Pará, Brazil Genealogy
Guide to State of Pará family history and genealogy: birth records, marriage records, death records, census records, and military records.
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Most of your genealogical research for Pará will be in two main record types: civil registration (registros civis) and church records (registros da igreja). This article will teach you methods for locating and searching these two record groups.
History[edit | edit source]
The region of the Amazon valley, by the Treaty of Tordesillas in 1494, was in possession of the Spanish Crown, the Portuguese expeditionaries, with the purpose of consolidating the region as Portuguese territory. Despite the construction of a large fort, the occupation of territory was marked by early Dutch and English incursions in search of spices, hence the need of the Portuguese to fortify the area.
In 1823, the Pará had decided to join the independent Brazil, which had been separated during the colonial period, reporting directly to Lisbon, however the political infighting continued. The most important of them, the Cabanagem in 1835, did decree the independence of the province of Pará.
Cabanagem was a popular and social revolt during the Empire of Brazil, in the Amazon region, was influenced by the French Revolution, mainly due to extreme poverty, hunger and disease that devastated the Amazon at the beginning of the period. The revolt spread from 1835 until January 1840, due to the process of independence of Brazil in 1822, which did not occur immediately in the province due to political irrelevance.
Indians, blacks and mestizos in most poor class members, all named cabanos, teamed against the Regent Government and rebelled, in order to increase the importance of the region in Brazil's central Government addressed the issue of poverty of the people of the Amazon as one of the reasons, all lived in mud huts. At the bottom of the rebellion, there has been a mobilization of the Brazilian Empire against the reactionary forces of the province of Grão-Pará in expelling such insurgents who wanted to keep the region as a Portuguese colony or territory independent.
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Municipalities[edit | edit source]
- Abaetetuba
- Abel Figueiredo
- Acará
- Afuá
- Água Azul do Norte
- Alenquer
- Almeirim
- Altamira
- Anajás
- Ananindeua
- Anapu
- Augusto Corrêa
- Aurora do Pará
- Aveiro
- Bagre
- Baião
- Bannach
- Barcarena
- Belém
- Belterra
- Benevides
- Bom Jesus do Tocantins
- Bonito
- Bragança
- Brasil Novo
- Brejo Grande do Araguaia
- Breu Branco
- Breves
- Bujaru
- Cachoeira do Arari
- Cachoeira do Piriá
- Cametá
- Canaã dos Carajás
- Capanema
- Capitão Poço
- Castanhal
- Chaves
- Colares
- Conceição do Araguaia
- Concórdia do Pará
- Cumaru do Norte
- Curionópolis
- Curralinho
- Curuá
- Curuçá
- Dom Eliseu
- Eldorado dos Carajás
- Faro
- Floresta do Araguaia
- Garrafão do Norte
- Goianésia do Pará
- Gurupá
- Igarapé-Açu
- Igarapé-Miri
- Inhangapi
- Ipixuna do Pará
- Irituia
- Itaituba
- Itupiranga
- Jacareacanga
- Jacundá
- Juruti
- Limoeiro do Ajuru
- Mãe do Rio
- Magalhães Barata
- Marabá
- Maracanã
- Marapanim
- Marituba
- Medicilândia
- Melgaço
- Mocajuba
- Moju
- Mojuí dos Campos
- Monte Alegre
- Muaná
- Nova Esperança do Piriá
- Nova Ipixuna
- Nova Timboteua
- Novo Progresso
- Novo Repartimento
- Óbidos
- Oeiras do Pará
- Oriximiná
- Ourém
- Ourilândia do Norte
- Pacajá
- Palestina do Pará
- Paragominas
- Parauapebas
- Pau d'Arco
- Peixe-Boi
- Piçarra
- Placas
- Ponta de Pedras
- Portel
- Porto de Moz
- Prainha
- Primavera
- Quatipuru
- Redenção
- Rio Maria
- Rondon do Pará
- Rurópolis
- Salinópolis
- Salvaterra
- Santa Bárbara do Pará
- Santa Cruz do Arari
- Santa Isabel do Pará
- Santa Luzia do Pará
- Santa Maria das Barreiras
- Santa Maria do Pará
- Santana do Araguaia
- Santarém Novo
- Santarém
- Santo Antônio do Tauá
- São Caetano de Odivelas
- São Domingos do Araguaia
- São Domingos do Capim
- São Félix do Xingu
- São Francisco do Pará
- São Geraldo do Araguaia
