Relics
Genealogy Terms
- AB INITIO - (Latin) A reference to the beginning of like a deed, estate or marriage
- AB INTESTATE - (Latin) Receiving an inheritance from someone who died without a will
- ABUTTAL - a common boundary (the meeting of two properties)
- ACCOMODATION – An allotment of land to a family
- AD HOC - (Latin) For a special purpose or reason
- ADMEASURE – The division of ones inherited shares of a dower, estate, property, money or other
- ADMEASUREMENT of DOWER – The adjusting of a dower (Giving the full share back to the child heir rather than what was set aside for a guardian)
- ADMINISTRATION – The settling of an estate (This can be with or without a will)
- ADMINISTRATOR – Person appointed to oversee the settlement of the estate by will or appointment by a judge.
- AD VERBATIM – (Latin) As written or in full
- ADVERSE POSSESION – The actual possession of a property by a person not having title
- AFFIDAVIT - A sworn statement while under oath
- AGE of CONSENT - Age at which you can marry without parental consent, it varied by state
- AGE of MAJORITY – More a sign of maturity rather than age, when one could handle their own affairs
- ANCESTORS – Who you are descended from in a direct line
- ANNO DOMINI - (Latin) The year of our Lord, the start of many legal documents showing an honor or respect for God
- APPRAISAL – The valuation of the goods owned by a deceased person normally ordered by a court regardless of the person leaving a will for the final sale of all property
- ATTEST – The certification or affirmation of something
- BAILIWICK – The authority or district of a bailiff (The area of his jurisdiction
- BASTARD – Illegitimate child one born out of wedlock
- BECK – (Old English) – Small brook or creek
- BEQUEST – A gift or inheritance given in a will
- BINDING OUT – In Colonial America churchwardens, government officials and guardians were able to bind out or contract into servitude an individual. Many times it was a young person who worked in return for learning a trade.
- BIRTHRIGHT – The practice of giving the first born male child a double share of the inheritance, a custom brought over from Europe and continued in America until the Civil War
- BONA – (Latin) Meaning in good faith
- BOND – An agreement or promise to which one is bound
- BONDMAID – A female slave
- BONDMAN – A male slave
- BOND SERVANT – Simply an indentured servant
- BONDSMAN – A person liable for payment to the court if a defendant does not appear for a hearing
- BOUND OUT – (See BINDING OUT)
- BURGESS – (Colonial America) The first governing body formed a Jamestown
- CANNON LAW – Laws of the church
- Carte de Visite - A type of photograph, normally an albumen print popular between 1860 -1880
- CERTIFIED COPY – A true copy of an original certified or verified to be an exact duplicate
- CHATTELS – A term for personal property slaves and livestock were considered chattels
- CHILD of TENDER YEARS – usually a child less than 14 years of age
- CHRISTIAN NAME – A given name, other than ones last name
- CHRISTENING – The Baptism of an infant or small child
- CHRISTYDE – The coming of the new year
- CHURCH WARDEN – An unpaid member of the Vestry or assistant to a pastor much like a church elder of today
- CIRCA – (Latin) An approximate date or year
- CIVIL WAR – War of the rebellion 1861-1865
- COAL OIL – Kerosene or lamp oil, previously distilled from mineral wax, often used for medicinal purposes such as swabbing inflamed tonsils
- COAT of ARMS – A shield containing symbols and emblems, contrary to popular belief it was bestowed or granted to an individual not a family, it was passed to direct descendants and each generation would add or modify it slightly thereby identifying that generation of a family
- CODICIL – An addition to a will, usually included at the end of the will when the maker of the will has changed his mind about his last wishes, many times a child or relative would have what was given in the main body of the will taken away
- COLLATERAL LINES – Descent from the same common ancestor, but a different line like an aunt, uncle or cousin
- COMMON LAW MARRIAGE – Two people presenting themselves as man and wife without a civil or religious ceremony
- CONFEDERACY – Southern States that seceded from the Union 1861-1865
- CONSORT – A term describing a spouse commonly referring to a female, it could be a male if the female had a higher title. Example: Prince Albert Consort of Queen Victoria
- CONVEY – To give or transfer title of property to another
- DAGUERREOTYPE – A photographic process invented by L.M. Daguerre
- DE ANNO IN ANNUM (Latin) – From Year to Year
- DECEASED – Someone who has died
- DEED POLE – A deed made only by one person
- DE FACTO (Latin) – Meaning in fact
- DEGREE OF CONSANGUINITY – The degree of blood relationship used to determine a right of inheritance in a court
- DE JURE (Latin) – By right …the legal accomplishment of something
- DESCENDANT- Anyone to whom you are an ancestor…children, grandchildren etc.
