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A ledger of lives and law from medieval Yorkshire. Every will tells a life. Testamenta Eboracensia: A Selection of Wills from the Registry at York (Volume III) gathers selections from the York registry archives to present a historical document collection of medieval English wills and testamentary records that illuminate household practice, local charity, trade and kinship in 15th century England. These probate entries record bequests, debts, occupational detail and social obligation in plain, unadorned language. Names, places and occasional sums offer precise leads for family historians; references to goods, rents and offices reveal the material habits of towns and villages. Taken together, these testamentary records create a vivid mosaic of community life and legal custom. For family history enthusiasts and genealogists it is an indispensable genealogy research resource; for students of English legal history and scholars of estate inheritance studies it provides primary evidence of legal practice, property distribution and the rituals of remembrance.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. Its significance is both cultural and scholarly: a worthy inclusion in any British history anthology and a durable academic reference material for research into Yorkshire probate records and testamentary records across England. Casual readers will be arrested by the human immediacy of the entries; family history enthusiasts and genealogists will find names, relationships and domestic detail that open new lines of inquiry. Classic-literature collectors will appreciate the rich documentary texture and authentic voice; scholars will value the book as primary source material for mapping networks, economic ties and local institutions. The pages of this volume connect law to lived experience, giving modern readers direct access to the voices recorded in the York registry archives.