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Historical Life Table Construction/Evidence
Method evidence record

Historical Life Table Construction

Historical life table construction is the craft of converting the patchy mortality evidence of the past—burial registers, family genealogies, monastic obituaries, even skeletal age-at-death distributions—into the formal apparatus of the life table: age-specific death rates, the probability of dying within each age interval, the number of survivors to each age, and expectation of life. The life table descends from John Graunt's 1662 reading of London's Bills of Mortality and Halley's Breslau table, but applying it to historical populations demands special care, since exposures are rarely known and deaths are often recorded without reliable ages. Historians therefore lean heavily on families of model life tables to smooth noisy data and fill missing age bands. Whether built as period tables capturing a single era's mortality or cohort tables following one birth-year group through life, these reconstructions are the indispensable summary of how, and how long, people lived in the past.

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Source record

Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.

Construction of Period and Cohort Life Tables from Historical Data
Taxonomic method record · process-pipeline / historical-demography
  • Wrigley, E. A., & Schofield, R. S. (1981). The Population History of England 1541-1871: A Reconstruction. Edward Arnold / Harvard University Press. · ISBN 9780674690073
  • Bengtsson, T., Campbell, C., & Lee, J. Z. (2004). Life under Pressure: Mortality and Living Standards in Europe and Asia, 1700-1900. MIT Press. · ISBN 9780262025515
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Related methods

Generated from the method graph and shown as machine-suggested relations — no evidence claim is inferred.

Same method familyAggregative Parish Register Analysismachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Same method familyFamily Reconstitutionmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Often confused withHistorical Event-History Demographymachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Same method familyInverse Projectionmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.

Evidence status

Sources recorded, not reviewed

Bibliographic sources are present. Claim-level evidence review has not been performed.

Sources

2 recorded citations, copied from the method source record.

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