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Parish and Civil Registers in Paris

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First page of the Saint-Gervais church baptismal register for 1865.

The parish and civil registers in Paris are documents containing records that officially establish the lineage of individuals born, baptized, married, divorced, deceased, or buried in Paris, within its administratively variable boundaries over time. Since the 16th century, the capital has maintained an exceptional quantity of parish registers due to its size and the high number of parishes. Directories accompany the collection.

In May 1871, during the Commune, most of Paris' archives [fr], including its civil records, suffered a major disaster: deliberate fires almost destroyed the parish registers from the 16th century to 1792 and the civil registers from 1793 to 1859, despite being stored at two different sites. The flames obliterated nearly 11,500 registers containing over 8 million documents in a few hours. This resulted in a vast and permanent gap, making historical and genealogical research in Paris particularly challenging today.

Parish registers of the Ancien Régime

Preamble to the Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts.

The oldest known parish register in Paris belongs to the parish of Saint-Jean-en-Grève [fr]. In agenda format and written in Latin, it covers the period from April 1515 to November 1521. Registers of baptisms were opened as early as 1525 in the parishes of Saint-André-des-Arts [fr] and Saint-Jacques-la-Boucherie [fr]. The first burial registers, from Saint-Josse and Saint-Landry [fr], date back to 1527.

In August 1539, Francis I issued the Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts, requiring parish priests to keep a register of baptisms conducted in their church, written in French (Article 51):

A record in the form of proof of baptisms shall be made, containing the time and hour of birth. An extract from this register may be used to prove the age of majority or minority and will serve as full legal evidence for this purpose.

Before this legal requirement, fifteen Parisian parishes already kept baptismal registers, three kept marriage registers, and one kept burial registers.

Presided over by Pope Paul III from 1545 to 1563, the Council of Trent also required priests to keep a register of baptisms performed in their parish. The names of godparents had to be included to prevent marriages between people linked by spiritual kinship (e.g., a godfather and his goddaughter could not marry). The council also mandated that marriages, freely contracted before a priest and two or three witnesses, be preceded by the publication of banns and recorded in a designated register. It also advocated for the union of children without requiring parental consent.

In May 1579, the Ordinance of Blois [fr] extended the obligation to keep marriage and burial registers throughout France. The Ordinance of Saint-Germain-en-Laye of April 1667, known as the "Code Louis [fr]," required these registers to be kept in duplicate: the first copy (the minute) remained in the parish, while the duplicate (the grosse) was deposited at the court registry. In Paris, the Châtelet registry preserved the second copy, with the oldest dating back to 1668.

By 1790, the capital had around fifty parishes [fr]. The law of June 27, 1790, passed by the Constituent Assembly, reorganized the Parisian municipality [fr] into forty-eight sections. The city then became the administrative center of the Seine department, which also included several nearby communes.

Civil Registers created by the revolution (1792)

Death certificate of Louis XVII dated June 12, 1795.

The law of June 22, 1792, established that municipalities would receive and preserve civil status records. Consequently, the decree of September 20, 1792, created the civil register [fr] system. Starting January 1, 1793, mayors were tasked with birth certificate, marriage, and death records in duplicate. This decree also required all Catholic parishes to submit their parish registers to the municipality (Title VI). It was one of the last decrees passed by the Legislative Assembly, which gave way to the Convention the next day.

According to the decree of September 20, 1792, parish registers were handed over to the municipalities of the twelve districts [fr] established in Paris by the law of 19 Vendémiaire Year IV (October 11, 1795). The Palace of Justice, located on the Île de la Cité, received duplicates of these registers along with those of the communes in the newly created Seine department, which retained their local collections.

Although Catholic priests lost their role in maintaining civil status records in 1792, they continued to record baptisms, marriages, and burials they performed. These were called "registers of catholicity" and, from 1793, were kept in each Parisian parish. The law of February 4, 1791, reduced the number of parishes in the capital to thirty-three, abolishing twenty-seven and creating nine new ones. Most Parisian Catholic registers began in the early 19th century, following the 1801 Concordat [fr] signed between Napoleon Bonaparte and Pope Pius VII. These registers were kept in duplicate for baptisms and marriages but in a single copy for burials. Article LV of Title III of the Concordat specified that "the registers kept by religious ministers, being and only concerning the administration of sacraments, cannot under any circumstances replace the registers required by law to document the civil status of French citizens." Nevertheless, these religious registers were largely used to reconstruct Paris’s civil records after the 1871 disaster.

Thiers wall (1844) – Territorial reform (1860)

On the proposal of the politician Adolphe Thiers, after whom it would be named, a fortification was built around Paris from 1841 to 1844 by order of Louis-Philippe I. The king was convinced that defending the territory required preventing the capital from falling into the hands of foreign armies, as had occurred in 1814 during the Battle of Paris. Louis-Philippe thus wanted to encircle the city with fortifications to make it impregnable. With fifty-two gates or posterns, this fortification encompassed the capital and all or part of the surrounding communes. In these areas, residents avoided the octroi taxes imposed on Parisians, which the Wall of the Farmers-General enforced as both an administrative boundary and a fiscal burden.

