The Origin of the Kilians in Germany
Andreas Kilian's marriage recorded in a church book in Oberfranken, Bavaria, Germany led to the discovery of his parents' marriage and burial records, Andreas' baptismal records and his first three children's baptismal records.
de William Randolph McCreight
Este es el precio que tus clientes ven. Editar lista de precios
Acerca del libro
Andreas Kilian’s marriage recorded in a church book in Oberfranken, Bavaria, Germany led to the discovery of his parents’ marriage and burial records, Andreas’ baptismal records and his first three children’s baptismal records. Andreas’ parents’ marriage record revealed that Andreas’ father was also named Andreas and his grandfather was Georg Kilian.
The book discusses the difficulties of finding and interpreting German genealogical records with archaic regional words and abbreviations no longer in use. It analyses the contents of these records and their implications, in the context of the historical times, to find clues as to how they lived in especially troubled times. It examines likely ethnic origins of the family, the derivation of the name, and the perils of traveling from a small inland village in Germany to America in the 18th century with limited or no funds. It discusses the 16th to 19th century German laws concerning marriages forced by the state. The book takes a close look at family legends that were false trails and hindered locating the records.
The book contains 52 photographs of the places where the marriages, baptisms and burials occurred, as well as the towns Andreas must have traveled through to reach Rotterdam before he sailed to Philadelphia. It contains two 18th century signatures, Andreas' handwritten marriage record from the church book and a diagram of the interrogation prison in Nürnberg.
Acerca del creador
William Randolph McCreight is a physicist and mathematician with experience at NASA in orbital analysis, and at Boeing Aerospace Division predicting the effects on spacecraft from atomic explosions in space. In 1965 he was assigned to England and subsequently lived and worked in England, Sweden, Belgium, Switzerland, Germany and South Africa. He lived in the Far East three years and has professional experience in every western European country, some eastern European countries and Turkey. He became interested in genealogy when examining papers in his great-great-grandmother's trunk. This interest intensified with his first personal computer in 1975 and the advent of genealogy computer programs. He now has over 17,000 names, all confirmed by documentary and historical sources. He is now retired in the Taunus Mountains in Germany and spends his time primarily taking history courses with emphasis on Europe in the Bronze Age to the middle ages, and genealogy research.