117:, which was responsible for the probate of wills and trials of testamentary causes where the value of the goods involved was greater than five pounds, and the property was held in two (or more) dioceses within Great Britain. While wills might also be proven at York, Canterbury's jurisdiction covered Southern England (including London) and Wales. Its archive also contains large numbers of wills relating to individuals who died abroad, but who owned property in Britain. In the period between 1680 and 1820, the Court proved on average 3,700 wills a year, including large numbers of Irish and colonial wills, and those of soldiers and sailors who died while in service. The jurisdiction of the prerogative courts was transferred to the
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or administration where the diocesan courts could not entertain the case owing to the deceased having died possessed of goods above a set value in each of two or more dioceses. The
Prerogative Court of Canterbury (PCC) was a church court under the authority of the
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Index to the
Prerogative Wills of Ireland, 1536— 1810. Edited by Sir Arthur Vicars, F.S.A., Ulster King of Arms, Edward Ponsonby, Dublin, 1897
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were exercised. In
England in the 17th century, a clash developed between these courts, representing the crown's authority, and
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Index of Wills Proved in the
Prerogative Court of Canterbury 1383–1558, vol. 2 (Names: Kalf–Zowche)
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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The Fifty
Earliest English Wills in the Court of Probate 1387–1439
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The term also applied to one of the
English provincial courts of
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The same term was used to describe the
Prerogative Court of the
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68:. A parallel system of common law courts was grounded in
175:(died 1610), who was also the first judge of the Irish
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60:employed against his enemies, and was abolished (
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347:(11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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179:. This court was also abolished by the
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20:is a court through which the
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216:. Among them included the
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131:High Court of Justice
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22:discretionary powers
163:") in at least two
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339:Prerogative Courts
187:French equivalents
177:Court of Admiralty
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211:monarchical
207:last resort
70:Magna Carta
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300:References
234:Parlements
94:Canterbury
66:parliament
48:, and the
26:privileges
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280:. London.
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252:. London.
104:over the
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34:sovereign
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