Information for "Bulgaria Getting Started"

Basic information

Display titleBulgaria Getting Started
Default sort keyBulgaria Getting Started
Page length (in bytes)4,932
Page ID26510
Page content languageen - English
Page content modelwikitext
Indexing by robotsAllowed
Number of redirects to this page4
Counted as a content pageYes
Page imageFlag of Bulgaria.png

Page protection

EditAllow only administrators (infinite)
MoveAllow only administrators (infinite)
View the protection log for this page.

Edit history

Page creatorPysnaks (talk | contribs)
Date of page creation10:42, 17 April 2009
Latest editorTegnosis (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit12:00, 18 March 2024
Total number of edits23
Total number of distinct authors6
Recent number of edits (within past 90 days)0
Recent number of distinct authors0

Page properties

Magic word (1)
  • __NOTOC__
Hidden category (1)

This page is a member of a hidden category:

Transcluded templates (4)

Templates used on this page:

SEO properties

Description

Content

Article description: (description)
This attribute controls the content of the description and og:description elements.
Church records are primarily from the Bulgarian Orthodox and Roman Catholic religions, dating back usually to 1850 but some Catholic books back to at least 1797. A few parish registers have been gathered into state archives or the national museum but most are located in the churches. Civil registration was instituted in 1893. The records are located at the district archives in each of the twenty eight districts of Bulgaria. In 1920, family registers were used for vital information. The FamilySearch Library has microfilms of civil registration for the districts of Sofia and Plovdiv and these records usually cover 1893-1912 time period. The first national census was conducted in 1880 just after liberation from Ottoman rule. The name lists for all 19th century censuses have not been preserved. Ottoman census records for the period 1831-1872 were enumerations of males compiled not as population counts but for fiscal and military purposes. Administratively, Bulgaria is divided into twenty eight districts. Each has an archive where civil registration and some church records are preserved. Contact information can be found on the Bulgarian Archives website. Most church records are still located at the churches and may also be in monasteries. To identify the jurisdictions and localities in Bulgaria refer to: Michev, N. and P. Koledarov. Rechnik na selishchata i selishchnite imena v Bulgariia, 1878-1987 (Dictionary of villages and village names in Bulgaria, 1878-1987), Sofia: Nauka i izkustvo, 1989 (FS Library book 949.77 E5m). Bulgarian is a southern Slavic tongue and is written in the Cyrillic script. Records were kept in Bulgarian, Turkish, Greek, and Old Church Slavonic. A good genealogy site is BulgariaGenWeb Project. Determine the religion of an ancestor. Until the 1900s, vital records were kept by church parishes or Jewish congregations. The records of different religions were kept separately. If you are not sure of your ancestor's religion, start by searching Orthodox or Roman-Catholic records. Not every village in Bulgaria had its own parish. Often, several smaller villages belonged to one parish. Use gazetteer to determine the proper record keeping jurisdiction.
Information from Extension:WikiSEO