Estonia Archives and Libraries


 * Archives collect and preserve original documents of organizations such as churches or governments. Libraries generally collect published sources such as books, maps, and microfilm.
 * If you plan to visit a repository, contact them and ask for information about their collection, hours, services, and fees. Ask if they require you to have a reader’s ticket (a paper indicating you are a responsible researcher) to view the records, and ask how to obtain one.
 * Although the records you need may be in an archive or library, the Family History Library may have microfilmed and/or digitized copies of them.

'''One difficulty in Estonian research is the dispersal of sources among various archives. Records can be found in the:'''
 * Estonian National Archives
 * National Archives of Sweden
 * Russian State Archives
 * Latvian State Historical Archives

Archives
Estonian National Archives (Rahvusarhiv) Nooruse 3 50411 Tartu, Estonia E-mail:	rahvusarhiiv@ra.ee Telephone: +372 738 7500 Saaga: Online Digital Records Contact Information
 * Digitized records include metrical books (church records), revision lists, military records, farmstead books, land registry records, residential registration records and more. For help navigating Saaga, see the "How to" Guide.

The National Archives of Sweden
The Sweden government collects records relating to Sweden history, culture, and people. The National Archives of Sweden, which is open to the public, has a large genealogical and biographical collection as well as government accounts, land records, tax lists, maps, and pictures. The Family History Library has microfilm copies of many of the National Archives' records.


 * Riksarkivet Fyrverkarbacken 13-17 Stockholm, Sweden Postal address: Box 12541, S-102 29, Stockholm, Sweden< Telephone: 011-46-8-737 63 50 Fax: 011-46-8-737 64 74
 * Website
 * Start researching archives Here you can search for information about archives in Sweden and about the National Archives' digitized archive material, for example church archives, population registers or letters. Documents from the Swedish Diplomatarium and the Swedish Biographical Lexicon (SBL) are also included.
 * About family and personal research Genealogy for beginners: In our archives there is information about who has been born and died, married, moved or participated in house interrogations. We have private archives of diaries and letters, as well as official sources from civil and military archives across the country.
 * Explore our digital archives In the Digitala forskarsalen you will find the National Archives' digitized archives, registers and databases.
 * Personal/genealogical research, general Here you can order copies or information from the church archives and other archive holdings that you need for your personal and genealogical research.

Russian State Historical Archives
Original sources concerning the history of Estonian people from the 17th up to the first half of the 20th century can be found in these archives. Their website can be found here.

Latvian State Historical Archives
Original sources concerning the history of Estonian people from the 17th up to the first half of the 20th century can be found in these archives. Their website can be found here.

Some Estonian records have been digitized through the Latvian State Archive's digital reading room, Raduraksti. These records are primarily vital records and 1897 census records for towns of modern day southern Estonia that once belonged to Livland gubernia. To learn how to navigate the site, see the Raduraksti "How to" Guide.

Shefayim Archives
The Association of Latvian and Estonian Jews holds records at Kibbutz Shefayim. Thier website is in Hebrew, but you can use Google Translate to help you navigate the site. To see an online inventory of records available, see the JewishGen Latvia and Estonia Research Devision Shefayim Archives page.

Estonian American National Council, Inc.
The purpose of the Estonian American National Council is: "Collecting of Estonian-American materials began before the establishment of the Estonian Archives in the U.S. This included valuable materials from more than a century ago. The overwhelming abundance of preserved, collected and deposited materials has come from Estonians who immigrated to America from the Displaced Persons Camps in Germany, 1945-1950. As a result of a formal appeal in 1965 for additional material about that the DP period a substantial collection was in place and archived. This was initially housed for safe keeping in numerous Estonian American homes."

The Estonian Archives of the United States can be found: Estonian Archives in the U.S., Inc. (EAUS).