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Look at the death certificate
Like A Birth Certificate.
Gold licenses in ancient civilization were likely made from real gold or gold-plated materials. They would have had intricate designs or inscriptions related to their purpose or authority, and were often worn as symbols of status or power by the owner.
Depends on when the death occurred. If the death is relatively recent, then there will be a death certificate. You go to the gov and look up ordering a death certificate. Not just anyone can order the certificate, you have to have a legitimate reason (normally you need to be related). Most gov agencies are online. Look up your location and Vital Statistics, and it will be there. If you are looking at a death that occurred abt 100 years ago, death certificates were not common and not issued as a rule. Just a simple entry in a book was all most gov'ts required.
Look at the 'related links' section.
Airplane.
Rectangle with writing on t.
Look up the soical security death indx on the net or order his death certificate from the state where he died
A law degree is a diploma, so it looks like a certificate.
Go to freebmd.co.uk search 'deaths' look up name and year and look for the person on the list. Hope that helped!
A business certificate looks like most certificates do. Generally, it will show the business's name and type, the license number, and the date and county it was issued at.
A degree certificate and a transcript of studies is usually presented at the convocation ceremony for those students able to attend; thus the degree certificate and convocation certificate are one and the same. For those who cannot attend, the certificate (call it what you will) and the transcript of marks is either mailed out or picked up at the college (university) office. This is to the best of my knowledge. If some colleges/universities have two separate certificates, I am not aware of it.