By the decree of February 16, 1859, and the law of June 16, 1859 [fr], Napoleon III extended Paris’s territory to the Thiers wall. On January 1, 1860, the city expanded from twelve [fr] to twenty districts. It absorbed, fully or partially, some nearby suburban communes.

The 11 fully annexed communes, moving from southwest to southeast through the north and east, were: Vaugirard, Grenelle, Auteuil, Passy, Batignolles-Monceau, Montmartre, La Chapelle, La Villette, Belleville, Charonne [fr], and Bercy [fr].

The 13 partially annexed communes, following the same directional pattern, were: Issy-les-Moulineaux, Neuilly, Clichy, Saint-Ouen, Aubervilliers, Pantin, Le Pré-Saint-Gervais, Bagnolet, Saint-Mandé, Ivry, Gentilly, Vanves, and Montrouge.

Since the twenty newly created districts differed geographically from the twelve older ones [fr], the original parish registers up to 1792 and civil records covering 1793 to 1859 were stored at City Hall, along with those of fully annexed communes. All duplicates, forming the "Greffe collection," were stored at the Palais de Justice. Partially annexed communes retained their original registers, but their duplicates were also sent to the Palais de Justice.

Destruction during the commune (1871)

Paris City Hall after its destruction by Communards in 1871.

On May 23, 1871, at the instigation of anarchist Jean-Louis Pindy [fr], Communards set fire to many public buildings, including Paris’ City Hall. The civil records, stored in an annex at 4 Avenue Victoria, were the first to burn. Within hours, the originals of civil and parish registers were destroyed, along with the collection of the Historical Library of Paris, which had been transferred to City Hall. Just days earlier, on May 17, 1871, Louise Michel had declared at the "Club de la Trinité": "Paris will be ours or will no longer exist!"

On May 24, 1871, the day after City Hall’s destruction, Communards burned the Palais de Justice on orders from Blanquist Théophile Ferré. The second copies of civil and parish registers for Paris and all communes in the Seine were lost as well. Besides civil registry offices, much of the Palais was destroyed: the offices of the Court of First Instance; the General Prosecutor’s Office; the Public Prosecutor’s Office; judges’ chambers; two criminal courts (completed just two years earlier); much of the Court of Cassation; the Court of Appeal; the Great Hall and Grand Chamber; the Correctional Police; and the archives.

The house of writer Prosper Mérimée, 52 rue de Lille, Paris, totally destroyed by fire in 1871.

During this civil war, which ended the Commune, many other Parisian buildings burned, sometimes accidentally due to artillery fire from both sides. In mere hours, centuries of history were destroyed, including the Tuileries Palace, Palais-Royal, Orsay Palace [fr] (seat of the Court of Accounts), the Ministry of Finance, the Palace of the Legion of Honor (where many records of honorees were lost), the Police Prefecture, the Louvre Library, the General Warehouses [fr], Gare de Lyon, and the home of Prosper Mérimée at 52 Rue de Lille, which housed his correspondence and part of his library.

However, some buildings escaped destruction: the National Archives were saved by Louis-Guillaume Debock [fr], who stopped his Communard comrades from setting them ablaze; the Louvre Museum; the Sainte-Chapelle, already doused in petroleum; Notre-Dame, where interns from Hôtel-Dieu extinguished a fire; and the Granary of Abundance at the Arsenal Basin.

Prior to the destruction of City Hall and the Palais de Justice, Paris' archives [fr] included:

The total losses exceeded eight million documents.

The memory of the Parisian population, preserved since the 16th century, was thus almost entirely obliterated—both that of the "people of Paris" and of the greatest moments in French history, including the births, baptisms, marriages, deaths, and burials of eminent figures. Historian Count de Chastellux [fr] wrote:

"The destruction of the civil registers stored at the Paris archives (Avenue Victoria) and the registry of the Seine Civil Court is not only a profound disruption for families but also infinitely distressing from a historical perspective. It was the most complete collection of its kind in France, dating back to the reign of Francis I. Within more than 150,000 registers lay solutions to countless questions: historians, biographers, genealogists, topographers, and autograph enthusiasts found a rich and precious mine there."

In the second edition of Critical Dictionary of Biography and History (1872), archivist Auguste Jal similarly lamented: "The Civil Archives of Paris were annihilated by fire, both at the Palais de Justice and the depot on Avenue Victoria, during those bloody days of furious hatred, criminal enterprises, and wild and savage acts that marked the few days in mid-May 1871. It was only natural for those who wished to abolish families to include in their incendiary program the destruction of records that established the genealogies of all families—certain genealogies of the people, the bourgeoisie, and the nobility. They needed to burn the proof of their ancestors' marriages, their parents', their own, and their children's. They no longer wanted marriages, so what did the registers of old Parisian parishes and municipalities matter to them? These documents, which for each family composed its history, were just ashes to be scattered to the wind. They knew that the records documenting their births, those of their wives, children, and grandparents would be lost. Yet they did not hesitate, despite realizing these births would remain uncertain and unproven in the future. What all sensible people living in society respect was reduced to nothing more than ashes cast to the wind. If I foresaw revolutions, if I thought one might see terror return, I did not anticipate that innocent collections of documents—where the poor, commoners, artists, and craftsmen stood side by side with the rich, nobles, partisans, ministers, and princes—would become targets."

