{{Short description|UK government accounting process}} {{Use British English|date=August 2025}} {{Use dmy dates|date=October 2016}} [[File:New Palace Yard, 1807.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[New Palace Yard]], home of the English Exchequer from the 12th to the 19th century: the building to the right of [[Westminster Hall]] housed the Court of Exchequer, the buildings to the left housed the offices of the Exchequer of Receipt (which "stretched across the entrance to the [[Speaker's House]] to the east of the Hall towards the river").<ref name="SR1883" /> Pictured in 1807.]] The UK '''Exchequer''' (formally '''His Majesty's Exchequer''')<ref name="InterpretationAct1978" /> is part of the [[machinery of government]], defined as 'the legal and accounting entities which support the UK's spending and revenue activities'.<ref name="Berkeley&c2025">{{cite journal |last1=Berkeley |first1=A. |last2=Ryan-Collins |first2=J. |last3=Voldsgaard |first3=A. |last4=Wilson |first4=N. |title=The Self-Financing State: An Institutional Analysis of Government Expenditure, Revenue Collection and Debt Issuance Operations in the United Kingdom |journal=Journal of Economic Issues |date=September 2025 |volume=59 |issue=3 |pages=852–880 |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00213624.2025.2533726 |access-date=3 March 2026}}</ref> The term is used for the [[accounting]] processes of [[Government of the United Kingdom|central government]], and as such it appears in various financial documents (including the latest departmental and agency annual accounts).<ref>{{cite web |title=Annual Reports and Accounts for Central Government Departments |url=https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/annual-reports-and-accounts-for-central-government-departments |website=gov.uk |publisher=UK Government |access-date=15 March 2026}}</ref> The [[Consolidated Fund|Consolidated Fund account]] at the Bank of England is officially termed 'The Account of His Majesty's Exchequer':<ref name="Berkeley&c2025" /> it serves as the government's [[Current account (banking)|current account]], into which is paid the money raised from [[taxation]] (and other [[government revenues]]), and out of which is issued money for [[government spending]].<ref name="EFPA1950" />
Historically the Exchequer (the '''Court of Exchequer''') was an [[Executive (government)|executive]] body, having the combined characteristics of a [[British government departments|government department]] and a [[court of law]].<ref name="EADA1866" /> It was responsible for the collection and the management of taxes and revenues, making payments on behalf of the sovereign and auditing official accounts. Twice a year, at [[Easter]] and [[Michaelmas]], those responsible for collecting the king's revenue ([[sheriffs]], [[bailiffs]], [[escheator]]s and others) were summoned to the Exchequer to deposit the money and account for all that was owed.
The existence of an Exchequer in England was first recorded in 1110. Similar offices were established in [[Normandy]] (by 1180), in [[Scotland]] around 1200 and in [[Ireland]] in 1210.<ref name="Howard" />
Alongside its [[accountancy]] responsibilities, the Exchequer had a [[judicial]] character.<ref name="Bryson" /> Its primary function in this regard was as a court of revenue: concerned with asserting and protecting 'the [[royal prerogative]] in matters regarding the King's revenue', as well as enforcing payments and preventing fraud.{{sfn|Price|1830|pp=50-51}} From an early date, however, the Exchequer developed a broader jurisdiction (and secondary function) as a [[court of common pleas]]:<ref name="EB1911" /> 'hearing and determining personal suits and actions at law between subject and subject'.{{sfn|Price|1830|pp=51-52}} Over time, the principle of [[Equity (law)|equity]] was admitted into the judicial workings of the Exchequer, which then came to be recognised as a [[court of equity]] as well as a court of law. In the [[Tudor period]] the judicial work of the Exchequer further expanded: the [[Court of Augmentations]] and the [[Court of First Fruits and Tenths]] were both merged into the Exchequer, significantly increasing its workload.
The old Exchequer continued in operation until the 1830s, after which its various offices were gradually and progressively abolished (with their functions being transferred to other departments of state or courts of law). The Exchequer as presently constituted dates from the passing of the [[Exchequer and Audit Departments Act 1866]],<ref name="Berkeley&c2025" /> which remains in force in relation to the accounting processes of HM Government.<ref>{{cite web |title=Exchequer and Audit Departments Act 1866 |url=https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Vict/29-30/39/contents |website=legislation.gov.uk |publisher=National Archives |access-date=3 March 2026}}</ref> It is 'one of the oldest surviving institutions of its type in the world'.<ref name="Berkeley&c2025" />
==Etymology== [[File:Exchequer of Ireland.jpg|thumb|right|upright|The [[Exchequer of Ireland]] in the fifteenth century.]] The Exchequer was named after a table used to perform calculations for taxes and goods in the medieval period.<ref>{{cite book | last = Noble | first = Thomas | title = The foundations of Western civilization | publisher = Teaching Co | location = Chantilly, VA | year = 2002 | chapter = 36 | isbn = 978-1565856370 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/foundationsofwes04nobl}}</ref> According to the ''[[Dialogus de Scaccario]]'' (the 'Dialogue concerning the Exchequer', an early [[medieval]] work describing the practice of the Exchequer),<ref name="Dialogue concerning the Exchequer" /> the table was large, {{Convert|10|ft|m}} by {{Convert|5|ft|m}} with a raised edge or "lip" on all sides (of about the height of four fingers to ensure that nothing fell off it), upon which [[Jeton|counters]] were placed representing various values. The name Exchequer referred to the resemblance of the table to a [[chess]] board (French: ''échiquier'') as it was covered by a black cloth bearing stripes of about the breadth of a human hand in a [[check (pattern)|chequer-pattern]]. The spaces represented pounds, shillings and pence.<ref name="Dialogue concerning the Exchequer">[https://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/excheq1.html King John of England: Royal Licenses to Export and Import, 1205–1206 Dialogue concerning the Exchequer] Internet Medieval Sourcebook publ by Fordham University, New York. Source: Joseph Hunter, ed., Rotuli Selecti, (London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1834), pp. 4–5, 11; reprinted in Roy C. Cave & Herbert H. Coulson, A Source Book for Medieval Economic History, (Milwaukee: The Bruce Publishing Co., 1936; reprint ed., New York: Biblo & Tannen, 1965), p.412</ref> It has been suggested that this was necessary because many of those who were responsible for collecting and submitting taxes, were unable to read or write;<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bucholz |first=Robert |url=https://doi.org/10.1002/9781394266517 |title=Early Modern England 1485‐1714 |last2=Key |first2=Newton |date=2019-12-09 |publisher=Wiley |isbn=978-1-118-53222-5}}</ref> more straightforwardly, the counting table provided a useful and practical means of calculating, in plain sight, how much was owed and how much had been paid.{{sfn|Brand|1989|pp=20-21}}
== Exchequer in England and Wales == {{see also|History of the English fiscal system}} Like other offices of state in England, the Exchequer originally formed part of the ''Curia Regis'' or King's court. The royal court was the centre of government administration and finance. No distinction was made between the King's money and the [[public finances]]. It was also the seat of justice, cases being heard in the ''[[Aula Regia|Aula Regis]]'' (the [[Great Hall]] of the king's palace).{{sfn|Price|1830|pp=10-11}}
In origin, [[His Majesty's Treasury]] was a strong box kept in the king's [[Great chamber|chamber]] and therefore it was overseen by the king's [[Chamberlain (office)|Chamberlains]] (who remained in charge even after it had been given a more secure and permanent base in [[Winchester Castle]]).<ref name="Tout1920" /> The Treasury was, first and foremost, the place where the money was stored. The Exchequer, on the other hand, emerged (in the early 12th century) as a [[Finance|financial office]]: 'the Curia sitting for financial purposes'.{{sfn|Anson|1892|p=161}} As such, it was, by default, staffed and overseen by the [[Great Officers of State (United Kingdom)|Great Officers of State]]. By the reign of [[Henry II of England|Henry II]], in the mid-12th century, the Exchequer had come to be based in the [[Palace of Westminster]] (the monarch's principal royal residence in London), though occasionally (up until 1339) it sat elsewhere.<ref name="CofA">{{cite web |title=Centre of Administration |url=https://www.parliament.uk/about/living-heritage/building/palace/westminsterhall/government-and-administration/centre-of-admin/ |website=UK Parliament |access-date=2 May 2026}}</ref> By the time [[John, King of England|King John]] came to the throne, the king's treasury had been removed from Winchester to Westminster.
