As close as many sets of twins are, its only natural
that twins sometimes end up marrying another set of twins. It does not
happen too often (we have seen one reference to only 250 sets of
identical twins married to identical twins in the world) but when it
does, it can mean double bliss and a lot of second-glances. The official
term for these type of marriages is "quaternary marriages".
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When identical twin sisters Diane and Darlene Nettemeier met identical
twin brothers Craig and Mark Sanders a decade ago, they could never have
guessed just how much of their lives would be based around perfect sets
of two. The sets of twins, from Texas, fell in love, went on a double
date to Las Vegas, and won thousands of dollars at poker. Sensing they
were on a winning streak, they got engaged on the same day, married at a
joint ceremony (officially "quarternarymarriages"), and built a pair of
homes, side by side.
Soon afterwards, despite a million-to-one odds, Diane and Craig went on
to have identical twins of their own - Colby and Brady, now seven.
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Barbi Kantor-Goldenberg of Rye Brook, New York and her twin sister,
Cheryl, married twin brothers, Bruce and Barry Goldenberg, respectively,
almost 30 years ago in different ceremonies that were a year apart.
Today, the two couples remain happily married and have five children
between them. The Goldenberg children are actually full genetic
siblings, an oddity of genetics that occurs when identical twins marry
identical twins (since identical twins share the same DNA).
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Identical twins from Abilene Christian University two-stepped down the
aisle in 2008 - with identical twin grooms. Ginna and Gaylen Glasscock,
both 22, started dating Erich and Nicholas Schmidt, both 23, during
their freshman year at ACU. The sight of two sets of identical twins
dating each other caused some giggles from the student body. Both girls
felt fireworks. And both knew they were paired with the right twin.
Gaylen said she and Nicholas are more goal-oriented and outspoken while
Ginna and Erich are laid back. After three years of dating, Nicholas and
Erich proposed to their girlfriends on Oct. 27. The proposals were a
well-planned surprise.
The Glasscock twins thought they were part of a photo shoot for a new
Amarillo restaurant owned by their boyfriends' mother, Tammy Schmidt,
and her business partner. But when desserts arrived with rings attached,
the real purpose became clear.
The couples shared wedding attendants, the church and a reception -
which saves money. But there was some differences. Gaylen and Nicholas
walked down the aisle at 4 p.m. with bridesmaids dressed in yellow.
Ginna and Erich walk down the aisle at 5:30 p.m. with bridesmaids
wearing pink. The reception was also split - one side was decorated in
pink, the other in yellow. Of course, the girls served as each other's
maid of honor, and the boys were each other's best man.
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Two sets of twins held a joint-wedding ceremony in the Russian city of
Pechora, much to the confusion of friends and relatives. Twin brothers
Alexei and Dimitry Semyonov married twin sisters Lilia and Liana. The
twin grooms' mother said that while she recognized her own sons she
could not identify the difference between the two brides. Even the
couples admitted that there are times when it becomes confusing.
The two brothers met Lilia and Liana almost a year prior to the wedding
at a dance party at a local club in St Petersburg.
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People were confused how a Chinese couple managed to run a busy
restaurant 21 hours a day without getting tired. Turns out the
restaurant is run by two couples … both the men and women are identical
twins!
Locals had nicknamed the eatery the "robot couple restaurant" as they
couldn't understand how the same couple seemed to be on duty from 6am
through to 3am. However, a journalist from Today Morning Post
interviewed the restaurant owner and found out the truth. It turned out
that the twin brothers, 32, married a set of twin sisters from the same
township three years ago and moved to Yiwu to run the restaurant
together. "Many diners thought we worked too hard and are like robots,
but they don't know that we are actually four people," said Mao Zhanghua,
32, the elder brother.
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Identical twins Mandy Westerman and Brandy Laman fit several of the
classic twin stereotypes. They were so hard to tell apart as babies that
their parents first painted their toenails different colors, then had
their ears pierced at 2 months old, putting tiny hearts in one twin's
earlobes and stars in the other's.
Today, at 27, they still have much more in common than blond hair and
similar features. For one thing, they share not only a birthday, but
also an anniversary. They got married on a double ceremony in May 2008.
The two couples -- Mandy and husband Kris Westerman, 26, and Brandy and
husband Daniel Laman, 27 -- followed up the wedding with a joint
honeymoon in Jamaica.
And then a few months ago, the couples bought their first homes,
closing, of course, on the same day. The houses, just down the street
from one another, share the same floor plan, only in reverse. The
vaulted-ceiling living rooms in their new Cordova homes even contain
identical beige sectional sofas, side chairs and TV stands. The twins
didn't set out to match, but they've found over the years that it's
simply hard not to.
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A pair of identical twins are celebrating their
diamond wedding anniversaries - after proposing on the same day. When
Frank Sinton asked Irene Evans to marry him in 1947 he had no idea his
identical brother Roy had chosen the same day to propose to Joyce Toft.
Now the two 83-year-olds are celebrating after 60 years of happy married
life.
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Two identical twin brothers married two identical twin sisters in a
joint wedding ceremony in China. The two couples, from Binhai town, look
so much alike that members of their own family struggle to tell them
apart. One brother, Yang Kang, 23, met and fell in love with one of the
sisters, Zhang Lanxiang, at work in Wuxi. The other couple, brother Yang
Jian and sister Jiang Juxiang, met at their engagement party and
instantly fell for each other.
At their joint wedding, the brothers sported different haircuts while
the sisters wore different coloured dresses so people could tell them
apart.
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