The Apostles lived about 2000 years ago. No birth or death records in the modern sense have survived from that era. It is all a matter of tradition. According to tradition, all of the apostles died as martyrs with the exception of the Apostle John, who died of old age on the island of Patmos near the coast of what is now Turkey.
The Romans did the same kinds of writing that we do. Everything from inventory lists, records of births and deaths, sales receipts , contracts, letters, books, poetry, the first novel (the Satyricon), histories, biographies, memoirs, court records, senate records, and religious records.
"live births, deaths, fetal deaths, marriages and divorces"
It increases.
45.62 births 14.29 deaths
yes or the population would never grow
The incas used it for keeping records such as, births, deaths, and harvests. Quipus where made out of a group of knotted strings.
Try the county courthouse for actual physical records. Then try the state health records, they record births and deaths of all residents of the state.
There are many, many records about how and where each of the apostles died. None of these records is at all historical, and in many cases there are records that tell us that a single apostle died in more than one place or in quit different ways. The one thing these fictional accounts have in common is that, apart from John, all the apostles supposedly were martyred.As for historical accounts of the deaths of the apostles, we have none. It's as if the apostles never existed.
The name of the 500th person on Earth is not known. In the times of early man records of births and deaths were not kept and this information is not available.
Unlike births, deaths and marriages, records of batisms are not kept nationally. The best source would be the church at which the baptism occurred.
The Hungarian registry of births, deaths, and marriages provides information about individuals' vital events such as births, deaths, and marriages that have occurred in Hungary. This information can be used for legal, genealogical, and statistical purposes.
14.7 deaths by 1000 live births.
births and deaths
total: 22.02 deaths/1,000 live births male: 25.61 deaths/1,000 live births female: 18.26 deaths/1,000 live births (2008 est.) SO?URCE: http://www.exxun.com/Venezuela/c_pp.html
The Romans did the same kinds of writing that we do. Everything from inventory lists, records of births and deaths, sales receipts , contracts, letters, books, poetry, the first novel (the Satyricon), histories, biographies, memoirs, court records, senate records, and religious records.
10.7 births/1,000 population 11.0 deaths/1,000 population Infant mortality - 4.9 deaths/1,000 live births
"live births, deaths, fetal deaths, marriages and divorces"