By the end of the 12th century,<ref name="Tout1920">{{cite book |last1=Tout |first1=T. F. |title=Chapters in the administrative history of mediaeval England: the wardrobe, the chamber, and the small seals (Volume I) |date=1920 |publisher=Manchester University Press |location=Manchester |page=12 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Chapters_in_the_Administrative_History_o/Q95RAQAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA12 |access-date=1 January 2026 |author1-link=Thomas Tout}}</ref> the Exchequer had begun to separate itself from the ''Curia Regis'' and was operating more-or-less independently both as an administrative and as a judicial body.<ref name="Scargill-BirdIntro" /> When in session it was termed the King's Court at the Exchequer ({{lang|la|Curia Regis ad Scaccarium}}).{{sfn|Madox|1769a|p=82}} Those involved in its oversight included the aforementioned Chamberlains, the [[Chief Justiciar]] (the senior judge and ''de facto'' [[English chief ministers|chief minister]] of the kingdom), the king's [[Lord Chancellor|Chancellor]] (who was head of his writing office and custodian of the [[Great Seal of the Realm]]) and his [[Lord Treasurer|Treasurer]] (a comparatively junior official at this time); the Chancellor and Treasurer were clerics, the Chamberlains were laymen.{{sfn|Johnson|1983|p=xxiii-xxxiii}}
===The early Exchequer (12th and 13th centuries)===
====Origins==== It is unknown exactly when the Exchequer was established, but the earliest mention appears in a royal writ of 1110 (during the reign of King [[Henry I of England|Henry I]]), addressed from [[Roger of Salisbury]] and [[Ranulf (chancellor)|Ranulf]] the [[Lord Chancellor|Chancellor]] to the ''barones de scaccario'' ([[Barons of the Exchequer]]).<ref>{{cite book|first1=Charles|last1=Johnson|first2=H. A.|last2=Cronne|year=1956|title=Regesta Regum Anglo-Normannorum 1066–1154|volume=II|at=961}}</ref> The oldest surviving [[Pipe Roll]] is that of 1130, already in mature form (indicating that such records existed for some time beforehand, though they do not survive).<ref name="Bartlett" />{{rp|p.159}}<ref>Chrimes ''Administrative History'' pp. 62–63</ref> Pipe Rolls form a mostly continuous record of royal revenues and taxation (though not all such revenue went into the Exchequer, so some taxes and levies were never recorded in the Pipe Rolls).<ref name="Dict219" />{{rp|p.219}} The {{Lang|la|[[Dialogus de Scaccario]]}} ({{gloss|Dialogue concerning the Exchequer}}), which gives a detailed description of the Exchequer and its workings, is believed to date from the late 1170s (during the reign of [[Henry II of England|Henry II]]).<ref name="Dialogue concerning the Exchequer" />
According to the ''Dialogue'', the Exchequer is "said to have begun with the very conquest of the kingdom made by king [[William the Conqueror|William]], the arrangement being taken [...] from the exchequer across the seas" (i.e. the [[Exchequer of Normandy]]); albeit "they differ in very many and almost the most important points".<ref name="Dialogue concerning the Exchequer" /> Some scholars, including [[Thomas Madox]] (in his 1769 ''History of the Exchequer''), have accepted the likelihood of this proposition;{{sfn|Madox|1769a|pp=177-189}} others, such as 19th-century constitutional historian [[William Stubbs]], have dissented from it. (Either way, in contrast to those of its English counterpart, no surviving records of the Exchequer of Normandy predate 1180).{{sfn|Brand|1989|pp=14-19}}
The Exchequer's ''[[modus operandi]]'' came to be referred to, with reverence, as the '''Course of the Exchequer''': appeal was frequently (and often selectively) made to the 'ancient Course' by officers of the Exchequer in order to justify claims of precedence and particular ways of working.<ref name="Wright2023" />
====Constitution==== The ''Dialogue concerning the Exchequer'' describes the {{circa|1180}} Exchequer as split into two components, which it terms the 'upper Exchequer' and the 'lower Exchequer'.<ref name="Dialogus">[https://avalon.law.yale.edu/medieval/excheq.asp Dialogue concerning the Exchequer]</ref> The upper Exchequer (usually referred to simply as 'the Exchequer', formally the '''Court of His Majesty's Exchequer'''){{sfn|Poole|1912|p=100}} functioned as a [[Court of Audit]]:{{sfn|Brand|1989|p=12}} those appointed as Barons of the Exchequer would sit at the counting table (with its distinctive chequered cloth) where, one by one, the [[Sheriff#United Kingdom|sheriffs]] of the kingdom (and others with responsibility for Crown revenues{{efn|E.g. [[Steward (office)|stewards]] and [[bailiffs]] of [[Honour (England)|honours]], bailiffs and [[Reeve (England)|reeves]] of towns, guardians of the [[temporalities]] of vacant bishoprics and abbacies, guardians of [[escheated]] [[English feudal barony|baronies]] and other [[fiefs]], and [[guilds]] of craftsmen.{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=127}}}}) would present themselves to account for monies (rents and other income) which they had received on behalf of the King. The lower Exchequer (known as the '''Exchequer of Receipt''', formally the '''Court of the Receipt of His Majesty's Exchequer''')<ref name="Beatson1806">{{cite book |last1=Beatson |first1=Robert |title=A political index to the histories of Great Britain and Ireland (Volume II) |date=1806 |publisher=Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme |location=London |pages=306–322 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/A_political_index_to_the_histories_of_Gr/MX4BAAAAQAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA306 |access-date=8 March 2026 |chapter=Of the Court of Exchequer}}</ref> was where these monies were deposited (and wooden [[tally sticks]] issued as a receipt for each deposit). The two were inextricably connected: 'whatever is declared payable at the greater [upper] one is here [at the lower] paid; and whatever has been paid here is accounted for there'.<ref name="Dialogus" />
The 12th-century Exchequer normally sat twice a year: at [[Easter]] and [[Michaelmas]]. The [[Fiscal year|Exchequer year]] ended on 29 September (the feast of Michaelmas); thus at Michaelmas (at the "''Scaccarium S. Michaelis''") the sheriffs were required to present their final account for the year, while at Easter (the "''Scaccarium Paschæ''") they were required to present an interim account.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Richardson |first=H.G. |date=1925 |title=The Exchequer Year |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3678321 |journal=Transactions of the Royal Historical Society |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |volume=8 |pages=171–190 |doi=10.2307/3678321 |issn=0080-4401 |jstor=3678321 |s2cid=154782015 |quote=From the earliest times and for many centuries the year of account in the Exchequer ended at Michaelmas|url-access=subscription }}</ref> The Exchequer of Receipt at this time only operated while the Exchequer itself was in session; afterwards the chests of money were taken and deposited in the Treasury at Winchester.{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=72}}
Originally, the Exchequer's [[jurisdiction]] covered only such matters as were associated with the king's revenue;<ref name=Scargill-BirdIntro>{{cite book |last1=Scargill-Bird |first1=S. R. |title=A Guide to the Principal Classes of Documents Preserved in the Public Record Office |date=1896 |publisher=Her Majesty's Stationery Office |location=London |pages=xix-xxiii |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/A_Guide_to_the_Principal_Classes_of_Docu/P3Rb7b7avbcC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PR19 |access-date=17 February 2026 |chapter=Introduction: The Court of Exchequer}}</ref> however, owing to the Barons' experience in weighing evidence and passing judgements, the king began to look to the Exchequer to settle disputes between his subjects (particularly those concerning property and possessions).{{efn|For example, by the 1170s [[fine of lands]] suits were regularly (though not exclusively) heard at the Exchequer.}}{{sfn|Poole|1912|pp=177-181}}
At that time, the only courts sitting at Westminster were the Exchequer and the ''Curia Regis'' itself.{{sfn|Madox|1769a|p=155}} During the reign of King [[John, King of England|John]], what would become the [[Court of Common Pleas (England)|Court of Common Pleas]] began to emerge, its explicit purpose being to hold pleas of 'all civil causes at Common Law between subject and subject in actions real personal and mixed';<ref name="Scargill-BirdIntro" /> nevertheless, the emergence of this new court did not prevent civil pleas still being heard in the Exchequer. While the ''chief'' purpose of the latter was always "to decide on all matters affecting the rights and revenues of the crown" (indeed "in all cases where the sovereign's revenue is affected the Exchequer is the only court where the question can be tried"),<ref name="Memories1874">{{cite book |title=Memories of Westminster Hall (Vol. I) |date=1874 |publisher=George W. Smith & Co. |location=New York |pages=100–102 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Memories_of_Westminster_Hall/-Ro-AQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA100 |access-date=9 April 2026 |chapter=Court of Exchequer}}</ref> the 'Plea side' ('hearing and determining personal suits and actions of law between subject and subject'){{sfn|Price|1830|p=52}} continued operate, alongside the 'Revenue side', right up until the court's demise in the late-19th century.
===Operation=== [[File:Tally-Sticks.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Tally sticks were issued by the Exchequer as a receipt for money paid in (the amount being recorded both in writing and in 'notches', cut into the wood). Pictured are the 'stocks' issued to the depositor; a parallel 'foil' would have been separated from the stock at the time of issue and kept by the Exchequer.]] The operation of the medieval Exchequer, as first described in the ''Dialogue'', is summarised below.
====Summonses==== Under Henry I, the procedure adopted for the [[audit]] involved a writ of [[summons]] being issued to each sheriff, twice yearly, requiring him to come before the Exchequer with an account of the income in his [[shire]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Warren |first=W. L. |title=The Governance of Norman and Angevin England 1086–1272 |publisher=Edward Arnold |date=1987 |isbn=0-7131-6378-X |pp=73–74}}</ref> It included a detailed statement of all amounts due (determined in part by reference to the previous year's Roll).{{sfn|Brand|1989|p=63}} Income to be accounted for usually included the county [[Farm (revenue commutation)|''farm'']] (a fixed sum payable in lieu of income from royal [[demesne]] lands), debts carried over from the previous year, [[amercements]] levied at the [[general eyres]] and [[Royal forest#Forest law|forest eyres]], taxes such as [[scutage]] and [[tallage]], "''oblata''" (payments made in return for favours) and other miscellaneous items.<ref name="NA-pipe">{{cite web |title=Medieval financial records: pipe rolls 1130-c.1300 |url=https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/medieval-financial-records-pipe-rolls-1130-1300/ |website=The National Archives |access-date=16 April 2026}}</ref>
The summons came to be known as the 'Summons of the [[Pipe rolls|Pipe]]'. It required the sheriff to bring to the Exchequer: money to be paid in, tallies (as proof of deposit) for money already paid in, and copies of any writs or quittances (which made allowances for out-of-pocket expenses). Information on amercements was estreated [extracted] in advance from the [[plea rolls]] of the lower courts and sent to the Exchequer (in the form of an "estreat roll") to be incorporated in the summonses.<ref name="PRS-os">{{cite web |title=Pipe Roll Introduction: the overall system |url=https://piperollsociety.co.uk/the-overall-system |website=The Pipe Roll Society |access-date=16 April 2026}}</ref> Similarly, the [[Chancery (medieval office)|Chancery]] extracted information from its [[fine rolls]], which included a record of every [[Fief|grant of land]] made in that office on which rents were reserved or fines payable; this was compiled into a document known as the "''originalia'' roll", which was likewise sent to the Exchequer to be used in the preparation of the summonses.<ref name="EB1911" />
====Tallies==== There were two types of tally issued by the Exchequer: 'tallies of sol.' were issued as proof of money paid (Latin: {{lang|la|solutum}}) into the Exchequer of Receipt; 'tallies of pro' were a form of [[financial instrument]], issued for the benefit of ('{{lang|la|pro}}') an accountant (e.g. a sheriff), authorising him to make a direct payment to a third party out of revenue collected (without the sum having to be first deposited and then withdrawn from the Exchequer of Receipt). In the mid-1280s the use of these tallies was regulated by [[Letters patent (United Kingdom)|letters patent]] issued by king [[Edward I]].<ref name="HoC1869" />
