Scandinavian Research

Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden

My Heritage contains millions of records from Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Finland

Denmark

Boundaries and Territory

Denmark emerged as a unified country in the 10th century. It survived as a monarchy until 1849, when it became a constitutional monarchy. The main body of Denmark is comprised of a large peninsula and 443 islands and is divided into 5 Regions (regioner) and further divided into Municipalities (kummuner)

Denmark consolidated its original 50 counties into 23 in 1793 and realined them again in 1970. The counties were replaced by 5 regions in 2007


The FamilySearch Wiki has a useful site containing a Denmark Parish List

Immigration

The Copenhagen police recorded everyone emigrating from Denmark from 1868-1940. Information included: name, last residents, age, year of emigration and initial destination abroad


If your Danish ancestors lived in Jutland or in Schleswig-Holstein, they may have immigrated through Hamburg. You can visit the Family Search Wiki for Hamburg Passenger Lists for more information


Danish Emigrant Archives is searchable by name, occupation, age, last residence, parish, county, destination, ticket number, or date of registration

Church Records

Denmark has adopted Lutheranism as its official state religion


Until almost the 20th century, the Church kept all Danish vital records. FamilySearch has digitized and indexed many of these records


Lutheran ministers detailed their lives in church records called Kirkebøger

Naming Conventions

Until 1904 when a law was passed requiring permanent surnames, surnames generally changed from generation to generation


Women generally did not change their names at marriage


Children’ would take their father’s name with “sen” added for a son and “datter” added for a daughter


The first boy was generally name for the father’s father. The second boy was usually named for the mother’s father. Subsequent boys were often named for the father and then for the parent’s brothers


The first girl was generally named for the mother’s mother. The second girl was usually named for the father’s mother


If a spouse died and the other remarried. The second couple generally named the first child after the deceased spouse of the same sex

Misc.

Danish citizenship was not a birthright. Instead, cities would confer citizenship upon individuals. Citizenship allowed individuals to reside and do business in that city

Useful Websites

Finland

Boundaries and Territory

From medieval times through 1809 Finland was under Swedish rule


From 1809 to 1917 the territory was an autonomous grand duchy within the Russian Empire


From 1918 to the present the territory is the Republic of Finland

Immigration

Large number of Finland emigrants to U.S. from 1890-1914


Finish ancestors may have migrated through the following ports: Goteborg, Malmo, Stockholm and Trondheim

Misc.

Most official records before 1863 are in Swedish


Until the late 19th century, surnames changed with each generation


Most important records are those kept by the state Lutheran Church beginning in 1686


Finland began keeping a census, called henkikirjat, in 1634

Useful Websites

Norway

Boundaries and Territory

During 1524 to 1814 Norway was part of Denmark


From 1814 to 1905 the territory was the United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway


In 1905 the territory became the Kingdom of Norway – independent constitutional monarchy

Church Records

Most Norwegians were members of the state Lutheran church.  The Lutheran church began keeping parish records in the 1600.  Church recordkeeping was standardized by royal ordinance in 1814.


Duplicate registers, called klokkerboker (clerk books) were kept in a seperate location for saety.


The Norwegeian Historical Data Center has an ongoing parish-record transcription project.


Generally baptism dates were recorded instead of birth records.


In addition to baptism, marriage, death and burial records, churches kept track of when a child/teenager was confirmed and ready to receive their first communion.


Misc.

Records may be in Danish, Swedish or Latin


Four major waves of emigration from Norway: 1866-1873, 1880-1893, 1900-1914, 1920-1929


Police in major coastal towns kept records of emigrants between 1867-1930


When Norwegians began adopting permanent surnames in 1923, many used the name of their town or farm

Useful Websites

Sweden

Boundaries and Territory


From the Medieval Times to the 17th Century Sweden was a unified country


During the 17th Century the country includes Finland and portions of Russia, Poland and Lithuania


During the 18th Century Sweden lost most of its non-Scandinavia territories (including Finland)

Misc.

In Sweden, it is not uncommon to call a person by an affectionate form of the given name. Most names also have variant spellings


Children often took their father’s first name, plus a possessive s and -son or -dotter as their last names

Useful Websites