This paper introduces a new source for the study of mortality and the health transition in Italy: the Burial Permits. In the years leading up to the Italian Unification, local authorities began requiring official documentation, compiled by medical officers, for the burial of individuals in local cemeteries. These documents, preserved in the form of single sheets or registers, contain a wealth of individual-level data on deceased people, including the indication of the cause(s) of death. This feature, a novelty in the Italian historical demographic research, allows addressing a longstanding gap in the availability of individual-level information on causes of death, a factor that has limited and hampered the research on the evolution of the mortality patterns and the health transition in Italy. The paper provides a detailed description of this source and the type of information it contains, reviews what has been done so far, and investigates its possible applications to address new directions in the study of health and mortality in Italy.
A New Source for the Study of Unexplored Aspects of the Italian Health Transition: The Burial Permits / Manfredini, Matteo; Pozzi, Lucia. - In: HISTORICAL LIFE COURSE STUDIES. - ISSN 2352-6343. - 16:(2026), pp. 87-95. [10.52024/hlcs25553]
A New Source for the Study of Unexplored Aspects of the Italian Health Transition: The Burial Permits
Pozzi, Lucia
2026-01-01
Abstract
This paper introduces a new source for the study of mortality and the health transition in Italy: the Burial Permits. In the years leading up to the Italian Unification, local authorities began requiring official documentation, compiled by medical officers, for the burial of individuals in local cemeteries. These documents, preserved in the form of single sheets or registers, contain a wealth of individual-level data on deceased people, including the indication of the cause(s) of death. This feature, a novelty in the Italian historical demographic research, allows addressing a longstanding gap in the availability of individual-level information on causes of death, a factor that has limited and hampered the research on the evolution of the mortality patterns and the health transition in Italy. The paper provides a detailed description of this source and the type of information it contains, reviews what has been done so far, and investigates its possible applications to address new directions in the study of health and mortality in Italy.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