====The lower Exchequer==== Before appearing before the Barons, each sheriff had to go to the Exchequer of Receipt to pay in what was due. Payment was normally made in the form of [[Penny (English coin)|silver pennies]]; it was not unusual for a sheriff to deposit tens of thousands of coins, amounting to several hundred [[pounds sterling]].{{sfn|Brand|1989|p=10}} The coins were counted by the tellers and separated into 100-shilling (£5) batches. Periodically a mixed selection of 240 pennies would be separated off by the Chamberlains' knights and weighed against a [[Tower pound]]; if the coins were too far [[Debasement|below the requisite weight]] the whole deposit could (in theory) be rejected.{{sfn|Brand|1989|pp=77-81}} Each £5 batch was also weighed, before being loaded into £100 sacks (which, when filled, were sealed by the Treasurer's clerk). The sacks were stored in strong boxes with double locks (requiring the presence of both Chamberlains' knights to unlock them), over which the Treasurer's clerk again set his seal.{{efn|Later a third lock, for the Treasurer's clerk, was used in place of the seal.}}
At Westminster (where the main Exchequer of Receipt was located), the tellers, who were clerks, occupied an office on the upper floor where they received and counted the money. Once the money had been deposited, the details of the deposit were written on a parchment (a 'teller's bill'), which was sent down a pipe to the Tally Court (the room below). Here, the Treasurer's clerk copied the details on to the tally stick, and also made an entry on the Receipt roll (the pell of ''Introitus''). passed to the Chamberlains' staff who cut a tally for each deposit made. Finally, after everything had been checked, the Deputy Chamberlains split the tally: the 'stock' would be given to the sheriff and the 'foil' kept by the Exchequer.<ref name="Wright2023" /> Like the Court of Exchequer itself, the Tally Court was furnished with a large table, covered with a chequered cloth, and seats for the senior officers.<ref name="HoC1869" />
Money could only be issued from the Exchequer of Receipt on royal authority, issued to the Treasurer and Chamberlains by writ 'of {{lang|la|Liberate}}'.{{sfn|Poole|1912|pp=113-114}}
====The upper Exchequer==== In the upper Exchequer the sheriff handed over his summons, which itemised the payments which had been required of him; he then produced the relevant tally stock as proof of payment for each sum deposited (and this was immediately checked by the Chamberlains against the corresponding tally foil). The total amount paid in (totted up using the counters on the table) was then compared against the amount due, and if there was a shortfall (after authorised expenses had been taken into account), then the Barons would judge whether the money owed could be carried forward, or whether the account-holder should be detained pending full payment. The Barons had use of a privy chamber ({{lang|la|thalamus secretorum}}) where they could withdraw if necessary to consider points in private, so that the ongoing accounting business of the Exchequer was not thereby necessarily delayed.{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=178}}
Many Exchequer payments (including most of the county 'farms') were reckoned 'in blanch', meaning that an additional payment had to be paid (to make up for any discrepancy between the face value and actual silver content of the coinage used). At times the level of this payment was ascertained by assay: coins with a total face value of £1 were melted down and the silver ingot produced was solemnly weighed against a pound weight before the Barons; at other times a notional blanch of a shilling in the pound (i.e. 5%) was used.<ref>{{cite web |title=Blanched and numero |url=https://piperollsociety.co.uk/blanched-and-numero |website=The Pipe Roll Society |access-date=16 January 2026}}</ref>
When everything had been accounted for, the sheriff having been judged to have correctly paid all that was due, he was duly granted his ''Quietus'': a written statement of his acquittal.{{sfn|Price|1830|p=64}}
===Personnel=== In the upper Exchequer, the [[Chief Justiciar]] (who presided, in the absence of the king{{efn|On occasion the king himself presided.{{sfn|Madox|1769a|p=191}}}}) sat at the head of the table.{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=102}} Facing him (across the table) sat the sheriff (or other person) whose account was being examined. On the Justiciar's left sat the king's [[Lord Chancellor|Chancellor]] and others who had been appointed as Barons of the Exchequer for the duration of the session. The Chancellor attended with the [[Great Seal of the Realm]], which served as the [[Seal (emblem)|seal]] of the Exchequer. (Up until the early 13th century the Great Seal was ordinarily kept in the 'Treasury of the Exchequer' when not in use).{{sfn|Madox|1769a|p=194}}
====Barons of the Exchequer==== The Barons of the Exchequer were described in the ''Dialogue'' as 'certain who excel in greatness and discretion, whether they be of the clergy or of the Court', sitting 'by the mere command of the Sovereign, and so with temporary authority'. Their role was 'to decide rights and to determine questions that arise; for the special science of the Exchequer consists not in accounts but in judgements of all sorts'.{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=103}} It was still the norm at this time for Great Officers of the State to serve as Barons by virtue of their office (though others would be appointed in their place if they were otherwise engaged, which often happened as they frequently had duties elsewhere). Those chosen to serve as Barons for the forthcoming session 'by reason of their office or by mandate of their prince' were called to attend by [[writ of summons]].<ref name="Dialogus" />
Alongside the Justiciar and the Chancellor, those usually appointed Barons by reason of their office were the [[Lord High Constable of England|Constable]], two Chamberlains and the [[Earl Marshal|Marshal]].{{sfn|Anson|1892|p=161}} Each had particular roles with regard to the Exchequer when it was in session: the Constable would witness (with the Justiciar) any [[writs]] that were drawn up (e.g. for the issuing of money or the discharge of debts); the Chamberlains were the deputies of the [[Lord Great Chamberlain|Master Chamberlain]] who had oversight of the Treasury (unlike the other Barons, the Chamberlains had duties in the lower as well as the upper Exchequer); the Marshal was responsible for detaining any individuals who failed to satisfy the Barons with their account, and afterwards (if the court so required) placing them in custody.{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=107}}
Around 1234, the office of Baron of the Exchequer began to emerge as a permanent appointment with its own distinct status, function and salary.<ref name="Tout1914">{{cite book |last1=Tout |first1=T. F. |title=The place of the reign of Edward II in English history |date=1914 |publisher=Manchester University Press |location=Manchester |page=55 |url=https://archive.org/details/placeofreignofed00tout/page/54/mode/2up? |access-date=13 January 2026}}</ref> At around the same time, the judicial business of the Exchequer began to be placed on a more formal footing: the earliest [[plea rolls]] of the Exchequer date from 1236.{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=183}} The Barons, however, were more revenue specialists than [[jurists]] at this time.<ref name="SA1854">{{cite journal |last1=Foss |first1=Edward |title=On the Origin of the Title and Office of Cursitor Baron of the Exchequer |journal=Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of London |date=16 November 1854 |volume=III |issue=41 |pages=118–119 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Proceedings_of_the_Society_of_Antiquarie/gb0uAAAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA118 |access-date=15 February 2026}}</ref>
====Clerks and other officers==== [[File:Pipe roll 1194.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Part of the record of payments for the [[County of Lancaster]] in the Great Roll of the Pipe for the Sixth Year of King Richard I, Michaelmas 1194.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Stenton |first1=Doris M. |title=The Great Roll of the Pipe for the Sixth Year of King Richard I, Michaelmas 1194 (Pipe Roll 40) |journal=The Publications of the Pipe Roll Society |date=1928 |volume=XLIII (New Series: V) |pages=124–125 |author1-link=Doris Mary Stenton |url=https://archive.org/details/publicationspip10britgoog/page/n173/mode/2up |access-date=16 April 2026}}</ref>]] Seated along the long side of the table, at the right hand of the Justiciar, were the king's [[Treasurer]] and the [[clerk]]s who were tasked with making a record of the proceedings: the Treasurer's clerk (later '[[Clerk of the Pipe]]') was responsible for the Treasury Roll (also known as the [[Great Roll of the Exchequer]] or Pipe Roll). The Chancellor's clerk (later '[[Comptroller]] of the Pipe') was responsible for the Chancellor's Roll (which was a duplicate record of proceedings and served as a [[Comptroller#Etymology|counter-roll]]); he was also responsible for drawing up writs to be issued through the court.{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=113}} The Constable's clerk was also present (he played a key role in maintaining communication with the king's Court; for example, if a sheriff produced a writ from the king in court permitting or excusing him certain payments, the Constable's clerk would be responsible for producing the counter-writ and checking the one against the other).{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=115}}
Facing them across the table sat the Chamberlains' serjeant (who had with him the counter-tallies from the lower Exchequer, for checking against the tallies brought by the sheriffs), the Chancellor's deputy (the ''Magister Scriptorii'', a forerunner of the [[Master of the Rolls]])<ref name="EB1911">{{cite book |editor1-last=Spring-Rice |editor1-first=Stephen Edward |title=Encyclopaedia Britannica |date=1911 |publisher=Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc. |location=New York |pages=54–58 |edition=11th |url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopedia-britannica-volume-14_202405/Encyclopedia%20Britannica%2C%20Volume%2010/page/54/mode/2up |access-date=17 March 2026 |chapter=Exchequer}}</ref> and, between them, the 'calculator' responsible for placing the counters on the counting table.{{sfn|Poole|1912|pp=109-115}}
The king could appoint others to sit at the Exchequer in addition to the office-holders listed above; for example, the ''Dialogue'' lists the Bishop of Winchester ([[Richard of Ilchester]]) as having a seat at the table at that time (as a personal appointee rather than an office-holder) and also [[Thomas Brun]] (who had been tasked with creating a third Exchequer Roll, so that the proceedings would be recorded in triplicate).<ref name="Dialogus" />
====The Treasurer and Chamberlains==== The king's Treasurer (who was also designated [[Treasurer of the Exchequer]]) and the two Chamberlains (usually called [[Chamberlains of the Exchequer]]){{efn|to distinguish them from the chamberlains of the [[Royal Households of the United Kingdom|Household]]}} were the executive officers of the Exchequer. The Treasurer and his staff were [[clergy|clerics]] (and therefore [[literate]]), the Chamberlains and their staff were [[laity|laymen]].{{sfn|Thomas|1848|pp=131-133}} As well as having seats and duties in the upper Exchequer, the Treasurer and Chamberlains presided over the lower Exchequer, the Exchequer of Receipt, where they held joint responsibility for its transactions (their shared oversight functioning as an early form of [[internal audit]]).
Their duties in the Exchequer of Receipt were normally undertaken by deputies: those of the Treasurer by a clerk, those of the Chamberlains by a pair of knights (later called the Chamberlains of the Receipt). The clerk of the Treasurer was responsible for maintaining the written records of money paid in and paid out (the 'pells' of ''introitus'' and ''exitus'', respectively), while the deputy Chamberlains and their staff were responsible for the cutting and issuing of tallies.<ref name="EB1911" /> As well as serving as [[Clerk of the Pells]], the Treasurer's clerk functioned as Tally Writer, a duty which later developed into the separate office of [[Auditor of the Receipt of the Exchequer]].<ref name="Wright2023">{{cite journal |last1=Wright |first1=Kirsty |title=Revisiting the War in the Receipt, 1572–1609 |journal=Parliamentary History |date=February 2023 |volume=42 |issue=1 |pages=11–31 |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1750-0206.12668 |access-date=17 March 2026}}</ref>
During the 13th century the office of Chief Justiciar gradually receded in importance (it had disappeared by the end of the reign of [[Henry III of England|Henry III]], i.e. by 1272). In place of the Justiciar, the king's Treasurer (whose influence in the realm was steadily growing) began to take precedence at the Exchequer.{{sfn|Anson|1892|p=162}} His role developed into the office of [[Lord High Treasurer of England]]; those appointed to this office were invariably appointed Treasurer of the Exchequer at the same time, by issue of a separate [[Letters patent (United Kingdom)|patent]]. After the appointment of Barons of the Exchequer became permanent, the Treasurer and Barons were viewed as the senior officers of the Upper Exchequer, and the Treasurer and Chamberlains as the senior officers of the Lower Exchequer (the Treasurer thus having overarching oversight).
