Showing posts with label GermanAncestry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GermanAncestry. Show all posts

Monday, July 09, 2007

BallinStadt opens in Hamburg

On July 5, BallinStadt, Albert Ballin's "Emigrant City" on Veddel Island in the Elbe River in Hamburg, reopened. Albert Ballin was the General Director of BallinStadt, which was constructed between 1898 and 1901, and enlarged in 1906/1907. The newly rebuilt facilities give you a chance to relive the experience of the over 5 million people, who left Germany through the port of Hamburg between 1850 and 1934 to start a new life in the United States.

The nicely put together website, available in German and English, gives details on BallinStadt, describes the materials located at the research center there, links to other online emigration records in Europe, and gives links for further research on German ancestors.

If you're planning a trip to Hamburg and have German ancestry, sounds like this is a worthwhile stop. It is currently open Monday through Sunday from 10am - 6pm, with last entrance at 5pm.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Surname Research on Ancestry.de

The Ancestry.com German site, Ancestry.de, has some new added features. One interesting one uses data from the phone book to map the (current) distribution of surnames.

Wo in Deutschland ist mein Familienname verbreitet?

Neben dem Ursprung des Namens, ist auch die geografische Verbreitung eines Namens interessant für die Familienforschung. So können Sie Gebiete in Deutschland finden, in denen es wahrscheinlich auch Aufzeichnungen über Ihren Familiennamen gibt oder erwandte von Ihnen leben. Lassen Sie sich hier die Verbreitung Ihres Familiennamens in Deutschland anzeigen.


At the Namenforschung (Surname Research) Infocenter, enter your Familienname (family name) under the Verteilung (distribution) tab to get to the Surname distribution map. Enter your family name under the Ursprung (origin) tab to get the origin of your family name (this will be in German). Here are my results for Geyer.



Verteilung (Surname Distribution)


Geyer:

Der Name Geyer kommt insgesamt 5495 Mal in 419 Distrikten vor. Es gibt schätzungsweise 14648 Personen mit diesem Nachnamen. Dies liegt über dem Durchschnitt für alle deutschen Familiennamen. Er liegt damit an 468. Stelle der häufigsten Namen.

Die meisten Personen mit dem Familiennamen Geyer wurden in Kreisfreie Stadt München gefunden; der Name kam 85 Mal im Telefonbuch vor.

Die wenigsten leben in Kreisfreie Stadt Amberg, mit 14 Telefonbucheinträgen.

Um die Karte herunterzuladen, klicken Sie mit der rechten Maustaste auf einen leeren Bereich der Karte und wählen "Bild speichern als...".


Translated, this says:

The surname Geyer is found 5,495 times in 419 districts. It is estimated that there are 14,648 people with this surname in Germany. This is higher than average for a surname in Germany. In 468 places, it is the most common surname.

The most people with this surname were found in metro-area Munich, where the name is found 85 times in the telephone book.

It is least common in the area of Amberg, where it appears only 14 times in the phone book.

To download the map, right click on the picture and choose "Save picture as...".

Distribution of the surname Geyer in Germany


On the map, gray stands for "less than 1 occurance", dark yellow for "up to 60 occurances" and dark green for "more than 120 occurances". The map uses absolute occurances, so the high population areas also show increased surname occurance. On the map above, the darker green areas are Munich and Berlin. It might be more interesting to see a map based on percentage of population.

We also aren't sure that this is the original spelling of our surname. The other possibility is Geier:

Geier:

Der Name Geier kommt insgesamt 4806 Mal in 409 Distrikten vor. Es gibt schätzungsweise 12816 Personen mit diesem Nachnamen. Dies liegt über dem Durchschnitt für alle deutschen Familiennamen. Er liegt damit an 560. Stelle der häufigsten Namen.

Die meisten Personen mit dem Familiennamen Geier wurden in Kreisfreie Stadt München gefunden; der Name kam 85 Mal im Telefonbuch vor.

Die wenigsten leben in Kreisfreie Stadt Delmenhorst, mit 33 Telefonbucheinträgen.


Translated, this says:

The surname Geier is found 4,806 times in 409 districts. It is estimated that there are 12,816 people with this surname in Germany. This is higher than average for a surname in Germany. In 560 places, it is the most common surname.

The most people with this surname were found in metro-area Munich, where the name is found 85 times in the telephone book.

It is least common in the area of Delmenhorst, where it appears 33 times in the phone book.

Distribution of the surname Geier in Germany


Interestingly, this map shows heavy distribution in the Neckar-Odenwald area and Main-Tauber area (the new dark green area in the southwest quadrant). This is just south of the city of Aschaffenburg.



