Finding Aids for German Records

After You Find the Name of Your Ancestors' Town in Germany

 * So you went through a variety of United States records, and finally found the name of the town in Germany where your ancestors lived. Hopefully, along the way, you saw other clues to the region of that town, such as Saxony, Prussia, Hessen, or Bavaria. Sometimes those regions are easier to find than the town, and they can be important if there are several towns of the same name. But your job might not be done.
 * The town name you found, might be a small village that had no church of its own. You might have to figure out where the people in that village went to a nearby larger town to attend a Catholic church, and yet a different town if they were Lutheran. There might be a Catholic church in the village, but the Lutherans had to travel to another town.
 * Your town might have had a civil registration office of its own, or it was too small and had to report births, marriages, and deaths in another closeby town.  Your town might have had its own civil registrar until the 1980's when all the offices were consolidated into fewer offices to save money. So to continue with your research, there is a little more detective work you need to do about your town.

Important Questions
Once you have learned the name of the town in Germany where your ancestors lived, there are several questions you need to answer:
 * 1) Are there several towns with that name, and if so, which one is the correct one?
 * 2) If you are looking for civil registration records (anything after 1876, and in some states sooner), where was the Standesamt (civil registry)? Where is it today?
 * 3) Where are the Lutheran church and the Catholic church that would have records for the town?
 * |If the churches have placed the records in archives for safekeeping, which archives have jurisdiction for the area?

Some of these questions will be answered in the Wiki Germany province page for your province in Germany. This article will teach you about some geographical reference aids that might also help you.

Are there several towns with that name, and if so, which one is the correct one?
Two great online gazetteers will help you find details about any location in Germany: MeyersGaz Online Gazetteer and Kartenmeister. Here are two online classes that will teach you how to use these: Meyer's Gazetteer Now Online, Indexed and Fully Searchable! and Finding Places in the Former German Areas of Poland Using the Online Gazetteer Kartenmeister.com

Find All the Towns of That Name in Meyers Gazetteer
Once you know the town name you need, the other facts you need are contained in Meyers Orts- und Verkehrs-lexikon des deutschen Reichs, the gazetteer on which the FamilySearch catalog for Germany is based. This covers Germany as it existed in 1871, recently unified from its former existence as many small countries.
 * Use MeyersGaz, the digital gazetteer, to find all the towns with that name in Germany in 1871.
 * MeyersGaz Help Guide  Abbreviation Table

Go back to the records you have found for your ancestor in the United States to look for clues to the province (state, duchy, kingdom, etc.). Actually, it is more likely that this information showed up in your earlier searches than that the town showed up. If you still need to search those records for more clues, see Germany Gathering Information to Locate Place of Origin.

If you cannot find other clues to narrow down the list of towns, you might have to check each town until you find the records you need.

If you are looking for civil registration records (anything after 1876, and in some states sooner), where was the Standesamt (civil registry)? Where is it today?
Standesamt records in the FamilySearch collection will be listed by the Standesamt of the town in 1876. For more recent records that are not microfilmed, you will need to write to the current Standesamt. Several offices have been merged to save money.

Determine the Standesamt (Civil Registry Office) Location

 * In MeyersGaz.org the location of the Standesamt is indicated by the abbreviation "StdA". This will be the location used in the FamilySearch Catalog.


 * For towns covered by Kartenmeister, the Standesamt is listed in every entry:

Finding the New Consolidated Standesamt

 * However, some of the offices were merged in 1970's, so the record location might be different than that listed in MeyersGaz.
 * For a municipality:
 * To find the current Standesamt, go to the German Wikipedia, and enter the name of the town in the search box. An article about the town will start with a first line such as: "Besse with about 3200 inhabitants is the largest district of the municipality Edermünde in Hessian Schwalm-Eder-Kreis ." It is probable that the Standesamt is now located in the municipality (in this example Edermünde).
 * Email the municipality to verify that the civil registry for your town is there. From the town article, click on the name of the municipality that links to that article. There will usually be an infobox on the page that lists the address and the website of the municipality. From the website, look for Kontakt (Contact) information with an email address.
 * For a town:
 * Follow the same instructions as for a municipality. However, in this case, the first line will read, for example: "Borken is a town in the Schwalm-Eder-Kreis with about 13,000 residents.'''
 * The infobox with the website will appear directly on a town page.

