1.5m parish records for Norfolk go online – plus Domesday Book added to map tool

1.5m parish records for Norfolk go online – plus Domesday Book added to map tool

Significantly increased Norfolk parish records coverage by releasing 1,445,523 new individuals into its growing Parish Record Collection.

News, Discover Your Ancestors

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Discover Your Ancestors


St Mary Magdalene, Sandringham
St Mary Magdalene, Sandringham

TheGenealogist has significantly increased its Norfolk parish records coverage by releasing 1,445,523 new individuals into its growing Parish Record Collection.

These records, which are released in association with the Norfolk Record Office, are fully searchable and transcribed while also being linked to high quality images making them an extremely valuable resource for researchers of this eastern part of England.

This latest addition brings the total number of individuals in the parish records for Norfolk on TheGenealogist to over 12 million. These new parish records are available as part of the Diamond Subscription at

TheGenealogist and allows family historians to find the names of forebears, their parents’ forenames, the father’s occupation (where noted), and the parish that the event had taken place within. Parish records can cover from the mid 16th century up to much more recent times, as TheGenealogist’s latest feature article discovers when it finds Royals sandwiched on the Parish Register page between Carpenters and Production Operatives – see  here

Sandringham Domesday records on the Map Explorer
Sandringham Domesday records on the Map Explorer

The Genealogist’s Map Explorer tool now also allows researchers to search for Domesday book entries from the period 20 years after the Norman Conquest. Pins on the map indicate where a record exists in 1086 and links to records that show holdings before and after the conquest. Discover the name of the overlord, tenant in chief and lord of areas across England. Find out the numbers of villagers – and even slaves that were the lord’s property – for places at the time of William the Conqueror’s rule. Researchers can click the link to read the transcripts of the records that give details of the land, see who held it in 1066 and then in 1086, as well as see images of the actual pages from the 1086 Domesday Book.

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