FAQ: Rheinhessen
Contents
December 1998
Please send any corrections or suggestions to goertz@cyberspace.org
Contents:
Q1: Where was Rheinhessen?
Q2: What was Rheinhessens's recent history?
Q3: What were the administrative areas of Rheinhessen?
Q4: What were the court districts in Rheinhessen in 1890?
Q5: How do I find locations and maps for Rheinhessen?
Q6: When were civil registers introduced?
Q7: Is there a listserv for Hessen family researchers?
Q8: Any websites of interest to Hessen researchers?
Q9: Where are Mennonite congregations in Rheinhessen?
Q10: Are there emigration records available?
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Q1: Where was Rheinhessen?
A1: Rheinhessen was one of the three provinces of the Grandduchy of
Hessen, the other two being Starkenburg and Oberhessen.
Its capital was Mainz located West of the Rhine river.
Today Rheinhessen is a district of Land Rheinland-Pfalz of the
new Germany together with Rheinpfalz and the (formerly Prussian)
districts of Koblenz, Trier and Montabaur.
Q2: What was Rheinhessen's recent history?
A2: France annexed the area in 1802. After Napoleon's defeat, Rheinhessen
was given to the Grandduchy of Hessen in 1815 and became known as
Rheinhessen.
Q3: What were the administrative areas of Rheinhessen?
A3: In 1890 Rheinhessen had the following (5) Kreise (counties):
Alzey,Bingen,Mainz,Oppenheim,Worms.
Its population was 46.3% Evangelical,49.3% Catholic,0.3% Jewish.
Q4: What were the court districts in 1890?
A4: The highest court in the Grandduchy of Hessen was the
Oberlandesgericht in Darmstadt.
The provincial court for Rheinhessen was Landgericht Mainz with
(11) Amtsgerichte:
Alzey,Bingen,Mainz,Niederolm,Oberingelheim,Oppenheim,Osthofen,
Pfeddersheim,Woellstein,Woerrstadt,Worms.
Of special interest are the land deed records with no published survey known todate.
Q5: How do I find locations and maps for Rheinhessen?
A5: The best German gazetteer is
Meyers Orts- and Verkehrslexikon des Deutschen Reiches,1912 edition,
which is available on microfiche in the LDS Family History Centers.
There is LDS microfilm #068814 available of
Karte des Deutschen Reiches, scale 1:100000, 1km = 1cm
which may be loaned thru the LDS Family History Centers.
It covers Germany for 1914-1917.
Topographical maps (Messtischblaetter 1:25000) as well as
historical maps may be purchased from
Hessisches Landesvermessungsamt
Schaperstr. 16
Postfach 32 49
D-65022 Wiesbaden
(Ask for their map catalog or Kartenverzeichnis)
Q6: When were civil registers introduced?
A6: Civil registers of births,marriages,deaths were introduced in
Rheinhessen by the French in 1792.
The Civil registry office is called Standesamt.
Q7: Is there a listserv for Rheinhessen family researchers?
A7: There is presently no mailing list for anyone with a
genealogical interest in RheinHessen.
Q8: Any websites of interest to Rheinhessen researchers?
A8: http://www.genealogy.net/gene/reg/rindex.htm
http://w3g.med.uni-giessen.de/gene/reg/rindex.htm
If you have no access to the Web (www), you can direct web files to your email box by sending a request to
getweb@usa.healthnet.org
or to
getweb@unganisha.idrc.ca
with the message HELP or
get http://.....
Q9: Where are Mennonite congregations in Rheinhessen?
A9: Here are statistics for the Mennonite congregations in Rheinhessen:
(data from Mennonitisches Lexikon III)
1857 1887 1914 1934 1954
--------------------------------
Uffhofen 45 72 62 53 62
Ibersheim 300 233 160 156 185
Monsheim 180 280 260 230 286
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total 525 585 482 439 533
Q10: Are there emigration records available?
A10: The state archives have many emigration records.
http://www.bawue.de/~hanacek/info/darmst01.htm
http://www.qrz.com/gene/reg/RHE-PFA/rhein-p.html
For details see:
Learned, Marion Dexter, 1857-1917:
Guide to the manuscript materials relating to American history
in the German state archives, Washington, D.C.,
Carnegie Institution of Washington. Publication no. 150 , 1912, 352 p.:
-also Kraus reprints NY 1965-
p.275-277:Darmstadt archives