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  1. Dec 13, 2016 · An illegitimate child is a child who is born to parents who are not married to each other, or who is born “out of wedlock.”. An illegitimate child may also be referred to as a “bastard,” or a “love child.”. Perhaps one of the most famous illegitimate children in Hollywood was the love child born to actor and the former governor of ...

  2. Family and criminal code. (or criminal law) v. t. e. Legitimacy, in traditional Western common law, is the status of a child born to parents who are legally married to each other, and of a child conceived before the parents obtain a legal divorce. Conversely, illegitimacy, also known as bastardy, has been the status of a child born outside ...

  3. An illegitimate child’s status may be changed by a legal action called legitimation, granting him all the rights of legitimate children—except that property or money already given to a naturally legitimate child cannot be transferred to a legitimated one who would otherwise have been entitled to part of it. In some places, legitimation automatically occurs if the parents subsequently marry ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. An illegitimate child refers to a child born to parents who are not married or in a legally recognized relationship. In contrast, a legitimate child is born to parents who are married or in a legally recognized relationship. The distinction between these two terms is primarily based on the legal and societal recognition of the parents ...

  5. Illegitimate Child. An illegitimate child refers to a child who is born to unmarried parents and does not have a legal relationship with either parent. The concept of illegitimacy has evolved over time, with many countries now providing equal social protection and rights to both legitimate and illegitimate children.

  6. Jul 16, 2019 · In 1969, just one year after this trust was set up, the law was changed to provide property rights for illegitimate children, by introducing a presumption that any reference to a child of a person in a ‘disposition’ (such as a trust deed) was to be construed as including a reference to any illegitimate child of that person.

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  8. Adoption Act 1976. The Adoption Act 1976 allowed adoptees the right to see their original birth certificate and other information relating to their biological parents. A long-running campaign in the 1920s by the National Council for the Unmarried Mother and her Child (founded in 1918) resulted in the passage of the Legitimacy Act in 1926.

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