Locations Groningen - Friesland - Drenthe - Overijssel - Flevoland - Gelderland - Utrecht - Noord-Holland - Zuid-Holland - Zeeland - Noord-Brabant - Limburg - Amsterdam - Rotterdam - Den Haag - Netherlands Antilles - Surinam - Australia - Canada - Germany - Ghana - Taiwan - USA
Topics Baptists - Dates and times - Dutch food - Dutch history - Dutch language - Dutch names - Emigration - Early Dutch settlers - Ellis Island - Holland America Line - New to Dutch genealogy - Newsletter - Online genealogy - Pitfalls - Sources - Wilhelminakade - Wie was wie


Online records: Amsterdam population register

The Amsterdam city archive added two new databases to its websites: The population register 1851-1853 and the population register 1874-1893. The index of the latter is not complete yet, but will be soon.

The population register 1893-1939 (also known as the family cards) was already online.

Searching the indexes is free, but there is a charge for viewing and downloading scans.

The new databases are currently only available through the Dutch website.

If you plan to search the population register, be aware that many first names are abbreviated, e.g. Johs means Johannes. Use wildcards when searching, or only use surnames.

Warning: Population registers are not primary sources of BMD data and are known to contain errors.

Read more about population registers.

Labels: , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Postcard from Amsterdam

Postcard from Amsterdam

Postcard from Holland is a regular feature on this blog. On Wednesdays I post a card from my collection of vintage postcards. Today: Amsterdam.

The Singel, a canal that once encircled Amsterdam and is now the innermost of the semicircular ring of canals encircling downtown Amsterdam. In the background (near the right edge of the postcard) we can see the Munttoren (Mint Tower).

If you come to Amsterdam, do a boat tour of the canals. You will see that the view on the postcard has not changed much.

Labels: , ,

2 Comments:

Anonymous Dan the Photo Restoration guy said...

I just love old postcards like this, showing off architecture from the good old times. People had style back then, when dressing themselves and when constructing buildings!

 
Anonymous Dutch said...

This is a great photo. I lived on the Singel for many years nera the Munt Tower.

I left the Netherlands 20 years ago but this brings back sweet memories.
Thanks from an old “Amsterdammer

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

Postcard from Amsterdam

Postcard from Amsterdam: Keizersgracht

Last week, the Unesco added 21 new sites to its world heritage list. One of those sites was the seventeenth-century canal ring Area inside the Singelgracht, in Amsterdam. The Unesco describes the area as follows:

The historic urban ensemble of the canal district of Amsterdam was a project for a new 'port city' built at the end of the 16th and beginning of the 17th centuries. It comprises a network of canals to the west and south of the historic old town and the medieval port that encircled the old town and was accompanied by the repositioning inland of the city's fortified boundaries, the Singelgracht. This was a long-term programme that involved extending the city by draining the swampland, using a system of canals in concentric arcs and filling in the intermediate spaces. These spaces allowed the development of a homogeneous urban ensemble including gabled houses and numerous monuments. This urban extension was the largest and most homogeneous of its time. It was a model of large-scale town planning, and served as a reference throughout the world until the 19th century. [link]

One of the canals encircling the old town is the Keizersgracht (litt. Emperor's Canal) in Amsterdam. The postcard shows this canal.

Though there is an address on the back of the card, there is no stamp or date mark, and the card was probably never sent. The card is probably from the first decade of the 20th century.

Labels: ,

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am looking for information about my grandfather's uncle, Jan Brinkhuis born in 1894 in Amsterdam.
When did he die and did he have children?
Thank you.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

Postcard from Amsterdam

Postcard from Amsterdam

Postcard from Holland is a regular feature on this blog. On Wednesdays I post a card from my collection of vintage postcards. Today: A postcard from Amsterdam.

A postcard of the royal palace in Amsterdam. Built as a city hall for Amsterdam in 1648 (by the famous architect Jacob van Campen), it became a royal palace in 1808, and is still in use as royal palace today. It is not a royal residence, though: The queen lives in Den Haag (a.k.a. The Hague).

Postcard from Amsterdam

The postcard was sent from Amsterdam to Hillegom on 26 March 1905. The back of the card is reserved for the address and the stamp only, as was customary at the time. The sender could leave his message on the small space provided on the front of the card (in this case, to the right of the image; below the image was also common).

