Search the British India Office collection to unearth the wills and probate records of European soldiers and civilians who died in India and Burma. Discover information about your ancestor’s estate in India and what happened to it after death.
Search the British India Office collection to unearth the wills and probate records of European soldiers and civilians who died in India and Burma. Discover information about your ancestor’s estate in India and what happened to it after death.
The records in the British India Office Collection include an image and a transcript of the original document. The amount of information you can discover can vary, but the British India Office wills and probate records usually include a combination of the following information about your ancestors:
Details of will
Name and address of deceased
Names of beneficiaries
Address of relatives (sometimes)
Details of bequests
Names of executors (sometimes)
Biographical information
Name of deceased and date of death
Age at death
Rank of military personnel
List of possessions at death
Value of estate at death
Over 200,000 wills and probate records from 1749-1947.
The records include wills and administrations, inventories, and accounts of deceased estates.
Inventories and accounts of deceased estates give the name of the deceased and a full inventory of their possessions at death.
Grants of representation are documents granted under seal by the High Court of the Presidency. They give authority to a named person (or persons) to deal with a deceased person’s estate.
The almost 2.5 million British In India records are sourced from the original India Office Records and Private Papers held by the British Library. These records comprise the archives of the East India Company (1600-1858), the Board of Control or Board of Commissioners for the Affairs of India (1784 – 1858), the India Office (1858-1947), the Burma Office (1937-1947), and a number of related British agencies.