In 1847, A. Taillandier published a list of the starting dates of parish registers in several cities, distinguishing births (baptisms), marriages, and deaths (burials). In the section on Paris, after transcribing the oldest records verbatim, he provided a list of parishes. For several of these parishes, which did not exist under the Ancien Régime—such as Saint-Ambroise, Saint-François d'Assise, Saint-Germain-des-Prés, or Notre-Dame—the registers began in 1791.

Starting dates of Paris parish registers
Parish Births Marriages Deaths Parish Births Marriages Deaths
Saint-Ambroise 1791 1791 1791 Saint-Jean-de-Latran [fr] 1592 1592 1592
Saint-André-des-Arcs [fr] 1525 1545 1545 Saint-Josse 1527 1527 1527
Saint-Antoine 1791 1791 1791 Saints-Innocents [fr] 1561 1561 1561
Saint-Augustin 1791 1791 1791 Saint-Landry [fr] 1527 1527 1527
Saint-Barthélemy [fr] 1551 1578 1598 Saint-Laurent 1527 1611 1622
Saint-Benoît 1540 1586 1590 Saint-Leu et Saint-Gilles 1533 1635 1608
Bonne-Nouvelle 1628 1639 1665 Saint-Louis-en-l'Île 1623 1624 1624
Cardinal Lemoine 1688 1688 1631 Saint-Louis-du-Louvre 1603 1603 1603
Sainte-Chapelle Basse 1568 1568 1559 Sainte-Madeleine-de-la-Cité [fr] 1539 1610 1610
Saint-Pierre-de-Chaillot 1620 1620 1620 Sainte-Madelaine-de-la-Ville-l'Évêque 1598 1650 1624
Sainte-Croix-en-la-Cité [fr] 1548 1548 1513 Saint-Marcel [fr] 1546 1620 1620
Saint-Côme [fr] 1539 1547 1592 Sainte-Marguerite 1663 1713 1637
Saint-Christophe [fr] 1597 1649 1597 Sainte-Marine [fr] 1634 1634 1634
Saint-Denis-de-la-Châtre 1550 1550 1550 Saint-Martial [fr] 1597 1657 1657
Saint-Étienne-du-Mont 1530 1668 1669 Saint-Médard 1545 1542 1692
Saint-Eustache 1529 1580 1568 Saint-Merry 1536 1557 1630
Saint-François-d'Assise [fr] 1791 1791 1791 Saint-Nicolas-des-Champs 1580 1605 1589
Sainte-Geneviève-des-Ardents 1551 1551 1551 Saint-Nicolas-du-Chardonnet 1536 1603 1538
Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois 1528 1541 1668 Notre-Dame 1791 1634 1791
Saint-Germain-des-Prés 1791 1791 1791 Sainte-Opportune [fr] 1541 >> >>
Saint-Germain-le-Vieil [fr] 1545 1545 1515 Saint-Paul 1539 1560 1585
Saint-Gervais 1531 1608 1639 Saint-Pierre-aux-Bœufs [fr] 1578 1578 1578
Gros-Caillou 1738 1738 1738 Saint-Pierre-des-Arcis [fr] 1539 1539 1539
Saint-Hilaire 1547 1547 1664 Saint-Philippe-du-Roule 1697 1697 1697
Saint-Hippolyte [fr] 1604 1633 1653 Qunize-Vingts 1636 1636 1636
Saint-Honoré [fr] 1593 1593 1593 Saint-Roch 1578 1595 1595
Saint-Jacques-la-Boucherie [fr] 1525 1523 1613 Saint-Sauveur [fr] 1545 1627 1571
Saint-Jacques-du-Haut-Pas 1567 1615 1665 Saint-Séverin 1537 1599 1594
Saint-Jacques-l'Hôpital [fr] 1616 1616 1615 Saint-Sulpice 1537 1544 1604
Saint-Jean-en-Grève [fr] 1526 1515 1629 Saint-Thomas-d'Aquin 1791 1791 1791
Saint-Jean-le-Rond 1655 1655 1655 Saint-Victor 1594 1594 1594
Source: Historical notes on old civil registers in Paris

In 1890, E. Welvert published a summary report on the old archives of the Seine department, destroyed in 1871. This report was compiled by an archivist from the Prefecture named Aubert. Differences in dates appear between the two lists, and some parishes are missing from one or the other.

