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Who Do You Think You Are?
Who Do You Think You Are?

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Who Do You Think You Are?, 19 mai 2026

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Who Do You Think You Are? magazine est disponible à la lecture en ligne avec PressReader. Téléchargez le numéro actuel pour le lire plus tard ou consultez les anciens numéros de Who Do You Think You Are? dans l'archive.

Dans cette édition

ArticleSarah’s T p Tip

I love wills, so when Ances­try launched its col­lec­tion of Prerog­at­ive Court of York wills (page 10), I couldn’t res­ist dip­ping in to see what I could find. Wills, espe­cially early ones, can be hard to read, so I decided to fol­low James...

Sarah’s T p Tip

ArticleJames Ransom

James is an Hon­or­ary Senior Research Fel­low at UCL who spe­cial­ises in the impact of AI on soci­ety. On page 14 he turns his expert­ise to how AI can help you with your fam­ily his­tory.

James Ransom

ArticleAnthony Adolph

A hugely exper­i­enced gene­a­lo­gist and the author of Tra­cing your Aris­to­cractic Ancest­ors, Anthony is an expert on his­toric ped­i­grees. On page 38 he explores Burke’s Peer­age.

Anthony Adolph

ArticleNic­ola Lisle

Nic­ola has been writ­ing about dolls’ houses for over 20 years and on page 56 she shares her pas­sion. Her book, Life in Mini­ature: A His­tory of Dolls’ Houses has just been reis­sued.

Nic­ola Lisle

ArticleAI For Gene­a­lo­gists

AI expert Dr James Ransom shares his advice for using the latest AI tools to research your tree and smash brick walls while avoid­ing com­mon mis­takes Old hand­writ­ing can bring your gene­a­logy research to a grind­ing halt. AI excels at pat­tern...

AI For Gene­a­lo­gists

ArticleFocus On

You can use online records of set­tle­ment and removal to research your fore­bears who fell on hard times, says Julie Kath­leen John­son he par­ish officers of St Leonard, Shored­itch, East Lon­don, faced a com­mon prob­lem in 1822: a preg­nant woman...

Focus On