Source Information

Ancestry.com. Bad Doberan, Germany, Births, Marriages, and Deaths, 1876-1981 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2017.
Original data: Personenstandsregister 1876-1981. Stadtarchiv Bad Doberan, Bad Doberan, Deutschland.

About Bad Doberan, Germany, Births, Marriages, and Deaths, 1876-1981

About this collection

This collection includes the civil registers of births, marriages, and deaths from Bad Doberan in the German state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

Beginning on January 1, 1876, birth, marriage and death records in the former German Empire were created by local registry offices. The collected records are arranged chronologically and usually bound together in the form of yearbooks. These are collectively referred to as "civil registers." Occasionally, alphabetical directories of names were also created. While churches continued to keep traditional records, the State also mandated that the personal or marital status of the entire population be recorded.

What you can find in the records

Birth records were created using preprinted forms that were filled in by hand by the registrar. In each record the date of a birth usually differs from the date it was registered. Depending on the individual form or on the formulations used by the registrar, you may find:

  • Sequential or Certificate Number
  • Registration Date
  • Informant: Occupation, Given Names, Last Name, Maiden Name, Residence/Address, Denomination
  • Mother: Given Names, Last Name, Maiden Name, Denomination, Residence/Address
  • Child: Birth Date, Time of Birth, Sex, Given Names
  • Signatures

Marriage records were created using preprinted forms that were filled in by hand by the registrar. Depending on the individual form or on the formulations used by the registrar, you may find:

  • Sequential or Certificate Number
  • Marriage Date
  • Groom: Occupation, Last name, Given names, Denomination, Age or Birthdate and Birthplace, Residence as well as details about his Parents and their Place of Residence
  • Bride: Occupation, Given names, Last name, Maiden Name, Denomination, Age or Birthdate and Birthplace, Residence as well as details about her Parents and their Place of Residence
  • Witnesses
  • Signatures

Death records were created using preprinted forms that were filled in by hand by the registrar. In each record the date of death usually differs from the date it was registered. Depending on the individual form or on the formulations used by the registrar, you may find:

  • Sequential or Certificate Number
  • Informant: Occupation, Given Names, Last Name, Maiden Name, Residence/Address, Denomination
  • Deceased: Occupation, Given Names, Last Name, Maiden Name, Age, Denomination, Residence/Address, Place/Date of Birth, Spouse/Parents, Place/Date of Death, Time of Death
  • Beginning in 1938, the records may also include a Cause of Death and cross references to corresponding birth and/or marriage registers
  • Signatures

When name directories are available for a registry office, they are displayed and selectable at the end of the Year Range list within the browse. (Under "Browse this collection,” select the Civil Registration Office and Year Range of the register desired.)

The marriage name directories contain the following details:

  • Sequential number
  • Last Name and Given Names of the Groom
  • Last Names and Given Names of the Bride
  • Occupation, Residence
  • Cross reference to marriage register

The deceased name directories contain the following details:

  • Sequential number
  • Last Names and Given Names of the deceased
  • Residence
  • Cross reference to death register

More about using this collection

Each birth record comprises one page. Additional events from the life of the child were sometimes recorded later on in the margins. These notes, sometimes referred to as "narration," can contain very useful information but they have not been indexed. As a result, information from the notes will not be found via the search form. The “Informant” was often a midwife or the child's father.

Each marriage document has a front and back. These are displayed one after the other. Additional events from the life of the couple were sometimes recorded later on in the margins. These notes, sometimes referred to as "narration," can contain very useful information but they have not been indexed. As a result, information from the notes will not be found via the search form.

Each death record comprises one page. Additional events from the life of the deceased were sometimes recorded later on in the margins. These notes, sometimes referred to as "narration," can contain very useful information but they have not been indexed. As a result, information from the notes will not be found via the search form. The “Informant” was often a relative of the deceased. In later years death information was usually submitted by hospital administrators.