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FRENCH HISTORY

How to research your French ancestry

Learning about your family history can be fascinating, but if you have relatives or ancestors from France, you might want some tips on where to start.

How to research your French ancestry
Jocelyne Denis-Gouyette shows a 200-year-old civil register that volunteers are working to put on the website of the Rennes municipal archives on 07 February 2007 in Rennes. (Photo by ANDRE DURAND / AFP)

If you are looking to learn about your French ancestry, then there are a few places to start.

First, you might consider some of the popular genealogy websites, including Ancestry.com, MyHeritage, and Family Search Wiki, all of which have information from France.

If you are primarily curious about your DNA, you may opt for websites such as Living DNA, 23andMe, or Ancestry DNA. However, if you are doing the process from France, you should be aware that France does not allow at-home DNA testing.

Home DNA testing has been banned in France since 1994 under the loi de bioetiques (law of bioethics) – the only way you can take a DNA test legally in France is by getting medical approval or a court order. Anyone who breaks the law faces a fine of up to €3,750.

Nevertheless, there are still plenty of great ways to learn about your history and where you come from, especially as more records are being digitised across France.

Finding documents about your ancestors

Oftentimes, paid genealogy websites will allow you to build family trees, or even link yours with the work that other people in your extended family have accomplished. These sites make it faster and simpler to scan archives that reference your family members, but there is usually a subscription price attached if you want to go beyond the basics.

If you already know your ancestor’s name, you can try to search for their civil documents on your own. If you do not speak French, now would be a good time to open up a translator like Google Translate or Deepl. 

READ MORE: EXPLAINED: France’s unique regional identities and the languages that shape them

Before starting, you will want to figure out when your ancestor was alive.

This could determine whether their region was even part of France – for example, the historic Alsace-Lorraine territory flipped back and forth between France and Germany for many years. Meanwhile, the southern Mediterranean city of Nice was finally ceded to France in 1860, and prior to that Italian had been the official language used in the area.

Once you’ve figured out where your family member hailed from, you can start off by googling ‘archives’ alongside the French commune (town) or département (county) that they are from. Several archives websites will have a dedicated page for those researching their généalogie (genealogy).

If your information is not that specific and you do not know exactly where they lived, you might start off by using larger databases, such as the archives site: FranceArchives.Gouv.FR.

Going straight to the larger archives website might be helpful too if your ancestor’s town or city had records destroyed at any point. For example, during the fires of ‘Bloody Week’ during the Paris Commune in 1871, many of the city’s records were destroyed when the Hôtel de Ville burned down. 

Luckily, some records were salvaged, namely those kept in the individual town halls of arrondissements.

On the France Archives site, you can find the full list of different archives pages for the départements, which will include things like censuses (les recensements) and voting rolls (listes électorales). 

Prior to 1792, church parishes kept documents (les registres paroissiaux) related to events such as baptisms and marriages. Some of these go back to the 14th or 15th centuries, though many begin around the 16th century.

After 1792, a lot of official documents related to marriage, death and birth were recorded on civil registers by local communes. These are called registres d’état civil. As you look for these you ought to come up across the tables décennales – tables drawn up every 10 years after 1792 listing all the births, marriages and deaths in the commune for that period.

You may also be able to locate your family member’s grave or tombstone using the French version of ‘Find a Grave’.

There are separate websites available for researching people who were in the armed services. For example, if you believe your family member participated in World War I, then you can find information about them on the ‘Grand Mémorial’ site.

You can also try the Memoire des Hommes website to look for former servicemen.

If you believe your family member may have departed from or arrived in France by boat, then you can also search for liste des passagers (passenger lists). And for north Americans who believe their French ancestors may have first stopped through Quebec, you can try the dedicated ‘Genealogy Quebec’ website.

As for paid sites – there is also the website Filae, which has compiled archives and old documents from across France. It may be a bit more user friendly than the public archives websites. The website does offer some free information, but to go further you will need to pay for a subscription.

You could also make an account on the French genealogy site, and Geneanet, in order to make use of its vast array of family trees.

Keep in mind that many records have not yet been digitised, but if you can narrow down the commune or département you need to look at, plus the time period, then you could consider taking a trip to their records office (the archives).

Finding information about your ancestor’s life in France

While there is a lot you can do on the internet to research what your ancestor’s day-to-day may have looked like, going in person may be an effective option to immerse yourself in the history.

If you know where they hailed from, consider visiting the local town hall (mairie). Especially in small towns, the mairie can be an essential starting point to get information about where records might be kept, the location of local cemeteries and more.  

READ MORE: Préfecture v Mairie: French admin offices explained

Some town halls may store old property records, deeds, and previous zoning plans, which could help you figure out exactly where your ancestors lived.

As mentioned above, taking a trip to the local archives is a great option too.

When it comes to learning about the area, if you search ‘Culture et patrimoine’ plus the name of the town or département, you will come across local monuments, museums, and other landmarks. 

You can also try to look up castles open for visitors in the area – France was a feudal society for many centuries, and restoration efforts to maintain old chateaux not only focus on the castles themselves, but also involve learning about the surrounding area and villages.

Almost every French town and village has a war memorial listing the people from that area who died in World War I and II so you may find members of your family listed – some of the memorials have pictures of those who died too.

Getting help along the way

There are also resources for joining genealogy associations, such as the Centre d’Entraide Généalogique de France, which brings together people interested in genealogy and sometimes hosts workshops. You can find them online.

