Thoroughly enjoyed putting on a document display at The National Archives (UK) last night to mark the 250th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party, including the Tea Act [C 65/942], the US Declaration of Independence [EXT 9/1], and the 1783 Treaty of Paris [FO 93/8/2].
Want to know more about how The National Archives tackles uncatalogued series? This blog from Ada Mascio talks us through the recent listing of LR 16 as part of Catalogue Week 2023. www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/about/our-ro...
Ada Mascio, Archivist – Catalogue Data Cataloguing, Taxonomy and Data Team, November 2023 In this recorded presentation, archivist Ada Mascio explains the skills, techniques and processes involve...
Don't know if this has been answered yet, but Heward's Masters in Ordinary contains a list of Masters 1272-1597 in its appendix.
Don't know if this has been answered yet, but Heward's Masters in Ordinary contains a list of Masters 1272-1597 in its appendix.
Morning everyone - my book on royal justice, the Court of Requests, and the early Tudors is out NOW for those with online access! Print publication to follow shortly... www.cambridge.org/core/books/r...
Not to item level, no. There are a couple of pieces that have item descriptions from later secondary sources, though.
Pleadings of the Chancery Court of the Palatinate of Durham from the 1640s. Completely uncalendared. What fun! [TNA DURH 2/55] #Archives#LegalRecords
What starts with 15th-century petty treason and ends with 21st-century libel (Vardy v Rooney)? Blog 3 of the Legal Records Jamboree, of course, all about records relating to verdicts. legalhistorymiscellany.com/2023/10/16/l...
In Part Three of a four-part series, legal records specialists at The National Archives (Kew) explore evidence of verdicts from the 'Legal Records Jamboree'.