Information sur la source

Ancestry.com. Données extraites des registres paroissiaux de l’Église d’Angleterre, Cheshire, Angleterre [base de données en ligne]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2017.
Données originales : Electronic databases created from various publications of parish records.

 Données extraites des registres paroissiaux de l’Église d’Angleterre, Cheshire, Angleterre

Cette base de données consiste en une collection de registres paroissiaux historiques du Cheshire, en Angleterre. Les documents paroissiaux, surtout les baptêmes, les mariages, et les enterrements, s’avèrent être les meilleures sources d’information sur les actes d’état civil pour les siècles précédant l’enregistrement civil. Les certificats de baptême contiennent généralement la date du baptême, le nom de l’enfant et le nom du père. En règle générale, les actes de mariage incluent la date de mariage et les noms des mariés. Les documents d’enterrement fournissent normalement la date de l’enterrement et le nom du défunt. Ils peuvent parfois inclure d’autres informations, comme par exemple le pays d’origine du défunt et s’il était en veuvage ou non.

This database is a collection of historical parish registers from Huntingdonshire, England. The records in this collection range in date from 1559 to1836. Parish records--primarily baptisms, marriages, and burials--provide the best source of vital record information in the centuries before civil registration. These recordsare primarily marriages and all of the data was converted as it was originally presented. For this reason, you will find interesting phonetic spellings.

This Collection

Due to the legibility of the original sources, there may be gaps in the records, including partial sentences, cut-off words, and other omissions. Due to the nature of the records and because the records were originally compiled by a third party, it is difficult to absolutely verify the completeness and validity of the data. The information in this collection is as correct as it was when Ancestry.com received it, and has merely been reproduced in an electronic format.

A large number of parish records date from the sixteenth century, when a series of mandates required clergy to compile records of baptisms, marriages, and burials within the parish, and to send an annual copy to the Bishop. Essentially, there are two sets of records: the parish copy and the copy the clergyman sent to the Bishop each year, known as Bishops Transcripts. Many records were destroyed, lost, or simply not kept during the Civil War (1642-1660). Of the surviving records, many have since been transcribed and collected by genealogical societies. The records are a valuable resource for finding vital information of people of the time. The content of the records may vary between the two sets. Civil registration of births, deaths, and marriage, often called General Registration, began in July of 1837. It provides a national vital records index that simplifies searches and includes people who may not have been associated with a church. The civil records are more readily available than parish records (parish records after 1837 often aren't filmed) and are easier to use. But many births went unrecorded in the early years of civil registration, so parish records are still extremely valuable.

  • Huntingdonshire: - Register of Marriages, 1559-1839