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England
& Wales Hardwicke Marriage Index |
The ParishThe parish of Aylesbury lies almost centrally within Buckinghamshire being 16 miles southeast of the town of Buckingham and sits some 38 miles northwest of London. Aylesbury is a focal point for 3 main routes, the A41 from London, following the ancient Roman route of Akeman Street, and continuing on to Bicester, the A418 arriving from Leighton Buzzard and continuing on to Thame and the A413 from Buckingham and continuing on to Amersham. Aylesbury is thus an important market town, the administrative capital of its county and a regional centre for trade and industry. Aylesbury has a long history, perhaps founded as a way station on Akeman Street that took over an Iron Age hill-fort, certainly by 571 it is mentioned in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. By the end of the Late-Saxon period of the 10th & 11th century it had acquired a market, a mint and a castle, which is only recalled in the naming of one of its streets. For much of the medieval period it was as a market town supplying a centre for trade and specialist skills that the town functioned, the rich vale in which it sits, below the Chiltern ranges, being productive for livestock at that time. During the 18th century the town developed a reputation for its lace making which developed into a substantial cottage industry. In addition to lace making the town bred rabbits and the famous Aylesbury ducks for the London market. Modern developments arrived in 1815 when a branch of the Grand Union Canal arrived connecting the town more formally with the capital, soon after railways arrived with lines from London and from High Wycombe boosting trade and introducing some commuter development. Today the town remains a substantial market town which has grown to almost engulf many of the villages which once stood around it (including the former chapelry of Quarrendon which was not licensed for marriages during the transcript period), it forms a slanting oblong roughly 4 miles by 3 with an axis remaining focussed from northwest to southeast, its main economy being light industry and services. Aylesbury is drained westwards by the River Thame which makes its way eventually to the Thames at Dorchester on Thames, the latter heading back eastwards through Reading, Windsor and the capital to the North Sea. Aylesbury is sited at around 90 metres above the sea with its northern suburbs along the Thame some 20 metres lower, to the south the escarpment of the Chilterns rises dominating southern views and reaching 260 metres at Combe Hill, the local high point. The parish of Aylesbury covered close to 3,200 acres and with Quarrenden contributing a further 1,900 it was an extensive area supporting a population of close to 5,400 parishioners (by comparison in 1991 in held over 51,000). As would be expected in Domesday times Aylesbury was already large enough to be amongst the largest 20% of settlements by population, held by King William it held 20 ploughs, some meadows and 2 mills, meanwhile Quarrendon (held by Geoffrey de Mandeville) offered a further 20 ploughs, meadows and woodland. |
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| Register No | Covering Dates | Deposited With | Register Style | Quality Standard | Comments |
| 1 |
14th April 1754 - 25th October 1772 |
Buckinghamshire Archives - Reference - PR11/1/24a |
Plain, ruled & margined book containing Marriages |
Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low
likelihood of misreads |
None NB this register is bundled together with its successor into a single archival deposit |
| 2 | 30th October 1772 - 30th October 1799 | Buckinghamshire Archives - Reference - PR11/1/24b | Plain, ruled & margined book containing Marriages | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of
misreads |
None NB this register is bundled together with its predecessor into a single archival deposit |
| 3 | 11th November 1799 - 24th December 1812 | Buckinghamshire Archives - Reference - PR11/1/25 | Plain, ruled & margined book containing Marriages | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of misreads | None |
| 4 | 10th January 1813 - 1st September 1829 | Buckinghamshire Archives - Reference - PR11/1/26 | Standard Rose style preprinted and prenumbered Marriage register | Grade 1 Register - Few issues noted and a low likelihood of
misreads |
None |
| 4 | 17th September 1829 - 25th June 1837 | Buckinghamshire Archives - Reference - PR11/1/27 | Standard Rose style preprinted and prenumbered Marriage register | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of misreads | None |
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Waddesdon
St Michael
Pitchcott St Giles |
Bierton
St James
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Fleet
Marston St Mary
Stone St John the Baptist Hartwell St Mary the Virgin |
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Bierton
St James
Weston Turville St Mary |
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Hartwell
St Mary the Virgin
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Weston
Turville St Mary
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1755 1760 1765 1770 1775 1780 1785 1790 1795 1800 1805 1810 1815 1820 1825 1830 1835
Corrections to Tinstaafl Transcripts