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Record revealed

An Elizabethan widow's will

This ordinary will from 1587 gives us a glimpse of an Elizabethan woman’s concerns on her deathbed. It includes a word-for-word account of a conversation between mother and son.

Why this record matters

Date
27 December 1587
Catalogue reference
PROB 10/121

The National Archives holds a collection of over a million wills proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury between 1384 and 1858. Each one tells a story of one individual and their network of family and friends.

There are many women’s wills, mainly those of spinsters and widows. Married women could not usually bequeath property until the Married Women’s Property Acts of 1870 and 1882.

This will, spoken on her deathbed on 27 December 1587 by Agnes Haselwood of Cheveley in Cambridgeshire, is unusual in that Agnes had only been a widow for one or two days. Her husband Martin’s will was written on Christmas Day.

Martin’s will is fairly typical of wills from this period. It states he was ‘sound of mind’ but does not mention his bodily health, and lists bequests to a range of people including his step-children from his wife’s first marriage. His will does not project the same sense of imminent death as that of Agnes.

Agnes’s will is in a very different style. It is a nuncupative will, meaning that she spoke her wishes in front of witnesses, as there was no time to have them formally recorded in writing before she died. Of particular interest is the number of women who were present in her final hours, with five of them signing the will as witnesses. The one male witness – Nicholas Alyn (or Allen), a clergyman and Agnes’s son by her first marriage – probably acted as scribe.

It is apparent that Agnes was overwhelmingly concerned about her son John Haselwood and his financial security on his farm. This meant she was resistant to suggestions that any of her belongings should be given to anyone else. However, as her illness progressed, she changed her mind and sent for her son to ask him for his permission to leave some bedding to her daughter, Alice instead. The exchange between mother and son is recorded verbatim (in the transcript above) – a rare glimpse of such an interaction in 16th-century England.

Agnes and her husband, Martin, were both buried in Cheveley on 29 December 1587. It is possible they both fell victim to the bubonic plague which was circulating in England between 1585 and 1587. Both wills were brought into the Prerogative Court of Canterbury on 28 February 1588 by John Haselwood.

John did not survive to enjoy his farm for long – he was buried in Cheveley on 24 October 1589 and his will was proved a week later.

Blogs and podcasts

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    The poignant last will and testament of Nicholas Hilliard

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    Author
    Elizabeth Goldring
    Published
    30 April 2019

    Nicholas Hilliard – goldsmith, portrait painter, royal servant – was buried in St Martin-in-the-Fields, at the western end of London’s Strand, on 7 January 1619. What does his will reveal?

  • Podcast

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    Published
    1 April 2020

    Who would have left a will? What information can you find in them? Are they all at The National Archives? Find out the answers in this short podcast.

  • Research guide

    Wills 1384-1858

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    Author
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    Published
    23 March 2015

    Discover how to search wills proved by the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, covering the south of England and Wales.