Domestic Occurrences

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In a fashion similar to Birth, marriage and death announcements in the newspapers of today, in the 19th century it was often the custom to make such announcements in the Domestic Occurrences section of publications. Accordingly, for British India, a significant number are to be found in newspapers/journals and almanacs/directories. It should be recognized that such announcements were often made some two years after the event.

The same publications may also contain notification of changes of name by deed poll but these will generally be in different section of the publication, not specifically under the heading 'Domestic Occurrences'.

Death information can be also be found in official Lists. As an example, the Fibiwiki page Post and Telegraphs Department indicates that a researcher found a December 1929 death in Civil Lists Indian Posts and Telegraph Department May 1930 to April 1932, British Library IOR V/13/260. This death was not recorded in the records on Findmypast.

A list of Directories online links to directories and almanacs available to read online. Quarterly and monthly publications are listed in Newspapers and journals online

Titles - especially those for women - in Domestic Occurences would usually concur with the accepted Order of Precedence - i.e Officers and their Ladies; NCOs and their Wives; Other ranks and their Women. The definitions were also extended to non military circles where professional or wealthy business men would rank higher in the social scale than some others. Although the Editor of the publication would have printed what he had been sent, submitted entries were unlikely to have strayed too far from the accepted protocol for fear of upsetting social conventions.

FIBIS resources

Domestic Occurences transcribed and available on FIBIS Search:

Also see

External links

  • India List post[1] by Noel Clark dated 29 November 2013 advises that Ancestry (a pay site) has a database "England, Andrews Newspaper Index Cards, 1790-1976"[2], part of Newspapers and Periodicals. "It is possible to search this database for "colonial" entries just using the "keyword" field. No personal name is required. So, for example, it is possible to find all the notices that refer to India, Pakistan etc., to a specific place, such as Simla, Murree, etc."

References

  1. India List post, now archived
  2. "England, Andrews Newspaper Index Cards, 1790-1976" Ancestry. "Approximately 250,000 cards include announcements of births, marriages, obituaries, and deaths abroad; notices of wills, unclaimed estates, and filings under the Colonial Probates Act of 1892 (which recognized probates from courts in British possessions); and advertisements for missing persons and people seeking next of kin."