Where are the Lutheran church and the Catholic church that would have records for the town?
The two dominant religious groups in Germany were Catholics and Evangelical Lutherans. Your town may have been the site of the main parish church for one or both of the religions, or it might have been a village within a larger parish. So your next task is to find the parish church that kept the records for your town.

If Your Town Is Still in Germany
Here are some methods you can use to find the parishes for areas still in Germany today:

Meyer's Gazetteer
There are two ways that Meyer's Gazetteer can inform you on parish location:

If Your Town Is No Longer in Germany
Remember, the town will still be listed in the FamilySearch Catalog as it was in Meyer's Gazetteer. However, if you need to write for records, you will use the address in Kartenmeister.

Kevan Hansen's “Map Guide to German Parish Registers”
Kevan Hansen has prepared a 53-volume guide to maps of all the parishes in Germany, both Cathoilc and Lutheran (with information about minority religious groups--Jewish, French Protestant, etc.). To learn about these guides and how to use them, watch this online course: Hansen’s Map Guides: Finding Records with Parish Maps.
 * These are available at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.
 * They can also be purchased online at bookstores such as Amazon.com. To determine which volume to use or purchase, consult Handout #2 in the online course. This might prove useful as your research takes you to other nearby communities as your family moves from parish to parish or marries into families from nearby parishes. You might need to be continually consulting the book for each new locatiopn.
 * You can contact the Central European Genealogy Research Community to see if one of their volunteers could consult the map guide for you.
 * Another option would be to hire a professional genealogist to consult the reference work for you, even though you would continue to do your own research after that

FamilySearch Catalog

 * One of your eventual questions is whether the church records you seek have been microfilmed or digitized by FamilySearch. You can just by-pass all this geography and jump to checking to see if FamilySearch has the records.  If the town is a parish, it might show up immediately in that system. Occasionally a town will show up listed under the parish that has it records. Go to the FamilySearch Catalog and enter the name of the town in the "Place" search field.  If there is an item there for any town of that name, the catalog will bring up a list, automatically adding country and province information.

Church Directories
Each Germany province page has links for current church directories under the section Writing to an Priest for Church Records. Look for this: - - Generally, these directories are set up so that you can enter a name of a village, and the directory will give you the address for the appropriate parish. Here is an example: - -

Google Maps

 * Look for your town on Google Maps with the phrase: Churches near [your town]. You will get a map showing symbols and names for churches in the vicinity. On the left will be an actual address list for the churches.>

Wikipedia.de (German Wikipedia)

 * There is a dedicated German Wikipedia, which you can choose to have displayed in English, that has a great deal more detail about Germany than the English Wikipedia. Here is an example of the detail you might find there about the religious institutions within a city:
 * If your town is a "village", there will be much less detail on it. Click on the link to the article about the community it belongs to.  It is more likely that the parish seat is in the larger community.

A Quick E-mail Check
Because many churches now have known email addresses, you can quickly check whether the parish records are stored at the parish church or have been moved to archives. If possible, do this before sending a more detailed inquiry or any money.

If the churches have placed the records in archives for safekeeping, which archives have jurisdiction for the area?
Sometimes, local church records are donated to church archives for safekeeping. Also, for certain time periods, duplicates of the church records were supposed to be sent to the government to act as civil registration. So you can contact archives to find records. The trick is to locate the correct archives. Each Germany province page has links for the appropriate archives. Some of the listings have a link to lists for the church records that can be found at the archives. Here is an example: