Aberffraw, Anglesey, Wales Genealogy

Wales Anglesey  Anglesey Parishes Aberffraw

History
ABERFRAW (ABER-FRAW), a parish, and formerly a market-town, in the union of Anglesey, hundred of Malltraeth, county of Anglesey, North Wales, 9 miles (S. W.) from Llangevni. This place, which derives its name from its situation at the mouth of the small river Fraw, was distinguished at a very early period as the principal residence of the ancient princes of North Wales. The church, dedicated to St. Beuno, is an ancient structure, 20 yards in length and 12 in breadth, containing 800 sittings. In the tything of Tyndryval anciently stood a chapel designated Capel Mair, or "St. Mary's chapel." There are places of worship for Calvinistic and Wesleyan Methodists. A ruined chapel, called Eglwys y Beili, was rebuilt for a school, in 1729.

fckLRfckLR*Aberffraw (ocasionally spelled Aberffo; Abar Fraw; Aber-Fraw) is a parish and market town in Anglesey, Wales. ABERFFRAW, a parish in the hundred of Malltraeth, in the county of Anglesey, North Wales, 16 miles S.W. of Beaumaris. It is a station on the Holyhead railway. Bangor is the post town.To learn additional information about this parish go to Genuki.org.uk.&lt;br&gt; fckLR*An Anglesey time line highlights history from 1282 to the 2010.fckLRfckLR== Administration ==fckLRfckLR{| width="75%" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="3"fckLR|-fckLR| Years fckLR| CountyfckLR|-fckLR| Pre 1536 fckLR| GwyneddfckLR|-fckLR| 1536 - 31 Mar 1974 fckLR| AngleseyfckLR|-fckLR| 1 Apr 1974 - 31 Mar 1996 fckLR| GwyneddfckLR|-fckLR| Post 1996 fckLR| AngleseyfckLR|}fckLRfckLR&lt;br&gt; fckLRfckLR{| width="75%" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="3"fckLR|-fckLR| Type of Jurisdiction fckLR| NamefckLR|-fckLR| Hundred fckLR| MalltraethfckLR|-fckLR| Church of England/ Church in Wales Diocese fckLR| BangorfckLR|-fckLR| Civil Registration District fckLR| AngleseyfckLR|}fckLRfckLR&lt;br&gt; fckLRfckLR== What Do You Want to Find? ==fckLRfckLRTo start your search, decide when your ancestor lived. If he or she lived between 1837-1911, start by searching civil registration and census records. If they lived before 1837, use church records and probate records. Read more about these records below. fckLRfckLR== Records ==fckLRfckLR=== Civil Registration ===fckLRfckLRBirth, marriages and deaths were kept by the government, from July 1837 to the present day. The civil registration article tells more about these records. Several Internet sites list names or indexes to the records, including: fckLRfckLR*FreeBMD fckLR*Ancestry.co.uk fckLR*findmypast fckLR*TheGenealogist.co.ukfckLRfckLR=== Church records ===fckLRfckLR=== Census records ===fckLRfckLRCensus for the entire country was started in 1841 and continued every ten years. The most recent census available to the public is 1911. Learn more about these records, including the information given in them, by reading the census article. fckLRfckLR fckLRfckLR=== Probate records ===fckLRfckLRRecords of wills, administrations, inventories, indexes, etc. were filed by the court with jurisdiction over this parish. Go to Anglesey Probate Records to find the name of the court having primary jurisdiction. Scroll down in the article to the section Court Jurisdictions by Parish. fckLRfckLR== Maps and Gazetteers ==fckLRfckLRMaps are a visual look at the locations in Wales. Gazetteers contain brief summaries about a place. Here is a link to a web site with gazetteers and maps. fckLRfckLR*Vision of BritainfckLRfckLR== Web sites ==fckLRfckLR fckLRfckLR&lt;/ref&gt;