Luxembourg Church Records

For information about records for non-Christian religions in Luxembourg, go to the Religious Records page.

Baptismal Records

 * Date and place of baptism
 * Birth date of child
 * Name and gender of child
 * Legitimacy of child
 * Names of parents
 * Names of grandparents
 * Names of godparents

Marriage Records

 * Date and place of marriage
 * Names of the bride and groom
 * Previous marital status (this could be “previously unmarried” or be “widow” or “widower.”
 * Their residences and ages
 * Names of groom's parents
 * Names of bride's parents
 * Names of the witnesses and their relationship to the bride and groom

Burial Records

 * Date and place of burial
 * Date and place of death
 * Name of deceased
 * Age of deceased
 * Names of their parents (if unmarried) or name of the spouse
 * Names of witnesses and with their relationship to the deceased

Online
Births, Baptisms, or Christenings; Marriages; Deaths or Burials
 * Images, no index. Incomplete.
 * LuxRoots, ($). Index.
 * Luxembourg Parish/Civil Records, University of St. Thomas, 1600-1890, index.


 * Index. Incomplete.
 * Luxembourg, Select Births and Baptisms, 1662-1840., ($). Index. Incomplete.
 * Luxembourg, Births and Baptisms, 1662-1840., ($). Index. Incomplete.


 * Index. Incomplete.
 * Luxembourg, Select Marriages, 1700-1810., ($). Index. Incomplete.
 * Luxembourg, Marriages, 1700-1810., ($). Index. Incomplete.


 * Index. Incomplete.
 * Luxembourg Select Deaths and Burials, 1702-1798., ($). Index. Incomplete.

Writing for Records
Luxembourgers are traditionally Catholic. To find parishes in your ancestor's home community, use the archdiocesan parish finder: Ou est ma paroisse?

Quirks
Some parish registers in Luxembourg go back to the early 1600s, but most do not start until 1779. A number of registers have been destroyed or lost; other registers are in the hands of individuals and church officials who guard them jealously.

In 1797 when the official état civil (civil registration) was introduced, a French order required that the priests turn their parish registers over to the communities (civil jurisdiction). But the clergy, mistreated by the French regime, obeyed this order only partially. Thus beginning with that date part of the registers were deposited with the local civil government (communes) and part of them remained in the hands of the clergy.