- DEVISE – A gift of real property via a will
- DEVISEE – A person receiving property
- DEVISOR – A person giving property
- DIRECT LINE – A line of decent through individuals who are related
- DIRK – A straight knife with a handle
- DIVINATION – The act of foretelling the future by divine powers
- DOUBLE TREE - Equalizing bar for horses
- DOWER – Provision made by right of law or by will for the wife to receive one third of an estate
- DOWER RIGHT – The right of a wife to one third of all assets…A deed often required the wife to give up or relinquish freely any claim or title she might have
- DOWRY – Any type of property real, or personal brought by a bride to her husband by their marriage
- ESTATE – The whole of ones property all assets
- EXECUTOR – A person appointed by the maker of a will to carry out his wishes when he dies
- EXECUTRIX – A female executor of a will
- EX FACTO (Latin) given by deed
- EXTANT – A state of existence not missing or destroyed
- FAILURE OF ISSUE – In a will or deed in the event there are no children born or that survive the deceased the property or assets are conveyed to another party
- FAN – Drive the chaff from a crop by a current of air
- FEE SIMPLE – A non conditional inheritance, a complete inheritance with no stipulations
- FLAIL OR FLAILED – Hand thresh with a wooden handle with a shorter stick attached
- FREE MAN OF COLOR – A black man who was born free or became free later in life
- FULL AGE – The age of majority when one reached legal age, it varied by state and by circumstance
- GLEBE LANDS – (COLONIAL AMERICA) Lands set aside by the English Crown strictly for the use and benefit of a church
- GOODS and CHATTELS – Personal property before the Civil War both slaves and livestock were personal property
- GOODY – Housewife or old woman
- GRANGE – A small farm community or even a farmhouse
- GRASS WIDOW – Unmarried woman usually with children who lived with one or more men
- GUARDIAN – A person appointed by the court to care for someone who was not capable of caring for themselves
- HEADRIGHT – (COLONIAL AMERICA) The right to a certain number of acres (usually 50) guaranteed in advance to the male head of a family for settling a new territory
- HEAD TAX – A Poll tax or tax on the person
- HEIR – A person who inherits by the conditions of a will or by the right of law
- HIGH SHERRIFF – The highest ranking sheriff in an area such as a county sheriff
- HIDE – (OLD ENGLISH) A measure of land from 60 to 120 acres
- HOLOGRAPHIC WILL – One written by hand in the persons own writing and bearing the signature of the maker
- HUNDRED – (COLONIAL AMERICA/ OLD ENGLISH) A term referring to and administrative or military district Smythe’s Hundred was an area rather than a hundred people
- INDENTURE – A contract where a person is bound over for service (often young men were indentured to learn a trade)
- INDENTURED SERVANT – The person bound over for service, it also was used to mean a person who sold their self into labor for passage to another country
- INDIDEM (Latin) – meaning to come from the same place or thing
- INATION – Death by starvation
- INTESTATE – Dying without leaving a will
- INTERMARRIED – To be related or connected to another by marriage
- ILLEGITIMATE – A child born out of wedlock
- INVENTORY – A list of goods belonging to the estate of a deceased person
- ISSUE – Descendants of a common ancestor (offspring or children)
- ITEM – A term meaning the start of a new paragraph or wish of the maker (many times numbered Item 1)
- JOIN TOGETHER – Common term for a marriage
- JUDGEMENT – The final decision or ruling of a judge or court
- KEELER – A small wooden vessel to hold milk
- KINDRED – A group that are blood relatives
- KITH and KIN (OLD ENGLISH) Meaning friends and neighbors
- LATE or OF LATE – Reference to a person who had recently died
- LEGACY – Typically a gift of money left by a deceased to someone
- LETTERS of TESTAMENT – A document issued by a court in a probate proceeding giving authority of the executor to perform his duties outlined in the will
- LEVY – A poll or capitalization tax
- LIEN – A claim for the property or goods belonging to another to secure the payment of a debt or obligation
- LIFE ESTATE – Besides a dower many times a widow was given a life estate or commonly referenced as lending to the wife certain property for her natural life many times with the clause or stipulation that she would not remarry
- LINE of CONSANGUINITY – Direct line descended from one another, grandfather, father, son
- LOOSE PAPERS – Original papers supporting a court record
- LOYALIST – (COLONIAL AMERICA) A Tory one loyal to England
- MAJORITY – Age at which one is no longer a minor
- MARRIAGE BOND – A document to secure the performance of an intended marriage
- MARK – (ENGLISH CURRENCY) Three marks equaled two pounds
- MATERNAL LINE – Line traced thru the mothers ancestry
- MILITIA – Citizen soldiers an army formed by common people
