Who Do You Think You Are?

WELSH RECORDS

‘Survival rates of parish registers are poor in comparison with England’

When giving talks or helping visitors at shows, I frequently encounter family historians who are much less confident about undertaking Welsh research than they are investigating their roots in England. Since 1536 under the Act of Union, England and Wales have shared both common law and the system of administration by county or shires, and parish registers in Wales were to be kept by law from 1538, as in England. In theory this commonality of systems should make researching your Welsh ancestors plain sailing. However, there are a number of crucial differences.

The first hurdle that all researchers encounter is simply that too many people share the same surnames, the top

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Who Do You Think You Are?

Who Do You Think You Are?5 min read
News
A historian has received funding for a new project researching divorce in Britain in the 19th and 20th centuries. Dr Jennifer Aston (pictured below), an associate professor in history at Northumbria University (northumbria.ac.uk), has been awarded ov
Who Do You Think You Are?3 min readInternet & Web
Ancestry
Our five readers were largely comfortable navigating Ancestry's pages – Steve thought its interface was beginner-friendly, while Dave described the top navigation bar as “reasonably comprehensive”. It wasn't all plain sailing, however. For Kay the si
Who Do You Think You Are?1 min read
Charles Ignatius Sancho C1729–1780
Charles Ignatius Sancho made history in 1774 as the first person of African descent to vote in a British election. Born on a slave ship crossing the Atlantic, on which both his parents died, Sancho was sold and brought to London as a toddler, before

Related