C genealogical glossary terms: Difference between revisions

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'''C'''  
'''C'''  


C  
===== C =====


    Roman numeral for "one-hundred."
*Roman numeral for "one-hundred."


circa, Swedish ((ca.) (Latin))  
===== circa, Swedish ((ca.) (Latin)) =====


    Swedish word for "about, approximately."
*Swedish word for "about, approximately."


<br> contrajó matrimonio con (c.m.c.)  
===== contrajó matrimonio con (c.m.c.) =====


    Spanish word for "contracted marriage with."
*Spanish word for "contracted marriage with."


circa, German (ca.)  
===== circa, German (ca.) =====


    German word for "about."
*German word for "about."


caballero  
===== caballero =====


    Spanish word for "nobleman, knight, gentleman."
*Spanish word for "nobleman, knight, gentleman."


cabaretier  
===== cabaretier =====


    French word for "barkeeper."
*French word for "barkeeper."


cabeza  
===== cabeza =====


    Spanish word for "head."
*Spanish word for "head."


cabeça  
===== cabeça =====


    Portuguese word for "head."
*Portuguese word for "head."


cabildo  
===== cabildo =====


    Spanish word for "town council."
*Spanish word for "town council."


===== Cabinda, Brazil  =====
===== Cabinda, Brazil  =====
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*A term used in Brazilian Catholic Church registers to describe a person whose ancestry is a mix of African and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*A term used in Brazilian Catholic Church registers to describe a person whose ancestry is a mix of African and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.


cacciatore  
===== cacciatore =====


    Italian word for "hunter."
*Italian word for "hunter."


Cadastral map  
===== Cadastral map =====


*A map that shows the people who own land in an area. Also called land ownership map.
*Map that shows the people who own land in an area. Also called land ownership map.


cadastro  
===== cadastro =====


    Portuguese word for "land census."
*Portuguese word for "land census."


cadaver  
===== cadaver =====


    Latin word for "dead body, cadaver."
*Latin word for "dead body, cadaver."


cadeia  
===== cadeia =====


    Portuguese word for "jail."
*Portuguese word for "jail."


Cadency  
===== Cadency =====


*A mark on a coat of arms showing a younger son's birth order.
*A mark on a coat of arms showing a younger son's birth order.


caduto  
===== caduto =====


    Italian word for "fallen."
*Italian word for "fallen."


caelebs  
===== caelebs =====


    Latin word for "bachelor, single man."
*Latin word for "bachelor, single man."


caelum  
===== caelum =====


    Latin word for "heaven, sky."
*Latin word for "heaven, sky."


caementarius  
===== caementarius =====


    Latin word for "stonemason."
*Latin word for "stonemason."


cafezal  
===== cafezal =====


    Portuguese word for "coffee plantation."
*Portuguese word for "coffee plantation."


cafone  
===== cafone =====


    Italian word for "peasant."
*Italian word for "peasant."


café  
===== café =====


    Portuguese word for "coffee."
*Portuguese word for "coffee."


===== Cafuzo, Brazil  =====
===== Cafuzo, Brazil  =====
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*A descendant of French settlers who came from the Acadia region of Canada, or present-day New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, to the United States. They settled in Louisiana in the swamps and slow-moving streams called bayous. They still maintain a unique cultural identity and speak both English and a dialect of French. Most are Roman Catholic.
*A descendant of French settlers who came from the Acadia region of Canada, or present-day New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, to the United States. They settled in Louisiana in the swamps and slow-moving streams called bayous. They still maintain a unique cultural identity and speak both English and a dialect of French. Most are Roman Catholic.


calcearius  
===== calcearius =====


    Latin word for "shoemaker."
*Latin word for "shoemaker."


calciator  
===== calciator =====


    Latin word for "shoemaker."
*Latin word for "shoemaker."
 
<br>
 
<br>


===== Calculated date  =====
===== Calculated date  =====
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*An event date that is derived from the date of another event in a person's life. For example, if the United States 1860 census lists a person as being 20 years old, a calculated birth date would be 1839 or 1840.
*An event date that is derived from the date of another event in a person's life. For example, if the United States 1860 census lists a person as being 20 years old, a calculated birth date would be 1839 or 1840.


calderaio  
===== calderaio =====


    Italian word for "tinker."
*Italian word for "tinker."


caledonia  
===== caledonia =====


    Latin word for "Scotland."
*Latin word for "Scotland."


Frank T. Calef collection (Calef collection)  
===== Frank T. Calef collection (Calef collection) =====


    A manuscript collection of genealogical information about people who are descended from Puritans or Mayflower passengers.
*A manuscript collection of genealogical information about people who are descended from Puritans or Mayflower passengers.
 
<br>


===== Calendar  =====
===== Calendar  =====
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*An probate index that is arranged by first letter of the surname only and then by probate date. I may give the place of residence of a testator.
*An probate index that is arranged by first letter of the surname only and then by probate date. I may give the place of residence of a testator.


California Gold Rush  
===== California Gold Rush =====
 
    The movement of large numbers of people to the gold fields in California, especially in 1849.


caligator
*The movement of large numbers of people to the gold fields in California, especially in 1849.


    Latin word for "shoemaker."
===== caligator  =====


<br>
*Latin word for "shoemaker."


===== Call number  =====
===== Call number  =====
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*The number used to identify a book, microfilm, microfiche, or other source in a library or archive. Library materials are stored and retrieved by call number.
*The number used to identify a book, microfilm, microfiche, or other source in a library or archive. Library materials are stored and retrieved by call number.


calle  
===== calle =====


    Spanish word for "street."
*Spanish word for "street."


===== Calpamulato  =====
===== Calpamulato  =====
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*A religion that began to spread throughout Wales during the late 1730s. At first leaders advocated reforming the Church of England but not separating from it. Members would meet weekly for singing and preaching but attend their local parishes for communion. In 1811, however, the Methodists began ordaining their own ministers and keeping their own records. Their beliefs are based on the teachings of John Calvin. Today the religion is known as the Presbyterian Church of Wales.
*A religion that began to spread throughout Wales during the late 1730s. At first leaders advocated reforming the Church of England but not separating from it. Members would meet weekly for singing and preaching but attend their local parishes for communion. In 1811, however, the Methodists began ordaining their own ministers and keeping their own records. Their beliefs are based on the teachings of John Calvin. Today the religion is known as the Presbyterian Church of Wales.


caly  
===== caly =====


    Polish word for "entire."
*Polish word for "entire."


calzolaio  
===== calzolaio =====


    Italian word for "shoemaker."
*Italian word for "shoemaker."


cambria  
===== cambria =====


    Latin word for "Wales."
*Latin word for "Wales."


===== Cambujo  =====
===== Cambujo  =====
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*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian (1/2), African (1/4), and Spanish Caucasian (1/4). Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian (1/2), African (1/4), and Spanish Caucasian (1/4). Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.


cameranius  
===== cameranius =====


    Latin word for "chamberlain, valet, groom."
*Latin word for "chamberlain, valet, groom."


cameriera  
===== cameriera =====


    Italian word for "maid, servant girl."
*Italian word for "maid, servant girl."


cameriere  
===== cameriere =====


    Italian word for "waiter."
*Italian word for "waiter."


cameriere di casa  
===== cameriere di casa =====


    Italian word for "house steward."
*Italian word for "house steward."


camino  
===== camino =====


    Spanish word for "road."
*Spanish word for "road."


campagna  
===== campagna =====


    Italian word for "countryside, rural."
*Italian word for "countryside, rural."


campagnuolo, -a  
===== campagnuolo, -a =====


    Italian word for "countryman, countrywoman."
*Italian word for "countryman, countrywoman."


campesino (a)  
===== campesino (a) =====


    Spanish word for "peasant."
*Spanish word for "peasant."


campo, Portuguese  
===== campo, Portuguese =====


    Portuguese word for "field, plain."
*Portuguese word for "field, plain."


campo, Spanish  
===== campo, Spanish =====


    Spanish word for "field."
*Spanish word for "field."


camponês (a)  
===== camponês (a) =====


    Portuguese word for "peasant, small farmer."
*Portuguese word for "peasant, small farmer."


cana de açúcar  
===== cana de açúcar =====


    Portuguese word for "sugarcane.
*Portuguese word for "sugarcane.


===== Canada East  =====
===== Canada East  =====
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===== Canadian border crossing lists, Canada  =====
===== Canadian border crossing lists, Canada  =====


*Lists of passengers being transported from Canada into the United States. Canadian shipping companies began keeping these records in 1895. There are two type of manifests: lists of people traveling by train and lists of people traveling by boat. The manifests may include the person's name, port or station of entry, date of entry, age, literacy, last residence, previous visits to the United States, and birthplace. Sometimes officials only recorded the information on the index card rather than on the manifest. Beginning in 1908 the companies began keeping similar records of people arriving in Canada from the United States. These records are not indexed and are not available through the Family History Library™. Also called border crossing manifests, passenger lists, or manifests.
*Lists of passengers being transported from Canada into the United States. Canadian shipping companies began keeping these records in 1895. There are two type of manifests: lists of people traveling by train and lists of people traveling by boat. The manifests may include the person's name, port or station of entry, date of entry, age, literacy, last residence, previous visits to the United States, and birthplace. Sometimes officials only recorded the information on the index card rather than on the manifest. Beginning in 1908 the companies began keeping similar records of people arriving in Canada from the United States. These records are not indexed and are not available through the FamilySearch Library™. Also called border crossing manifests, passenger lists, or manifests.


===== Canadian border crossing lists, United States  =====
===== Canadian border crossing lists, United States  =====
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*A railroad that extended across Canada from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. It was completed in 1885 and allowed for more rapid settlement of Canada's interior lands.
*A railroad that extended across Canada from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. It was completed in 1885 and allowed for more rapid settlement of Canada's interior lands.


cancro  
===== cancro =====


    Italian word for "cancer."
*Italian word for "cancer."


cantante  
===== cantante =====


    Italian word for "singer."
*Italian word for "singer."


cantatrice  
===== cantatrice =====


    Italian word for "singer."
*Italian word for "singer."


===== Canton  =====
===== Canton  =====
Line 309: Line 301:
*The region along the Cape Fear River in North Carolina.
*The region along the Cape Fear River in North Carolina.


capela  
===== capela =====


    Portuguese word for "chapel."
*Portuguese word for "chapel."


capella  
===== capella =====


    Latin word for "chapel."
*Latin word for "chapel."


capellanus  
===== capellanus =====


    Latin word for "chaplain."
*Latin word for "chaplain."


===== Capellanías, military  =====
===== Capellanías, military  =====
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*A type of land grant in Latin America. These land grants covered lands that individuals and families ceded to the Catholic Church. Related documents include wills, court records, land titles, and contracts. Information about the individuals and families involved may also be included.
*A type of land grant in Latin America. These land grants covered lands that individuals and families ceded to the Catholic Church. Related documents include wills, court records, land titles, and contracts. Information about the individuals and families involved may also be included.


capilla  
===== capilla =====


    Spanish word for "chapel."
*Spanish word for "chapel."


===== Capital case  =====
===== Capital case  =====
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*A type of criminal court case in which the defendant could receive the death penalty.
*A type of criminal court case in which the defendant could receive the death penalty.


Capital, USA  
===== Capital, USA =====


    A city where the main offices of a government are located.
*A city where the main offices of a government are located.


capitis  
===== capitis =====


    Latin word for "head, chief."
*Latin word for "head, chief."<br>


capofamiglia  
===== capofamiglia =====


    Italian word for "family head."
*Italian word for "family head."<br>


capostipite  
===== capostipite =====


    Italian word for "family founder, earliest ancestor."
*Italian word for "family founder, earliest ancestor."<br>


cappellaio  
===== cappellaio =====


    Italian word for "hatter."
*Italian word for "hatter."<br>


capt et jurat  
===== capt et jurat =====


    Latin word for "taken and sworn."
*Latin word for "taken and sworn."<br>


===== Captain  =====
===== Captain  =====
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*An army, marine, or air force officer who commands a military company; also a naval officer who commands a warship.
*An army, marine, or air force officer who commands a military company; also a naval officer who commands a warship.


Captain  
===== Captain =====


    An army, marine, or air force officer who commands a military company; also a naval officer who commands a warship.
*An army, marine, or air force officer who commands a military company; also a naval officer who commands a warship.<br>


caput  
===== caput =====


    Latin word for "head, chief."
*Latin word for "head, chief."<br>


cara  
===== cara =====


    Portuguese and Spanish word for "face."
*Portuguese and Spanish word for "face."<br>


carabiniere  
===== carabiniere =====


    Italian word for "policeman."
*Italian word for "policeman."<br>


carbonaio  
===== carbonaio =====


    Italian word for "coal dealer."
*Italian word for "coal dealer."<br>


carbonarius  
===== carbonarius =====


    Latin word for "collier, coal miner."
**Latin word for "collier, coal miner."<br>


===== Card index  =====
===== Card index  =====
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*A printed form used to record membership information of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1941 to the present. Most wards now use an electronic version of the form. Before the electronic version was used, the forms were separate and were bound in books. When a member moves from a ward, the membership record is returned to Church headquarters and sent to the member’s new ward or branch.
*A printed form used to record membership information of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1941 to the present. Most wards now use an electronic version of the form. Before the electronic version was used, the forms were separate and were bound in books. When a member moves from a ward, the membership record is returned to Church headquarters and sent to the member’s new ward or branch.


carecarius  
===== carecarius =====


    Latin word for "carter."
*Latin word for "carter."<br>


===== Carey Act of 1894  =====
===== Carey Act of 1894  =====
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*A federal law that provided for the reclamation and homesteading of desert land in public land states. It established new settlements in northern Wyoming.
*A federal law that provided for the reclamation and homesteading of desert land in public land states. It established new settlements in northern Wyoming.


Cariboo Gold Rush  
===== Cariboo Gold Rush =====


    A gold mining boom in the Cariboo Mountains of south central British Columbia that lasted from 1860 to 1863.
*A gold mining boom in the Cariboo Mountains of south central British Columbia that lasted from 1860 to 1863.<br>


carnarius  
===== carnarius =====


    Latin word for "butcher."
*Latin word for "butcher."<br>


carnicero  
===== carnicero =====


    Spanish word for "butcher."
*Spanish word for "butcher."<br>


carpentarius  
===== carpentarius =====


    Latin word for "carpenter."
*Latin word for "carpenter."<br>


===== Carpenter  =====
===== Carpenter  =====
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*A person who works with wood; also the officer in the British navy who examined the wooden parts of a ship.
*A person who works with wood; also the officer in the British navy who examined the wooden parts of a ship.


carpinteiro  
===== carpinteiro =====


    Portuguese word for "carpenter."
*Portuguese word for "carpenter."<br>


carpintero  
===== carpintero =====


    Spanish word for "carpenter."
*Spanish word for "carpenter."<br>


carraio  
===== carraio =====


    Italian word for "wheelwright."
*Italian word for "wheelwright."<br>


carretera  
===== carretera =====


    Spanish word for "road."
*Spanish word for "road."<br>


carta  
===== carta =====


    Latin word for "deed, charter, map."
*Latin word for "deed, charter, map."<br>


===== Cartas de dote  =====
===== Cartas de dote  =====
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*The Spanish term for dowry records.
*The Spanish term for dowry records.


carte, French  
===== carte, French =====


    French word for "map."
*French word for "map."<br>


carte, Italian  
===== carte, Italian =====


    Italian word for "maps, charts."
*Italian word for "maps, charts."<br>


cartório  
===== cartório =====


    Portuguese word for "archive."
*Portuguese word for "archive."<br>


casa  
===== casa =====


    Italian, Portuguese and Spanish word for "house."
*Italian, Portuguese and Spanish word for "house."<br>


casado (a)  
===== casado (a) =====


    Portuguese and Spanish word for "married."
*Portuguese and Spanish word for "married."<br>


casado con (c.c.)  
===== casado con (c.c.) =====


    Spanish word for "married to."
*Spanish word for "married to."<br>


casale  
===== casale =====


    Latin word for "estate, village."
*Latin word for "estate, village."<br>


casamento  
===== casamento =====


    Portuguese word for "marriage."
*Portuguese word for "marriage."<br>


===== Casamentos  =====
===== Casamentos  =====
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*An identification number assigned to a case file.
*An identification number assigned to a case file.


casar, casarse  
===== casar, casarse =====


    Spanish word for "to marry."
*Spanish word for "to marry."<br>


casar-se  
===== casar-se =====


    Portuguese word for "to marry."
*Portuguese word for "to marry."<br>


casaro  
===== casaro =====


    Italian word for "dairy farmer."
*Italian word for "dairy farmer."<br>


casatus  
===== casatus =====


    Latin word for "cottager."
*Latin word for "cottager."<br>


Case file number  
===== Case file number =====


    An identification number assigned to a case file.
*An identification number assigned to a case file.<br>


===== Case file, court records  =====
===== Case file, court records  =====
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*The collection of records relating to a person's purchase of federal land.
*The collection of records relating to a person's purchase of federal land.


cassa  
===== cassa =====


    Italian word for "chest, cash, cashier."
*Italian word for "chest, cash, cashier."<br>


cassetta  
===== cassetta =====


    Italian word for "chest."
*Italian word for "chest."<br>


casta  
===== casta =====


    Spanish word for "caste, racial lineage."
*Spanish word for "caste, racial lineage."<br>


castaldo  
===== castaldo =====


    Italian word for "land agent."
*Italian word for "land agent."<br>


castello  
===== castello =====


    Italian word for "castle."
*Italian word for "castle."<br>


castelo  
===== castelo =====


    Portuguese word for "castle."
*Portuguese word for "castle."<br>


castillo  
===== castillo =====


    Spanish word for "castle."
*Spanish word for "castle."<br>


===== Castizo, Puerto Rico  =====
===== Castizo, Puerto Rico  =====
Line 569: Line 561:
*A description of items available in a library's or archive's collection. A catalog usually gives you the call number or other information needed to find the item within the collection.
*A description of items available in a library's or archive's collection. A catalog usually gives you the call number or other information needed to find the item within the collection.


cataster  
===== cataster =====
 
*Latin word for "land, property record."<br>
 
===== catasto  =====


    Latin word for "land, property record."
*Italian word for "land register."<br>


catasto
===== catastro  =====


    Italian word for "land register."
*Spanish word for "land census."<br>


catastro
===== catedral  =====


    Spanish word for "land census."
*Portuguese and Spanish word for "cathedral."<br>


catedral
===== Catholic diocese, Ireland  =====


    Portuguese and Spanish word for "cathedral."
*An ecclesiastical division headed by a bishop, made up of many parishes within the Bishop's jurisdiction, which parishes may be in more than one county. Both the Church of Ireland and the Catholic Church had dioceses, but neither the name of the diocese nor its boundaries are the same between the two churches.


===== Catholic mission  =====
===== Catholic mission  =====


*A settlement established by Catholic priests to convert the Native Americans to Catholicism and to maintain the authority of the country from which the priests came. Missions provided the Native Americans with food, clothing, education in a trade, and sometimes housing. In return, the Native Americans worked, took instruction in the Catholic Church, and agreed to live by the customs of the priests' country. Spanish missions were established in Georgia, Florida, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California. French missions were established in the Great Lakes area.
*A settlement established by Catholic priests to convert the Native Americans to Catholicism and to maintain the authority of the country from which the priests came. Missions provided the Native Americans with food, clothing, education in a trade, and sometimes housing. In return, the Native Americans worked, took instruction in the Catholic Church, and agreed to live by the customs of the priests' country. Spanish missions were established in Georgia, Florida, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California. French missions were established in the Great Lakes area.
===== Catholic parish, Ireland  =====
*A parish of the Catholic Church, whose name, boundaries, members, diocese, and records are different than that of the [[C_genealogical_glossary_terms#Civil_parish.2C_Ireland|civil parish]]. The Catholic parish has no civil jurisdiction.


===== Catholic Records in Montréal, Canada  =====
===== Catholic Records in Montréal, Canada  =====
Line 597: Line 597:
*A series of laws passed to restore to Roman Catholics in Ireland the rights that had been taken away in the Penal Laws passed between 1695 and 1728.
*A series of laws passed to restore to Roman Catholics in Ireland the rights that had been taken away in the Penal Laws passed between 1695 and 1728.


catholicus  
===== catholicus =====
 
    Latin word for "Catholic."


catholique romaine
*Latin word for "Catholic."<br>


    French word for "Roman Catholic."
===== catholique romaine  =====


catorce
*French word for "Roman Catholic."<br>


    Spanish word for "fourteen."
===== catorce  =====


catorze
*Spanish word for "fourteen."<br>


    Portuguese word for "fourteen."
===== catorze  =====


cattolico, -a
*Portuguese word for "fourteen."<br>


    Italian word for "Roman Catholic."
===== cattolico, -a  =====


católico (a)
*Italian word for "Roman Catholic."<br>


    Portuguese and Spanish word for "Catholic."
===== católico (a)  =====


caupo (cauponis)
*Portuguese and Spanish word for "Catholic."<br>


    Latin word for "innkeeper."
===== caupo (cauponis)  =====


causa
*Latin word for "innkeeper."<br>


    Latin word for "cause, sake, because of." Ex causa means "on account of, for the sake of."
===== causa =====


cavalheiro
*Latin word for "cause, sake, because of." Ex causa means "on account of, for the sake of."<br>


    Portuguese word for "gentleman, knight, nobleman."
===== cavalheiro  =====


cavaliere
*Portuguese word for "gentleman, knight, nobleman."<br>


    Italian word for "knight."
===== cavaliere  =====


<br>  
*Italian word for "knight."<br>  


===== Caveat  =====
===== Caveat  =====


*A warning notice issued by an interested person to a probate court that no action is to be taken in granting a probate without his case being heard.
*A warning notice issued by an interested person to a probate court that no action is to be taken in granting a probate without his case being heard.  


