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Where past families speak again. A historical testament register and probate records collection, The Commissariot Record Of Hamilton And Campsie: Register Of Testaments 1564-1800, by J. Grant, Francis, gathers testament entries and probate notices from parish records Scotland between 1564 and 1800. This primary-source volume sits at the meeting point of law and domestic life, recording names, bequests, guardianships and estate dealings that illuminate how ordinary households managed property and obligation. Essential to scottish genealogy records and family history research, it serves as an ancestry reference book and legal documents archive, giving researchers and historians direct evidence for kinship links, inheritance practice and local economy across the decades. Particular strengths lie in its concentration on hamilton and campsie history, where clerical registrations and recorded claims provide a continuous line through 16th to 18th century Scotland. Spanning more than two centuries, the register reveals longer patterns of continuity and change in local practice, and it often provides the only surviving legal trace for families otherwise absent from later records. It is an invaluable complement to parish records Scotland for anyone piecing together ancestry or the texture of community life.Far from dry ledger work, the register offers textured source material for social narrative and legal study and is of clear literary and historical significance within scottish archival studies. Casual readers curious about local biography will recognise human stories in the wills and testaments Scotland preserves here; professional scholars will use the material to trace property networks, test familial connections and chart legal custom. Students and archivists can follow shifts in testamentary practice that reflect religious, economic and administrative change across the centuries. Used together with kirk session material and other parish records Scotland, this register helps reconstruct neighbourhoods as lived environments. Classic-literature collectors and regional librarians will value it as a cultural artefact and a period witness to local voice. 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.