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Bills of Mortality

 
Encyclopedia of Public Health: Bills of Mortality

In English parishes, beginning in 1538, every burial required completion of a document that was the precursor of the modern death certificate. This made the burial legal and allowed the deceased's estate to be legally disposed of. The number of deaths were compiled on a weekly and an annual basis. These compilations were known as bills of morality. In many parishes they were rough accounts of the causes of death, and over the years this information became more precise, though it was not necessarily consistent from one parish to another. The procedure was made more formal and systematic throughout England in 1603, and continued until it was superceded by the Births and Deaths Registration Act of 1836. From 1728 onward, the age of death was also recorded in the bills.

In the years following the foundation of the Royal Society in 1660, several scholars found these documents to be a fruitful source of information about the lives and deaths of the English people. The first of these was John Graunt, a London haberdasher and amateur scientist who was interested in the impact of epidemic outbreaks of plague, the impact of death and its cases on men and women, and the relative merits of living either in a city such as London or in the country. Graunt published his analyses in Natural and Political Observations … on the Bills of Mortality (1662), a work that became the founding classic of the modern sciences of vital statistics and epidemiology. Graunt's contemporary Sir William Petty adopted a similar approach in his analyses, published in Political Arithmetic (1682) and other works that made Petty a founding father of economics.

(SEE ALSO: Certification of Causes of Deaths; Graunt, John; Mortality Rates)

— JOHN M. LAST



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Wikipedia: Bills of Mortality
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The London Bills of Mortality were the main source of mortality statistics, designed to monitor deaths from the plague from the 1600s-1830s. They were used mainly as a way of warning about plague epidemics.

They began to be made in London after an outbreak of plague in 1592 (although there are a few earlier instances). From 1603, after another outbreak, they were made regularly on a weekly basis, with the view to giving authorities and inhabitants full information as to the increases or decreases in the number of deaths. The information was collected by Parish Clerks and published every week.

By 1570 the bills included baptisms; in 1629 the cause of death was given, and in the early 18th century the age at death. In 1836 they were superseded by the Registrar General's returns under the Births and Deaths Registrations Act.

The following places were within the boundaries of the Bills of Mortality:[1]

County Parts thereof
City of London Entire, comprising:
City within the Walls;
City without the Walls;
Inns of Court and Chancery
Middlesex The City and Liberty of Westminster;

The Tower and its Liberty (including the Old Artillery Ground);
St Andrew Holborn above Bars with St George the Martyr1; St Matthew, Bethnal Green2; St Botolph without Aldgate; The Charterhouse; Christchurch, Spitalfields3; St Clement Danes (part)4,; St James and St John, Clerkenwell5; Liberty of the Duchy of Lancaster (part); Ely Place; St Giles in the Fields and St George, Bloomsbury6; St George in the East3; Liberty of Glasshouse Yard; St John, Hackney; St Mary, Islington; St Katherine near the Tower; St Ann, Limehouse7; St Luke, Middlesex8; Liberty of the Rolls; Liberty of Saffron Hill and Hatton Garden; St John the Baptist in the Savoy; St Sepulchre (part)9; St Paul, Shadwell10; St Leonard, Shoreditch; St Dunstan, Stepney (the hamlets of Ratcliffe, Mile End Old Town and Mile End New Town); St John, Wapping3; St Mary, Whitechapel11

Surrey The Borough of Southwark (the parishes of St George the Martyr; St John Horsleydown; St Olave; St Saviour and St Thomas and Christchurch)12

St Mary, Rotherhithe; St Mary, Bermondsey; St Mary, Newington Butts; St Mary, Lambeth

1Formed 1767 by separating the Middlesex portion of the parish St Andrew Holborn from the remainder in the City of London and merging with the parish of St George the Martyr.[2]
2Formed from part of Stepney in 1743.[2]
3Formed from part of Stepney in 1729.[2]
4The remainder of the parish lay in the Liberty of Westminster.[2]
5The parish of St John was formed from part of St James in 1723.[2]
6The two parishes of St Giles and St George were united in 1774.[2]
7Formed from of Stepney in 1725.[2]
8Parish created 1733 from the part of St Giles Cripplegate outside the City of London.[2]
9The remainder of the parish lay in the City of London.
10Formed from part of Stepney in 1670.[2]
11Formed from part of Stepney in the early seventeenth century.[2]
12Parish of Christchurch, Southwark formed 1670: originally the Liberty of Paris Garden.[2]


Bills of Mortality came to the attention of the British public in more recent years following their inclusion in a stand-up routine by David Baddiel, in which he listed the unusual caused of death lists. Examples included people who died of "Lethargy", "Suddenly" and "Piles".[citation needed]

References

  • This article incorporates text from The Modern World Encyclopædia: Illustrated (1935); out of UK copyright as of 2005.

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Encyclopedia of Public Health. Encyclopedia of Public Health. Copyright © 2002 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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