<br> cazador  
===== cazador =====


    Spanish word for "hunter."
*Spanish word for "hunter."<br>


caçador  
===== caçador =====


    Portuguese word for "hunter."
*Portuguese word for "hunter."<br>


caña de azúcar  
===== caña de azúcar =====


    Spanish word for "sugar cane."
*Spanish word for "sugar cane."<br>


CC  
===== CC =====


    Roman numeral for "two-hundred."
*Roman numeral for "two-hundred."<br>


CCC  
===== CCC =====


    Roman numeral for "three-hundred."
*Roman numeral for "three-hundred."<br>


CD  
===== CD =====


    Roman numeral for "four-hundred."
*Roman numeral for "four-hundred."<br>


ce  
===== ce =====


    Italian word for "us."
*Italian word for "us."<br>


ce, c'  
===== ce, c' =====


    French word for "it."
*French word for "it."<br>


ce, cet, cette  
===== ce, cet, cette =====


    French word for "this, that."
*French word for "this, that."<br>


cech  
===== cech =====


    Czech word for "guild."
*Czech word for "guild."<br>


Ceded  
===== Ceded =====


    Transfer, give up control. When Spain ceded Florida to the United States, it gave up control of the area.
*Transfer, give up control. When Spain ceded Florida to the United States, it gave up control of the area.<br>


cedo  
===== cedo =====


    Portuguese word for "early."
*Portuguese word for "early."<br>


Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF)  
===== Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) =====
 
    The Canadian army that served in World War I.


ceglarz
*The Canadian army that served in World War I.<br>


    Polish word for "brick maker."
===== ceglarz  =====


cego (a)
  Polish word for "brick maker."<br>


    Portuguese word for "blind."
===== cego (a)  =====


cejourd'hier
  Portuguese word for "blind."<br>


    French word for "yesterday."
===== cejourd'hier  =====


cejourd'hui
  French word for "yesterday."<br>


    French word for "today."
===== cejourd'hui  =====


celator
  French word for "today."<br>


    Latin word for "turner."
===== celator  =====


celebrare il matrimonio
  Latin word for "turner."<br>


    Italian word for "solemnize a marriage."
===== celebrare il matrimonio  =====


celebraverunt
  Italian word for "solemnize a marriage."<br>


    Latin word for "they celebrated, were married."
===== celebraverunt  =====


celibe
  Latin word for "they celebrated, were married."<br>


    Italian word for "bachelor, bachelorette, single, unmarried."
===== celibe  =====


celle
  Italian word for "bachelor, bachelorette, single, unmarried."<br>


    French word for "this one, she."
===== celle  =====


celle-ci
  French word for "this one, she."<br>


    French word for "the latter (f.)."
===== celle-ci  =====


celle-là
  French word for "the latter (f.)."<br>


    French word for "the former (f.)."
===== celle-là  =====


celui
  French word for "the former (f.)."<br>


    French word for "this one, he."
===== celui  =====


celui-ci
  French word for "this one, he."<br>


    French word for "the latter (m.)."
===== celui-ci  =====


celui-là
  French word for "the latter (m.)."<br>


    French word for "the former (m.)."
===== celui-là  =====


celý
  French word for "the former (m.)."<br>


    Czech word for "entire."
===== celý  =====


cem
  Czech word for "entire."<br>


    Portuguese word for "one hundred."
===== cem  =====


cementerio
  Portuguese word for "one hundred."<br>


    Spanish word for "cemetery."
===== cementerio  =====


<br>  
  Spanish word for "cemetery."<br>


===== Cementerios  =====
===== Cementerios  =====
Line 769: Line 765:
*A Spanish term for cemeteries and cemetery records. Also used in the Philippines.
*A Spanish term for cemeteries and cemetery records. Also used in the Philippines.


===== Cemeteries, Family History Library Catalog™  =====
===== Cemeteries, FamilySearch Catalog™  =====


*A subject heading used in the Family History Library Catalog to categorize cemetery records (records that contain information about where people are buried).
*A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize cemetery records (records that contain information about where people are buried).


===== Cemeteries, PERiodical Source Index  =====
===== Cemeteries, PERiodical Source Index  =====
Line 787: Line 783:
===== Cemetery Locator File, Indiana  =====
===== Cemetery Locator File, Indiana  =====


*An alphabetical list of cemeteries in Indiana. This file is at the Indiana State Library. The Family History Library™ has a microfilm copy.
*An alphabetical list of cemeteries in Indiana. This file is at the Indiana State Library. The FamilySearch Library™ has a microfilm copy.


cemitério  
===== cemitério =====


    Portuguese word for "cemetery."
  Portuguese word for "cemetery."<br>


censimento  
===== censimento =====


    Italian word for "census."
  Italian word for "census."<br>


===== Censo  =====
===== Censo  =====
Line 801: Line 797:
*The word used in Spanish and Portuguese for census. The Catholic Church and the government took censuses. Some censuses were taken of military men and their families in outlying areas.
*The word used in Spanish and Portuguese for census. The Catholic Church and the government took censuses. Some censuses were taken of military men and their families in outlying areas.


Census  
===== Census =====


    An official count and description of the people living in a country, colony, state, county, township, or city.
  An official count and description of the people living in a country, colony, state, county, township, or city.<br>


Census Birthplace Index, 1881 British Census  
===== Census Birthplace Index, 1881 British Census =====


    An index to the 1881 census that is arranged alphabetically by surname, then by place of birth, first name, and age in descending order.
  An index to the 1881 census that is arranged alphabetically by surname, then by place of birth, first name, and age in descending order.<br>


Census bundle number  
===== Census bundle number, England<br> =====


    A number assigned by the Public Record Office in England to each section of the census returns, 1841 to the present. Also called a piece number.
  A number assigned by the Public Record Office in England to each section of the census returns, 1841 to the present. Also called a piece number.<br>
 
<br>  


===== Census district  =====
===== Census district  =====
Line 821: Line 815:
*In Canada, census districts are voting districts, not counties. Though the census district may have the same name as a county, it may not include the same townships.
*In Canada, census districts are voting districts, not counties. Though the census district may have the same name as a county, it may not include the same townships.


Census district, British  
===== Census district, British =====


    A civil boundary created for collecting information about the population of an area. The boundary of a census district was determined by the government and was based on the population in the area. Each district was divided into subdistricts, and each subdistrict was divided into enumeration districts.
A civil boundary created for collecting information about the population of an area. The boundary of a census district was determined by the government and was based on the population in the area. Each district was divided into subdistricts, and each subdistrict was divided into enumeration districts.


Census district, Scotland  
===== Census district, Scotland =====


    A geographic boundary created for collecting information about the population of an area. In Scotland, this area is the same as the civil or ecclesiastical boundary.
A geographic boundary created for collecting information about the population of an area. In Scotland, this area is the same as the civil or ecclesiastical boundary.


Census division, Canada  
===== Census division, Canada =====


    In Canadian national censuses, the smallest area covered by the census. Canadian provinces are divided into census districts. Districts are divided into subdistricts. Only sometimes are the subdistricts divided into two or more divisions.
  In Canadian national censuses, the smallest area covered by the census. Canadian provinces are divided into census districts. Districts are divided into subdistricts. Only sometimes are the subdistricts divided into two or more divisions.<br>


<br> Census enumeration district, England  
===== Census enumeration district, England =====


    The geographic area assigned to one census taker, who was known as an enumerator. The size of the enumeration district depended on the number of people living in the area. The enumerator was responsible to collect information about every person in the district on a specific night.
  The geographic area assigned to one census taker, who was known as an enumerator. The size of the enumeration district depended on the number of people living in the area. The enumerator was responsible to collect information about every person in the district on a specific night. Several enumeration districts make up a section of the census known as a census piece or bundle.<br>
    Several enumeration districts make up a section of the census known as a census piece or bundle.


Census folio number  
===== Census folio number =====


    A census folio is a two-sided sheet of paper used for recording the census. The folio number is stamped in the top right corner of the front of the sheet. Folio numbers run consecutively through a section of the census known as a piece or bundle.
  A census folio is a two-sided sheet of paper used for recording the census. The folio number is stamped in the top right corner of the front of the sheet. Folio numbers run consecutively through a section of the census known as a piece or bundle.<br>


===== Census index  =====
===== Census index  =====
Line 850: Line 843:
*A special census taken in 1911 in Arkansas of all living veterans who served in the Confederate Army.
*A special census taken in 1911 in Arkansas of all living veterans who served in the Confederate Army.


Census page number  
===== Census page number =====


    A number printed on a page in an enumerator's book. The number appears in the top middle or a top corner of each page. Page numbers run consecutively through one enumeration district only.
  A number printed on a page in an enumerator's book. The number appears in the top middle or a top corner of each page. Page numbers run consecutively through one enumeration district only.<br>


Census piece number  
===== Census piece number =====


    A number assigned by the Public Record Office in England to each section of the census returns, 1841 to the present. Also called a bundle number.
  A number assigned by the Public Record Office in England to each section of the census returns, 1841 to the present. Also called a bundle number.<br>


===== Census Place Index, 1881 British Census  =====
===== Census Place Index, 1881 British Census  =====
Line 862: Line 855:
*An index to the 1881 British Census that is organized alphabetically by surname then alphabetically by the census place.
*An index to the 1881 British Census that is organized alphabetically by surname then alphabetically by the census place.


Census Record-As-Enumerated, 1881 British Census  
===== Census Record-As-Enumerated, 1881 British Census =====


    An index to the 1881 British census that is arranged in the same order as the original census, with individuals listed by the household in which they were enumerated. Use this index after using the Surname Index, Birthplace Index, or Census Place Index.
  An index to the 1881 British census that is arranged in the same order as the original census, with individuals listed by the household in which they were enumerated. Use this index after using the Surname Index, Birthplace Index, or Census Place Index.<br>


===== Census schedule  =====
===== Census schedule  =====
Line 870: Line 863:
*A type of list in a census. A census can have many types of schedules, such as a population or mortality schedule.
*A type of list in a census. A census can have many types of schedules, such as a population or mortality schedule.


===== Census, Family History Library Catalog™  =====
===== Census, FamilySearch Catalog™  =====


*A subject heading used in the Family History Library Catalog to categorize censuses (official counts and descriptions of the people living in a country, colony, state, county, township, or city).
*A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize censuses (official counts and descriptions of the people living in a country, colony, state, county, township, or city).


===== Census, general  =====
===== Census, general  =====
Line 884: Line 877:
Census street index  
Census street index  


    An alphabetical list of streets appearing in the census record of a geographic area. The index shows the name of the street and a set of reference numbers that are helpful in finding the street in a census record of most large cities.
  An alphabetical list of streets appearing in the census record of a geographic area. The index shows the name of the street and a set of reference numbers that are helpful in finding the street in a census record of most large cities.<br>


Census subdistrict, Canada  
===== Census subdistrict, Canada =====


    In Canadian national censuses, an area covered by the census. Canadian provinces are divided into census districts. Districts are divided into subdistricts. In some provinces, townships are census subdistricts. A political ward in a city may also be a census subdistrict. Only sometimes are the subdistricts further divided into two or more divisions.
  In Canadian national censuses, an area covered by the census. Canadian provinces are divided into census districts. Districts are divided into subdistricts. In some provinces, townships are census subdistricts. A political ward in a city may also be a census subdistrict. Only sometimes are the subdistricts further divided into two or more divisions.<br>


Census substitutes  
===== Census substitutes =====


    Records which can be used instead of a census. The substitutes are lists of people in an area, such as tax lists.
  Records which can be used instead of a census. The substitutes are lists of people in an area, such as tax lists.<br>


Census Surname Index, 1881 British Census  
===== Census Surname Index, 1881 British Census =====


    An index to the 1881 British census that is arranged alphabetically by surname, then by first name and age in descending order.
  An index to the 1881 British census that is arranged alphabetically by surname, then by first name and age in descending order.<br>


Census, PERiodical Source Index  
===== Census, PERiodical Source Index =====


    A record type used in the Locality and Research Methodologies sections of the PERiodical Source Index (PERSI) to identify articles that contain information about census records.
  A record type used in the Locality and Research Methodologies sections of the PERiodical Source Index (PERSI) to identify articles that contain information about census records.<br>


census, Latin and Czech  
===== Census, Latin and Czech =====


    Latin and Czech word for "census."
  Latin and Czech word for "census."<br>


cent  
===== cent =====


    French word for "hundred."
  French word for "hundred."<br>


centenario  
===== centenario =====


    Spanish word for "centennial."
  Spanish word for "centennial."<br>


centenarius  
===== centenarius =====


    Latin word for "a person one hundred years of age."
  Latin word for "a person one hundred years of age."<br>


centenário  
===== centenário =====


    Portuguese word for "centennial."
  Portuguese word for "centennial."<br>


centesimo, -a  
===== centesimo, -a =====


    Italian word for "hundredth."
  Italian word for "hundredth."<br>


centesimus  
===== centesimus =====


    Latin word for "hundredth."
  Latin word for "hundredth."<br>


centesimus primus  
===== centesimus primus =====


    Latin word for "one-hundred-first."
  Latin word for "one-hundred-first."<br>


centesimus quinquagesimus  
===== centesimus quinquagesimus =====


    Latin word for "one-hundred-fiftieth."
  Latin word for "one-hundred-fiftieth."<br>


centième  
===== centième =====


    French word for "hundredth."
  French word for "hundredth."<br>


cento  
===== cento =====


    Italian and Portuguese word for "one hundred."
  Italian and Portuguese word for "one hundred."<br>
 
<br>  


===== Central Bureau of Statistics, Sweden  =====
===== Central Bureau of Statistics, Sweden  =====
Line 960: Line 951:
*A grouping of Canadian provinces comprising Québec and Ontario.
*A grouping of Canadian provinces comprising Québec and Ontario.


<br> centum  
===== centum =====


    Latin word for "hundred."
  Latin word for "hundred."<br>


centum quinquaginta  
===== centum quinquaginta =====


    Latin word for "one-hundred-fifty."
  Latin word for "one-hundred-fifty."<br>


centum unus  
===== centum unus =====


    Latin word for "one-hundred-one."
  Latin word for "one-hundred-one."<br>


Century Farm Applications, Iowa  
===== Century Farm Applications, Iowa =====


    A collection of records gathered by the Iowa American Revolution Bicentennial Commission. These records contain information about farm owners in Iowa whose property had remained in the family for 100 years or longer.
  A collection of records gathered by the Iowa American Revolution Bicentennial Commission. These records contain information about farm owners in Iowa whose property had remained in the family for 100 years or longer.<br>


centésimo  
===== centésimo =====


    Portuguese and Spanish word for "one-hundredth."
  Portuguese and Spanish word for "one-hundredth."<br>


centésimo primero  
===== centésimo primero =====


    Spanish word for "one-hundred-first."
  Spanish word for "one-hundred-first."


<br>
===== cerca =====


===== Century Farm Applications, Iowa  =====
  Portuguese and Spanish word for "near, approximate."<br>
 
*A collection of records gathered by the Iowa American Revolution Bicentennial Commission. These records contain information about farm owners in Iowa whose property had remained in the family for 100 years or longer.
 
cerca
 
    Portuguese and Spanish word for "near, approximate."


cerdo (cerdonis)  
===== cerdo (cerdonis) =====


    Latin word for "handworker."
  Latin word for "handworker."<br>


cerrajero  
===== cerrajero =====


    Spanish word for "locksmith."
  Spanish word for "locksmith."<br>


certidão  
===== certidão =====


    Portuguese word for "certificate."
  Portuguese word for "certificate."<br>


certificado  
===== certificado =====


    Spanish word for "certificate."
  Spanish word for "certificate."<br>


===== Certificate of arrival  =====
===== Certificate of arrival  =====
Line 1,026: Line 1,011:
*A legal document given to immigrants after they have met all immigration requirements and have been sworn in as citizens of the United States. Also called a Certificate of Naturalization and Form 2207.
*A legal document given to immigrants after they have met all immigration requirements and have been sworn in as citizens of the United States. Also called a Certificate of Naturalization and Form 2207.


certificato  
===== certificato =====


    Italian word for "certificate."
  Italian word for "certificate."<br>


===== Certificats  =====
===== Certificats  =====
Line 1,034: Line 1,019:
*A French term for marriage certificate, a record that documents the date and place of a couple's marriage.
*A French term for marriage certificate, a record that documents the date and place of a couple's marriage.


certifichiamo  
;certifichiamo: Italian word for "we certify."


    Italian word for "we certify."
;cervecero: Spanish word for "brewer."


cervecero
;cervejeiro: Portuguese word for "brewer."


    Spanish word for "brewer."
;cesarski: Polish word for "imperial."


cervejeiro
;cesarstwo: Polish word for "empire."


    Portuguese word for "brewer."
;cesta: Czech word for "road."


cesarski
;cestovní pas: Czech word for "passport."


    Polish word for "imperial."
;ceux: French word for "those."


cesarstwo
;confronta (cfr.): Italian word for "compare."


    Polish word for "empire."
;chalupnik: Polish word for "cottager, poor peasant."


cesta
;chalupník: Czech word for "cottager, poor peasant."


    Czech word for "road."
===== Chamizo  =====


cestovní pas
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian, African, and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.


    Czech word for "passport."
===== Chancery case  =====


ceux
*A court case in which parties disputing over a matter that does not involve a violation of law ask a court to make a fair decision. Chancery cases commonly involve disputes over property rights or probate matters. Also called equity case.
 
    French word for "those."
 
confronta (cfr.)
 
    Italian word for "compare."
 
chalupnik
 
    Polish word for "cottager, poor peasant."
 
chalupník
 
    Czech word for "cottager, poor peasant."
 
===== Chamizo  =====
 
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian, African, and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
 
===== Chancery case  =====
 
*A court case in which parties disputing over a matter that does not involve a violation of law ask a court to make a fair decision. Chancery cases commonly involve disputes over property rights or probate matters. Also called equity case.


===== Chancery court, Arkansas  =====
===== Chancery court, Arkansas  =====
Line 1,130: Line 1,093:
*A clergyman in charge of a chapel; also a person who serves in the military as a clergyman. The chaplain is considered an officer.
*A clergyman in charge of a chapel; also a person who serves in the military as a clergyman. The chaplain is considered an officer.


charbonnier  
;charbonnier: French word for "charcoal burner."
 
    French word for "charcoal burner."
 
charcutier


    French word for "pork merchant."
;charcutier: French word for "pork merchant."


===== Charles Carroll Gardner's Collections, New Jersey  =====
===== Charles Carroll Gardner's Collections, New Jersey  =====
Line 1,150: Line 1,109:
*A collection of cemetery records from Connecticut. The collection has cemetery inscriptions from more than 2,000 cemeteries. It also includes notices of deaths and marriages listed in newspapers.
*A collection of cemetery records from Connecticut. The collection has cemetery inscriptions from more than 2,000 cemeteries. It also includes notices of deaths and marriages listed in newspapers.


charretier  
;charretier: French word for "cart or carriage man."
 
    French word for "cart or carriage man."


charron  
;charron: French word for "cartwright, wheelwright."


    French word for "cartwright, wheelwright."
;chartarius: Latin word for "paper miller."


chartarius
;chasseur: French word for "hunter."


    Latin word for "paper miller."
;chaudronnier: French word for "cooper, barrel maker."


chasseur
;chce: Polish and Czech word for "he wants."


    French word for "hunter."
;che: Italian word for "which, than, what, who, that, whom."
 
chaudronnier
 
    French word for "cooper, barrel maker."
 
chce
 
    Polish and Czech word for "he wants."
 
che  
 
    Italian word for "which, than, what, who, that, whom."


===== Cherokee  =====
===== Cherokee  =====
Line 1,198: Line 1,143:
*The French term for the highest ranking title in the French gentry (petite noblesse). A chevalier is equivalent to a British knight.
*The French term for the highest ranking title in the French gentry (petite noblesse). A chevalier is equivalent to a British knight.


Cheyenne Indians  
;Cheyenne Indians: A tribe of Native Americans that lived on the western plains in the United States.
 
    A tribe of Native Americans that lived on the western plains in the United States.


chez  
;chez: French word for "at the home of."


    French word for "at the home of."
;chi: Italian word for "who, whom."
 
chi  
 
    Italian word for "who, whom."


===== Chicago fire, USA  =====
===== Chicago fire, USA  =====
Line 1,218: Line 1,157:
*A city in Cook County, Illinois.
*A city in Cook County, Illinois.


Chicago Road  
;Chicago Road: The military highway that ran between Detroit and Fort Dearborn, now Chicago, after the 1820s. It was a major route for settlers moving to the Northwest.
 
    The military highway that ran between Detroit and Fort Dearborn, now Chicago, after the 1820s. It was a major route for settlers moving to the Northwest.


===== Chickasaw  =====
===== Chickasaw  =====
Line 1,226: Line 1,163:
*A tribe of Native Americans who originally lived in northern Mississippi, western Tennessee, and northwestern Alabama. In 1837 they moved to Indian Territory.
*A tribe of Native Americans who originally lived in northern Mississippi, western Tennessee, and northwestern Alabama. In 1837 they moved to Indian Territory.


chiesa  
;chiesa: Italian word for "church."
 
    Italian word for "church."
 
chiesa ortodossa
 
    Italian word for "Greek Catholic."
 
chilometro


    Italian word for "kilometer."
;chiesa ortodossa: Italian word for "Greek Catholic."


chimico
;chilometro: Italian word for "kilometer."


