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'This book aims to unravel the complexity of the probate court system in Yorkshire ... The book will also explain the probate process and the documentation that was generated during this process." -- P. xv.
Although aimed primarily at the beginner, this book opens up to researchers of all levels the wealth of material from the PCC held in the Public Record Office. Coverage begins in the 19th century and works backwards, enabling readers to develop expertise before tackling more complex topics. Topics dealt with include: how and where to find wills; using the indexes available; finding an administration; using the Probate Act books to supplement information; and how to decipher PCC script. Fully illustrated with examples of original wills, probate inventories and death duty records, the book also demonstrates a family tree based on wills.
Seventeenth-century England was a country obsessed with property rights. For only those who owned property were considered to have a vested interest in the maintenance of law, order and social harmony. As such, establishing the ownership of 'things' was a constant concern for all people, and nowhere is this more evident than in the cases of disputed wills. Based on a wealth of surviving evidence from the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, the probate jurisdiction which probated wills of the more wealthy English property owners as well as some of those with a more modest quantity of property, this book investigates what litigation over the validity of wills reveals about the interplay between s...