PDA

View Full Version : Quiz about the History of English and Welsh marriages


Merry
28-10-12, 08:15
This quiz comes recommended by Lost Cousins:

Marriage laws and practices quiz (http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/staff/academic/probert/marriagelawforgenealogists/quiz/)

a few of the answers came as a surprise to me!

Olde Crone
28-10-12, 08:51
And me, I only got 6/15! I did feel some of the questions were trick questions in the way they were worded.

For example, Jews and Quakers have always been able to conduct and record their own marriages. As these are not ecclesiastical, i.e. church of England, then they must surely be civil marriages?

And the "marriage under 21" question. "There haave always been ways to marry without parental consent under 21". Well, yes, but those ways weren't the NORM, they were exceptions which wouldn't apply to the vast majority.

OC

Merry
28-10-12, 09:06
I thought the Q about the average age of marriage was a bit misleading. The answer was:

(The average age) was just over 24 for women at this time. The average age at marriage was in fact lower in the mid-twentieth century than it was in the mid-nineteenth.

Do they really mean average?? Or do they mean the most likely age to marry for the first time?

kiterunner
28-10-12, 09:10
This question makes no sense!

"Comparing your ancestors’ marriage certificate to the census entry from the same year, you discover that they clearly married in a parish to which neither belonged."

Firstly, the census just shows where they were on census night, not where they "belonged"; secondly, unless they got married within 3 weeks of census night (if they married by banns), how do you know they didn't move house from one parish to another between census night and the wedding?

Also, a lot of the questions don't have the answer I want to give as a choice!

ElizabethHerts
28-10-12, 09:15
I got 6/15. I found some of the questions poorly worded, and I agree with Kate about the proffered answers.

kiterunner
28-10-12, 09:51
I think they should have put "1837" (instead of 1836) as a possible answer to the question about when the first civil marriage took place, as many people would be likely to choose that one. (I knew it was around 1653 because I was recently transcribing some marriages from that period for FreeREG.)

Phoenix
28-10-12, 09:52
I got 9/15, but would be arguing firmly for a recount!

I didn't reckon I'd FIND Catholic marriages because I wasn't convinced they would survive.

And belonging to a place is not the same as living there. Still, and interesting quiz.

kiterunner
28-10-12, 09:57
I didn't reckon I'd FIND Catholic marriages because I wasn't convinced they would survive.



Yes, same here.

Merry
28-10-12, 10:01
I did better on the poorly worded questions! Probably the way my brain works! lol

I got two wrong the first time I did it and a different two wrong when I had another go this morning!!!

Olde Crone
28-10-12, 10:35
Yes, I was of the opinion that I wouldn't find RC marriages even if they HAD been recorded.

OC

WendyPusey
28-10-12, 10:46
I managed to get 8 right!

vallee
28-10-12, 12:38
I got 9 which surprised me thought I'd get less

Nell
28-10-12, 13:20
Thrilled I got one more than OC or Elizabeth!

Lindsay
28-10-12, 13:24
10 out of 15 for me, though some I got right for the wrong reasons!

JayG
28-10-12, 21:11
9/15 which came as a surprise!

Guinevere
29-10-12, 16:38
11/15 not altogether happy about some of their answers.

Nell
30-10-12, 08:00
Well Gwynne neither was I. On the other hand if I had been happy with their answers I'd have got 15/15!!!!

Guinevere
30-10-12, 10:09
:d :d :d

JBee
30-10-12, 11:20
Sits in the dunce's corner - only 5/15

Muggins in Sussex
30-10-12, 19:22
Sits in the dunce's corner - only 5/15

Don't worry, Julie - I'm a bigger dunce than you! - I only got 3/15 :o

Janet
31-10-12, 04:09
Excuse me, may I sit between the two of you, please? I'm the 4/15. :d

Vicwinann
31-10-12, 07:48
Some of the questions were pretty ambiguous, and I thought some of the choices not very well worded. Nevertheless, a useful exercise, albeit one which relied heavily on statistics..