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<br>Most materials used in German research are written in German. However, you do not need to speak or read German to do research in German records. You will need to know some key words and phrases to understand the records.  
Most materials used in German research are written in German. However, you do not need to speak or read German to do research in German records. You will need to know some key words and phrases to understand the records.  


Because of Germany's history, you may also find several other languages in German records. Latin was frequently used in Roman Catholic church records. French was often used in Elsaß-Lothringen and during the French domination of the area west of the Rhein river (1806-1815). Danish was used in much of Schleswig-Holstein until Preußen annexed that area in 1864.  
Because of Germany's history, you may also find several other languages in German records. Latin was frequently used in Roman Catholic church records. French was often used in Elsaß-Lothringen/Alsace-Lorraine and during the French domination of the area west of the Rhein. Danish was used in much of Schleswig-Holstein until Preußen/Prussia annexed that area in 1864. Polish, Dutch, and Low German can also be found in some areas.
==Language Aids==


Click here for information on [https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/The_Low_German_Language_in_German_Research Low German]&nbsp;or here&nbsp;for [https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Languages_in_the_Lower_Rhine_Area_of_Germany languages in the Lower Rhine ]area.&nbsp;
*FamilySearch Wiki has genealogical '''word lists''' for:
**[[German Word List]]
**[[Danish Word List]] Danish is used in some records of Schleswig-Holstein.
**[[French Wordlist|French Word List]] French is used in some records of Alsace-Lorraine (Elsass-Lothringen).
**[[Poland Genealogical Word List|Polish Genealogical Word List]]
**[[Portuguese Genealogical Word List]]<br>


German grammar may affect the way names appear in genealogical records, so your ancestor's name in German may vary from record to record. For help in understanding name variations, see the “Names, Personal” section.  
*The German Word List includes symbols commonly used in German genealogical sources.
*[https://script.byu.edu/00000184-9bb0-d9f7-af95-9bbc5e000001/german-name-examples '''List of Names in Old German Script'''] A comprehensive list of German  given names,  written in old script, with possible variations.
*[http://altdeutsche-schrift.de/adsschreiben.php#schrifftfeld '''Old German Script Transcriber (alte deutsche Handschriften):'''] See your family names in the script of the era. Type your name or other word into the font generator tool. Click between the 8 different fonts. Save the image to your computer and use it as you work with old German records.<br>
*[http://www.kurrentschrift.net/index.php?s=schreiben '''Schreibübung [writing practice]'''] Type a name or other word into one of the blank text boxes (note: if an "s" is at the end of a syllable, type # instead in order to generate the ending "s"). Fill out one to five of the boxes with text. Click on the "umwandeln" button. Scroll down to see the word(s) written in Kurrent. To see other words in Kurrent, click on "löschen" or delete the text in a box, write something new, and click on "umwandeln" again.<br>
*[https://www.wordmine.info/?slang=de '''WordMine'''] If the website language is not in English, click on "Language" at the top right and change it to English. (To look at a word in a language other than German, from just above the search box click on "German" and select a different language.) Check the box next to "Number of letters" underneath the search box, and change the range to fit the word you are looking for. Then click on "Select search type" from above the search box and select an option, such as "Words starting with," "Words ending in," or "Words containing." Type the letter sequence you see (from the German word you're trying to decipher) into the search box and click on the search button. Then browse through the results, which may be listed on multiple pages, to potentially locate the correct full German word.


Click here for information on how [https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/The_Dialect_Basis_of_Spelling_Variation_in_German_Surnames dialects affect German ]names.
==Handwriting==


Click here for information on [https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Spelling_Variations_in_German_Documents spelling variations in German documents].  
*These links to lessons and websites will assist in learning to read the records of Germany:
**[https://www.familysearch.org/help/helpcenter/lessons/german-paleography-seminar-introduction German Paleography Seminar (10 videos)]
**[https://www.familysearch.org/help/helpcenter/lessons/old-german-script-part-1 Old German Script Part 1],  [https://www.familysearch.org/help/helpcenter/lessons/old-german-script-part-2 Part 2], [https://www.familysearch.org/help/helpcenter/lessons/old-german-script-german-church-and-civil-records-part-3 Part 3 (German Church and Civil Records)]
**[https://www.familysearch.org/help/helpcenter/lessons/german-church-and-civil-records German Church and Civil Records]
**[https://script.byu.edu/german-handwriting/introduction German Script Tutorial]
**[[Deciphering German Script 1-12|Deciphering German Script 1-12]]
**[[Deciphering German Script 25-36|Deciphering German Script 25-36]]
**[[Deciphering German Script 13-24|Deciphering German Script 13-24]]
**[[Schleswig-Holstein: Handwriting|Schleswig-Holstein: Handwriting]]


