|
|
(151 intermediate revisions by 23 users not shown) |
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
| Back to [[Germany|Germany Page]]►
| | {{CountrySidebar |
| | |Country=Germany |
| | |Name=Germany |
| | |Type=Topic |
| | |Topic Type=Records |
| | |Records=Civil Registration |
| | |Rating=Acceptable |
| | }}{{breadcrumb |
| | | link1=[[Germany Genealogy|Germany]] |
| | | link2= |
| | | link3= |
| | | link4= |
| | | link5=[[Germany Civil Registration|Civil Registration]] |
| | }} |
|
| |
|
| Civil registration records are records of births, marriages, and deaths kept by the government. German terms for these records include Standesamtsregister, Zivilstandsregister, or Personenstandsregister. They are an excellent source for fairly accurate information on names and dates and places of births, marriages, and deaths. These records are kept by the civil registrar [German: Standesbeamte] at the civil registry office (Standesamt). | | ==Overview== |
| | Civil registration records are records of births, marriages, and deaths kept by the government. German terms for these records include ''Standesamtsregister'', ''Zivilstandsregister'', or ''Personenstandsregister''. They are an excellent source for information on names and dates and places of births, marriages, and deaths. These records are kept by the civil registrar [German: Standesbeamte] at the civil registry office (Standesamt). Because they cover about 98% of the population and often provide more information than church records, civil registration records are important sources for German genealogical research, especially after 1876 when the entirety of Germany established civil registration. <br><br> |
|
| |
|
| Civil registration in the German Empire began between 1792 and 1876, depending on the locality. Alsace-Lorraine started in 1792, since it belonged to France at the time. The creation of ''mairies'' that kept civil birth, marriage, and death registers was required by the French as they advanced into the German territories between 1808 and 1812. These early records are often written in the French language and use the [[French Republican Calendar]]. After Napoleon was defeated, civil registration was discontinued in many parts of Germany and replaced by parish register duplicates used for civil purposes, such as conscription. In Prussia, civil births, marriages, and deaths were kept again beginning in October 1874. Civil registration became mandatory in all German states on 1 January 1876. To learn more about when German Civil Registration began in individual provinces or states, [[German Civil Registration Time Periods|click here]]. | | ==Civil registration years: Napoleonic period== |
| | {| style="float:right" |
| | |- |
| | | style="padding-right:0px"| |
| | [[Image:Civil_reg_1808-1815.jpg|thumb|<center>Areas where civil registration was instituted between 1798 and 1815.</center>|alt=Areas where civil registration was instituted between 1798 and 1815.]] |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| Because they cover about 98% of the population and often provide more information than church records, civil registration records are important sources for German genealogical research.
| | During the Napoleonic time period, many areas of modern-day Germany were invaded and annexed by the French Empire. In annexed areas, civil registration was fully implemented. |
| | After Napoleon's defeat, areas east of the Rhine river stopped civil registration and returned to church records as the primary means of recording their populations, mainly because these areas were annexed very late (as late as 1811) and had only been keeping civil records for a few years. Areas west of the Rhine river continued keeping civil registration records, mainly because these areas had been keeping them for upwards of 15+ years. The following list of principalities indicate the time frame civil registration records began, and if and when they ended: |
| | *'''Alsace-Lorraine''': 1792 |
| | *'''Rheinland (west of the Rhine)''': 1798 |
| | *'''Hessen, province of Rheinhessen (west of the Rhine)''': 1798 |
| | *'''Grand Duchy of Berg''': 1806-1815 |
| | *'''Kingdom of Westphalia''': 1807-1815 |
| | *'''Hamburg''': 1811-1815 |
| | *'''Hannover (parts)''': 1811-1815 |
| | *'''Hessen-Kassel''': - 1811-1815 |
| | *'''Lübeck''': 1811-1815 |
| | *'''Oldenburg''': 1811-1815 |
|
| |
|
| For birth, death, and marriage records created before civil registration began, see [[Germany Church Records|Germany Church Records]].
