Birth, marriage and death records are an essential resource for family
historians, and this handbook is an authoritative introduction to them.
It explains the original motives for registering these milestones in
individual lives, describes how these record-keeping systems evolved,
and shows how they can be explored and interpreted.
Authors David Annal and Audrey Collins guide researchers through the
difficulties they may encounter in understanding the documentation. They
recount the history of parish registers from their origin in Tudor
times, they look at how civil registration was organized in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries and explain how the system in England
and Wales differs from those in Scotland and Ireland.
The record-keeping practiced by nonconformist and foreign churches, in
communities overseas and in the military is also explained, as are the
systems of the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands. Other useful sources
of evidence for births, marriages and deaths are explored and, of
course, the authors assess the online sites that researchers can turn to
for help in this crucial area of family history research.