Information sur la source

Ancestry.com. Mariages et bans de mariage de l’Église d’Angleterre, Dorset, Angleterre, 1813 à 1921 [base de données en ligne]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.
Données originales : Dorset Parish Registers. Dorchester, England: Dorset History Centre. Dorset Church of England Parish Registers, Dorset History Centre, Dorchester, England.

 Mariages et bans de mariage de l’Église d’Angleterre, Dorset, Angleterre, 1813 à 1921

Cette base de données contient les images des actes et bans de mariage de l’Église d’Angleterre enregistrés dans les registres paroissiaux du comté de Dorset.

This database contains images of Church of England marriage records and banns in registers from parishes in Dorset County.

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

The 1753 Marriage Act required that marriages in England and Wales be performed in a church, by bann or license, and recorded in a separate register on printed forms. Thus, after the act took effect in 1754, marriage banns typically list

  • bride
  • groom
  • parish
  • dates
  • marital status (bachelor, widow, spinsters, etc.)
  • occupation

Early records of marriage are similar and include

  • bride
  • groom
  • marriage date
  • parish
  • witnesses
  • who performed marriage
  • marital status (possibly)

Later records included age, marital status, occupation, residence, and fathers’ names and professions.

Historically, couples were usually married in the bride’s parish. Remember, too, that a marriage bann does not mean that the marriage necessarily took place.