Parish registers of Paris within its pre-1860 boundaries
Parish Extreme dates Records Parish Extreme dates Records
Saint-André-des-Arts [fr] (1525-1789) 55 Saint-Laurent (1527-1789) 229
Saint-Barthélemy [fr] (1551-1791) 54 Saint-Leu et Saint-Gilles (1533-1790) 53
Saint-Benoît (1540-1790) 56 Saint-Louis-du-Louvre (1603-1791) 4
Bonne-Nouvelle (1628-1791) 53 Saint-Louis-en-l'Île (1623-1789) 189
Cardinal-Lemoine [fr] (1628-1791) 3 Sainte-Madeleine-en-la-Cité [fr] (1539-1791) 28
Sainte-Chapelle (1541-1790) 10 Sainte-Madeleine-la-Ville-l'Évêque (1598-1789) 81
Saint-Christophe-en-la-Cité [fr] (1597-1747) 8 Sainte-Marie-du-Temple (1581-1791) 14
Saint-Pierre-du-Gros-Caillou (1738-1789) 32 Sainte-Marguerite (1637-1789) 109
Saint-Cosme [fr] (1539-1791) 31 Sainte-Marine (1634-1791) 9
Sainte-Croix-en-la-Cité [fr] (1548-1791) 11 Saint-Martial (1527-1722) 6
Saint-Denis-de-La-Châtre (1550-1698) 4 Saint-Martin et Saint-Marcel (1546-1791) 36
Saint-Étienne-du-Mont (1530-1790) 161 Saint-Médard (1545-1789) 79
Saint-Eustache (1529-1789) 395 Saint-Merry (1536-1789) 86
Sainte-Geneviève-des-Ardents (1551-1747) 7 Saint-Nicolas-des-Champs (1580-1789) 299
Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois (1528-1789) 336 Saint-Nicolas-du-Chardonnet (1536-1790) 81
Saint-Germain-le-Vieux (1545-1791) 24 Sainte-Opportune (1541-1791) 16
Saint-Gervais (1531-1789) 143 Saint-Paul (1539-1790) 205
Saint-Hilaire (1574-1791) 20 Saint-Philippe-du-Roule (1697-1790) 10
Saint-Hippolyte [fr] (1604-1791) 36 Saint-Pierre-de-Chaillot (1620-1789) 29
Saint-Honoré [fr] (1593-1791) 5 Saint-Pierre-aux-Bœufs (1578-1790) 8
Saints-Innocents [fr] (1581-1786) 15 Quinze-Vingts (1636-1791) 14
Saint-Jacques-du-Haut-Pas (1567-1790) 45 Saint-Roch (1578-1790) 181
Saint-Jacques-le-Majeur [fr] (1525-1789) 113 Saint-Sauveur (1547-1792) 108
Saint-Jacques-l'Hôpital [fr] (1616-1791) 6 Saint-Sépulcre (1674-1791) 2
Saint-Jean-en-Grève [fr] (1515-1791) 121 Saint-Sulpice (1537-1790) 449
Saint-Jean-de-Latran [fr] (1592-1791) 8 Saint-Victor (1594-1791) 2
Saint-Jean-le-Rond (1607-1791) 11 Répertoires 81
Saint-Josse (1527-1791) 9 Publications de bans (1642-1790) 47
Saint-Landry [fr] (1527-1791) 15 État civil des protestants (1680-1790) 15
Source: Summary of the old Seine archives burnt in 1871

To this inventory, one must add the parish registers of the communes fully annexed to Paris in 1860:

Parish registers of communes fully annexed in 1860
Parish Extreme dates Records Parish Extreme dates Records
Saint-Denys-de-la-Chapelle (?-?) ? Saint-Germain-de-Charonne (?-?) ?
Saint-Jacques-Saint-Christophe-de-la-Villette [fr] (?-?) ? Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Belleville (?-?) ?
Saint-Lambert-de-Vaugirard [fr] (?-?) ? Saint-Pierre de Montmartre (1565-?) ?
Notre-Dame-d'Auteuil (?-?) ?
Saint-Eustache church.
Communes in the former Seine department.

What survived amounts to only 29 articles. An ambiguous wording in the latest guide to the Paris Archives suggests that many registers were preserved. For example, it mentions a register from Saint-Eustache covering the period 15291748, even though this parish originally had 395 registers dating from 1529 to 1789.

The mentioned registers are collections of excerpts compiled by Abraham Charles Guiblet. They pertain to noble or notable individuals and may be very brief, sometimes indicating only the name of a godparent or witness. These are preserved in the Manuscripts Department of the Bibliothèque nationale de France. Some have been digitized:

  • parish of Saint-Eustache,
  • parish of Saint-Nicolas-du-Chardonnet,
  • parish of Saint-Sauveur,
  • parish of Saint-Jean-en-Grève,
  • parish of Saint-André-des-Arcs,
  • Saint-Sulpice parish (mortuaries),
  • parish of Saint-Sulpice (baptisms),
  • parishes of la Madeleine de la Ville-l'Évêque, Saint-Honoré, Saint-Landry, Saint-Médard, Saint-Merry, Saint-Roch.

