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FAMILY ARCHIVE CDs
Require Windows 95 or higher. In order to read the CDs you must use the
free
download of the
current
version of Family Archive Viewer
available at http://www.genealogy.com/abtffiv.html. The Family Tree Maker software program, version 4.0 through version 16 (2006) will also read these CDs. Family
Tree Maker 2008 and later versions will not read the CDs. |
Family Archives CD #270
This CD comprises the three great gazetteers published by Samuel Lewis in the
early to mid-1800s: (1) A Topographical Dictionary of England (4 vols.);
(2) A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland (2 vols.); and (3) A
Topographical Dictionary of Scotland (2 vols.). (A topographical dictionary,
or gazetteer, describes the political, social, cultural, and physical features
of a particular locale.)
Of critical importance to the genealogist is the fact that even the most
obscure places in England, Ireland, and Scotland are identified in relation to a
parish and in most cases to a specific church, leading in turn to the
identification of parish records. Thus, if you know the place of origin of your
ancestor--the village or town--these gazetteers will show you, in effect, which
parish records to search for births, marriages, and deaths. Modern gazetteers
are useless for this purpose. But over and above their obvious genealogical
value, these gazetteers are fascinating and illuminating in themselves, bringing
to life the ancestral homes and villages which until now have existed in name
only, or as part of family lore and tradition. Information that was once obscure
and mysterious is now at your fingertips, and while helpful in compiling a
family history, this type of information is indispensable in understanding the
culture and environment in which your ancestors lived.
The Topographical Dictionary of England gives a minute account of the
history, topographical features, and principal events of every county, city,
borough, market town, post town, parish, chapelry, township, hamlet, tything,
and hundred in England. Information furnished includes population statistics,
history of civil and ecclesiastical jurisdictions, accounts of local courts, and
relationships between civil and church parishes. In the Topographical
Dictionary of Ireland every fact of importance tending to illustrate the
local history of Ireland is given. Arranged alphabetically by place, it provides
a faithful description of all Irish localities, showing, for example, exactly
where a civil parish was located in relation to the nearest town, the barony,
county, and province in which it was located, its physical features and
principal landowners, the diocese in which it was situated, and the Roman
Catholic district in which the parish was located. The Topographical
Dictionary of Scotland contains much the same kind of detail, but since the
LDS Church has made all the old Scottish parish records (pre-1855) available,
there is now all the more reason to know the parish from whence your ancestor
came.
In addition to the points noted above, these gazetteers contain full-page
maps of the counties of England, Ireland, and Scotland. Furthermore, almost
every page is embellished with engravings of the arms of cities, bishoprics,
universities, colleges, corporate towns and boroughs, and the seals of municipal
corporations. So detailed are these works, with their focus on local topography,
history, and parishes, that the researcher will have no need to search out
additional reference material.
This CD is recommended not only for genealogists but for anyone who has ever
loitered over a dictionary or encyclopedia. The contents are immediately
accessible via an electronic place name index. IRELAND: ENGLAND: SCOTLAND:
| Details |
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| Item Number: | 401C-7270X |
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Media:
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CD Windows
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Shipping:
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usually ships within 1-2 business days
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Publisher:
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Genealogical Publishing Co.
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| List Price: | 39.99 |
| Your Price |
$29.99
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