Alice Thornton's Books
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thorntonsbooks.bsky.social
Alice Thornton's Books
@thorntonsbooks.bsky.social
We were an AHRC-funded project (Sept. 2021-Feb. 2025), based at the University of Edinburgh. Our main output was a digital edition of the books of Yorkshire gentlewoman, Alice Wandesford Thornton (1626-1707). See http://thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk
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The Thornton's Books team are very pleased that our digital edition has been recognised by the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women and Gender in their annual publication awards. We received a ‘Co-Honourable Mention’ in the Digital Scholarship category.
thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/posts/news/2...
Alice Thornton's Books Wins Award
News article - 26 October 2025
thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk
10 Nov. 1668 #OTD Alice Thornton wrote to her cousin Lady Mary Yorke declining her offer to take teenager Nally, Thornton's daughter and Yorke's god-daughter, to be confirmed by the bishop, knowing it was part of a plot to prevent Nally's marriage to Thomas Comber. #EarlyModern 🗃️
November 10, 2025 at 9:22 PM
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Great look into the comprehensiveness of EEBO and EEBO-TCP and what that means for using those tools. Highly recommend for all computational bibliographers and early modernists doing large-scale work with EEBO
November 9, 2025 at 5:04 PM
8 Nov. 1668 #OTD Alice Thornton received a letter from her former servant. Daphne Lightfoot had uncovered a plot to prevent the marriage of Thornton's daughter Nally to Thomas Comber. Thornton writes, 'there was a conspiracy between Dr Samways, Mrs Danby and my Lady Yorke' (Bk3). 1/2 #EarlyModern 🗃️
November 8, 2025 at 1:41 PM
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On this day in 1605 a Catholic soldier named Guy Fawkes was arrested in an undercroft below the House of Lords.

Many people know about the infamous gunpowder plot, but here's a blog post about the broader Catholic community at the time.

manyheadedmonster.com/2014/11/03/g...

#EarlyModern 🗃️
November 5, 2025 at 7:39 AM
5 Nov. 1668 #OTD Thomas Comber went to York to apply for a licence to marry Alice Thornton's eldest daughter, Nally. They would be married 12 days later. The significance of the date was not lost on Thornton, who was a devout Protestant and royalist. #EarlyModern 🗃️ #GuyFawkes #BonfireNight 1/3
November 5, 2025 at 1:47 PM
4 Nov. 1667 Alice Thornton, aged 41, went into labour with her 9th and final child, Christopher #OTD: 'I fell into pangs of labour about the 4th of November being very ill, and so continued by fits all that week' (BkRem). Christopher was born a week later on 11 Nov. #EarlyModern 🗃️
November 4, 2025 at 8:09 PM
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The document pictured is headed 'Alice Thornton wife of William Thornton of east Newton Esqr aged twenty nyne yeares or thereabouts'. Reader, she was 30.
According to Book 2, Alice Thornton #OTD 3 Nov. 1658 gave evidence at Hipswell before a Master of Chancery. She deposed that her father, Christopher Wandesford, had made a will in Ireland in 1640. The will had since gone missing and its contents were disputed. 1/2 #EarlyModern 📜 🗃️
November 3, 2025 at 8:30 PM
According to Book 2, Alice Thornton #OTD 3 Nov. 1658 gave evidence at Hipswell before a Master of Chancery. She deposed that her father, Christopher Wandesford, had made a will in Ireland in 1640. The will had since gone missing and its contents were disputed. 1/2 #EarlyModern 📜 🗃️
November 3, 2025 at 8:26 PM
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Did anyone else feel their heart leap with the news that the British Library are aiming to relaunch their archives and manuscript catalogue in early December? Can't wait to see you old friend 😭
October 31, 2025 at 11:51 AM
2) Seventeenth-century copy of the St John’s Gospel in an envelop binding!
October 31, 2025 at 12:46 PM
Kirklington Hall, where Alice Wandesford Thornton was born in 1626, has a ghost 👻 associated with it known as the Grey Lady. It is also said that if the enormous old trunk, which once contained all the Wandesford family papers, was moved from the Hall then disaster will follow. Spooky! #Halloween 🗃️
October 31, 2025 at 10:36 AM
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*ANNOUNCEMENT*

We are excited to announce a brand new podcast series: UPRISING: THE CIVIL WARS. A six-part series produced by HistFest Productions for the HistoryExtra podcast.

