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RESEARCHING HISTORICAL RECORDS

The Church of Scotland offices does not have an archives department. However, on this page you can find information on how to trace:
Birth, marriage and death certificates
Baptism certificates
Burial records
Historical ministers' details
Records of kirk sessions, presbyteries and the General Assembly

Please note that all external links on this page will take you out of the Church of Scotland website and open a new browser window.

Birth, marriage and death certificates

ScotlandsPeople is the official online source of parish registers, civil registration, census records and wills and testaments for Scotland. The website is a partnership between the General Register Office for Scotland (GROS), the National Archives of Scotland (NAS), the Court of the Lord Lyon and Scotland On Line.
ScotlandsPeople logo and link to website ScotlandsPeople is one of the world’s largest resources of genealogical information and one of the largest single information resources on the web.
With almost 50 million records to access it provides:
  • a fully searchable index of Scottish births from 1553 to 1905;
  • marriages from 1553 to 1930;
  • deaths from 1855 to 1955;
  • indexed census data from 1841 to 1901; and
  • a free index search of wills and testaments from 1513 to 1901.

To respect privacy of living people, internet access has been limited to birth records over 100 years old, marriage records over 75 years, and death records over 50 years.

The ScotlandsPeople website also hosts full colour images of the registered testaments of Scots up to 1901 are available there. Among the testaments free to view in the ‘Famous Scots’ section of the website are those of John Knox, David Livingstone and Thomas Guthrie.

Visit the website now at: www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk

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Baptism certificates

If you are looking for a copy of a baptism certificate, the first place to try is the parish where the baptism took place: the more recent baptismal records are usually held by the minister. Click here to visit our online map to locate the parish, or if you only know the name of the parish or minister and not its location, use our general search facility here and search by text. For records of baptisms earlier than those held by the minister in each parish, the records are divided into two types:
  1. baptismal records before 1885, which are held by the General Register Office for Scotland; and

  2. baptismal registers among kirk session records, which are held by the National Archives of Scotland.
Baptismal font at Cromarty East Church
All records which exist should be available on the ScotlandsPeople website.

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Burial records

Historically, the Church of Scotland - in the form of kirk sessions and heritors in each parish - was responsible for the maintenance of burial grounds within churchyards and kept records of burials. In 1925 responsibility for the maintenance of Church graveyards was also transferred to local authorities (or councils) in Scotland and from then burial records were no longer the responsibility of the Church.
The graveyard at Kilbirnie Auld Kirk
The location of burial records is not as clear cut as that for baptismal and marriage records, but in most cases any surviving burial registers will be among kirk session records at the National Ariches of Scotland (NAS) or at the General Register Office for Scotland (GROS).
Pre-1855 burial records held by the GROS are currently not available on the ScotlandsPeople website. You can visit the GROS online at
www.gro-scotland.gov.uk

Over the last 20 years the inscriptions on gravestones and monuments in many Scottish burial grounds - or at least those which are legible - have been surveyed and indexed by local history, family history and antiquarian societies, and the results published. Usually these can be consulted at local studies libraries and archive services of the relevant local authorities in Scotland.

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Historical ministers' details

A comprehensive account of the register of ministers of the Church of Scotland since the Reformation of the 16th century is provided in the volume of books entitle Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae. Historically published by Saint Andrew Press, this series provides an invaluable guide to genealogists as it records in detail the family, career and writings of the lives of ministers, chaplains, secretaries, clerks and university staff associated with the Church of Scotland. The first volume was originally completed in 1866 by editor Hew Scott. This book was later published in a new edition over seven volumes between 1915 and 1928, edited by the Rev W. S. Crockett, and later editions have followed. These publications should be available through your local library or archive service.

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Records of kirk sessions, presbyteries and the General Assembly

The National Archives of Scotland (NAS) is also the place of legal deposit for the records of the Church of Scotland's kirk sessions and presbyteries which are earlier than those in current use. The NAS also holds the historical records of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and the records of synods, which were abolished in 1993. In some cases, the NAS re-transmits the records to local authority archives under special conditions laid down by the Keeper of the Records of Scotland.

Image of historical document held in trust by the NAS
Priceless historical documents are held by
the National Archives of Scotland

The records of kirk sessions, presbyteries, synods and the General Assembly together make up a major part of Scotland's written history, and they are used by a wide range of academic, professional and amateur researchers, especially genealogists and ecclesiastical historians.

To preserve the records and make access to them much easier for future generations, the Church of Scotland and the NAS has reached agreement to make digital surrogates of surviving church records from 1500 to 1901 for public use.
The fantastic digitisation project will finish in 2007 and will involved the digital capture of more than five million pages of information. Scottish Documents logo and link to website
For more information about the historical records of kirk sessions, presbyteries, synods and the General Assembly, visit the Scottish Documents website on www.scottishdocuments.com

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Queries

If you have any other queries about how to obtain archived documents or certificates, please use the comprehensive help facility on the ScotlandsPeople website.

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In this section

Introduction
An overview of the links available in this section

Find your local church and parish minister
Use our online clickable map to find your local church and parish minister across our presbyteries

Church offices
Contact details and addresses for our central church offices and departments

Website team
Do you have a query about something on our website? Contact the website team here

Researching historical records
Find out who you should contact to help trace historical family and ministers' details

Add your details
Ministers and chaplains can add their details to our online listings by filling in the following form

Feedback form
Want to get in touch by email? Use our online form to contact the Church via the webteam

Links to other websites
Visit our central external links page for other websites we suggest you may wish to visit

 

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