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Beneath Bath Abbey’s stone and spire, the ordinary lives of a city are written in careful ledgers. Essential for family history research. The Registers of the Abbey Church of Ss. Peter and Paul, Bath (Volume II), by Arthur J. Jewers, gathers parish register transcripts and a companion church records collection from Bath Abbey archives and neighbouring Somerset parish records into a single, readable ecclesiastical records anthology. Presented with an eye to clarity and source fidelity, this volume is a practical historical genealogy resource: it opens a discreet window onto nineteenth-century England and supplies Victorian-era documents that anchor personal stories inside wider social and religious patterns of the period. Casual readers and classic-literature collectors alike are drawn to its human immediacy and archival authenticity.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. Beyond its obvious usefulness for family history research, the registers offer scholars tangible evidence for studies of English church history and Victorian social life; demographers, prosopographers and parish historians will find primary material that complements secondary scholarship. As academic reference material, the book sits comfortably beside leading British genealogy books, while its faithful reproduction and careful annotation make it attractive to collectors who prize provenance and readable presentation. Whether consulted for a precise Somerset family line or browsed for local colour, this edition restores access to Bath’s civic and ecclesiastical past without academic fog. The editors balance fidelity with accessibility so that casual look-ups, deep archival study and classroom use are all served; the result is a volume that supports family historians and researchers alike as they trace connections across time and place. Accessible, reliable and rooted in place, this edition rewards both quick queries and long study. Collectors of local history and students of nineteenth-century England will appreciate the respectful reproduction and the sense of continuity it provides between Bath’s past and present.