| | ==Civil registration years in all of Germany== |
|
| |
|
| === General Historical Background === | | {| style="float:right" |
| | |- |
| | | style="padding-right:0px"| |
| | [[Image:Civil_reg_1875.jpg|thumb|<center>German civil registration. Red indicates areas that began before 1876. Prussia (green) started in October 1874.</center>}|alt=German civil registration. Red indicates areas that began before 1876. Prussia (green) started in October 1874.]] |
| | |} |
| | Between 1850 and 1876, all territories instituted civil registration. The two main time periods were October 1874, when all of Prussia begain their registers, and 1 January 1876, when the rest of the constituent members of the German Empire followed. <br><br> |
| | The list below includes areas that established civil registration before this time period: |
|
| |
|
| Civil registration was begun in France with a law passed by the national Assembly on 20 Sep 1792. Alsace and Lorraine, which were under French rule at that time, were the first German areas to keep civil records of births, marriages, and deaths. French occupation of the areas left of the Rhine River in 1796 to 1798 brought civil registration to these areas as well. As the French advanced into other areas of Germany, they required local governments to keep civil records of births, marriages, and deaths. After Napoleon was defeated, civil registration was discontinued in many parts of Germany and replaced by parish register duplicates used for civil purposes, such as conscription. In Prussia, civil births, marriages, and deaths were kept again beginning in October 1874. Civil registration became mandatory in all German states on 1 January 1876. The records are created and kept by the Standesamt.
| | *'''Anhalt''': 1850 |
| | *'''Hamburg''': (restarted) 1866 |
|
| |
|
| Between 1792 and 1876, most German states or provinces developed their own separate laws and civil registration systems. Some civil registration offices were established later than others. Therefore, the date a particular state began civil registration is only a general guideline and does not always apply to every town within its borders. In 1876 civil registration began in all of Germany, and since 1876 almost every German has been registered with the local civil government authorities.
| | To learn more about when German civil registration began in individual provinces or states, see [[German Civil Registration Time Periods|'''German Civil Registration Time Periods''']]. |
| | [[Image:Herne Stadtarchiv Standesamt Baukau.jpg|right|thumb|250px|<center>Herne Stadtarchiv Standesamt Baukau<center>|alt=Herne Stadtarchiv Standesamt Baukau]]<br> |
|
| |
|
| === Regional Differences === | | = Determining the Location of a Civil Registration Office = |
| | '''If you are looking for civil registration records online:''' |
|
| |
|
| Between 1792 and 1798, when France occupied the area west of the Rhine River, the government began civil registration in parts of the Pfalz, Oldenburg, Hessen, and the Rhineland west of the Rhine. These records are usually written in French until about 1815. Hamburg began keeping civil registration records in 1799. As France's influence increased in Germany through the Confederation of the Rhein, the states of Braunschweig, Hannover, Westfalen, Bremen, Lippe, more of Hessen, the rest of Oldenburg and Lübeck established civil registration between 1808 and 1812. But when Napoleon's power began to fade in 1814, many of these states suspended civil registration.
| | Research your town name in [http://www.meyersgaz.org '''MeyersGaz.org'''] to find the location of the registry office (''Standesamt'') at the time of the German Empire. The civil office is indicated by the abbreviation "'''StdA'''." This is the Standesamt location you will use when searching for civil registration records anywhere in the FamilySearch Catalog, FamilySearch Images, and other websites like Ancestry.com. Records in archives will use this location prior to the consolidation of registration offices in the 1970s. |
|
| |
|
| By 1838 most of the province of Waldeck was recording marriage contracts. The prime minister of Prussia, Otto von Bismarck, instituted civil registration in all the provinces of Prussia in 1874. The remaining states—Anhalt, Bavaria, Lippe, Mecklenburg, Saxony, Schaumburg-Lippe, Thuringia, and Württemberg—began requiring civil registration in 1876.
| | '''If you are looking for civil registration records still in offices in Germany:''' |
|
| |
|
| In areas under French influence, especially Alsace and Lorraine, ten-year indexes were usually kept. Duplicate copies of civil registers were also made. The mayor's office [Bürgermeisterei] kept the original copy, and the duplicate was sent to the court [Landesgericht] or another central archive. For example, most of Westfalen and Lippe sent their duplicates to Detmold, and most of the Rhineland sent theirs to Brühl.
