct. 1418, shown to the jurors, William Tauk, Robert Monkeston and Thomas Welegh, who were seised in their demesne as of fee, granted the manor of Pury, a messuage, carucate and 13 acres meadow, 40 a. pasture and 20 a. wood at "la Bere juxta Southwyke" as lands and tenements in Pury, Badley, "Colvyle", "Holdmede", and "Bere", to William Pagam and his wife Agnes, who survives, for life of Agnes, remainder to William and his heirs in fee simple. The manor of Pury, annual value 6 marks, is held of the king in chief, service unknown. The messuage, carucate, arable, meadow, pasture and wood at "le Bere" annual value 40s. are held of the king in chief for 7s. 4d. paid to the king by the constable of Porchester Castle at Michaelmas. He died on 15 July last. Philip Pagam is his son and next heir, aged 6 years and more. C 138/63, no.26A
Here the manor of Drayton is held by the
Calendars
Printed
List of published calendars
Period covered | Volume no. | Regnal years | Publisher, date, editors | National Archives classes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1236–1272 | vol 1 | 21–57 Henry III | 1904 [1][2][3] | C132; E149 |
1272–1290 | vol 2 | 1–19 Edward I | 1906 [4][5] | C133; E149 |
1291–1298 | vol 3 | 20–28 Edward I | HMSO, 1912 [6] | C133; E149 |
1299–1307 | vol 4 | 29–35 Edward I | HMSO, 1913 [7] | C133; E149 |
1307–1315 | vol 5 | 1–9 Edward II | HMSO, 1908 [8] | C134, E149 |
1316–1327 | Vol.6 | 10–20 Edward II | 1910 [9] | C134; E149 |
1327–1335 | Vol.7 | 1–9 Edward III | HMSO, 1909 [10] | C135; E149 |
1336–1345 | Vol.8 | 10–20 Edward III | 1913 [11] | C135; E149 |
1346–1352 | Vol.9 | 21–25 Edward III | 1916/17 [12] | C135; E149 |
1353–1360 | Vol.10 | 26–34 Edward III | 1921 | C135; E149 |
1361–1364 | Vol.11 | 35–38 Edward III | 1935 [13] | C135; E149 |
1365–1369 | Vol.12 | 39–43 Edward III | 1938 [14] | C135; E149 |
1370–1373 | Vol.13 | 44–47 Edward III | 1954/5 | C135; E149 |
1374–1377 | Vol.14 | 48–51 Edward III | 1952 | C135; E149 |
1377–1384 | Vol 15 | 1–7 Richard II | HMSO,1970 | C136; E149 |
1384–1392 | Vol 16 | 7–15 Richard II | HMSO, 1974 | C136; E149 |
1392–1399 | Vol 17 | 15–23 Richard II | HMSO,1988 | C136; E149 |
1399–1405 | Vol 18 | 1–6 Henry IV | HMSO,1987 | C137; E149 |
1405–1413 | Vol 19 | 7–14 Henry IV | HMSO, 1992 | C137; E149 |
1413–1418 | Vol 20 | 1–5 Henry V | HMSO, 1995 | C138; E149 |
1418–1422 | Vol 21 | 6–10 Henry V | Boydell & Brewer, 2002, ed. J.L.Kirby, Janet H. Stevenson | C138; E149 |
1422–1427 | Vol 22 | 1–5 Henry VI | Boydell & Brewer, 2003, ed. Kate Parkin, Janet H. Stevenson | C139; E149 |
1427–1432 | Vol 23 | 6–10 Henry VI | Boydell & Brewer, 2004, ed. Claire Noble | C139; E149 |
1432–1437 | Vol 24 | 11–15 Henry VI | Boydell Press, 2010, ed. M.L.Holford, S.A.Mileson, C.V.Noble, Kate Parkin | C139; E149 |
1437–1442 | Vol 25 | 16–20 Henry VI | Boydell Press, 2009, ed. Claire Noble | C139; E149 |
1442–1447 | Vol 26 | 21–25 Henry VI | Boydell Press, 2009, ed. M.L. Holford | C139; E149 |
1447–1461 | uncalendared | consult original documents only | C139; E149 | |
1461–1483 | uncalendared | consult original documents only | C140; E149 | |
1483–1485 | vol 35 | Edward V; 1–3 Richard III | Boydell and Brewer, 2021, ed. G. KcKelvie, M. Hicks | C141; E149 |
1485–1496 | Vol. 1 | 1–12 Henry VII | Second Series, HMSO, 1898 | C142; E150 |
1496–1504 | Vol. 2 | 13–20 Henry VII | Second Series, HMSO, 1915 [15] | C142; E150 |
1504–1509 | Vol. 3 | 20–24 Henry VII | Second Series, HMSO, 1955 [16] | C142; E150 |
1509–1660 | uncalendared | consult original documents only | C142; E150 |
See also
- Proof of age inquisition
Sources
Books
- Brown, William. Preface to Yorkshire Inquisitions of the Reigns of Henry III and Edward I, Vol. I, Yorkshire Archaeological Society, Record Series, p.iii, 1892
- Carpenter, Christine (2003). "Introduction". In Parkin, Kate; Stevenson, Janet H. (eds.). Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem. Vol. 22, 1422–1427. Boydell & Brewer.
- Lyon, Bryce Dale (1980). A Constitutional and Legal History of Medieval England (Second ed.). New York: Norton. ISBN 0-393-95132-4.
- ISBN 9781843837121.
- Maxwell Lyte, H. C. (1904). "Introduction". In Sharp, J. E. E. S. (ed.). Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem. Vol. 1 (Henry III). London: His Majesty's Stationery Office. pp. vii–ix.
Further reading
- .
References
- ^ Maxwell-Lyte, Introduction, uses the term "inquisition post mortem" and states they were "formerly known as 'escheats'". Modern academic usage favours the term Inq.p.m., see e.g. the Winchester University project, op.cit.
- ^ That the heir himself generally sued for a writ of diem clausit extremum is noted by Fleming, Peter & Wood, Michael, in Gloucestershire's Forgotten Battle: Nibley Green 1470
- ^ Maxwell-Lyte
- ^ Called a verdict in contemporary correspondence re the Inq.p.m. of William Paston (d.1444), see Winchester University case study 2: Informing the Escheator
- ^ National Archives, op.cit., para 5
- ^ National Archives, para.5
- ^ Lyon Constitutional and Legal History p. 478
- ^ Winchester University, stated in several passages
- ^ "Inquisitions Post Mortem – Mapping the Medieval Countryside: properties, places & people". Retrieved 19 August 2016.
External links
- "Inquisitions post mortem: land ownership and inheritance in the medieval and early modern periods". The National Archives research guide.
- "The Inquisitions Post-Mortem Projects". University of Winchester.
- "Mapping the Medieval Countryside". Inquisitions Post Mortem Project.