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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.

Parishes and Extra-Parochial Places

By Jessica Otis

The main organizational unit behind the London Bills of Mortality is the parish: a religious administrative unit usually consisting of one or more churches, their associated staff, and all Christians living within the geographical bounds of the parish. The parish clergy christened, married, and …

Confusion of Calendars

By Emily Meyers , Jessica Otis

One of the first things a Bill of Mortality tells the reader is the date. The bill (partially) pictured below covers mortality data for the city of London, in the 3rd week of the current bills’ year, which ran from the 31st of December to the 7th of January in the year 1700 AD (from the Latin, Anno …

The London Bills of Mortality

By Dan Howlett , Jessica Otis

Plague epidemics were a recurring threat in late medieval and early modern Europe. While plague could and did strike anywhere, the most well-documented epidemics were often in cities. Responses varied across time and space, as city leaders and other political authorities attempted to avoid …