    Italian word for "chemist."
;chimico: Italian word for "chemist."


===== China  =====
===== China  =====
Line 1,250: Line 1,179:
*Pertaining to something or someone from China; also the languages used by the people of China and other countries.
*Pertaining to something or someone from China; also the languages used by the people of China and other countries.


<br>
===== Chino  =====
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
===== Chino  =====


*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian, African, and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian, African, and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.


hirotherarus
;hirotherarus: Latin word for "glover."
 
    Latin word for "glover."
 
Chirurg
 
    German word for "surgeon."
 
chirurgien
 
    French word for "surgeon."
 
chirurgo
 
    Italian word for "surgeon."
 
chirurgus
 
    Latin word for "surgeon."
 
chiunque
 
    Italian word for "whoever."
 
chlap


    Czech word for "peasant, country fellow."
;Chirurg: German word for "surgeon."


chlapec
;chirurgien: French word for "surgeon."


    Czech word for "boy."
;chirurgo: Italian word for "surgeon."


chlop
;chirurgus: Latin word for "surgeon."


    Polish word for "peasant, country fellow."
;chiunque: Italian word for "whoever."


chlopiec
;chlap: Czech word for "peasant, country fellow."


    Polish word for "boy."
;chlapec: Czech word for "boy."


;chlop: Polish word for "peasant, country fellow."


;chlopiec: Polish word for "boy."


===== Choctaw  =====
===== Choctaw  =====
Line 1,310: Line 1,211:
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.


choroba
;choroba: Polish and Czech word for "disease."


    Polish and Czech word for "disease."
;Christening (chr): An ordinance performed on a baby by the minister of the local parish in the Church of England, Wales, and Ireland. The child is baptized, given a name, and received into the church.


Christening (chr)
;chramarius: Latin word for "merchant."


    An ordinance performed on a baby by the minister of the local parish in the Church of England, Wales, and Ireland. The child is baptized, given a name, and received into the church.
;Christelik: Afrikaans word for "Christianlike, religious."


chramarius
;Christen: Afrikaans word for "Christian."
 
    Latin word for "merchant."
 
Christelik
 
    Afrikaans word for "Christianlike, religious."
 
Christen
 
    Afrikaans word for "Christian."


===== Christen, religious  =====
===== Christen, religious  =====
Line 1,340: Line 1,231:
Christening records: Records created when an individual is christened (a religious ceremony in which an individual is baptized or an infant is given a name).  
Christening records: Records created when an individual is christened (a religious ceremony in which an individual is baptized or an infant is given a name).  


Christening records
;Christening records: Records created when an individual is christened (a religious ceremony in which an individual is baptized or an infant is given a name).
 
    Records created when an individual is christened (a religious ceremony in which an individual is baptized or an infant is given a name).


===== Christian Church  =====
===== Christian Church  =====
Line 1,356: Line 1,245:
*A church founded in 1857 in the United States by people who separated from the Dutch Reformed Church (now called the Reformed Church in America). It adopted its current name in 1904. The church follows the teachings of John Calvin and Huldrych Zwingli, maintaining a conservative, orthodox interpretation of doctrine and practices. It used to conduct its services and keep its records in Dutch.
*A church founded in 1857 in the United States by people who separated from the Dutch Reformed Church (now called the Reformed Church in America). It adopted its current name in 1904. The church follows the teachings of John Calvin and Huldrych Zwingli, maintaining a conservative, orthodox interpretation of doctrine and practices. It used to conduct its services and keep its records in Dutch.


Christmonat
;Christmonat: German word for "December."
 
    German word for "December."


chrzczony
;chrzczony: Polish word for "christened."


    Polish word for "christened."
;chrzest: Polish word for "christening."
 
chrzest
 
    Polish word for "christening."
 
chrzestna, chrzestny
 
    Polish word for "godparent(s)."


;chrzestna, chrzestny: Polish word for "godparent(s)."




Line 1,390: Line 1,270:
*A list and description of members of a church that is taken to track growth and update membership records. Church censuses are a major source of family history information for members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
*A list and description of members of a church that is taken to track growth and update membership records. Church censuses are a major source of family history information for members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.


===== Church Directories, Family History Library Catalog™  =====
===== Church Directories, FamilySearch Catalog™  =====


*A subject heading used in the Family History Library Catalog to categorize lists of churches' organizational divisions and officials, including the names of the places and congregations where the officials have served.
*A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize lists of churches' organizational divisions and officials, including the names of the places and congregations where the officials have served.


===== Church directory  =====
===== Church directory  =====
Line 1,398: Line 1,278:
*A list of a church's organizational divisions and officials, including the names of the places and congregations where the officials have served. A church directory may also contain historical information about the local congregations, complete addresses of the churches, and the address of the church headquarters where additional records may be kept.
*A list of a church's organizational divisions and officials, including the names of the places and congregations where the officials have served. A church directory may also contain historical information about the local congregations, complete addresses of the churches, and the address of the church headquarters where additional records may be kept.


===== Church History, Family History Library Catalog™  =====
===== Church History, FamilySearch Catalog™  =====


*A subject heading used in the Family History Library Catalog to categorize information about the history of various churches.
*A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize information about the history of various churches.


===== Church history, general  =====
===== Church history, general  =====
Line 1,430: Line 1,310:
*A Protestant religion established in Texas in 1908. The church follows the early teachings of Methodism and sponsors many schools, liberal arts colleges, and theological seminaries.
*A Protestant religion established in Texas in 1908. The church follows the early teachings of Methodism and sponsors many schools, liberal arts colleges, and theological seminaries.


===== Church Records, Family History Library Catalog™  =====
===== Church Records, FamilySearch Catalog™  =====


*A subject heading used in the Family History Library Catalog to categorize records kept by churches, such as baptism records, marriage records, and burial records.
*A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize records kept by churches, such as baptism records, marriage records, and burial records.


===== Church records, general  =====
===== Church records, general  =====
Line 1,454: Line 1,334:
*A lay officer in a parish or district of the Church of England. The churchwarden helps the minister with various administrative duties and represents the parishioners in church matters. Most parishes have two churchwardens, who are elected on Easter Tuesday. Before large parishes were broken down into divisions, they may have had up to four churchwardens to represent various areas of the parish. Also called churchman, churchmaster, church reeve, and kirkmaster.
*A lay officer in a parish or district of the Church of England. The churchwarden helps the minister with various administrative duties and represents the parishioners in church matters. Most parishes have two churchwardens, who are elected on Easter Tuesday. Before large parishes were broken down into divisions, they may have had up to four churchwardens to represent various areas of the parish. Also called churchman, churchmaster, church reeve, and kirkmaster.


chwilowo
;chwilowo: Polish word for "temporarily."


    Polish word for "temporarily."
;château: French word for "castle."


château
;châtelain: French word for "owner of a castle."


    French word for "castle."
;ci: Italian word for "there, us, to us."


châtelain
;CI: Roman numeral for "one-hundred-one."


    French word for "owner of a castle."
;ci-dessous: French word for "below here."


ci
;ci-dessus: French word for "above here."


    Italian word for "there, us, to us."
;ciabattino: Italian word for "cobbler."


CI
;cidade: Portuguese word for "city."


    Roman numeral for "one-hundred-one."
;cidadão (ã): Portuguese word for "citizen."


ci-dessous
;ciego (a):Spanish word for "blind."


    French word for "below here."
;ciento: Spanish word for "one hundred."


ci-dessus
;ciento uno: Spanish word for "one hundred one."


    French word for "above here."
;cigány: Hungarian word for "gypsy."


ciabattino
;cikán: Czech word for "gypsy."


    Italian word for "cobbler."
;Cimarrón: A term used in Mexican and Guatemalan Catholic Church registers to describe a person whose ancestry is a mix of Indian (1/4), African (1/2), and Spanish Caucasian (1/4). Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.


cidade
;cimeterium: Latin word for "cemetery."


    Portuguese word for "city."
;cimetière: French word for "cemetery."


cidadão (ã)
;cimitero: Italian word for "cemetery."


    Portuguese word for "citizen."
;cinco: Portuguese and Spanish word for "five."


ciego (a)
;cincuenta: Spanish word for "fifty."


    Spanish word for "blind."
;cingarus: Latin word for "gypsy."


ciento
;cinq: French word for "five."


    Spanish word for "one hundred."
;cinquanta: Italian word for "fifty."


ciento uno
;cinquante: French word for "fifty."


    Spanish word for "one hundred one."
;cinquantesimo, -a: Italian word for "fiftieth."


cigány
;cinquantième: French word for "fiftieth."


    Hungarian word for "gypsy."
;cinque: Italian word for "five."


cikán
;cinquième: French word for "fifth."


    Czech word for "gypsy."
;cinqüenta: Portuguese word for "fifty."


;cinterem: Hungarian word for "burial ground."


;ciocia (ciotka): Polish word for "aunt."


===== Cimarrón  =====
;cioè: Italian word for "that is, namely."


*A term used in Mexican and Guatemalan Catholic Church registers to describe a person whose ancestry is a mix of Indian (1/4), African (1/2), and Spanish Caucasian (1/4). Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
;cipész: Hungarian word for "shoemaker."


cimeterium
;circa, Danish: Danish word for "approximately."


    Latin word for "cemetery."
;circa, German (ca.): German word for "about."


cimetière
;circa, Italian: Italian word for "about, approximately."


    French word for "cemetery."
;circa, Latin: Latin word for "about, around, round about."


cimitero
;circa, Swedish ((ca.) (Latin)): Swedish word for "about, approximately."


    Italian word for "cemetery."
;circiter: Latin word for "about, approximately."


cinco
===== Circuit court guardian docket  =====


    Portuguese and Spanish word for "five."
*A list of guardian judgments made by the circuit court.


cincuenta
===== Circuit court of appeals  =====


    Spanish word for "fifty."
*The former name of the United States Court of Appeals. The court of appeals may review and revise decisions made by federal district courts. The United States Supreme Court may review and revise decisions made by the circuit courts of appeals.


cingarus
===== Circuit court, Alabama  =====


    Latin word for "gypsy."
*A court in Alabama with countywide jurisdiction over felonies, major criminal and civil cases, and appeals from inferior courts.


cinq
===== Circuit court, New Jersey  =====


    French word for "five."
*A court in New Jersey with countywide jurisdiction over civil and equity cases such as mortgage foreclosures, name changes, marriages, adoptions, estate partitions, naturalizations, debts, and probate suits. Circuit courts were replaced by superior courts in 1947.


cinquanta
===== Circuit court, Ohio  =====


    Italian word for "fifty."
*A court in Ohio with countywide jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases, including equity and divorce cases.


cinquante
===== Circuit court, USA  =====


    French word for "fifty."
*A court used in many states of the United States. The court generally has jurisdiction over several towns, counties, or districts in the state. Circuit courts have jurisdiction over both criminal and civil matters.


cinquantesimo, -a
===== Circuit court, Virginia  =====


    Italian word for "fiftieth."
*A court in Virginia with circuitwide jurisdiction. Circuit courts were created in 1851 and continue today.


cinquantième
===== Circuit court, Wisconsin  =====


    French word for "fiftieth."
*A court in Wisconsin with countywide jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases and some appeals.


cinque
Circuit superior court of law and chancery, Virginia


    Italian word for "five."
*A court in Virginia with districtwide jurisdiction. In 1851 these courts were replaced by circuit courts.


cinquième
===== Circuit superior court of law, West Virginia  =====


    French word for "fifth."
*A court in West Virginia with circuitwide jurisdiction. Circuit superior courts of law were used from 1809 to 1852.


cinqüenta
===== Circumcision register, Jewish  =====


    Portuguese word for "fifty."
*A book containing information about Jewish circumcisions. They include the Hebrew given name of the child, the date of circumcision in the Hebrew calendar, and the father's Hebrew given name. Also called Mohel books.


cinterem
;cirka: Norwegian word for "approximately."


    Hungarian word for "burial ground."
===== Citizen, early England and Wales  =====


ciocia (ciotka)
*A freeman who lived in a city.


    Polish word for "aunt."
===== Citizenship  =====


cioè
*The allegiance of an individual to a government and its laws and customs. In return, the individual is granted all rights allowed by the government.


    Italian word for "that is, namely."
===== Citizenship book, Danish  =====


cipész
*A list of people who received the rights to citizenship extended by a city. Citizenship rights included the right to engage in business in the city, protection under the law, and permission to live in the city without being expelled. Citizenship books include the names of the people granted citizenship and their age, social and economic status, occupation and training, and sometimes birthplace and names of relatives. Until the twentieth century, only males of the middle or upper class, usually merchants and tradesmen, were granted citizenship. The Danish citizenship books are called borgerskabprotokoller.


    Hungarian word for "shoemaker."
===== Citizenship book, Germany  =====


circa, Danish
*A book used to record the names of people who had received the rights to citizenship. These books were frequently kept in Germany, where they were called Bürgerbücher or Bürgerlisten.


    Danish word for "approximately."
;Citizenship record: Citizenship records document the process of a person becoming a member of a country.  


circa, German (ca.)
:The records may give the name, age, country of birth, ethnic background, date and port of arrival, name of the ship, previous residences, or current address. Each of the various types of records created during the citizenship process can give different details about the person.


    German word for "about."
:In the United States, records for earlier years usually contain less information than those after 1906, when the names, birth dates, and birth places of the spouse and children are given.


circa, Italian
:Citizenship records are found in town, county, state, and federal court records.


    Italian word for "about, approximately."
;citoyen(ne): French word for "citizen."


circa, Latin
;cittadinanze: Italian word for "citizenship."


    Latin word for "about, around, round about."
;cittadino, -a: Italian word for "citizen."


circa, Swedish ((ca.) (Latin))
;città: Italian word for "city, town."


    Swedish word for "about, approximately."
;City: An inhabited place that has more people than a town or village. Different countries have different requirements for what is considered a city. In some countries, for example, a city must be an incorporated entity. In others, it must have a charter from the government.


circiter
===== City census  =====


    Latin word for "about, approximately."
*A census taken by a city rather than a state or federal government.


===== City court, Kansas  =====


*A court in Kansas with citywide jurisdiction over minor criminal cases and traffic matters. Also called magistrate court.


===== Circuit court guardian docket  =====
City court, Utah


*A list of guardian judgments made by the circuit court.
*A court used in Utah between 1906 and 1977. City courts had limited jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases in a county. They were replaced by the circuit court system in 1977.


===== Circuit court of appeals =====
===== City directory =====


*The former name of the United States Court of Appeals. The court of appeals may review and revise decisions made by federal district courts. The United States Supreme Court may review and revise decisions made by the circuit courts of appeals.
*A list of the names, addresses, and telephone numbers (if applicable) of the people living in a city. City directories may also provide other information about individuals such as their profession, trade, or place of employment.


===== Circuit court, Alabama =====
===== City livery company, England =====


*A court in Alabama with countywide jurisdiction over felonies, major criminal and civil cases, and appeals from inferior courts.
*A craft or trade association in London that is descended from the medieval trade guilds. The term livery originally referred to the distinctive uniform that each guild (or company) used on special occasions. Eventually the term was used to refer to the collective membership of the company.


===== Circuit court, New Jersey =====
===== City map =====


*A court in New Jersey with countywide jurisdiction over civil and equity cases such as mortgage foreclosures, name changes, marriages, adoptions, estate partitions, naturalizations, debts, and probate suits. Circuit courts were replaced by superior courts in 1947.
*A map that shows the streets and sometimes political divisions of a large city.


===== Circuit court, Ohio =====
===== City records =====


*A court in Ohio with countywide jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases, including equity and divorce cases.
*Records, such as those for births and deaths, kept at a city level.


===== Circuit court, USA  =====
;ciudad: Spanish word for "city."


*A court used in many states of the United States. The court generally has jurisdiction over several towns, counties, or districts in the state. Circuit courts have jurisdiction over both criminal and civil matters.
;ciudadano (a): Spanish word for "citizen."


===== Circuit court, Virginia  =====
;Civil authorities: Authorities in charge of a country or other non-church unit.


*A court in Virginia with circuitwide jurisdiction. Circuit courts were created in 1851 and continue today.
===== Civil case  =====


===== Circuit court, Wisconsin  =====
*A lawsuit involving a violation of laws when an individual (but not society) is harmed, such as property damage, trespass, or libel. Civil cases seek enforcement of private rights or compensation for infringement on private rights.


*A court in Wisconsin with countywide jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases and some appeals.
===== Civil court, Florida  =====


Circuit superior court of law and chancery, Virginia
*A court in Florida that exists in counties with more than 100,000 residents. In these counties, civil courts take the place of county courts.


*A court in Virginia with districtwide jurisdiction. In 1851 these courts were replaced by circuit courts.
===== Civil court, general  =====


===== Circuit superior court of law, West Virginia  =====
*A court that hears civil cases (lawsuits involving a violation of laws when an individual but not society is harmed, such as property damage, trespass, or libel). Civil cases seek enforcement of private rights or compensation for infringement of private rights.


*A court in West Virginia with circuitwide jurisdiction. Circuit superior courts of law were used from 1809 to 1852.
===== Civil district, Denmark  =====


===== Circumcision register, Jewish  =====
*An area covered by a Danish court. In Danish they are called herred and birke.


*A book containing information about Jewish circumcisions. They include the Hebrew given name of the child, the date of circumcision in the Hebrew calendar, and the father's Hebrew given name. Also called Mohel books.
;Civil division: The part of a governmental unit which oversees noncriminal matters.


===== Civil government  =====


*A government that has authority over a country or other non-church unit.


===== Civil law  =====


*The laws in a country that define the rights and obligations that people owe one another. Civil law covers issues such as the borrowing and lending of money, contracts, land and property ownership, marriage, divorce, adoption, and injury due to the actions of another person. In the Canadian province of Québec civil law is based on a French code of laws. In other provinces, civil law is based on English common law.


===== Citizen, early England and Wales =====
===== Civil marriage register =====


*A freeman who lived in a city.
*A government record of marriages performed by various civil and religious officials. A register is usually a record in a bound book.


===== Citizenship =====
===== Civil parish, Ireland =====


*The allegiance of an individual to a government and its laws and customs. In return, the individual is granted all rights allowed by the government.
*An administrative division of a county in Ireland. Before the Reformation, the civil parish was an ecclesiastical division.


===== Citizenship book, Danish =====
===== Civil Registration District =====
*The geographic area of a country in which the birth, marriage, divorce, and death records of the citizens are kept. In the United States, civil registration is called vital records.


*A list of people who received the rights to citizenship extended by a city. Citizenship rights included the right to engage in business in the city, protection under the law, and permission to live in the city without being expelled. Citizenship books include the names of the people granted citizenship and their age, social and economic status, occupation and training, and sometimes birthplace and names of relatives. Until the twentieth century, only males of the middle or upper class, usually merchants and tradesmen, were granted citizenship. The Danish citizenship books are called borgerskabprotokoller.
===== Civil registration office  =====


===== Citizenship book, Germany  =====
*A local government office that keeps the government's local birth, marriage, and death records. Some civil registration offices may also have records regarding divorces.


*A book used to record the names of people who had received the rights to citizenship. These books were frequently kept in Germany, where they were called Bürgerbücher or Bürgerlisten.
===== Civil Registration, FamilySearch Catalog™  =====


===== City census  =====
*A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize birth, marriage, divorce, and death records kept by civil governments. Birth, marriage, divorce, and death records from the United States and all Canadian provinces except Québec are cataloged under the subject heading "Vital Records."


*A census taken by a city rather than a state or federal government.
===== Civil registration, general  =====


===== City court, Kansas  =====
*Birth, marriage, divorce, and death records kept by a government. In the United States, civil registration is called vital records.


*A court in Kansas with citywide jurisdiction over minor criminal cases and traffic matters. Also called magistrate court.
===== Civil Secretary, Canada  =====


City court, Utah: A court used in Utah between 1906 and 1977. City courts had limited jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases in a county. They were replaced by the circuit court system in 1977.  
*A government official in Upper Canada (Ontario) who served as a private secretary to the lieutenant-governor of the province. He received letters and petitions. This position does not exist in modern-day Ontario.


===== City directory =====
===== Civil War, American =====


*A list of the names, addresses, and telephone numbers (if applicable) of the people living in a city. City directories may also provide other information about individuals such as their profession, trade, or place of employment.
*A term for the American Civil War, 1861 to 1865. Also called the War between the States and the War of Secession.


===== City livery company, England =====
===== Civil war, general =====


*A craft or trade association in London that is descended from the medieval trade guilds. The term livery originally referred to the distinctive uniform that each guild (or company) used on special occasions. Eventually the term was used to refer to the collective membership of the company.
*A type of war in which two or more factions within the same country are at war with each other.


===== City map  =====
;civilregistret
*Swedish word for "civil registrar."


*A map that shows the streets and sometimes political divisions of a large city.
;civis
*Latin word for "citizen."


===== City records  =====
;cizozemský
*Czech word for "foreign."


*Records, such as those for births and deaths, kept at a city level.
;cizí
*Czech word for "foreign, strange."


===== Civil case  =====
;ciò
*Italian word for "that."


*A lawsuit involving a violation of laws when an individual (but not society) is harmed, such as property damage, trespass, or libel. Civil cases seek enforcement of private rights or compensation for infringement on private rights.
;CL
*Roman numeral for "one-hundred-fifty."


===== Civil court, Florida =====
===== Claim =====


*A court in Florida that exists in counties with more than 100,000 residents. In these counties, civil courts take the place of county courts.
*A request made in a court of law.


===== Civil court, general =====
===== Claim registers =====


*A court that hears civil cases (lawsuits involving a violation of laws when an individual but not society is harmed, such as property damage, trespass, or libel). Civil cases seek enforcement of private rights or compensation for infringement of private rights.
*Records of claims made against a deceased person's estate.


