Ordering Maltese Certificates

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Revision as of 19:03, 21 June 2007 by PippaDoll-2 (talk | contribs)
Birth

Birth

Maltese certs can be ordered on line

A new simple way to acquire certificates from the public registry online service- for more infomation

There is not an index like there is for England and Wales and the Public Registry in Malta generally search 3 years either side of the date you supply.

The cost is approx LM 4.00 for an A3 certificate which is just under £7.00 however it has an amazing amount of information.

Quote: Luckily for me I had spotted Sarah Needham on the 1901 census and knew she was born in approximately 1882. I knew that her father was called James and family legend said that her mother was called Sarah something beginning with X. These were the details that I used on the online form.

The certificate that was returned to me shows the date, time and place of birth.

A Maltese cert Gives both parents details including age, place of birth, occupation and residence. It gives the grandfather’s names including if they are still alive. It also gives details of witnesses including their occupation, age, residence, place of birth and their fathers.







Marriage

Marriage

A marriage certificate costs LM 4.00 and supplies the names, ages, birth place, occupation and residence of the bride and groom. It gives details of the both of the bride and groom’s parents including whether or not they are living and their occupation. It gives the names, occupation, ages, birth place, residence and fathers and whether or not they are living. It also states where the marriage took place, the date and the Priest.

Quote: From the birth certificate I found out that Sarah’s mother was Serafina Scicluna (Scic can also be written as Xic – tying into family legend).

So for the marriage certificate I approximated year of 1881 and gave the parties names as Serafina Scicluna and James Needham. I had a bit of a surprise when I got the marriage certificate as the groom was listed as Giacomo – it is Italian for James!


Malta has a handful of genealogists that will do the research work for you but unless you go to Malta there isn’t a way to verify the information they have given you.

A tip if you go, is to give the Parish Priest a donation as it seems to smooth the way however you may need to visit each parish individually.


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