Summary information

Study title

London weekly bills of mortality, 1644-1849

Creator

Smith, R, University of Cambridge
Davenport, R, University of Cambridge
Newton, G, University of Cambridge

Study number / PID

854104 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-854104 (DOI)

Data access

Open

Series

Not available

Abstract

This dataset comprises enumerations relating to London burials (and baptisms) transcribed from 9,950 extant Weekly Bills of Mortality from 1644 to 1849. Each Bill comprises four main sections containing different types of information for that week: 1) counts - the number of persons buried, dying of plague or christened weekly in each parish from 1644 to 1849. 2) ages - the number of dead persons in all parishes together in each of circa twelve age groups weekly from 1729 to 1849. 3) cods - the number of dead persons in all parishes together ascribed to particular causes of death, ie each 'disease or casualty', weekly from 1644 to 1845. 4) bread - the weight of bread of several types sold at a standard price in London, weekly from 1644 to 1815.

These weekly data on London burials, baptisms, causes of death and bread prices were compiled as part of a research programme exploring long-run changes in England's mortality regime. Today, life expectancy is higher in urban rather than rural areas, but early modern towns and cities were demographic sinks with extraordinarily high mortality, especially among the young and migrants who were essential for city growth. The project investigated how and when cities transformed from urban graveyards into promoters of health between 1600 and 1945. The process of endemicisation and exogenous disease variation is key to the evolution of both urban and non-urban mortality regimes, especially with respect to: infectious diseases among the young, maternal health and adult migrants and their health/immunological status.

Methodology

Data collection period

01/12/2014 - 01/12/2019

Country

United Kingdom

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual
Object

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeric
Text

Data collection mode

Every post-1644 extant Weekly Bill of Mortality for London that could be accessed was transcribed by Goldsmith from originals photographed at the Bodleian Library in Oxford, London Metropolitan Archive, British Library, Wellcome Library, or from microfiche held at Cambridge University Library, depending on availability (scattered earlier Weekly Bills exist but do not form a complete series and were not transcribed).

Funding information

Grant number

360G-Wellcome-103322_Z_13_Z

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2020

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access. Commercial Use of data is not permitted.

Related publications

Not available