===== Civil district, Denmark =====
===== Claims docket =====


*An area covered by a Danish court. In Danish they are called herred and birke.
*A list of court cases.


===== Civil government =====
===== Clarence Torrey Collection, New England =====


*A government that has authority over a country or other non-church unit.
*A collection of marriage records gathered by Clarence Torrey. It lists marriages that occurred during the 1600s in colonial New England. Its proper name is New England Marriages Prior to 1700.


===== Civil law =====
===== Class 1 settler =====


*The laws in a country that define the rights and obligations that people owe one another. Civil law covers issues such as the borrowing and lending of money, contracts, land and property ownership, marriage, divorce, adoption, and injury due to the actions of another person. In the Canadian province of Québec civil law is based on a French code of laws. In other provinces, civil law is based on English common law.
*A settler who was part of a system that filed headright grants by time period. These particular settlers arrived in Texas before 1 March 1836 and received headright land grants from Spain and Mexico.


===== Civil marriage register =====
===== Class 2 settler =====


*A government record of marriages performed by various civil and religious officials. A register is usually a record in a bound book.
*A settler who was part of a system that filed headright grants by time period. These particular settlers arrived in Texas from 2 March 1836 to 1 October 1837 and received headright land grants from the Republic of Texas.


Civil parish, Ireland: An administrative division of a county in Ireland. Before the Reformation, the civil parish was an ecclesiastical division.
===== Class 3 settler  =====


===== Civil registration office  =====
*A settler who was part of a system that filed headright grants by time period. These particular settlers arrived in Texas from 1 October 1837 to 1 January 1840 and received headright land grants from the Republic of Texas.


*A local government office that keeps the government's local birth, marriage, and death records. Some civil registration offices may also have records regarding divorces.
===== Class 4 settler  =====


===== Civil Registration, Family History Library Catalog™  =====
*A settler who was part of a system that filed headright grants by time period. These particular settlers arrived in Texas from 1 January 1840 to 1 January 1842 and received headright land grants from the Republic of Texas.


*A subject heading used in the Family History Library Catalog to categorize birth, marriage, divorce, and death records kept by civil governments. Birth, marriage, divorce, and death records from the United States and all Canadian provinces except Québec are cataloged under the subject heading "Vital Records."
;clausit: Latin word for "he/she finished, closed." Diem clausit extremem means "(died) he/she finished the last day."


===== Civil registration, general  =====
;claustrarius: Latin word for "locksmith."


*Birth, marriage, divorce, and death records kept by a government. In the United States, civil registration is called vital records.
;clausum:Latin word for "closed, finished."


===== Civil Secretary, Canada =====
===== Clergy directory =====


*A government official in Upper Canada (Ontario) who served as a private secretary to the lieutenant-governor of the province. He received letters and petitions. This position does not exist in modern-day Ontario.
*A list of the religious leaders in an area or religion.


===== Civil War, American  =====
;clergé: French word for "clergymen."


*A term for the American Civil War, 1861 to 1865. Also called the War between the States and the War of Secession.
===== Clerical register of souls, Norway  =====


===== Civil war, general  =====
*A census taken by the Lutheran clergy in Norway during the mid-1700s. It lists all members of a family and all persons living with the family. In Norwegian this census is called a sjeleregister.


*A type of war in which two or more factions within the same country are at war with each other.
===== Clerical survey records, Sweden  =====


===== Claim  =====
*A roll kept in Sweden that lists all members of a parish, their place of residence, and their knowledge of catechism. The Evangelical Lutheran Church (Svenska Kyrkan) passed a law in 1686 requiring ministers to keep these records. Some records exist for as early as 1700, but most start much later. From about 1820, surveys are available for most parishes. In Swedish the word for clerical survey records is husförslängder.


*A request made in a court of law.
;clericus: Latin word for "clergyman."


===== Claim registers =====
===== Clerk =====


*Records of claims made against a deceased person's estate.
*An individual charged with keeping records.


===== Claims docket =====
===== Clerk of the court =====


*A list of court cases.
*A government official who keeps the records of a court.


===== Clarence Torrey Collection, New England  =====
;clero: Portuguese word for "clergy."


*A collection of marriage records gathered by Clarence Torrey. It lists marriages that occurred during the 1600s in colonial New England. Its proper name is New England Marriages Prior to 1700.
===== Clipping file  =====


===== Class 1 settler  =====
*A file of obituaries and other articles cut out of newspapers.


*A settler who was part of a system that filed headright grants by time period. These particular settlers arrived in Texas before 1 March 1836 and received headright land grants from Spain and Mexico.
;clostrarius: Latin word for "locksmith."


===== Class 2 settler  =====
;clérigo: Portuguese and Spanish word for "clergyman."


*A settler who was part of a system that filed headright grants by time period. These particular settlers arrived in Texas from 2 March 1836 to 1 October 1837 and received headright land grants from the Republic of Texas.
;CM: Roman numeral for "nine-hundred."


===== Class 3 settler  =====
;cmentarz: Polish word for "cemetery, churchyard."


*A settler who was part of a system that filed headright grants by time period. These particular settlers arrived in Texas from 1 October 1837 to 1 January 1840 and received headright land grants from the Republic of Texas.
;co: Polish and Czech word for "what."


===== Class 4 settler =====
===== Coast Guard =====


*A settler who was part of a system that filed headright grants by time period. These particular settlers arrived in Texas from 1 January 1840 to 1 January 1842 and received headright land grants from the Republic of Texas.
*The branch of a nation's armed forces that is employed to protect and police a nation's coastline. In Great Britain, the Coast Guard was originally formed to prevent smuggling.


===== Clergy directory =====
===== Coat of arms =====
 
*An emblem used on shields and other implements of war. Coats of arms, invented in the Holy Land during the Crusades, were introduced to England by Richard I. They were originally painted on the shields of Christian soldiers to identify them. Later, the Crown granted the right to use a coat of arms to an individual to identify him in battle. Then a coat of arms became a reward for performing a heroic deed, making a notable achievement, or holding a prominent position.
 
;cocchiere: Italian word for "coachman."


*A list of the religious leaders in an area or religion.
===== Codicil  =====


===== Clerical register of souls, Norway  =====
*A signed supplement, change, or addition to a will.


*A census taken by the Lutheran clergy in Norway during the mid-1700s. It lists all members of a family and all persons living with the family. In Norwegian this census is called a sjeleregister.
;oelebs: Latin word for "bachelor, single man."


===== Clerical survey records, Sweden  =====
;coemeterium: Latin word for "cemetery."


*A roll kept in Sweden that lists all members of a parish, their place of residence, and their knowledge of catechism. The Evangelical Lutheran Church (Svenska Kyrkan) passed a law in 1686 requiring ministers to keep these records. Some records exist for as early as 1700, but most start much later. From about 1820, surveys are available for most parishes. In Swedish the word for clerical survey records is husförslängder.
;Coextensive (District of Columbia): Having the same boundaries. Washington is coextensive with the District of Columbia which means that the City of Washington occupies the same space and has the same boundaries as the District of Columbia.


===== Clerk  =====
;cofradía: Spanish word for "religious brotherhood, guild."


*An individual charged with keeping records.
===== Cofradías, Spain  =====


===== Clerk of the court  =====
*An organization in Spain whose membership was restricted to persons of hidalgo status (untitled Spanish nobility). In Spanish, the terms órdenes militares, confradías and confraternidades refer to military orders of chivalry that were established during the Crusades (1100–1450) to provide a fraternal religious life among the Spanish nobility. The orders were dedicated to retaking Spain from the Moors and protecting pilgrimages to the Holy Land. These orders functioned under the direction of the Pope and were independent of other ecclesiastical or civil authority. However, as the orders grew in wealth and power, they came into conflict with the Spanish Crown. By 1587 most of the orders fell under the control of the monarch. The orders became honorary in nature.


*A government official who keeps the records of a court.
;cognationis: Latin word for "blood relationship."


===== Clipping file  =====
;cognato, -a: Italian word for "brother-in-law, sister-in-law."


*A file of obituaries and other articles cut out of newspapers.
;cognome, -i: Italian word for "surname(s)."


===== Coast Guard  =====
;cognomen: Latin word for "name, family name, surname."


*The branch of a nation's armed forces that is employed to protect and police a nation's coastline. In Great Britain, the Coast Guard was originally formed to prevent smuggling.
===== Cohabitation certificates  =====


===== Coat of arms  =====
*A record that states the legal marital status of freed slaves.


*An emblem used on shields and other implements of war. Coats of arms, invented in the Holy Land during the Crusades, were introduced to England by Richard I. They were originally painted on the shields of Christian soldiers to identify them. Later, the Crown granted the right to use a coat of arms to an individual to identify him in battle. Then a coat of arms became a reward for performing a heroic deed, making a notable achievement, or holding a prominent position.
;cojo: Spanish word for "lame."


===== Codicil  =====
;col consenso: Italian word for "with the consent."


*A signed supplement, change, or addition to a will.
;colera: Italian word for "cholera."


===== Cofradías, Spain  =====
;colheita: Portuguese word for "harvest."


*An organization in Spain whose membership was restricted to persons of hidalgo status (untitled Spanish nobility). In Spanish, the terms órdenes militares, confradías and confraternidades refer to military orders of chivalry that were established during the Crusades (1100–1450) to provide a fraternal religious life among the Spanish nobility. The orders were dedicated to retaking Spain from the Moors and protecting pilgrimages to the Holy Land. These orders functioned under the direction of the Pope and were independent of other ecclesiastical or civil authority. However, as the orders grew in wealth and power, they came into conflict with the Spanish Crown. By 1587 most of the orders fell under the control of the monarch. The orders became honorary in nature.
;colina: Portuguese and Spanish word for "hill."


===== Cohabitation certificates  =====
;Collaboration Lists: A feature on the FamilySearch Internet Genealogy Service that allows people to type in information that other people can then read or download. Users can also post questions for others to answer, answer questions posted by others, or read questions and answers already on the service. Each collaboration list focuses on a particular place, surname, or topic. Also called a computer bulletin board system (BBS) or computer message board.


*A record that states the legal marital status of freed slaves.
;Collateral (genealogy): A member of a family but not in the direct line, such as an aunt, uncle, or cousin.


===== Collection Fabien, Canada  =====
===== Collection Fabien, Canada  =====


*A collection of Catholic marriage records at the National Archives of Canada. It covers marriages that occurred from 1657 to 1974 in counties surrounding Montréal and on both the Québec and Ontario sides of the Ottawa River Valley.Collection Gagnon, Canada<br>Collection Gagnon, Canada: A collection of marriage indexes, church records, and vital records about French Canadians. This collection is at the city library of Montreal.
*A collection of Catholic marriage records at the National Archives of Canada. It covers marriages that occurred from 1657 to 1974 in counties surrounding Montréal and on both the Québec and Ontario sides of the Ottawa River Valley.Collection Gagnon, Canada<br>Collection Gagnon, Canada: A collection of marriage indexes, church records, and vital records about French Canadians. This collection is at the city library of Montreal.
;Collection Gagnon, Canada: A collection of marriage indexes, church records, and vital records about French Canadians. This collection is at the city library of Montreal.


===== Collection Rhode Island Family Records  =====
===== Collection Rhode Island Family Records  =====


*A collection of will abstracts and family records created by Martha A. Benns. The collection is available at the Rhode Island Historical Society and the Family History Library™.
*A collection of will abstracts and family records created by Martha A. Benns. The collection is available at the Rhode Island Historical Society and the FamilySearch Library™.


===== Collections, Family History Library Catalog™  =====
===== Collections, FamilySearch Catalog™  =====


*A subject heading used in the Family History Library Catalog to categorize collections of genealogical or historical information gathered by a person or group and then made available for public research.
*A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize collections of genealogical or historical information gathered by a person or group and then made available for public research.


===== Collective biography  =====
===== Collective biography  =====
Line 1,862: Line 1,764:
*A list of property owners and how much tax they paid in a given year.
*A list of property owners and how much tax they paid in a given year.


===== Colonel  =====
;collina: Italian word for "hill."


*Usually the senior staff or administrative officer in the army, air force, or marines who commands a regiment. The British often gave this as an honorary title to members of noble families.
;colline: French word for "hill."
 
;collis: Latin word for "hill."
 
===== Colonel  =====
 
*Usually the senior staff or administrative officer in the army, air force, or marines who commands a regiment. The British often gave this as an honorary title to members of noble families.
 
;colonia: Spanish word for "colony."


===== Colonial census  =====
===== Colonial census  =====


*A list and description of the population of a colony.
*A list and description of the population of a colony.
;Colonial government: The government of any of the Thirteen Colonies, such as Delaware, before it became a state of the United States.


===== Colonial land records  =====
===== Colonial land records  =====


*Records kept about land matters during colonial times. These records were kept at the colony level but not at the county level.
*Records kept about land matters during colonial times. These records were kept at the colony level but not at the county level.
;Colonial legislature: A legislature (law-making group of people) that existed while an area was a colony of some "mother" country.


===== Colonial naturalization  =====
===== Colonial naturalization  =====
Line 1,889: Line 1,803:


*Wars that occurred in what is now the United States between the French, Spanish, and British governments and between the colonists and Native Americans.
*Wars that occurred in what is now the United States between the French, Spanish, and British governments and between the colonists and Native Americans.
;Colonist: German word for "settler, tenant farmer."


===== Colonization Policy  =====
===== Colonization Policy  =====
Line 1,899: Line 1,815:


Colony of New York: An English colony established in 1664 when Peter Stuyvesant, the Dutch governor of New Netherland, surrendered to the English. The Dutch formally gave the colony of New Netherland to the English. The English renamed it New York, calling it after the Duke of York, who would later become King James II of England.  
Colony of New York: An English colony established in 1664 when Peter Stuyvesant, the Dutch governor of New Netherland, surrendered to the English. The Dutch formally gave the colony of New Netherland to the English. The English renamed it New York, calling it after the Duke of York, who would later become King James II of England.  
;colono: Italian word for "farmer, colonist."
;colonus: Latin word for "colonist, settler, resident, farmer, peasant."
;Colony of New York: An English colony established in 1664 when Peter Stuyvesant, the Dutch governor of New Netherland, surrendered to the English. The Dutch formally gave the colony of New Netherland to the English. The English renamed it New York, calling it after the Duke of York, who would later become King James II of England.
;colorado (a): Spanish word for "red."


===== Colorado Territory  =====
===== Colorado Territory  =====


*A territory established in 1861 that comprised all of the present-day state of Colorado.
*A territory established in 1861 that comprised all of the present-day state of Colorado.
;colorator: Latin word for "dyer."
;coltivatore: Italian word for "cultivator, farmer."
;colônia: Portuguese word for "colony."
;come: Italian word for "as, like, how."
;come sopra: Italian word for "as above."
;comerciante: Portuguese and Spanish word for "merchant."
;comercio : Spanish word for "business, commerce."
;comes: Latin word for "count."
;comitas : Latin word for "county."
;comitatus : Latin word for "county."
;comitissa : Latin word for "countess."


===== Commander  =====
===== Commander  =====


*An officer in the navy or coast guard who ranks above a lieutenant commander and below a captain. The commander is usually second in command of the ship.
*An officer in the navy or coast guard who ranks above a lieutenant commander and below a captain. The commander is usually second in command of the ship.
;commater: Latin word for "godmother."


===== Commercial directory  =====
===== Commercial directory  =====
Line 1,914: Line 1,862:
===== Commercial on-line service  =====
===== Commercial on-line service  =====


*A business such as America On-line and CompuServe that is established to provide computer users with various types of services, including E-mail and access to the Internet.
*A business such as America On-line and CompuServe that is established to provide computer users with various types of services, including Email and access to the Internet.
 
;commerciante di vino: Italian word for "wine merchant."


===== Commissariat court, Scotland  =====
===== Commissariat court, Scotland  =====
Line 1,927: Line 1,877:


*A Scottish court with jurisdiction over executory (probate) and civil matters until 1823. Most of the civil matters concerned debt. Also called commissariat court.
*A Scottish court with jurisdiction over executory (probate) and civil matters until 1823. Most of the civil matters concerned debt. Also called commissariat court.
;commissionario: Italian word for "broker."


===== Commissioned officer  =====
===== Commissioned officer  =====
Line 1,948: Line 1,900:
*A term used in the official names of four states in the United States: Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Massachusetts, and Virginia.
*A term used in the official names of four states in the United States: Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Massachusetts, and Virginia.


===== Commune  =====
===== commorantes =====  


*The French word for community.
*Latin word for "living, residing."


===== Community cemetery  =====
===== Commot =====  


*A cemetery owned by a civil government.
*An early Welsh administrative division that was part of a cantrev.


Compact disc: A disc similar to the music and audio discs available in many stores. A compact disc can store large amounts of information and can be read by computers equipped with compact disc drives.
===== Comstock Load =====     


===== Compact disc catalog  =====
*Named for Henry Comstock (nicknamed "Old Pancake"). In 1859 he held the rights to a large silver deposit in the mines of Virginia City, Nevada, but later sold the rights for almost nothing.


*The Family History Library Catalog™ on compact disc.
===== communauté =====


===== Compact disc index  =====
*French word for "community (of goods), religious community."


*A computerized index to a set of records that is stored on a compact disc.
===== Commune  =====


===== Compendium  =====
*The French word for community.


*A collection or compilation of information gathered from other sources.
===== communicanten =====


===== Compiled biography  =====
*Dutch word for "members, communicants."


*A compilation of the histories of people’s lives. The people selected for a compiled biography usually have something in common, such as an occupation, place of origin or residence, or experience in a historical event. Also called a biographical encyclopedia or biographical dictionary.
===== communion =====


===== Compiled record:  =====
*French and Norwegian word for "communion."


*collection of information that has been gathered and interpreted from many sources.
===== communionsbog =====


===== Compiled service records  =====
*Danish word for "communion book."


*All of the records concerning people who served in the military. These records are usually indexed.
===== Community cemetery  =====


===== Compiled source  =====
*A cemetery owned by a civil government.


*A collection of information that has been gathered and interpreted from many sources.
Compact disc: A disc similar to the music and audio discs available in many stores. A compact disc can store large amounts of information and can be read by computers equipped with compact disc drives.  


===== Complete record  =====
===== como =====  


*A complete transcript of probate cases involving the titles to real property.
*Portuguese and Spanish word for "as, how."


===== Compound surname  =====
===== Compact disc =====


*A surname (last name) that has two parts, such as McKay, MacDouglas, Van Dyke, or DeWess.
*A disc similar to the music and audio discs available in many stores. A compact disc can store large amounts of information and can be read by computers equipped with compact disc drives.


===== Computer bulletin board system =====
===== Compact disc catalog =====


*A computer service that allows people to enter information that other people can then read or download. Users can also post questions for others to answer, answer questions posted by others, or read questions and answers already on the service. Many bulletin boards focus on a particular topic. Also called a computer message board or computer news group.
*The FamilySearch Catalog™ on compact disc.


===== Computer chat session =====
===== Compact disc index =====


*A computer resource that allows people to send messages to each other in real time. This may also be called a conference.
*A computerized index to a set of records that is stored on a compact disc.


===== Computer interest group  =====
===== compagnon =====


*A group of people who share a common interest and use computer on-line services to share information, learn about the particular topic, promote projects, or publish newsletters.
*French word for "journeyman, partner."<br>


===== Computer lecture session  =====
===== comparant =====


*A computer program that allows an individual to conduct a “classroom lecture” through a computer network or on-line service.
*Dutch word for "one who appeared."<br>


===== Computer message board  =====
===== comparatio =====


*A computer service that allows people to enter information that other people can then read or download. Users can also post questions for others to answer, answer questions posted by others, or read questions and answers already on the service. Many computer message boards focus on a particular topic. Also called a computer bulletin board system (BBS) or computer news group.
*Latin word for "presence, appearance."<br>


===== Computer network  =====
===== compareerde =====


*A group of computers electronically connected to each other so they can share information and programs.
*Dutch word for "appeared before."<br>


===== Computer news group  =====
===== comparu =====


*A computer service that allows people to enter information that other people can then read or download. Users can also post questions for others to answer, answer questions posted by others, or read questions and answers already on the service. Many news groups focus on a particular topic. Also called a computer bulletin board system (BBS) or computer message board.
*French word for "appeared."<br>


===== Computer number =====
===== comparuit =====


*A number used to identify each entry in the Family History Library Catalog™. Using the Computer Number search is the fastest way to find a record in the catalog.
*Latin word for "he/she appeared, was present."<br>


===== Computer on-line services =====
===== compater =====


*The various features available to computer users through networks and modems, such as E-mail and Internet access. Computer on-line services usually refer to commercial organizations, such as America On-line or CompuServe, that provide such services for a fee.
*Latin word for "godfather."<br>


===== Computer record =====
===== Compendium =====


*A record that is stored in a computer-readable format.
*A collection or compilation of information gathered from other sources.


===== Computerized phone directory =====
===== compenso =====


*A list of people's names, addresses, and telephone numbers that can be searched by computer.
*Italian word for "fee."<br>


===== Comstock Lode =====
===== Compiled biography =====


*A large gold and silver deposit discovered in central Nevada, near Virginia City, in 1859. It attracted many miners from California, and Virginia City became one of the largest, most prosperous cities in the Rocky Mountain West. Mining began to fade in the 1880s, and the population of Nevada declined as a result.
*A compilation of the histories of people’s lives. The people selected for a compiled biography usually have something in common, such as an occupation, place of origin or residence, or experience in a historical event. Also called a biographical encyclopedia or biographical dictionary.