Communes of the former Seine department

The destruction caused by the Commune affected not only the originals stored at the annex of the Hôtel de Ville, located at 4 Avenue Victoria [fr], but also the duplicates from the Greffe collection, which were destroyed in the fire at the Palais de Justice on May 24, 1871. The disaster obliterated most of the parish registers (pre-1793) and civil status records (1793–1859) from the communes of the former Seine department. The situation varies depending on how these areas were incorporated into Paris in 1860:

Reconstitution of civil records (1872–1897)

Paris City Hall in the early 20th century.
Law of February 12, 1872 on civil status in Paris. Archives nationales A//1359

To address the destruction, a commission created by the law of February 12, 1872, was tasked with reconstructing Parisian civil records before 1860. This work relied on cross-referencing family papers (notices in particular), notarial deeds, and records of parish and civil acts compiled before 1871 by archivists such as Auguste Jal, especially for prominent individuals. However, the main sources used were Catholic registers from 1793 to 1860, preserved in parishes and had not been burned.

Accompanied by alphabetical index cards for searching, the reconstructed records were produced in duplicate through three distinct methods:

  • Authentic extracts elevated to the rank of originals (Series A);
  • Declarations by individuals (Series B);
  • Official reconstructions based on documents held by the administration or registers transferred to it (Series C).

This operation lasted until 1897 and ended due to a lack of funds. It made it possible to restore slightly more than 2.6 million records, most of which date from the 19th century. Only 347,000 records were restored for the Ancien Régime, with just five dating back to the 16th century. Altogether, the restored documents represent only one-third of those that were destroyed. Birth records are the most numerous, with approximately 1,422,000 records dating from 1550 to 1859, compared to around 922,000 death records from 1568 to 1859 and 322,000 marriage records from 1630 to 1859. However, the vast majority of data, particularly that concerning families without descendants, is lost forever.

The reconstructed records are preserved at the Archives of Paris. Their duplicates, stored at the Montlignon Fort (Val-d’Oise), were destroyed in a fire in June 1974.

Second reconstruction (1941–1958)

A second reconstruction was carried out between 1941 and 1958, initiated by François Jourda de Vaux de Foletier (18931988), director of the Seine Archives. This effort, referred to as the "second reconstruction," primarily used documents donated by families, biographical works, and dictionaries. It includes over 400 boxes, organized alphabetically by family name, and classified into births, marriages (listed only under the husband’s name), and deaths.

The Archives of Paris continue to receive records or copies of documents to supplement the civil records. These contributions usually come from individuals who uncover materials during their research, effectively extending the "second reconstruction" of Parisian civil records.

Civil records from 1871 to present

“Corrected records” (1871)

Cover of a family record book from 1948 in Paris.

Under the law of July 19, 1871, civil records registered from March 18, 1871, during the Paris Commune, were annulled and rewritten between August 1, 1871, and September 30, 1871, and in the following years. These revised records are referred to as "corrected records" (actes bâtonnés). Only the rewritten records were included in decennial tables, and their dates can differ significantly from the actual events they record. Despite being invalidated by law, the original corrected records remain in the registers and can be searched like any others.

At the 12th arrondissement town hall [fr], an accidental fire destroyed birth records from January 1, 1870, to May 25, 1871. These records were reestablished and are classified alongside those reconstructed in the official civil records reconstruction.

Family record book (1877)

The loss of Parisian civil records largely influenced the creation of the family record book in 1877, introduced by a circular from Jules Simon, President of the Council and Minister of the Interior. The circular explicitly referenced the Commune’s destruction, stating that “family record books will serve as a third deposit of civil records entrusted to individuals and will provide valuable information should registers be destroyed.”

The law of April 5, 1884, concerning municipal organization, required town halls to budget for the costs of family record books.

Marginal notes

Like that of all French municipalities, Parisian civil records have been updated over time. Since October 28, 1922, birth records have included the dates and places of birth of the parents. Marginal notes have gradually been added to birth records, including the dates and places of marriage and legitimations since the law of August 17, 1897, divorce information since March 10, 1932, and the dates and places of death since the ordinance of March 29, 1945.

Recording methods

Originally handwritten, Parisian civil records began being typed in the second half of 1922.

Transcriptions at the 1st arrondissement town hall

1st arrondissement town hall.

If the last residence is unknown, the law of August 10, 1917, requires that the following civil records be transcribed in the 1st arrondissement [fr]:

  • Birth and death records registered at sea,
  • Judicial death declarations,
  • Records related to soldiers and sailors under certain special circumstances,
  • Divorce judgments or rulings, when the marriage was celebrated in a territory occupied by the enemy.

Modern era

The arrondissement town halls have deposited their civil records prior to 1903 at the Paris Archives. While it only keeps its records, the 1st arrondissement town hall [fr] centralizes requests requiring searches across all arrondissements.

In 1973, the City of Paris made an agreement with the Archdiocese to deposit duplicates of its registers of Catholic rites, including baptisms and marriages performed in all Parisian parishes from 1793 to 1899. Deposits continued until 1909. The other copies remain preserved in the parishes.

