For this blog we gratefully acknowledge the help of our Bluesky community, particularly Dr Helen Newsome-Chandler, Professor Laurie Johnson, and Professor Tracey Hill, who tackled our palaeography conundrum and identified our âEyrye of Swannysâ. This monthâs testator is John Spurstowe âesquierâ, whose will was proved in 1540. This document provides an insight into the life […]
When selecting previous wills to feature in our monthly series, we browsed testator metadata, looking for particular names or locations, or filtering by occupational, social, and marital status. All of this information can be searched for on The National Archivesâ Discovery catalogue. However, thanks to the recent completion of our will transcriptions and the development […]
Will Johnson, Barbara Tearle, Emily Vine This edition of our âWill of the Monthâ series is a very special one. Itâs the fruit of a collaboration: the research and transcription were completed by Zooniverse volunteers Will Johnson and Barbara Tearle, and this blog post is a collaboration between us all. It untangles not only the […]
Emily Vine **This will inspired a Chris Hoban song! Read his lyrics at the end of the post.** This monthâs post examines the will of Margaret âPenningtonâ Cooke (d. 1552), a widow of Hornchurch in Essex. Margaret Cooke moved in prominent circles and had royal connections â she was a lady-in-waiting to both Catherine of Aragon and […]
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 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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