===== Comte =====
===== Compiled record: =====


*The third highest ranking title in the French peerage. A comte ranks below a marquis (marquess) and above a vicomte (viscount). A comte is equal to a count in other parts of continental Europe and an earl in Great Britain.
*collection of information that has been gathered and interpreted from many sources.


===== Concession, Canada =====
===== Compiled service records =====


*A division of a township in eastern Canada.
*All of the records concerning people who served in the military. These records are usually indexed.


===== Conde =====
===== Compiled source =====


*The third highest raking title of Spanish nobility. A conde (equivalent in rank to a count or earl) ranks below a marqués (marques or marquis) and above a vizconde (viscount).
*A collection of information that has been gathered and interpreted from many sources.


===== Confederacy =====
===== Complete record =====


*The southern states that seceded from the United States in 1861. These states were Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia.
*A complete transcript of probate cases involving the titles to real property.


===== Confederate prisoners =====
===== compos =====


*Men who served in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War and were taken as prisoners of war.
*Latin word for "in possession of."<br>


===== Confederate scrip lands =====
===== Compound surname =====


*Land grants issued by Texas to Confederate veterans who were permanently disabled in the American Civil War or to widows of soldiers who were killed during the war.
*A surname (last name) that has two parts, such as McKay, MacDouglas, Van Dyke, or DeWess.


===== Confirmación =====
===== comprare =====


*A Spanish term meaning confirmation. Also used in the Philippines. The plural is confirmaciones.
*Italian word for "to buy."<br>


===== Confirmações =====
===== comprend =====


*A Portuguese word for confirmations.
*French word for "includes."<br>


===== Confirmation record =====
===== Computer bulletin board system =====


*A record created by a church when an individual is confirmed.
*A computer service that allows people to enter information that other people can then read or download. Users can also post questions for others to answer, answer questions posted by others, or read questions and answers already on the service. Many bulletin boards focus on a particular topic. Also called a computer message board or computer news group.


===== Confirmation, general =====
===== Computer chat session =====


*A church rite that allows an individual to become a member of a church.
*A computer resource that allows people to send messages to each other in real time. This may also be called a conference.


Confirmation, Latter-day Saint: An ordinance of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in which an individual becomes a member of the Church and receives the gift of the Holy Ghost.
===== Computer interest group  =====


===== Conflict between Denmark and Sweden (1643-1645)  =====
*A group of people who share a common interest and use computer on-line services to share information, learn about the particular topic, promote projects, or publish newsletters.


*A military action in which Sweden invaded and defeated Denmark and Jutland. In 1645 the Treaty of Christianopel forced Denmark to cede some of its possessions to Sweden.
===== Computer lecture session  =====


===== Confraternidades, Spain  =====
*A computer program that allows an individual to conduct a “classroom lecture” through a computer network or on-line service.


*An organization in Spain whose membership was restricted to persons of hidalgo status (untitled Spanish nobility). In Spanish, the terms órdenes militares, confradías and confraternidades refer to military orders of chivalry that were established during the Crusades (1100–1450) to provide a fraternal religious life among the Spanish nobility. The orders were dedicated to retaking Spain from the Moors and protecting pilgrimages to the Holy Land. These orders functioned under the direction of the Pope and were independent of other ecclesiastical or civil authority. However, as the orders grew in wealth and power, they came into conflict with the Spanish Crown. By 1587 most of the orders fell under the control of the monarch. The orders became honorary in nature.
===== Computer message board  =====


===== Congo  =====
*A computer service that allows people to enter information that other people can then read or download. Users can also post questions for others to answer, answer questions posted by others, or read questions and answers already on the service. Many computer message boards focus on a particular topic. Also called a computer bulletin board system (BBS) or computer news group.


*A term used in Brazilian Catholic Church registers to describe a person who is from the Congo region of Africa. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
===== Computer network  =====


===== Congregation  =====
*A group of computers electronically connected to each other so they can share information and programs.


*A group of people who support the same parish or branch of a church or regularly meet together for religious services. The term can also refer to any gathering of people.
===== Computer news group =====


===== Congregationalist Church  =====
*A computer service that allows people to enter information that other people can then read or download. Users can also post questions for others to answer, answer questions posted by others, or read questions and answers already on the service. Many news groups focus on a particular topic. Also called a computer bulletin board system (BBS) or computer message board.


*A group of Protestant churches whose beliefs are based on the teachings of John Calvin. They support the right of individual congregations to rule themselves, including selecting their own ministers, and oppose government interference in religion. Congregationalism developed out of the Separatist movement in Great Britain, where they are also known as Independents. In 1931 the Congregationalist churches in the United States merged with three smaller churches to form the Congregational Christian Churches. In 1957 they merged with the Evangelical and Reformed Churches to form the United Church of Christ. However, several Congregational groups did not join. In 1972 Congregationalist and Presbyterians congregations in England united to form the United Reformed Church. Welsh and Scottish congregations did not join.
===== Computer number  =====


===== Congress lands  =====
*A number used to identify each entry in the FamilySearch Catalog™. Using the Computer Number search is the fastest way to find a record in the catalog.


*Land in Ohio that was owned by the United States government and sold by general acts of Congress. Congress lands included land sold to the Ohio Company and John Cleves Symmes. Much of the land was reserved for soldiers who had served in the Revolutionary War and refugees from Canada who had supported the colonies during the war. Much of the reserved land was not claimed, and it reverted back to being Congress land. Most of what is now the state of Ohio was Congress land. The term Congress land can also refer to any federal land disposed of by acts of Congress.
===== Computer on-line services  =====


===== Conscription  =====
*The various features available to computer users through networks and modems, such as Email and Internet access. Computer on-line services usually refer to commercial organizations, such as America On-line or CompuServe, that provide such services for a fee.


*Mandatory enrollment for military service.
===== Computer record  =====


===== Conscription list  =====
*A record that is stored in a computer-readable format.


*A type of military record used in Latin America, translated as listas de quintas or conscripciones. These are lists of new recruits and, in some cases, all males eligible for military service. In many cases, these records are found in town or municipal archives. They can serve as a type of census of all the males who lived in a community at the time the list was compiled.
===== Computerized phone directory  =====


===== Conseil Superieur, French Louisiana  =====
*A list of people's names, addresses, and telephone numbers that can be searched by computer.


*The judicial arm of government in French Louisiana. It handled all judicial matters in the colony. The administrative arm of government was called the conseil de regie. These two branches often met together, and it is difficult to distinguish them. The conseil superieur is also called the French Superior Council.
===== Comstock Lode  =====


===== Consent papers  =====
*A large gold and silver deposit discovered in central Nevada, near Virginia City, in 1859. It attracted many miners from California, and Virginia City became one of the largest, most prosperous cities in the Rocky Mountain West. Mining began to fade in the 1880s, and the population of Nevada declined as a result.


*A document signed by the parents of children who are legally too young to marry to give them permission to marry.
===== Comte  =====


===== Consistory court, Church of England  =====
*The third highest ranking title in the French peerage. A comte ranks below a marquis (marquess) and above a vicomte (viscount). A comte is equal to a count in other parts of continental Europe and an earl in Great Britain.


*The highest court in a diocese of the Church of England. These courts also had superior jurisdiction over lesser courts in probate matters. Consistory courts are also called episcopal, commissary, diocesan, exchequer, and bishop's courts.
===== comune =====


===== Contents  =====
*Italian word for "municipality."


*The information contained in a record.
===== comunhão =====


===== Continental Line  =====
*Portuguese word for "communion."


*Troops who were part of the regular Revolutionary War army raised by the Continental Congress. They were not part of state militia units.
====== comunione =====


===== Continental pedigree  =====
*Italian word for "communion."


*A table that lists the name and date and place of birth, marriage, and death for an individual and a specified number of his or her ancestors. This chart is also called an ahnentafel chart.
===== comunità =====


===== Contract  =====
*Italian word for "community, township."


*A legally binding agreement between parties.
===== comunión =====


===== Contrat de mariage  =====
*Spanish word for "communion."


*A French term for marriage contract, a document created to protect the legal rights and property of a couple who are to be married.
===== con =====


===== Contrato de compra-venta  =====
*Italian and Spanish word for "with."


*The Spanish term for a contract documenting the purchase and sale of goods.
===== concejal =====


===== Cook  =====
*Spanish word for "councilman."


*In the British military, an officer who prepares food. In the United States military, the cook is an enlisted man rather than an officer.
===== concelho =====


===== Cook County, Illinois  =====
*Portuguese word for "council, counsel."


*The county in Illinois of which Chicago is a part.
===== concepta est =====


===== Copulerede  =====
*Latin word for "she was pregnant."


*A Danish word for marriages.
===== concernente =====


===== Copyhold records, Denmark  =====
*Portuguese word for "concerning."


*Danish land contracts that document agreements between the landowner and farmers wishing to lease crown-held land. These contracts were made before 1850 and include the name of the former occupant, his reason for leaving the farm, the name and sometimes birthplace of the new leaseholder, the new leaseholder's relationship to the former leaseholder (if any), the date of transfer, and a description of the land. If there was no breach of contract, the landowner could not evict the leaseholder. In Danish these records are called fæsteprotokoller.
===== concerniente =====


===== Copyright  =====
*Spanish word for "concerning."


*The exclusive legal right to reproduce, publish, and sell an original literary or artistic work that is granted for a specific time to the author or originator.
===== Concession, Canada  =====


===== Corbin Manuscript Collection, Massachusetts  =====
*A division of a township in eastern Canada.


*A manuscript collection of information about people from central and western Massachusetts. It includes local histories, church records, town records, genealogies, and transcripts of Bible and cemetery records. It is helpful for the years 1650 to 1850.
===== concessit =====


===== Cornet, British  =====
*Latin word for "consented."


*The fifth-ranking commissioned officer in a British infantry. The cornet carries the colors. The rank is equal with the ensign in the cavalry.
===== conciatore ===== 


===== Cornish  =====
*Italian word for "tanner."


*A member of the ethno-linguistic group which originated in Cornwall. A speaker of the Brythonic Celtic language of Cornwall.
===== concilio =====


===== Coroner  =====
*Spanish word for "council."


*A public official who inquires into deaths of people who did not die under the care of a physician or people whose deaths may not have been due to natural causes.
===== concilio tridentino =====
*Spanish word for "Council of Trent."


===== Coroner's inquest  =====
===== concubina ======  


*The records relating to a coroner's examination of a body to determine the cause of death.
*Italian word for "concubine."


===== Corporation court, Virginia  =====
===== concubine =====  


*A court formed in 1850 in independent cities, such as Richmond, to handle minor civil and criminal cases and equity, probate, and orphan matters. In 1902, the circuit courts assumed the duties of the corporation courts.
*French word for "concubine."


===== Corrected record of birth  =====
===== condado =====  


*A document showing a change or addition to a birth certificate.
*Spanish word for "county."


===== Correctional Institutions, Family History Library Catalog™  =====
===== conde, Portuguese =====


*A subject heading used in the Family History Library Catalog to categorize information about jails, prisons, halfway houses, and other correctional institutions.
*Portuguese word for "count, earl".


===== Correspondence =====
===== Conde =====


*The exchange of written communication, such as a letter and a response.
*The third highest raking title of Spanish nobility. A conde (equivalent in rank to a count or earl) ranks below a marqués (marques or marquis) and above a vizconde (viscount).


===== Council of probate, Rhode Island  =====
===== conditione, sub =====


*A probate court in Rhode Island. The council of probate is also known as the general council.
*Latin word for "conditionally."


===== Council of Trent  =====
===== condizione =====  


*A series of conferences held between 1545 and 1563 in Trent, Italy. The focus of the council was to define Catholic beliefs and counteract the Protestant Reformation. The council also formalized record-keeping practices that were being followed in much of the Catholic world.
*Italian word for "status, condition."


Council, Virginia: The legislative body and court of appeals for the colony of Virginia during its earliest period.
===== conducente =====


===== Count  =====
*Italian word for "driver."


*A title of nobility in continental Europe, equal in rank to a British earl. Generally, a count ranks below a marquess and above a viscount. In German, a count is called a Graf. In Spain, Portugal, and Latin America, a count is called a conde. In France, a count is called a comte.
===== conditione, sub =====


===== Counter Reformation  =====
*Latin word for "conditionally."


*A religious movement that occurred during the 1500s and 1600s as the Catholic Church tried to unify its beliefs and stop the spread of Protestantism. It led to a series of wars that occurred when Catholic governments tried to stop the spread of Protestantism in their countries. These wars include civil war in France (1565–1648), rebellion in the Netherlands (1585–1604), conflicts between Spain and England (1585–1604), and the Thirty Years War (1618–1648).
===== condizione =====


===== Country of arrival  =====
*Italian word for "status, condition."


*The country to which an immigrant moves.
===== conducente =====


===== Country of origin  =====
*Italian word for "driver."


*The country from which an individual moved.
===== Confederacy  =====


===== County  =====
*The southern states that seceded from the United States in 1861. These states were Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia.


*A division within a country, state, or province.
===== Confederate =====


===== County commissioner  =====
*A person who supported the Southern States prior to, during, and after the Civil War. Also an adjective describing things relating to the states that seceded from the United States, such as places, military forces, and flags.


*An elected official who sits on the council that creates county laws and ordinances.
===== Confederate prisoners  =====


===== County commissioner's court, Illinois  =====
*Men who served in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War and were taken as prisoners of war.


*A court in Illinois with countywide jurisdiction over disputes concerning county roads, turnpikes, canals, taxes, and licenses. These courts have evolved into administrative rather than judicial bodies.
===== Confederate armed forces =====


===== County commissioner's court, Maine  =====
*The army and navy of the Southern states during the United States Civil War.


*A court in Maine with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases. From 1699 to 1831 county commissioner's courts were called courts of general sessions. They were replaced by the district courts in 1961.
===== Confederate scrip lands  =====


===== County court orders, Kentucky  =====
*Land grants issued by Texas to Confederate veterans who were permanently disabled in the American Civil War or to widows of soldiers who were killed during the war.


*Land grants sold by counties in Kentucky beginning in 1835.
===== Confederation (of Canada) ===== 


===== County court, Alabama  =====
*The union on 1 July 1867 of the former British colonies of Canada West (Ontario), Canada East (Quebec), New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia as the Dominion of Canada. It now includes all the present provinces and territories of Canada.


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases. These courts have also been called inferior courts, superior courts, chancery courts, intermediate courts, common pleas courts, civil courts, criminal courts, law and equity courts, general sessions courts, and law and juvenile courts.
===== confermazione ===== 


===== County court, Arkansas  =====
*Italian word for "confirmation."


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over juvenile cases, taxes, claims, and county expenditures.
===== confettiere =====


===== County court, Canada  =====
*Italian word for "confectioner."


*A provincial court in Canada that handles certain types of criminal cases and civil cases involving more than a specified amount of money. Also called a midlevel county court or judicial district court. Many provinces no longer use these courts.
===== Confirmación  =====


===== County court, Colorado  =====
*A Spanish term meaning confirmation. Also used in the Philippines. The plural is confirmaciones.


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over misdemeanors, preliminary hearings, the issuance of some warrants, some bail matters, minor civil cases, probates, and some appeals.
===== Confirmações  =====


===== County court, Connecticut  =====
*A Portuguese word for confirmations.


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over civil, minor criminal, chancery, and divorce cases. These courts existed from 1666 to 1855.
===== confirmatie =====


County court, Florida: A court with countywide jurisdiction over probates, marriages, administration, and guardianships.  
*Dutch word for "confirmation."


===== County court, general =====
===== Confirmation record =====


*A court with jurisdiction over a county.
*A record created by a church when an individual is confirmed.


===== County court, Illinois =====
===== Confirmation, general =====


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases. In some counties, the county courts also have jurisdiction over probates.
*A church rite that allows an individual to become a member of a church.


===== County court, Kansas  =====
====== Confirmation, Latter-day Saint =====


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over some criminal cases, including traffic violations, and minor civil cases.
*An ordinance of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in which an individual becomes a member of the Church and receives the gift of the Holy Ghost.  


===== County court, Kentucky  =====
===== confirmeraður =====  


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases, bonds, deeds, probates, and juvenile matters. After 1852 most criminal cases were heard by the circuit or quarterly courts.
*Icelandic word for "confirmed, confirmand."


===== County court, Maryland  =====
===== confirmerede ======


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases. In 1851 the county courts were replaced by circuit courts.
*Norwegian word for "confirmed."


===== County court, Massachusetts  =====
===== confirmeret =====  


*A court in Massachusetts with countywide jurisdiction. County courts are also called quarter courts or inferior quarter courts.
*Danish word for "confirmed."


===== County court, Michigan =====
===== Conflict between Denmark and Sweden (1643-1645) =====


*A court with countywide jurisdiction. Michigan abolished these courts in 1833. Few of the remaining records have genealogical value.
*A military action in which Sweden invaded and defeated Denmark and Jutland. In 1645 the Treaty of Christianopel forced Denmark to cede some of its possessions to Sweden.


===== County court, Mississippi =====
===== Confraternidades, Spain =====


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over misdemeanors, some law and equity cases, and appeals from other courts.
*An organization in Spain whose membership was restricted to persons of hidalgo status (untitled Spanish nobility). In Spanish, the terms órdenes militares, confradías and confraternidades refer to military orders of chivalry that were established during the Crusades (1100–1450) to provide a fraternal religious life among the Spanish nobility. The orders were dedicated to retaking Spain from the Moors and protecting pilgrimages to the Holy Land. These orders functioned under the direction of the Pope and were independent of other ecclesiastical or civil authority. However, as the orders grew in wealth and power, they came into conflict with the Spanish Crown. By 1587 most of the orders fell under the control of the monarch. The orders became honorary in nature.


===== County court, Nebraska  =====
===== confronta (cfr.) =====  


*A countywide court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases and juvenile and probate actions.
*Italian word for "compare."


===== County court, New Jersey  =====
===== congestion cérébrale ======  


*A court in New Jersey with countywide jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases. County courts replaced the courts of common pleas, oyer and terminer, general quarter sessions, special sessions, and orphan's courts. In 1978 county courts were replaced by the superior courts.
*French word for "stroke."


===== County court, New York  =====
===== congiunto =====  


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over criminal cases, minor equity cases, and some appeals. These are the major trial courts for each county in New York.
*Italian word for "related."


===== County court, North Carolina =====
===== Congo =====


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over civil cases, estate settlements, land entries, military pension declarations, and criminal cases. These courts were abolished in 1868.
*A term used in Brazilian Catholic Church registers to describe a person who is from the Congo region of Africa. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.


===== County court, North Dakota =====
===== Congregation =====


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases, probates, and guardianships.
*A group of people who support the same parish or branch of a church or regularly meet together for religious services. The term can also refer to any gathering of people.


===== County court, Ohio =====
===== Congregationalist Church =====


*A court in Ohio with countywide jurisdiction over minor criminal cases and civil cases.
*A group of Protestant churches whose beliefs are based on the teachings of John Calvin. They support the right of individual congregations to rule themselves, including selecting their own ministers, and oppose government interference in religion. Congregationalism developed out of the Separatist movement in Great Britain, where they are also known as Independents. In 1931 the Congregationalist churches in the United States merged with three smaller churches to form the Congregational Christian Churches. In 1957 they merged with the Evangelical and Reformed Churches to form the United Church of Christ. However, several Congregational groups did not join. In 1972 Congregationalist and Presbyterians congregations in England united to form the United Reformed Church. Welsh and Scottish congregations did not join.


===== County court, Oregon =====
===== Congress lands =====


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over probate, juvenile cases, and civil cases under $500.
*Land in Ohio that was owned by the United States government and sold by general acts of Congress. Congress lands included land sold to the Ohio Company and John Cleves Symmes. Much of the land was reserved for soldiers who had served in the Revolutionary War and refugees from Canada who had supported the colonies during the war. Much of the reserved land was not claimed, and it reverted back to being Congress land. Most of what is now the state of Ohio was Congress land. The term Congress land can also refer to any federal land disposed of by acts of Congress.


===== County court, Pennsylvania  =====
===== Congress, USA =====  


*A court in Pennsylvania with countywide jurisdiction over equity and estate cases, civil cases, and criminal cases (except for capital crimes). The courts also performed many executive duties, such as laying out roads, registering marks and brands, levying taxes, supervising indentured servants, and so forth. The justices of county courts also met as an orphan's court to deal with orphan matters. County courts were used from 1682 to 1722.
*The legislative or law-making branch of the government. Congress is divided into two groups: the House of Representatives and the Senate.


===== County court, South Carolina  =====
===== conhecido (a) =====  


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases. These courts existed between 1785 to 1798.
*Portuguese word for "known, acquaintance."


County court, Texas: A court with countywide jurisdiction over major criminal cases, civil cases, and naturalizations.
===== conhecido (a) como =====


===== County court, Virginia  =====
*Portuguese word for "known as."


*A court in Virginia with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases and equity, probate, and orphan matters. County courts existed from 1618 to 1902, when they were replaced by circuit courts. Also called monthly courts (1618–1634) and courts of the shire.
===== coniugati =====


===== County court, Wisconsin  =====
*Italian word for "married."


*A court in Wisconsin with countywide jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases, probates, juvenile matters and dependency and neglect matters. From 1854 to 1913 the county courts handled probate matters but did not have criminal or civil jurisdiction.
===== coniugi =====


===== County courthouse, archive  =====
*Italian word for "married couple."


*A building that houses county offices and county records.
===== conjoint =====


===== County courthouse, court records  =====
*French word for "spouse, assistant."


*A building that houses a county-level court of law.
===== conjugatus =====


===== County directory  =====
*Latin word for "married."