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Dutch archive news Q1 2010

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

1 Comments:

Blogger Miriam Robbins said...

You are the recipient of the Ancestor Approved Award!

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

Postcard from Amsterdam

Postcard from Amsterdam

Postcard from Holland is a regular feature on this blog. On Wednesdays I post a card from my collection of vintage postcards. Today: A postcard from Amsterdam.

The Oudezijds Voorburgwal, a typical street (with canal) in Amsterdam, at the beginning of the previous century (the card was sent in 1909). Note the handcars on the streets. Nowadays the street is lined with bicycles and cars, but the canal itself and its surroundings did not change much.

Address side of postcard

Have a look at the back of the card. The card could be sent as postcard (briefkaart) or as printed matter (drukwerk), at different postage rates, by crossing out either the first or the second line at the top of the card. When sending at the (slightly cheaper) printed matter rate, the sender was not allowed to write a message on the card - he could only leave his name and address at the bottom left.

There are usage instructions on the top left and right of the card. On the left, it reads Bij verzending als briefkaart (niet als drukwerk) mag deze ruimte voor correspondentie gebruikt worden: When sending as postcard (not as printed matter) this space can be used for correspondence. On the right, at the place of the stamp, we find the text Bij verzending als "drukwerk" de woorden briefkaart postkarte enz. doorschrappen en alleen naam en datum er op schrijven: When sending as "printed matter" strike out the words briefkaart postkarte etc. and only write name and date on it.

The stamp on the card is now lost, presumably removed by a stamp collector.

Labels: , ,

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have found that an ancestor moved from Amsterdam to Hull in England around 1868.
His name was Jacob Lyons and he was born in Amsterdam in 1853.
His fathers name was also Jacob Lyons and his mother was Mary Jane (Korputt)
How could I trace where he lived in Amsterdam, if the house is still standing and his ancestors ?
Paul Bulmer
paulbulmerhull@hotmail.co.uk

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

Dutch archive news, December 2009

Last month's news and announcements from the Dutch archives

  • Several archives announced changes in opening hours for the new year.
  • Genlias added death acts from Noord-Brabant and marriage acts from Amsterdam.
  • The Dutch National Archive and the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation NIOD, launched the website Wegwijzer Archieven WO2 (Guide to WW2 Archives), an online guide to the (usually offline) war archives that are scattered throughout the country. The website is available in Dutch only.
  • The Central Bureau for Genealogy presented Asal Oesoel, a research guide for people with roots in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). It is the last book (for now) in the series Voorouders van verre (Ancestors from far away). The books are only available in Dutch.

Labels: , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Dutch archive news November 2009

  • Many archives announced limited opening hours and service around the holidays.
  • Genlias added new birth records from Utrecht, new marriage records from Friesland, and new death records from Friesland and Utrecht.
  • The National Archive opened an e-depot. Nowadays many government records are only created electronically. These records need to be remain accessible for interested parties and have to be archived and kept for future generations, just like the paper records of the past. Though currently a pilot with just a few records, the e-depot of the national archive will eventually electronically store and archive these records.
  • The first selection of audiovisual material for Open Images is now available online. The subjects of the 469 items that can now be found on Open Images are very diverse, such as an item about a caravan that can also be used as a boat, a video about the Tour de France in the Netherlands and about the first residents of Almere city.
  • Drenlias is adding tax registers from the 17th and 18th century. The Groningen archive is publishing estate inventories online. So if your ancestors lived in Groningen or Drenthe you can soon find out if they prospered.
  • The Amsterdam city archive published pre-1811 burial registers on their website, available here.

Labels: , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Dutch archive news - October 2009

