Relics
Legal and Land Terms
- Abstract – The important or main parts of a document.
- Administrator – A person appointed to manage the assets of a deceased person.
- Administratix – A female appointed to manage the assets of a deceased person.
- Affidavit – A written statement sworn to before a person of authority.
- Affinity – A non-blood or marital type relationship.
- Ancestor – A person that you are descended from such as a grandfather.
- Anno Domini – Latin for “ In the year of our Lord “.
- Apprentice – Often a minor, bound by law or indentures to learn a trade.
- Appurtenance – Real property belonging to another such as a building, or garden.
- Appurtenant – An access agreement such as rights to enter a cemetery.
- Assigns – To give or transfer property on a voluntary basis.
- Attest – To witness or affirm by oath or signature.
- Banns – A public announcement often in a church of intent to marry.
- Beneficiary – The recipient of a trust or property.
- Bequeath – A gift of personal property by a last will.
- Bequest – The gift of personal property by will.
- Bond – An agreement, requiring a performance or payment by a given date.
- Bounty Land Warrant – A right to a specific number of acres for military service.
- Census – An official counting or enumeration of a population.
- Certified Copy – A copy of an original document certified as original.
- Chain – A unit of measure equaling 100 links or 66 feet to measure a property.
- Chattel – The personal property belonging to an individual.
- Child of Tender Years – A minor child under age 14.
- Christen – The Baptism or naming of an infant as dedicated to Christ.
- Circa – An approximation of a date.
- Codicil – A change or modification to a will after the initial writing.
- Collateral Ancestor – From the same family line but not of the direct line of decent.
- Common Ancestor - The sharing of an ancestor by two or more individuals.
- Consanguinity – Relationship as a Blood Relative.
- Consort - The wife of a living husband.
- Conveyance – The transfer normally by deed.
- Croft – A small piece or parcel of land.
- Curtsey – The lifetime estate of a widower living on the lands of a deceased spouse.
- Deceased – A person that has died.
- Decedent – A person no longer living a deceased person.
- Deed – A document transferring interest in a property from one person to another.
- Deed Poll – A deed signed by an individual, sometimes for the interest of others.
- Deposition – The testimony of an individual taken under oath.
- Devise – A gift of property by will.
- Devisee or Devisor – The giver of property. The recipient of property.
- Direct Deed – A grantor deed.
- Dissenter – A person not belonging to an established church.
- Dower – One-third share acquired by marriage of a husbands estate for natural life.
- Enumeration – The listing or counting as in a Census.
- Epitaph – An inscription on a tomb or headstone for the memory of the deceased.
- Escheat – The reverting of property, when there are no heirs, to the state.
- Estate – Property and debts belonging to an individual.
- Executor – A male appointed to carry out the will or bequest of a deceased person.
- Executrix - A female appointed to carry out the will or bequest of a deceased person.
- Family Burying Ground – A family cemetery.
- Fee Simple – Ownership of property with no restrictions.
- Fee Tail – Land or inheritance limited by lineal decent of the heirs.
- Free Hold – A fee simple estate that could be Fee Tail or for life.
- Friend – Reference to a member of any number of religious societies.
- Furlong – 1000 links of chain or 660 feet.
- Genealogy – A history of the family lines of decent.
- Gazetteer – A Dictionary of Geography.
- Given Name – The first or middle name of the person not the Surname.
- Glebe or Parish Land – Land belonging to a church.
- Heir – A person or persons entitled by law or last will to inherit an estate.
- Holographic Will – A hand written will by the testator.
- Indenture – A deed involving two or more persons with obligations to each other.
- Indentured Servant – A person that was bound for a specific time of service.
- Infant – Any person not of majority or full legal age.
- Intestate – A person dying without the benefit of leaving a will.
- Inventory – An accounting by an executor of the estate of a deceased person.
- Issue – Offspring, legitimate children of a descendant or ancestor.
- Legacy – A gift of money or property given by last will and testament.
- Lineage – Direct descent or ancestry from an individual.
- Link – A measurement of 7.92 inches of a chain. Used as a measure of land.
- Letters of Administration – A court administration of an intestate person.
- Loyalist – An American Colonist who supported the British. (A Tory)
- Marriage Bond – A license for marriage with a financial obligation of the groom.
- Maternal – Related thru the line of one’s mother.
- Militia – Private citizens available for military service in an emergency.
- Mortality Schedules – Schedule of persons that died in the year prior to the Census.
- Namesake – A person named after another person.
- Nuncupative Will – A will based on the oral declared will of the deceased.
- Orphan – A child that has lost one or more parents.
- Orphan’s Court – Special courts to oversee the needs of wards of the state.
- Patent – A land grant from the government to an individual.
- Paternal – A relation thru the line of ones father.
- Pension – Money paid to an individual as a reward for military service.
- Pole – A unit of measure of 16.5 feet for measuring land.
- Posterity – Descendants or those who come after.
- Power of Attorney – A person appointed to act in the interest of others. Probate – The proving or administration of a last will and testament.
- Progenitor – A direct line ancestor.
- Proved Will – A will certified as legitimate by a court.
- Provost – A person appointed to supervise others.
- Quitclaim Deed – A deed releasing all claims and interests to real property.
- Right of First Born – A custom where the father’s estate went to the first born male.
- Rector – A clergyman.
- Relict – The widow or surviving spouse this could be male or female.
- Rod – A unit of measure for surveying land equaling 5 ½ Yards.
- Rood – A unit of measure around 6-8 yards for the surveying of land.
- Surety – A bond posted to ensure a specific performance of a duty or obligation.
- Surname – Family name or last name.
- Tenant – Refers to a person holding land by any right or title.
- Testate – A person that dies leaving a valid will.
- Testator – A person that leaves a valid will.
- Tithable – Usually refers to a male attaining the age of sixteen that pays taxes.
- Tithe – Money collected for the support of clergy or the church.
- Tory – A Loyalist that supported the British.
- TO WIT – Naming a specific item.
- Tract – A portion of land.
- Tract Book – Entries of property by range or township.
- Tradition – Passing down beliefs, legends, customs etc. usually to each generation.
- Transcribe – To make a written copy.
- Trust Deed – A type of mortgage.
- Vital Records – A record of births, deaths, marriages and divorce.
- Vital Statistics – The data pertaining to births, deaths, marriages and divorce.
- Ward – City divisions for voting purposes.
- Warranty Deed – A deed where the grantor guarantee’s the title.
- Will – A written expression of a persons last intentions or wishes.
- Witness – A person called to testify about an event or transaction.
(Last modified: Feb 3rd 2014, 12:39)
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