- MINISTERS RETURN - The written record of marriages performed by a minister normally given to the court clerk to make a permanent record
- MORTALITY SCHEDULES – A list of deaths that occurred in the year prior to the Census kept from 1850-1880. It also contained foot notes describing the various diseases or epidemics for a county in that year
- MULATTO – The offspring of a white person and a black although it could mean any mix of races even Indians
- MUSTER OUT – A legitimate discharge from military service
- NECROLOGY – List of obituaries or records of deaths
- NEE – Normally refers to a woman’s maiden name, born as
- NUNCUPATIVE WILL – An oral will given in the hours before their death, with at least two witnesses and written on paper soon after
- NOW WIFE – A will related term meaning there was a former wife
- OLD DOMINION – A term for Virginia
- ORAL WILL – See Nuncupative Will
- ORPHAN – Child who has lost at least one parent
- “OF COLOR” – Reference to a black person
- OBITUARY – Newspaper or other notice of death often with some biography of the deceased
- PASSENGER LIST – A ships list showing passengers it may contain occupation, age, sex and country of origin
- PARISH – Site of a church often including religious lands
- PER ANNUM (LATIN) – Yearly
- POLECAT – A skunk
- POLL – Early term denoting a taxable person
- POSTHUMOUS – After death, often referred to a child born after the death of the father
- PRIMARY RECORD – One created at the time the event occurred
- PROBATE - Court approval of a will and settlement of an estate
- PROVED – Establishment of the validity of a will, deed etc. by a court proceeding
- QUARDROON – Refers to a child of mixed parents or having a grandparent of a different race
- QUIT RENT ROLLS – (COLONIAL AMERICA) A list of persons who paid an annual fee to the Crown for the right to farm or live on a property
- REEVE – (COLONIAL AMERICA) A churchwarden or sheriff
- RELICT – Widow or surviving spouse
- RESIDUARY or RESIDUE – Normally in reference to a will that part left over after the division set forth by the will
- REVENUE STAMP – A mark or stamp on an item indicating a tax had been collected
- RUN – A small creek, branch or stream also called a kill run
- SECONDARY RECORD – A record created some time after an event has occurred
- SOCIETY OF FRIENDS – Term for Quakers
- SPOUSE – A husband or wife
- SPONSOR – One other than a parent who takes responsibility for a Childs religious education, often at Baptism or church membership, may also be a Godparent
- SURNAME – Family name or last name
- TENANT FARMER – A farmer who rents land to farm for money or a share of the crops
- TERCE – An agreement (lending or renting) by law, giving a widow a dower of one third of a mans property if the marriage was one year and a day
- TESTABLE – Any item which can be transferred by way of a will
- TESTAMENT- (Also last will and testament) The transfer of ones property in a will
- TESTATE – Having died with a legitimate will
- TESTE – The end of a legal document usually showing the date and signed by a judge or other person of authority
- TITHE – A Church offering usually 10 per cent of ones income
- TITHABLE – A person obligated by law to pay tax, sometimes refers to a person reaching an age to pay taxes
- TOWNSHIP – A government survey of a tract of land six by six miles square
- TRADITION or FAMILY TRADITION – Stories, legends or customs about the family (usually oral) passed from generation to generation
- TRANSCRIBE – To make a written copy, in more traditional terms to covert an old document to a newer more understandable version using current words or terms
- UNDERGROUND RAILROAD – A route by which slaves could get safe passage to a Northern State
- UNPROBATED WILL – One which was not sent to a court for probate
- UNREGISTERED WILL – One not recorded for one of several reasons such as non payment of a recording fee
- UNSOLEM WILL – One where an executor was not named
- VERBATIM (LATIN) – Exactly as written
- VESTRY – The ruling body of a church
- VICAR (OLD ENGLISH) – A church minister who served under another.
- VITAL RECORDS – Records kept of births, marriages and deaths
- WAINWRIGHT – A person whose craft was building wagons
- WAGONMASTER (CIVIL WAR) – One who tended the horses
- WAIVER – The voluntary giving up of a persons rights
- WHEELWRIGHT – A person whose craft was the manufacture or repair of a wheel
- WILL – A legal document explaining how a person wants their property divided upon their death
- WRIT of SUMMONS – A notice to appear in court
- YEARS PROVISIONS – A set aside from a husbands estate of goods or money, exempt from creditors
- YEOMAN – A dependable or diligent worker
- YOBBO (OLD ENGLISH) – Cruel or brutal fellow, a ruffian or hooligan
- ZAMBO – A person having one native American parent and one African American parent
(Last modified: Jan 31st 2014, 08:26)
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