Interesting.
I only needed to provide a recent copy of my confirmation record, showing my reception into the Latin Church a number of decades ago. That certificate included the date and location of my baptism in the Episcopal Church. There was nothing noted about nor asked for regarding my marriage, which took place before my reception in the Catholic Church.
My favorite story about that is that the volunteer who typed up the Confirmation certificate at the Chancery had my mother’s maiden name spelled wrong. When I said it was wrong she could have cared less, refused to look at the record book again and had no intention of retyping it. I just left with it and emailed the Cathedral parish Rector who lived in my Latin parish prior to moving to the Cathedral and asked him to help me get a correct copy. The next day there was one ready for me to pick up.
The Church imagines she’s the world’s best record keeper. Sadly, I’ve had plenty of experience in the Latin Church with not great record keeping and I’ve had Orthodox tell me likewise for Orthodox parishes.
On the other hand, the Episcopal Church where I was Baptized had burned down but they had redundancy even back in the 1950s and so had a record of my baptism from that second set of records that survived the fire.
So word to the wise, if you ask for a record be sure to do a proof read of it.