- São João da Ponta
- São João de Pirabas
- São João do Araguaia
- São Miguel do Guamá
- São Sebastião da Boa Vista
- Sapucaia
- Senador José Porfírio
- Soure
- Tailândia
- Terra Alta
- Terra Santa
- Tomé-Açu
- Tracuateua
- Trairão
- Tucumã
- Tucuruí
- Ulianópolis
- Uruará
- Vigia
- Viseu
- Vitória do Xingu
- Xinguara
Civil Registration (Registros civis)[edit | edit source]
Civil registration records (Registros civis) are government records covering birth, marriage, and death. They are an excellent source of names, dates, places, and relationships.
In 1850, a law was passed requiring registration of births and deaths throughout the country. Until 1870, the Catholic Church was required to keep this record. After 1870, these records were to be kept by the justices of the peace. Since 1827, the government has accepted marriages performed in the Catholic Church as official marriages.
Civil registration records are kept on a municipal level by local civil registration offices. Records are subsequently sent on to a municipal, district, or delegation office. People from small villages often reported their births, marriages, and deaths to a nearby central municipality office. Many towns in Brazil are very new. If you do not find records for the city you need, you will need to determine when the city was founded and from which older city it was created (try a Google search). Origins of cities are also given in the reference book, Cidades e vilas 1998, which can be consulted online from a FamilySearch Center computer.
1. Online Digital Records for Civil Registration[edit | edit source]
For localities several in Brazil, civil registration records have been filmed, and digitized online copies of the records are available through FamilySearch Historical Records. Filming continues and more records are added as they become available. Until records become available for Pará, research should rely mostly on church records and on writing for civil certificates.. The majority of birth, marriage, and death events would be recorded both in civil and in church records.
- 1815-1995 Brazil, Pará, Civil Registration, 1815-1995 at FamilySearch — How to Use this Collection; index and images
2. Writing for Civil Registration Certificates[edit | edit source]
It is possible to obtain civil registration records by writing to the local civil registry in the municipality. Civil officials will generally answer correspondence in Portuguese. Your request may be forwarded if the records have been sent to state archives. This method is not always reliable. Officials might or might not respond. Using available church records is advisable first.
Write a brief request in Portuguese to the proper office using this address as guide replacing the information in parentheses:
- Cartório de Registro Civil
- (postal code), (municipality), Pará
- BRASIL
Send the following:
- Money for the search fee, usually $10.00
- Full name and the sex of the ancestor sought
- Names of the ancestor’s parents, if known
- Approximate date and place of the event
- Your relationship to the ancestor
- Reason for the request (family history, medical, and so on)
- Request for a photocopy of the complete original record
Write your request in Portuguese whenever possible. For writing your letter in Portuguese, use the translated questions and phrases in this Portuguese Letter-writing Guide.
Church Records (registros da igreja)[edit | edit source]
The vast majority of Brazilians were Catholic and were registered in entries for baptisms, marriages, deaths, and burials in the local church records. Often two and sometimes three generations are indicated in the registers, with personal information on the family. Church records are the main source prior to 1850, when civil registration began. After this date one should search in both church and civil records, since there may be information in one record that does not appear in the other. For instance, the church records may only list the godparents, while the civil records may list the grandparents.
