Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- PART I
- PART II
- PART III
- APPENDICES
- 1 A list of the reconstituted parishes from which data were drawn and of the names of those who carried out the reconstitutions
- 2 Examples of the slips and forms used in reconstitution and a description of the system of weights and flags employed
- 3 Truncation bias and similar problems
- 4 Tests for logical errors in reconstitution data
- 5 Correcting for a ‘missing’ parish in making tabulations of marriage age
- 6 The estimation of adult mortality
- 7 Adjusting mortality rates taken from the four groups to form a single series
- 8 The calculation of the proportion of women still fecund at any given age
- 9 Summary of quinquennial demographic data using revised aggregative data and produced by generalised inverse projection
- 10 Selection criteria used in compiling the tables in chapters 5 to 7
- Bibliography
- Name index
- Place index
- Subject index
- Cambridge Studies in Population, Economy and Society in Past Time
5 - Correcting for a ‘missing’ parish in making tabulations of marriage age
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- PART I
- PART II
- PART III
- APPENDICES
- 1 A list of the reconstituted parishes from which data were drawn and of the names of those who carried out the reconstitutions
- 2 Examples of the slips and forms used in reconstitution and a description of the system of weights and flags employed
- 3 Truncation bias and similar problems
- 4 Tests for logical errors in reconstitution data
- 5 Correcting for a ‘missing’ parish in making tabulations of marriage age
- 6 The estimation of adult mortality
- 7 Adjusting mortality rates taken from the four groups to form a single series
- 8 The calculation of the proportion of women still fecund at any given age
- 9 Summary of quinquennial demographic data using revised aggregative data and produced by generalised inverse projection
- 10 Selection criteria used in compiling the tables in chapters 5 to 7
- Bibliography
- Name index
- Place index
- Subject index
- Cambridge Studies in Population, Economy and Society in Past Time
Summary
This appendix describes the method used to maximise the period of time over which age at marriage was calculated in chapter 5. The problem arises because the parishes making up a particular group may not all begin to produce reliable data from the same date. To wait until all were yielding reliable data would mean a late starting date, but to make no correction for ‘missing’ parishes in the early decades of a tabulation would carry the risk that apparent changes were due simply to the entry of a new parish into the group at a particular point in time. It is necessary to produce a series in which a ‘missing’ parish contributes in a rational, if arbitrary, fashion to the mean for the group as a whole even before it has come ‘on stream’.
Consider the case of Birstall and group 2 using the data contained in table 5.2. The table suggests that a correction for Birstall is only necessary for 1630–9 and earlier decades, since the parish made a contribution to the group total in 1640–9 at much the same level as in the next decade. Appearances are deceptive, however. Reconstitution began in Birstall in 1595, so that, if truncation bias is to be avoided, marriage age information can only be used from 1645 onwards, and the proportional contribution of Birstall in the 1640s shown in table 5.2, therefore, is based on a total of marriages for 1645–9 rather than for the whole decade.
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- Information
- English Population History from Family Reconstitution 1580–1837 , pp. 578 - 580Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997