🎧 Listen wherever you get your podcasts!
October 28, 2025 at 9:20 AM
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Today on the blog: a magnificent find by @franceswolfreston.bsky.social of a book that the poet Katherine Philips gave to Mary Jeffreys; a discussion with important scholarly implications for the study of Philips earlymodernfemalebookownership.wordpress.com/2025/10/27/h... #EarlyModern #HerBook
October 27, 2025 at 6:41 PM
The Thornton's Books team are very pleased that our digital edition has been recognised by the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women and Gender in their annual publication awards. We received a ‘Co-Honourable Mention’ in the Digital Scholarship category.
thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/posts/news/2...
Alice Thornton's Books Wins Award
News article - 26 October 2025
thornton.kdl.kcl.ac.uk
October 27, 2025 at 8:46 PM
27 Oct. 1698 #OTD Thornton wrote to her great-nephew, Abstrupus Danby, about her daughter Katherine's proposed 2nd marriage to Robert Danby of Northallerton: 'she has given now promise without the consent of friends and there is more in the case to see her utter ruin'. #EarlyModern 📜 🗃️
October 27, 2025 at 1:35 PM
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Yorkshire gentlewoman Alice Thornton (1626-1707) mentions a 'first sleep' in her Book 1, pp. 83 and 134. #EarlyModern 🗃️ @thorntonsbooks.bsky.social
For those whose sleep is negatively impacted by the seasonal changes of the clock - might biphasic sleeping be of any assistance? @drpam outlines evidence that suggests this might be a more natural way to sleep.
Getting back to sleep: understanding biphasic normality
Can some previously little-known information about our ancestors’ sleeping patterns help us to better understand modern insomnia?
yorkshirebylines.co.uk
October 26, 2025 at 2:15 PM
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Delighted my podcast on Brilliana Harley has been released. She died on 29th October 1643 of a 'defluxion of the lungs ', probably pneumonia @susanwabuda.bsky.social @suwesterman.bsky.social @sdamussen.bsky.social @annlaurahughes.bsky.social @jamesdaybell.bsky.social @englishcivilwar.bsky.social
October 25, 2025 at 6:28 AM
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Thornton herself does not write much in her four surviving manuscripts about events beyond 1669 but there is material about her life up until 1682 in a manuscript written by her great-great-grandson, another Thomas Comber, now at the Beinecke Library, Yale. #EarlyModern 📜 📚 🗃️
24 Oct. 1677 #OTD Alice Thornton, with her daughter Alice and son-in-law Thomas Comber, went to Malton 'for the first time since the death of her husband ... to pay her respects to his relations, which she was desirous of doing from the regard she had to his memory'. William had died in Sept. 1668.
October 24, 2025 at 1:41 PM
24 Oct. 1677 #OTD Alice Thornton, with her daughter Alice and son-in-law Thomas Comber, went to Malton 'for the first time since the death of her husband ... to pay her respects to his relations, which she was desirous of doing from the regard she had to his memory'. William had died in Sept. 1668.
October 24, 2025 at 9:29 AM
23 Oct. 1641 #OTD Alice Thornton (then Wandesford) was living in Dublin and the Irish Rebellion reached the city: ‘we were forced upon the alarm to leave our house and fly into the castle that night with all my mother's family and what goods she could' (Book 1, 66). #EarlyModern 🗃️
October 23, 2025 at 1:34 PM
20 Oct. 1668 #OTD Thornton received a letter and one of her Books back from her aunt Anne Norton, via her servant Daphne Lightfoot: 'which did abundantly please and satisfy her and said that it was not writ as if a weak woman might have done it but might have become a divine' (Bk 3, 197). 1/3 🗃️
October 20, 2025 at 4:54 PM
18 Oct. 1668 #OTD Thornton received a letter from her uncle, Lord John Frescheville, consoling her 'on the death of my dear husband and that he will ever be my friend and assistant in all my concerns' (Bk3). Frescheville was her mother's half-brother and was made 1st Baron Frescheville in 1665. 🗃️
October 18, 2025 at 1:38 PM
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It was a privilege to talk about the radical C17th women in my book with @sixteenthcgirl.bsky.social for Not Just the Tudors. We had a brilliant and wide-ranging discussion about a Yorkshire maidservant who met the sultan of the Ottoman Empire … and much more!

shows.acast.com/not-just-the...
Voices of Thunder: Radical Women of the 17th Century | Not Just the Tudors
How radical women of the English Revolution reshaped faith, gender, and political power
shows.acast.com
October 14, 2025 at 8:25 AM
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C17 commonplace book index belonging to Whitelock Bulstrode (MS 3244, container 1.1) @ransomcenter.bsky.social. Can’t help but think immediately of @djbduncan.bsky.social and his splendid work on the history of the book index
October 14, 2025 at 6:45 PM
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Today on the blog: a female owner of Charles I's popular Eikon Basilike, a book cherished by women readers, who used their ownership marks to express their political affiliations during and after the Civil Wars earlymodernfemalebookownership.wordpress.com/2025/10/13/c... #HerBook #EarlyModern
Charles I, Eikon Basilike (1648)
It has long been known that the famous Eikon Basilike, attributed to Charles I and published shortly after his execution, was popular with seventeenth-century women readers. So far, our blog has fe…
earlymodernfemalebookownership.wordpress.com
October 13, 2025 at 5:26 PM