=== Language Aids  ===
*For more information about '''reading German writing''', see [[Germany Handwriting]].


<br>FamilySearch Wiki has genealogical word lists for: [[Danish Word List]] [[French Wordlist]] [[German Word List]] [[Poland Genealogical Word List]] [[Portuguese Genealogical Word List]]
==Downloadable Handouts==


The German Word List includes symbols commonly used in German genealogical sources. For more information about reading German writing, see [[Germany Handwriting]].  
These printable handouts can be used for ready reference when reading German Handwriting.<br>
''Letters:''<br>


The following books and English-German dictionaries can help in your research. You can find these and similar materials at many research libraries.  
*[[Media:Kurrent Letters.pdf|Kurrent Letters handout]]
*[[Media:Kurrent Font Help Wiki.pdf|Additional Kurrent Letters handout]]


Thode, Ernest. ''[http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?display=titledetails&titleno=47299&disp=German%2DEnglish+genealogical+dictionary%20%20&columns=*,0,0 German-English Genealogical Dictionary].'' Baltimore, Maryland, USA: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1992. (FHL book 433.21 T352g 1992.)
''Vocabulary found on Specific Records:''<br>


''[http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?display=titledetails&titleno=259067&disp=Langenscheidt%27s+German%2DEnglish%2C+En%20%20&columns=*,0,0 Langenscheidts German-English, English-German Dictionary = Langenscheidts Deutsch-Englisches, Englisch-Deutches Wörterbuch]''. New York, NY, USA: Pocket Books, 1952, 1993. (FHL book 433.21 L262g.)
*[[Media:Birth Record Vocabulary-Kurrent-german.pdf|Birth Records Vocabulary handout]]
*[[Media:Marriage Record Vocabulary-Kurrent-german.pdf|Marriage Records Vocabulary handout]]
*[[Media:German marriage handout templated jan 2017.pdf|Overview of Marriage Laws and Customs (handout)]]
*[[Media:Death Record Vocabulary-Kurrent german.pdf|Death Records Vocabulary handout]]


Grimms Dictionary online can be found at this link [http://germazope.uni-trier.de/Projects/WBB/woerterbuecher/dwb/wbgui?lemid=GA00001 Dictionary of German historical words].
''Dates, Numbers, Abbreviations:''<br>


Other language aids, including dictionaries of various dialects and time periods, are listed in the Place Search of the Family History Library Catalog under:  
*[[Media:Days and Months Vocabulary-Kurrent-German.pdf|Days and Months handout]]
*[[Media:Numbers Vocabulary.pdf|Numbers Vocabulary handout]]
*[[Media:Kurrent Script Dates, Numbers, etc.pdf|Script Dates and Numbers handout]]
*[[Media:Common Abbreviations-Kurrent-german.pdf|Common Abbreviations handout]]
*[[Media:Common Symbols - Kurrent-german.pdf|Common Symbols handout]]


:[http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?display=topicdetails&subject=383785&subject_disp=Germany+%2D+Language+and+languages&columns=*,0,0 GERMANY - LANGUAGE AND LANGUAGES]
''Miscellaneous Vocabulary:''<br>


:[http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?display=topicdetails&subject=329866&subject_disp=Germany+%2D+Language+and+languages+%2D+Dictionaries&columns=*,0,0 GERMANY - LANGUAGE AND LANGUAGES - DICTIONARIES]
*[[Media:German Occupations Vocabulary.pdf|German Occupations Vocabulary handout]]
*[[Media:Illnesses Vocabulary-Kurrent-german.pdf|Illnesses Vocabulary handout]]


Also check the Subject Search of the catalog under:  
''Fraktur:''<br>


<br>
*[[Media:Fraktur Font help - Wiki.pdf|Fraktur Font]]--Many forms and books are printed in this font.


