亨利三世财政部的银币、木制计数和羊皮纸卷

IF 0.4 Q3 HISTORY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES Financial History Review Pub Date : 2021-12-01 DOI:10.1017/s0968565021000184
Richard Cassidy
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在13世纪中期,英国只使用一种硬币,即银便士。硬币进出国库的情况都记录在国库收款单上。与管卷相比,这些收货和发放卷在很大程度上被忽略了,管卷是审计记录。一些更模糊的记录,如发行备忘录,有助于展示当现金是唯一可用的媒介时,政府财政的日常运作是如何运作的。它们表明了一些令人惊讶的事情:收据和发行账簿并不一定记录在它们名义上涵盖的期间内发生的交易。这些数据还表明,英国财政部早在几十年前就开始尝试使用点票棒等其他支付方式。这些名册和统计数字表明,财政部的目标并不像我们现在所期望的那样,与平衡收支、编制预算、甚至记录某一年内的现金流量有关。这些概念当时还不为人所知。相反,英国财政部的目标是通过将财政责任分配给个人而不是机构,来确保官员(包括财政部和其他政府部门的官员)的问责制。
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Silver coins, wooden tallies and parchment rolls in Henry III's Exchequer
In the mid thirteenth century, England used only a single coin, the silver penny. The flow of coins into and out of the government's treasury was recorded in the rolls of the Exchequer of Receipt. These receipt and issue rolls have been largely ignored, compared to the pipe rolls, which were records of audit. Some more obscure records, the memoranda of issue, help to show how the daily operations of government finance worked, when cash was the only medium available. They indicate something surprising: the receipt and issue rolls do not necessarily record transactions which took place during the periods they nominally cover. They also show that the Exchequer was experimenting with other forms of payment, using tally sticks, several decades earlier than was previously known. The rolls and the tallies indicate that the objectives of the Exchequer were not, as we would now expect, concerned with balancing income and expenditure, drawing up a budget, or even recording cash flows within a particular year. These concepts were as yet unknown. Instead, the Exchequer's aim was to ensure the accountability of officials, its own and those in other branches of government, by allocating financial responsibility to individuals rather than institutions.
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来源期刊
Financial History Review
Financial History Review HISTORY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES-
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: Financial History Review is the international forum for all scholars with interests in the development of banking, finance, and monetary matters. Its editors deliberately seek to embrace the broadest approach to publishing research findings within this growing historical specialism. Articles address all aspects of financial and monetary history, including technical and theoretical approaches, those derived from cultural and social perspectives and the interrelations between politics and finance. These presentations of current research are complemented by somewhat shorter pieces, specifically conceived as aids to research. Each issue contains a substantial review section, and every complete volume contains an annual bibliography.
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