Marriage Canonical Evidence

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Description

Official document or data proving the Marriage of two Persons. The Canonical Evidence in Use Case "Request an Extract or Copy of a Civil State Certificate" (MA UC2).

XSD

XSD files can be found on the GitHub repository.

Diagram

MarriageEvidence-UML-1.7.drawio.png

Attribute Specification

DE4A name Property type Cardinality Data type Related vocabulary Controlled vocabulary Definitions
MarriageEvidence Class Official document or data proving the Marriage of two Persons.
Identifier Object [0..1] Identifier cva:Cvidentifier An unambiguous reference to the Marriage Evidence.
IssueDate Datatype [1..1] Date udt:Date The most recent date on which the Marriage Evidence instance was issued.
IssuingAuthority Object [1..1] PublicOrganisation A Public Organisation with official authority in charge of issuing the Marriage Evidence.
IssuingPlace Object [1..1] ConstrainedLocationAddress The Location where the Marriage Evidence was issued.
CertifiesMarriage Object [1..1] Marriage Attesting in a formal way that the Marriage is true.
CertifiesEndOfMarriage Object [0..1] EndOfMarriage In case of divorce, this property includes information on the end of marriage
PublicOrganisation Class Any organisation that is defined as being part of the public sector by a legal framework at any level.
Identifier Object [0..*] Identifier cva:Cvidentifier Many organisations are referred to by an acronym or some other identifier. For example, among the EU institutions, the ECB is the identifier for the European Central Bank, OLAF for the European Anti-Fraud Office, and so on. These are formally recognised by the European Commission which provides a list of such acronyms. Analogous lists should be used in other contexts.
PrefLabel Datatype [1..*] Text udt:Text As defined in the ORG Ontology, a preferred label is used to provide the primary, legally recognised name of the organisation. An organisation may only have one such name in any given language. Primary names may be provided in multiple languages with multiple instances of the preferred label property.
Marriage Class A legally accepted relationship between two Persons in which they live together.
DateOfMarriage Datatype [1..1] Date udt:Date The date on which the Marriage took place.
Spouse Object [2..2] MarriedPerson The Person who was married.
PlaceOfMarriage Object [0..1] LocationAddress The Location where the Marriage took place.
MarriedPerson Class A Person who has entered into a Marriage.
FamilyNameAfterMarriage Datatype [0..*] Text udt:Text This property contains the family name after the Marriage of the Person.
FamilyNameBeforeMarriage Datatype [0..*] Text udt:Text This property contains the family name before the Marriage of the Person.
MaritalStatusBeforeMarriage Datatype [0..1] Text udt:Code Marital Status Situation with regard to whether a Person was single, married, separated, divorced or widowed.
Person Class An individual natural person who may be dead or alive, but not imaginary.
DateOfBirth Datatype [0..1] DateObject The day on which the Person was born.
PersonName Object [1..1] Name The family name and given name of a Person. At least one of the two must exist.
Identifier Object [0..*] Identifier cva:Cvidentifier The identifier relation is used to link a Person to any formally issued Identifier for that Person.
PlaceOfBirth Object [0..1] LocationAddress The Location where the Person was born.
Gender Datatype [1..1] Code udt:Code Human Sex The gender of an individual should be recorded using a controlled vocabulary that is appropriate for the specific context. In some cases the chromosomal or physical state of an individual will be more important than the gender that they express, in others the reverse will be true. What is always important is that the controlled vocabulary used to describe an individual's gender is stated explicitly.
Citizenship Object [0..*] Jurisdiction The citizenship relationship links a Person to a Jurisdiction that has conferred citizenship rights on the individual such as the right to vote, to receive certain protection from the community or the issuance of a passport.
Jurisdiction Class The authority that an official organisation has, to make legal decisions about somebody/something.
Identifier Object [0..1] Identifier cvb:JurisdictionID The value for the id property is a URI for that Jurisdiction.
Name Datatype [1..*] Text cbc:Name The name is simply a string that identifies the Jurisdiction, typically a country, with or without a language tag.
ConstrainedLocationAddress Class The Address of a location based on the INSPIRE Address representation. It is subclass of the class Address.
AdminUnitL2 Datatype [1..1] Text cvb:AdminunitSecondline The region of the address, usually a county, state or other such area that typically encompasses several localities.
AdminUnitL1 Datatype [1..1] Text cvb:AdminunitFirstline Country The uppermost administrative unit for the address, almost always a country. Best practice is to use the ISO 3166-1 code.