| | Many civil registration offices were merged in the 1970s, so the modern record location might be different than that listed in MeyersGaz. When writing for records, you must first find the modern civil registration office for your town. |
| | *To find the '''current Standesamt''', go to the [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Hauptseite '''German Wikipedia'''] and enter the name of the town in the search box. An article about the town will likely start with a first line similar to this: "Besse with about 3200 inhabitants is the largest district of the '''''municipality Edermünde'''''..." It is probable that the Standesamt is now located in the larger '''municipality''' (in this example Edermünde). The word ''Gemeinde'' may also be listed in an infobox at the top right; the location listed with the word ''Gemeinde'' is likely the current civil registration office location. |
| | *If your town is a larger town, its German Wikipedia page may not state that the town belongs to another municipality because it is itself a municipality. If that is the case, use the town itself as your civil registration office location. |
| | *To find the '''email address''' of the current Standesamt, google the location along with the word '''Standesamt''' (for example, '''Altgernsdorf Standesamt''') and click on the civil registration office or municipality (''Gemeinde'') website, which should be one of the first results. Then look for the word '''Kontakt''' (contact), which is likely to list an email address. Alternatively, it may lead you to an online form you can fill out to submit a request, especially in the case of larger cities. |
| | You may also want to go to [https://standesamt.com/ '''Standesamt.com'''] and enter the name of the town the Standesamt is located in today into the '''Ort''' search box at the top right. This will pull up contact information; however, the contact info may be outdated, so it must be confirmed by locating the contact information on the official Standesamt or municipality website. |
|
| |
|
| === Privacy Laws === | | == Information Recorded == |
|
| |
|
| Until recently, stringent rights-to-privacy requirements in Germany limited access to all civil registration records created in 1876 or later to the subject of the document and their parents, siblings, and direct-line descendants. Strict
| | The information recorded in civil registration records varies slightly over time. Each state used a different format for civil registration. Preprinted forms have often been used for civil registration. In these instances, the form determined what information the record contains. The early French records sometimes give slightly more complete information than the later records. The most important civil records are birth, marriage, and death registers. |
|
| |
|
| A law passed in February 2007, the [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personenstandsrechtsreformgesetz Personenstandsrechtsreformgesetz], makes civil registration records more accessible for family history research. Since 1 January 2009 the records are accessible to any researcher after these time periods have passed:
| | === Births (Geburtsregister)=== |
| | Birth records usually give: |
| | *the child's name; |
| | *sex; and |
| | *birth date, time, and place. |
| | *father's name, age, occupation, and residence |
| | *mother's maiden name, age, and marital status |
| | *names, ages, and residences of witnesses |
| | *parents' religion is also listed in some states. |
|
| |
|
| *births: 110 years
| | === Marriages (Heiraten, Ehen, or Trauungen)=== |
| *marriages: 80 years
| | Marriages were usually recorded where the bride lived. After 1792 a civil marriage ceremony was required in areas of Germany under French control. In 1876 this law was applied to all of Germany. Most couples also had a church wedding, so records may exist for both the civil and church ceremonies. The civil marriage records may include more information than the comparable church records. When possible search both the civil registration and church records. |
| *deaths: 30 years
| |
|
| |
|
| A direct relationship to the subject of the record sought will only be required in cases where the required time period has not yet elapsed. Even then, the records may be accessible if it can be shown that all "participating parties" have died at least 30 years ago. Participating parties are both parents and the child in birth records, and both spouses in a marriage. Special regulations apply to records of adoptees and other special-needs groups. <br>
| | ==== Intention to Marry ==== |
|
| |
|
| If the records were created more recently than these time periods, and the death of the participants cannot be proven, the former restrictions still apply. Paragraph 61 of the [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personenstandsgesetz_(Deutschland) Personenstandsgesetz] clearly defines who has a legal right to civil registration information under these cirumstances. When requesting a record from the Standesamt (civil registration office), the relationship to the person named in the record should be clearly stated. In 2008, the fee for a copy of a civil birth-, marriage-, or death record was seven Euros plus postage.<br> | | If you believe a marriage took place but cannot find a marriage record, search records that indicate the couple's “intent to marry.” Various records may have been created to show a couple's intent to marry: |
|
| |
|
| Civil registrars often use international extract forms to fill requests from foreign countries. Not all the information present in the original record may be copied onto the extract. As a rule, marginal notes are left out, but other details from the record, such as parents’ names and residences in marriage records, may be omitted.<br>
| | *'''Proclamations '''[Aufgebote or Eheverkündigungen] were made a few weeks before a couple planned to marry. The couple may have been required to announce their intentions in order to give other community members the opportunity to object to the marriage. |
| | *'''Marriage Supplements''' [Heiratsbeilagen] were often filed by the bride or groom to support their marriage application. Information included may document their births, their parents' deaths, and the groom's release from military service. Sometimes the records contain information about earlier generations. |
