"Within England and Wales, the wedding laws dictate that a ceremony must take place between the hours of 8am and 6pm, the only exceptions being for Jewish and Quaker ceremonies. Within Scotland, no such time-of-day restrictions are in place and couples are free to marry at any time of day". As quoted from here:
http://www.weddingsday.co.uk/wedding-laws/
Can anyone explain the reasoning behind this rule, and how/why it came to be the case? Just to give registrars and ministers the evening off? As I understand it marriages can be registered up until 5.59pm but not after the 6pm cut-off point, which seems a little outdated to me. Just pondering! Any ideas?