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Ovens/grates: Fringles

related Bibcites
Related Bibcite references

4. From Open Hearth to Cornish Range | Feock: some aspects of Local History (Part IV) 1977

Pilchards, Bacon, Pudding skins, Skimmer cake, Shin broth, Pilchards - Scrollers or Scrowlers, Ovens/grates: Fringles, Ovens/grates: Cloam, Ovens/grates: Cornish range; slab; Cornish stove, Lard
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abbreviations

fl – flourished
typically linked to specific documented sources/events, when aren't in themselves providing evidence of birth and death, but do show a year/s when person alive
d.s.p. – decessit sine prole
died without issue; cf
d.s.p.m. – died without male issue
d.s.p. legit – died without legitimate offspring
dvp
– died during father`s lifetime
s and h – son and heir
o.b.s.p.legil
– died without legitimate offspring
uxor – wife (Latin, found in older parish registers)
wife (Latin, found in older parish registers)'
fils – son (Latin)
Relict – widow of …

pr – (will) proved (probate)
Admon – letters of administration applied for when a person dies intestate (without leaving a Will)

BTs – bishops’ transcripts

DNB – Dictionary of National Biography
CRO – County Record Office
GRO – General Register Office


RD – Registration District (Civil Registration)
RDC – Rural District Council (after 1894)
RSD – Rural Sanitary District (1872 before 1894)

PRO – Public Record Office

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Helpful

Date information pre 1752 Calendar year ran from 25 Mar-24 March; and eleven days elided from September 1752 to align with other countries - click here for more
  • 1752: UK adopted Gregorian calendar system that still use today in September 1752; around 170 years after most other European nations; Act elided eleven days from September 1752; reason UK personal tax year ends 5 April, being eleven days on from original quarter-day of 25 March (Lady Day)
  • Calendars/Dates/Years: The calendar prior to 1752 was different. The year ran from 25th March to the following 24th March. See pre-1752 Calendar for details.
    • ["As early as 1522, Venice adopted 1 January as the start of the new year, and other European countries followed at intervals, though England did not catch up till 1752" Author's Note, Wolf Hall]
  • Quaker Dates Glossify Quakers numbered months - cf definition The English Year before and after 31 December 1751 | Quakers in Britain [In this book, as in most histories, the years are dated from 1 January1 ]

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Will transcript links (OPC)

References beginning with prefixes AP/*, SO/W/* and DSB/*: The images of the original documents in this index are all freely available from the FamilySearch web site. To view the films you MUST have a free FamilySearch account, and you MUST be signed in
• Enter the film number into the Film/Fiche search
• Open the record
• Click on the camera icon to open the film
• Enter the image number into the image counter (top left). Press enter.
• Double click on the highlighted image to enlarge it.
• Wills often cover many images. Check before and after the image numbers given.

References beginning with IR 26/* and PROB11/*: These are Abstracts or Probate Copies of the documents. They are currently available as free digital downlands from the National Archive. You MUST have a free account and MUST in be signed in to access them for free.
• Copy the reference number into the Any reference section of the search form. Open the record. Follow the download instructions.

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Before 1752 the year began in March, so there might be a few instances where the date of proving appears to be before the date the Will was written. See here for more information about the calendar change.

Use the Wills Transcription search to check whether the Will has already been transcribed

In order to interpret the results of this search you need to read this document


Probate link change needs more thinkingSadly not as simple as copying the last part... needs more thinking
Old style:https://probatesearch.service.gov.uk/Calendar/GetImgSrc?filePath=%2F190…
https://probatesearch.service.gov.uk/api/nuxeo/nxfile/default/0cf32172-…
Online maps and GPS use WGS84 datum whereas OS uses OSGB36 datum *pupdated 1936) - difference can be several hundred metres Online maps use the WGS84 datum whereas the OS uses the OSGB36 datum. The datum is a model that adjusts for the fact that the Earth is an ellipsoid rather than a true sphere. It means that latitude/longitude coordinates can be several hundred metres different. GPS signals use the WGS84 datum, and it makes sense for online mappers to comply, but OSGB36 is well established for the small area of Great Britain (Ireland has its own datum and grid system). The OS updated its datum in 1936, and it will have taken time for the revisions to feed through.
Listings/Gazeteers:
  • Gazetteer http://geo.nls.uk/maps/gb1900/
  • C:\Personal\Data\Genealogy\Genealogy\zAngarrack\_ +ParishBoundaries\=Manors

  • Domesday Book - All places | https://opendomesday.org/place/?indexChar=T
  • C:\Personal\Data\Genealogy\Genealogy\zAngarrack\_ +ParishBoundaries\=Manors
Language Cornish/Kernewek :
Cornish Dictionary (SWF) Bilingual PDF Version
https://www.cornishdictionary.org.uk/sites/default/files/GerlyverPDF%20… [Akademi Kernewek]
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