Discover your Welsh relatives by exploring thousands of burials records from Radnorshire. These records may reveal your ancestor’s burial date, parish, and parents’ names.
Discover your Welsh relatives by exploring thousands of burials records from Radnorshire. These records may reveal your ancestor’s burial date, parish, and parents’ names.
The records include transcripts of the burial records and images of the original records. The amount of information in each record can vary, but most will include a combination of the following:
This collection includes records that use the patronymic naming system. This system started in Wales in the 15th century and lasted through to the mid-18th century. It is the practice of using the father’s first name as the child’s surname. Usually, ab or ap was added between the child’s first name and the father’s first name. For example, William Ap David is William son of David. The patronymic naming system can affect your genealogical research. We would recommend searching by your relative’s first name and burial or birth year without the family’s surname. Then narrow your search from those results.
Radnorshire is one of 13 historic Welsh counties and a former administrative county. It borders Montgomeryshire, Shropshire, Herefordshire, Breconshire, and Cardiganshire. The administrative county was created under the Local Government Act 1888 and was abolished two years after the Local Government Act 1972, with its area being transferred to the newly formed county of Powys. Powys was split into three districts, namely, Montgomeryshire, Breconshire, and Radnorshire. When Powys became a unitary authority in 1996, Radnorshire was one of three areas established under a decentralization scheme. A shire committee made up of councillors elected for electoral divisions within the former district of Radnorshire carries out functions delegated by Powys County Council.
Begin your search broadly with just a name.
If needed, you can narrow your results by adding additional search criteria such as a year or place.
Explore the image linked to your ancestor’s transcript. It may provide additional details about your ancestor’s burial.