====Chancellor of the Exchequer==== During the first part of the 13th century (by 1248 at the latest) the distinct office of [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]] emerged.{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=115}} At around this time the [[Chancery (medieval office)|Chancery]] was increasingly gaining independence from the ''Curia Regis''. The king's Chancellor (subsequently termed [[Chancellor of England]]) was now running a largely autonomous department of state. He continued to sit periodically as a Baron,{{sfn|Thomas|1848|p=7}} but his clerk took over most of his other duties with regard to the Exchequer (and during the reign of [[Henry III of England|Henry III]] he began to be termed 'Chancellor of the Exchequer').{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=189}} At the same time, the Exchequer was provided with its own seal (the Great Seal of the Realm no longer being to hand), which was placed in the Chancellor of the Exchequer's keeping; he also took custody of the Chancellor's Roll (the counter-roll to the Pipe Roll).
====Constable and Marshal of the Exchequer==== In the early years of the Exchequer, the Constable of England (as ''de facto'' commander of the royal armies) and the Marshal of England (as his deputy) had duties in the Exchequer relating to the payment of soldiers (such as may have been hired during the year to supplement the provision of troops by [[English feudal barony|feudal baronies]] and the like).<ref name="Edmondson1780">{{cite book |last1=Edmondson |first1=Joseph |author1-link=Joseph Edmondson |title=A Complete Body of Heraldry (Volume I) |date=1780 |publisher=J. Edmondson, Esq. |location=London |pages=70-73 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/A_Complete_Body_of_Heraldry/7VszAQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA70 |access-date=19 May 2026}}</ref> Due to their having extensive duties elsewhere, these officers were frequently (and, by the mid-13th century, invariably) represented in the Exchequer by deputies (termed 'Constable of the Exchequer' and 'Marshal of the Exchequer' respectively).{{sfn|Madox|1769b|pp=281-290}} The former office was relatively short-lived,{{sfn|Sainty|1983|p.159}} but the latter remained in place until the 1830s;{{efn|The office of Marshal of the Exchequer is not recorded after 1833, and the offices of 'Marshal in the Courts of Common Pleas and Exchequer' were formally abolished (along with similar-named officials in other courts) by the Common Law Courts Act 1852.}} appointments to it were made by the [[Hereditary Marshal of England]] up until 1601, after which the right to appoint was vested in the Crown.{{sfn|Sainty|1983|p.150}}
====Remembrancers of the Exchequer==== By the end of the 12th century the business of the Exchequer had expanded to such an extent that it was sitting for much of the year. Increasing complexity led to the audit process for each County being separated into a preliminary and a final phase, with a proliferation of vouchers and memoranda being required to ensure continuity.{{sfn|Jenkinson|1917|p=268}} By the mid-13th century a pair of Exchequer officers called [[Remembrancer]]s had been appointed. Each kept what was known as a Memoranda Roll (one on behalf of the King, the other on behalf of the Treasurer); these supplemented the Pipe Roll by recording other items of Exchequer business from day to day.<ref>{{cite web |title=Political history in the medieval era – an overview |url=https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/medieval-political-history/ |website=The National Archives |access-date=12 January 2026}}</ref>
By 1299 each was distinctly titled: the [[King's Remembrancer]] and the [[Lord Treasurer's Remembrancer|Treasurer's Remembrancer]].{{sfn|Madox|1769b|p=265}} Each went on to develop a distinct role: the King's Remembrancer's office managed the preliminary audit, the Treasurer's Remembrancer (later Lord Treasurer's Remembrancer)'s office managed the final audit.{{sfn|Jenkinson|1917|p=247}} A parallel distinction was that the King's Remembrancer's office enforced the recovery of ''debts'' to the Crown, while the Treasurer's Remembrancer's office ensured the rendering of ''duties'' to the Crown. ('Debts' included payments arising from [[torts]] and [[trespasses]], and other income not included on the Pipe Roll; 'duties' due to the king included 'rents, fines, issues, amerciaments and other things [...] received or levied by the Sheriff', which were recorded on the Pipe Roll).{{sfn|Price|1830|pp=55-56}}
As the revenue from trade and commerce began to eclipse feudal income, so the work of the King's Remembrancer greatly increased, while that of the Lord Treasurer's Remembrancer diminished.{{sfn|Price|1830|pp=21-27}}
====Others==== A distinct set of officers was responsible for the [[Metallurgical assay#Coins|assays]] which routinely took place as part of the accounting process, including the melter and the weigher.{{sfn|Poole|1912|p=73}} In common with other lay offices in the Exchequer, these (comparatively lucrative) positions were held [[in fee]], with deputies employed to perform the actual duties required; in time they became hereditary [[sinecures]].{{sfn|Brand|1989|p=79}} Another such officer was the Usher of the Exchequer, who was responsible for the security of the building and its treasures. He was also entrusted with conveying the writs of summons to their various recipients, for which he oversaw a corps of messengers.{{sfn|Madox|1769b|p=278}}
Other officers of the lower Exchequer included four [[Bank teller|tellers]] (clerks, who received and counted the money) and an usher who (like his counterpart in the upper Exchequer) was responsible for security.
===Standard weights and measures=== {{main|Exchequer Standards}} Following the proclamation of [[Magna Carta]], legislation was enacted whereby the Exchequer would maintain the realm's [[prototype (metrology)|prototypes]] for the [[yard]] and [[pound (weight)|pound]]. These nominal standards were, however, only infrequently enforced on the localities around the kingdom. In 1279, the Exchequer was given custody of standard pieces of gold and silver, to be used in the [[Trial of the Pyx]]; when not in use they were kept in a strong box in the Pyx Chamber of Westminster Abbey, to which only the Chamberlains and Auditor of the Exchequer had keys.<ref name="Chisholm1866">{{cite book |last1=Chisholm |first1=H. W. |title=Accounts and Papers: Vol. XL |date=1866 |publisher=House of Commons |location=London |pages=11–14 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Accounts_and_Papers_of_the_House_of_Comm/DytcAAAAQAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=RA1 |access-date=7 April 2026 |chapter=A Report to the Comptroller General of the Exchequer upon the Trial of the Pyx and the Coinage subjected to this Public Trial. }}</ref>
===Later developments (14th-17th centuries)=== [[File:Exchequer of Pleas, c. 1460 (21329960204).jpg|thumb|The Court of Exchequer, c. 1460.]]
====Changes in the 14th-century==== In the year 1300 the Court of the Exchequer was forbidden from hearing cases between the king's subjects. In spite of this, the practice persisted (and indeed grew) thanks to the employment of [[Legal fiction#Jurisdiction of the Exchequer|fictions]] (most notably the [[writ of quominus]], by which a plaintiff in a case was able to suggest that the actions of the accused had rendered him less able to pay a debt to the king, thus placing the case under the jurisdiction of the Exchequer, notwithstanding the non-existence of any such debt in reality).<ref name="SA1854" />
In the early 14th century, the accounting function of the (upper) Exchequer came to be distinguished from its judicial function; the former began to be termed the '''Exchequer of Account''' and the latter the [[Exchequer of Pleas]]. Formally, both were one and the same Court of Exchequer, but practically they functioned separately.{{sfn|Anson|1892|p=309}} 1317 saw the first appointment of a [[Chief Baron of the Exchequer]], who (unlike the other barons) was a trained lawyer; appointed to preside at the Exchequer of Pleas.{{sfn|Anson|1892|p=162}}
During the 14th century the amount of 'casual' (as opposed to 'certain' or regular) income flowing into the Exchequer significantly increased. This casual income consisted mainly of fines, [[amercements]] and forfeited [[recognizance]]s levied from around the kingdom by local courts of law or [[justice of the peace|justices of the peace]]. (The Exchequer termed it 'foreign' income, possibly because it derived from proceedings in other courts.) The sheriffs had always had to account for both types of income, but, by the end of the reign of [[Edward III]], they had to account for each separately: a Clerk of the Foreign [[Estreat]]s was employed to draw up a separate writ for casual income (which was sealed with green wax and delivered to the sheriff alongside the regular writ of summons); and this money was then accounted for before a separate official called the Foreign Apposer (rather than before the barons) and checked against a separate record (the Estreat Roll) by the aforementioned clerk.<ref name="Scargill-Bird1896" />
====The Tudor period==== In the 1490s around 90 percent of the king's revenue was received by the Exchequer.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bucholz |first=Robert |url=https://doi.org/10.1002/9781394266517 |title=Early Modern England 1485‐1714 |last2=Key |first2=Newton |date=2019-12-09 |publisher=Wiley |isbn=978-1-118-53222-5}}</ref> Although the Exchequer was the official way of receiving tax revenue for HM Government, there was never a way of knowing how much one had at a given time. Any report would take years to come to fruition.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bucholz |first=Robert |url=https://doi.org/10.1002/9781394266517 |title=Early Modern England 1485‐1714 |last2=Key |first2=Newton |date=2019-12-09 |publisher=Wiley |isbn=978-1-118-53222-5}}</ref> (Accounts of income and expenditure would eventually be presented to Parliament under King [[William III of England|William III]], but after the death of Queen Anne in 1714 this practice again fell into abeyance, and it would not be until 1823 that a full '[[Balance sheet|Balance-Sheet]] of the Public Income and Expenditure of the United Kingdom' began to be published annually).<ref name="HoC1869" />
By the start of the 16th century the Lord High Treasurer was the undisputed head of the Exchequer. The office of Chamberlain of the Exchequer, at one time the Treasurer's equal, was now a sinecure position; where once they had served as a check on the Treasurer and his clerks, their residual duties were now undertaken by deputies.<ref name="Wright2023" />
In 1512 the four [[Tellers of the Receipt of the Exchequer]] were made custodians of the money in their coffers, each being given a key to his own [[Chest (furniture)|chest]]. The Pell of ''exitus'' was abolished and the Tellers (each of whom was made responsible for a different area of income and expenditure) kept their own account books, which were audited by the Tally Writer (henceforward termed the [[Auditor of the Receipt of the Exchequer]]).<ref name="Wright2023" /> Following accusations of [[misappropriation of funds]], however, the Pell of ''exitus'' was eventually revived in 1597. In addition to the Teller, the Auditor and the Clerk of the Pells held keys to each chest, and the presence of all three was required to open them. During the reign of Henry VIII, the Exchequer began to develop an [[Equity (law)|Equity]] jurisdiction (clearly distinct from the [[Common Law]] jurisdiction of the Exchequer of Pleas).<ref name="Scargill-BirdIntro" /> The [[Court of equity|Court of Exchequer in Equity]] sat separately (in the Exchequer Chamber) and was separately constituted and staffed.
