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Документ Mortality in the Greek Community of Odessa in 1800–1920(2021) Paradeisopoulos (Paradisopoulos), Sofronios; Парадісопулос, СофроніосMortality is the second important demographic process after fertility. Studies in mortality as a constituent part of biometry focus on how deaths influence a population, its size and structure. Mortality is generally referred to as a process of extinction of a generation and perceived as a mass statistical process composed of a number of individual deaths coming at different ages and defining in their totality a sequence of extinction of a real or a conditional generation. As a category of historic demographic process it implies examination of “a mass process composed of a number of individual deaths coming at different ages and defining in their totality a sequence of extinction of a real or a conditional generation”1 or is referred to as “frequency of incidents of death in a social environment”.2 Together with fertility, mortality shapes natural movement (reproduction) of a population.Документ Nuptiality among Greeks of Odessa in 1800–1920: Records from Registers of the Holy Trinity Greek Church(2021) Paradeisopoulos (Paradisopoulos), Sofronios; Парадісопулос, СофроніосThe term “marriage” is one of the most important categories for understanding the social structure of any society. Its historical and ethno-cultural variability gives an indication of philosophical notions of an elementary social organism – the family, which are implemented directly in the state of marriage typical of this society. Experts in historical demography say that “if the concept of marriage refers to a social institution, and the concept of getting married characterizes the individual act of creating a marriage alliance between a man and a woman, then the term nuptiality shall refer to a mass process of formation of married couples within the population as a combination of generations or within the generation as a set of people”.