Walter Stapeldon, fifteenth bishop of Exeter, was the founder of Exeter
College, Oxford, and the greatest of Edward II's treasurers of the
Exchequer. As Edward's regime crumbled in 1326, he paid the price of his
master's rapacious policies, of which he was the chief instrument. This
study shows how the Plantagenet revolution in government, the most
massive overhaul of the Exchequer ever undertaken in medieval England,
was shaped with a clear financial purpose. On the basis of his extensive
research in the Exchequer archives, Dr Buck reveals for the first time
the extent and severity of the government's action on the levying of
debts to the Crown, which, although initiated earlier, was exacerbated
in the early 1320s when parliament and the clergy were refusing the king
supply. Placing the policies of Stapeldon's treasurership in their
political and parliamentary context, he argues that the Exchequer was
Edward's most powerful weapon against the aristocratic opposition and in
the process reassesses the accepted interpretation of these years of
turmoil.