Everything about The Valor Ecclesiasticus totally explained
The
Valor Ecclesiasticus (
Latin: "church valuation") was a survey of the finances of the church in
England,
Wales and English controlled parts of
Ireland made in
1535 on the orders of
Henry VIII.
In
1534 King Henry broke with the
Pope and by the
Act of Supremacy made himself the supreme head of the church in his lands. One of his first actions in his new role was to impose taxes on the
clergy. Taxes traditionally paid by clerics to the Pope were now to be given to him and he also decided in late 1534 to create a new annual
income tax of 10% of the income from all church lands and offices. In order to properly assess the new tax a survey of all church property and revenues had to made.
In January
1535 the government appointed commissions throughout the country to conduct the survey. All clergymen,
parish priests, heads of
monasteries,
colleges,
hospitals and other institutions under church auspices were commanded to give sworn testimony before their local commissioners as to their income, the lands their establishments owned and the revenues they received from all other sources. The commissioners were to examine documents and account books and from these and the testimony provide a full financial statement for every religious institution. The work of collecting the information was ordered to be completed by May 30 1535 and the results sent in to the
Exchequer in
London.
The commissioners were unpaid and untrained, mostly local gentry, mayors, magistrates, bishops and sherrifs, but they approached the vast task with speed and, by the summer of 1535, the government had in its hands a detailed accounting of the property and wealth of the church. The majority of their work survives, preserved in 22 Latin volumes and three folders at the
Public Record Office in
Kew. Two of the volumes are
illuminated manuscripts and seem to be a summary made for King Henry's personal use.
Accuracy
The commissioners had no particular reason to be partial to the clergy and they applied themselves to the task with much dilligence. Where the figures can be checked, for example against the financial records of the king's officials in charge of dissolving monasteries in the later 1530s, they're shown to be broadly accurate though on the low side, in some cases by as much as 15%. There is, particularly in the north, a tendency to underestimate the value of some important classes of asset, especially agricultural land held in
desmesne and
woodland. One theory to account for this is the natural tendency of taxpayers to make conservative estimates combined with the rushed nature of the work, which encouraged the commissioners to give the benefit of the doubt.
Significance
The Valor gave the government for the first time a solid understanding of the scale of the wealth of the church as a whole and particularly of the monasteries. It wasn't long before King Henry began planning ways of seizing much of these riches for himself, starting with the smaller religious houses. Figures from the Valor were a vital part of the process of the
First Suppression Act (
1536), Henry's first move in the
Dissolution of the Monasteries, which dissolved all monasteries with a declared income of less than £200 per year.
The Valor is a document of the first importance for historians of the later
mediæval and
Tudor church, English
Reformation and the Dissolution. It is also valuable to economic historians of the period.
Bibliography and references
- Abbeys and Priories in England and Wales, Bryan Little, Batsford 1979
- The Abbeys and Priories of Medieval England, Colin Platt, Secker & Warburg 1984
- Bare Ruined Choirs, David Knowles, Cambridge University Press 1959
Further Information
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