Genealogy
Genealogy is the study of families, family history, and the tracing of their lineages. If you are looking for information about a close or distant relatives, or information about your ancestors, you are engaging with genealogy. This is a very specific and sometimes difficult branch of history research, so we have created
a few useful tips to navigate such a complex activity:
1. Try and search APE with name and last name (you never know!) but you will probably not find much of interest
2. Try and find out when, and most importantly where, your ancestors were born, died, got married
3. Try also to establish relationships: who was parent/child/relative/colleague, of whom
4. Start your research with the local municipality archives that hold the records of the Registry Offices, with act of births, marriage, deaths + tax authority + civil registry + this changes over time and it’s different for each country
5. Check the local historical archives of the church or other religious institutions: Parish and church archives from all faiths also hold records of baptisms, marriages, funerals, etc.
6. Check orphanages archives from the local areas
7. Census archival collections can also be very important. These are usually preserved within the National Archives of a country
8. If you know which schools your ancestors attended (whether elementary schools or universities) try and search in our directory if that school has its own archive; if you don’t find anything, you can still try and contact the school directly they may have their own archive, or be able to indicate to you where they hold their historical documentation
9. Check the military archives (you can refer to our directory) to find information on military service (Mainly for male ancestors, but possibly also for female ones)
10. Check Trade Union archives or companies’ archives if you know which job your ancestors did
11. Check the archives of the Ministry of the Interiors or other bodies that keep registries of migration to / from a country
12. Contact possible family history centres, local history societies, and genealogical societies from the local areas of where your ancestors have lived. Very often the local library is a good place to find out if these societies exist!
13. Still haven’t found what you are looking for? Try and contact the National Archives of the country where your ancestors were based – they may help you in your research!
Genealogy portals
Centrum voor familiegeschiedenis - CBG -- the Dutch research centre for genealogical and heraldic studies
Portale Antenati -- Italian archives for genealogical research
Raduraksti -- the portal for genealogy research in Latvia
Search Persons -- Belgian persons search engine
WieWasWie -- Dutch genealogy search engine
US National Archives Genealogy Series -- tools for genealogy research from the US National Archives and Records Administration
Faire sa généalogie - a dedicated help page and portal about genealogy studies in France
Local Help Pages
Genealogy-related archival collections in Luxembourg:
Guide to the État civil Luxembourg online (in French)
Matricula online (Archives diocésaines de Luxembourg)
Genealogy-related archival collections in Sweden: https://sok.riksarkivet.se/amnesomrade?infosida=amnesomrade-slaktforskning
Resources for genealogists in the U.S.: https://www.archives.gov/research/genealogy
Genealogy Research Services
Ancestry: https://www.ancestry.com/
Family Search: https://www.familysearch.org/en/
Genealogy Center of Luxembourg: https://www.luxroots.org/Display.php?pagename=Page1
Luxracines (Genealogy & Local History in Luxembourg: https://www.luxroots.org/Display.php?pagename=Page1
Archives Portal Europe has a topic dedicated to genealogy, available here