  • Genlias added the first 120,000 marriage records from Amsterdam. This covers the period 1916-1932. There are also new birth and death acts from Limburg, and death acts from Noord-Holland.
  • The Central Bureau for Genealogy (CBG) in The Hague presented the next book in the series Voorouders van verre (Ancestors from far away): Sranan famiri, a research guide for people with Suriname roots.
  • The CBG started indexing their collection Familieadvertenties (newspaper ads announcing births, deaths, marriages or other family events). Currently these are only indexed on primary surname, and you may have to browse through many scans (paying for them as you go along) before you find what you are looking for. In the future you can also see which persons are on which scan (first and last name, year, place) so that you can go directly to the scan you need.
  • The CBG received a grant for their project StamboomNederland (Family Tree The Netherlands). In the future people can upload their genealogical research to share it with others and make it available to future generations. The CBG has archived printed and handwritten family trees for many years, and they plan to do the same for digital trees. StamboomNederland will launch late 2010.
  • Educational broadcasting corporation Teleac has bought the Dutch rights of the famous BBC television series Who do you think you are? They will create a Dutch series together with Central Bureau for Genealogy.
  • The Dutch National Archive announced that 800 meters Suriname archive, kept in The Netherlands because of better archiving conditions, will return to Suriname. Next year the Suriname national archive will open a new, modern archive building. Together with improved regulations and staff training this will guarantee proper conservation of these documents.
  • The Friesland archive Tresoar and the Groningen university are indexing the registers of the Sound Toll from the Danish national archive. The Sound Toll Registers contain information on about 1.8 million passages. From ca. 1580 onward, the biggest part of the passing ships came from The Netherlands. During the 18th century more ships came from Friesland than from any other Dutch province. The project's website is The Sound Toll Registers Online.
  • The city archive of The Hague have published part of the population register online. Not as part of their clumsy virtual study room, but (like many cities in Zuid-Holland) in Digitale Stamboom (Digital Family Tree). You can find the records from The Hague here. Scans are available free of charge.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Dutch archive news, September 2009

  • Genlias added birth records from Limburg and death records from Gelderland and Limburg.
  • As part of Images for the Future, the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision and Knowledgeland launched Open Images. Open Images is an open media platform that offers online access to a selection of audiovisual archive material to stimulate creative reuse. Access to the content will be based on the Creative Commons model.
  • The Central Bureau for Genealogy in The Hague presented Roots Karibense, a research guide for people with Netherlands Antillean roots. It is the fourth book in the series Voorouders van verre (Ancestors from far away). The books are only available in Dutch.
  • Over 60 documents from the Dutch National Archive, including the famous Schaghen letter, are on display in the South Street Seaport Museum in New York, where the exhibition New Amsterdam. The Island at the Center of the World opened on 12 September.
  • Several documents from the Amsterdam city archive are on display in the Museum of American Finance in New York, where the exhibition Actiën Handel: Early Dutch Finance and the Founding of America opened on 8 September. One of the highlights of the exhibition is the testament of Peter Stuyvesant.
  • The Rotterdam city archive started the blog Dochters van Kaat Mossel (Daughters of Kaat Mossel), a genealogy blog about the female descendants of famous Rotterdam inhabitant Kaat Mossel (1723-1798). The blog aims to show what is available on their Digitale Stamboom (Digital Family Tree) website. Unfortunately the blog is only available in Dutch.
  • Anne Frank now has her own channel on YouTube, with, among others, the only existing film images of Anne. The channel is created and maintained by the Anne Frank museum.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Postcard from Amsterdam

Postcard from Amsterdam

This postcard was sent from Amsterdam in November 1904. It shows the Overtoom, a street near the Vondelpark, in Amsterdam (see how Overtoom looks now in streetview).

Have a look at the people on the card, and their different clothing styles.

The real "star" on this card is of course the beautiful tram. Trams were a major mode of transport at the time, not only in the city but also to connect different towns. The tram is still important for Amterdam and several other major cities, but outside the main cities the tram has disappeared completely.

The tram on the card is an electric tram, getting electricity from the wires overhead (the trams in use today still work the same way). The electric tram was introduced in Amsterdam in 1900, so it was still quite new when this card was sent in 1904 - possibly the recipients of this card never saw one. Other trams in use at the time include steam trams and horse-drawn trams.

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Reader's question: Origin of the Hartel surname

A reader of Trace your Dutch roots asked me about the origin of his surname, Hartel.

Hartel is an uncommon name, I have never encountered it before. There are only 67 hits in Genlias, without a clear geographic concentration.

The best place to find information about a surname is the Family name database of the Meertens Institute. About Hartel they tell it's a name derived from an address or toponym. In other words, the Hartel family originates from a place called Hartel (or something similar). Unfortunately, Meertens does not tell where or what that place was.

From the 56 Hartels in the 1947 census, 22 came from Amsterdam and another 17 from the rest of the province Noord-Holland. Similar names like Härtel (4 out of 7) and Hertel (33 out of 58) show a similar concentration in Amsterdam. So my next step was the Amsterdam registers.

