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Was your ancestor buried in Scotland, or had close relatives in the country? Discover final resting places, together with many details about lives lived in this collection of Scottish cemetery gravestone inscriptions, the largest of its kind online.
Each result will give you a transcript (and sometimes an image) of your ancestor’s burial monument. These records were created by a collaborative effort of a variety of family history societies and independent licensors, with transcripts that will vary depending on the age of the monument and its legibility. Below is a list of what you may find in the transcript.
Monumental inscriptions are memorials placed on a person’s grave or burial place. They vary in size and in how much is recorded about the person. Monumental inscriptions are an excellent resource for family historians because many record the names of other relatives such as a spouse, children or parents, as well as their birth and death dates.
For example, the record for Katherine Alexander holds six additional names: Katherine’s husband, two daughters, two sons, and daughter-in-law. Katherine’s eldest son was Captain Harry Charles Birnie. The inscription for Captain Birnie reads, ‘Birnie, DSO, RD, RNR, elder brother of Trinity House and commodore of ocean convoys, died gallantly in North Atlantic through enemy action 9 March 1943 aged 60’. The facts found in the inscription enabled us to find a death record for Harry Birnie in Findmypast’s British nationals armed forces deaths 1796-2005. Additionally, Birnie was found in the 1891 England, Wales & Scotland Census living in Aberdour with his parents and siblings.
Many of these records were created by local family history society volunteers, this collection currently includes records from:
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