United Kingdom registration and naturalisation certificates are issued by the Home Office in London. But it is possible to be a British citizen and have a certificate issued elsewhere. For example, (British citizenship) certificates since 1983 may also be issued by the governments of the Isle of Man, Jersey, Guernsey and Gibraltar, by the former colonial government in Hong Kong (1983-97) and by the British Consulate General in Hong Kong (post 1997).Marco 72 wrote:I have called the passport advice line about this. Someone said that 3A should not include foreign passports, and that the "place of issue" of the certificate is where I had the citizenship ceremony.
There are also all the pre-1983 certificates issued by colonial and protectorate governments, Dominion governments (pre-1949) and British High Commissioners (who had registration authority under the 1948 Act).