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Thomas Madox (1666 – 13 January 1727) was a
legal antiquary and historian, known for his publication and
discussion of medieval records and charters; and in particular for
his History of the Exchequer, tracing the administration
and records of that branch of the state from the Norman Conquest to the time of Edward
II. It became a standard work for the study of English medieval
history.
Life
Born in 1666, Madox applied himself at an early age to the study
of the common law, and was admitted to the Middle Temple, though he was never called to the bar.[1] He
became a sworn clerk in the Lord Treasurer's
remembrance office (ie official archives), and afterwards joint
clerk in the Augmentation
Office, which administered the crown estates; first with
Charles Batteley, who died in May 1722, and afterwards with John
Batteley.[2][1]
There he pursued his historical researches under the patronage
of Lord Somers. He made his
first appearance as an author with the publication of Formulare
Anglicanum in 1702, concerning ancient charters, which Madox
introduced with a learned dissertation on the subject. The
principal materials for this work were obtained from the archives
of the court of
augmentations. It is justly (according to the Dictionary of National
Biography) described by Bishop William Nicolson as 'of unspeakable
service to our students in law and antiquities'.[3] On the
motion of Peter Le
Neve, Madox was elected a member of the Society of Antiquaries in
January 1707-8 (O.S./N.S.).[4][1]
In 1711 he published his History of the Exchequer, with
a dedication to the queen and a long prefatory epistle to Lord
Somers, giving an account of his researches among the public
records in order to gather the materials for the work. Madox was
subsequently sworn in and admitted to the office of historiographer royal,
in succession to Thomas Rymer, on 12 July 1714,[5] with an
attached salary of £200 a year.[1]
The last of his works Madox saw printed in his lifetime was
Firma Burgi, on early records concerning English towns and
boroughs, dedicated to George I, published in 1723. Madox died on
13 January 1726-7 (O.S./N.S.), and was buried at Arlesey,
Bedfordshire.[6] He was
succeeded in the office of historiographer royal by Robert
Stephens. By his wife Catharine, daughter of Vigarus Edwards, Esq.,
he had no issue.[1]
A posthumous work, Baronia Anglica, on the history and
records of the feudal
barons, appeared in 1736. A collection of further transcripts
was bequeathed by his widow to the British Museum, as an addition to the Sloane Library. It ran to ninety-four
volumes,[7] folio
and quarto, consisting chiefly of extracts of records from the
Exchequer, the Patent and Close Rolls in the
Tower, the Cottonian Library, the archives of
Canterbury and Westminster, and the library of Corpus Christi College,
Cambridge; all that Madox had transcribed himself, intending
them as materials for a Feudal History of England from the
earliest times.[8][1]
Works
- Formulare Anglicanum, or a Collection of Antique Charters
and Instruments of divers kinds, taken from the Originals, placed
under several Heads, and deduced (in a Series according to the
Order of Time) from the Norman Conquest to the End of the Reign of
King Henry VIII. London, 1702, fol., 441 pp.[1][9]
- History and Antiquities of the
Exchequer of the Kings of England . . . from the Norman Conquest to
the End of the Reign of . . . Edward II, London, 1711,
fol., 752 pp. plus annexes. An index was printed in Baronia
Anglica, and a second edition, in 2 vols., with the index, was
published in London in 1769, (4to). (vol. 1, vol. 2)[1][9]
Appended was a copy of the Dialogue concerning the
Exchequer (De Scaccario), erroneously ascribed to
Gervase of
Tilbury, now believed to be by Richard FitzNeal; also a Latin
dissertation by Madox on the Great Roll
of the Exchequer (the Pipe rolls). An English translation of these
appendices, made by 'a Gentleman of the Inner Temple,' appeared at
London, 1758, 4to. [1][9]
- An account of all the gold and silver coins ever used in
England: particularly of their value, fineness, and allay, and the
standards of gold and silver in all the respective reigns for the
last six hundred years: likewise of it's plenty and scarcity,
London, 1718, 8vo., 23pp.[9]
- Firma Burgi, or an Historical Essay concerning the Cities,
Towns, and Boroughs of England, taken from Records, London,
1723, and again 1726, fol., 297 pp.[1][9]
- Baronia Anglica; an History of Land-honours and Baronies,
and of Tenure in capite Verified by Records, London,
1736, fol., 292pp.; reissued in 1741.[1][9]
References
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
Thompson
Cooper, Thomas Madox, in Sidney Lee, ed. (1893),
Dictionary of National
Biography, vol. 35, p. 305
- ^
DNB cites Birch MS, 4223, fol. 1
- ^
DNB cites English Hist. Libr. 1776, wp. 168-9
- ^
DNB cites Nichols, Lit. Anecd. vi. 147, 148
- ^
DNB cites Addit. MS. 4572, fol. 108
- ^
DNB cites Historical Register, 1727, Chron. Diary, p.
6
- ^
DNB cites British Library Additional MSS. 4479-4572
- ^
DNB cites Nichols, Lit. Anecd. ix. 645
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
"National Library of
Australia - Catalogue". http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Search/Home?lookfor=author:%22Madox,+Thomas,+1666-1727%22&type=all&limits=&submit=Find. Retrieved
2009-11-02.
DNB
Additional Bibliography
- British
Library Additional MSS. 4572, art. 9, 32476 f. 54; Ayncough's
Catalogue of MSS. Pref. p. vi and pp. 236, 239, 262, 280,
735; Brydges Restituta, i. 67 ; Nichols's Literary
Anecdotes i 243. vii. 243, ix. 645 ; Nichols's Illustration of
Literature, iv. 155, 156; Lowndes's Bibliographer's
Manual (Buhn), p. 1448 ; Nicholson's English Historical
Library.
Further
reading
- Charlotte Harrison (2008), Thomas Madox and the Origins of
English Diplomatic Scholarship, Journal of the Society of
Archivists, 29(2), 147-169 doi:10.1080/00379810902916282
- Joseph M. Levine (1991), The Battle of the Books: History
and Literature in the Augustan Age, pp. 368–373. Cornell
University Press ISBN 0801481996
- David C.
Douglas (1939 / 1951), English Scholars, pp. 237–243.
Eyre & Spottiswoode
- Harold D. Hazeltine (1916), Thomas Madox as Constitutional and
Legal Historian, part 1 32 L. Q.
Rev., p. 268; part 2, 32 L. Q.
Rev, p. 352
- William Searle Holdsworth (1928), The historians of
Anglo-American law, New York: Columbia University Press;
pp.42-45
- Catherine S. Sims (1959), An Unpublished Fragment of Madox'
"History of the Exchequer", The Huntington Library
Quarterly, 23(1), pp. 61-94 Jstor
This article incorporates text from the entry Madox, Thomas in
the Dictionary of National
Biography (1885–1900), a publication now in the public
domain.