Under Queen [[Mary I|Mary]], several courts which Henry had established following the [[dissolution of the monasteries]] (namely the [[Court of Augmentations]], the [[Court of General Surveyors]] and the [[Court of First Fruits and Tenths]]) were absorbed into the Exchequer.<ref name="Scargill-BirdIntro" />
Prior to the reign of Elizabeth I, the Barons of the Exchequer (other than the Chief Baron) had been revenue specialists, appointed from among the officers of the Exchequer of Account. With the judicial work of the Exchequer increasing, however, Elizabeth appointed a [[Serjeant-at-law]] to be Baron when one of the positions fell vacant (unlike the other Barons, he was given the same judicial status as the judges of other courts). Subsequent vacancies were likewise filled by lawyers, and at the end of her reign only one non-lawyer Baron remained in post. He in turn retired (and was likewise replaced by a legal specialist). Subsequently, an additional Baron (of inferior rank) was appointed to take care of the revenue work of the Exchequer;<ref name="SA1854" /> he came to be known as the [[Cursitor Baron of the Exchequer|Cursitor Baron]]{{efn|i.e. the 'Baron of the Course [of the Exchequer]', from the Latin ''[[wikt:cursus|cursus]]''.{{sfn|Price|1830|pp=77-87}}}} Subsequently, the sheriffs were examined (or 'apposed') with regard to their accounts by the Cursitor Baron alone.<ref name="Scargill-Bird1896">{{cite book |last1=Scargill-Bird |first1=S. R. |title=A Guide to the Principal Classes of Documents Preserved in the Public Record Office |date=1896 |publisher=Her Majesty's Stationery Office |location=London |pages=322–325 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/A_Guide_to_the_Principal_Classes_of_Docu/P3Rb7b7avbcC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA322 |access-date=17 February 2026 |chapter=Revenue Rolls}}</ref> In time, these apposals took place in the Cursitor Baron's [[Chambers (law)|chambers]], rather than in open court, though the Cursitor Baron did hold court (in the Tally Court of the Exchequer of Receipt) for the twice yearly 'proffers' at which the sheriffs and others deposited their dues.{{sfn|Price|1830|p=78}}
Under Elizabeth I a pair of [[auditors]] were appointed: the [[Auditor of the imprests|Auditors of the Imprests]]. Operating out of the Exchequer, they were empowered to examine the accounts of all who had received public money on account or by way of [[Imprest system|imprest]]. They later employed deputies to undertake their duties. In the late 18th century the Auditors of the Imprests were found to be in possession of two of the most lucrative sinecures held under the Crown; each received an annual income of over £16,000, while their audit was judged to be entirely ineffective.<ref name="HoC1869" />
====The Stuart period==== [[File:Kingdom of England Exchequer note-5 Pounds (1697).jpg|thumb|250px|Exchequer bill (of the third issue), dated 6 August 1697]] Through most of the 1600s, goldsmiths would deposit their reserve of treasure with the Exchequer, sanctioned by the government.
The [[Board of Customs]] was established in 1671; then, with the creation of new types of revenue, came the formation of new committees of oversight: e.g. the [[Board of Excise]] (1683), Board of [[Stamp duty in the United Kingdom|Stamps]] (1694) and Board of Taxes (1718). Some of these boards were given (or assumed) quasi-judicial powers, which diluted the authority of the Barons of the Exchequer.{{sfn|Price|1830|p=xviii}}
In the aftermath of the [[Second Dutch War]], between 1667 and 1672, the government attempted to raise funds through 'fiduciary Exchequer [[money orders]]', an early example of government-issued negotiable interest-bearing [[securities]].<ref name="Richards1936" /> The [[goldsmith banker]]s invested heavily but the government was unable to meet its obligations, leading to the '[[Great Stop of the Exchequer]]' in 1672: [[Charles II of England|Charles II]] "shut up" the Exchequer, forbidding payments from it, in what [[Walter Bagehot]] described as "one of those monstrous frauds... this monstrous robbery". This ruined the goldsmiths and the credit of the Stuart government, which would never recover it. In 1694, the credit of [[William III of England|William III]]'s government was so bad in London that it could not borrow, which led to the foundation of the Governor and Company of the [[Bank of England]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Bagehot|first=Walter|title=Lombard Street: a description of the money market (1873)|date=November 5, 2010|publisher=Henry S. King and Co. (etext by Project Gutenberg)| location=London| url=https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/4359|quote="Charles II. shut up the 'Exchequer,' would pay no one, and so the 'goldsmiths' were ruined. The credit of the Stuart Government never recovered from this monstrous robbery."}}</ref>
A clause in the [[National Land Bank Act 1696]] ([[7 & 8 Will. 3]]. c. 31) empowered the Exchequer to raise up to £1.5 million in the security of 'indented [[bills of credit]]', bearing interest at 3[[Penny (British pre-decimal coin)|d]] ''per cent. per diem''. They would be issued by the Tellers to any person willing to advance money to the government (the bills serving as their security); they could be passed from person to person as currency and would be cashed by the Tellers on demand. Known as [[Exchequer Bills]], they remained in regular use as a source of Government revenue up until 1892.<ref name="Richards1936">{{cite journal |last1=Richards |first1=R. D. |title=THE EXCHEQUER BILL IN THE HISTORY OF ENGLISH GOVERNMENT FINANCE |journal=Economic History |date=February 1936 |volume=3 |issue=11 |pages=193–211 |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/45366459 |access-date=2 May 2026}}</ref>
===Reform and decline (18th-19th centuries)=== [[File:EB1911 Tally - tally stick (diagram).jpg|thumb|right|Diagram of an Exchequer tally issued in 1739, inscribed in Latin and with notches indicating receipt of £236 4s 3½d.]]
====18th century==== The [[Proceedings in Courts of Justice Act 1730]] ([[4 Geo. 2]]. c. 26) required the use of English (rather than Latin or [[Law French|French]]) in English courts of law (including in the Court of Exchequer), but the ''Court of the Receipt of HM Exchequer'' was explicitly exempted from the provisions of this act. Following its own long-established practices, the Exchequer of Receipt continued to use an abbreviated form of Latin together with Exchequer numerals ('a corrupted form of the old [[Roman numerals|Roman figures]]') in its written records up until 1834.<ref name="HoC1869" />
The [[Receipt of the Exchequer Act 1783]] ([[23 Geo. 3]]. c. 82) abolished a number of 'useless, expensive, and unnecessary Offices' connected with the Exchequer of Receipt, and laid the ground for other offices to be exercised in person by salaried officers (rather than held as sinecures, with deputies performing the duties). It also made provision for the age-old use of wooden tallies to be replaced with a system of 'indented Cheque Receipts', but this was only scheduled to take place 'upon the Death, Surrender, Forfeiture or Removal of the two Chamberlains in the Receipt of his Majesty's Exchequer' currently in post;<ref>{{cite book |title=The Statutes at Large, from the Nineteenth Year of the Reign of King George the Third to the Twenty fifth Year of the Reign of King George the Third, inclusive |date=1786 |publisher=Eyre and Strahan |location=London |pages=351–352 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Statutes_at_Large_from_Magna_Charta/r4RaAAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA351 |access-date=16 February 2026}}</ref> this finally took place forty-four years later, when the last of the Chamberlains died in 1826.{{sfn|Anson|1892|p=310}}
The Auditors of the Imprests were abolished, by the [[Audit of Public Accounts Act 1785]] ([[25 Geo. 3]]. c. 52), which appointed in their place a body of five [[Commissioners of Audit|Commissioners for Auditing the Public Accounts]].<ref name="HoC1869" />
In 1787 the [[Consolidated Fund]] was established, following the passing of the [[Customs and Excise Act 1787]] ([[27 Geo. 3]]. c. 13).<ref name=HoC1869>{{cite book |title=Public Income and Expenditure (Part II) |date=1869 |publisher=House of Commons |location=London |pages=327–331 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Public_Income_and_Expenditure_Gross_acco/JCkrAAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA327 |access-date=18 February 2026}}</ref> Henceforward, 'all monies paid into the Exchequer, and not otherwise appropriated, [were] to be carried to the Consolidated Fund'.<ref name="27 Geo. 3 c.13">{{cite book |last1=Pickering |first1=Danby |title=The Statutes at Large (Volume XXXVI) |date=1787 |publisher=J. Johnson etc. |location=London |page=50 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Statutes_at_Large/XrIuAAAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA50 |access-date=18 February 2026 |chapter=Cap. XIII}}</ref>
The passing of the [[Bank Restriction Act 1797]] ([[37 Geo. 3]]. c. 45) led to [[bank notes]] being accepted for payment of taxes; from that time a representative of the [[Bank of England]] had to attend the Exchequer daily to verify and remove all notes paid in at the Exchequer.<ref name="Andréadès1909">{{cite book |last1=Andréadès |first1=A. |title=History of the Bank of England 1640-1903 |date=1909 |publisher=Frank Cass & Co. Ltd |location=Abingdon, Oxon. |pages=393–395 |edition=Fourth}}</ref> Shortly afterwards, the Bank was authorised to receive payments directly from various receivers of revenue (including [[HM Customs]], the [[Excise office|Excise Office]], the [[Stamp Office]] and others). Such payments were still technically made (and accounted for) at the Exchequer: transfer tickets were used by the Bank for the receipt and issue of funds (most offices in direct receipt of public funds had accounts at the Bank of England), and at the end of each day these were presented at the Exchequer of Receipt; the difference between the receipt and issue of funds was then reconciled by adding or subtracting money to or from the Tellers' chests.<ref name="HoC1869" />
====19th century==== [[File:Court of Exchequer, Westminster Hall (Microcosm of London, plate 25) MET DP873998.jpg|thumb|300px|right|A trial underway in the Court of Exchequer in 1808. The court sits in a room 'contiguous to the north-west corner of Westminster Hall'; the Lord Chief Baron presides.<ref name="Ackermann1808">{{cite book |last1=Ackermann |first1=R. |author1-link=Rudolph Ackermann |title=The Microcosm of London (Volume I) |date=1808 |publisher=R. Ackermann |location=London |pages=207–209 |url=https://archive.org/details/b22007076_0001/page/206/mode/2up |access-date=8 April 2026 |chapter=Court of Exchequer}}</ref>]]
The [[Fines Act 1833]] ([[3 & 4 Will. 4]]. c. 99) was passed 'for facilitating the Appointment of Sheriffs and the more effectual Audit and passing of their Accounts'.<ref name="3&4 William IV c.99">{{cite book |title=The Statutes: Revised Edition (Volume VII) |date=1875 |publisher=Eyre and Spottiswoode |location=London |pages=604–612 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Statutes_Revised_Edition/0tw15w-_UbwC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA604 |access-date=17 February 2026}}</ref> It described the established practice of auditing and passing the sheriffs' accounts in the Court of Exchequer as 'attended with unnecessary delay, expense and trouble'. Henceforth they were instead to submit their accounts to the [[Commissioners of Audit]]. The act further provided for the abolition of several offices of the Exchequer of Account (which were now rendered obsolete), including the Lord Treasurer's Remembrancer, the Clerk of the Pipe, the Comptroller of the Pipe, the Foreign Apposer, the Clerk of the Estreats and others. Any residual duties were to be vested in the [[King's Remembrancer]].{{sfn|Thomas|1848|p=22}}