<br>
==Fraktur Font Used in Printed Records==
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraktur_(script) Wikipedia Fraktur Script]. For a printable table showing Fraktur letters, [[Media:Fraktur Font help - Wiki.pdf|click here]].


:[http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?display=subjecthitlist&columns=*%2C0%2C0&subject=German+Language&presubject=German+Language GERMAN LANGUAGE - DICTIONARIES]
For a printable table showing Kurrent letters in a computer font, [[Media:Kurrent Font Help Wiki.pdf|click here]].


<br>Other language aids for parish Latin can be found at these links:
==Dictionaries==


[http://www.krumhermersdorf.de/literatur/latein.htm#Auswahl http://www.krumhermersdorf.de/literatur/latein.htm#Auswahl]&nbsp;
*The following '''books and English-German dictionaries''' can help in your research. You can find these and similar materials at many research libraries.
**Thode, Ernest. ''[http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?display=titledetails&titleno=47299&disp=German%2DEnglish+genealogical+dictionary%20%20&columns=*,0,0 German-English Genealogical Dictionary].'' Baltimore, Maryland, USA: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1992. (FS Library book 433.21 T352g 1992.)
**''[http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?display=titledetails&titleno=259067&disp=Langenscheidt%27s+German%2DEnglish%2C+En%20%20&columns=*,0,0 Langenscheidts German-English, English-German Dictionary = Langenscheidts Deutsch-Englisches, Englisch-Deutches Wörterbuch]''. New York, NY, USA: Pocket Books, 1952, 1993. (FS Library book 433.21 L262g.)
**Grimm's Dictionary online can be found at this link [http://germazope.uni-trier.de/Projects/WBB/woerterbuecher/dwb/wbgui?lemid=GA00001 Dictionary of German historical words].


[http://www.e-latein.de/ http://www.e-latein.de/]
==Latin Aids==
Other language aids for parish Latin can be found at these links:  


[http://www.krumhermersdorf.de/literatur/latein.htm http://www.krumhermersdorf.de/literatur/latein.htm]  
*[http://www.krumhermersdorf.de/literatur/latein.htm#Auswahl Church-Book Latin]
*[http://www.e-latein.de/ e-Latin]
*[http://www.albertmartin.de/latein/ Latein Wörterbuch, search]
*[http://www.albertmartin.de/latein/?q=bapti&con=0 Latein Wörterbuch, alphabetical list]


[http://www.albertmartin.de/latein/ http://www.albertmartin.de/latein/]
==Dialects and Variations==
See also:  


[http://lateinisch.bildung-infos.info/latedeus.htm http://lateinisch.bildung-infos.info/latedeus.htm]
*[[Low German Language in German Research|Low German language]]
*[[Languages in the Lower Rhine Area of Germany|Languages in the Lower Rhine area]]
*[[Spellings Variants in the Northern Rheinland|Spelling variation in the northern Rhine]] area.


[http://www.muehle-com.de/HP-Tools/html/latein.html http://www.muehle-com.de/HP-Tools/html/latein.html]
German grammar may affect the way names appear in genealogical records, so your ancestor's name in German may vary from record to record. For help in understanding name variations, see the “Names, Personal” section and [[The Dialect Basis of Spelling Variation in German Surnames|Affect of dialects on German surnames]].  


[http://lateinwiki.org/Hauptseite http://lateinwiki.org/Hauptseite]<br>[http://www.albertmartin.de/latein/?q=bapti&con=0 http://www.albertmartin.de/latein/?q=bapti&amp;con=0]
See also: [[Spelling Variations in German Documents|spelling variations in German documents]].  


== NUMBERS  ==
==Numbers==
 
----


In some genealogical records, numbers are spelled out. This is especially true of dates. The following list gives the cardinal (1, 2, 3) and the ordinal (1st, 2nd, 3rd) versions of each number. Days of the month are written in ordinal form. Ordinal forms may have other endings, for example: erste, ersten.  
In some genealogical records, numbers are spelled out. This is especially true of dates. The following list gives the cardinal (1, 2, 3) and the ordinal (1st, 2nd, 3rd) versions of each number. Days of the month are written in ordinal form. Ordinal forms may have other endings, for example: erste, ersten.  


