Counting Couples: The Marriage Banns Registers of the City of Amsterdam, 1580–1810: Social and Economic History

Publication date

2021

Authors

van Weeren, RenéISNI 0000000388892017
De Moor, Tine

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Marriage is generally regarded as a decisive moment in the life course of individuals. As the social, but also the legal status of women and men changes as soon as they enter marriage and – by extension – their preceding wedding engagement, registers are and were being kept to record this life event in most societies. The difficulty in studying the long-term development of marriage patterns is the need for, among other things, detailed information about the marriage formation process. Most of the research on marriage patterns is based on a limited amount of data. Data either cover only a limited period (at most several consecutive decades), a limited number of variables, a relatively small number of marriages, and/or a relatively small town or region. The Amsterdam marriage banns registers are an exception to the above, in terms of content, focus area, and volume. In this article, we present the dataset results of the Citizen Science project ‘Ja, ik wil!’ [‘Yes, I do!’], involving over 500 participants retrieving a wide range of socio-economic data on over 94,000 couples from the rich source of the historical Amsterdam marriage banns registers, covering every fifth year between 1580 and 1810.

Keywords

Amsterdam, Citizen Science, Demography, Historical socio-economic data, Marriage patterns, General Arts and Humanities, General Social Sciences, Computer Science Applications, SDG 5 - Gender Equality

Citation

van Weeren, R & De Moor, T 2021, 'Counting Couples: The Marriage Banns Registers of the City of Amsterdam, 1580–1810 : Social and Economic History', Research Data Journal for the Humanities and Social Sciences, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 1-45. https://doi.org/10.1163/24523666-06010002