Källinformation

Ancestry.com. Liverpool, England, vigslar och lysningar, 1754-1935 [webbaserad databas]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.
Originaldata: Liverpool Registers. Liverpool, England: Liverpool Record Office.

 Liverpool, England, vigslar och lysningar, 1754-1935

Den här samlingen innehåller uppgifter om vigslar registrerade inom Church of England i Liverpool-området i Lancashire. Innan civila myndigheter i England började sin registrering 1837 nedtecknades viktiga händelser i personers privatliv av kyrkan och inte av staten. Församlingsregistren är den bästa informationskällan i England för tiden före 1800-talet och de förblir en viktig källa. I de tidiga handlingarna finns namnet på bruden och brudgummen, vigseldatum, församling och namnet på prästen som förrättade vigseln. I senare handlingar finns uppgifter om brudgummens yrke, om bruden var änka eller om brudgummen var änkling, ålder, bostadsort vid tidpunkten för vigseln, fädernas namn och yrke samt vittnenas namn.

This collection contains Church of England marriage registers from the Liverpool area of Lancashire County. Liverpool saw its first dock open in 1715, and by 1800, the city boasted five docks, a vital role in world trade, and a population of more than 75,000. The next century would see the population burgeon almost tenfold.

Parish Records

Before civil registration in England began in 1837, key events in a person’s life were typically recorded by the church rather than the state. Parish records are the best source of vital record information in England before the nineteenth century and remain an important source thereafter.

Marriage Records

Historically, couples were usually married in the bride’s parish, and until the early 20th century couples could marry at a very young age. Early records list the names of the bride and groom, their marriage date, the parish, and the name of the priest who officiated. Later records include the groom’s occupation, whether the bride was a widow or the groom a widower, age, residence at the time of marriage, fathers’ names and professions, and names of witnesses.

This database also includes marriage banns, which were notices of a couple’s intent to marry. These will include name and status (bachelor, widow, etc.) of the groom and bride, the parish, and dates when the banns were published. Some will include a note of the marriage date added later. Remember that a marriage bann does not mean that the marriage necessarily took place.

Earlier Records

For earlier registers, please see the link provided in the Related Data Collections section.

Historical Background:

Some key dates for understanding the historical background of parish registers include the following.

      1538 — A mandate is issued requiring that every parish was to keep a register. Many parishes ignored this order. Only about 800 registers exist from this time period.
      1598 — Clergy were required to send copies of their registers to the bishop of their diocese. These copies are known as Bishop’s Transcripts.
      1643–1659 — Registers were poorly kept during the English Civil War and the Commonwealth period which followed or abandoned altogether.
      1711 — An order was made to the effect that all register pages were to be ruled and numbered. This was widely ignored.
      1733 — The use of Latin in registers is prohibited.
      1751 — Calendar reform. Prior to this the year commenced on 25th March, so any register entry for December 1750 would have been followed by January 1750.
      1754 — Lord Hardwicke’s Marriage Act. A separate marriage register is enforced which records witnesses, signatures of all parties, occupation of groom and the residences of the couple marrying. It also enforced Banns and made clandestine marriages illegal.
      1763 — Minimum age for marriage set at 16 (previously the Church accepted marriage of girls of 12 and boys of 14). Those under 21 still needed the consent of parents. On marriage records individuals that are over 21 often have their age listed as “full age” rather than an exact year.
      1812 — George Rose’s Act. New pre-printed registers were to be used for separate baptism, marriage and burial registers as a way of standardizing records.