First deposit of sixteenth-century English accident inquests is a spreadsheet with details extracted from 6000 coroners' inquests into accidental deaths in sixteenth-century England held at the National Archives. The columns give the following information: the term of the legal year in which the inquest report was submitted to the court of King’s Bench, numbered within each year from 1 (Hilary) to 4 (Michaelmas); a number for each accident, prefaced by a letter for the decade in which the accident occurred; the TNA reference for the document; a reference to a any printed version of the document; the sixteenth-century county in which the inquest was held; the parish in which the inquest was held; the date of the inquest; the coroner who presided; the victim’s surname; the victim’s Christian name; the victim’s gender; the victim’s residence, if given; the victim’s status, if given; the victim’s relationship to another family member, if given; the victim’s age, if given; the victim’s condition at the time of the accident, if given; the date of the accident, if given; the month of the accident, if given; the day of the week of the accident, if given or calculated; the time of the accident if given; the type of location of the accident if given or assigned; the activity in which the victim was engaged; the narrative of the accident; the object or person given as causing the accident; its interaction with the victim; a second object or person given s as causing the accident; its interaction with the victim; the injury caused; the time of death; any other people involved; the valuation (in pounds, shillings and pence sterling) of any objects involved in the accident and subject to forfeiture; the valuation of the goods, chattels and lands of the victim or a possible murderer, if given; any further comments on the presentation or reception of the report.