Saturday, 17 January 2015

The 1352 Statute of Treasons, Forging the Royal Seal, and 'Seeing Authority' in Later Medieval England

The year 1352 saw the enacting of the Statute of Treasons, a truly significant legislative act that has long drawn the attention of constitutional and legal historians. The Statute (25 Edward III, st. 5, c. 2) was ground-breaking in providing a definition of treason, which prevented the abuse of the worryingly wide – and previously undefined – scope of treason charges that had been conspicuous in the political turmoil of the early 1300s. The classic example of this vague ‘accroaching on the royal power’ came in 1347, when Sir John Gerberge committed what was essentially a standard case of armed highway robbery and found himself accused of treason. Such arbitrary accusations formed a worrying precedent which was largely resolved by the 1352 Statute, which set strict limits on the crimes which could be considered high treason.[1] Indeed, the statute specifically states that it was not intended that those – like Gerberge – who rode armed with the intentions of robbery should be charged with treason. Historians concerned with the Statute have largely concentrated on two issues. The first is the motivation behind the creation of this piece of legislation, with differing opinions on whether the Statute was motivated primarily by a legalistic concern[2] - to clarify and differentiate between treason and forfeiture (and so to clarify the law regarding property) – or by political considerations revolving around the wishes of the magnates to protect themselves against the risk of arbitrary forfeiture by the king.[3] The second issue has been the restriction of the Statute on the power to create new interpretations of treason, which was placed firmly under the jurisdiction of the king in parliament, and as such had significant repercussions for the seventeenth century.[4]

So far, so good; important elements of the 1352 Statute and the preceding state of the treason law have received distinguished treatment. There is, however, an aspect of the treason law as codified in the 1352 Statute that, perhaps being overshadowed by the novelty of the statute and its constitutional implications, has not received a great deal of attention. This is the inclusion of counterfeiting the king’s great or privy seal in the crimes to be judged as high treason. As mentioned above, most scholarly articles are concerned with different aspects of the law of treason, and J. G. Bellamy’s book on the subject simply notes that, since any tampering with the king’s seal had always been considered treason, the inclusion of this matter is only to be expected, without elaborating further.[5] As Bellamy (very) briefly demonstrates in his pre-1352 analysis of the medieval concept of treason, the counterfeiting of the king’s seal had long been considered a treasonous activity. Counterfeiting the king’s image had been held a crime of laesae majestatis since Roman times, and this Roman Law influence was specifically articulated in both Glanville and Bracton, and appears in later works of Fleta and Britton. Furthermore, concerns about the counterfeiting of seals were not just academic. Forgery was a real and serious issue and as such a significant amount of energy and resources were spent on punishing offenders. In November 1336, for example, Hugh Courtenay, earl of Devon, was issued a letter close telling him that a certain John of Norwich had been arrested for possessing ‘certain false and forged commissions under the great seal and others under the counterfeit privy seal’ and that, with the relevant commission having been inspected by the king and his council, he should review the commissions himself and have John drawn and hanged.[6] As Bellamy’s demonstration is not accompanied by an explanation of just why forgery was such a consistent and prominent issue, it may be interesting and useful to speculate on the possible reasons for the incorporation of counterfeiting the royal seal into the highest category of criminal law.[7]

At first sight, the immediate reasons for the association of forgery with crimen laesae majestatis would seem to be practical. The use of false seals on forged charters would threaten the security of that most prevalent concern of the late medieval landowner, the successful seisin of his or her landed property. The potential for forged documents sealed with forged seals to influence property settlements is at once obvious and important. An equally practical concern, although this time solely of the central government, would be loss of revenue at the hanaper. A person wishing to have a charter or letter of some kind sealed with the great seal would usually have to pay for the privilege, and these payments were considerable by the time of Edward III, with the sealing of a charter costing at least 16s 4d, and original writs – frequently used as the basis of the common law – costing 6d each.[8] The use of false seals would, of course, deprive the crown of this revenue.

