Irish Daily Star

More couples giving church bells wedded miss OUR WORLD

‘PROOF OF CHANGING IRISH’

- ■■Keith FALKINER

NON-RELIGIOUS weddings again outranked Catholic ones last year, CSO stats show.

There were 7,256 Catholic marriage ceremonies in 2023, 35.4 per cent of the total.

However, 40.3 per cent of people chose a non-religious celebratio­n in 2023, up on 35.5 per cent in 2022 and considerab­ly higher than the equivalent figure in 1990 of just 4 per cent.

There were 242 Church of Ireland weddings – just 1.1 per cent of all marriages – while 16 per cent of couples opted for other religious ceremonies.

Friday remained the most popular day of the week, with 7,419 formalitie­s taking place, compared to less than a tenth of that (714) on Sundays.

In 2022, July was the most popular month and last year it was August.

But the least favoured month has remained January, with just 665 post-Christmas weddings at the start of 2023.

The average age of people getting married is broadly unchanged.

For oppositese­x marriages, the average groom in 2023 was 37.7 years old and the average bride was 35.8 years old, changed slightly from 37.8 and 35.7 years old respective­ly in 2022.

For same-sex marriages, the average age of men rose to 40.8 years from 40 in 2022, while for women it fell to 38 from 40 in 2022.

The figures have prompted secular organisati­ons to call for religion to be removed from core subjects in schools.

Society

Education Equality, which wants such classes to be held outside normal school hours, said the CSO statistics prove Ireland is a vastly-changed society.

Its spokesman David Graham said: “Nonreligio­us marriages have outnumbere­d Catholic marriages three times in the past four years.

“These figures provide firm evidence of a changing population with respect to religious belief and practice.

“What will it take before the Government finally responds to the calls for change from parents across the country?

“Religion is a choice, not an obligation. Our taxpayer-funded education system is forcing religion on families against their will, in breach of their human and constituti­onal rights.

“We need to respect children’s and teachers’ rights to freedom of religion and belief. Our current education system – where over 95 per cent of our taxpayer-funded schools operate a religious-integrated curriculum with no effective opt-out for children or teachers – is clearly not fit for purpose.”

However, secular ceremonies are not the only evidence of changing practices for tying the knot here.

Last August, a leading wedding dress designer has urged brides not to wear runners on their big day.

Andriana Mitchell said there was a growing trend among new wives to wear trainers under the dress or change into them later in the day to feel more comfortabl­e than staying in killer heels for hours.

However, the designers said leisure footwear can make the bride look slumped and less elegant.

She said: “I find that runners make the bride feel more casual so they often slouch or walk faster than the graceful movement of their dress.”

Other trends to emerge include the hiring of online content creators rather than videograph­ers to produce snippets for Instagram and TikTok.

Wedding experts say ‘TikTok weddings’ are on the rise, with couples pre-planning TikTok-friendly moments to capture during their special day.

Some are also setting up websites ahead of their weddings and audio guestbooks, where those invited can record their well wishes on a vintage-style phone.

Five star venues said richer duos are also forking out up to a quarter of a million for exclusive venues away from prying eyes.

Dromoland Castle in Co Clare revealed last year it had exclusivit­y deals with four couples staging their wedding there.

 ?? ?? CHOICE: David Graham
RISE: ‘TikTok weddings’
BIG DAY: Number of weddings that are non-religious is on rise across country
DEALS: Dromoland Castle in Co Clare
CHOICE: David Graham RISE: ‘TikTok weddings’ BIG DAY: Number of weddings that are non-religious is on rise across country DEALS: Dromoland Castle in Co Clare

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