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A definitive compendium of churches and chapels across Yorkshire.History lives within these pages.George Lawton’s Collectio Rerum Ecclesiasticarum gathers notices and registers relating to parishes in the diocese of York, with added material from the diocese of Ripon. This church history collection doubles as an ecclesiastical architecture reference and a parish records anthology, balancing topographical description with clerical succession and the types of historical church registers that are indispensable to family historians. Entries vary in length and tone - succinct site descriptions sit alongside fuller lists of incumbents, notes on patronage and surviving fabric - so students of anglican church studies and anyone tracing roots through nineteenth-century england find both factual scaffolding and narrative colour. Practical as a genealogy research resource, the volume is pitched to local history enthusiasts yet written with a measured antiquarian eye that rewards careful reading. There is careful attention to place-names, boundary changes and ecclesiastical patronage, making the volume a practical guide for on-site enquiry as much as for desk-based research; the accumulation of brief but precise entries builds a panorama of parish life that rewards both quick reference checks and slower study.Of clear historical significance, Lawton’s compilation illuminates yorkshire church history and complements enquiries into the york diocese archives and ripon cathedral history, adding textured evidence to the story of english religious heritage. 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 drawn to place and provenance will find immediate, readable rewards; classic-literature collectors and reference libraries will prize this edition for its research value and its quiet antiquarian appeal, making it a bridge between scholarly anglican church studies and popular local-history curiosity. Measured and unshowy, Lawton’s prose lets the facts speak: readable vignettes sit beside lists and dates, so both the armchair explorer and the working historian can use the book with equal profit.