There can be little doubt, then, that practical concerns played a part in the association of counterfeiting the royal seals and the law of treason. However, many crimes threatened property rights and diminished royal revenues but were not to be considered treason. Another – less tangible – issue may help to explain why the medieval mind considered counterfeiting such a heinous crime. For most people royal authority was experienced through the image of the king. The primary media of this image was not the actual witnessing of the kings person while he travelled with his household or held a tournament but came rather through exposure to royal letters and charters – sealed, of course, with royal seals. Michael Clanchy has estimated that by the fourteenth century the system of royal writs had penetrated ‘to every village’.[9] This structure of visualised government has not received the attention it deserves.[10] Most people inhabiting the political community of the English polity would never meet the king but they would have had exposure to the image of his royal majesty as portrayed by his seal. The dissemination of written royal instruments comprised the mechanism by which government was conducted throughout the realm: people literally saw royal authority in these documents. It is within this context that we must see the association of counterfeiting with treason as codified in the 1352 Statute: the forging of the royal seal would be a direct perversion of the written royal authority that represented the king’s will. Crimes involving counterfeiting would upset the orientation of the body politic by usurping royal authority and channelling that ‘public’ authority in the interests of a private individual whose concern was probably to harm a member of the community of the realm. As such, the forgery of the royal seals could not be anything other than a crime that warranted a punishment of utmost severity. Perhaps, then, we may conclude with a plea for the recognition that the inclusion of counterfeiting in medieval notions of treason is more important than has previously been recognised, providing an indication as it does to the working of the late medieval polity and to the experience of government within this polity. Such recognition would seem to be overdue.  



[1] Select Documents of English Constitutional History, 1307-1485, ed. S.B. Chrimes and A.L. Brown (London, 1961), pp. 76-7; W.M. Ormrod, Edward III (London, 2011), p. 364.
[2] I.D. Thornley, ‘The Act of Treasons of 1352’, History, 6 (1921), pp. 106-8; J.G. Bellamy, The Law of Treason in England in the Later Middle Ages (Cambridge, 1970), p. 92.
[3] Most forcefully articulated by M.V. Clarke in her Fourteenth Century Studies, ed. L.S. Sutherland and M. McKisack (Oxford, 1937), p. 132.
[4] S. Rezneck, ‘The Early History of the Parliamentary Declaration of Treason’, English Historical Review, 42 (1927), pp. 497-513.
[5] Bellamy, The Law of Treason, p. 85.
[6] CCR 1333-1337, pp. 721-2.
[7] The discussion below excludes coins. This is because there are obvious fiscal reasons for prohibiting the clipping of coins etc. that do not apply to the counterfeiting of royal seals. It should be noted, however, that as coins bore the image of the king the conclusions of this piece also apply in part to the inclusion of articles relating to the coinage in the 1352 statute and in treason law generally.
[8] B. Wilkinson, The Chancery under Edward III (Manchester, 1929), pp. 59-60.
[9] M.T. Clanchy, From Memory to Written Record: England 1066-1307, Second Edition (Oxford, 1993), p. 53.
[10] Although John Watts has examined the visibility of state apparatus in his ‘Looking for the State in Later Medieval England’, in P. Coss and M. Keen (eds)., Heraldry, Pageantry and Social Display in Medieval England (Woodbridge, 2002), pp. 243-269, his definition of state does not include strictly royal media like seals. ‘Seeing authority’ has received more attention in the early modern period, in particular in the work of K. Sharpe. Unfortunately, while Sharpe recognises the importance of imagery on seals, the subject receives far less attention than it merits. See K. Sharpe, Selling the Tudor Monarchy: Authority and Image in Sixteenth-Century England (London, 2009), p. 152. It is revealing that Sharpe highlights the 1536 Statute of Treasons, which included the same prohibitions on forgery of seals as the 1352 Statute, as investing the royal writ with ‘an almost spiritual quality’ (p. 87). On the basis of the discussion in this piece, we should predate this statement to a far earlier period and see the 1536 Statute as confirming an existing situation rather than being innovatory in this respect.    

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