Jump to content

France Civil Registration: Difference between revisions

m
Line 106: Line 106:
You must determine the town where your ancestor lived before you can find civil registration records. Your ancestor may have lived in a village that belonged to a nearby larger town. In large cities there may be many civil registration districts. Each district has its own registrar. You may need to use gazetteers and other geographic references to identify the place your ancestor lived and the civil registration office that served it. See the "[[France Gazetteers|Gazetteers]]" section.  
You must determine the town where your ancestor lived before you can find civil registration records. Your ancestor may have lived in a village that belonged to a nearby larger town. In large cities there may be many civil registration districts. Each district has its own registrar. You may need to use gazetteers and other geographic references to identify the place your ancestor lived and the civil registration office that served it. See the "[[France Gazetteers|Gazetteers]]" section.  


In addition, it helps to know the approximate year in which the birth, marriage, divorce, or death occurred. Records less than 100 years old are confidential. This means the registrar will issue a birth or marriage certificate less than 100 years old only to direct relatives.  
In addition, it helps to know the approximate year in which the birth, marriage, divorce, or death occurred. Records less than 100 years old are confidential. This means the registrar will issue a birth or marriage certificate less than 100 years old only to direct relatives.
====French Archives Online====
 
For the past few years France has been digitizing its archives (both Civil registers and Parish registers) and making them available online from a variety of Departmental links.
 
Some Departments provide the record images free of charge whereas some ask for payment.  There is no determining factor enabling the researcher to determine where the archives will be available for free or not.  Only by visiting the sites will you know.
 
This is a work in progress and not all Departements are online yet, nor complete.
 
For example, in Sarthe: http://www.archives.sarthe.com/RegistreNumerise.asp
 
Here you find a listing of all the towns, villages in that Departement that have been digitized, so you can choose what time frame you need to look at.  After that it's like cranking the wheel of a microfilm reader.  Use the indexes as mentioned earlier in this article.  Tools are found on the page to zoom in and out, rotate, save and/or print the original document.
 
'''Tips''' (Astuces) are given at the top of the page or you can Return to the main list of digitized documents by clicking on "Retour <span>à&nbsp;</span>l'Inventaire" where you can choose other records to search through.
 
To find out what is available, check this website for a map:
 
http://www.francegenweb.org/~archives/archivesgenweb/?id=carte
 
Clicking on the map will redirect you to an alphabetical list of all the Departements that are participating in this digitization project.
 
In some cases, notarial records are included as part of the project.


=== Indexes to Civil Registration Records  ===
=== Indexes to Civil Registration Records  ===
318,531

edits