| | *'''Contracts '''[Ehekontrakte] are documents created to protect legal rights and property of spouses. These may give the same information as the marriage supplements noted above. They also list property and are usually found in court records rather than in civil registration records. |
| | *'''Marriage Permission Papers '''[Verehelichungsakten] are documents created in the process of obtaining permission to get married. Some states required prospective spouses to get permission from the local city council or mayor before they could be married. For Bavaria and Hessen-Nasssau many of these files have been microfilmed. They may be cataloged under "court records", "civil registration", or "public records." |
|
| |
|
| Prior to the passing of the 2007 law, it was difficult or impossible to obtain any post-1875 civil registration records of birth-, marriage-, or death records for non-direct-line relatives (such as a great-aunt or -uncle), even if they were already deceased. Now it is not only possible to obtain records that meet these time requirements, but these records are even starting to become available online.<br>
| | ==== Marriage Records ==== |
| | '''Marriage Registers (Heiratsregister).''' Civil officials recorded the marriages they performed, usually on preprinted forms bound in a book and kept in the civil registration office. Marriage registers give: |
| | *the date and time of the marriage |
| | *bride's and groom's names, |
| | *bride's and groom's ages, birth dates, birthplaces, |
| | *bride's and groom's residences, occupations, and |
| | *whether they were single or widowed. |
| | *the parents' names, residence, occupations, marital status, and whether they were living at the time of the marriage. |
| | *witnesses' names, ages, and relationships to the bride or groom |
| | *the couple's religion, especially after 1874. |
| | <br> |
| | '''Certificates (Heiratsscheine).''' Some couples were given a marriage certificate or a book [Stammbuch] with the marriage entry and space for entering children's births. The certificate or book may be in the possession of the family or the civil registrar. |
|
| |
|
| === Information Recorded in Civil Registers === | | === Deaths (Sterberegister or Totenregister)=== |
| | Death records are especially helpful because they may provide important information on a person's birth, spouse, and parents. Civil death records often exist for individuals for whom there were no birth or marriage records. |
|
| |
|
| The information recorded in civil registration records varies slightly over time. Each state used a different format for civil registration. Preprinted forms have often been used for civil registration. In these instances, the form determined what information the record contains. The early French records sometimes give slightly more complete information than the later records. The most important civil records are birth, marriage, and death registers.
| | Early death records usually give: |
| | *the name of the deceased and |
| | *the date, time, and place of death |
| | *the age, birthplace, residence, occupation, and marital status of the deceased |
| | *the name of the parents or spouse and their residences |
| | *the informant's name, age, occupation, residence, and relationship |
| | *the person's religion. |
|
| |
|
| === Births [Geburtsregister] ===
| | Information about parents, the birth date, the birthplace, and other information about the deceased may be inaccurate, depending on the informant's knowledge. |
|
| |
|
| Birth records usually give the child's name; sex; and birth date, time, and place. The father's name, age, occupation, and residence are also usually listed. The mother's maiden name, age, and marital status are usually given, although her age is sometimes omitted. The names, ages, and residences of witnesses are usually provided. The parents' religion is also listed in some states.
| | === Stamps and Notes on Civil Registration Records=== |
|
| |
|
| Births were usually registered within a few days of the child's birth by the father, a neighbor, or the midwife. Corrections and additions to a birth record may have been added as marginal notes.
| | The following table illustrates which types of stamps and notes may be found on which type(s) of German civil registration records. |
|
| |
|
| === Marriages [Heiraten, Ehen, or Trauungen] === | | {| width="100%" border="1" cellpadding="10" "0" |
| | |- |
| | | width="10.5%" style="background: #455f21" <th align="center">|{{color|white|'''Record Type'''}} |
| | | width="10.5%" style="background: #455f21" <th align="center">|{{color|white|'''Birth Stamp'''}} |
| | | width="15%" style="background: #455f21" <th align="center">|{{color|white|'''Marriage Stamp'''}} |
| | | width="12.5%" style="background: #455f21" <th align="center">|{{color|white|'''Divorce Note'''}} |
| | | width="12.5%" style="background: #455f21" <th align="center">|{{color|white|'''Death Stamp'''}} |
| | | width="12.50%" style="background: #455f21" <th align="center">|{{color|white|'''Paternity Note'''}} |
| | | width="15%" style="background: #455f21" <th align="center">|{{color|white|'''Name Change Note'''}} |
| | | width="12.50%" style="background: #455f21" <th align="center">|{{color|white|'''Correction Note'''}} |
| | |- |
| | | '''Birth''' |
| | | |
| | | <center>'''✓''' |
| | | |
| | |<center> '''✓''' |
| | |<center>'''✓''' (note) |
| | | <center>'''✓''' |
| | |<center>'''✓''' |
| | |- |
| | | '''Marriage''' |
| | |<center>'''✓ '''(of children) |
| | | |
| | | <center>'''✓''' |
| | |<center>'''✓''' |
| | |<center>'''✓ '''(paragraph) |
| | | <center>'''✓''' |
| | | <center>'''✓''' |
| | |- |
| | | '''Death''' |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | |<center> '''✓''' |
| | |- |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| Marriages were usually recorded where the bride lived. After 1792 a civil marriage ceremony was required in areas of Germany under French control. In 1876 this law was applied to all of Germany. Most couples also had a church wedding, so records may exist for both the civil and church ceremonies. The civil marriage records may include more information than the comparable church records. When possible search both the civil registration and church records.
