South Africa Cape Province Death Notices

Death notices are essential documents for research in South Africa. These important documents typically supply age, date, and place of death, whether married nor not, names of children, and, if known, the names of the parents of the deceased, so are of great value.

Death notices were held under the jurisdiction for which they were created. The first death notices in the Cape were created in 1834. Prior to 1994, death notices for the three Cape provinces (Eastern Cape, Northern Cape, and Western Cape) were all created by the Master of the Supreme Court, under the old Cape Province.

Indexes for these notices are available in paper form at the Family History Library; see the catalog entry here.

The South African National Archives have also indexed these records online. To search the death notices, visit the National Archives index page for the Cape Town Archives Repository by clicking here. This index searches all types of records held within the Cape Town Archives Repository; to list only death notices, type in "Death Notice" as one of the search terms. The source (always shown as MOOC), as well as the volume number and reference, are essential in order to obtain a copy of the death notice. The reference should look something like this:

MOOC 6/9/21, 4309 - Matthys Jacobus Greeff, year 1840.

These records are not filmed, but must be obtained in person from the Cape Town Archives Repository in Cape Town, South Africa. They are located at:

Western Cape Provincial Archives and Records Service 72 Roeland Street Cape Town South Africa

If you are not able to obtain the record in person, the South Africa National Archives has provided a list of researchers at the link here.