Cardinal Ordinal <br>0 null <br>1 eins 1st erste <br>2 zwei 2nd zweite, zweyte <br>3 drei 3rd dritte <br>4 vier 4th vierte <br>5 fünf 5th fünfte <br>6 sechs 6th sechste <br>7 sieben 7th siebte, siebente <br>8 acht 8th achte <br>9 neun 9th neunte <br>10 zehn 10th zehnte <br>11 elf 11th elfte <br>12 zwölf 12th zwölfte <br>13 dreizehn 13th dreizehnte <br>14 vierzehn 14th vierzehnte <br>15 fünfzehn 15th fünfzehnte <br>16 sechzehn 16th sechzehnte <br>17 siebzehn 17th siebzehnte <br>18 achtzehn 18th achtzehnte <br>19 neunzehn 19th neunzehnte <br>20 zwanzig 20th zwanzigste <br>21 einundzwanzig 21st einundzwanzigste <br>22 zweiundzwanzig 22nd zweiundzwanzigste <br>23 dreiundzwanzig 23rd dreiundzwanzigste <br>24 vierundzwanzig 24th vierundzwanzigste <br>25 fünfundzwanzig 25th fünfundzwanzigste <br>26 sechsundzwanzig 26th sechsundzwanzigste <br>27 siebenundzwanzig 27th siebenundzwanzigste <br>28 achtundzwanzig 28th achtundzwanzigste <br>29 neunundzwanzig 29th neunundzwanzigste <br>30 dreißig 30th dreißigste <br>31 einunddreißig 31st einunddreißigste <br>40 vierzig 40th vierzigste <br>50 fünfzig 50th fünfzigste <br>60 sechzig 60th sechzigste <br>70 siebzig 70th siebzigste <br>80 achtzig 80th achtzigste <br>90 neunzig 90th neunzigste <br>100 hundert 100th hunderste <br>200 zweihundert 200th zwei hunderste <br>1000 tausend 1000th tausendste  
{|
|-
|'''Cardinal'''
|
|'''Ordinal'''
|
|-
|null
|
|
|
|-
|eins
|1st
|erste
|
|-
|zwei
|2nd
|zweite, zweyte
|
|-
|drei
|3rd
|dritte
|
|-
|vier
|4th
|vierte
|
|-
|fünf
|5th
|fünfte
|
|-
|sechs
|6th
|sechste
|
|-
|sieben
|7th
|siebte, siebente
|
|-
|acht
|8th
|achte
|
|-
|neun
|9th
|neunte
|
|-
|zehn
|10th
|zehnte
|
|-
|elf
|11th
|elfte
|
|-
|zwölf
|12th
|zwölfte
|
|-
|dreizehn
|13th
|dreizehnte
|
|-
|vierzehn
|14th
|vierzehnte
|
|-
|fünfzehn
|15th
|fünfzehnte
|
|-
|sechzehn
|16th
|sechzehnte
|
|-
|siebzehn
|17th
|siebzehnte
|
|-
|achtzehn
|18th
|achtzehnte
|
|-
|neunzehn
|19th
|neunzehnte
|
|-
|zwanzig
|20th
|zwanzigste
|
|-
|einundzwanzig
|21st
|einundzwanzigste
|
|-
|zweiundzwanzig
|22nd
|zweiundzwanzigste
|
|-
|dreiundzwanzig
|23rd
|dreiundzwanzigste
|
|-
|vierundzwanzig
|24th
|vierundzwanzigste
|
|-
|fünfundzwanzig
|25th
|fünfundzwanzigste
|
|-
|sechsundzwanzig
|26th
|sechsundzwanzigste
|
|-
|siebenundzwanzig
|27th
|siebenundzwanzigste
|
|-
|achtundzwanzig
|28th
|achtundzwanzigste
|
|-
|neunundzwanzig
|29th
|neunundzwanzigste
|
|-
|dreißig
|30th
|dreißigste
|
|-
|einunddreißig
|31st
|einunddreißigste
|
|-
|vierzig
|40th
|vierzigste
|
|-
|fünfzig
|50th
|fünfzigste
|
|-
|sechzig
|60th
|sechzigste
|
|-
|siebzig
|70th
|siebzigste
|
|-
|achtzig
|80th
|achtzigste
|
|-
|neunzig
|90th
|neunzigste
|
|-
|hundert
|100th
|hunderste
|
|-
|zweihundert
|200th
|zwei hunderste
|
|-
|tausend
|1000th
|tausendste
|
|}


