User:Armenwood/Sandbox/Jan23 Archive/Scotland Research

Ceud Mìle Fàilte
[A Hundred Thousand Welcomes]

We hope that the information we display on this site will be of benefit to all. It has been designed with the beginner in mind, but will appreciated by the seasoned Researcher as well. The layout is simple to avoid too much confusion and the content extensive, I hope, which will treat some areas in a way and to an extent they have never been treated before. Most of the information here is probably available in other sources, but we have tried to combine as much information into a single source as possible to cut out some of the labour and a lot of the worry.

The main areas of Scottish Research will be covered under the following Main headings listed below. These will be added to as we get the material prepared. Branches and Sub-Branches from these Main Headings will treat specific aspects or topics within that Heading. It sounds complicated, but we hope as it evolves the user will see the benefits and their research is made easier. Some of the information may not be found in any other source or form, to my knowledge. In some cases it required going through each individual film and extracting the information directly from the films themselves.

We have no timetable as to when all of this will occur, we will do what we can when we can. One step at a time will get us to where we are going and we hope you will join us for the journey.

SAM GIBSON LAFSL Scottish Research Specialist

ADMINISTRATION DISTRICTS
SCOTTISH ADMINISTRATION AREAS Every Nation on Earth is governed by a form of Administration, whither it be Judicial, Ecclesiastical 0r Civil. Throughout their entire History, they have survived under one of these forms, or perhaps more than one at the same time. Scotland has seen many changes in it's Administrations throughout the ages. Many of the records to these Administrations have survived and we can see the evolution through to the present day. Some forms of Administration in the far past we can only speculate at. The fact that Scotland stands as a Nation today is witness to all the Administrations, from simple tribal to complex judicial, that have shaped the country and it's people today. The Picts, who inhabited the land before the Scots arrived, had been in residence for perhaps 3000 to 4000 years, before their World was invaded by the Romans. To have survived so long, they would have had to have had some form of Administration to keep their peoples together. But that is lost to History and Time. The Romans were well organized and we know they had an Administration to govern this far-flung Province of the Empire. They had a large network of camps and forts throughout Central and Southern Scotland and an organization to keep these places supplied. I don't know if such a chart for that Administration Survives in some Museum today. This was probably the first formal Administration of the land that would become Scotland. From Historians, we do know that the Romans did make maps of the land indicating places, landmarks and the local Pictish tribes. This information forms the first of the following Charts.

The Charts in this section show some of the Administrations from Scotland's Past and it's Present. They are arranged in Chronological Order to try and show their evolution. More importantly for the Researcher, they show the use of local names and how many have remained in use for the longest time. Some have faded into obscurity and may only be mentioned in local areas, many have become well known around the World. Some Researchers may only have a place name of where their Ancestors had originated and these Charts may be of some use pinpointing a location for those names. Click here to go back -> Nationalities & Resources

PICTISH TRIBES IN ROMAN TIMES 150 A.D.
The Roman view of Northern Britian According to Claudius Ptolemaeus

ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH-PARISHES-1300 AD
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SCOTTISH CHAPMAN CODES AD
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SCOTTISH CHAPMAN CODES AD - SCOTTISH COUNTIES & PARISHES 1855-1971
SCOTTISH COUNTIES & Parishes 1855-1971

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SCOTTISH CHAPMAN CODES AD - SCOTTISH REGIONS 1975 AD
SCOTTISH REGIONS 1975-1994

SCOTTISH CHAPMAN CODES AD - SCOTTISH 1994 A.D. COUNCILS AND WARDS
SCOTTISH COUNCIL DISTRICTS 1994-PRESENT

SCOTTISH 1901 CENSUS E.D. NUMBERS AND THE LAFSL MICROFILM NUMBERS
''This chart shows a breakdown of the Scotland 1901 Census by Registration and Enumeration Districts (E.D.), indicating their names and suffixes. The missing Enumeration Districts are also show along with the General Registry Office Scotland (G.R.O.S.) Reel Numbers and LAFSL Microfilm Numbers. This Chart was compiled from information from G.R.O.S. for the LAFSL Patron Film Sponsorship Programme. ''We do not have a G.R.O.S. Reel Number for the Street Indexes. When we first received the information from G.R.O.S., it was only for the Census Reels themselves. We assigned these to our 400000000 Series Film Catalogue, the first available number being #40000901, with each succeeding reel following on behind. We were then sent a list of the Street Index Publications and it was some time later that we were notified these Indexes would be available on Film. We ordered the film and catalogued it behind the Census Reels with #400001347.

Shetland Isles
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