Browse The National Archives' catalogue

Browse by reference Browse home

Inside you will find

  • E 326c1200-1592Exchequer: Augmentation Office: Ancient Deeds, Series B

    This collection, consisting chiefly of conveyances and other evidences of title, forms the greater part of some 20,000 deeds acquired by the Crown from private and institutional hands and held by the Augmentation Office until removal to Chancery Lane in 1856-7.

    For the most part the deeds represent the estate archives taken into the custody of the Court of Augmentations, the Court of General Surveyors, and the latter's predecessors, the Office of General Surveyors and the K king's Chamber. These archives had come into the possession of the Crown along with the estates acquired variously through forfeiture, purchase, exchange, wardship and, above all, through the dissolution of religious houses, the administration of whose properties was the main task of the Courts of Augmentations.

    More than 13,500 of the deeds held by the Augmentation Office now make up this series.

    Among the estate archives which can be identified within the series are those of numerous suppressed religious houses, including the priories of Breamore, Canons Ashby, Langley, Stamford and the London Charterhouse, and the abbeys of Bordesley, Quarr, Ramsey and Syon. Lay estates represented in the series include those of the earl of Warwick (1428-1471), the duke of Somerset (c.1506-1552) and Sir Thomas Wyatt (?1521-1554).