<br>
<br>  


== Dates and Time<br> ==
==Dates and Time==


In German records, dates are often written out. For example:  
In German records, dates are often written out. For example:  
Line 75: Line 336:
To understand German dates, use the following lists as well as the preceding “Numbers” section.  
To understand German dates, use the following lists as well as the preceding “Numbers” section.  


Months  
===Months===
 
<br>English German <br>January Januar, Jänner, Hartung, Jenner <br>February Februar, Hornung <br>March März, Frühlingsmonat <br>April April, Ostermonat, Osteren <br>May Mai, Wonnemonat, Blütemonat <br>June Juni, Brachmonat <br>July Juli, Heuert, Heumonat, Heuet <br>August August, Erntemonat, Hitzmonat <br>September September, Fruchtmonat, Herbstmonat, Herpsten, 7ber, 7bris <br>October Oktober, Weinmonat, 8ber, 8bris <br>November November, Wintermonat, 9ber, 9bris <br>December Dezember, Christmonat, 10ber, 10bris, Xber, Xbris
 
Click here for an extensive list of [https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Month_Names_in_German month names in German].
 
<br>Days of the Week
 
<br>English&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;German <br>Sunday&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sonntag <br>Monday&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Montag <br>Tuesday&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Dienstag <br>Wednesday Mittwoch <br>Thursday&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Donnerstag <br>Friday&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Freitag, Freytag&nbsp;<br>Saturday&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Samstag, Sonnabend


Click here for an article on [https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Week_day_symbols special symbols used for week days].
{|
|-
|'''English'''
|'''German'''
|-
|January
|Januar, Jänner, Hartung, Jenner
|-
|February
|Februar, Hornung
|-
|March
|März, Frühlingsmonat, Lenzing
|-
|April
|April, Ostermonat, Osteren,Oster
|-
|May
|Mai, Wonnemonat, Blütemonat, Wonnemond
|-
|June
|Juni, Brachmonat, Brachet
|-
|July
|Juli, Heuert, Heumonat, Heuet
|-
|August
|August, Erntemonat, Hitzmonat, Ernting
|-
|September
|September, Fruchtmonat, Herbstmonat, Herpsten, 7ber, 7bris, Scheiding
|-
|October
|Oktober, Weinmonat, 8ber, 8bris, Gilbhard
|-
|November
|November, Wintermonat, 9ber, 9bris, Neblung
|-
|December
|Dezember, Christmonat, 10ber, 10bris, Xber, Xbris, Julmond
|}


<br>Times of the Day
A more extensive list of [[Month Names in German|month names in German]].


<br>German birth and death records often indicated the exact time of day when the birth or death occurred. This is usually written out.
===Days of the Week===


German English <br>ein Uhr one (o’clock) <br>zwei Uhr two (o’clock) <br>drei Uhr three (o’clock) <br>halb eins half one = 12:30 <br>halb zwei half two = 1:30 <br>halbe Stunde half hour <br>Stunde hour <br>früh early (a.m.) <br>spät late (p.m.) <br>morgens in the morning <br>vormittags in the forenoon <br>mittags at noon <br>nachmittags in the afternoon <br>abends in the evening <br>mitternachts at midnight
{|
|-
|'''English'''
|
|'''German'''
|-
|Sunday
|
|Sonntag
|-
|Monday
|
|Montag
|-
|Tuesday
|
|Dienstag
|-
|Wednesday
|
|Mittwoch
|-
|Thursday
|
|Donnerstag
|-
|Friday
|
|Freitag, Freytag
|-
|Saturday
|
|Samstag, Sonnabend
|}


<br>Return to top of page
See also:


<br>SYMBOLS
*[[Week Day Symbols|special symbols used for week days]].


