MARINE DEPARTMENT LIBRARY

148. Table XXX gives statistics for the past ten years of the numbers of marriages registered, civil and religious ceremonies (with percentages of each), marriages between parties of Chinese race, marriages between persons already married (see paragraph 151), and 'new' marriages, and of the amounts of fees collected. The number of marriages registered annually has risen every year since 1950-51 except in 1962-63, 1964-65 and 1967-68, each of which was a 'blind year' and therefore unpopular for marriages between Chinese. While the total number of marriages registered has risen from 7,954 to 16,894 over the decade, the percentages of civil and of religious ceremonies to the total number of marriages registered have remained remarkably steady, beginning at 89.69% and 10.31% respectively in 1958-59 and ending in 1967-68 at 90.84% and 9.16%.

149. Table XXXI shows the ages or age groups of the husbands and wives married during the year as stated in the marriage certificates. This shows that 333 of the husbands and 4,094 of the wives were under 21 at the time of their marriage, and therefore required the consent of their parents or guardians or (in 92 cases) of the Registrar as laid down in Sections 14 and 15 of the Ordinance. The distribution of husbands and wives as between the various age groups followed more or less the same pattern as in previous years with the 20-24 age group the most popular for wives and the 25-29 group most popular for husbands. In England and Wales the 20-24 age group is the most popular for both husbands and wives.

150. The trend for girls to marry younger lost momentum for the first time since 1961-62, with a decrease of 1.33% to 4,094. The numbers of girls marrying under 21 during the past seven years were as follows:

% of all Marriages under the Ordinance

Number

1961-62

1,676

14.18

1962-63

:

1,868

16.70

1963-64

2,488

19.59

1964-65

2,733

21.68

1965-66

3,511

22.60

1966-67

4,562

25.56

1967-68

4,094

24.23

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