*A list of the names and addresses of people living in a county.
===== conjuges =====


===== County history  =====
*Latin word for "married couple."


*A written account of the events that took place in a county. County histories often include biographical sketches of county residents.
===== conjugum =====


===== County justice court, North Dakota  =====
*Latin word for "of/from the married couple."


*A court in North Dakota with jurisdiction in counties that do not have county courts. They have jurisdiction over misdemeanors and civil cases.
===== conjuncti sunt =====


===== County map  =====
*Latin word for "they were joined (in marriage)."


*A map that shows the land in a county.
===== conjux =====


===== County probate court, Arizona  =====
*Latin word for "spouse."


*A court in Arizona with countywide jurisdiction over paying a deceased person's debts and distributing his or her property. Since 1912 the superior courts have handled probates.
===== connaissance =====


===== County probate court, Utah  =====
*French word for "acquaintance."


*A court in Utah with countywide jurisdiction over probate actions. These courts were used from 1850 to 1896.
===== connessione =====


===== County record office  =====
*Italian word for "relationship."


*An archive that houses records for a particular county in England, Scotland, and Wales.
===== conocido (a) =====
*Spanish word for "known, acquaintance."


===== County records  =====
===== conocido (a) como =====


*Records, such as birth, marriage, death, and land records, kept by a county government.
*Spanish word for "known as."


===== County registrar  =====
===== consanguinidad =====  


*A county official charged with keeping deed records.
*Spanish word for "blood relationship, kinship."


===== County seat  =====
===== consanguinitatis =====  


*The town that houses a county's governmental offices. Also called a county town.
*Latin word for "of blood relationship (such as cousins)."


===== County surrogate court indexes, New Jersey  =====
===== consangüinidade =====  


*Indexes to probate records kept by the county surrogate courts in New Jersey.
*Portuguese word for "blood relationship, kinship."


===== County surrogate court, New Jersey  =====
<br>


*A court that began handling New Jersey probate cases in 1804.
===== Conscription  =====


===== County town  =====
*Mandatory enrollment for military service.


*The town that houses a county's governmental offices. Also called a county seat.
===== Conscription list  =====


===== Countywide index  =====
*A type of military record used in Latin America, translated as listas de quintas or conscripciones. These are lists of new recruits and, in some cases, all males eligible for military service. In many cases, these records are found in town or municipal archives. They can serve as a type of census of all the males who lived in a community at the time the list was compiled.


*An index to a group of records covering a single county. For example, a countywide index may cover one county of a state within a federal census.
===== conseil d'état civil =====


===== Court calendar  =====
*French word for "civil registrar's."


*Lists of cases heard by a court. Court calendars may list the names of the plaintiff and defendant, the date the case was heard, the case file number, and all documents related to the case. They are also called dockets.
===== Conseil Superieur, French Louisiana  =====


===== Court case file  =====
*The judicial arm of government in French Louisiana. It handled all judicial matters in the colony. The administrative arm of government was called the conseil de regie. These two branches often met together, and it is difficult to distinguish them. The conseil superieur is also called the French Superior Council.


*A packet or bundle of the loose documents relating to a court case, such as copies of evidence, testimonies, bonds, depositions, correspondence, and petitions.
===== conseiller =====


===== Court clerk  =====
*French word for "councilor."


*An officer of the court who files pleadings, motions, and judgments and keeps records of court proceedings.
===== consejo =====


===== Court decree  =====
*Spanish word for "council."


*A record of a court’s decision on a case. Also called a court judgment or court order.
===== consenso =====


===== Court directory  =====
*Italian word for "consent."


*A list of city officers, government officials, and private residents.
===== Consent papers  =====


===== Court executions, New Jersey  =====
*A document signed by the parents of children who are legally too young to marry to give them permission to marry.


*Recorded actions taken by a New Jersey court of chancery.
=====consentement =====


===== Court for trial of Negroes, Pennsylvania  =====
*French word for "consent."


*A court in Pennsylvania with countywide jurisdiction over African-Americans who were accused of committing crimes. This court existed from 1700 to 1780.
===== conservato =====


===== Court judgment  =====
*Italian word for "preserved."


*A record of a court’s decision on a case. Also called a court decree or court order.
===== consigliere =====


===== Court minutes  =====
*Italian word for "counselor."


*Brief daily accounts of all actions taken by a court. Minutes list the names of the plaintiff and defendant and briefly describe the action taken.
===== Consistory court, Church of England  =====


===== Court of appeal, Ohio  =====
*The highest court in a diocese of the Church of England. These courts also had superior jurisdiction over lesser courts in probate matters. Consistory courts are also called episcopal, commissary, diocesan, exchequer, and bishop's courts.


*A court in Ohio with countywide jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases, including equity and divorce cases.
===== consobrina =====


===== Court of appeals deed book, Kentucky  =====
*Latin word for "female cousin (usually on the mother's side)."


*A record of disputes and litigation that occurred over land rights in Kentucky.
===== consobrinus =====


===== Court of appeals, California  =====
*Latin word for "male cousin (usually on the mother's side)."


*A statewide court in California that hears cases appealed from lower courts.
===== consors (consortis) =====


===== Court of appeals, Canada  =====
*Latin word for "wife."


*A division of a provincial superior or supreme court in Canada. The court hears appeals of civil and criminal cases from the Trial Division (Court of Queens' Bench) and from lower courts.
===== consorte =====


===== Court of appeals, Colorado  =====
*Portuguese and Spanish word for "spouse, partner."


*An intermediate court in Colorado with statewide jurisdiction over appeals from district courts, the Denver Superior Court, probate courts, and juvenile courts.
===== constipación =====


===== Court of appeals, Maryland  =====
*Spanish word for "constipation."


*The highest court in Maryland. It has statewide jurisdiction over criminal, civil, and probate appeals.
===== constipação =====


===== Court of appeals, Oklahoma  =====
*Portuguese word for "constipation."


*An intermediate court in Oklahoma with statewide jurisdiction to hear appeals from lower courts.
===== Constitution =====


===== Court of arches, England  =====
*The document that lists the basic laws, powers, and duties of a state or nation and which guarantees certain rights of the people.


*A court that heard appeals from the Prerogative Court of Canterbury.
===== consumimiento =====


===== Court of assistants, Connecticut  =====
*Spanish word for "consumption."


*The main court of jurisdiction in Connecticut for all matters of law, including appeals from town and borough courts. The court of assistants lasted from 1665 to 1711.
===== consunção =====


===== Court of assizes, New York  =====
*Portuguese word for "consumption."


*The highest provincial court in New York from 1665 to 1683. It was located in New York City and heard civil, criminal, and probate cases.
===== conta =====


===== Court of chancery, New Jersey  =====
*Portuguese word for "account, bill."


*A court in New Jersey with statewide jurisdiction that gradually received jurisdiction over civil and equity cases, mortgage foreclosures, lis pendens, land partitions, payment of debt, probate suits, lunacy inquisitions, naturalizations, divorces, and child custody. These functions are now handled by the superior courts.
===== contabile =====


===== Court of chancery, New York  =====
*Italian word for "accountant."


*A court in New York with statewide jurisdiction over civil equity matters such as mortgage foreclosures, real property proceedings, sales of estates in dower and curtesy, naturalizations, matrimonial disputes, divorces, guardianships, and child custody. It absorbed the court of probate and had appellate jurisdiction over surrogates' courts. After 1847 equity responsibilities were assigned to the state's supreme court.
===== contadino, -a =====


===== Court of chancery, Ontario, Canada  =====
*Italian word for "farm laborer, peasant."


*A court with jurisdiction over equity cases in Ontario. (Equity cases are court cases in which parties are disputing over a matter that is not a violation of law, and the court is asked to make a fair decision.) This court was established in 1837.
===== conte =====


===== Court of chancery, South Carolina  =====
*Italian word for "count, earl."


*A type of court used in South Carolina from 1671 to the 1790s. It handled land and inheritance matters for the entire colony.
===== contea =====


===== Court of chancery/equity, Pennsylvania  =====
*Italian word for "county."


*A court in Pennsylvania with jurisdiction over equity cases.
===== contenido =====


===== Court of civil appeals, Alabama  =====
*Spanish word for "contents."


*A court in Alabama with statewide jurisdiction over civil cases appealed from lower courts.
===== Contents  =====


Court of common law: A court with jurisdiction over criminal cases.  
*The information contained in a record.


===== Court of common pleas, Delaware  =====
===== contenu =====  


*A court in Delaware with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil suits, minor criminal cases, appeals from lesser courts, adoption cases, and cases to terminate parental rights. Courts of common pleas operated from 1701 to 1831, when the authority of the court of common pleas was given to the superior courts. Before 1792 the courts of common pleas also heard cases now handled by the chancery courts.
*French word for "content."


===== Court of common pleas, England  =====
===== conteúdo =====  


*One of the four superior courts at Westminster. It heard civil cases between commoners. In 1873 it became the Common Pleas division of the High Court of Justice, which was merged with the Queen's Bench division in 1880.
*Portuguese word for "contents."


Court of common pleas, general: A countywide court, usually having civil and criminal jurisdiction.
===== Continental Line  =====


===== Court of common pleas, Indiana  =====
*Troops who were part of the regular Revolutionary War army raised by the Continental Congress. They were not part of state militia units.


*A court that existed from 1790 to 1817 and from 1853 to 1873. It heard insanity, guardianship, probate, naturalization, equity, criminal, and civil cases.
===== Continental pedigree  =====


===== Court of common pleas, Missouri  =====
*A table that lists the name and date and place of birth, marriage, and death for an individual and a specified number of his or her ancestors. This chart is also called an ahnentafel chart.


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases before the 1880s. Not all counties in Missouri had courts of common pleas.
===== conto =====


===== Court of common pleas, New Hampshire  =====
*Italian word for "account, bill."


*A court in New Hampshire with jurisdiction over civil matters from 1769 to 1820 and from 1824 to 1859.
===== contra, Latin =====


===== Court of common pleas, New Jersey  =====
*Latin word for "against, opposite."


*A court in New Jersey with countywide jurisdiction over civil cases and appeals from the justice and small cause courts.
===== contra, Portuguese =====


===== Court of common pleas, New York  =====
*Portuguese word for "against."


*A court established in each city or county in New York to handle civil cases such as marriages, naturalizations, name changes, probates, exemptions from military duty, lunacy cases, tavern licenses, insolvency cases, old age assistance, manumissions, the laying of roads, settlements of boundary disputes, and child support and custody. These courts also handled appeals from the justices of the peace. These courts existed from 1691 to 1847, when they were replaced by county courts.
===== Contract  =====


===== Court of common pleas, Ohio  =====
*A legally binding agreement between parties.


*A court in Ohio with districtwide jurisdiction over felonies, marriages, major civil cases, juvenile matters, probates (until 1852), naturalizations (until 1860 and after 1906), chancery matters (until 1900), and divorces (until 1894).
===== contractant =====


===== Court of common pleas, Pennsylvania  =====
*French word for "the groom (in a marriage record)."


*A court in Pennsylvania with countywide jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases including real estate, bankruptcy, tax collection, naturalization, and divorce. The court was created in 1722 and is still used today.
===== contractante =====


===== Court of common pleas, Rhode Island  =====
*French word for "the bride (in a marriage record)."


*A court in Rhode Island with countywide jurisdiction over most criminal and civil matters. These courts were established in 1730 and continue today.
===== contracti =====


===== Court of common pleas, South Carolina  =====
*Latin word for "contracted, drawn together."


*A court that had statewide jurisdiction over guardianship and civil cases until 1790, when district courts assumed these cases. Courts of common pleas continue to operate today.
===== contrada =====


===== Court of common pleas, West Virginia  =====
*Italian word for "town quarter."


*A court established in some counties. The court has limited jurisdiction over civil and domestic cases. It also hears appeals from municipal and justice courts. These courts have also been called criminal courts, intermediate courts, and statutory courts.
===== contraente =====


===== Court of criminal appeals, Alabama  =====
*Portuguese word for "contracting party in a marriage."


*A court in Alabama with statewide jurisdiction over criminal cases appealed from lower courts.
===== contrajó matrimonio con (c.m.c.) =====


===== Court of criminal appeals, Oklahoma  =====
*Spanish word for "contracted marriage with."


*A court in Oklahoma that hears appeals of criminal cases from lower courts.
===== Contrat de mariage  =====


===== Court of delegates, England  =====
*A French term for marriage contract, a document created to protect the legal rights and property of a couple who are to be married.


*A court that heard final appeals from the court of arches until 1832. It was formerly the great court of appeal in all ecclesiastical cases.
===== Contrato de compra-venta  =====


===== Court of equity, South Carolina  =====
*The Spanish term for a contract documenting the purchase and sale of goods.


*A court in South Carolina with countywide jurisdiction over property matters. Courts of equity were used from 1791 to 1900.
===== contratto di matrimonio =====


===== Court of First Instance, Philippines  =====
*Italian word for "marriage contract."


*A court in the Philippines with jurisdiction over land records, wills, etc.
===== contraxerunt =====


===== Court of general quarter session, New Hampshire  =====
*Latin word for "they contracted (marriage)."


*A court in New Hampshire with jurisdiction over civil and criminal matters from 1769 to 1794 and from 1820 to 1824.
===== contrayente =====


===== Court of general quarter sessions, Delaware  =====
*Spanish word for "contracting party in a marriage."


*A court in Delaware with jurisdiction over all criminal cases except capital crimes. These courts have existed since 1676 and continue to operate today.
===== contre =====


===== Court of general sessions of the peace, New York  =====
*French word for "against."


*A court in New York with countywide jurisdiction over criminal cases such as desertions, apprenticeship disputes, bastardy, and other violations of vice and immorality laws. These courts existed from 1665 to 1962, handling probate matters from 1665 to 1683 and then only criminal cases after 1691. Their jurisdiction was transferred to the county court in 1847, except in New York County, where they continued until 1962.
===== contro =====


===== Court of general sessions, Maine  =====
*Italian word for "against."


*A court in Maine with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases. These courts became the county commissioner's courts in 1831 and were replaced by the district courts in 1961.
===== Conversion guide =====
 
*A guide that lists two sets of microfilm numbers for the same set of microfilms. For example, the Archives of Ontario and the FamilySearch Library both have copies of the same microfilms of vital records of births, marriages, and deaths from the Province of Ontario, Canada. The Archives of Ontario uses one numbering system for those records, and the FamilySearch Library uses another numbering system. The Archives of Ontario has a conversion guide that lists both the Archives of Ontario and the FS Library film numbers for each roll of microfilm in the set.
 
===== conversione =====
 
*Italian word for "conversion."
 
===== conversión =====
 
*Spanish word for "conversion."
 
===== conversão =====
 
*Portuguese word for "conversion."
 
===== Conveyance =====
 
*A title deed; a document drawn up to transfer property from one person to another.
 
===== Convict records =====
 
*Records of convicts who were deported to colonies of their country. These include records made in the new colony or country while the people were still convicts.


===== Court of general sessions, South Carolina  =====
===== Convict Records, FamilySearch =====


*A court in South Carolina with statewide jurisdiction over criminal cases. This court was used from 1769 to 1790.
*A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize records of convicts who were deported to colonies of their country. These include records made in the new colony or country while the people were still convicts.


===== Court of ordinary, Georgia  =====
===== convulsione, -i =====


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over homesteads, land warrants, licenses, indentures, paupers, voting registers, and marriages. From 1777 to 1798 and after 1852 these courts also had jurisdiction over probates.
*Italian word for "convulsion(s)."


===== Court of oyer and terminer and general gaol delivery, New York  =====
===== convulsionis =====  


*A court in New York with countywide jurisdiction over capital crimes such as treason and murder. These courts were used from 1683 to 1895.
*Latin word for "of convulsions."


===== Court of oyer and terminer, Delaware  =====
===== convulsión =====  


*A court in Delaware with jurisdiction over capital cases. These courts have existed since 1746 and continue to operate today.
*Spanish word for "convulsion."


===== Court of oyer and terminer, New Jersey  =====
===== convulsão =====


*A court in New Jersey with countywide jurisdiction over all crimes committed within the county except for capital offenses of treason and murder. These courts were abolished in 1947.
*Portuguese word for "convulsion."


===== Court of probates, New York =====
===== Cook =====


*A court in New York that had jurisdiction over probates from 1778 to 1823. Until 1783, the prerogative court also handled probates in British-occupied New York City, Long Island, and Staten Island.
*In the British military, an officer who prepares food. In the United States military, the cook is an enlisted man rather than an officer.


===== Court of quarter sessions of the peace, Pennsylvania =====
===== Cook County, Illinois =====


*A court in Pennsylvania with countywide jurisdiction over criminal and other cases. This court was created in 1722 and is still used today.
*The county in Illinois of which Chicago is a part.


===== Court of quarter sessions, England and Ireland  =====
===== cooperta =====  


*A countywide court that met quarterly in England and Ireland to hear criminal cases such as murder, riot, theft, assault, poaching, and so forth. The court did not hear civil cases or criminal cases involving treason or forgery. Starting in 1531 these courts also administered the poor law.
*Latin word for "married (of a woman)."


===== Court of quarter sessions, general  =====
===== coopvaerdi =====  


*A court that meets four times a year.
*Swedish word for "merchant marine."


===== Court of quarter sessions, Georgia  =====
===== Gilbert Cope's Collection of Family Data (Cope collection) =====
 
*A collection of family history information about Quakers and others who lived in southeastern Pennsylvania and Burlington, Cumberland, Gloucester, and Salem counties in New Jersey.
 
===== copie civili di registri parrocchiali =====
 
*Italian word for "parish register transcripts."
 
===== copulati sunt =====
 
*Latin word for "they were married, joined."
 
===== copulationis =====
 
*Latin word for "of marriage."
 
===== copulatus =====
 
*Latin word for "married, joined."
 
===== copulavit =====
 
*Latin word for "he married (performed wedding)."
 
===== Copulerede  =====
 
*A Danish word for marriages.
 
===== copuleret =====
 
*Danish word for "married."
 
===== copulieren =====
 
*German word for "to marry."
 
===== Copyhold land, England =====
 
*Land held subject to the will of the lord of a manor. Title to the land was recorded in the manor court rolls, and the tenant was given a copy. A copyhold could not be inherited unless the heir released the land to the lord and was confirmed by the lord on payment of a fee. The same applied to other copyhold land transfers.
 
===== Copyhold records, Denmark  =====
 
*Danish land contracts that document agreements between the landowner and farmers wishing to lease crown-held land. These contracts were made before 1850 and include the name of the former occupant, his reason for leaving the farm, the name and sometimes birthplace of the new leaseholder, the new leaseholder's relationship to the former leaseholder (if any), the date of transfer, and a description of the land. If there was no breach of contract, the landowner could not evict the leaseholder. In Danish these records are called fæsteprotokoller.
 
===== Copyright  =====
 
*The exclusive legal right to reproduce, publish, and sell an original literary or artistic work that is granted for a specific time to the author or originator.
 
===== coqueluche =====
 
*French and Portuguese word for "whooping cough."
 
===== coquus =====
 
*Latin word for "cook."
 
===== coram =====
 
*Latin word for "in the presence of."
 
===== Corbin Manuscript Collection, Massachusetts  =====
 
*A manuscript collection of information about people from central and western Massachusetts. It includes local histories, church records, town records, genealogies, and transcripts of Bible and cemetery records. It is helpful for the years 1650 to 1850.
 
===== cordaio =====
 
*Italian word for "rope maker."
 
===== cordelero =====
 
*Spanish word for "rope maker."
 
===== cordier =====
 
*French word for "rope maker."
 
===== cordoeiro =====
 
*Portuguese word for "rope maker."
 
===== cordonnier =====
 
*French word for "shoemaker."
 
===== coriarius =====
 
*Latin word for "tanner, leather worker."
 
===== Cornet, British  =====
 
*The fifth-ranking commissioned officer in a British infantry. The cornet carries the colors. The rank is equal with the ensign in the cavalry.
 
===== Cornish  =====
 
*A member of the ethno-linguistic group which originated in Cornwall. A speaker of the Brythonic Celtic language of Cornwall.
 
===== Coroner  =====
 
*A public official who inquires into deaths of people who did not die under the care of a physician or people whose deaths may not have been due to natural causes.
 
===== Coroner's inquest  =====
 
*The records relating to a coroner's examination of a body to determine the cause of death.
 
===== Corporation court, Virginia  =====
 
*A court formed in 1850 in independent cities, such as Richmond, to handle minor civil and criminal cases and equity, probate, and orphan matters. In 1902, the circuit courts assumed the duties of the corporation courts.
 
===== corpus (corporis) =====
 
*Latin word for "body."
 
===== Corrected record of birth  =====
 
*A document showing a change or addition to a birth certificate.
 
===== Correctional Institutions, FamilySearch Catalog™  =====
 
*A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize information about jails, prisons, halfway houses, and other correctional institutions.
 
===== corrente =====
 
*Italian and Portuguese word for "current."
 
===== Correspondence  =====
 
*The exchange of written communication, such as a letter and a response.
 
===== corriente =====
 
*Spanish word for "current."
 
===== corriere =====
 
*Italian word for "couier."
 
===== corte =====
 
*Italian and Portuguese word for "court."
 
===== cortiça =====
 
*Portuguese word for "cork."
 
===== cosecha =====
 
*Spanish word for "harvest."
 
===== costruttore =====
 
*Italian word for "builder."
 
===== così =====
 
*Italian word for "thus, so."
 
===== cotarius =====
 
*Latin word for "cottager."
 
===== couches =====
 
*French word for "bed, marital bed." Morte en couches means "died in childbirth."
 