The old marriage registers - which usually list place of origin of both spouses - are not online yet, but the Amsterdam baptisms are. There is only one Hartel baptism: Johanna Maria Christina Fredrica, daughter of Johan Gerrit Hartel, was baptized in 1783. One of the witnesses was Diedrik Philip Hartel. She was baptized by Wilhelm August Klepperbein, a German minister. This suggests the Hartel family may come from Germany. There are also a few hits for Hertel, most of them seem to have a German connection too.

I have no proof yet (for that I have to visit the Amsterdam city archive), but I expect the Dutch Hartel family originates in Germany. Just to be sure I checked the online German phone book and I found 687 hits for Hartel, 3744 for Hertel, and 2857 for Härtel.

So my hypothesis is that the Dutch Hartel family actually came from Germany. What Mr. Hartel needs to do now is confirm that he descends from the Amsterdam Hartel family, and then check the pre-1811 Amsterdam marriage books (this can be done in his local FHC) to confirm they came from Germany.

Do you also have a question about Dutch genealogy that you want me to discuss? Leave your question in the comments below this post, or use the contact form.

Labels: , , ,

8 Comments:

Blogger Olive Tree Genealogy said...

Interesting question! Is your reader sure his family is of Dutch descent? Some of the Hartel descendants are from Jacques Hertel, interpretor to Samuel de Champlain in New France (present day Quebec) in the early 1600s. Jacques was the founder of Trois Rivieres, and one of my ancestors. He was the father of several legitimate children by his French wife plus an illegitimate daughter by a Mohawk woman. See Van Slyke Family for more information

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

Hi Lorine,

Thanks for your reply. While I was researching for this post I also found the (20th century) emigration record, so I'm sure that this reader has (recent) Dutch roots.

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thank you so much for all the help
you have,given me
.Kind regards.Hendrik Anthony Hartel Hopperscrossing Victoria 3029

 
Blogger Thomas said...

hi can anyone help. Trying to find the origin of surnames Grelling and Lanting.
Also as a first name Yantje.
Thanks

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

Yantje is probably Jantje in Dutch. It's a diminutive of Jan, which is the Dutch form of John (so Jantje means little John). Diminutives of male names were often used as female names in Holland.

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

Grelling is a rare name from the southeast of the province Drenthe. I expect there is only a single Grelling family, and you can trace them through the 19th century in Genlias.

 
Blogger Unknown said...

hello my name is anna elisabeth gerekink. i live in australia my family migrated to australia 1957 on the sibajak i was born1958..in melbourne my mother became very sad and missed her family she returned to holland..4 a holliday sorry to say mom never returned.dad became very ill in the 1980s he passed this year he loved mom till the end hislast wishes were if i do find her that i must tell her somthing.dad passed away in my arms . if any family member of wilhelmina adriana klaassen gerekink read this please email anna410brown@gmail.com I traveled. to holland in 2008 I was so happy I
did this as i saw my fathers home before he passed
please if you know my family could you contact my mother is a great grandmother 4 times
anna down under australia

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

my mom is a Hartel and her roots are from the Liege or Luik area from 1700 this part of Europe was back and forth part of Netherlands, France and now it is Belgium but just a stone throw away from the Dutch and German border. My mom and her father are from Groningen , Netherlands but her grandfather from the Luik/Liege area. we don;t have anything else.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

Dutch archive news roundup: April 2009

  • Genlias added birth and marriage acts from Friesland, and birth, marriage and death acts from Utrecht.
  • The Dutch National Archive published new images on flickr The Commons, including a set of images related to New York.
  • The archives in Groningen opened a new image database: Beeldbank Groningen.
  • Drenlias, the database of BMD acts from Drenthe, added scans of death acts of the period 1943-1952. This includes the death act of the concentration camp in Westerbork, but also many death acts of Jews who died in e.g. Auschwitz or Sobibor. Death acts for these people were usually made up after the war in their last place of residence. These death acts often have supplements, scans of these documents are also online.
  • Last year, I wrote about the Archiefbank (Archives Database) of the Amsterdam City Archive. The Archiefbank recently became available in English. The Archiefbank was one of the winners of Best Archives Website, awarded by ArchivesNext.