1. Online Digital Records for Church Records[edit | edit source]
For some localities, digital copies of Catholic church records can be searched online:
- 1930-1976 Brazil, Pará, Catholic Church Records, 1930-1976 at FamilySearch - index & images
Batismos are infant baptisms, which are used for birth information. Matrimônios' are marriages. "Óbitos" are deaths. "Índice" is the index.
2. Microfilm Copies of Church Records in the FamilySearch Catalog[edit | edit source]
If the locality and time period you need are not included in the online records, the next step is to find them in the microfilm collection of the FamilySearch Library. Currently, they are being digitized, and plans are to complete that project by 2020. Check back occasionally to see if your records have become available. In the meantime, some of them might be available at a FamilySearch Center near you.
To find a microfilm:
- a. Click on this link to see a list of records for Brazil, Pará.
- b. Click on "Places within Brazil, Pará" and a list of towns and cities will open.
- c. Click on the town or city you wish to search.
- d. Click on "Church Records" topic. Click on the blue links to specific record titles.
- e. Choose the correct event and time period for your ancestor.
- f. Some combination of these icons will appear at the far right of the microfilm listed for the record.
. Clicking on the magnifying glass will take you to the index. Clicking on the camera will take you to an online digital copy of the microfilm.
3. Writing to a Catholic Priest for Church Records[edit | edit source]
Baptism, marriage, and death records may be searched by contacting or visiting local parish or diocese archives in Brazil. Brazil has no single repository of church records. Write your request in Portuguese whenever possible. This method is not always reliable. Officials might or might not respond.
- Find the address for the parish church your ancestors used: The Catholic Directory, Brazil.
Write a brief request in Portuguese to the proper church using this address as guide replacing the information in parentheses:
- Reverendo Pároco
- Paróquia de (name of parish)
- (postal code), (municipality), Pará
- BRASIL
When requesting information, send the following:
- Money for the search fee, usually $10.00
- Full name and the sex of the ancestor sought
- Names of the ancestor’s parents, if known
- Approximate date and place of the event
- Your relationship to the ancestor
- Reason for the request (family history, medical, and so on)
- Request for a photocopy of the complete original record
Write your request in Portuguese whenever possible. For writing your letter in Portuguese, use the translated questions and phrases in this Portuguese Letter-writing Guide.
Reading the Records[edit | edit source]
- You do not have to be fluent in Portuguese to read your documents. Genealogical records usually contain a limited vocabulary. Use this Portuguese Genealogical Word List to translate the important points in the document.
- To learn how to read Portuguese records, study the The Portuguese Script Tutorial.
- Reading aids are samples of typical records with translations of key words provided.
Tips for finding your ancestor in the records[edit | edit source]
- Births were usually reported within a few days of the birth by the father of the child, a neighbor, or the midwife. A search for a birth record should begin with the known date of birth and then searching forward in time, day by day, until the record is found. It might be found within a few days of the actual birth date, but in some instances, it might be weeks or months later.
- In the larger cities of Brazil such as Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, or others, there are several registration offices located throughout the city. If you know in which part of the city your ancestor lived, you should begin your search in the records of the office nearest their home. If you do not know, you will need to search office by office.
- Some civil registration books have indexes in the front or back of them. These indexes are often by the given name of the child. You may have to check every entry in the index if your ancestor had more than one given name.
- Marriages typically took place in the hometown of the bride.
- Death records can be particularly helpful for people who may not have had a civil birth or marriage record but died during the period when civil registration had begun.
Search Strategy[edit | edit source]
- Search for the relative or ancestor you selected. When you find his birth record, search for the births of his brothers and sisters.
- Next, search for the marriage of his parents. The marriage record will have information that will often help you find the birth records of the parents.
- You can estimate the ages of the parents and determine a birth year to search for their birth records.
- Search the death registers for all known family members.
- Repeat this process for both the father and the mother, starting with their birth records, then their siblings' births, then their parents' marriages, and so on.
- If earlier generations (parents, grandparents, etc.) do not appear in the records, search neighboring parishes.