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A vital repository of Somerset’s past. Essential for family history research. Frederick Brown’s Abstracts of Somersetshire Wills (Second Series) compiles clear, concise summaries of probate material recorded in Somersetshire archives, presenting an approachable English wills collection for both scholars and curious readers. Each abstract distils a will to its essentials - names, kinship ties, property mentions and executors - so Somerset genealogy records become searchable, actionable starting points rather than opaque ledgers. The arrangement emphasises immediate research value, making estate inheritance research and routine look-ups far more efficient than sifting original registers.As a genealogists’ reference guide the book sits at the intersection of local memory and legal record: what seem like dry lists reveal networks of kin, patterns of landholding and the everyday mechanics of English legal history. Local history enthusiasts encounter candid fragments of domestic life; students of British family history and social historians gain corroborating data to plug gaps in parish narratives and demographic study. Useful for research spanning many periods, it helps to connect names found in British parish records with probate evidence and offers context for both 16th century England enquiries and later Victorian era documents. More than a mere index, these historical probate abstracts bring texture to county studies and supply reliable leads for deeper archival work.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Casual readers find digestible, often surprising portraits of county life; archivists and classic-literature collectors value the edition’s measured presentation and its role as a focused reference for local-history shelves. Compact in purpose but broad in use, Brown’s abstracts belong in the research library of anyone pursuing British family history or the material culture of rural England too.