===== Council of probate, Rhode Island  =====
 
*A probate court in Rhode Island. The council of probate is also known as the general council.
 
===== Council of Trent  =====
 
*A series of conferences held between 1545 and 1563 in Trent, Italy. The focus of the council was to define Catholic beliefs and counteract the Protestant Reformation. The council also formalized record-keeping practices that were being followed in much of the Catholic world.
 
===== Council, Virginia =====
 
*The legislative body and court of appeals for the colony of Virginia during its earliest period.
 
===== Count  =====
 
*A title of nobility in continental Europe, equal in rank to a British earl. Generally, a count ranks below a marquess and above a viscount. In German, a count is called a Graf. In Spain, Portugal, and Latin America, a count is called a conde. In France, a count is called a comte.
 
===== Counter Reformation  =====
 
*A religious movement that occurred during the 1500s and 1600s as the Catholic Church tried to unify its beliefs and stop the spread of Protestantism. It led to a series of wars that occurred when Catholic governments tried to stop the spread of Protestantism in their countries. These wars include civil war in France (1565–1648), rebellion in the Netherlands (1585–1604), conflicts between Spain and England (1585–1604), and the Thirty Years War (1618–1648).
 
===== Country =====
 
*The highest level of government in a given area.
 
===== Country of arrival  =====
 
*The country to which an immigrant moves.
 
===== Country of origin  =====
 
*The country from which an individual moved.
 
===== County  =====
 
*A division within a country, state, or province.
 
===== County commissioner  =====
 
*An elected official who sits on the council that creates county laws and ordinances.
 
===== County commissioner's court, Illinois  =====
 
*A court in Illinois with countywide jurisdiction over disputes concerning county roads, turnpikes, canals, taxes, and licenses. These courts have evolved into administrative rather than judicial bodies.
 
===== County commissioner's court, Maine  =====
 
*A court in Maine with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases. From 1699 to 1831 county commissioner's courts were called courts of general sessions. They were replaced by the district courts in 1961.
 
===== County court orders, Kentucky  =====
 
*Land grants sold by counties in Kentucky beginning in 1835.
 
===== County court, Alabama  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases. These courts have also been called inferior courts, superior courts, chancery courts, intermediate courts, common pleas courts, civil courts, criminal courts, law and equity courts, general sessions courts, and law and juvenile courts.
 
===== County court, Arkansas  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over juvenile cases, taxes, claims, and county expenditures.
 
===== County court, Canada  =====
 
*A provincial court in Canada that handles certain types of criminal cases and civil cases involving more than a specified amount of money. Also called a midlevel county court or judicial district court. Many provinces no longer use these courts.
 
===== County court, Colorado  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over misdemeanors, preliminary hearings, the issuance of some warrants, some bail matters, minor civil cases, probates, and some appeals.
 
===== County court, Connecticut  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over civil, minor criminal, chancery, and divorce cases. These courts existed from 1666 to 1855.
 
===== County court, Florida =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over probates, marriages, administration, and guardianships.
 
===== County court, general  =====
 
*A court with jurisdiction over a county.
 
===== County court, Illinois  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases. In some counties, the county courts also have jurisdiction over probates.
 
===== County court, Kansas  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over some criminal cases, including traffic violations, and minor civil cases.
 
===== County court, Kentucky  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases, bonds, deeds, probates, and juvenile matters. After 1852 most criminal cases were heard by the circuit or quarterly courts.
 
===== County court, Maryland  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases. In 1851 the county courts were replaced by circuit courts.
 
===== County court, Massachusetts  =====
 
*A court in Massachusetts with countywide jurisdiction. County courts are also called quarter courts or inferior quarter courts.
 
===== County court, Michigan  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction. Michigan abolished these courts in 1833. Few of the remaining records have genealogical value.
 
===== County court, Mississippi  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over misdemeanors, some law and equity cases, and appeals from other courts.
 
===== County court, Nebraska  =====
 
*A countywide court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases and juvenile and probate actions.
 
===== County court, New Jersey  =====
 
*A court in New Jersey with countywide jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases. County courts replaced the courts of common pleas, oyer and terminer, general quarter sessions, special sessions, and orphan's courts. In 1978 county courts were replaced by the superior courts.
 
===== County court, New York  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over criminal cases, minor equity cases, and some appeals. These are the major trial courts for each county in New York.
 
===== County court, North Carolina  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over civil cases, estate settlements, land entries, military pension declarations, and criminal cases. These courts were abolished in 1868.
 
===== County court, North Dakota  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases, probates, and guardianships.
 
===== County court, Ohio  =====
 
*A court in Ohio with countywide jurisdiction over minor criminal cases and civil cases.
 
===== County court, Oregon  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over probate, juvenile cases, and civil cases under $500.
 
===== County court, Pennsylvania  =====
 
*A court in Pennsylvania with countywide jurisdiction over equity and estate cases, civil cases, and criminal cases (except for capital crimes). The courts also performed many executive duties, such as laying out roads, registering marks and brands, levying taxes, supervising indentured servants, and so forth. The justices of county courts also met as an orphan's court to deal with orphan matters. County courts were used from 1682 to 1722.
 
===== County court, South Carolina  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases. These courts existed between 1785 to 1798.
 
County court, Texas: A court with countywide jurisdiction over major criminal cases, civil cases, and naturalizations.
 
===== County court, Virginia  =====
 
*A court in Virginia with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases and equity, probate, and orphan matters. County courts existed from 1618 to 1902, when they were replaced by circuit courts. Also called monthly courts (1618–1634) and courts of the shire.
 
===== County court, Wisconsin  =====
 
*A court in Wisconsin with countywide jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases, probates, juvenile matters and dependency and neglect matters. From 1854 to 1913 the county courts handled probate matters but did not have criminal or civil jurisdiction.
 
===== County courthouse, archive  =====
 
*A building that houses county offices and county records.
 
===== County courthouse, court records  =====
 
*A building that houses a county-level court of law.
 
<br>
 
===== County directory  =====
 
*A list of the names and addresses of people living in a county.
 
===== County history  =====
 
*A written account of the events that took place in a county. County histories often include biographical sketches of county residents.
 
===== County justice court, North Dakota  =====
 
*A court in North Dakota with jurisdiction in counties that do not have county courts. They have jurisdiction over misdemeanors and civil cases.
 
===== County map  =====
 
*A map that shows the land in a county.
 
===== County probate court, Arizona  =====
 
*A court in Arizona with countywide jurisdiction over paying a deceased person's debts and distributing his or her property. Since 1912 the superior courts have handled probates.
 
===== County probate court, Utah  =====
 
*A court in Utah with countywide jurisdiction over probate actions. These courts were used from 1850 to 1896.
 
===== County record office  =====
 
*An archive that houses records for a particular county in England, Scotland, and Wales.
 
===== County records  =====
 
*Records, such as birth, marriage, death, and land records, kept by a county government.
 
===== County registrar  =====
 
*A county official charged with keeping deed records.
 
===== County seat  =====
 
*The town that houses a county's governmental offices. Also called a county town.
 
===== County surrogate court indexes, New Jersey  =====
 
*Indexes to probate records kept by the county surrogate courts in New Jersey.
 
===== County surrogate court, New Jersey  =====
 
*A court that began handling New Jersey probate cases in 1804.
 
===== County town  =====
 
*The town that houses a county's governmental offices. Also called a county seat.
 
===== Countywide index  =====
 
*An index to a group of records covering a single county. For example, a countywide index may cover one county of a state within a federal census.
 
===== coup de sang =====
 
*French word for "paralytic stroke."
 
===== cour =====
 
*French word for "court."
 
===== courant =====
 
*French word for "current."
 
===== Court calendar  =====
 
*Lists of cases heard by a court. Court calendars may list the names of the plaintiff and defendant, the date the case was heard, the case file number, and all documents related to the case. They are also called dockets.
 
===== Court case file  =====
 
*A packet or bundle of the loose documents relating to a court case, such as copies of evidence, testimonies, bonds, depositions, correspondence, and petitions.
 
===== Court clerk  =====
 
*An officer of the court who files pleadings, motions, and judgments and keeps records of court proceedings.
 
===== Court decree  =====
 
*A record of a court’s decision on a case. Also called a court judgment or court order.
 
===== Court directory  =====
 
*A list of city officers, government officials, and private residents.
 
===== Court district =====
 
*The area of land over which a court has authority.
 
===== Court executions, New Jersey =====
 
*Recorded actions taken by a New Jersey court of chancery.
 
===== Court executions, New Jersey  =====
 
*Recorded actions taken by a New Jersey court of chancery.
 
===== Court for trial of Negroes, Pennsylvania  =====
 
*A court in Pennsylvania with countywide jurisdiction over African-Americans who were accused of committing crimes. This court existed from 1700 to 1780.
 
===== Court judgment  =====
 
*A record of a court’s decision on a case. Also called a court decree or court order.
 
===== Court minutes  =====
 
*Brief daily accounts of all actions taken by a court. Minutes list the names of the plaintiff and defendant and briefly describe the action taken.
 
===== Court of appeal, Ohio  =====
 
*A court in Ohio with countywide jurisdiction over civil and criminal cases, including equity and divorce cases.
 
===== Court of appeals deed book, Kentucky  =====
 
*A record of disputes and litigation that occurred over land rights in Kentucky.
 
===== Court of appeals, California  =====
 
*A statewide court in California that hears cases appealed from lower courts.
 
===== Court of appeals, Canada  =====
 
*A division of a provincial superior or supreme court in Canada. The court hears appeals of civil and criminal cases from the Trial Division (Court of Queens' Bench) and from lower courts.
 
===== Court of appeals, Colorado  =====
 
*An intermediate court in Colorado with statewide jurisdiction over appeals from district courts, the Denver Superior Court, probate courts, and juvenile courts.
 
===== Court of appeals, Maryland  =====
 
*The highest court in Maryland. It has statewide jurisdiction over criminal, civil, and probate appeals.
 
===== Court of appeals, Oklahoma  =====
 
*An intermediate court in Oklahoma with statewide jurisdiction to hear appeals from lower courts.
 
===== Court of arches, England  =====
 
*A court that heard appeals from the Prerogative Court of Canterbury.
 
===== Court of assistants, Connecticut  =====
 
*The main court of jurisdiction in Connecticut for all matters of law, including appeals from town and borough courts. The court of assistants lasted from 1665 to 1711.
 
===== Court of assizes, New York  =====
 
*The highest provincial court in New York from 1665 to 1683. It was located in New York City and heard civil, criminal, and probate cases.
 
===== Court of chancery, New Jersey  =====
 
*A court in New Jersey with statewide jurisdiction that gradually received jurisdiction over civil and equity cases, mortgage foreclosures, lis pendens, land partitions, payment of debt, probate suits, lunacy inquisitions, naturalizations, divorces, and child custody. These functions are now handled by the superior courts.
 
===== Court of chancery, New York  =====
 
*A court in New York with statewide jurisdiction over civil equity matters such as mortgage foreclosures, real property proceedings, sales of estates in dower and curtesy, naturalizations, matrimonial disputes, divorces, guardianships, and child custody. It absorbed the court of probate and had appellate jurisdiction over surrogates' courts. After 1847 equity responsibilities were assigned to the state's supreme court.
 
===== Court of chancery, Ontario, Canada  =====
 
*A court with jurisdiction over equity cases in Ontario. (Equity cases are court cases in which parties are disputing over a matter that is not a violation of law, and the court is asked to make a fair decision.) This court was established in 1837.
 
===== Court of chancery, South Carolina  =====
 
*A type of court used in South Carolina from 1671 to the 1790s. It handled land and inheritance matters for the entire colony.
 
===== Court of chancery/equity, Pennsylvania  =====
 
*A court in Pennsylvania with jurisdiction over equity cases.
 
===== Court of civil appeals, Alabama  =====
 
*A court in Alabama with statewide jurisdiction over civil cases appealed from lower courts.
 
===== Court of common law =====
 
*A court with jurisdiction over criminal cases.
 
===== Court of common pleas, Delaware  =====
 
*A court in Delaware with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil suits, minor criminal cases, appeals from lesser courts, adoption cases, and cases to terminate parental rights. Courts of common pleas operated from 1701 to 1831, when the authority of the court of common pleas was given to the superior courts. Before 1792 the courts of common pleas also heard cases now handled by the chancery courts.
 
===== Court of common pleas, England  =====
 
*One of the four superior courts at Westminster. It heard civil cases between commoners. In 1873 it became the Common Pleas division of the High Court of Justice, which was merged with the Queen's Bench division in 1880.
 
===== Court of common pleas, general =====
 
*A countywide court, usually having civil and criminal jurisdiction.
 
===== Court of common pleas, Indiana  =====
 
*A court that existed from 1790 to 1817 and from 1853 to 1873. It heard insanity, guardianship, probate, naturalization, equity, criminal, and civil cases.
 
===== Court of common pleas, Missouri  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases before the 1880s. Not all counties in Missouri had courts of common pleas.
 
===== Court of common pleas, New Hampshire  =====
 
*A court in New Hampshire with jurisdiction over civil matters from 1769 to 1820 and from 1824 to 1859.
 
===== Court of common pleas, New Jersey  =====
 
*A court in New Jersey with countywide jurisdiction over civil cases and appeals from the justice and small cause courts.
 
===== Court of common pleas, New York  =====
 
*A court established in each city or county in New York to handle civil cases such as marriages, naturalizations, name changes, probates, exemptions from military duty, lunacy cases, tavern licenses, insolvency cases, old age assistance, manumissions, the laying of roads, settlements of boundary disputes, and child support and custody. These courts also handled appeals from the justices of the peace. These courts existed from 1691 to 1847, when they were replaced by county courts.
 
===== Court of common pleas, Ohio  =====
 
*A court in Ohio with districtwide jurisdiction over felonies, marriages, major civil cases, juvenile matters, probates (until 1852), naturalizations (until 1860 and after 1906), chancery matters (until 1900), and divorces (until 1894).
 
===== Court of common pleas, Pennsylvania  =====
 
*A court in Pennsylvania with countywide jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases including real estate, bankruptcy, tax collection, naturalization, and divorce. The court was created in 1722 and is still used today.
 
===== Court of common pleas, Rhode Island  =====
 
*A court in Rhode Island with countywide jurisdiction over most criminal and civil matters. These courts were established in 1730 and continue today.
 
===== Court of common pleas, South Carolina  =====
 
*A court that had statewide jurisdiction over guardianship and civil cases until 1790, when district courts assumed these cases. Courts of common pleas continue to operate today.
 
===== Court of common pleas, West Virginia  =====
 
*A court established in some counties. The court has limited jurisdiction over civil and domestic cases. It also hears appeals from municipal and justice courts. These courts have also been called criminal courts, intermediate courts, and statutory courts.
 
===== Court of criminal appeals, Alabama  =====
 
*A court in Alabama with statewide jurisdiction over criminal cases appealed from lower courts.
 
===== Court of criminal appeals, Oklahoma  =====
 
*A court in Oklahoma that hears appeals of criminal cases from lower courts.
 
===== Court of delegates, England  =====
 
*A court that heard final appeals from the Court of Arches until 1832. It was formerly the great court of appeal in all ecclesiastical cases. The High Court of Delegates was established by law during the reign of Henry VIII. No permanent judges were appointed, but in every case of appeal a special commission usually appointed three judges to hear the case.<br>
 
===== Court of equity, South Carolina  =====
 
*A court in South Carolina with countywide jurisdiction over property matters. Courts of equity were used from 1791 to 1900.
 
===== Court of First Instance, Philippines  =====
 
*A court in the Philippines with jurisdiction over land records, wills, etc.
 
===== Court of general quarter session, New Hampshire  =====
 
*A court in New Hampshire with jurisdiction over civil and criminal matters from 1769 to 1794 and from 1820 to 1824.
 
===== Court of general quarter sessions, Delaware  =====
 
*A court in Delaware with jurisdiction over all criminal cases except capital crimes. These courts have existed since 1676 and continue to operate today.
 
===== Court of general sessions of the peace, New York  =====
 
*A court in New York with countywide jurisdiction over criminal cases such as desertions, apprenticeship disputes, bastardy, and other violations of vice and immorality laws. These courts existed from 1665 to 1962, handling probate matters from 1665 to 1683 and then only criminal cases after 1691. Their jurisdiction was transferred to the county court in 1847, except in New York County, where they continued until 1962.
 
===== Court of general sessions, Maine  =====
 
*A court in Maine with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases. These courts became the county commissioner's courts in 1831 and were replaced by the district courts in 1961.
 
===== Court of general sessions, South Carolina  =====
 
*A court in South Carolina with statewide jurisdiction over criminal cases. This court was used from 1769 to 1790.
 
===== Court of ordinary, Georgia  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over homesteads, land warrants, licenses, indentures, paupers, voting registers, and marriages. From 1777 to 1798 and after 1852 these courts also had jurisdiction over probates.
 
===== Court of oyer and terminer and general gaol delivery, New York  =====
 
*A court in New York with countywide jurisdiction over capital crimes such as treason and murder. These courts were used from 1683 to 1895.
 
===== Court of oyer and terminer, Delaware  =====
 
*A court in Delaware with jurisdiction over capital cases. These courts have existed since 1746 and continue to operate today.
 
===== Court of oyer and terminer, New Jersey  =====
 
*A court in New Jersey with countywide jurisdiction over all crimes committed within the county except for capital offenses of treason and murder. These courts were abolished in 1947.
 
===== Court of probates, New York  =====
 
*A court in New York that had jurisdiction over probates from 1778 to 1823. Until 1783, the prerogative court also handled probates in British-occupied New York City, Long Island, and Staten Island.
 
===== Court of quarter sessions of the peace, Pennsylvania  =====
 
*A court in Pennsylvania with countywide jurisdiction over criminal and other cases. This court was created in 1722 and is still used today.
 
===== Court of quarter sessions, England and Ireland  =====
 
*A countywide court that met quarterly in England and Ireland to hear criminal cases such as murder, riot, theft, assault, poaching, and so forth. The court did not hear civil cases or criminal cases involving treason or forgery. Starting in 1531 these courts also administered the poor law.
 
===== Court of quarter sessions, general  =====
 
*A court that meets four times a year.
 
===== Court of quarter sessions, Georgia  =====
 
*A court used in colonial Georgia. No records exist from these courts.
 
===== Court of quarter sessions, Indiana =====
 
*A statewide court with jurisdiction over all criminal and civil cases and probate matters between 1796 and 1813.
 
===== Court of quarter sessions, Kentucky  =====
 
*A court with jurisdiction over suits involving large amounts of money. This court existed between 1787 and 1802.
 
===== Court of quarter sessions, Tennessee  =====
 
*A court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases and estate matters.
 
===== Court of Queen's Bench, Canada  =====
 
*A division of a provincial superior or supreme court in Canada. The court hears serious civil and criminal cases and has the authority to grant divorces. Also called Court of King's Bench if the reigning monarch is a king and also called Trial Division.
 
===== Court of Requests, England =====
 
*A court used to recover small debts, intended originally for use by the poor. It was abolished in 1642, and its function was taken over by county Quarter Sessions courts.
 
===== Court of schouts and schepens, New Netherland  =====
 
*A court in New Netherland, which later became the state of New York, that had jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases from 1653 to 1674. These courts were replaced by mayor's courts.
 
===== Court of Session, Scotland  =====
 
*The highest court in Scotland. It handles cases that deal with revenue, including debt to the Crown, and cases that lower courts refer to it.
 
===== Court of Star Chamber, England =====
 
*A high court, under the direct authority of the king, that mostly handled cases involving riots, perjury, and serious misdemeanors. It was abolished in 1642.
 
===== Court of the Exchequer, England  =====
 
*A court in England that originally had charge over keeping the king's accounts and collecting taxes. It began hearing cases between subjects, but this ended in 1290. After 1290 its jurisdiction was limited to cases regarding people who were withholding taxes or who refused to repay debts to the Crown. It later regained its jurisdiction over suits between subjects.
 
===== Court of the Exchequer, Scotland  =====
 
*A national court in Scotland that dealt with revenue issues, including debt to the Crown. This court existed from 1708 to 1856, when its jurisdiction was transferred to the Court of Session.
 
===== Court of the general quarter session, Upper Canada  =====
 
*A court with jurisdiction over criminal matters in Upper Canada (Ontario). These courts operated from 1777 to 1868. They met four times a year.
 
===== Court of the general quarter sessions of the peace, New Jersey  =====
 
*A court in New Jersey with countywide jurisdiction over minor criminal cases, such as desertions, vice, apprenticeship disputes, and bastardy. Before 1704 these courts also had jurisdiction over civil cases. These courts were dissolved in 1947. They are also called county courts.
 
===== Court of the King's Bench, England =====
 
*A court of Common Law that handled matters of direct interest to the King or which were to be tried by his court. It was one of three courts that evolved from the earlier Curia Regis.
 
===== Court of Ward and Liveries, England =====
 
*A high court, under the direct authority of the king, which handled cases of inheritance of land. It was abolished in 1646.
 
===== Court order  =====
 
*A record of a court’s decision on a case. Also called a court decree or court judgment.
 
<br>
 
===== Court Records, FamilySearch Catalog™  =====
 
*A subject heading used in the FamilySearch Catalog to categorize records, such as dockets and court minutes, kept by courts.
 
===== Court records, general  =====
 
*Records kept by courts of law.
 
===== Court, PERiodical Source Index =====
 
*A record type used in the Locality and Research Methodologies sections of the PERiodical Source Index (PERSI) to identify articles that contain information about court records.
 
===== Courthouse, archive  =====
 
*A building that houses a court of law or county offices and county records.
 
===== cousin(e) =====
 
*French word for "cousin."
 
