While on break, I posted briefly about the England, Prerogative and Exchequer Court of York Wills, 1389–1858. With 2,462,539 records, it deserves a closer look.
In addition to extracting name, place of residence, relationship to head of household, will date, and probate date, the collection includes a list of individuals mentioned and their relationship to the testator. This feature is absent from Ancestry’s Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384–1858, almost certainly because it relies on AI, which was not available when the PCC records first appeared on Ancestry in 2014.
A second, and even larger, addition to Ancestry from the Borthwick Institute is the Yorkshire, England, Bishops’ Transcripts of Church of England Baptism, Marriage and Burial Registers, 1558–1912, with 13,500,549 records. Baptism entries include name, date and place of baptism, and parents’ names (though not the mother’s maiden name). Marriage entries include names, date and place, and burial entries include name, date of death, and date and place of burial.
Both collections link to images of the original records. These days, it’s good practice to run those images through an AI tool for analysis. The results may not be perfect, but they’re often useful.