Photo: Queen Wilhelmina visits New York and is welcomed by Mayor La Guardia. Dutch National Archive, on flickr The Commons.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Archive news roundup: February-March 2009

News from the Dutch archives

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Dutch archive news roundup January 2009

Labels: , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Dutch National Archive on flickr

Emigrants waiting to board the S.S. Volendam, bound for Canada

Nationaal Archief, the Dutch national archive, and Spaarnestad Photo, an archive of press and documentary photos, announced today that they published part of their photo collections on The Commons on Flickr. Albums include the Labour Inspectorate collection, the 1928 olympics in Amsterdam, and Dutch emigrants.

The Nationaal Archief is the first Dutch participant in Flickr the Commons. The Nationaal Archief and Spaarnestad Photo hope to collect the stories behind the photographs this way and asks visitors to contribute their knowledge:

"You can help us enrich our knowledge of the photo collections by adding tags and comments. If you recognize people or locations in the photos, or have an interesting story to tell about one of the photos, then post a comment [..] At the moment, 200 photographs from the Nationaal Archief's collection (most of them from the Labour Inspectorate collection) and 200 from the Spaarnestad Photo collection are available for viewing on Flickr the Commons. We will be adding new material regularly, and hope that you will continue to return to the site to see what's new."

Photo: Emigrants waiting to board the S.S. Volendam, bound for Canada. Rotterdam, 15 May 1951. Collection Spaarnestad Photo.

Labels: , , ,

2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks for pointing us to this wonderful collection. I've only looked at a few of the photos but I'll be spending lots of time going through them all. They are fabulous!

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

You're welcome, Denise.

What I like especially about this collection is "no known copyright restrictons", which means I can use the photos on my blog. Usually the Nationaal Archief charges a (hefty) usage fee for any non-personal usage, but in this case the archive "authorizes others to use the work without restrictions".

There are many more photos on their image bank, but you have to search using a Dutch interface.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

Exhibition: The world of Christiaan Andriessen

The world of Christiaan Andriessen

None of his paintings survive, but his drawings and sketches give a unique insight in early 19th century street life in Amsterdam.

Blizzard

Christiaan Andriessen (1775-1846) was a painter, but is now remembered only for his drawings, sketches and illustrations, and especially for his illustrated diary (1805-1808). This diary contained probably over 700 illustrations (many are now lost), and 80 of these illustrations are now on display on a special exhibition in Amsterdam: De wereld van Christiaan Andriessen. Amsterdamse dagboektekeningen 1805-1808. (The world of Christiaan Andriessen: Diary illustrations from Amsterdam 1805-1808.)

The exhibition is open from today, 17 October 2008, until 11 January 2009.

For those of you not planning a trip to Amsterdam this autumn, many of these diary illustrations are also available in the Beeldbank Amsterdam (image bank Amsterdam).

UPDATE: Only hours after I posted the above message, I received an announcement from the Amsterdam City Archive that many diary illustrations are now online and in chronological order on the Christiaan Andriessen: Amsterdamse dagboektekeningen 1805-1808 website.

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Dutch archive news roundup: April 2008

News from the Dutch archives:

  • Several archives, museums, and other institutions cooperated to created the Image Bank WW2, with thousands of photographs from the second world war.
  • The Central Bureau for Genealogy published scans of parts of their collection online. This is a paid service. We will soon look at the online collection in our online records series.
  • Tresoar added 1750 photos of Jewish graves from Friesland to their website.
  • New records on the website of the Amsterdam city archive: archiefkaarten. These cards were copies of persoonskaarten that were made when the city of Amsterdam had to hand over the persoonskaart to another authority, usually because the subject of the card died or moved to another city. One million cards, created between 1939 and 1960, are now online.

Labels: , , ,

2 Comments:

Blogger Unknown said...

Would any one be aware of a town, place or area called Odink in the mid 1700. I found wedding bans in Amsterdam stating Jan Hendrik Thomas came from Odink. When I was in Salt Lake City someone mentioned it might be in the Province of Gelderland.

If any one has any information I would really appreciate hearing from them.

Ada P. Thomas Vancouver BC

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

I checked a few reference works, but I can't find "Odink". I think there are two possibilities:

* The original text is misread (or misspelled), maybe it should be Odijk.

