Last week's episode of Who Do You Think You Are? wrapped up the current series with actress and comedian Diane Morgan.
Diane is possibly most well-known for mocking TV history programmes by playing hapless historian Philomena Cunk - which is somewhat ironically fitting for this programme.
Diane's personality is what carries this episode forward - there was a genuine element of wondering what she would say next, with a gladness that we were coming along for the ride.
Her family's stories, though, are equally compelling.
And it turned out that her father's ancestor, German Charlie was, (spoiler alert!) actually a German man known as Charlie - which Diane seemed more genuinely surprised at than I would have guessed.
There are also poignant moments relating to a lost love, killed on the battlefields of World War One.
The stand-out feature of the episode though, is Diane's Scottish ancestor Isabella - who had something of a reputation in her community.
It took a large amount of strength and obstinance, though, for a 19th Century woman to take a man to court over child support payments - often known as maintenance or affiliation
.
It's often surprising to people that there was a mechanism in place to provide child support for unmarried mothers - it somehow doesn't chime with our modern view of Victorian society.
Making the father pay for the child, though, made it less likely that these children would become a 'burden' on the parish or poor law union (i.e. the state and the taxpayer) - which many saw as a win.
A lot of women were reluctant, however, to come forward and stand before a court - and often to have the details of their love lives cross-examined and then reported in the local press - due to the stigma attached to being an unmarried mother or 'ruined' woman.
To take several different men to court, then, as Isabella did, would have taken some serious gumption on her part!
All in all, this was a highly-entertaining episode to end the series with; let's hope we won't have to wait too long for the next one!
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