===== cousin(e) germain(e)=====
 
*French word for "first cousin."
 
===== Coûtume de Paris  =====
 
*An old French law system, used in the area surrounding Paris in 1664, on which civil law in Québec (Canada) was based.
 
===== couvreur =====
 
*French word for "roofer."
 
===== cova =====
 
*Portuguese word for "grave."
 
===== Covenant, general  =====
 
*A legally binding agreement between two or more parties.
 
coxo (a),
 
    Portuguese word for "lame."
 
===== Coyote  =====
 
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian (3/8), African (1/8), and Spanish Caucasian (1/2). Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
 
Coûtume de Paris
 
    An old French law system, used in the area surrounding Paris in 1664, on which civil law in Québec (Canada) was based.
 
cras
 
    Latin word for "tomorrow."
 
Creator (of a record)
 
    The person, church, or government official or agency who made an original document or record. The "author" of a record.
 
creatura dei
 
    Latin word for "foundling (creature of God)."
 
===== Creek War (1836-1837)  =====
 
*A disturbance in eastern Alabama caused by the impending removal of the Creek tribe of Native Americans according to a treaty signed in 1832.
 
===== Creek, Native Americans  =====
 
*Tribes of Native Americans who originally lived in Alabama and Georgia. In 1832 they were forced to sign a treaty that required them to move to the Indian Territory, west of the Mississippi River.
 
===== Creole  =====
 
*A descendant of the original Spanish, Portuguese, or French settlers of the Americas.
 
cresima
 
    Italian word for "confirmation."
 
cresimato, -i
 
    Italian word for "confirmee(s)."
 
criada
 
    Portuguese and Spanish word for "maid."
 
criança
 
    Portuguese word for "child."
 
criatura
 
    Spanish word for "infant, child."
 
===== Crimean War (1854-1856)  =====
 
*A war fought over religious, commercial, and strategic issues between Russia and the combined forces of Great Britain, France, the Ottoman Empire, and Sardinia. Russia was defeated and forced to give up some of the land it had taken from the Ottoman Empire.
 
===== Criminal case  =====
 
*A proceeding against an individual charged with a violation of law that harmed or could have harmed society. Criminal cases include theft, murder, and drunk driving.
 
===== Criminal court  =====
 
*A court that hears criminal cases (cases in which a violation of law harmed or could have harmed society). Such cases include theft, murder, and drunk driving.
 
===== Criminal court, West Virginia  =====
 
*A court created by special acts of the West Virginia legislature. The jurisdiction of these courts varies, but it may include limited civil and domestic cases and appeals from municipal and justice courts.
 
===== Criminal jurisdiction  =====
 
*The authority of a court to hear criminal cases that involve violations of law in which society was harmed or could have been harmed.
 
===== Criminal law  =====
 
*The laws in a country that define criminal offences (offences that harm society), set the rules for the arrest and possibly for the trial of those accused of crimes, and define punishment for crimes. Offences range in seriousness from disorderly conduct to murder.
 
===== Criollo  =====
 
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person born in Latin America whose ancestors are all from Spain (a pure-blooded Spaniard born in Latin America).
 
===== Crioulo  =====
 
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person born in Latin America whose ancestors are all from Europe.
 
===== Crismas  =====
 
*A Spanish word for chrism, or holy oil used in Latin and Greek churches for baptisms, confirmations, and other rites.
 
cristiano (a)
 
    Spanish word for "Christian."
 
cristiano, -a
 
    Italian word for Christian (or Catholic)."
 
cristão (ã)
 
    Portuguese word for "Christian."
 
===== Croato =====
 
*Italian word for "Croat".
 
===== Cromwellian period (1649-1660), England  =====
 
*The period in English history when Oliver Cromwell ruled England. After the Civil War, Parliament refused to reform the English government as much as Cromwell and his Puritan supporters desired. As a result, Cromwell dismissed Parliament and established himself as lord protector of England. During this time, Cromwell severely limited freedom of the press and enforced strict moral standards. He also strengthened England's navy, brought Scotland and Ireland under English control, and helped in the development of English colonies in North America and Asia.
 
===== Cross Index to Selected City Streets and Enumeration Districts  =====
 
*An index that lists street addresses and the corresponding enumeration district in the 1910 census for many large cities in the United States.
 
===== Crossing the Ocean Index  =====
 
*A list of Latter-day Saints who left Great Britain and Europe between 1840 and 1925 to settle in the western United States. Its official name is the European Emigration Card Index.
 
===== Crossing the Plains Index  =====
 
*An incomplete but valuable list of Latter-day Saint pioneers who crossed the plains before 1869, when the railroad arrived in Utah. Its official name is the Utah Immigration Card Index.
 
Crown colony
 
    A colony that was governed under the direction of the King of England, who appointed a governor over the colony and provided instructions on how the governor was to exercise his authority. All undisposed land was owned by the king, but the governor had the authority to dispose of it through the grant process.
 
===== Crown colony land grants  =====
 
*Land grants issued by Kings George II and III between 1735 and 1775. North Carolina became a Crown colony in 1729 when seven of the eight Lords Proprietors sold their land to King George II.
 
===== Crown grant  =====
 
*A land grant issued by the British or French monarch.
 
===== Crown land  =====
 
*Land that is held (owned) in the name of a monarch.
 
===== Crown Lands Administration, Canada  =====
 
*A branch of the government in Newfoundland, Canada, that manages public lands.
 
===== Crown Lands Registry, Canada  =====
 
*A branch of the government in Manitoba, Canada, that houses land records made before 1930.
 
===== Crown lease, British  =====
 
*A contract that allows a person to use land held by the British Crown in return for money or some other form of recompense.
 
csak
 
    Hungarian word for "only, but, just."
 
család
 
    Hungarian word for "family, clan."
 
családfa
 
    Hungarian word for "pedigree, family tree."
 
családi állapota
 
    Hungarian word for "marital status of."
 
családikönyv
 
    Hungarian word for "family book."
 
családinév
 
    Hungarian word for "family name, surname."
 
családtag
 
    Hungarian word for "family member."
 
családtörténet
 
    Hungarian word for "genealogy, family history."
 
cseh
 
    Hungarian word for "czech."
 
Csehország
 
    Hungarian word for "Bohemia."
 
cseléd
 
    Hungarian word for "servant."
 
csikós
 
    Hungarian word for "horseherder."
 
csizmadia
 
    Hungarian word for "bootmaker."
 
csütörtök
 
    Hungarian word for "Thursday."
 
cuadragésimo
 
    Spanish word for "fortieth."
 
cuadringéntesimo
 
    Spanish word for "four-hundredth."
 
cuarenta
 
    Spanish word for "forty."
 
<br>
 
===== Cuarteado  =====
 
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian (1/4), African (1/4), and Spanish Caucasian (1/2). Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
 
===== Cuarterón  =====
 
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of African (1/4) and Spanish Caucasian (3/4). Also spelled quarterón. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
 
===== Cuarterón de Chino, Peru  =====
 
*A term used in Peruvian Catholic Church registers to describe a person whose ancestry is a mix of African and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
 
===== Cuarterón de Mestizo, Peru  =====
 
*A term used in Peruvian Catholic Church registers to describe a person whose ancestry is a mix of Indian and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
 
===== Cuarterón de Mulato, Peru  =====
 
*A term used in Peruvian Catholic Church registers to describe a person whose ancestry is a mix of Indian, African, and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
 
===== cuarto =====
 
*Spanish word for "room, fourth."
 
===== cuarto (a) =====
 
*Spanish word for "fourth."
 
===== cuate =====
 
*Spanish word for "twin."
 
<br>
 
===== Cuatrero  =====
 
*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian (3/4) and Spanish Caucasian (1/4). Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
 
===== cuatro =====
 
*Spanish word for "four."
 
===== cuatrocientos =====
 
*Spanish word for "four hundred."
 
===== cucitrice =====
 
*Italian word for "seamstress."
 
===== cudzoziemski =====
 
*Polish word for "foreign."
 
===== cuenta =====
 
*Spanish word for "account."
 
===== cugino, -a =====
 
*Italian word for "cousin."
 
===== cuius =====
 
*Latin word for "whose."
 
===== cuiusdam =====
 
*Latin word for "of a certain."
 
===== cujo (a) =====
 
*Portuguese word for "whose."
 
===== cukrovka =====
 
*Czech word for "diabetes."
 
===== cukrzyca =====
 
*Polish word for "diabetes."
 
===== culte =====
 
*French word for "religion."
 
===== cultellarius =====
 
*Latin word for "cutler."
 
===== cultivateur =====
 
*French word for "farmer, cultivator."
 
===== cum =====
 
*Latin word for "with."
 
===== Cumberland Gap  =====
 
*A natural mountain pass in the Appalachian Mountains. It is located near where the boundaries of Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia intersect. It was a major passage into lands west of Virginia. During the American Civil War, the Cumberland Gap was held at different times by the Union and the Confederacy.
 
===== Cumberland Plateau  =====
 
*A highland area that covers parts of eastern Tennessee and Kentucky. The Cumberland Plateau is bounded on the east by the Appalachian Mountain range.
 
===== Cumberland Plateau  =====
 
  A highland area that covers parts of eastern Tennessee and Kentucky. The Cumberland Plateau is bounded on the east by the Appalachian Mountain range.<br>
 
===== cumpleaños  =====
 
  Spanish word for "birthday."<br>
 
===== cunhado (a)  =====
 
  Portuguese word for "brother-in-law, sister-in-law."<br>
 
===== cuoco  =====
 
  Italian word for "cook."<br>
 
===== cuore  =====
 
  Italian word for "heart."<br>
 
===== cuprifaber  =====
 
  Latin word for "coppersmith."<br>
 
===== cur  =====
 
  Latin word for "why."<br>
 
===== cura  =====
 
  Portuguese and Spanish word for "clergyman."<br>
 
===== curateur  =====
 
  French word for "guardian".<br>
 
<br>
 
===== Curation  =====
 
*Guardianship over a child who is old enough to marry but not yet 21 years of age.
 
===== curato =====
 
*Portuguese and Spanish word for "parish."
 
===== curia, Latin =====
 
*Latin word for "court."
 
===== curia, Spanish ===== 
 
*Spanish word for "ecclesiastical tribunal."
 
===== currarius =====
 
*Latin word for "carriage builder."
 
===== Curtesy  =====
 
*The right a husband had to his deceased wife's real property. The husband received all of his wife's property, providing they had legitimate children who were born alive.
 
===== curtidor =====
 
*Portuguese and Spanish word for "tanner."
 
===== curé =====
 
*French word for "parish minister, pastor, priest, clergyman."
 
===== Customs passenger list  =====
 
*Passenger lists that masters of ships submitted to United States customs officials when ships arrived in the United States.


*A court used in colonial Georgia. No records exist from these courts.
===== custos (custodis) =====


===== Court of quarter sessions, Indiana  =====
*Latin word for "custodian, guard."


*A statewide court with jurisdiction over all criminal and civil cases and probate matters between 1796 and 1813.
===== cuyo (a) =====


===== Court of quarter sessions, Kentucky  =====
*Spanish word for "whose."


*A court with jurisdiction over suits involving large amounts of money. This court existed between 1787 and 1802.
===== cuál =====


===== Court of quarter sessions, Tennessee  =====
*Spanish word for "which."


*A court with countywide jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal cases and estate matters.
===== cuándo =====


===== Court of Queen's Bench, Canada  =====
*Spanish word for "when."


*A division of a provincial superior or supreme court in Canada. The court hears serious civil and criminal cases and has the authority to grant divorces. Also called Court of King's Bench if the reigning monarch is a king and also called Trial Division.
===== cuñada =====  
 
===== Court of schouts and schepens, New Netherland  =====
 
*A court in New Netherland, which later became the state of New York, that had jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases from 1653 to 1674. These courts were replaced by mayor's courts.


===== Court of Session, Scotland  =====
*Spanish word for "sister-in-law."


*The highest court in Scotland. It handles cases that deal with revenue, including debt to the Crown, and cases that lower courts refer to it.
===== cuñado =====


===== Court of the Exchequer, England  =====
*Spanish word for "brother-in-law."


*A court in England that originally had charge over keeping the king's accounts and collecting taxes. It began hearing cases between subjects, but this ended in 1290. After 1290 its jurisdiction was limited to cases regarding people who were withholding taxes or who refused to repay debts to the Crown. It later regained its jurisdiction over suits between subjects.
===== cyrkul =====


===== Court of the Exchequer, Scotland  =====
*Polish word for "district (of a city), ward."


*A national court in Scotland that dealt with revenue issues, including debt to the Crown. This court existed from 1708 to 1856, when its jurisdiction was transferred to the Court of Session.
===== cyrulnik =====


===== Court of the general quarter session, Upper Canada  =====
*Polish word for "barber-surgeon."


*A court with jurisdiction over criminal matters in Upper Canada (Ontario). These courts operated from 1777 to 1868. They met four times a year.
===== czarnyv =====


===== Court of the general quarter sessions of the peace, New Jersey  =====
*Polish word for "black."


*A court in New Jersey with countywide jurisdiction over minor criminal cases, such as desertions, vice, apprenticeship disputes, and bastardy. Before 1704 these courts also had jurisdiction over civil cases. These courts were dissolved in 1947. They are also called county courts.
===== czas =====


===== Court order  =====
*Polish word for "time."


*A record of a court’s decision on a case. Also called a court decree or court judgment.
===== czasopismo =====


===== Court Records, Family History Library Catalog™  =====
*Polish word for "magazine, periodical."


*A subject heading used in the Family History Library Catalog to categorize records, such as dockets and court minutes, kept by courts.
===== czasowo =====


===== Court records, general  =====
*Polish word for "temporarily."


*Records kept by courts of law.
===== czemu =====


Court, PERiodical Source Index: A record type used in the Locality and Research Methodologies sections of the PERiodical Source Index (PERSI) to identify articles that contain information about court records.  
*Polish word for "why."


===== Courthouse, archive  =====
===== czerwca (VI.) =====  


*A building that houses a court of law or county offices and county records.
*Polish word for "of June."


===== Coûtume de Paris  =====
===== czerwony =====  


*An old French law system, used in the area surrounding Paris in 1664, on which civil law in Québec (Canada) was based.
*Polish word for "red."


===== Covenant, general  =====
===== czesc =====  


*A legally binding agreement between two or more parties.
*Polish word for "part, portion."


===== Coyote  =====
===== czeski =====  


*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian (3/8), African (1/8), and Spanish Caucasian (1/2). Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*Polish word for "Czech."


===== Creek War (1836-1837)  =====
===== czesto =====


*A disturbance in eastern Alabama caused by the impending removal of the Creek tribe of Native Americans according to a treaty signed in 1832.
*Polish word for "often."


===== Creek, Native Americans  =====
===== czlonek =====


*Tribes of Native Americans who originally lived in Alabama and Georgia. In 1832 they were forced to sign a treaty that required them to move to the Indian Territory, west of the Mississippi River.
*Polish word for "member."


===== Creole  =====
===== czterdziesci =====  


*A descendant of the original Spanish, Portuguese, or French settlers of the Americas.
*Polish word for "forty."


===== Crimean War (1854-1856)  =====
===== czterdziesty =====  


*A war fought over religious, commercial, and strategic issues between Russia and the combined forces of Great Britain, France, the Ottoman Empire, and Sardinia. Russia was defeated and forced to give up some of the land it had taken from the Ottoman Empire.
*Polish word for "fortieth."


===== Criminal case  =====
===== czterechsetny =====  


*A proceeding against an individual charged with a violation of law that harmed or could have harmed society. Criminal cases include theft, murder, and drunk driving.
*Polish word for "four hundredth."


===== Criminal court  =====
===== czternascie =====  


*A court that hears criminal cases (cases in which a violation of law harmed or could have harmed society). Such cases include theft, murder, and drunk driving.
*Polish word for "fourteen."


===== Criminal court, West Virginia  =====
===== czternasty =====  


*A court created by special acts of the West Virginia legislature. The jurisdiction of these courts varies, but it may include limited civil and domestic cases and appeals from municipal and justice courts.
*Polish word for "fourteenth."


===== Criminal jurisdiction  =====
===== cztery =====  


*The authority of a court to hear criminal cases that involve violations of law in which society was harmed or could have been harmed.
*Polish word for "four."


===== Criminal law  =====
===== czterysetny =====  


*The laws in a country that define criminal offences (offences that harm society), set the rules for the arrest and possibly for the trial of those accused of crimes, and define punishment for crimes. Offences range in seriousness from disorderly conduct to murder.
*Polish word for "four hundredth."


===== Criollo  =====
===== czterysta =====  


*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person born in Latin America whose ancestors are all from Spain (a pure-blooded Spaniard born in Latin America).
*Polish word for "four hundred."


===== Crioulo  =====
===== czwartek =====  


*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person born in Latin America whose ancestors are all from Europe.
*Polish word for "Thursday."


===== Crismas  =====
===== czwarty =====


*A Spanish word for chrism, or holy oil used in Latin and Greek churches for baptisms, confirmations, and other rites.
*Polish word for "fourth."


===== Cromwellian period (1649-1660), England  =====
===== czy =====  


*The period in English history when Oliver Cromwell ruled England. After the Civil War, Parliament refused to reform the English government as much as Cromwell and his Puritan supporters desired. As a result, Cromwell dismissed Parliament and established himself as lord protector of England. During this time, Cromwell severely limited freedom of the press and enforced strict moral standards. He also strengthened England's navy, brought Scotland and Ireland under English control, and helped in the development of English colonies in North America and Asia.
*Polish word for "whether (introduces a question)."


===== Cross Index to Selected City Streets and Enumeration Districts  =====
===== czyli =====  


*An index that lists street addresses and the corresponding enumeration district in the 1910 census for many large cities in the United States.
*Polish word for "or."


===== Crossing the Ocean Index  =====
===== czynszownik =====  


*A list of Latter-day Saints who left Great Britain and Europe between 1840 and 1925 to settle in the western United States. Its official name is the European Emigration Card Index.
*Polish word for "renter."


===== Crossing the Plains Index  =====
===== cáncer =====  


*An incomplete but valuable list of Latter-day Saint pioneers who crossed the plains before 1869, when the railroad arrived in Utah. Its official name is the Utah Immigration Card Index.
*Spanish word for "cancer."


===== Crown colony land grants  =====
===== cárcel =====  


*Land grants issued by Kings George II and III between 1735 and 1775. North Carolina became a Crown colony in 1729 when seven of the eight Lords Proprietors sold their land to King George II.
*Spanish word for "jail."


===== Crown grant  =====
===== câncer =====  


*A land grant issued by the British or French monarch.
*Portuguese word for "cancer."


===== Crown land  =====
===== céans =====  


*Land that is held (owned) in the name of a monarch.
*French word for "here within."


===== Crown Lands Administration, Canada  =====
===== cédula =====  


*A branch of the government in Newfoundland, Canada, that manages public lands.
*Spanish word for "royal decree."


===== Crown Lands Registry, Canada  =====
===== cél =====


*A branch of the government in Manitoba, Canada, that houses land records made before 1930.
*Hungarian word for "purpose."


===== Crown lease, British  =====
===== célibataire =====  


*A contract that allows a person to use land held by the British Crown in return for money or some other form of recompense.
*French word for "bachelor, unmarried, single."


===== Cuarteado  =====
===== célèbre =====  


*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian (1/4), African (1/4), and Spanish Caucasian (1/2). Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*French word for "famous."


===== Cuarterón  =====
===== cím =====  


*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of African (1/4) and Spanish Caucasian (3/4). Also spelled quarterón. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*Hungarian word for "title, address."


===== Cuarterón de Chino, Peru  =====
===== címer =====  


*A term used in Peruvian Catholic Church registers to describe a person whose ancestry is a mix of African and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*Hungarian word for "coat of arms."


===== Cuarterón de Mestizo, Peru  =====
===== címtár =====  


*A term used in Peruvian Catholic Church registers to describe a person whose ancestry is a mix of Indian and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*Hungarian word for "directory."


===== Cuarterón de Mulato, Peru  =====
===== církev =====  


*A term used in Peruvian Catholic Church registers to describe a person whose ancestry is a mix of Indian, African, and Caucasian. Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*Czech word for "church."


===== Cuatrero  =====
===== cónyuge =====  


*A term used in Catholic Church registers to describe a person from Spanish-speaking Latin America whose ancestry is a mix of Indian (3/4) and Spanish Caucasian (1/4). Racial classifications were often based on physical appearance or social status; therefore, they were not always accurate.
*Spanish word for "spouse."


===== Cumberland Gap  =====
===== córka =====  


*A natural mountain pass in the Appalachian Mountains. It is located near where the boundaries of Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia intersect. It was a major passage into lands west of Virginia. During the American Civil War, the Cumberland Gap was held at different times by the Union and the Confederacy.
*Polish word for "daughter."


===== Cumberland Plateau  =====
===== cônjuge =====  


*A highland area that covers parts of eastern Tennessee and Kentucky. The Cumberland Plateau is bounded on the east by the Appalachian Mountain range.
*Portuguese word for "spouse."


===== Curation  =====
===== cônjuges =====


*Guardianship over a child who is old enough to marry but not yet 21 years of age.
*Portuguese word for "partners, couple."


===== Curtesy  =====
===== côte =====  


*The right a husband had to his deceased wife's real property. The husband received all of his wife's property, providing they had legitimate children who were born alive.
*French word for "hill."


===== Customs passenger list  =====
===== cúria, Portuguese =====  


*Passenger lists that masters of ships submitted to United States customs officials when ships arrived in the United States.
*Portuguese word for "religious tribunal."


[[Category:Glossary]]
[[Category:Glossary]]
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