A year later, the [[Office of Receipt of Exchequer Act 1834]] ([[4 Will. 4]]. c. 15) was passed which reformed the Exchequer of Receipt:<ref name="4 Will. IV c.15">{{cite book |editor1-last=Simons |editor1-first=N. |title=The Statutes of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (Volume 13) |date=1835 |publisher=Eyre and Spottiswoode |location=London |pages=569–570 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Statutes_of_the_United_Kingdom_of_Gr/B6JUAAAAcAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA569 |access-date=17 February 2026 |chapter=An Act to regulate the Office of the Receipt of His Majesty's Exchequer at Westminster}}</ref> among others, the offices of Clerk of the Pells, Auditor of the Receipt of the Exchequer and the four Tellers of the Exchequer were all abolished. In their place a new official, the [[Comptroller General of the Exchequer|Comptroller General of the Receipt and Issue of His Majesty's Exchequer]], was appointed. An account was opened at the [[Bank of England]] ('The Account of His Majesty's Exchequer') into which was deposited all the cash held in the tellers' chests; thenceforward, government departments collecting revenue paid it directly in to the Bank.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Vict/31-32/9/section/1|title= Exchequer Extra Receipts Act 1868|publisher=UK Government|website= legislation.gov.uk|page=Section 1|access-date=15 November 2016}}</ref> Outgoing payments became the responsibility of a new officer, the Paymaster of Civil Services (whose role would in 1848 be merged into that of [[Paymaster General]]).<ref name="HoC1869" />
On 16 October 1834, an attempt to dispose of redundant tally sticks (which had been retained in large numbers and stored in the Tally Court of the Exchequer of Receipt) by burning them in the parliamentary furnaces caused the [[Burning of Parliament|destruction of much of the old Palace of Westminster]]. The following year the Exchequer Department moved from [[Old Palace Yard]] to Whitehall Yard, to enable its former site to be cleared for the rebuilding of the Palace of Westminster.<ref name="HoC1869" />
In 1841 the Equity jurisdiction of the Exchequer was abolished; its work was amalgamated into the [[Court of Chancery]].<ref name="Scargill-Bird1896" />
The office of Cursitor Baron of HM Court of Exchequer at Westminster was abolished by the [[Cursitor Baron of the Exchequer Act 1856]] ([[19 & 20 Vict.]] c. 86), 'the duties thereof having for the most part ceased'.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Cursitor Baron |journal=The Legal Observer, and Solicitors' Journal |date=29 November 1856 |volume=LII |page=511 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Legal_Observer_and_Solicitors_Journa/SQkvAAAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA511 |access-date=2 March 2026}}</ref> (This took place after the office had fallen vacant following the death of [[George Bankes]]). Under the [[Exchequer and Audit Departments Act 1866]] ([[29 & 30 Vict.]] c. 39) the office of Comptroller General of the Exchequer was abolished and the Exchequer 'ceased to be a distinct Department of the State'.<ref name="HoC1869" /> The Comptroller General's duties were combined with those of the ''Commissioners for auditing the Public Accounts'' under the new post of [[Comptroller and Auditor General]],<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Vict/29-30/39/section/5|title=Exchequer and Audit Departments Act 1866|publisher=UK Government|website= legislation.gov.uk|page=Section 5|access-date=15 November 2016}}</ref> (whose office was named the ''Exchequer and Audit Department'' from 1866 until 1983 when the new [[National Audit Office (United Kingdom)|National Audit Office]] was created).<ref>“The Audit Commission” by Couchman V. in Sherer & Turley: ''Current Issues in Auditing'', Paul Chapman Publishing (1997)</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1983/44/contents |title=National Audit Act 1983 |publisher=UK Government|website= legislation.gov.uk|access-date=15 November 2016}}</ref> At the same time the [[Standards Department]] of the [[Board of Trade]] took over metrological responsibilities from the Comptroller General of the Exchequer;<ref>{{cite EB1911|wstitle=Standards Department |volume= 25 |short=x}}</ref> the standard weights and measures (previously held by the Chamberlains and then by the Auditor of the Receipt of the Exchequer) were moved to the [[Jewel Tower]], a surviving part of the old Palace of Westminster.<ref>{{cite web |title=History of the Jewel Tower |url=https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/jewel-tower/history/ |website=English Heritage |access-date=6 April 2026}}</ref> Meanwhile, responsibility for the Trial of the Pyx was handed to the Treasury, and the old standard pieces of gold and silver were entrusted to the care of the [[Royal Mint]].<ref name="HoC1869" />
The Exchequer nevertheless continued thereafter to function as a court of law until the passing of the [[Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873]], whereupon it was reconstituted to form the Exchequer Division of the new [[High Court of Justice]] (with the Lord Chief Baron at its head). The ongoing existence of the Exchequer as a separate division of the High Court was only, however, a temporary and transitional arrangement: in 1880 the office of Lord Chief Baron was, by [[Order in Council]], abolished and the business of the Exchequer Division absorbed into that of the [[Queen's Bench Division]].<ref name="Chalmers1882">{{cite book |last1=Chalmers |first1=M. D. |author1-link=Mackenzie Dalzell Chalmers |title=Wilson's Supreme Court of Judicature Acts |date=1882 |publisher=Stevens and Sons |location=London |edition=Third |pages=42–45, 168 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Wilson_s_Supreme_Court_of_Judicature_Act/4LkDAAAAQAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA42 |access-date=9 April 2026}}</ref>
===Modern Exchequer (20th-21st century)=== {{see also|Public finance of the United Kingdom}} The ancient office of Chancellor of the Exchequer (Chancellor and Under-Treasurer of HM Exchequer) remains extant as the title of the lead minister in HM Treasury (which includes, among its junior ministers, an [[Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury]]).
The [[Exchequer and Audit Departments Act 1866]] continues to govern administration of the Consolidated Fund, which is held in the Exchequer account of the Bank of England.<ref name="Berkeley&c2025" /> Parts of the act have been repealed by the [[Government Resources and Accounts Act 2000]], which approved the introduction of [[accrual accounting in the public sector]], both in individual departments and across the [[Whole of Government Accounts|whole of government]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lienert |first1=Ian |title=Are Laws Needed for Public Management Reforms? An International Comparison |journal=Working Paper Summaries (International Monetary Fund) |date=1 March 2005 |issue=62 |url=https://www.elibrary.imf.org/view/journals/001/2005/062/article-A001-en.xml |access-date=8 April 2026}}</ref>
The full formal title of the Comptroller and Auditor General (the head of the National Audit Office) is ''Comptroller General of the Receipt and Issue of His Majesty’s Exchequer and Auditor General of Public Accounts''.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Taylor |first1=Max |title=A Role for Parliament in Independent Judicial Appointments: A Comparison with the Comptroller and Auditor General |url=https://ukconstitutionallaw.org/2025/02/19/max-taylor-a-role-for-parliament-in-independent-judicial-appointments-a-comparison-with-the-comptroller-and-auditor-general/ |website=UK Constitutional Law Association |date=19 February 2025 |access-date=20 April 2026}}</ref>
The [[Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1881]] provided that "the proceedings for the ordaining or [[High sheriff#Nomination|nominating of sheriffs]] directed by an Act passed in the fourteenth year of King Edward the First [...] shall henceforth in every year take place in the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice at the same time and in the same manner as hath been heretofore accustomed in the Court of Exchequer".<ref name="Chalmers1882" /> Thus once a year the defunct Court of Exchequer is 'fictionally' reconstituted: the Chancellor of the Exchequer nominally presides (albeit he or she 'has not attended in recent years'), and the ceremony is overseen by the King's Remembrancer.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Turner |first1=Robert |title=A Sheriffs’ 1300 year Odyssey |url=https://highsheriffs.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Robert-Turners-talk-to-2020-AGM.pdf |website=The High Sheriffs' Association of England and Wales |access-date=6 April 2026}}</ref> The [[Quit Rents ceremonies]], which also take place on this occasion, were first attested (as an already well-established custom) in the reign of [[Henry III of England|Henry III]], the [[Sheriff of London and Middlesex|Sheriffs of London and Middlesex]] being required to account to the King in the Exchequer for certain pieces of land held in [[Farm (revenue commutation)|farm]].<ref name="HoC1869" />
The 1881 act also provided that "the [[Lord Mayor's Day|presentation and swearing of the Lord Mayor]] of the city of London which has heretofore taken place in the Court of Exchequer at Westminster after every annual election into that office [...] shall henceforth take place in the Queen's Bench Division of Her Majesty's High Court of Justice or before the judges of that Division at the same time and in the same manner as hath been heretofore accustomed in the Court of Exchequer";<ref name="Chalmers1882" /> this continues to take place annually as part of what is known as the [[Lord Mayor's Show]]. In modern parlance, "exchequer" (in addition to its more specific meanings) is sometimes used as a broad [[synonym]] for HM Treasury, or else it can signify 'funds' in general (as in "the company's exchequer is low").<ref>{{cite web |title=Exchequer (noun) |url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/exchequer |website=Dictionary |publisher=Merriam-Webster |access-date=3 March 2026}}</ref>
=== Officers === The following officers of the Exchequer were extant in 1800.<ref name="HoC1800">{{cite book |title=Reports from Committees of the House of Commons (volume 15) |date=1800 |publisher=House of Commons |location=London |pages=127–215 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Reports_from_Committees_of_the_House_of/pS9DAAAAcAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA127 |access-date=21 March 2026}}</ref>
====Revenue side==== {{columns-list| *[[Treasurer of the Exchequer]] (held in commission since 1714) *[[Chancellor of the Exchequer]] *[[Barons of the Exchequer]] (rendered obsolete by the [[Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873]]) *[[Chief Baron of the Exchequer]] (amalgamated in 1880 into the office of [[Lord Chief Justice of England]]) *[[King's Remembrancer]] *Lord Treasurer's [[Remembrancer]] (office abolished in 1833) *[[Commissioners for Auditing the Public Accounts]] (replaced the [[Auditor of the imprests|Auditors of the Imprests]] in 1785; replaced by the [[Comptroller and Auditor General (United Kingdom)|Comptroller and Auditor General]] in 1866) *[[Clerk of the Pipe]] (office abolished in 1833) *[[Comptroller]] of the Pipe (office abolished in 1833) *Foreign Apposer (office abolished in 1833) *Clerk of the Foreign [[Estreat]]s (office abolished in 1833) *Clerk of the Nichills (office abolished in 1833) *Surveyor of the Green Wax (office abolished in 1833) *[[Surveyor General of the Land Revenues of the Crown]] (merged with the [[Commissioners of Woods and Forests]] in 1810) *Auditors of the Land Revenue (originally termed Auditors of the Exchequer) (abolished in 1832){{sfn|Thomas|1848|pp=125-127}} *[[Exchequer of Pleas|Clerk of the Pleas]] *[[Attorney at law|Attornies]] in the Office of Pleas *Receiver General, the [[Alienation Office]] *Remembrancer of [[Court of First Fruits and Tenths|First Fruits and Tenths]] *Clerk of the [[Augmentation office]] }}
====Receipt side==== {{columns-list| *[[Auditor of the Receipt of the Exchequer]] (office abolished in 1834) *[[Chamberlain of the Exchequer|Chamberlains in the Receipt of HM Exchequer]] (office abolished in 1826) *[[Clerk of the Pells]] (office abolished in 1834) *[[Teller of the Receipt of the Exchequer]] (office abolished in 1834) }}
In 1834 the officers of the Exchequer of Receipt were replaced by the [[Comptroller General of the Exchequer|Comptroller General of the Receipt and Issue of HM Exchequer]].
