Lancashire Parishes: Difference between revisions
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*[[Bolton le Sands, Lancashire Genealogy|Bolton le Sands]] | *[[Bolton le Sands, Lancashire Genealogy|Bolton le Sands]] | ||
*[[Brindle, Lancashire Genealogy|Brindle]] | *[[Brindle, Lancashire Genealogy|Brindle]] | ||
*[[Brindle Heath St Ann, Lancashire Genealogy|Brindle Heath St Ann]] | |||
*[[Bury St Mary, Lancashire Genealogy|Bury St Mary]] | *[[Bury St Mary, Lancashire Genealogy|Bury St Mary]] | ||
*[[Cartmel, Lancashire Genealogy|Cartmel]] | *[[Cartmel, Lancashire Genealogy|Cartmel]] |
Revision as of 16:30, 15 September 2023
Lancashire Wiki Topics |
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Beginning Research |
Record Types |
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Lancashire Background |
Local Research Resources |
Lancashire is one of England's most populated counties. Lancashire possessed 75 ancient parishes, far fewer than most England counties. To handle a population explosion, the Church of England divided most of the Lancashire parishes into chapelries. The end result was 400 chapelries within the 75 parishes of Lancashire.
Ancient Parishes[edit | edit source]
Chapelries[edit | edit source]
Each chapelry (church) kept its own separate church registers for christenings, for most burials, and for some marriages as well. The chapelry was supported by the parish church and the tithes of the chapelry area were paid to the parish priest. Over time many chapelries did obtain "parish" status.
Lists of chapelries and their associated parishes are sorted alphabetically on the pages listed below.
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