LocationAddress Class The Address of the place of birth based on the INSPIRE Address representation. It is subclass of the class Address.
AdminUnitL2 Datatype [0..1] Text cvb:AdminunitSecondline The region of the address, usually a county, state or other such area that typically encompasses several localities.
AdminUnitL1 Datatype [0..1] Text cvb:AdminunitFirstline Country The uppermost administrative unit for the address, almost always a country. Best practice is to use the ISO 3166-1 code.
Address Class Representation of address based on the INSPIRE Address Representation.
PoBox Datatype [0..1] Text cvb:PoBox The Post Office Box number. INSPIRE's name for this is "postalDeliveryIdentifier" for which it uses the locator designator property with a type attribute of that name. This vocabulary separates out the Post Office Box for greater independence of technology.
Thoroughfare Datatype [0..1] Text cvb:Thoroughfare Quoting from the INSPIRE guidelines, a thoroughfare is: "an address component that represents the name of a passage or way through from one location to another. A thoroughfare is not necessarily a road, it might be a waterway or some other feature.
LocatorDesignator Datatype [0..1] Text cvb:LocatorDesignator The locator designator is defined by the INSPIRE guidelines as "a number or a sequence of characters that uniquely identifies the locator within the relevant scope(s). The full identification of the locator could include one or more locator designators." In simpler terms, this is the building number, apartment number, etc. For an address such as "Flat 3, 17 Bridge Street", the locator is "flat 3, 17."
LocatorName Datatype [0..1] Text cvb:LocatorName Based on the INSPIRE guidelines, locator name is defined as: "Proper noun(s) applied to the real world entity identified by the locator. The locator name could be the name of the property or complex, of the building or part of the building, or it could be the name of a room inside a building. The key difference between a locator and a locator name is that the latter is a proper name and is unlikely to include digits. For example, "Shumann, Berlaymont" is a meeting room within the European Commission headquarters for which locator name is more appropriate than locator.
AddressArea Datatype [0..1] Text cvb:CvaddressArea Taking the definition from INSPIRE, the address area is: the name or names of a geographic area or locality that groups a number of addressable objects for addressing purposes, without being an administrative unit." This would typically be part of a city, a neighbourhood or village.
PostName Datatype [0..1] Text cvb:PostName The key postal division of the address, usually the city. (INSPIRE's definition is "One or more names created and maintained for postal purposes to identify a subdivision of addresses and postal delivery points.)
PostCode Datatype [0..1] Text cvb:PostCode The post code (a.k.a postal code, zip code etc.). Post codes are common elements in many countries' postal address systems.
EndOfMarriage Class Date and cause of end of marriage
DateOfEndOfMarriage Datatype [0..1] Date udt:Date
Cause Datatype [0..1] Text udt:Text
DateObject Class Structured representation of date with year, month and day of the month.
Year Datatype [0..1] Year xsd:gYear A gregorian calendar year. The value space of Year is the set of Gregorian calendar years as defined in § 5.2.1 of ISO 8601. Specifically, it is a set of one-year long, non-periodic instances e.g. lexical 1999 to represent the whole year 1999, independent of how many months and days this year has.
Month Datatype [0..1] Month xsd:gMonth A gregorian month that recurs every year. The value space of Month is the space of a set of calendar months as defined in § 3 of ISO 8601. Specifically, it is a set of one-month long, yearly periodic instances.
Day Datatype [0..1] Day xsd:gDay A gregorian day that recurs, specifically a day of the month such as the 5th of the month. The value space of Day is the space of a set of calendar dates as defined in § 3 of ISO 8601. Specifically, it is a set of one-day long, monthly periodic instances.
Name Class A name of a person that includes the family and given name.
FamilyName Datatype [0..*] Text cbc:FamilyName A family name is usually shared by members of a family. This attribute also carries prefixes or suffixes which are part of the family name, e.g. "de Boer", "van de Putte", "von und zu Orlow". Multiple family names, such as are commonly found in Hispanic countries, are recorded in the single family name field so that, for example, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra's Family Name would be recorded as "de Cervantes Saavedra".
GivenName Datatype [0..*] Text cvb:GivenName A given name, or multiple given names, are the denominator(s) that identify an individual within a family. These are given to a Person by his or her parents at birth or may be legally recognised as 'given names' through a formal process. All given names are ordered in one field so that, for example, the given name for Johann Sebastian Bach is 'Johann Sebastian'.