The inquest records of Tasmania dating from 1828 are stark revelations of human tragedy. From them it is possible to gain knowledge of the legal processes operating, vivid details of the life and times, and insight into the way in which sudden and accidental deaths were viewed by coroners and others seeking to make life in Tasmania safer for its citizens. This study samples these records, setting them in historical context and highlighting what I consider is the interesting data revealed
It is not proposed in this paper to attempt any detailed description of the method by which the Tas...
For a fuller account of this episode, see Human Remains: Dissection and its Histories (New Haven & L...
In recent years, historians interested in the mechanisms by which outcomes for one generation might ...
The inquest records of Tasmania dating from 1828 are stark revelations of human tragedy. From them ...
Studies of nineteenth-century cause-specific mortality date from the nineteenth century itself. Of n...
Tasmania, as an island state, is a "natural laboratory" for such disciplines as medical genetics, hi...
Secular understandings of suicide began to emerge in western Europe during the late-seventeenth cent...
This article describes the formation of The Tasmanian Historical Dataset a longitudinal data resourc...
This article describes the formation of The Tasmanian Historical Dataset a longitudinal data resourc...
Tasmania (known as Van Diemen’s Land until 1855) was occupied for at least 30,000 years by a hunter-...
This article explores the utility of using the rich holdings of coronial inquests in the collection ...
This paper outlines a cause-of-death classification system applicable to nineteenth-century English-...
The purpose of this article is to detail research completed in 2007 which investigated the way in wh...
The purpose of this article is to detail research completed in 2007 which investigated the way in wh...
The purpose of this article is to detail research completed in 2007 which investigated the way in wh...
It is not proposed in this paper to attempt any detailed description of the method by which the Tas...
For a fuller account of this episode, see Human Remains: Dissection and its Histories (New Haven & L...
In recent years, historians interested in the mechanisms by which outcomes for one generation might ...
The inquest records of Tasmania dating from 1828 are stark revelations of human tragedy. From them ...
Studies of nineteenth-century cause-specific mortality date from the nineteenth century itself. Of n...
Tasmania, as an island state, is a "natural laboratory" for such disciplines as medical genetics, hi...
Secular understandings of suicide began to emerge in western Europe during the late-seventeenth cent...
This article describes the formation of The Tasmanian Historical Dataset a longitudinal data resourc...
This article describes the formation of The Tasmanian Historical Dataset a longitudinal data resourc...
Tasmania (known as Van Diemen’s Land until 1855) was occupied for at least 30,000 years by a hunter-...
This article explores the utility of using the rich holdings of coronial inquests in the collection ...
This paper outlines a cause-of-death classification system applicable to nineteenth-century English-...
The purpose of this article is to detail research completed in 2007 which investigated the way in wh...
The purpose of this article is to detail research completed in 2007 which investigated the way in wh...
The purpose of this article is to detail research completed in 2007 which investigated the way in wh...
It is not proposed in this paper to attempt any detailed description of the method by which the Tas...
For a fuller account of this episode, see Human Remains: Dissection and its Histories (New Haven & L...
In recent years, historians interested in the mechanisms by which outcomes for one generation might ...