Court of the Peculiar of Craike: Difference between revisions
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==== FamilySearch Library Records  ====  | ==== FamilySearch Library Records  ====  | ||
The FamilySearch Library has the following records. Films can be view in the library or in a[[:Category:FamilySearch Centers|  | The FamilySearch Library has the following records. Films can be view in the library or in a[[:Category:FamilySearch Centers|FamilySearch center]].<br>  | ||
*{{FSC|299120|title-id|disp=Wills, administrations and indexes, 1526-1858}} for the Episcopal Consistory Court with the Peculiar of Craike in the Diocese of Durham.    | *{{FSC|299120|title-id|disp=Wills, administrations and indexes, 1526-1858}} for the Episcopal Consistory Court with the Peculiar of Craike in the Diocese of Durham.    | ||
Latest revision as of 10:00, 15 December 2022
A general explanation of probate records in England, is given in the article England Probate Records.
Description[edit | edit source]
Probate is the legal court process by which the estate of a deceased person is distributed to his or her heirs. The term probate refers to a collection of documents, including wills, administrations (also called admons), inventories, and act books. The Church of England ecclesiastical courts had authority for this process until to 1858.
Step By Step[edit | edit source]
1. Search indexes to help you more quickly find the will, writing down each detail given in the index.
2. Go to "Records" (below) to determine what probate records exist for this court.
3. Obtain the records to search. Use one of these methods to find indexes and records.
- Contact or visit the Archive (see below) or hire a professional record searcher to view these records on your behalf.
 - Microfilm can no longer be ordered.
 
Indexes[edit | edit source]
Online Indexes[edit | edit source]
Printed and Published Indexes[edit | edit source]
- Personal names in wills proved at Durham, by by G. Nicholson and J.A. Readdie. Three volumes, 1787-1803.
 - Index and abstracts to Durham wills, 1540-1590, for Newcastle upon Tyne including the Peculiar of Craike.
 - Wills and administrations of York Peculiar, Prebendial and Manorial Courts, 1559-1858
 
Records[edit | edit source]
Archive Location[edit | edit source]
Before 1837, the records are in the Durham University Library, Special Collections. After 1837, they were transferred to the Archdeaconry of Cleveland and the records are in the Borthwick Institute in York.
Archive Records[edit | edit source]
Add information.
FamilySearch Library Records[edit | edit source]
The FamilySearch Library has the following records. Films can be view in the library or in aFamilySearch center.
- Wills, administrations and indexes, 1526-1858 for the Episcopal Consistory Court with the Peculiar of Craike in the Diocese of Durham.
 - Act books, administration bonds, inventories, etc., 1571-1853for the Palatine and Episcopal Consistory Court with the Peculiar of Craike in the Diocese of Durham.
 
Jurisdiction[edit | edit source]
Craike (also spelled Crayke) in the North Riding of Yorkshire was in the diocese of Durham until 1837 when it was transferred to the Archdeaconry of Cleveland in the diocese of York and freed from peculiar jurisdiction. Never inhibited.[1]
 
- ↑ Camp, Anthony J. Wills and Their Whereabouts. London: published by author, 1974; page 27.