German Genealogical Research in Eastern Europe: Difference between revisions

Adding more about research strategies
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The first step in researching is to determine specifically where the ancestor lived. Gazetteers can provide information about correct spelling of towns, what country or district the town was in, and the location of the parish, synagogue, or civil registration office responsible for record keeping ("Finding Former German Localities" below).
The first step in researching is to determine specifically where the ancestor lived. Gazetteers can provide information about correct spelling of towns, what country or district the town was in, and the location of the parish, synagogue, or civil registration office responsible for record keeping ("Finding Former German Localities" below).


The most significant sources of genealogical research in Russia and Poland are birth, marriage, and death records. Imperial Russia entrusted the keeping of such records to the churches, which recorded christenings, births, deaths, and burials. In Russia the Orthodox church was required to keep records by imperial decree in 1722; Roman Catholics were required in 1826, Muslims in 1828, Lutherans and other Protestants in 1832, and Jews in 1835. The decree required that a copy of the record be kept locally and a copy (transcript) be sent to the consistory office (called civil transcripts). Most of the German colonies had already been keeping records before the decree. However, these registers and transcripts were not always consistently maintained. Austria required civil transcripts of vital records starting in 1784. Catholics were responsible for recording people of other faiths until the 1820s.
The most significant sources of genealogical research in Russia and Poland are birth, marriage, and death records. Imperial Russia entrusted the keeping of such records to the churches, which recorded christenings, births, deaths, and burials. In Russia the Orthodox church was required to keep records by imperial decree in 1722; Roman Catholics were required in 1826, Muslims in 1828, Lutherans and other Protestants in 1832, and Jews in 1835. The decree required that a copy of the record be kept locally and a copy (transcript) be sent to the consistory office (called civil transcripts). Most of the German colonies had already been keeping records before the decree. However, these registers and transcripts were not always consistently maintained. Austria required civil transcripts of vital records starting in 1784. Catholics were responsible for recording people of other faiths until the 1820s. Some helpful books include:
 
Helpful books:
*Keller, Conrad. ''The German Colonies in South Russia, 1804-1904''. A. Becker, trans. Saskatoon, Canada: Western Producer, 1968-1973. (FHL call no. [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/203481 947.7 F2k]
*Keller, Conrad. ''The German Colonies in South Russia, 1804-1904''. A. Becker, trans. Saskatoon, Canada: Western Producer, 1968-1973. (FHL call no. [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/203481 947.7 F2k]
*Brendle, Johannes. ''Aus deutschen Kolonien in Kutschurganer Gebier'' [From the German Colonies in the Kuchurgan district] Stuttgart: Ausland und Heimat Verlags-Aktiengesellschaft, 1930.
*Brendle, Johannes. ''Aus deutschen Kolonien in Kutschurganer Gebier'' [From the German Colonies in the Kuchurgan district] Stuttgart: Ausland und Heimat Verlags-Aktiengesellschaft, 1930.
*Unruh, Benjamin Heinrich. ''Die niederlandisch-Niederdeutschen Hintergrunde der Mennonitischen Oswanderungen im 16, 17, und 19. Jahrhunder'' [The Netherlands-Low German background of the Mennonite Migration to the East in the 16th, 18th, and 19th centuries]. Karlsruhe: Self-published, 1955.
*Unruh, Benjamin Heinrich. ''Die niederlandisch-Niederdeutschen Hintergrunde der Mennonitischen Oswanderungen im 16, 17, und 19. Jahrhunder'' [The Netherlands-Low German background of the Mennonite Migration to the East in the 16th, 18th, and 19th centuries]. Karlsruhe: Self-published, 1955.


