Parish registers originated from
Injunctions issued by Thomas Cromwell in 1538, but as the Injunctions were
reissued or repeated on subsequent occasions with enquiries as to whether
they were being obeyed, there is some doubt as to the measure of early
compliance. The clergy liked the scheme no more than they liked Thomas
Cromwell; not without prescience, they thought that the registers might
come to be used as a basis for taxation. Some were obedient, for ten of
the twenty-one parishes in the diocese of Rochester whose surviving
registers antedate the reign of Elizabeth are known to have opened their
original registers in 1538.
The genesis of the parchment registers, which replaced
the earlier paper registers, was a direction by the Convocation of
Canterbury in 1597, later embodied in Canon 70 of 1603. The Canon required
that the old registers should be transcribed into the new registers‘so |
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far as the ancient books thereof can be procured’,
but the further words ‘especially since the beginning of the reign of
the late Queen' provided a loophole even when the ancient books could be
procured. With this tacit encouragement, sixteen incumbents in the diocese
started their parchment registers from 1558, the year of Elizabeth’s
accession; what is more surprising is that upwards of forty registers were
begun at later dates in Elizabeth’s reign. In all this, Ash is something
of an oddity. The Baptismal and Marriage registers begin after 1558, but
the Burial register begins in 1553, the year of Mary Tudor’s accession.1
It is inherently probable that all three of the original
registers were in fact opened at the same time and there is some
circumstantial evidence that this was done well before 1553. Cromwell’s
directions for the keeping of a register |