| | Stamps and notes are added after the event the record is created for—as such, these additions refer to events that took place later. The exception is the paragraph space on the second page of a civil marriage record, which is filled out at the time of the marriage and contains information about any premarital children of the now married couple. |
|
| |
|
| === Records of Intention to Marry ===
| | For more information about stamps and notes, see the "Reading German Civil Birth, Marriage, and Death Records" Instruction sheet on the [[Germany "How to" Guides|Germany "How to" Guides]] FamilySearch Wiki page. |
|
| |
|
| If you believe a marriage took place but cannot find a marriage record, search records that indicate the couple's “intent to marry.” Various records may have been created to show a couple's intent to marry:
| | == Locating Records == |
|
| |
|
| *'''Proclamations'''[Aufgebote or Eheverkündigungen] were made a few weeks before a couple planned to marry. The couple may have been required to announce their intentions in order to give other community members the opportunity to object to the marriage.
| | Civil registration records were kept at the local civil registration office (Standesamt). Most civil registers are still located at the local civil registration offices, but some are collected in city or state archives. To determine which civil registration office to contact, see the [https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/Germany_Civil_Registration#Determining_the_Location_of_a_Civil_Registration_Office Determining the Location of a Civil Registration Office] heading. |
| *'''Marriage Supplements''' [Heiratsbeilagen] were often filed by the bride or groom to support their marriage application. Information included may document their births, their parents' deaths, and the groom's release from military service. Sometimes the records contain information about earlier generations.
| |
| *'''Contracts'''[Ehekontrakte] are documents created to protect legal rights and property of spouses. These may give the same information as the marriage supplements noted above. They also list property and are usually found in court records rather than in civil registration records.
| |
| *'''Marriage Permission Papers '''[Verehelichungsakten] are documents created in the process of obtaining permission to get married. Some states required prospective spouses to get permission fom the local city council or mayor before they could be married. For Bavaria and Hessen-Nasssau many of these files have been microfilmed. They may be cataloged under "court records", "civil registration", or "public records".
| |
|
| |
|
| === Marriage Records [Heiratsregister] ===
| | Since 2009 birth records have been public after 110 years, marriages after 80 years, and deaths after 30 years. However, in places where records are online, the records recently made public may have not yet been placed online. |
|
| |
|
| You may find the following records documenting civil marriages:
| | A direct relationship to the subject of the record sought should only be required in cases where the required time period has not yet elapsed. Even if there is no direct relationship, the records may be accessible if it can be shown that all "participating parties" have died at least 30 years ago. Participating parties are both parents and the child in birth records, and both spouses in a marriage record. |
|
| |
|
| *'''Marriage Registers [Heiratsregister].''' Civil officials recorded the marriages they performed, usually on preprinted forms bound in a book and kept in the civil registration office. Marriage registers give the date and time of the marriage. They list the bride's and groom's names, ages, birth dates, birthplaces, residences, occupations, and whether they were single or widowed. The registers also give the parents' names, residence, occupations, marital status, and whether they were living at the time of the marriage. Witnesses' names, ages, and relationships to the bride or groom are supplied. Often a note is made as to whether a parent or other party gave permission for the marriage. The couple's religion is often mentioned, especially after 1874.
| | ===Ancestry=== |
| *'''Certificates [Heiratsscheine].''' Some couples were given a marriage certificate or a book [Stammbuch] with the marriage entry and space for entering children's births. The certificate or book may be in the possession of the family or the civil registrar.
| | Ancestry.com has many German civil registration records, which are indexed and searchable. A list of the German civil registration collections can be found in Ancestry's [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/catalog/?keyword=civil&location=3253_1652381 Card Catalog]. |
|
| |
|
| === Deaths [Sterberegister or Totenregister] === | | ===FamilySearch Catalog=== |
| | FamilySearch has microfilmed many civil registration records. To find civil registration records in the FamilySearch Catalog, search the Place Search under: |
|
| |
|
| Death records are especially helpful because they may provide important information on a person's birth, spouse, and parents. Civil death records often exist for individuals for whom there were no birth or marriage records. Deaths were usually registered within a few days of death in the town or city where the person died.
| | {{Block indent|GERMANY, [STATE], [TOWN] - CIVIL REGISTRATION}} |
|
| |
|
| Early death records usually give the name of the deceased and the date, time, and place of death. The age, birthplace, residence, occupation, and marital status of the deceased may also be given, along with the name of the parents or spouse and their residences. The informant's name, age, occupation, residence, and relationship may also be listed. Post¬1874 death registers also include the person's religion. Information about parents, the birth date, the birthplace, and other information about the deceased may be inaccurate, depending on the informant's knowledge.