North Dakota received many immigrant German-Russians from the Kherson provinces of Russia. Their pattern of settlement in the United States is directly related to their pattern of settlement in Russia. Catholic families from the Beresan region and many from Crimea settled in Stark County, North Dakota. Catholic families from the Katschurgan and Leigenthal regions settled Emmons, Logan, and McIntosh counties. In many cases, the original Catholic immigrants recorded their heritage in the records of the new Catholic parish in North Dakota. When researching the genealogy of German-Russian Catholic families in North Dakota, it is important to determine where they originally settled in North Dakota. The records of the Catholic parish in that place will then help in tracing your ancestry back to Russia. Priests are usually happy to help those who wish to research the records in person and may help by correspondence. For those whose ancestors settled in Stark County, considerable research has already been done. See:
Genealogical research in the German colonies in Russia has been greatly facilitated by the system of village coordinators. These are individuals who coordinate the gathering of information and compiling databases about the inhabitants of specific villages. You are encouraged to share your family information with the village coordinator for the village your ancestors came from. You may also benefit from information already submitted by others. To learn more, see [[Germans from Russia Archives and Libraries#Village Coordinators|Village Coordinators]].
*Aberle, George P. Monsignor. ''Pioneers and their Sons''. Bismark, N.D.: Tumbleweed Press, 1980. (FHL call no. [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/359400 978.4 D3a] (digital copy online)
 
Some German emigrants from Russia and Poland brought their records with them when they emigrated. For more information, see [[Germans from Russia Emigration and Immigration#Other_Records|Other Records]].<ref>Schlyter, Daniel M. "German Genealogical Research in Polish and Russian Areas". 1999. Copy in possession of Family History Department of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.</ref>
 
=== How to Access the Records ===
==== Online Records ====
Some church and civil registration records are available at the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search Family History Library]. The FHL has microfilm copies of church records and their civil transcripts from German communities in all areas of Poland. Records have also been acquired from areas in former Galicia, Austria, and what is now Poland and Ukraine. Privacy restrictions have prevented the microfilming of records more recent than the late 1800s. Most of the church records in the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search FamilySearch Catalog] have been digitized and are available on the website. The records can be found by searching for:
POLAND, [PROVINCE], [TOWN]. The records will be under the "Church records" heading. Some civil registration records from the Prussia area, beginning in 1874, are available on the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search FamilySearch Catalog], but they usually go no later than 1880. The records can be found by searching for POLAND, [PROVINCE], [TOWN]. The records will be under the "Civil registration" heading. The FHL has also acquired many church records from archives in Russia (including St. Petersburg) and Ukraine. Additionally, there are a few records from Bessarabia and Volhynia in the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search FamilySearch Catalog]. Most have been digitized and are available online. If the records needed have no been microfilmed yet, information can still be obtained through writing to, visiting, or hiring a researcher to visit the record repositories in Poland and Russia.
 
==== Original Records ====


==== How to Access the Records ====
The original civil registration records and civil transcripts of church records are stored at local civil registration offices. They are stored at these offices [called ''urzady stanu cywilnego''] for 100 years and then turned over to the Polish State Archives. In some cases, church records are also kept at these offices. This is especially true with Protestant records when the local Protestant church is no longer functioning. Many of the records at the State Archives have been microfilmed and are available at the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search Family History Library]. Because of privacy laws, nothing less than 100 years old was microfilmed, meaning most of the microfilmed records end in the 1860s and 1870s. It is possible to write in English to the Polish State Archives for information regarding the records which have not yet been microfilmed. They will forward your request for information to the local civil registration office if they determine that the records you need are there. The address:<br>
The original civil registration records and civil transcripts of church records are stored at local civil registration offices. They are stored at these offices [called ''urzady stanu cywilnego''] for 100 years and then turned over to the Polish State Archives. In some cases, church records are also kept at these offices. This is especially true with Protestant records when the local Protestant church is no longer functioning. Many of the records at the State Archives have been microfilmed and are available at the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search Family History Library]. Because of privacy laws, nothing less than 100 years old was microfilmed, meaning most of the microfilmed records end in the 1860s and 1870s. It is possible to write in English to the Polish State Archives for information regarding the records which have not yet been microfilmed. They will forward your request for information to the local civil registration office if they determine that the records you need are there. The address:<br>
::Naczelna Dyrekcja
::Naczelna Dyrekcja
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::Poland<br>
::Poland<br>


