« Reply #2 on: Friday 05 May 17 20:49 BST (UK) »
On checking SP for a marriage between my 4x great-grandparents Alexander Guild and Christina Davidson, two entries come up for 1828. One dated, 26/11/1828 in Monikie and the other dated 12/12/1828 in Dundee.
Before I go ahead and order a copy of these extracts is it likely that both of these are the same people given the names and close proximity of the dates.
Yes. What it tells you is that at the time of the marriage one of them lived in Dundee and the other in Monikie.
The pre-1855 records are from the parish registers and they are in fact the records of proclamation of banns, rather than of the marriage ceremony itself. If follows that if they lived in different parishes the banns would have to be proclaimed in both parishes, and this is why there are apparently two records of the same marriage.
Do *not* attempt to 'order an extract'. You can view digital images of both entries online on the SP web site. They will cost you 6 credits each, total £3. 'Ordering an extract' will tell you nothing different, and will cost you much more than £3. (On reflection, I am not even sure you can actually 'order an extract' of a pre-1855 parish register listing.)
Be aware that the records of proclamation of banns are unlikely to tell you the names of the couple's parents. For that you would need to get their death certificates, assuming they died in Scotland after 1855. These should tell you the full names of their parents, including their mothers' maiden surnames.
Thanks for confirming that Forfarian.
I think I made an error in what I was trying to say. I had just meant the . section rather than "ordering an extract". I'd used the wrong terminology there. My apologies.
I think I'll not bother wasting credits on viewing this entry given that not much information is presented in them.
By the 1871 census Christina is shown as widowed at
"Chrispanhall Connonsyth", Carmyllie Parish.
(This looks grossly mis-transcribed on findmypast and ancestry, I live near the area and have heard of nothing like this place?).
Alexander is in the 1851 at "Crispon Hall of Cononsyth". So this is the same place. Still it's not familiar to me?
I think the Alexander Guild that died aged 62 in 1869 in Carmyllie is the same man. So I will go ahead and view this image on SP.
Thanks again. But I don't suppose you have any clues as to this "Crispon Hall of Cononsyth" at all?
Jill.
mtDNA subclade K1b2b. Father's Y-DNA I-S25383
GEDmatch kit; CF7867455
Father's kit; RY1336515
Mother's kit; AF2312865
Kincardineshire
Sheret, Hosie, Valentine, Crow, Beattie, McArthur, Wyllie.
Angus (Forfarshire)
Adam, Valentine, Ewan, Elder, Guild, Kydd, Bradford, Stronner, Gibson, Cloudsley, Evans, Stewart, Stott.
Perthshire
Small, Robertson, Murray, Kennedy, McGregor
Ross & Cromarty
Cameron, Stewart, Grant
Banffshire - Gamrie
Anderson, Massie