<br>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<br>  


<br>The following symbols are commonly used in German genealogical sources.
===Times of the Day===


Symbol Meaning <br>born <br>baptized, christened <br>married <br>died <br>buried <br>born illegitimately <br>common law marriage, illegitimate <br>divorced <br>killed in action <br>died of battle wounds <br>stillborn
German birth and death records often indicated the exact time of day when the birth or death occurred. This is usually written out.


<br>Paper publication: Third edition 1997. English approval: 4/97. <br>
{|
|'''German'''
|'''English'''
|-
|ein Uhr
|one (o’clock)
|-
|zwei Uhr
|two (o’clock)
|-
|drei Uhr
|three (o’clock)
|-
|halb eins
|half one = 12:30
|-
|halb zwei
|half two = 1:30
|-
|halbe Stunde
|half hour
|-
|Stunde
|hour
|-
|früh
|early (a.m.)
|-
|spät
|late (p.m.)
|-
|morgens
|in the morning
|-
|vormittags
|in the forenoon
|-
|mittags
|at noon
|-
|nachmittags
|in the afternoon
|-
|abends
|in the evening
|-
|mitternachts
|at midnight
|-
|}


<br>
==Symbols==


==
Sometimes a symbol is used in German genealogical sources rather than abbreviations. Some of these are shown at [http://wiki-de.genealogy.net/Genealogische_Symbole_und_Zeichen GenWiki, Genealogical Symbols and Signs].


[[Category:Germany]] [[Category:Language_and_Languages]]
<br> {{Germany|Germany}}
[[fr:Allemagne : La Langue et les Langues]]
[[pt:Alemanha, Os Idiomas Germânicos]]
[[Category:Germany Language and Handwriting]]  
[[Category:Language and Handwriting]]

Latest revision as of 12:16, 20 March 2024


Germany Wiki Topics
Flag of Germany
Germany Beginning Research
Record Types
Germany Background
Germany Genealogical Word Lists
Cultural Groups
Local Research Resources

Most materials used in German research are written in German. However, you do not need to speak or read German to do research in German records. You will need to know some key words and phrases to understand the records.

Because of Germany's history, you may also find several other languages in German records. Latin was frequently used in Roman Catholic church records. French was often used in Elsaß-Lothringen/Alsace-Lorraine and during the French domination of the area west of the Rhein. Danish was used in much of Schleswig-Holstein until Preußen/Prussia annexed that area in 1864. Polish, Dutch, and Low German can also be found in some areas.

Language Aids

  • The German Word List includes symbols commonly used in German genealogical sources.
  • List of Names in Old German Script A comprehensive list of German given names, written in old script, with possible variations.
  • Old German Script Transcriber (alte deutsche Handschriften): See your family names in the script of the era. Type your name or other word into the font generator tool. Click between the 8 different fonts. Save the image to your computer and use it as you work with old German records.
  • Schreibübung [writing practice] Type a name or other word into one of the blank text boxes (note: if an "s" is at the end of a syllable, type # instead in order to generate the ending "s"). Fill out one to five of the boxes with text. Click on the "umwandeln" button. Scroll down to see the word(s) written in Kurrent. To see other words in Kurrent, click on "löschen" or delete the text in a box, write something new, and click on "umwandeln" again.
  • WordMine If the website language is not in English, click on "Language" at the top right and change it to English. (To look at a word in a language other than German, from just above the search box click on "German" and select a different language.) Check the box next to "Number of letters" underneath the search box, and change the range to fit the word you are looking for. Then click on "Select search type" from above the search box and select an option, such as "Words starting with," "Words ending in," or "Words containing." Type the letter sequence you see (from the German word you're trying to decipher) into the search box and click on the search button. Then browse through the results, which may be listed on multiple pages, to potentially locate the correct full German word.

Handwriting

Downloadable Handouts

These printable handouts can be used for ready reference when reading German Handwriting.
Letters:

Vocabulary found on Specific Records:

Dates, Numbers, Abbreviations:

Miscellaneous Vocabulary:

Fraktur:

  • Fraktur Font--Many forms and books are printed in this font.

Fraktur Font Used in Printed Records

Wikipedia Fraktur Script. For a printable table showing Fraktur letters, click here.