Ursprung (Surname Origin)

The source and history given here is from the Duden Surname Dictionary.

Geyer:

»Geier.

Geier:

1) Übername zu mhd. gir >Geier< für einen habgierigen Menschen. Vgl. den Beleg Chunr. Geyr (Regensburg a. 1347).

2) Auf einen Hausnamen zurückgehender Familienname. In Köln ist ein Haus que dicitur Gyr [welches man Geier nennt] i. J. 1197 belegt.

3) Vereinzelt Herkunftsname zu dem Ortsnamen Geyer im Erzgebirge (Sachsen).

The source of the name Geyer is the name Geier. The source of the name Geier could be:

1) Taken from middle-high-German "gir" meaning "Geier" (German for vulture), to denote a greedy person. See Chunr. Geyr (Regensburg a. 1347)

2) From a house. In Cologne there is a house que dicitur Gyr [which people called Geier] from the year 1197.

3) From a place name in the Ore Mountains in the German state of Saxony.

For help with translation, try the German-English dictionary at Leo.org, or for translated large chunks of text or whole webpages at a time, try Babel Fish Translation.

Sunday, June 25, 2006

Emigration records of Baden-Wuerttemberg

I just found this well-made site of the Landesarchiv Baden-Wuerttemberg (State Archives), that includes a database of emigration records that can be searched. Unfortunately, Franz Geyer and Josef Freund, who emigrated in 1876 from somewhere in Prussia, were not in it, but maybe your ancestor is. The information in the database comes from the archives of Stuttgart, Karlsruhe, Ludwigsburg, Sigmaringen, and Freiburg. Also on the website is an interesting section with short articles on the crossing and some famous emigrants from the area (such as John Jacob Astor).

Thursday, June 22, 2006

The Ideal German Wife

In "The First American: The Life and Times of Benjamin Franklin" by H.W. Brands ( a book I recommend not just as a biography of Franklin, the author also gives inciteful descriptions of the way life was in Franklin's time) , the author writes that there came a point in the 1750's where the Pennsylvania Assembly worried about the integration of the German immigrants and the English colonists (sound familiar?). Peter Collinson suggested that intermarriage between Germans and English be subsidized. Franklin said this would never work, because:

The German women are generally so disagreeable to an English eye that it would require great portions to induce Englishmen to marry them. Nor would German ideas of beauty generally agree with our women; dick und starcke; that is, thick and strong, always enters into their description of a pretty girl, for the value of a wife with them consists much in the work she is able to do. So that it would require a round sum with an English wife to make up to a Dutch man the difference in labour and frugality.
No wonder Rainer was all into me ;-)

So I guess if we have German ancestors, we can assume the women were probably dick und stark (I know in my family this trait has been passed down to the current generation despite the addition of tiny asian person genes).

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Book Review: Finding Your German Ancestors

This book starts out with a short, uncomplicated history of the region known today as Germany. The same time period is covered in the Germany article on Wikipedia.com. Comparitively, Hansen gives a few more sentences on the early history than the Wikipedia article.

He then gives tips for locating your ancestor's town in modern day Germany (the internet page he gives no longer exists), names a few online German dictionaries (but not leo.org), and sends you to CyndisList.com for more internet sites. He explains that you will find a lot of spelling errors and variations in spelling in the records, and that you need to know the town before starting research in German records, as records were not kept on a National level until recently, so if you don't know the town name, you need to keep looking in US sources (he does not give any hints on where to look here).

The third chapter gives a brief summary of the different types of records available (brief = one paragraph). The rest of the book is mailing addresses of archives and genealogical societies.

Overall, the book did not provide me with much new information, but it only costs $6.95 (and I got it for $4). Sometimes it's nice to have something in your hand as opposed to on the computer screen, so I don't regret the money spent. There is the possibility that some of the info is out of date, as the book was published in 1999.

In regards to genealogy resources in Germany, I've found the soc.genealogy.german Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) page the most useful resource thus far.

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Title: Finding Your German Ancestor's: A Beginner's Guide (buy this at Amazon.com)
Author: Kevan M. Hansen
ISBN: 0916489833
Published: 1999 by Ancestry.com
Pages: 80
Cost: $6.95

Chapter 1: Historic Germany (16 pages)
Chapter 2: Research Tools and Tips (10 pages)
Chapter 3: German Genealogical Sources (12 pages)
Chapter 4: Church Records (13 pages)
Chapter 5: Archival Records (16 pages)
Chapter 6: Genealogical Societies (4 pages)

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