In June 1974, the duplicates of reconstructed records, along with numerous judicial archives, were destroyed in a fire at the Montlignon fort (Val-d'Oise), where they had been stored.

With original civil records starting only in 1860, Paris is one of the few cities in France where tracing family origins is particularly challenging. The 1871 disaster underscored the importance of preserving and protecting archives, which is now facilitated by digitization.

The Paris Archives have gradually made the following records available online:

  • The civil status records from 1860 to 1902 and the index of reconstructed records prior to 1860 (December 15, 2009).
  • The ten-year tables of births, marriages, and deaths from 1903 to 1932; the annual tables of marriages from 1933 to 1939; the annual tables of deaths from 1933 to 1954; and the ten-year tables of marriages and deaths from 1955 to 1974 (January 12, 2016).
  • Birth records from 1903; marriage records from 1903 to 1940.
  • Death records from 1903 to 1986; ten-year tables of deaths from 1975 to 1984.
  • Marriage records from 1941 to 1945; annual tables of deaths for 1985 and 1986.
  • Reconstructed civil status records prior to 1860:
    • Birth records (November 2020).
    • Marriage records (January 2021).
    • Death records (November 2021).

Currently, all old Parisian civil records are accessible online.

Accessible documents (as of May 2023)

The Archives de Paris building at 18 boulevard Sérurier.
  • CIVIL RECORDS [fr]
    • Held in the 20 arrondissement town halls:
      • Births from 1925 to the present.
      • Marriages from 1948 to the present.
      • Deaths from 1987 to the present.
    • Available at the Paris Archives:
    • Available on-site at the Paris Archives:
      • Records from the second reconstruction (V.5.E).
      • 29 registers of parish or civil status records from the 18th and 19th centuries not destroyed in 1871 (V.6.E 1–29).
      • Births from 1923 and 1924.
  • CATHOLIC RECORDS
    • Baptisms, marriages, and burials from the 16th century to 1792—about 50 parish registers, mostly containing excerpts, preserved at the National Archives and the National Library.
    • Baptisms, marriages, and burials from all Parisian churches from 1793 to 1909 (with gaps):
      • First copies preserved in parishes (a single register for burials).
      • Second copies (baptisms and marriages only) deposited at the Paris Archives by the Archdiocese.
    • Baptisms, marriages, and burials from all Parisian churches from 1910 to the present—preserved in parishes or at the Archdiocese (so-called “diocesan” archives).

Substitute sources

National Archives. Courtyard of the Horses of the Sun. Entrance to the Central Notary Office of Paris.

Notarial records

The primary source for compensating gaps in Parisian civil records is the "Minutier central des notaires de Paris." Established in 1932 under the law of March 14, 1928, this repository allows notaries in the Seine department to deposit records over 125 years old at the National Archives. It includes 100 million records, spanning from the late 15th century to the early 20th century, sourced from 122 Parisian notarial offices, numbered I to CXXII. Documents such as marriage contracts, wills, post-mortem inventories, and various other contracts offer insights into Parisian daily life since the late Middle Ages.

While these documents help address gaps in civil records prior to 1860, they are also valuable for researchers studying local, social, demographic, or epidemiological history.

Assisted children

The Paris Archives hold registers for the admission of foundlings, abandoned children, orphans, and rescued minors, referred to as “assisted children.” These records span from 1742 to 1924, with a gap between 1748 and 1754. Available online, they provide registration numbers that allow access to the admission files on-site.

Military archives

The Defence Historical Service (SHD), located at the Château de Vincennes, preserves military personnel files. Many of these files contain copies, sometimes complete, of Parisian civil records. The online databases include name indexes for officer career records. On-site, one can consult muster rolls for all army units, which record each soldier’s date and place of birth, residence, and the names of parents and spouses.

The Paris Archives also retain documents on military recruitment in the Seine department, including alphabetical tables (18721940) and muster rolls (18871921). These archives are accessible online.

Elections

The Paris Archives store two sets of records for male voters. The first covers voters in the capital from 1860 to 1870. The second lists voters in the Seine department whose registration status was modified (added or removed) between 1921 and 1939. These records are accessible online.

Census records

Population censuses [fr], administratively called "enumerations," are valuable genealogical resources, as their name lists help reconstruct families sharing the same residence. Censuses were conducted roughly every five years, except during wartime. Paris only organized four censuses—in 1926, 1931, 1936, and 1946. These records are available online via the Paris Archives website, except for the 1946 census, which can only be viewed on-site.

Legion of honor

The Léonore database allows online access to a large portion of files for members of the National Order of the Legion of Honor. Many birth records predating 1860 are included, helping to fill gaps in Parisian civil records.

Hospitals

The Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) preserves numerous archives, some dating back to the Middle Ages. The oldest hospitalization registers—approximately one million pages—have been digitized and made available online. “Population registers” document admissions, discharges, births, and deaths. Each hospital maintains two types of annual records: alphabetical indexes to locate individuals and chronological registers specifying civil status, reasons for admission, and, in some cases, causes of death.

