Information sur la source

Ancestry.com. Index des licences de mariage de Crisp, Londres, Angleterre, 1708 à -1892 [base de données en ligne]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors.
Données originales : Crisp's London Marriage Licences. Print Publication, 177 volumes. Canterbury, Kent, England: The Institute of Heraldic and Genealogical Studies.

 Index des licences de mariage de Crisp, Londres, Angleterre, 1708 à -1892

Cette base de données comprend des extraits de licences de mariage et un grand nombre de licences originales des principales paroisses de Londres. Ces documents peuvent inclure des informations concernant le lieu d’origine et les membres de famille, ainsi que la date et lieu de mariage et le nom du conjoint

Abstracts of marriage licenses and many original licenses from major London parishes are in this database. Information regarding places of origin and family members may sometimes be found in addition to the marriage date, location, and spouse’s name. As a general rule licenses were reserved for the wealthy or famous, allowing them to circumvent public announcements or Banns of their impending marriage (thus avoiding possible objections) and also allowing a quick marriage. Couples were usually married in the bride’s parish and could wed at a very young age until the early 20th century.

A series of mandates in the sixteenth century required clergy to compile records of baptisms, marriages, and burials within each parish. As the clergy were also obliged to send an annual copy to the bishop (called Bishop’s Transcripts) there are many parish records from this time. During England’s Civil War from 1642–1660 records were destroyed, lost, or never recorded. In 1837 civil registration, also known as General Registration, began recording births, deaths, and marriages on a country-wide level.

Important dates affecting marriage records:

1751 – Calendar reform from Julian to Gregorian; 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; enforced a separate marriage register 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; required the use of new pre-printed registers for separate baptism, marriage and burial registers as a way of standardizing records.

Information in this database:

  • Surname
  • Residence
  • Spouse’s name
  • Spouse’s residence
  • License date