Many thanks to the Zooniverse users who contributed to conversations about this will on our talkboards, including Will and Barbara, and @sk001, @studentius, @Tearle, @ManyHeaded, and @HJSmith .You can view the discussion of this will here. To join in with reading and transcribing early modern wills, have a look at our Zooniverse site here. This […]
The end of October and the beginning of November marks âAllhallowtideâ â the time of the year when Western Christians, including in early modern England, have traditionally turned their thoughts to the dead with the marking of All Hallowsâ Eve, All Saintsâ Day, and All Soulsâ Day. While Protestantism rejected purgatory and prayers for the […]
Weâre delighted to announce an exciting new phase of the âMaterial Culture of Willsâ project â the launch of our Zooniverse site. We hope that the Zooniverse âcrowdsourcingâ platform will allow us to involve hundreds of new volunteers in the project who will work with us to transcribe our sample of 25,000 English wills made […]
Emily Vine Thanks to all participants at our recent workshops at The National Archives and the University of Exeter, where we discussed this will. I have drawn on these discussions when writing this post. In this monthâs post weâre thinking not just about the âcontentâ of a will â the details of the bequests it […]
In this monthâs post, one of our Expert Volunteers shares a fascinating will that he transcribed as part of our project. Austen Hamilton, Project Volunteer This monthâs post explores the will of Thomas Pechill, esquire of Normanton in Lincolnshire, which was composed in September 1665.1 Pechill died within a few months of making his will, […]
Emily Vine Early modern folk frequently added âconditionsâ to their wills: that a sum of money would not be given until a beneficiary reached the age of twenty-one, got married, or entered a certain profession, or threats to disinherit those who behaved poorly or ignored parental instruction. These caveats and contingencies reflect a key reason […]
This monthâs featured will is longer and more detailed than previous examples, stretching to three and a half pages. Itâs the will of Ralph Wrighte, a landowner and farmer who died in Sutton Saint James, Lincolnshire, in 1604, and had a lot of land, money, and farm animals to distribute. The dispersal of the estate […]
Emily Vine Our first blog post introduced the different features of early modern wills, and provided some examples of how we can determine the âmeaningâ ascribed to some of the objects and possessions listed in them. This blog post is the first in our âWill of the Monthâ series. Each month we will put a […]
Emily Vine Whatâs in an early modern will? On the one hand the answer to this question is straightforward â according to the legal definition a will is the documentary instrument by which a person regulates the rights of others to their property or family after their death. Yet their value as historical records is […]
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