Cemeteries

Parisian cemeteries [fr] keep burial registers, with the oldest dating back to 1786. These records can be viewed online on the Paris Archives website for burials between 1804 and 1970.

Other Sources

Several publications contain copies of Parisian parish and civil records:

Notes

  1. Paris currently boasts one hundred and thirteen parish churches.
  2. ^ On the trail of your ancestors in Paris. April 1997 (guide published by Archives de Paris). Pages 24 and 25).
  3. The original of this circular is kept at the Archives Nationales under the symbol: Fla 3539
  4. Law of April 5, 1884, art. 136, §4 (JO of April 6, 1884 - BO No. 835, p. 369 et seq.).
  5. ^ Between 1933 and 1954, only annual tables were kept in Paris. Decennial tables were no longer compiled.

References

  1. Barroux 1898, p. 9
  2. ^ Fierro 1996, p. 859
  3. Delsalle 2009, p. 32
  4. Delsalle 2009, pp. 62–63
  5. "Jusqu'où remonter en généalogie ?" [How far back can genealogy go?] (in French). Archived from the original on January 15, 2013.
  6. Delsalle 2009, p. 35
  7. Delsalle 2009, pp. 38–40
  8. Gasnault 2007, p. 46
  9. Barroux 1898, p. 10
  10. "Les anciennes paroisses parisiennes" [Former Paris parishes] (in French). Archived from the original on December 26, 2011.
  11. Lazare, Félix; Lazare, Louis (1855). Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues et monuments de Paris [Administrative and historical dictionary of the streets and monuments of Paris] (in French). Paris: Revue municipale. p. 102.
  12. Abbé Migne. Encyclopédie théologique [Theological encyclopedia] (in French). Vol. 36. Paris. p. 105.
  13. "Histoire de l'arrondissement" [District history] (in French). Archived from the original on June 25, 2015.
  14. Delarc, Abbé Odon Jean Marie (1887). L'église de Paris pendant la Révolution française, 1789-1801 [The Paris church during the French Revolution, 1789-1801] (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: Desclée de Brouwer et Cie. pp. 405–410.
  15. "Texte intégral du Concordat de 1801" [Full text of the Concordat of 1801] (in French). Archived from the original on April 20, 2014.
  16. ^ Gasnault 2007, p. 29
  17. ^ Fierro 1996, p. 277
  18. Fierro 1996, p. 328
  19. ^ Abensur-Hazan, Laurence (2011). Recherche ses ancêtres à Paris [Search for ancestors in Paris] (in French). Paris: Autrement généalogies. pp. 11–13.
  20. "Article sur Jean-Louis Pindy dans le Dictionnaire des militants anarchistes" [Article on Jean-Louis Pindy in the Dictionnaire des militants anarchistes] (in French). Archived from the original on January 29, 2016.
  21. Favier, Jean (1997). Paris deux mille ans d'histoire [Paris two thousand years of history] (in French). Paris: Éditions Fayard. p. 897.
  22. Fort, Frédéric (1871). Paris brûlé : l'hôtel de ville, les Tuileries... [Paris burned: the town hall, the Tuileries...] (in French). Paris: Lachaud Éditeur. p. 37.
  23. Dérens, Jean (1980). Constitution d'un patrimoine parisien: la Bibliothèque historique depuis l'incendie de 1871 [Building a Parisian heritage: the Bibliothèque historique since the fire of 1871] (in French).
  24. Godineau, Laure (2010). La Commune de Paris par ceux qui l'ont vécue [The Paris Commune through the eyes of those who lived it] (in French). Paris: Parigramme. p. 204.
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  29. Griffe, Maurice (2007). Paris, 20 siècles d'histoire [Paris, 20 centuries of history] (in French). Tableaux synoptiques de l'histoire.
  30. ^ Welvert, E (1890). "État sommaire des Archives anciennes de la Seine brûlées en 1871 dressé par l'archiviste de la Préfecture Aubert" [Summary of the archives of the Seine department burnt in 1871, drawn up by the archivist of the Préfecture Aubert]. Archives historiques, artistiques et littéraires (in French). 1: 465–489.
  31. Barroux 1898
  32. de Chastellux,, Henri Paul César (1875). Notes prises aux archives de l'état-civil de Paris, avenue Victoria, 4, brûlées le 24 mai 1871 [Notes taken from the archives of the Paris registry office, avenue Victoria, 4, burnt on May 24, 1871] (in French). Paris: Dumoulin. p. 1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
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  37. Gasnault 2007, pp. 56–57
  38. Welvert 1890, p. 474
  39. Bernard, Gildas (1981). Guide des recherches sur l'histoire des familles [Guide to family history research] (in French). Paris: Archives nationales. p. 243.
  40. Bornot, Eugène (1872). Loi du 12 février 1872 sur la reconstitution des actes de l'état civil [Act of February 12, 1872 on the reconstitution of civil status records] (in French). Paris: Lachaud.
  41. "Commission de reconstitution de l'état civil parisien (1875-1897). Page 3" [Commission de reconstitution de l'état civil parisien (1875-1897). Page 3] (PDF) (in French). Archived from the original (PDF) on November 4, 2023.
  42. "Exemple d'acte de mariage reconstitué" [Example of a reconstituted marriage certificate] (in r). Archived from the original on January 1, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  43. Gasnault 2007, p. 33
  44. Duvergier, Jean-Baptiste (1871). Collection complète des lois, décrets, règlements et avis du Conseil d'État [Complete collection of laws, decrees, regulations and opinions of the Conseil d'État] (in French). Vol. 71. Paris. p. 139.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  45. "Comment retrouver un acte qui s'est déroulé pendant les évènements de la Commune entre le 18 mars et le 28 mai 1871 ?" [How do you find an act that took place during the events of the Commune between March 18 and May 28, 1871?] (in French). Archived from the original on April 18, 2011.
  46. Delsalle 2009, p. 20
  47. "Les actes de l'état civil ou jugements obligatoirement transcrits à la mairie du 1er arrondissement de Paris" [Civil status certificates or judgments must be transcribed at the town hall of the1st arrondissement of Paris.] (in French). Archived from the original on April 15, 2014.
  48. "La recherche d'état civil et la consultation des registres" [Civil status research and register consultation] (in French). Archived from the original on October 27, 2011.
  49. Gasnault 2007, p. 48
  50. Bernard 1981, p. 240
  51. "Les archives de Paris sont en ligne" [The Paris archives are online] (in French). Archived from the original on September 25, 2011.
  52. "Les tables de l'état civil parisien sont en ligne jusqu'en 1974" [Paris civil registry tables online until 1974] (in r). Archived from the original on January 13, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  53. "Naissance jusqu'à 1912, mariages jusqu'à 1940 aux archives de Paris" [Births to 1912, marriages to 1940 in the Paris archives] (in r). Archived from the original on September 7, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  54. "Les actes de décès reconstitués sont en ligne" [Reconstituted death certificates are available online] (in r). Archived from the original on November 1, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
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  60. Demeulenaere-Douyère, Christiane (1982). Guide des sources de l'état civil parisien [Guide to Parisian civil registry sources] (in French). pp. 31–34. ISBN 2-86075-001-0.
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  62. "Service historique de la Défense" [Defence Historical Service] (in French). Archived from the original on April 28, 2021.
  63. "Archives de Paris. Recrutement militaire de la Seine" [Archives de Paris. Military recruitment for the Seine] (in French). Archived from the original on February 11, 2021.
  64. "Archives de Paris. Fichiers des électeurs" [Paris Archives. Voter files] (in French). Archived from the original on September 18, 2021.
  65. "Archives de Paris. Recensements" [Archives of Paris. Census] (in French). Archived from the original on November 18, 2024.
  66. "Base Léonore" [Leonore base] (in French).
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Bibliography

