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A ledger of ordinary lives, preserved in parish ink. Lost lives reappear on paper.William Brigg’s The Parish Registers Of Often Co. York Part 2 is a meticulous parish register collection of baptisms (April 1672 to June 1753), marriages (April 1672 to June 1750) and burials (April 1672 to March 1751-2) for the parish of Often in the county of York. As direct access to historical church records - 17th century baptisms, early modern marriages and the burial register Yorkshire entries - it supplies the raw entries that fuel yorkshire genealogy records and the broader british parish archives. Genealogists will value the terse, original wording that reveals parentage, sponsors and dates; family history researchers can trace surnames across generations and correlate parish data with wills, tax lists and later civil registrations. Occasional marginal notes and the steady cadence of entries give texture to communal life, and each line is a datum that can be combined with neighbouring parishes to support county-wide study. Accessible for casual readers intrigued by human detail yet rigorous enough to serve as a working genealogical reference book for researchers and local history enthusiasts, it maps lives across Yorkshire 1672 to 1753.Historically significant, these registers preserve parish-level evidence that invites both genealogists and social historians to read the ordinary as telling. The volume supplies measurable traces of community life (naming trends, marriage ages, mortality rhythms) and is as useful to students of demography and social history as it is to those pursuing an ancestry resource England-wide. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today’s and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector’s item and a cultural treasure. Classic-literature collectors assembling reference shelves will prize it, and casual readers will find in the spare entries a human archive of births, unions and farewells.