* It is not a place but a farm, most likely in Achterhoek (a region in the east of Gelderland) or Twente (a region in the east of Overijssel).

As you found it in Amsterdam, I think Odijk (province Utrecht) is the most likely, unless you've seen the handwriting and can be absolutely sure it reads Odink and not Odijk.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

Online records: Beeldbank Amsterdam

The website

When we discussed the archiefbank from the Amsterdam city archive I promised we would look at their image database in a separate post. So, today we will take a look at the beeldbank (image database) of the Amsterdam city archive.

What do they have?

Images. The database contains currently 237,298 images, most of them of Amsterdam: 180,000 photos, 12,000 prints, almost 11,000 drawings, 30,000 designs of buildings, and a few other objects. The online collection is growing all the time, so by the time you read this the numbers may already be higher.

Is there an English interface?

No, the interface is only available in Dutch.

How do I use it?

Fill in your search phrase in the search box on the top, and optionally a period (the fields van jaar, from year, and tot jaar, until year, will become visible when you start typing in the search box) and press the red zoek button. To refine your search, check zoek in resultaat (search within result) before entering another search phrase. Check nieuwe zoekopdracht (new search) again to start a new search.

Click on an image in the search results to enlarge.In the larger image there are buttons to the left of the picture to zoom in and out. Click the cross (on the right of the red bar above the image) to close the image and go back to the search results.

How much does it cost?

Browsing the collection is free, but there are charges for downloading (currently €16.30 per image), ordering prints, and publication (€75 for publication on a website). See the price list for details.

Future plans

New images are added all the time.

Conclusion

If your ancestors were from Amsterdam, or if you want to see what the Dutch capital looked like in the past, the beeldbank is a site you should visit.

Where most image databases offer the option to download low resolution scans for personal use for free, this beeldbank charges a hefty €16.30 per image (for high resolution scans). Free download of low-res scans would be a great enhancement. Another welcome addition would be an English interface.

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Online records: Archiefbank Amsterdam

Next in our online records series are the websites of the city archives of the three largest Dutch cities: Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague. Amsterdam and Rotterdam do not have any records in Genlias, and The Hague only a few, so the websites of the city archives are the main online sources for these cities.

Today we will look at the website of the Amsterdam city archive, Rotterdam and The Hague will follow in the next few days.

The website

The part the of the website of the Amsterdam city archive where you can search for records is called Archiefbank (archive database), this is the part of the website we will look at today. The website has more to offer, but that's currently all in Dutch. We will look at the image database in a later post.

What do they have?

In this post, we will look at Doopregisters (baptisms), 1564 - 1811, and Gezinskaarten (family cards, part of the population register), 1893 - 1939. There are several other databases on the sites, and many scanned but not indexed collections.

Is there an English interface?

No.

Update (summer 2009): In the meantime, the Amsterdam city archive has created an English interface.

How do I use it?

The website is not easy to navigate, especially if you don't speak Dutch. I will discuss the doopregisters and gezinskaarten databases and give you direct links to the search pages. If you want to search the other databases, the best place to start is here.

Doopregisters

Let's start with the doopregisters (baptism registers) from the Amsterdam church books. On the search form you can fill in two names, one in the left column, one in the right column. If you want to search for a single name, just fill in the left column. There are fields for given name (voor), infix (tussen), and surname (achter). Check the Fuzzy box if you also want to find similar names. If you want you can select a time frame (periode), fill in the first and last day/month/year (in this order!) of the time frame you want.

Look at the example below to see how I filled in the form, looking for children of the couple Adrianus Koopman and Johanna van Grol baptized between 1770 and 1790 (click on the image to enlarge).

When you have filled in the form, click the Zoek button (the black arrow on the right). With the search form filled in as in the example, I found three search results. Hovering over the results shows the details. On the image below, you see the baptism record of dochter (daughter) Johanna. To the right of the record is a small image of the scan of this record, with the text klik op de thumbnail om scan te openen (click on the thumbnail to open the scan). If you click it you will be asked to logon: You need to be a registered user to download scans, and you need to pay for them!

I have an account, so I logged in, paid, and downloaded the image. Once you have paid for a scan, you can come back later, log in again, and view it again, you will not be charged again for the same image (but your account will be closed if you don't use it for a year).

Usually, the scan will not have more information than is already available from the index.