| | Alternatively, type the location of your civil registration office of interest into the FamilySearch Catalog's "Keywords" search box. |
|
| |
|
| [[Germany Deaths and Burials (FamilySearch Historical Records)]]
| | The collections of FamilySearch continue to grow as new records are microfilmed or digitized. To view some digitized records you may need to be at a FSC or Affiliate Library, or be a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. |
|
| |
|
| === Locating Civil Registration Records === | | ===FamilySearch Images=== |
| | FamilySearch Images also contains German civil registration records, which may be found by searching the location of your civil registration office of interest in [https://www.familysearch.org/records/images/ Images]. |
|
| |
|
| Civil registration records are kept at the local civil registration office [Standesamt]. You must therefore determine the town where your ancestor lived before you can find the records. In a few places, such as Detmold and Speyer, duplicates have been gathered into a central archive.
| | ===Other Online Records=== |
| | Additional online records for the individual provinces of the German Empire are listed on the civil registration page for each province: |
| | {|style="vertical-align:top;; padding-right:1em" |
| | |- |
| | |style="vertical-align:top; width:25%; padding-right:1em"| |
| | '''Independent From Prussia'''<br> |
| | *[[Anhalt, German Empire Civil Registration|Anhalt]] |
| | *[[Baden, German Empire Civil Registration|Baden]] |
| | *[[Bavaria (Bayern), German Empire Civil Registration|Bavaria (Bayern)]] |
| | *[[Brunswick (Braunschweig), German Empire Civil Registration|Brunswick (Braunschweig)]] |
| | *[[Elsass-Lothringen, German Empire Civil Registration|Elsass-Lothringen]] |
| | *[[Hesse (Hessen), German Empire Civil Registration|Hesse (Hessen)]] |
| | *[[Lippe, German Empire Civil Registration|Lippe]] |
| | *[[Mecklenburg-Schwerin, German Empire Civil Registration|Mecklenburg-Schwerin]] |
| | *[[Mecklenburg-Strelitz, German Empire Civil Registration|Mecklenburg-Strelitz]] |
| | *[[Oldenburg, German Empire Civil Registration|Oldenburg]] |
| | *[[Saxony (Sachsen), German Empire Civil Registration|Saxony (Sachsen)]] |
| | *[[Schaumburg-Lippe, German Empire Civil Registration|Schaumburg-Lippe]] |
| | *[[Waldeck and Pyrmont, German Empire Civil Registration|Waldeck]] |
| | *[[Württemberg, German Empire Civil Registration|Württemberg]] |
| | |style="vertical-align:top; width:30%; padding-right:1em"| |
| | '''Prussia (Preussen)'''<br> |
| | *[[Brandenburg, German Empire Civil Registration|Brandenburg]] |
| | **[[Berlin, Brandenburg, German Empire Civil Registration|Berlin]] |
| | *[[East Prussia (Ostpreussen), German Empire Civil Registration|East Prussia (Ostpreussen)]] |
| | *[[Hanover (Hannover), German Empire Civil Registration|Hanover (Hannover)]] |
| | *[[Hesse-Nassau (Hessen-Nassau), German Empire Civil Registration|Hesse-Nassau (Hessen-Nassau)]] |
| | *[[Hohenzollern, German Empire Civil Registration|Hohenzollern]] |
| | *[[Pomerania (Pommern), German Empire Civil Registration|Pomerania (Pommern)]] |
| | *[[Posen, German Empire Civil Registration|Posen]] |
| | *[[Province of Saxony (Provinz Sachsen), German Empire Civil Registration|Province of Saxony (Provinz Sachsen)]] |
| | *[[Rhineland (Rheinland), German Empire Civil Registration|Rhineland (Rheinland)]] |
| | *[[Silesia (Schlesien), German Empire Civil Registration|Silesia (Schlesien)]] |
| | *[[Schleswig-Holstein, German Empire Civil Registration|Schleswig-Holstein]] |
| | *[[Westphalia (Westfalen), German Empire Civil Registration|Westphalia (Westfalen)]] |
| | *[[West Prussia (Westpreussen), German Empire Civil Registration|West Prussia (Westpreussen)]] |
| | |style="vertical-align:top; width:35%; padding-right:1em"| |
| | '''Thuringia (Thüringen)'''<br> |
| | *[[Reuss Younger Line (jüngere Linie), German Empire Civil Registration|Reuss Younger Line (jüngere Linie)]] |
| | *[[Reuss Elder Line (ältere Linie), German Empire Civil Registration|Reuss Elder Line (ältere Linie)]] |
| | *[[Saxe-Altenburg (Sachsen-Altenburg), German Empire Civil Registration|Saxe-Altenburg (Sachsen-Altenburg)]] |
| | *[[Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (Sachsen-Coburg-Gotha), German Empire Civil Registration|Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (Sachsen-Coburg-Gotha)]] |
| | *[[Saxe-Meiningen (Sachsen-Meiningen), German Empire Civil Registration|Saxe-Meiningen (Sachsen-Meiningen)]] |
| | *[[Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach), German Empire Civil Registration|Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach)]] |
| | *[[Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt, German Empire Civil Registration|Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt]] |
| | *[[Schwarzburg-Sondershausen, German Empire Civil Registration|Schwarzburg-Sondershausen]] |
|
| |
|
| If your ancestor lived in a small village, the civil records may have been kept in a larger nearby town. You may need to use gazetteers and other geographic references to identify the place where your ancestor lived and the civil registration office that served it (see [[Germany Gazetteers|Germany Gazetteers]]). You also need to know at least an approximate year in which the birth, marriage, or death of your ancestor occurred.
