https://www.findmypast.com/transcript?id=IRE/PRS/BAP/0747221 https://registers.nli.ie/registers/vtls000635269#page/135/mode/1up Skibbereen | Microfilm 04774 / 04 Diocese of Cork and Ross | County of Cork Record Transcription: Ireland Roman Catholic Parish Baptisms What can I do with this record? View an image of this record We will use the details from this record to create your family tree for you Report a transcription error. First name(s) Bartholomew Last name Brown Birth year - Baptism year 1823 Baptism date 14 Dec 1823 Residence Bridgetown Parish Skibbereen Alternative parish names Creagh, Creagh and Sullon, Rath, Skibbereen and Rath, Sullon Diocese Cork and Ross County Cork Country Ireland Father's first name(s) Thomas Father's last name Brown Mother's first name(s) Mary Mother's last name Collins Repository National Library of Ireland National Library of Ireland link Register Baptism Record set Ireland Roman Catholic Parish Baptisms Category Birth, Marriage & Death (Parish Registers) Subcategory Parish Baptisms Collections from Ireland copyright Findmypast 2015 Learn about these records About Ireland Roman Catholic Parish Baptisms Explore more than 7 million baptism records indexed and digitised NLI collection of Ireland’s Roman Catholic baptisms from 1000 parishes. Discover your ancestor’s birth place and parents’ name. Among the many name found in this collection we have uncovered the baptism records for revolutionaries Joseph Plunkett and Terence MacSwiny; the father of Australia’s legendary Ned Kelly, John ‘Red’ Kelly; and Patrick Henry Jones, the first lieutenant of the United States’ army’s 37th New York Irish Rifles during the American Civil War. In each result, you will find a transcript of all the vital information found in the parish register. Most records, will also display an image of the original record created from the National Library of Ireland’s microfilm collection. The detail found in each record will vary depending on age and condition of the parish register. You may discover the following information about your ancestor. Name Birth date Baptism date Residence Parish and diocese Father’s name Mothers name Register type Archive Image Earlier church records were written freehand in register books, but in later years they were recorded formally in printed registers. Many of the labels of these registers are in Latin. Until the 1960s, Latin was the official language of the Catholic Church. Therefore, until that time, many official church records were recorded in Latin. Even the names of individuals were Latinized. Common Latin words or phrases found on Irish Roman Catholic baptism records A me Infrascripto Parocho vel Vicario -- I the undersigned pastor or vicar Baptizandi Nomen -- baptized with the name Cognomen -- surname Die -- day Domicilium -- residence Ex parentibus legitimo Matrimonio junctis -- from the parents of a legitimate marriage Filium legitimum -- legitimate son (or child) Habitantibus in -- living in Mensis -- month Natus -- birth Nomina Parentum -- name of parents Patrinis adstantibus et e -- sponsors are standing up Sponsoribus -- sponsors Discover more about these records From 1537 until 1870, the Church of Ireland was the official church in Ireland, this meant that recording keeping in the Catholic Church was difficult because of the hostilities between the state church and the Roman Catholic Church. Few registers have survived or were recorded before the latter half of the eighteenth century. The earliest baptism records appear from Waterford, Wexford, Tipperary and Galway. Many of the records are dated from the 1850s onwards. Civil registration in Ireland began in 1864, which means that parish registers are the best source for finding the majority of the population before that time. The images have been digitised from the National Library of Ireland’s microfilms collection of parish records. In the 1950s and 1960s, the library embarked on a large scale project to microfilm all the surviving Catholic parish registers. A second phase of this project took place in the 1990s. Access to the parish registers is available for free in the National Library of Ireland. You can view the registers in their newly digitised form on computers and no longer need to use the microfilms. According to John Grenham’s *Tracing Your Irish Ancestors*, known parishes not covered include Rathlin Island, Co, Antrim; Killorglin, Co. Kerry; Rathocore and Rathmolyon, Co. Meath; Dublin city and county parishes of Clontarf, Naul and Santry; and Kilmeena, Co. Mayo. We have provided a full list of all the parishes available in these records.