  • Gasnault, François (2007). Sur les traces de vos ancêtres à Paris [On the trail of your ancestors in Paris] (in French). Paris: Archives de Paris.
  • Abensur-Hazan, Laurence (2011). Recherche ses ancêtres à Paris [Search for ancestors in Paris] (in French). Paris: Autrement généalogies.
  • Barroux, Maurice (1898). Les sources de l'ancien état civil parisien [Parisian civil registry sources] (in French). Paris: Honoré Champion Éditeur. Archived from the original on October 31, 2020.
  • de Blaignerie, Henri; Dangin, Édouard (2009). Paris incendié pendant la Commune - 1871 [Paris set on fire during the Commune - 1871] (in French). Paris: Les Éditions du Mécène.
  • de Brossard, Yolande (1965). Musiciens de Paris 1535-1792, actes d'état civil d'après le fichier Laborde de la Bibliothèque nationale [Musiciens de Paris 1535-1792, civil status records from the Bibliothèque nationale's Laborde file] (in French). Paris: Éditions Picard.
  • de Chastellux, Henri Paul César (1875). Notes prises aux archives de l'état-civil de Paris, avenue Victoria, 4, brûlées le 24 mai 1871 [Notes taken from the archives of the Paris registry office, avenue Victoria, 4, burnt on May 24, 1871] (in French). Paris: Dumoulin.
  • Delsalle, Paul (2009). Histoires de familles, les registres paroissiaux et d'état civil, du Moyen Âge à nos jours, démographie et généalogie [Family histories, parish and civil registers, from the Middle Ages to the present day, demography and genealogy] (in French). Besançon: Presses universitaires de Franche-Comté.
  • Fierro, Alfred (1996). Histoire et dictionnaire de Paris [History and dictionary of Paris] (in French). Paris: Éditions Robert-Laffont.
  • Auguste, Jal (1872). Dictionnaire critique de biographie et d'histoire [Critical Dictionary of Biography and History] (in French). Paris: Éditions Plon.
  • Piot, Eugène (1873). État civil de quelques artistes français [Marital status of some French artists] (in French). Paris: Librairie Pagnerre.

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