| | '''City-States'''<br> |
| | *[[Bremen, German Empire Civil Registration|Bremen]] |
| | *[[Hamburg, German Empire Civil Registration|Hamburg]] |
| | *[[Lübeck, German Empire Civil Registration|Lübeck]] |
| | <br> |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| Large cities often have many civil registration districts. City directories can sometimes help identify which civil registration district a person lived in. The Family History Library Catalog lists books showing registration districts for street addresses in Berlin, Leipzig, Magdeburg, Breslau, and Stettin.
| | === Writing for Records=== |
|
| |
|
| === Records from Towns now in Poland ===
| | Civil registration records from many towns and states are available on microfilm or online. However, many civil registration records, especially those created in 1876 or later, are still only available in the local civil registration office or archive in Germany that has the originals. Civil birth, marriage, and death records may be found by contacting or visiting the local civil registration office or archive. |
| | *To e-mail the municipality to '''verify that the civil registry for your town is there'''. |
| | *#Consult this address list for the exact contact information, which should include an e-mail address: [https://www.Standesamt.com/ '''Standesamt.com''']. In the horizontal menu bar, hover over "+registry office" or "+Standesämter", then the name of the modern state, for a drop-down list of links to modern cilvil registrars. |
| | *#Send a message asking whether you have the correct office for your ancestors' home town. You can also use e-mail to request records and arrange payment. Use the [[German Letter Writing Guide|'''German Letter Writing Guide''']] to write your questions in German. |
|
| |
|
| Extracts of German records requested from towns now in Poland will be written in Polish. Addresses of civil registration offices in formerly German areas of Poland, along with an inventory of available German civil registration records, are found in:<br>Brόzka, Tomascz. Deutsche Personenstandsbücher und Personenstandseinträge von Deutschen in Polen 1898 bis 1945. Frankfurt a/Main und Berlin: Verlag für Standesamtswesen, 2000. [[/w/index.php?title=Special:Booksources&isbn=3801956741|ISBN 3-8019-5674-1]]. (Int’l Ref area 943.8 V23b copy 3).<br>[http://www.usc.pl/s_urzedy.php?akcja=info1&id=2405074 The addresses of Civil Registration Offices in Poland can be found online at this link.]
| | Civil officials will usually answer correspondence that is written to them in German. Your request may be forwarded if the records have been sent to an archive or central repository. |
|
| |
|
| === Indexes to Civil Registration Records ===
| | '''How to write a letter:''' Write a brief request in German to the proper office using the [[German Letter Writing Guide|'''German Letter Writing Guide''']], which includes detailed instructions for what to include in the letter, along with German translations of the questions and sentences most frequently used. |
|
| |
|
| Births, marriages, and deaths were written in the civil registration records as they occurred, and thus they are arranged chronologically. Where available, indexes can help you find your ancestor more easily. The indexes usually cover one year at a time and are located at the beginning or end of each year. You will sometimes also find an alphabetical index at the beginning or the end of a volume. These indexes and volumes may cover many years.
| | === City Archives === |
|
| |
|
| Each civil registrar [Mairie or Bürgermeisterei] in Elsaß-Lothringen has cumulative indexes that cover ten-year periods [Tables décennales]. To use these indexes, you need to know the town or district where a person lived; the approximate year of birth, marriage, or death; and at least his or her surname. The indexes are alphabetical by at least the first letter of the surname. The Family History Library Catalog usually indicates which records have index listings.
