Hello All,
Once again, I seek assitance at the font of wisdom. I found my great-grandfather's baptismal record, and I can manage the Latin, but there are some abbreviations that I cannot suss out. The highly scripted cursive does not help, either.
As near as I can tell, it reads:
"14th Bapt. Michaelem J.L. Mauritii (Maurice)
Scanlon et (illegible, possibly Elizabetham) Walsh sus
Joanne Tobin Alicia Sislam/Sislem
Coolishal 2/6 AP Burke"
Michael's middle name was Joseph, so the "J." could be shorthand for that, or it could be something else (e.g. "F.L." - Filius - Son). Does that have significance? The "L." escapes me, as well.
I can't fathom the "Sus" which I suppose could be "Tes" (Testis) for witnesses or refer to sponsors/godparents.
The 2/6 appears on another Baptism just above that one, so could that be the actual date of birth?
Again, thanks for any clues to what this means...
Howard
hwrdhdsn
Friday 1st Oct 2021, 05:39PMMessage Board Replies
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Howard:
I'm sure there will be other comments but here is my take:
Michael (the F.L. is shorthand for filium (son)) of Maurice Scanlon and Bridget Walsh sponsors John Tobin and Alice Drislane?
The 2/6 was the offering of 2 shillings and six pence which was fairly standard in baptismal registers.
Roger McDonnell
Castlemore Roscommon, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘
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Hello Roger,
Thank you so much. That makes much more sense. Every time I clear a hurdle, it's like something slowly taking shape through fog.
Many warm regards,
Howard
hwrdhdsn
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Dear Howard, Just to add to what Roger has said above, the L in "F.L." probably stands for legitimus - "filius legitimus", legitimate son of. Best wishes with your research,
C Flaherty, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