2-3 minute read
By Niall Cullen | February 9, 2024
With the release of four new record sets, we're taking a trip to South Africa this week.
Church records and membership lists document over 350 years of South Africa's history and people in our latest release. With records from the Cape, Free State, Kwazulu-Natal, and Transvaal regions, is there a South African branch of your family tree waiting to be explored? Plus, we've added over 102,000 pages to our newspaper archive.
Spanning 1660-2011, over 785,000 new baptism records offer essential information about your South African family heritage. Some entries include a digitized scan of the original record, which is always worth checking for extra details, like godparents' names. Where available, the original record is likely to be written in Dutch or Afrikaans.
Did your ancestor tie the knot in South Africa? Find out in over 314,000 new church marriage records.
An example of a South African marriage record from 1840. View the full record.
The records reveal the names and birth years of both spouses, as well as when and where their wedding took place.
Trace South African ancestors from cradle to grave with the help of over 4,800 new burial records.
A map of South Africa from 1897.
From its indigenous people to European colonization and apartheid, South Africa's history is as diverse as it is tumultuous. Could these records help you trace a family connection there?
Detail-rich records reveal when your ancestor joined the church, along with important biographical facts. The 141,000-strong collection includes membership lists from Cape and Free State.
We've added Morecambe Visitor to our newspaper archive this week, alongside updates to 24 other papers. Here's a full rundown of what's new:
Morecambe Visitor covering 1900, 1917, 1952-1954, 1956-1962, 1964-1968 and 1987
Filter by title and date when searching to focus on the updates that interest you most.
We released even more baptism, marriage and burial records last week. If you missed them, you can catch up on what was featured here.