The original church records are mainly kept in local parish offices or in church archives. For Roman Catholic records, most records less than 100 years old are usually kept at the local parish. Older records are usually kept at the diocese. However, while some dioceses have gathered all pre-1900 church records, some have only gathered all pre-1800 records. Some of the records kept at the diocese have been microfilmed and are available at the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search Family History Library]. Additionally, records from one parish may have been consolidated with another one.Original Catholic parish registers can often be accessed by writing directly to the priest of the local Catholic parish. These letters should be in their native language. For Protestant records, parish registers can be found in multiple places because most Protestant churches no longer function. These records may be located: at a local civil registration office, in a state archive, at an existing Protestant parish, in a privately maintained Protestant church archive, carried away and deposited in an archive in Germany, misplaced and forgotten in some obscure storage place, or destroyed.
The original church records are mainly kept in local parish offices or in church archives. For Roman Catholic records, most records less than 100 years old are usually kept at the local parish. Older records are usually kept at the diocese. However, while some dioceses have gathered all pre-1900 church records, some have only gathered all pre-1800 records. Some of the records kept at the diocese have been microfilmed and are available at the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search Family History Library]. Additionally, records from one parish may have been consolidated with another one.Original Catholic parish registers can often be accessed by writing directly to the priest of the local Catholic parish. These letters should be in their native language. For Protestant records, parish registers can be found in multiple places because most Protestant churches no longer function. These records may be located: at a local civil registration office, in a state archive, at an existing Protestant parish, in a privately maintained Protestant church archive, carried away and deposited in an archive in Germany, misplaced and forgotten in some obscure storage place, or destroyed.<ref>Schlyter, Daniel M. "German Genealogical Research in Polish and Russian Areas". 1999. Copy in possession of Family History Department of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.</ref>
 
Some German emigrants from Russia and Poland brought their records with them when they emigrated. For example, vital records for Mennonite colonies can sometimes be found in collections in the United States and Canada. If you are looking for Mennonite records, check the Mennonite congregation in North America where the family first settled.
 
Some church and civil registration records are available at the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search Family History Library]. The FHL has microfilm copies of church records and their civil transcripts from German communities in all areas of Poland. Records have also been acquired from areas in former Galicia, Austria, and what is now Poland and Ukraine. Privacy restrictions have prevented the microfilming of records more recent than the late 1800s. Most of the church records in the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search FamilySearch Catalog] have been digitized and are available on the website. The records can be found by searching for:
POLAND, [PROVINCE], [TOWN]. The records will be under the "Church records" heading. Some civil registration records from the Prussia area, beginning in 1874, are available on the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search FamilySearch Catalog], but they usually go no later than 1880. The records can be found by searching for POLAND, [PROVINCE], [TOWN]. The records will be under the "Civil registration" heading. The FHL has also acquired many church records from archives in Russia (including St. Petersburg) and Ukraine. Additionally, there are a few records from Bessarabia and Volhynia in the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/search FamilySearch Catalog]. Most have been digitized and are available online. If the records needed have no been microfilmed yet, information can still be obtained through writing to, visiting, or hiring a researcher to visit the record repositories in Poland and Russia.


=== Finding Former German Localities ===
=== Finding Former German Localities ===
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For more information about what these references include, see Raymond S. Wright III's article "Finding Former German Localities Now in Poland" (''FEEFHS Quarterly'' VI no. 1-4 (1998): 3-7).<ref>Wright, Raymond S. III. "Finding Former German Localities Now in Poland." ''FEEFHS Quarterly'' VI no. 1-4 (1998): 3-7.</ref>
For more information about what these references include, see Raymond S. Wright III's article "Finding Former German Localities Now in Poland" (''FEEFHS Quarterly'' VI no. 1-4 (1998): 3-7).<ref>Wright, Raymond S. III. "Finding Former German Localities Now in Poland." ''FEEFHS Quarterly'' VI no. 1-4 (1998): 3-7.</ref>
=== Tracing Back to Germany ===
See [[Germans from Russia Emigration and Immigration#Tracing Families Back to Germany|Tracing Families Back to Germany]].


== Languages ==
== Languages ==
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