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General => The Common Room => Topic started by: rogerwill on Friday 26 November 21 12:41 GMT (UK)
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I have been looking at a Jewish marriage in 1873. Bloomah Frankel was married on 15 January 1873, the ceremony officiated over by Moses Berlyn (1843-1914), the Secretary of the Birmingham Hebrew Congregation, at Bedford House on Highfield Road, Edgbaston, King’s Norton, Birmingham. Looking through the register, most Jewish marriages were conducted in the local Synagogue in Birmingham, but a fair number were conducted in private homes, as in this case. Can anybody clarify why or what the significance is of having the marriage in one place or the other?
Thanks
Roger
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Hello Roger,
I had the same question when I received the marriage cert of my ggf's brother. He and his bride had married in functions rooms, rather than in the New West End Synagogue (near Hyde Park) whose minister had officiated at their wedding.
The sexton explained that the synagogue had only been completed and consecrated in 1879, the year before the marriage of my ggf's brother, and the interior was quite plain. Later works created a more sumptuous interior appearance. The sexton hypothesised that the plain interior may have put people off, hence they opted for an alternative venue.
Another factor to consider, is the convenience of holding the marriage ceremony and the subsequent celebrations in one place. If the private home was itself quite sumptuous, I imagine the parents of the bride would have been eager to show off their affluence.
Do you know who was living in Bedford House at the time? I believe Edgbaston was already an affluent suburb of Birmingham by the 1870s.
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You may find it informative to read the link.
https://www.genguide.co.uk/source/jewish-registers-of-birth-marriage-and-death-burial/
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My thanks to Justin and Jebber for your comments, I think I have a better understanding now of the choice of location and its relative significance. Jebber's link also provided me with several new resources for research :)
Thanks again
Roger