« Reply #6 on: Friday 30 January 09 08:48 GMT (UK) »
Thanks Nanny,
The original enquiry was from Paul - I'm sure he'll reply to you - but as I'm descended from the same family he is researching, thanks from me as well.
Regarding space in churchyards - in practice, bones were often removed (in the Middle Ages) & placed in Charnel Houses, usually attached to the church. This made way for other burials - I don't know when this practice ceased - with the Reformation I guess. Otherwise I think families just buried one on top of another - some plots can contain up to 6 or more bodies (I think coffins are a fairly modern idea)
Steve
Bumstead - London, Suffolk
Plant, Woolnough, Wase, Suffolk
Flexney, Godfrey, Burson, Hobby - Oxfordshire
Street, Mitchell - Gloucestershire
Horwood, Heale Drew - Bristol
Gibbs, Gait, Noyes, Peters, Padfield, Board, York, Rogers, Horler, Heale, Emery, Clavey, Mogg, - Somerset
Fook, Snell - Devon
M(a)cDonald, Yuell, Gollan, McKenzie - Rosshire
McLennan, Mackintosh - Inverness
Williams, Jones - Angelsey & Caernarvon
Campbell, McMartin, McLellan, McKercher, Perthshire