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Lives recorded, centuries remembered.Small words, large human stories.The Publications Of The Yorkshire Parish Register Society (Volume Xxxiii) The Register Of Often Co. York (Part I) 1562-1672, by William Brigg, opens a direct line into parish life across a transformative century. A Yorkshire parish register collection, it reproduces original english church records and serves as a dependable genealogical sourcebook for family history research and local study. The entries, names, dates and the terse notes kept by clergy, are not narrative history but primary testimony: 16th century parish registers that reveal naming patterns, mortality, marriage practice and the rhythms of a community in early modern England. This volume is an essential ancestry resource England researchers consult when tracing lineages from the region; it gathers yorkshire genealogy records and historical vital records that underpin family trees and scholarly inquiry. Presented without editorial invention, the register preserves the plain authority of the originals while making them accessible for modern readers, and the reproduction includes the english baptism marriage burial entries as recorded by the parish.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. As a parish register society publication of enduring value, it offers insight to scholars of early modern England history and quiet pleasures for local history enthusiasts. Casual readers hunting ancestral clues and classic-literature collectors seeking well-made heritage editions will both find this volume rewarding: a concentrated, authoritative source of primary material that bridges archival depth and approachable reading. The careful reproduction of historical vital records and parish metadata supports rigorous family history research and functions as a ready ancestry resource for England studies. Libraries, study groups and private collectors value such yorkshire genealogy records not only for names and dates but for the patterns they reveal across generations; here, the sparse lines of the register become a sustained witness to community and continuity.