Synopses & Reviews
Throughout the ages and across the world people have had a natural curiosity about their ancestors, but only recently have amateur historians begun to trace their forebears with such fervor and delight. Written by a leading authority in the field,
The Oxford Guide to Family History is a practical introduction to finding out about your family.
Much more than a guide to the mechanics of constructing a family tree, this helpful book suggests ways of broadening your own family research to look at what life was like for people of centuries past. Drawing on the oral tradition, financial records, gravestones, or census records, one may, for instance, learn how a family earned their living, what a person was like, or what religion they were. While many of the examples are based on British family histories, David Hey offers much practical advice on the basics of family research. He suggests, for example, that a family historian not start with some famous person who had the same surname back in the fifteenth century. The golden rule is to work backwards from the known to the unknown. Among basic sources for the beginner are municipal records, census records, and church registers. And Hey also points out that many surnames are intensely local in their distribution, and that as a result, tracing the geographical pattern of a surname is an important task, as it may lead towards the original home of the name.
Offering practical advice such as how to get started, where to find records, and how to decipher early styles of handwriting, The Oxford Guide to Family History is essential to learning the most about your family history. Lavishly illustrated with pictures of family groups, houses, monuments, and archive records, here is an authoritative guide to this fascinating hobby.
Review
"Review from previous edition Not only does it give up-to-date guidance on researching national and local registers, but it relates individual researches to recent developments in the social and economic history of the family. The practical guidance is well set out."--TLS
"remarkable value for its combination of social history, gracefully told, and lucid instruction"--Antonia Fraser
"a thoughtful and though-provoking book, finely researched and well written"--Family Tree Magazine
Synopsis
This book offers practical guidance to the basics of researching a family tree, advice on how to go beyond this and discover more details of the lives of one's ancestors, and a general history of the development and distribution of surnames. Hey highlights those aspects of social history that are most relevant to family history research, and looks at wider avenues of possible research, such as the past and present distribution of surnames, the stability of certain families, the mobility of others, and the use of painting and photographs.
About the Author
David Hey is Professor of Local and Family History at the University of Sheffield. His books include
The Oxford Companion to Local and Family History (OUP, 1996; paperback 1998) and the
Oxford Dictionary of Local and Family History (OUP, 1997).
Table of Contents
Part One - The Study of Family History
Part Two - Family Names
Part Three - Mobility and Stability
Part Four - Family and Society
Part Five - A Guide to the Records
Select Bibliography
Index of Surnames
Index
Illustration Sources