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- Ireland, original will registers 1858-1920
Records in this collection
- Ardagh Wills 1690-1857
- Betham Prerogative Marriage Licences Abstracts, 1629-1810
- Cantwell's Memorials of the Dead
- Clonfert Marriage Bonds 1663-1857
- Clonfert Wills and Administrations 1663-1857
- Crossle Genealogical Abstracts
- Deputy Keeper of Ireland, Index to the Act or Grant Books, and to Original Wills, of the Diocese of Dublin 1272-1858 (26th, 30th and 31st Reports, 1894, 1899)
- Donegal cemetery records
- Farrar's Index to Irish Marriages 1771-1812
- Fermanagh cemetery records
- Fermanagh parish registers baptisms
- Fermanagh parish registers burials
- Fermanagh parish registers marriages
- Index of Irish Wills 1484-1858
- Ireland BillionGraves Cemetery Index
- Ireland Calendars Of Wills & Administrations 1858-1965
- Ireland civil birth registers index
- Ireland civil marriage registers index
- Ireland Deaths 1864-1870
- Ireland Down Anaghlone Presbyterian baptisms 1839-1913
- Ireland Down Anaghlone Presbyterian marriages 1845-1913
- Ireland Down Annaclone (COI) baptisms 1877-1900
- Ireland Down Annaclone (COI) burials 1877-1900
- Ireland Down Annaclone (COI) marriages 1845-1900
- Ireland Down Ballyroney Presbyterian baptisms 1819-1913
- Ireland Down Ballyroney Presbyterian marriages 1831-1906
- Ireland Down St Colmans Annaclone (RC) baptisms 1834-1913
- Ireland Down St Colmans Annaclone (RC) burials 1851-1913
- Ireland Down St Colmans Annaclone (RC) marriages 1851-1913
- Ireland memorial and burial register, 1618-2005
- Ireland Memorial Inscriptions
- Ireland Roman Catholic Parish Baptisms
- Ireland Roman Catholic Parish Burials
- Ireland Roman Catholic Parish Congregational Records
- Ireland Roman Catholic Parish Marriages
- Ireland Roscommon Kiltullagh cemeteries
- Ireland, Dublin Church of Ireland Baptisms
- Ireland, Dublin Church of Ireland burials
- Ireland, Dublin Church of Ireland marriages
- Ireland, Gravestone Records
- Ireland, Inland Revenue Wills & Administrations 1828-1879
- Ireland, Non-conformist marriages
- Ireland, original will registers 1858-1920
- Ireland, Society of Friends (Quaker) births
- Ireland, Society of Friends (Quaker) deaths
- Ireland, Society of Friends (Quaker) marriages
- Irish Births 1864-1958
- Irish Death Notices In American Newspapers
- Irish Deaths 1864-1958
- Irish Marriage Notices in American Newspapers
- Irish Marriages 1845-1958
- Kiltullagh Parish (RC) Baptisms
- Kiltullagh Parish (RC) Marriages
- Leighlin Administrations 1700-1857
- Limerick non-conformist baptisms
- Limerick non-conformist congregational records 1911-1945
- Lincolnshire marriages
- Marriage Licence Bonds; Diocese of Cloyne 1630-1800
- Memorials of the Dead: Galway & Mayo
- Quakers Annual Monitor 1849
- Raphoe Marriage Bonds 1710-55 and 1817-30
- Register of Derry Cathedral Baptisms 1642-1703
- Registers of the French Non-Conformist Churches Dublin 1701-1831
- Registers of the French non-conformist churches Dublin 1702-1731
- Sir Arthur Vicars, Index to the Prerogative Wills of Ireland, 1536 - 1810
- The Parish Register Society of Dublin, The Registers of St. Patrick, Dublin, 1677-1800, 1907
- The Register of Derry Cathedral Burials 1642-1703
- The Register of Derry Cathedral Marriages 1642-1703
- Thomas Philip Le Fanu, Registers of the French Church of Portarlington, Ireland, 1694-1816
- Thrift Genealogical Abstracts
- Tipperary Clans Archive
- Tyrone Cemetery Records
- W.P.W. Phillimore & Gertrude Thrift, Indexes to Irish Wills 1536-1858
- Wicklow cemetery records
- WW1 Irish Soldiers Wills, 1914-1920
Find your ancestors in Ireland, original will registers 1858-1920
With each result, you will find a transcript of the original will and an image provided by the National Archives of Ireland.
Transcript
Each transcript will provide you with a combination of the following details.
- Name
- Role – either heir/executor or deceased
- Name of deceased
- Entry type – will, grant of probate, or administration
- Will - A will is a legal document drawn up to determine the inheritance of a person's property after their death.
- Grant of Probate - Once a will was proved, the courts issued a grant of probate.
- Grant of Administration - If the deceased was intestate, which means that he or she did not leave a will, or the will could not be proved, the courts would grant an Administration on an estate.
- Year
- Address and parish
- Registry place
- Description
- Names of other heirs
- Archive, series, and piece
- Item and folio
Image
The images provide much more detail about your ancestor’s will. Most entries comprise your ancestor’s death date, death place and who inherited the deceased person’s property and processions. The will can provide the names of many other relations and explain their familial connection. From one record, you may be able to create a family tree.
Some wills are more than one page, use the next arrow on the right side of the image to continue reading the document.
Discover more about these records
The Ireland, Original Will Registers 1858-1920 come from the will books created by the district courts and held by the National Archives of Ireland. The collection includes wills from Northern Ireland until 1917. Prior to 1847, the Church of Ireland was the testamentary authority in Ireland. Wills were proved in the ecclesiastical courts of the Church. However, after The Probate Act was passed in 1847, the power to grant probate and to issue letters of administration was given to twelve registries in Ireland: The Principal Registry in Dublin and eleven District Registries – Armagh, Ballina, Belfast, Cavan, Cork, Kilkenny, Limerick, Londonderry, Mullingar, Tuam, and Waterford.
Your ancestor’s last will and testament is a significant source for your family history. It can illuminate the life of your ancestor by giving you an understanding of their social standing and wealth. Wills were not limited to the wealthy. Even those living in humble circumstances could have a will.
A will is a legal document written to explain how to dispose of a person’s property and possessions after the individual’s death. The full title is the last will and testament. A will related primarily with property and buildings, while the testament was concerned with possessions such as money, furniture, etc. Once a will was proved in a court it was given a grant of probate. In circumstances where a will was not created, the courts would provide a grant of administration to clarify how the property was to be inherited or disposed of.
Principal and District Registries jurisdictions
The jurisdictions of the courts stretched across multiple county lines and different parishes within the same county could be within the jurisdiction of different courts. Below we have listed each probate district and the county it covered.
- Armagh – Armagh, Fermanagh, Monaghan, and Tyrone
- Ballina – Sligo and Mayo
- Belfast – Antrim and Down
- Cavan – Cavan, Leitrim, and Longford
- Cork – Cork and Kerry
- Dublin (Principal) – Dublin, Kildare, Meath, and Wicklow (The Principal Registry also had authority over large estates outside of the listed counties)
- Kilkenny – Carlow, Laois (Queen’s), and Kilkenny
- Limerick – Clare, Kerry, Limerick, and Tipperary
- Londonderry – Donegal, Londonderry (Derry), and Tyrone
- Mullingar – Leinster and Offaly (King’s)
- Tuam – Roscommon and Galway
- Waterford – Tipperary, Waterford, and Wexford