
| | | Groom
Pierre Thewes, born on October 9, 1819 in Bergen Op Zoom (Belgium), 31 years old, residing in Bruxelles, tailleur by profession Bride
Marie Catherine Broeckx, born on November 15, 1819 in Antwerpen (Belgium), 31 years old, residing in Schaerbeek, femme de chambre by profession |
Witnesses
- Jean Thewes, 26 years old, residing in Bruxelles, ebeniste by profession
- Charles Delaunoy, 45 years old, residing in Bruxelles, employé by profession
- Pierre De Jonge, 27 years old, residing in Bruxelles, peintre by profession
- Jean Broeckx, 27 years old, residing in Bruxelles, commis voyageur by profession
Source citation
State Archives of Belgium (Brussels) in Leuven (Belgium), Civil registration marriages
Burgerlijke stand Brussel, Leuven, June 11, 1851, record number 33
Demogen Vlaams-Brabant en Brussel (project hubru19a)
This data was last updated on June 23, 2023 by the source holder and first published on Open Archives on April 1, 2021. Provenance information: DemogenBrussel19a.mdb > mdb-export > abl/demogen/csv2a2a.pl, originele record identifier is HUBRU_00607114_0.
Internet address
- https://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-personen/zoekresultaat/weergave/akte/id/HUBRU_00607114_0
- https://www.openarchieven.nl/abb:7ef8f2fd-e2a1-f2ef-b084-eed523fc567c
Scans of marriage supplements are - according to Open Archives - available through FamilySearch:
The data above was used to search for more related information, the results:
Are you the first person who provides additional information?
Find your ancestors and publish your family tree on Genealogy Online via https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/
Open Archives can automatically search the records for details of the parents of a person.
With the information found, a pedigree chart can be presented.
To use this functionality you need to be logged in and have a subscription. Please note: a subscription does not give you access to more data, but it does give you more useful options!
There may be errors in the data of documents. Copying data from (scans of) originals is human work. But computers that can read handwriting can also make mistakes.
If you find an error in the data you are encouraged to report it so that this can be corrected in the source at the archival institution or association.
You can add the documents you find on Open Archives that are useful for your research to your list of favorite documents. You can organize this list and when searching you will immediately see which documents are already on your list of favorite documents.
Favorite person entries can be downloaded in PDF format (ideal for printing) and GEDCOM format (ideal for reading into your family tree program).
To use this feature, you need to login first.
Did you know you can mark the historical documents as a favorite?
Once you are logged in, you can mark documents as favorites by clicking the Add as favorite button at the bottom.
You can organize your favorite historical documents with tags, download it in PDF or GEDCOM format and share with others as public collection.
Thank you, your comment has been saved.