| | Large cities have many civil registration offices. Most civil registers are still located at the local offices, but some are collected in city archives. Many German cities have established archives to preserve their older records. Often they cannot handle genealogical requests, but they can determine whether specific records are available for you or your agent to search. |
|
| |
|
| === Records at the Family History Library === | | === State Archives === |
|
| |
|
| The Family History Library has microfilmed civil registration records up to around 1900 for Alsace-Lorraine, and from 1874 to approximately 1884 for various parts of Prussia, as well as various records from the Napoleonic era and a few sets that go beyond 1900. The use of sets containing post- 1900 records may be restricted.<br>In Hannover, Hessen-Nassau, and Westfalen the filmed civil registration records mostly cover 1808 to 1812, and sometimes 1874-1875. In the Pfalz [Palatinate] early 19th century marriage supplements are often cataloged under "[town name] - civil registration".
| | Duplicate registers from some towns are kept in state archives. For more recent records and for those not yet microfilmed, you may write to the state archives of Germany and request searches of the records. See [[Germany Archives and Libraries]]. |
|
| |
|
| The Family History Library has records from many towns and states. However, the library does not have records that were destroyed, have not been microfilmed, were not available in the registrar's office at the time of microfilming, or are restricted from public access by the laws of the country. You may use the records at the library for your family research, but you must contact the civil office holding the records if you want an official certificate for living or deceased individuals.
| | You may also find archive inventories that describe the record-keeping systems and available civil registration records in Germany (see [[Germany Archives and Libraries]]). These and other guides are found in the Place Search of the FamilySearch Catalog under: <br> |
|
| |
|
| To find civil registration records in the Family History Library Catalog, search the Place Search under:
| | {{Block indent|GERMANY - ARCHIVES AND LIBRARIES}} |
| | {{Block indent|GERMANY, [STATE] - ARCHIVES AND LIBRARIES}} |
|
| |
|
| GERMANY - CIVIL REGISTRATION<br>GERMANY, [STATE], [TOWN] - CIVIL REGISTRATION
| | That is, search for your German state in the FamilySearch Catalog and click on the "Archives and Libraries" heading in the search results. |
|
| |
|
| The library's collection continues to grow as new records are microfilmed and added to the collection. Do not give up if the records you need are not available. The Family History Library Catalog is updated regularly. Check it periodically to see if the records you need have been added to the library's collection.
| | After determining who has jurisdiction over the records for the time period you need, write a short request to the proper office. Be careful not to ask for too much when writing to German archives. They can briefly answer questions about the records in their collection but are often reluctant to do research in these records. You may have more success if you ask for a referral or a list of local researchers you could hire to search the archive's records. See [[German Letter Writing Guide]] for more information about writing to offices in Germany. |
|
| |
|
| Learn more about [[Germany locating civil registration records not at the Family History Library|Locating Records Not at the Family History Library]]. {{Place|Germany}}
| | ===Deaths of German Citizens Abroad=== |
| | *'''1939-1955''' [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/61888/ Germany, Deaths of German Citizens Abroad, Registers from Berlin Standesamt 1, 1939-1955] at Ancestry - Index and images ($) |
| | *'''1939-1945''' [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/61887/ Deaths, German Occupied Territories, 1939-1945] at Ancestry - index & images ($); countries covered in the collection include the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, and areas of Ukraine, Russia, and the Baltics designated 'Eastern Territories' in the records. |
|
| |
|
| '''Wiki articles describing these collections are found at:'''
| | === Records from Towns Now in Poland === |
|
| |
|
| *[[Germany Births and Baptisms (FamilySearch Historical Records)|Germany Births and Baptisms (FamilySearch Historical Records)]]
| | Extracts of German records requested from towns now in Poland will be written in Polish. Addresses of civil registration offices in formerly German areas of Poland, along with an inventory of available German civil registration records, are found in:<br>Brόzka, Tomascz. ''Deutsche Personenstandsbücher und Personenstandseinträge von Deutschen in Polen 1898 bis 1945''. Frankfurt a/Main und Berlin: Verlag für Standesamtswesen, 2000. ISBN 3-8019-5674-1. (B2 Floor, call number 943.8 V23b). |
| *[[Germany Deaths and Burials (FamilySearch Historical Records)|Germany Deaths and Burials (FamilySearch Historical Records)]]
| |
| *[[Germany Marriages (FamilySearch Historical Records)|Germany Marriages (FamilySearch Historical Records)]]
| |
|
| |
|
| [[Category:Germany|Civil Registration]] | | [[Category:Germany Civil Registration]] |
| | [[es:Alemania – registro civil]] |