Death by Numbers Death by Numbers
Overview
All Context Posts Bibliography Death Dictionary Parish Authority File
Overview
Database Images Downloads API
Overview
All Analysis Posts Data Visualizations
Overview
Humanities Data Urban Data
The Project
Project Team Methodologies All Posts and Essays Search

Context

The London Bills of Mortality were complex documents whose format changed significantly over the hundreds of years they were produced by the Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks. These essays by project team members help explain and situate the bills in their historical context.

General Introduction

  • London Bills of Mortality
  • Confusion of Calendars
  • Who Counts? Religion, Inclusion, and Exclusion in the Bills of Mortality
  • Why is There Bread in the Bills?

Space and Places

  • Parishes and Extra-Parochial Places
  • “Within the Bills”: EEBO and the Early Modern London Metropolis
  • A Parish By Any Other Name

Production of the Bills

  • A Woman’s Touch on the Bills of Mortality
  • The Parish Clerks’ Memento Mori: Iconography of Death and Trademark in the London Bills of Mortality, 1727-1752

Reading the Bills

  • God’s Terrible Voice in the City: New England Connections to the London Bills of Mortality
  • London in Tears: Grief and Collective Mourning in the Bills of Mortality
  • The Facts of Mortality: the Use of the London Bills in Daniel Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year

Bills of Mortality is generously funded by the National Science Foundation and developed by the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at George Mason University.

Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media George Mason University National Science Foundation