===Location=== From the mid-12th century the Exchequer was based at the [[Palace of Westminster]] (though it occasionally sat elsewhere, up until 1339).<ref name="CofA" /> From the description given in the ''Dialogue'', it seems that the upper and lower Exchequer were at that time co-located in a building to the east of Westminster Hall.<ref name="Hall1899">{{cite book |last1=Hall |first1=Hubert |title=Court Life under the Plantagenets |date=1899 |publisher=Swan Sonnenschein & Co. Ltd |location=London |pages=258–268 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Court_Life_Under_the_Plantagenets/APrRAAAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA258 |access-date=5 May 2026 |chapter=The Site of the Ancient Exchequer at Westminster}}</ref> During the reign of [[Henry III of England|Henry III]] and prior to 1244 a new Exchequer building was constructed, adjoining the north-west corner of Westminster Hall, to house the upper Exchequer, while the lower Exchequer (the Exchequer of Receipt) remained in the older building to the east.<ref name="Goodall2000">{{cite book |last1=Goodall |first1=John |author1-link=John Goodall (author) |editor1-last=Riding |editor1-first=Christine |editor2-last=Riding |editor2-first=Jacqueline |editor2-link=Jacqueline Riding |title=The Houses of Parliament: History, Art, Architecture |date=2000 |publisher=Merrell |location=London |pages=49–68 |chapter=The Medieval Palace of Westminster}}</ref> Inside the main (north) entrance to the Hall, a broad staircase to the left led to the Exchequer of Receipt, while a corresponding staircase to the right led to the Court of Exchequer.
The Court of Exchequer itself occupied a large first-floor apartment (measuring {{convert|74|ft|abbr=on}} by {{convert|45|ft|abbr=on}}), which looked out on to [[New Palace Yard]]. In 1569-70 it was rebuilt in brick, though much of the 13th-century stonework was left intact. It remained in use as the Exchequer courtroom up until its demolition in 1823. The Exchequer Chamber occupied a room immediately to the south, located between the first and second [[buttresses]] of Westminster Hall.<ref name="SR1883">{{cite journal |title=The Law Courts at Westminster |journal=The Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science and Art |date=11 August 1883 |volume=56 |issue=1,450 |pages=169–171 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Saturday_Review_of_Politics_Literatu/y8Gvw2DgaSIC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA169 |access-date=8 April 2026}}</ref> It too was rebuilt in the reign of Elizabeth I (in 1565–67) and was demolished in 1823.
In 1307, under [[Edward II]], significant repairs were undertaken to the palace, which had been damaged by fire in the previous reign. As part of the refurbishment houses were erected 'for the convenience and use of the treasurer and barons of the exchequer'.<ref name="BrayleyBritton1835">{{cite book |last1=Brayley |first1=Edward Wedlake |last2=Britton |first2=John |author1-link=Edward Wedlake Brayley |author2-link=John Britton (antiquary) |title=A History and Description of the late Houses of Parliament and ancient palatial edifices of Westminster |date=1835 |publisher=John Weale |location=London |pages=116–117 |url=https://archive.org/details/historyofancient00brit/page/116/mode/2up |access-date=8 April 2026}}</ref> In 1394 a set of [[cloisters]] (which still survive) was built alongside [[St Stephen's Chapel]], south of the offices of the Receipt.<ref name="Smith1807">{{cite book |last1=Smith |first1=John Thomas |author1-link=John Thomas Smith (engraver) |title=Antiquities of Westminster; the Old Palace, |date=1807 |publisher=J. T. Smith |location=London |page=101 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Antiquities_of_Westminster_the_old_palac/5rhxZZqwS6IC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA101 |access-date=18 April 2026}}</ref> After the [[dissolution of the monasteries]], the former precincts of the chapel (including the cloisters) were converted into a grand house. In 1572 this dwelling reverted to the Crown and it went on to serve until 1794 as the official residence of the Auditor of the Receipt of the Exchequer; subsequently the same residence became the [[Speaker's House]].<ref name="HallamSmith2022">{{cite journal |last1=Hallam Smith |first1=Elizabeth |title=The ‘Gothic Slum’: MPs and St Stephen's Cloister, Westminster, 1548–2017 |journal=Parliamentary History |date=June 2022 |volume=41 |issue=2 |pages=279–302 |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1750-0206.12630 |access-date=8 April 2026 |author1-link=Elizabeth Hallam Smith}}</ref> The Tellers were accommodated in an adjoining building to the north;<ref name="Smith1807" /> while in 1555 the Clerk of the Pells was given a suite of rooms in the East tower of Westminster Hall (which had previously served as chambers for the by-then defunct Court of First Fruits and Tenths).<ref name="Wright2023" />
The King's Remembrancer had his offices at the west end of the court building.<ref name="Smith1807" /> Below were three prison cells (known as 'Hell', 'Purgatory' and 'Paradise'), which were later converted into [[Public Houses]] bearing the same names,<ref name="SR1883" /> before being turned over (in the reign of Henry VIII) to the storage of records.<ref name="Thomas1853">{{cite book |last1=Thomas |first1=F.S. |title=Handbook to the Public Records |date=1853 |publisher=George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode |location=London |page=xiv |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Hand_book_to_the_Public_Records/2Mb8N3PczIMC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PR14 |access-date=5 May 2026}}</ref> The records of the Exchequer were kept in what was known as the [[Pell Office]], adjacent to [[Westminster Hall]], until the 19th century. The office was named after the skins (then "pells" or pelts) from which the rolls were made.<ref>Urbanus [https://books.google.com/books?id=u1NIAAAAYAAJ&dq=pell+office+records&pg=PA20 Records of the Exchequer. The Issue Roll of Thomas de Brantingham, Bishop of Exeter, Lord High Treasurer of England, containing payments made out of His Majesty's Revenue in the 44th year of Edward Ill, AD 1370 translated from the original Roll now remaining in the ancient Pell Office, by Frederick Devon. London, 1835, pp. 516.] Gentleman's Magazine, 1836, vol. 5, pp. 17–22, publ. W. Pickering.(book review) Google books</ref>
The Court of Exchequer remained in its ancient premises until 1823, when the building was demolished to make way for Sir [[John Soane]]'s new Law Courts complex (which provided new accommodation for the Courts of Exchequer and Exchequer Chamber, as well as for those courts hitherto housed within Westminster Hall itself).
==Other exchequers== ===Exchequer of Normandy=== {{main|Exchequer of Normandy}} {{Unreferenced section|date=August 2024}} The operation of an exchequer in Normandy is documented as early as 1180. This exchequer had broader jurisdiction than the English exchequer, dealing in both fiscal and administrative matters. The ''Dialogue concerning the Exchequer'' presents it as a general belief that the Norman kings established the Exchequer in England on the loose model of the Norman exchequer, while noting with some doubt an alternative view that the Exchequer existed in Anglo-Saxon times. The specific chronology of the two exchequers' founding's remains unknown.
===Exchequer of the Jews=== {{main|Exchequer of the Jews}} From the late 1190s to the [[Edict of expulsion|expulsion of the Jews]] in 1290, there was a separate division for taxation of [[Jews]] and the law-cases arising between Jews and Christians, called [[Exchequer of the Jews]] (Latin: ''Scaccarium Judaeorum'').<ref>Joe Hillaby (2003) "[https://books.google.com/books?id=GKXbD-RiQ2oC&q=hillaby&pg=PA15 Jewish Colonisation in the Twelfth Century]" In Patricia Skinner (ed.) ''Jews in Medieval Britain: Historical, Literary, and Archeological Perspective'', pp. 16–17. {{ISBN|0-85115-931-1}}</ref><ref>Gross, Charles (1887), ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=IFQUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA3 The Exchequer of the Jews of England in the Middle Ages]''. London: Office of the Jewish Chronicle; reprinted from ''Papers of the Anglo-Jewish Historical Exposition'', pp. 170–230.</ref>
===Exchequer in Scotland=== {{main|Auditor of the Exchequer in Scotland|Court of Exchequer (Scotland)}} [[File:Court of the Exchequer arms, Parliament Square - geograph.org.uk - 2377955.jpg|thumb|right|Royal Arms on the old Exchequer building in [[Parliament Square, Edinburgh]].]] The Scottish Exchequer dates to around 1200, with a similar role in [[Auditor of the Exchequer in Scotland|auditing]] and royal [[revenue]]s as in England. Receipt and issue of the revenue took place there and the [[Court of Exchequer (Scotland)|Court of Exchequer]] controlled the accounts in the name of the [[Treasurer of Scotland|Treasurer]] and [[Great Chamberlain]].{{sfn|Anson|1892|p=305}}
The Scottish Exchequer was slower to develop a separate judicial role; and it was not until 1584 that it became a court of law, separate from the king's council. Even then, the judicial and the administrative roles were never completely separated as with the English Exchequer.
In 1707, the [[Exchequer Court (Scotland) Act 1707]] ([[6 Ann. (GB)|6 Ann.]] c. 53) reconstituted the Exchequer into a law court on the English model, with a lord chief baron and four barons.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.legislation.gov.uk/apgb/Ann/6/53 |title=Exchequer Court (Scotland) Act 1707 |website=legislation.gov.uk |publisher=UK Government | access-date=11 November 2016}}</ref> The court adopted English forms of procedure and had further powers added. This was done in Section 19 of the [[Act of Union 1707]]<ref>Section XIX, "And that there be a Court of Exchequer in Scotland after the Union, for deciding Questions concerning the Revenues of Customs and Excises there, having the same power and authority in such cases, as the Court of Exchequer has in England": {{ws|[[s:Act of Union 1707|Act of Union 1707]] at Wikisource}}</ref>
In 1832 all the Exchequer's duties and powers pertaining to revenue administration were transferred to HM Treasury.{{sfn|Anson|1892|p=305}} From 1832, no new barons were appointed; their role was increasingly assumed by judges of the [[Court of Session]]. By the [[Exchequer Court (Scotland) Act 1856]] ([[19 & 20 Vict.]] c. 56), the Exchequer became a part of the Court of Session. A [[lord ordinary]] acts as a judge in Exchequer causes.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Vict/19-20/56 |title=Exchequer Court (Scotland) Act 1856 |website=legislation.gov.uk |publisher=UK Government | access-date=11 November 2016}}</ref> The English forms of process ceased to be used in 1947.
