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====== =============== ====== | ====== =============== ====== | ||
===== County directory ===== | ===== County directory ===== | ||
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*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. | *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 | coup de sang | ||
French word for "paralytic stroke." | French word for "paralytic stroke." | ||
cour | cour | ||
French word for "court." | French word for "court." | ||
courant | courant | ||
French word for "current." | French word for "current." | ||
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*A list of city officers, government officials, and private residents. | *A list of city officers, government officials, and private residents. | ||
Court district | Court district | ||
The area of land over which a court has authority. | The area of land over which a court has authority. | ||
Court executions, New Jersey | Court executions, New Jersey | ||
Recorded actions taken by a New Jersey court of chancery. | Recorded actions taken by a New Jersey court of chancery. | ||
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*A court in Alabama with statewide jurisdiction over civil cases appealed from lower courts. | *A court in Alabama with statewide jurisdiction over civil cases appealed from lower courts. | ||
Court of common law | Court of common law | ||
A court with jurisdiction over criminal cases. | A court with jurisdiction over criminal cases. | ||
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*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. | *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 | Court of common pleas, general | ||
A countywide court, usually having civil and criminal jurisdiction. | A countywide court, usually having civil and criminal jurisdiction. | ||
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*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. | *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 | 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. | 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. | ||
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*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. | *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 | 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. | 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. | ||
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*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. | *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 | 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. | 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 | 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. | A high court, under the direct authority of the king, which handled cases of inheritance of land. It was abolished in 1646. | ||
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*A record of a court’s decision on a case. Also called a court decree or court judgment. | *A record of a court’s decision on a case. Also called a court decree or court judgment. | ||
<br> | |||
===== Court Records, Family History Library Catalog™ ===== | ===== Court Records, Family History Library Catalog™ ===== | ||
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*Records kept by courts of law. | *Records kept by courts of law. | ||
Court, PERiodical Source Index | 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. | 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. | ||
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*A building that houses a court of law or county offices and county records. | *A building that houses a court of law or county offices and county records. | ||
cousin(e) | cousin(e) | ||
French word for "cousin." | French word for "cousin." | ||
cousin(e) germain(e) | cousin(e) germain(e) | ||
French word for "first cousin." | French word for "first cousin." | ||
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*An old French law system, used in the area surrounding Paris in 1664, on which civil law in Québec (Canada) was based. | *An old French law system, used in the area surrounding Paris in 1664, on which civil law in Québec (Canada) was based. | ||
couvreur | couvreur | ||
French word for "roofer." | French word for "roofer." | ||
cova | cova | ||
Portuguese word for "grave." | Portuguese word for "grave." | ||
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*A legally binding agreement between two or more parties. | *A legally binding agreement between two or more parties. | ||
coxo (a), | |||
Portuguese word for "lame." | |||
===== Coyote ===== | ===== 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. | *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) ===== | ===== Creek War (1836-1837) ===== | ||
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*A descendant of the original Spanish, Portuguese, or French settlers of the Americas. | *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) ===== | ===== Crimean War (1854-1856) ===== | ||
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*A Spanish word for chrism, or holy oil used in Latin and Greek churches for baptisms, confirmations, and other rites. | *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 ===== | ===== Cromwellian period (1649-1660), England ===== | ||
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*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. | *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 ===== | ===== Crown colony land grants ===== | ||
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*A contract that allows a person to use land held by the British Crown in return for money or some other form of recompense. | *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." | |||
===== Cuarteado ===== | ===== Cuarteado ===== | ||
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*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. | *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." | |||
===== Cuatrero ===== | ===== 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. | *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 ===== | ===== Cumberland Gap ===== | ||
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*A highland area that covers parts of eastern Tennessee and Kentucky. The Cumberland Plateau is bounded on the east by the Appalachian Mountain range. | *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. | |||
cumpleaños | |||
Spanish word for "birthday." | |||
cunhado (a) | |||
Portuguese word for "brother-in-law, sister-in-law." | |||
cuoco | |||
Italian word for "cook." | |||
cuore | |||
Italian word for "heart." | |||
cuprifaber | |||
Latin word for "coppersmith." | |||
cur | |||
Latin word for "why." | |||
cura | |||
Portuguese and Spanish word for "clergyman." | |||
curateur | |||
French word for "guardian". | |||
===== Curation ===== | ===== Curation ===== | ||
*Guardianship over a child who is old enough to marry but not yet 21 years of age. | *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 ===== | ===== 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. | *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 ===== | ===== Customs passenger list ===== | ||
*Passenger lists that masters of ships submitted to United States customs officials when ships arrived in the United States. | *Passenger lists that masters of ships submitted to United States customs officials when ships arrived in the United States. | ||
custos (custodis) | |||
Latin word for "custodian, guard." | |||
cuyo (a) | |||
Spanish word for "whose." | |||
cuál | cuál |
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