This paper presents Hungarian sources that provide information on the causes of death at both individual and aggregate levels. It demonstrates how causes of death appeared in parish records from the early 19th century onwards, alongside denominational differences and legal prescriptions for recording them. The paper also outlines the process of increasing professionalism, from the mandatory recording of causes, and the involvement of coroners or physicians as death inspectors, to the introduction of civil registration, and the use of prescribed lists of illnesses and international classifications in the first half of the 20th century. The paper also discusses the completeness and reliability of parish records and civil registration, as well as the emergence of aggregate-level statistics, which influenced the content and accuracy of individual-level registration. It presents existing family reconstitution databases containing causes of death alongside digitised statistical publications, enabling a thorough analysis of the mortality transition.
Őri et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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