ulster northern ireland genealogy records - EAS

44 results
  1. County Tyrone, Ireland Genealogy • FamilySearch

    https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/County_Tyrone

    Jun 30, 2022 · Tyrone is the largest county in northern Ireland. It is one of four counties in Northern Ireland which currently has a majority of the population from a Catholic community background. In the 12th century the kingdom of Ailech split into two sovereign territories and Cenél nEógain became Tír Eoghain, the land of Eoghan, Anglicised as Tyrone.

  2. County Antrim, Ireland Genealogy • FamilySearch

    https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/County_Antrim,_Ireland_Genealogy

    Jun 30, 2022 · Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI) 66 Balmoral Avenue Belfast BT9 6NY Ireland E-mail Proni. General Register Office Oxford House 49/55 Chichester St Belfast BT1 4HL Ireland E-mail Proni Register of births and deaths in Northern Ireland since 1864. Marriage records from 1922 onward. Ordnance Survey of Northern Ireland Colby House

  3. Records of birth, marriage & death - National Archives of Ireland

    https://www.nationalarchives.ie/article/records-birth-marriage-death

    For the six counties, which comprise Northern Ireland (Antrim, Armagh, Down, Fermanagh, Derry (Londonderry) and Tyrone) from 1922 onwards, records of births, marriages and deaths should be held by General Register Office for Northern Ireland, Colby …

  4. Ireland Genealogy & Ireland Family History Resources - Ancestry.com

    https://www.ancestry.com/search/places/europe/ireland

    Republic of Ireland vital records. Parish registers - For any research up to the middle of the 19th century, the best resources for tracing details of your ancestors’ vital events are the registers of christenings, marriages and burials compiled by churches up and down the land. Unfortunately, these records present their own problems.

  5. UK and Ireland - GENUKI

    https://www.genuki.org.uk/big

    The UK and Ireland are regarded, for the purposes of this Genealogical Information Service, as being made up of England, Ireland (i.e. Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland), Wales, and Scotland, together with the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man.Together, these constitute the British Isles - which is a geographical term for a group of islands lying off the north-west coast …

  6. Free Irish Civil Records - From Ireland: Free Irish Genealogy

    https://www.from-ireland.net/irish-civil-records

    Compulsory Irish civil registration of non-Roman Catholic marriages began on April 1st, 1845. The registration of births, deaths and all marriages commenced on January 1st, 1864. The General Register Office (GRO), holds copies of all civil records for the whole of Ireland, from the commencement of registration, up to and including the year 1921.

  7. Irish Cemeteries and Burial Records Online - ThoughtCo

    https://www.thoughtco.com/irish-cemeteries-and-burial-records-online-3576589

    Apr 08, 2019 · Ornate tombstones at Glasnevin Cemetery in Dublin, Ireland. Patrick Swan / Getty Images. The website of Glasnevin Trust of Dublin, Ireland, boasts about 1.5 million burial records dating from 1828.Basic search is free, but access to the online burial registers and book extracts, and additional features such as "extended burials by grave search" (includes all others in same …

  8. Free Irish genealogy websites - the Top 8!

    https://www.irish-genealogy-toolkit.com/free-Irish-genealogy.html

    It's an essential and free Irish genealogy and history site for researchers hunting details of their ancestors from Northern Ireland. It offers multiple online databases.Among them are records of pre-1840 freeholders, will calendars, Griffith's Valuation Revision Books and details of those who signed the 1912 Ulster Covenant.

  9. Search Irish Birth/Baptism Records - Co. Antrim & Co. Down

    https://www.ancestryireland.com/family-records/birth-and-baptism-records

    A large number of Church of Ireland and Presbyterian registers of baptisms for mid, south and west County Down ... As an accredited IFHF (Irish Family History Foundation) centre, Ulster Historical Foundation has compiled this database of birth, death and marriage records for Counties Antrim and Down as part of our commitment to broadening ...

  10. Only a few transcriptions survive from the 1861-1891 Irish censuses

    https://www.irish-genealogy-toolkit.com/1861-1891-irish-census.html

    Even so, these events in Ireland's census history still cause many a genealogist to weep, not least because not one of the original paper returns survive for 1861-1871, either. Not a scrap. Surprisingly, earlier Irish censuses (for 1821 to 1851) have a marginally higher survival rate (and I do mean marginal!).



Results by Google, Bing, Duck, Youtube, HotaVN