Talk:Norway Genealogy

Digitalarkivet (Norway's Digital Archives)
The National Archival Services of Norway maintains a website in which you can search in transcribed source material for free.

Please note that this site is undergoing a restructuring. On March 31, 2014 the old system of searching will be replaced by the new. A very substantial difference between the new Digital Archives (DA) and the old (ODA) is that users are now able to search across all sources at once.

To use this choose Select Source (Finn Kilde) from the menu. Here you may choose the type of record(s) you want to search for the geographical location of your choice.

Scanned images of the original church books are also found on the Digital Archives. The Parish Registers interface can be used in English, Norwegian (Bokmål), Norwegian (Nynorsk) or Samisk (Davvisámegiella). However, the records are written in Norwegian.

Featured Content
Take a look at the Bergen Norway Page, it contains links to some of the Emigrants leaving Norway for the United States from the ports in Bergen. Another useful Website for Norway research is Fylkesarkivet i Sogn, can be read in English or Norweigian.

Did you know?

 * You can view photos of churches in Norway.


 * You can also view a Photo Album of Farms as part of the digital archives of the Norwegian National Archives. It contains patron-submitted photos of 1900-era farms. There is a link in the album between a farm photo and the respective farm in the 1900 census list, so that one can find information on the farm and household.


 * During the 1500-1800’s it was very common for the Norwegian people to use a patronymic naming system. They would take the father’s given name and add “sen/son” or “datter”. Others chose to use the name of the farm they were associated with as their last names. This really was an address, but some of these farm names were continued through many generations and have become last names.


 * In 1923 a new naming law (Navneloven av 1923) came into effect, and people now had to choose a family name. The change from patronymics to family names had already started in the mid-1870; the cities had started a little earlier and the smaller parishes a little later. However, the law was approved 1923. In 2003 another law was put into practice. It was now again legal to choose a patronymic or matronymic name.


 * Farm names are very important in locating people in Norway. Through these names you can find parishes and then your ancestors in the parish registers.


 * There is a Norwegian Farm Book Extraction Project. Contact Roger Magneson only if you wish to&amp; participate in indexing. [mailto:MagnesonR@familysearch.org MagnesonR@familysearch.org]