Gezinskaarten

The search form for gezinskaarten is quite simple. You can only search for the head of a family, and there are only four search fields: Voorletters (initials), Tussenvoegsel (infix), Achternaam (surname) and Geboortedatum (date of birth). Press the pink Zoek button to search.

In the baptism records we just looked at, all the information available in the original records is also available in the index. Unfortunately, this is not the case for the gezinskaarten index: The search results have very little information, not even the full name! If you want to know more, you will have to pay for the scans.

How much does it cost?

Searching and browsing the index is free. Prices for viewing and downloading scans vary from €0.50 for a single scan to €0.25 per scan for orders over 1,000, plus a transaction fee between €2.50 and €7.50 (depending on payment method). Paid but unused scans will be credited to your account, credits are valid for one year. If you need multiple scans, make sure you pay for all your scans at once, to avoid multiple transaction fees.

On the login window, you can select Ik wil mij nu registreren (I want to register now) to register. Registration and payment pages are also in Dutch.

Future plans

The databases we discussed are part of a larger scanning project. Many of the collections that are kept by the Amsterdam city archive are already scanned, and customers can ask for scanning of collections that are not scanned yet. When you browse the inventory of the archive, you can see in the last column if a collection is scanned, and if so, how many scans there are. You can browse the collections of the Amsterdam city archive, buy scans that are already available, or order scans when they are not available yet. Eventually, a large part of the collections will be scanned and made available online, but not indexed, and thus not searchable.

Conclusion

The user interface is clumsy: The site is hard to navigate, there is no English interface, search interfaces are inconsistent (on one search form you have to click a black arrow to start searching, on another a pink button). There is a lot of room for improvement here.

It would be nice if the gezinskaarten index contained more information, especially since the scans are often difficult to read. It is, however, a miracle that there are scans of the cards at all, as most of them were lost or heavily damaged in 1943! Fortunately for us, the cards were microfilmed in 1939. The films do show some wear and tear, after decades of use.

It is interesting that while many archives are busy indexing their collections online, the Amsterdam city archive focuses on scanning instead. It is good to see so much information available online. On the other hand, the goal should be to make information more accessible, and an easy to navigate website, preferably multilingual, would help to achieve this.

Amsterdam records are not in Genlias (but behind the screens a lot of people are working on indexing Amsterdam marriages for Genlias), and the main sources for online genealogy in Amsterdam are the pre-1811 baptism books, and the post-1893 gezinskaarten, leaving most of the 19th century unindexed.

This website is not aimed at casual ancestry searchers. If you are new to Dutch genealogy I advise you to wait for Genlias, but for an experienced researcher that knows some Dutch the archiefbank can be an extremely valuable resource.

Labels: ,

2 Comments:

Blogger HB said...

Hello,
My 2x great-grandmother was born on a ship that was located off of the coast of Holland on 14 Aug 1817 and lived to be 98-years old. In the words of Catherine BUMGARDNER Raudebaugh, the ship "April" was "blowed off course".

Well, I came upon the amazing story of the ship HOPE. Connecting dots, I speculated that the words HOEPEL and APRIL sound the same, the suspected dates are the same, and the conditions of going off course are the same. Many years ago, Mr. Ronald Gase of the Netherlands replied to an email query of mine that Jacob Baumgartner was listed as a head-of-household on the ship HOPE.

Mr. Gase suggested researching Johan Lodewijk Baumgartner, a Lutheran, who married in Amsterdam in 1796 AND checking the baptismal records for Amsterdam 1564-1811.

Can anyone help me with this research to identify my 3x great grandparents and to find Catherine’s birth record? Would this birth have been recorded in Holland? It's interesting that Catherine considered herself Dutch; although her father's surname is German.

Back then, what legally denoted a nationality -- country of birth or ethnicity of parents? Perhaps she could have been the first recorded hyphenated national -- German-Dutch??? AND why would Mr. Gase suggest Johan? Although he would have been of correct age, isn't the Johan moniker the same as JOHN in English -- not Jacob???

Thank you for any assistance. H. Bundy; bundy@cvip.net; Clovis, California

 
Blogger HB said...

Dear Blog-Monitor (what a title!), Please respond to my email of yesterday to the posted address, bundy@cvip.net. I neglected to check that box as an appropriate method for correspondence.

Thank you.
H. Bundy

 

Post a Comment

<< Home