Given that humans fudge the facts regularily, of course!
Just wondering if something like this might explain the confusion some of us encounter when we're trying to identify which John Taylor out of dozens really belongs to us!
Carol
Moderator: Global Moderators
I hesitiate to even mention this, as it won't help you in your searching one jot... but I've sometimes seen children who have been registered twice; once where the event happened and once where the family usually resided.If a woman was a resident of Aberdeen and decided to go to her mother's in Inverurie to give birth, where would the child's birth be registered
If I'm wrong, I'm sure someone will be along to correct me, but I think what you're seeing is a record of their banns being recorded in each parish. Banns were usually called three times and then the marriage took place, and if you're lucky, on the later record you might even find that the date of actual marriage is also there....but people were married twice frequently--once in her parish and once in his.
I'd agree with Anne on the above: the banns were called in both parishes, and thus the mention in the Parish Register. The banns were called so that anyone with any objections to the marriage taking place, or who knew of any reason why it should not happen had an opportunity to raise thier objection. The marriage usually took place in the parish of the bride (but there are exceptions...of course!I haven't come across this, but people were married twice frequently--once in her parish and once in his.
The law states that a birth has to be registered within 21 days, and can be done so anywhere in Scotland. It may be that a woman may have returned to her home parish to have her child christened, out of a sense of tradition (as my two sons, who we took to my wife's home of Piltown, Kilkenny, to be christened, even though we live in Scotland), but it does not necessarily mean she will have had the birth registered there. On the flip side, she may have been ill after birth, and the family may have stayed in her home parish, and found it easier to have the birth registered there, rather than in their home back in Aberdeen etc. But then again, three days after birth, they may have moved to another house which wasn't in Inverurie or Aberdeen, and had the child registered in Peterhead or wherever they had moved to! There are no hard and fast rules - if only!speleobat2 wrote:If a woman was a resident of Aberdeen and decided to go to her mother's in Inverurie to give birth, where would the child's birth be registered?...
...Just wondering if something like this might explain the confusion some of us encounter when we're trying to identify which John Taylor out of dozens really belongs to us!![]()
Carol
This is the law now, but what was the law then, back in the times we're all looking?The law states that a birth has to be registered within 21 days, and can be done so anywhere in Scotland.