Altötting, Bavaria, Germany Genealogy

History and Geography


Altötting is a town in Bavaria, capital of the district Altötting. It is in the Administrative District of Oberbayern in Lower Bavaria. For 500 years it has been the scene of religious pilgrimages by Catholics in honor of Mary including a visit by Pope John Paul II in 1980 and Pope Benedict XVI in 2006.


 * During the Carolingian period, there was a royal palace here.
 * In 876 King Carloman erected a Benedictine monastery, with Werinolf as first abbot, and also built the abbey church in honour of the Apostle St. Philip.
 * In 907 King Louis the Child gave the abbey to Burchard, the Bishop of Passau.. In 910 the Hungarians ransacked and burnt the church and abbey.
 * In 1228 Duke Louis I of Bavaria rebuilt these buildings and, after they were sanctified, placed them in charge of twelve Canons Regular, headed by a provost. The canons remained until the secularization of the Bavarian monasteries in 1803.
 * Saint Conrad of Parzham, served as porter at the Friary of St. Ann in the city of Altötting for 40 years. See Wikipedia

Online Records

 * This link takes you to the FamilySearch Catalogue where there is a list of records that are on microfilm from this city. All of them can be viewed at Family History Centers and some of them have been digitized and are available online. Eventually they will all be digitized but for now it is necessary to check one at a time. The ones with a picture of a camera by it have been digitized. Then when you click on the camera either the actual documents can be viewed online or it will instruct you to go to a Family History Center.
 * There is some information from the cemetery in Altotting at Find A Grave
 * Bavaria, Germany, WWI Personnel Rosters, 1914-1918 may include information on some soldiers from this area on Ancestry.com This source is most useful when you are able to enter the ancestors full name and place of birth. However if you don't know all those details enter what you can and you may be pleasantly surprised.
 * Ancestry.com also has quite a bit of documentation concerning the Jews