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German Residential Records For Genealogists

German Residential Records For Genealogists

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German Residential Records For Genealogists: Tracing Your Ancestor From Place to Place in Germany

by Roger P. Minert, Ph.D., A.G

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1628592141
ISBN 13
9781628592146
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About This Item

German Residential Records For Genealogists: Tracing Your Ancestor From Place to Place in Germany; Roger P. Minert, Ph.D., A.G.; 2018; Soft Cover; 193 pp; 8.5x11; ISBN: 978-1-62859-214-6; Item #: FR0652.

Sometime before the completion of Dr. Roger Minert's 2016 book, German Census Records, 1816-1916, he found himself studying one of the best examples of residential registration he had found in four decades of Germanic family history research. The page established for Theresia Baumgärtner, who arrived in Würzburg from München in 1889, is replete with details about her partner and their illegitimate children. Roger began to research the origins of the practice of documenting strangers and foreigners in Germany - finding that the practice was used all over Germany - and goes back for centuries in some areas. Thus this book, German Residential Records For Genealogists: Tracing Your Ancestor From Place to Place in Germany, was conceived.

German residential records are found in archives all over Germany, and yes - many have been microfilmed and are available through the Family History Library. This book, German state by German state, details the history of these records. Tremendous numbers of these records were made, in that residential registration is a fact of life in Germany, an idea that's foreign to American researchers. The volume not only details the laws for each historic area of the Germany Empire, but includes examples, and state-by-state information on accessing these documents.

The following is from the Table of Contents:

Acknowledgements

A History of Residential Registration in Germany

Chapter 1: Anhalt

Chapter 2: Baden

Chapter 3: Bayern (Bavaria)

Chapter 4: Brandenburg

Chapter 5: Braunschweig (Brunswick)

Chapter 6: Bremen (Hansestadt Bremen)

Chapter 7: Elsaß-Lothringen (Alsace-Lorraine)

Chapter 8: Hamburg (Hansestadt Hamburg)

Chapter 9: Hannover (Hanover)

Chapter 10: Hessen (Hesse)

Chapter 11: Hessen-Nassau (Hesse-Nassau)

Chapter 12: Hohenzollern

Chapter 13: Lippe

Chapter 14: Lübeck (Hansestadt Lübeck, Luebeck)

Chapter 15: Mecklenburg-Schwerin

Chapter 16: Mecklenburg-Strelitz

Chapter 17: Oldenburg

Chapter 18: Ostpreußen (East Prussia)

Chapter 19: Pommern (Pomerania)

Chapter 20: Posen

Chapter 21: Reuß älterer Linie (Reuss Elder Line)

Chapter 22: Reuß jüngerer Linie (Reuß Younger Line)

Chapter 23: Rheinprovinz (Rhineland Province)

Chapter 24: Sachsen-Altenburg (Saxe-Altenburg)

Chapter 25: Sachsen-Coburg-Gotha (Saxe-Coburg-Gotha)

Chapter 26: Königreich Sachsen (Kingdom of Saxony)

Chapter 27: Sachsen-Meiningen (Saxe-Meiningen)

Chapter 28: Provinz Sachsen (Province of Saxony)

Chapter 29: Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach (Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach)

Chapter 30: Schaumburg-Lippe

Chapter 31: Schlesien (Silesia)

Chapter 32: Schleswig-Holstein

Chapter 33: Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt

Chapter 34: Schwarzburg-Sondershausen

Chapter 35: Waldeck

Chapter 36: Westfalen (Westphalia)

Chapter 37: Westpreußen (West Prussia)

Chapter 38: Württemberg (Wuerttemberg)

Appendix A: Writing to Archives in Germany, France, and Poland

Appendix B: Conducting Residential Research in Archives in Germany, France, and Poland

Appendix C: The States of the German Empire from 1871 to 1918

Appendix D: Glossary

Index

About the Author

Following are comments made about German Residential Records for Genealogists:

Wouldn't you know! Roger P. Minert has pounced on still another German research topic. And he's shared it with German family historians. We've known for a long time about the existence of these residential registration records, but we've not known much of anything about how to put those records to work in our own research. Now we can learn not only the background of these records – what this "signing in" and "signing out" business was all about through German centuries – but most important – now we can learn how to go about finding these ancestral "traveling around" records. When Minert recently found dramatic examples of these long-ago German "comings and goings" records, they lighted a spark in him that fired up this book. Shirley Riemer, author, and German genealogy research professional

Roger Minert has done it again! He has discovered yet another German record type that is universal, of utmost value to family historians, not widely recognized as a genealogical source, and has shown us how to use it. This time it is residential registrations. Minert describes the genesis of his book and the German legal basis behind such records, and he elucidates terms such as Polizei and Fremde and Heimat that can be misleading to Americans. Following the same format he successfully used in his groundbreaking German census book, German state by German state, he methodically spells out each state's laws, provides sample record forms or records, and suggests how best to obtain records from archives. Hint: Local is best. I can vouch for the usefulness of this type of record. When I recently obtained my father's citizenship file from USCIS, I was amazed to learn his place of residence every day from birth until his emigration from two jurisdictions in Schleswig-Holstein, including the exact dates when he went to work on my uncle's farm in different years and when he came back to his parental home. Each local residential registration office keeps records of all arrivals and departures of everybody, and he needed to document his good standing with the residential policing authority in each place in order to get his visa to emigrate. Like German census records, residential registration records are underrepresented in FHL microfilm and internet sites and hardly ever used as a genealogical source even by Germans, partly because they are described by many dissimilar terms in different areas. But at least now we know how to look for them, thanks to Minert's book. Ernie Thode - author, researcher, and lecturer in Germanic family history

About the Author

Roger P. Minert is a Nebraska native with ancestry in Hannover, Baden, Sachsen-Provinz, and Württemberg. He received his doctoral degree from the Ohio State University in German language history and second language acquisition theory. He taught German language and history for ten years, and then became a professional family history researcher. Accredited by the Family History Library for research in Germany and Austria, he has more than 38,000 hours of research experience. In August 2003, Dr. Minert became a professor of family history at Brigham Young University, and recently retired. The author of more than 150 books and articles, he is currently directing the research project "German Immigrants in American Church Records" that has already resulted in 37 large hard-bound volumes under this title. He and his wife Jeanne have four daughters and 21 grandchildren.

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Details

Bookseller
Family Roots Publishing Co., LLC US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
FR0652
Title
German Residential Records For Genealogists
Author
Roger P. Minert, Ph.D., A.G
Book Condition
New New
Quantity Available
50
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 10
1628592141
ISBN 13
9781628592146
Publisher
Family Roots Publishing Co., PPL
Place of Publication
Orting, WA
Date Published
2018
Pages
193
Keywords
German, Residential Records, Germany
Bookseller catalogs
German Genealogy Research Guides from Family Roots Publishing Co., LLC;

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Family Roots Publishing Co., LLC

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About the Seller

Family Roots Publishing Co., LLC

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2022
Orting, Washington

About Family Roots Publishing Co., LLC

Family Roots Publishing Co., LLC prints, and distributes research guides, and source books for genealogists and family historians. Located in Orting, Washington, and previously in Bountiful, Utah, we've published hundreds of popular guides since 2006. The company is owned and operated by Leland & Patty Meitzler, the founders of Heritage Quest (1985). Genealogy related news and announcements may be found at our blog - GenealogyBlog.com - since 2004.

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