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About Archdeaconry Court of London Wills Index 1750-1800
The Archdeaconry Court of London was one of the London church courts that dealt with testamentary matters as well as other concerns. The index to wills for which probate was granted in the Archdeaconry Court includes over 5,000 records, mainly from the first half of the 18th century. The index records usually contain the last name and first name of the testator, place of residence, occupation and date of probate; the latter date will, of course, establish the latest possible year of death of the person named. There are also numerous records of mariners, many of whom were ascribed as having residences in London parishes. Anyone with an English mariner ancestor who could have died overseas should search this index.
What was the Archdeaconry Court of London The Archdeaconry Court of London was one of the local church courts that dealt with testamentary matters as well as other concerns. Within the Diocese of London, the Archdeacon had jurisdiction over about half of the parishes in the City of London and some populous parishes bordering it in the county of Middlesex, including St Leonard Shoreditch and Clerkenwell. St Botolph Aldgate, to which many mariners dying abroad were ascribed as resident, also fell within this court's jurisdiction. Thus anyone who has a mariner ancestor who suspects a death overseas should examine this index. Similarly, it is invaluable as a way of locating anyone who might have died in the very large parishes of Shoreditch and Clerkenwell, whose burial registers can be difficult and time consuming to use. By 1700 the business of the court was already declining, presumably because more and more testators were resorting to the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. In the 1750s this drop became more marked, and there are very few wills after the 1770s. Though the court's jurisdiction was not abolished until 1858 the last will was proved in 1807. Click here for parishes covered by Archdeaconry Court of London What do the index records tell you? The index contains
1. Typical index record ATKINS, Ephraim, [of] St Mary Somerset, [occupation] farrier, [probate granted] Jul 1719 2. Typical mariner's entry ARBOCKLE, Quinton, Clerkenwell and HMS Faversham, Jun 1715 3. Where person died in different place to residence ASHTON, Elizabeth, St Olave Hart Street (but died Holborn), sp[inster]., Jun 1726 4. Alternative surname spellings BURGESS (BURGES, BURGIS), Alice, Clerkenwell, widow, May 1712 The source records The original records of the Archdeaconry Court of London, together with those of several other Church courts, can now be found at the Guildhall Library. Wills are a valuable source for family historians. Where they exist they can throw a useful insight into the thoughts and wishes of the testator as well as give genealogical information. The following information can be found on wills:
Remember also that children, lunatics, criminals, and married women without the consent of their husbands (before the 1883 Married Women's Property Act) could not leave wills. |