For a printable table showing Kurrent letters in a computer font, click here.

Dictionaries

Latin Aids

Other language aids for parish Latin can be found at these links:

Dialects and Variations

See also:

German grammar may affect the way names appear in genealogical records, so your ancestor's name in German may vary from record to record. For help in understanding name variations, see the “Names, Personal” section and Affect of dialects on German surnames.

See also: spelling variations in German documents.

Numbers

In some genealogical records, numbers are spelled out. This is especially true of dates. The following list gives the cardinal (1, 2, 3) and the ordinal (1st, 2nd, 3rd) versions of each number. Days of the month are written in ordinal form. Ordinal forms may have other endings, for example: erste, ersten.

Cardinal Ordinal
null
eins 1st erste
zwei 2nd zweite, zweyte
drei 3rd dritte
vier 4th vierte
fünf 5th fünfte
sechs 6th sechste
sieben 7th siebte, siebente
acht 8th achte
neun 9th neunte
zehn 10th zehnte
elf 11th elfte
zwölf 12th zwölfte
dreizehn 13th dreizehnte
vierzehn 14th vierzehnte
fünfzehn 15th fünfzehnte
sechzehn 16th sechzehnte
siebzehn 17th siebzehnte
achtzehn 18th achtzehnte
neunzehn 19th neunzehnte
zwanzig 20th zwanzigste
einundzwanzig 21st einundzwanzigste
zweiundzwanzig 22nd zweiundzwanzigste
dreiundzwanzig 23rd dreiundzwanzigste
vierundzwanzig 24th vierundzwanzigste
fünfundzwanzig 25th fünfundzwanzigste
sechsundzwanzig 26th sechsundzwanzigste
siebenundzwanzig 27th siebenundzwanzigste
achtundzwanzig 28th achtundzwanzigste
neunundzwanzig 29th neunundzwanzigste
dreißig 30th dreißigste
einunddreißig 31st einunddreißigste
vierzig 40th vierzigste
fünfzig 50th fünfzigste
sechzig 60th sechzigste
siebzig 70th siebzigste
achtzig 80th achtzigste
neunzig 90th neunzigste
hundert 100th hunderste
zweihundert 200th zwei hunderste
tausend 1000th tausendste


Dates and Time

In German records, dates are often written out. For example:

Freitag den vierzehnten Februar achtzehnhundert sechs und dreißig [Friday, the 14th of February, eighteen hundred six and thirty (1836)].

To understand German dates, use the following lists as well as the preceding “Numbers” section.

Months

English German
January Januar, Jänner, Hartung, Jenner
February Februar, Hornung
March März, Frühlingsmonat, Lenzing
April April, Ostermonat, Osteren,Oster
May Mai, Wonnemonat, Blütemonat, Wonnemond
June Juni, Brachmonat, Brachet
July Juli, Heuert, Heumonat, Heuet
August August, Erntemonat, Hitzmonat, Ernting
September September, Fruchtmonat, Herbstmonat, Herpsten, 7ber, 7bris, Scheiding
October Oktober, Weinmonat, 8ber, 8bris, Gilbhard
November November, Wintermonat, 9ber, 9bris, Neblung
December Dezember, Christmonat, 10ber, 10bris, Xber, Xbris, Julmond

A more extensive list of month names in German.

Days of the Week

English German
Sunday Sonntag
Monday Montag
Tuesday Dienstag
Wednesday Mittwoch
Thursday Donnerstag
Friday Freitag, Freytag
Saturday Samstag, Sonnabend

See also:


Times of the Day

German birth and death records often indicated the exact time of day when the birth or death occurred. This is usually written out.

German English
ein Uhr one (o’clock)
zwei Uhr two (o’clock)
drei Uhr three (o’clock)
halb eins half one = 12:30
halb zwei half two = 1:30
halbe Stunde half hour
Stunde hour
früh early (a.m.)
spät late (p.m.)
morgens in the morning
vormittags in the forenoon
mittags at noon
nachmittags in the afternoon
abends in the evening
mitternachts at midnight

Symbols

Sometimes a symbol is used in German genealogical sources rather than abbreviations. Some of these are shown at GenWiki, Genealogical Symbols and Signs.