Most départements have their own Association généalogique, so you can search that plus the relevant French département.

There are also plenty of genealogy workshops hosted by local authorities and/or amateur groups, which you may be able to find if you search ‘atelier de généalogie’ plus your area (though you would likely need some level of French to get by).

You can also try to join Facebook groups for ‘généannoteurs’ (fans of genealogy in France) and online forums to ask questions to other people in the same situation as you, such as the community section of ‘Family Search’ (found here). 

Will I be able to get citizenship through ancestry?

Probably not. Unlike Ireland, which allows citizenship through grandparents, or Italy, which accepts any ancestor going back to 1861, in France you need a French parent to qualify.

There are several routes to obtaining French nationality. The best-known methods, other than being born in France to French parents, are by marriage to a French citizen, or to have lived in the country long enough to fulfil residency requirements. 

France has a relatively generous approach to getting citizenship through residency – you can apply after just five years of living here (or two years if you undertook higher education in France) and the fee is just €55. Set against that, however, is the requirement for a language test, the lengthy application process and the extra costs in getting certified translation of documents.

READ MORE: Can I obtain French citizenship through ancestry?

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CULTURE

Why is the Mona Lisa so famous (and why is it even in France)?

Being lauded as either the greatest artwork in the world or the most overrated tourist attraction in France, Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa does not struggle to get attention. But why is this small portrait so famous?

Why is the Mona Lisa so famous (and why is it even in France)?

Paris’ Louvre museum has recently announced that the Mona Lisa painting is to get its own room, a move that is at least partly in reaction to increasing complaints about the artwork being overrated, while tourists struggle to see it in the small, crowded space.

There aren’t many paintings that get a room of their own, so just what is it about Mona Lisa (or La Joconde as she is known in France) that attracts so many millions of tourists each year – and should you bother going to see her?

Why is it in France?

Let’s start with why the painting is in France in the first place, since both painter and subject are Italian (although Italy at that time was still a collection of city states which would not be unified into the modern country until 1861). 

In short, Mona Lisa is in France because her creator Leonardo da Vinci travelled with her, and he was in France when he died in 1519. The reason that he was in France is that he spent the last years of his life working on special commissions for king François I. He died at the Château du Clos Lucé in Amboise, in France’s Loire Valley. 

Upon his death Mona Lisa was taken into the French royal collection and various descendants of François I hung her in their palaces until the French Revolution happened in 1793.

After the Revolution, with the exception of a brief stint in Napoleon’s palace, the painting entered the collection of the newly-created Louvre gallery which – in the spirit of revolutionary equality – was opened up to the people so that they too could enjoy great art.

Various requests over the years – some polite, others less so – from Italy to return the painting have been firmly declined by the French state. 

When did it get famous?

In the 18th and 19th centuries Leonardo’s painting was a popular exhibit among museum visitors, but didn’t have any particular fame and wasn’t regarded as any more special than the numerous other artworks exhibited there.

Although some academic interest in the painting’s subject – most commonly thought to be Lisa Gherardini, wife of the Florentine merchant Francesco del Giocondo – stirred in the 19th century, her real fame didn’t arrive until 1911.

This is when the painting was stolen from the Louvre, a crime that became a sensation and a cause celèbre in France, even more so when the painting was finally found in 1913 after the thief had attempted to sell it in Italy.

The fame of the painting and the crime inspired contemporary artists such as Marcel Duchamp who created a playful reproduction of Mona Lisa (complete with beard and moustache) which in turn enhanced the painting’s recognition. The artistic trend continued with everyone from Andy Warhol to the ubiquitous student posters of Mona Lisa smoking a joint.

Former chairman of the French Communist Party Robert Hue views moustachioed Mona Lisa by dadaist painter Marcel Duchamp, lent out by his party for the first time for an exhibition in January 2002. Photo by NICOLAS ASFOURI / AFP

A tour of the painting to the US in 1963 and to Japan in 1974 further enhanced the celebrity status.

21st century

These days it’s perhaps accurate to say that the painting is simply famous because it’s famous. As the best-known piece of art in the world it’s automatically on many tourists’ ‘must see’ list when they come to Paris – and a lot of tourists come to Paris (roughly 44 million per year).

Meanwhile the Louvre is the most-visited museum in the world, attracting roughly 9 million visitors a year.

Although some visitors find the painting itself disappointing (it’s very small, just 77cm by 53cm) the most common complaint is that the room is too crowded – many people report that it’s so jammed with visitors that it’s hard to even see the picture never mind spend time contemplating the artwork.

Should I go and see it?

It really depends on what you like – if your taste in art is firmly in the more modern camp then you probably won’t find that this painting particularly speaks to you. You will, however, find a lot in Paris that is much more to your taste, running from the Musée d’Orsay (mostly art created between 1848 and 1914) to the Pompidou Centre (featuring contemporary and experimental art) and much, much more.

If, however, Renaissance art is your bag then you’ll struggle to find a finer example of it than Mona Lisa, with her beautiful brushwork, detailed and intriguing background and realistic presentation.

If you do decide to visit, then be prepared for the gallery to be crowded – the Louvre now operates on a pre-booking basis but even having a pre-booked ticket won’t save you from the crowds.

If possible try to avoid the summer and school holidays and prioritise weekdays over weekends – the early morning or late evening slots tend to be a little quieter than others, but you’re going to have to be prepared to share her with many other art-lovers.

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