The Berkeley Manuscripts
The Berkeley Manuscripts: A Digital Archive for Ancestral Research
What are The Berkeley Manuscripts?
Published in 1883 by Sir John Maclean, this three-volume set is the life’s work of John Smyth of Nibley (1567–1640). Smyth served as the steward for the Lords of Berkeley Castle for decades. He didn't just write a history book; he spent his life meticulously documenting every record, land grant, and pedigree he could find in the castle’s massive medieval archives.
The collection is primarily split into two parts:
The Lives of the Berkeleys: Detailed biographies and lineages of the Lords of Berkeley from the Norman Conquest (1066) through 1618.
The Description of the Hundred of Berkeley: A "boots-on-the-ground" look at the inhabitants, manors, and families living in the surrounding Gloucestershire area.
Why I Use This as a Critical Reference
For those of us tracking the "Virginia to Carolina Trail," these manuscripts are more than just English history—they are a bridge.
The Virginia Connection: John Smyth was one of the original promoters of the Berkeley Hundred in Virginia. Many of the families documented in these pages eventually left Gloucestershire for the colonies.
Target Lineages: If you are researching names like Norwood, Spann, Smyth/Smith, or Berkeley, these records provide the "Old World" proof needed to bridge the gap to the American South.
The Peerage Link: This is a primary source for verifying claims to the Plantagenet or Marshal lines, as the Berkeleys were deeply intermarried with the highest levels of the English peerage.
How to Use This Archive
I am uploading these 400+ pages in digital format and am offering them here as a free resource to help other researchers "close the gaps" on sites like WikiTree.
Browse the Index: Use the links below to navigate to specific pedigrees or historical accounts.
Search for Names: I have transcribed key sections to ensure that ancestral names are searchable within this blog.
As uploading the pages and linking them to the entries on this blog will take time, feel free to download the full PDF: You can download my full digital copies for your private research via the link below.
[Download Link: The 1883 Berkeley Manuscripts - 400 Page PDF]
Volume II: The Later Lords (1066-1618)
This volume continues the biographies of the Berkeley family through the Tudor era. It is essential for understanding the political climate that led many Gloucestershire families to look toward the Virginia colonies.
Volume III: The Hundred of Berkeley & Its Inhabitants
This is the "People's History." It contains a detailed description of the parishes and the families living in the Gloucestershire countryside during John Smyth's time. This is a primary source for non-noble genealogy in the region.
A Note for my Fellow Researchers
I am currently using these manuscripts and others to verify the Norwood to Plantagenet trail and to cross-reference my own DNA matches with the "Ancient Samples" found in the Gloucestershire records.
You can find searchable content on a growing site for The Berkeley Manuscripts right here. The content is growing and will be available. It's 1200 pages or so and I'll add some per day. I will also be adding the out of copyright Peerage pages and other books. I will be uploading information that is available to the public or with permission from the originals if still in copyright so you don't have to pay a damn fortune to find data.
If you find a connection to the families mentioned in these pages, please leave a comment—I’d love to compare notes on our shared bloodlines.
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