===Exchequer of Ireland=== {{Main|Exchequer of Ireland|Court of Exchequer (Ireland)}} The [[Exchequer of Ireland]] developed in 1210 when King [[John of England]] reorganised the governance of his [[Lordship of Ireland]] and brought it more in line with English law.<ref name="Howard" /> It consisted of the ''Superior Exchequer'', a [[court of equity]] and revenue akin to the Exchequer of Pleas, and the ''Inferior Exchequer''.<ref name="Howard" /> The latter were the treasurers who handled all logistics from collecting the money (Teller or Cashier), logging it (Clerk of the Pells) and signing money orders accepting or paying money.{{sfn|Thomas|1848|p=}}{{page needed|date=February 2026}}<ref name="MTH" /> It was managed by its own [[Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland]] and [[Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer]].
The [[Court of Exchequer (Ireland)|Court of Exchequer]] existed from about 1299 to 1877. It was abolished under the [[Supreme Court of Judicature Act (Ireland) 1877]] and was merged, along with the [[Court of King's Bench (Ireland)|Court of King's Bench]], the [[Court of Chancery (Ireland)|Court of Chancery]] and the [[Court of Common Pleas (Ireland)|Court of Common Pleas]], into the new [[High Court of Justice in Ireland]] (now replaced by the [[High Court (Ireland)|High Court]]).<ref name="Howard" />
The [[Central Fund (Ireland)|Central Fund]], the Republic of Ireland's equivalent of the UK's Consolidated Fund, is colloquially called the Exchequer when distinguished as a component of [[Government of Ireland|government]] funding.<ref name="fiscalcouncil">{{cite book |chapter=Appendix E: The General Government Sector |chapter-url=https://www.fiscalcouncil.ie/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Appendix-E-The-General-Government-Sector-2.pdf |title=Fiscal Assessment Report |publisher=Fiscal Council |location=Dublin |pages=102–103 |date=November 2016}}</ref>
===Local exchequers=== [[File:DURHAM CATHEDRAL The former exchequer and palatinate built for Bishop Neville 1438-1457.JPG|thumb|right|The old Exchequer building in Durham (dating from 1438).]] As well as the principal Exchequer, which sat at Westminster (and occasionally elsewhere in earlier times), there are records of other exchequers operating in England and Wales (Madox describes them as 'inferior Receipts or Treasuries that were called by that Name').{{sfn|Madox|1769b|p=3}} There was one in the [[City of London]] at the ''Cambium'' (or Exchange), one in [[Caernarfon]] in North Wales, and others in [[Berwick upon Tweed]], [[Carlisle]], [[Chester]] and [[Durham, England|Durham]].{{sfn|Madox|1769b|p=4}} The [[Exchequer of Chester]] functioned as part of the administration of the [[County Palatine]] of [[Cheshire]], the Exchequer of Durham serving likewise for the [[County Palatine of Durham]]. The Exchequer at Caernarfon was staffed in the 13th century by a Chamberlain and a Treasurer and (like its counterpart in London) issued Writs of Summons for monies owed to the king.{{sfn|Madox|1769b|p=5}}
==See also== <!-- add in alphabetic order --> *[[Black Book of the Exchequer]] *[[Exchequer of Chester]] *[[Exchequer Standards]] *[[Fisc]] *[[History of the English fiscal system]] *[[Red Book of the Exchequer]] *[[Taxation in medieval England]]
==Notes== {{notelist}}
==References== {{reflist|30em|refs=
<ref name="Dict219">Coredon ''Dictionary'' p. 219</ref>
<ref name="Bartlett">{{cite book |author=Bartlett, Robert |author-link=Robert Bartlett (historian) |title=England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings: 1075–1225 |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford, UK |year=2000 |isbn=0-19-822741-8 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/englandundernorm00bart_0}}</ref>
<ref name="Bryson">{{cite book|last=Bryson|first=W.H.|title=The Equity Side of the Exchequer|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|year=2008|isbn=978-0-521-07659-3}}</ref>
<ref name="MTH">{{cite journal|last=H.|first=M. T.|date=1932|title=Review: History of the Financial Administration of Ireland to 1817 by T. J. Kiernan|journal=Irish Province of the Society of Jesus|volume=21|issue=81}}</ref>
<ref name="Howard">{{cite book|last=Howard|first=Gorges Edmond|author-link=Gorges Edmond Howard|title=A treatise of the Exchequer and revenue of Ireland.|publisher=J.A. Husband|date=1776|volume=1|oclc=5111516}}</ref>
<ref name="EADA1866">{{cite web |url=http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Vict/29-30/39/section/2 |title=Exchequer and Audit Departments Act 1866 |website=legislation.gov.uk |publisher=UK Government | access-date=6 October 2016}}</ref>
<ref name="InterpretationAct1978">{{cite web |url=http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1978/30/schedule/1 |title=Interpretation Act 1978 |website=legislation.gov.uk |publisher=UK Government | access-date=6 October 2016}}</ref>
<ref name="EFPA1950">{{cite web |url=http://www.legislation.gov.uk/apni/1950/3/section/19#text%3DExchequer |title=Exchequer and Financial Provisions Act (Northern Ireland) 1950 |website=legislation.gov.uk |publisher=UK Government | access-date=6 October 2016}}</ref>
}}
== Bibliography == * {{cite book |editor1-last=Henderson |editor1-first=Ernest F. |title=Select Historical Documents of the Middle Ages |date=1896 |publisher=George Bell and Sons |location=London |url=http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/medieval/excheq.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070208115037/http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/medieval/excheq.htm |archive-date=8 February 2007 |chapter=The Dialogue Concerning the Exchequer. circa 1180}} * {{cite book |editor1-last=Johnson |editor1-first=Charles |editor1-link=Charles Johnson (historian) |title=''Dialogus de Scaccario'': the Course of the Exchequer, by Richard, Fitz Nigel |edition=2nd |date=1983 |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford |url=https://amesfoundation.law.harvard.edu/lhsemelh/materials/Exchequer.pdf}} * {{cite book |last1=Anson |first1=Sir William Reynell |title=The Law and Custom of the Constitution, Part 2 |date=1892 |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford, Oxfordshire |pages=161–164 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CS40AAAAIAAJ |access-date=19 October 2021 |author1-link=Sir William Anson, 3rd Baronet}} * {{cite book |last1=Brand |first1=John David |title=The Exchequer in the Later Twelfth Century |date=1989 |publisher=The Polytechnic of North London |url=https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/7523/1/328938.pdf |location=London | access-date=1 January 2026}} * {{cite book |last1=Hall |first1=Hubert |title=The Antiquities and Curiosities of the Exchequer |date=1898 |publisher=Elliot Stock |location=London |url=https://dn790009.ca.archive.org/0/items/antiquitiescurio00halluoft/antiquitiescurio00halluoft.pdf |access-date=5 May 2026}} * {{cite book |last1=Jenkinson |first1=Hilary |author1-link=Hilary Jenkinson |editor1-last=Malden |editor1-first=Henry Elliot |editor1-link=H. E. Malden |title=Magna Carta Commemoration Essays |date=1917 |publisher=Royal Historical Society |location=London |pages=244–300 |url=https://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/bryce-magna-carta-commemoration-essays |access-date=4 May 2026 |chapter=Financial Records of the Reign of King John}} * {{cite book |last1=Keir |first1=D. L. |author1-link=David Keir (historian) |title=The Constitutional History of Modern Britain 1485–1937 |date=1946 |publisher=A & C Black |location=London |edition=Third}} * {{cite book |last1=Madox |first1=Thomas |title=The History and Antiquities of the Exchequer of the Kings of England (Volume I) |date=1769a |publisher=William Owen and Benjamin White |location=London |edition=Second |url=https://archive.org/details/historyantiquiti01mado/page/n7/mode/2up |access-date=5 January 2026}} * {{cite book |last1=Madox |first1=Thomas |title=The History and Antiquities of the Exchequer of the Kings of England (Volume II) |date=1769b |publisher=William Owen and Benjamin White |location=London |edition=Second |url=https://archive.org/details/historyantiquiti02mado/page/n5/mode/2up |access-date=5 January 2026}} * [http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/adsdata/PSAS_2002/pdf/vol_123/123_439_452.pdf Murray, Athol L, Burnett, Charles J., ''The seals of the Exchequer of Scotland''. Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scot. 123 (1993) 439–52] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090923083450/http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/adsdata/PSAS_2002/pdf/vol_123/123_439_452.pdf |date=23 September 2009 }} * {{cite book |last1=Poole |first1=Reginald |title=The Exchequer in the Twelfth Century |date=1912 |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford |url=https://historyofeconomicthought.mcmaster.ca/poole/exchequer12c.pdf |access-date=31 December 2025}} * {{cite book |last1=Price |first1=George |title=A Treatise on the law of the Exchequer |date=1830 |publisher=Saunders and Benning |location=London |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/A_Treatise_on_the_law_of_the_Exchequer_s/yEhfAAAAcAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1 |access-date=11 April 2026}} * {{cite book |last1=Sainty |first1=J. C. |author1-link=John Sainty (parliamentary official) |title=No. 18: Officers of the Exchequer |date=1983 |publisher=List and Index Society Publications |location=London}} * {{cite EB1911|wstitle=Exchequer |last= Spring-Rice |first= Stephen Edward |volume= 10 |pages= 54 - 58}} * [[Anthony Steel (historian)|Steel, Anthony]] ''The Receipt of the Exchequer, 1377–1485''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1954. *{{cite book|last=Thomas|first=Francis Sheppard|title=The Ancient Exchequer of England; the Treasury; and Origin of the Present Management of the Exchequer and Treasury of Ireland.|publisher=J. Petheram|date=1848|oclc=465938569}} * Warren, W. L., ''The Governance of Norman and Angevin England 1086–1272''. Edward Arnold, 1987. {{ISBN|0-7131-6378-X}} * [http://www.nas.gov.uk/guides/exchequer.asp National Archives of Scotland guide to Exchequer Records.] nas.gov.uk
==External links== {{wiktionary}} * [http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/about_history.htm HM Treasury history page]
{{English Exchequer}}
[[Category:Government of the United Kingdom]] [[Category:Defunct departments of the Government of the United Kingdom]] [[Category:Exchequer offices]] [[Category:Taxation in England]] [[Category:History of taxation in the United Kingdom]] [[Category:Monarchy and money]]