Family
history, cultures, and faiths: how your ancestors lived and worshipped
Michael Gandy
The National Archives, 2007, £7.99, Pbk., 278p., ISBN 9781905615117
This book is a guide to the wide variety of religious sources that are
available for tracing family history. It is not a guide to sources for
the history of religion, but rather a guide to sources for family history
in the records of Christian denominations and other religions from the
16th until the 20th centuries. The book is in the small format that the
National Archives use for a number of their family history guides, but
its 278 pages are packed with information nevertheless.
Michael Gandy gives a brief historical background in the first chapter.
He then devotes a whole chapter to records of ‘life stages’ -
primarily birth/baptism, marriage and death. These are the core records
for family historians of course. He then goes on to consider archives
of particular denominations, sources for those who moved for the sake
of religion, Catholic, Jacobite, Huguenot and Jewish records, and archives
of South Asian cultures and faiths. He completes the book with an A-Z
list of sources, a list of useful web sites and an index.
He not only describes well-known sources in local authority archives
such as, parish registers, and records in the National Archives, such
as pre-1837 non-conformist registers, but also lesser known sources.
Did you know for example that the records of the Muggletonians are in
the British Library? He offers advice about which sources are likely
to be of most use for finding records of particular family events. For
example, between 1753 and 1837, everyone, apart from Quakers and Jews,
had to get married in an Anglican church. Many people from other cultures
and faiths have long since settled in Britain from the 17th century until
the present day. Michael Gandy also gives information about the sources
that these communities created and other sources in which they may appear.
Family History Cultures and Faiths will be very useful to researchers
tracing their ancestors as it is inevitable that they will need to use
religious records since all our ancestors were involved with religious
practice to a greater or lesser extent. Those who want to know more about
the records that Christian and other faiths have created will also want
to read this book.
Contributed by: Richard Knight, BA, MCLIP, who is Principal Officer:
Local Studies and Archives for the London Borough of Camden.