Genealogical Numbering Systems

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A multitude of Genealogical Numbering Systems have been developed for indexing family trees and pedigree charts in text format. Each system provides a consistent method to determine the appropriate & predictable identifier for persons in a Family Tree.

Most systems assign identifiers relative to a focal person and are oriented towards Ancestors (an ascending system) or Descendants (a descending system).

The terminology used to refer to this focal person varies, including: subject, proband (from psychiatry & medical genetics; proposito for male proband or proposita for female proband), root node (graphing), progenitor/primogenitor (for descending genealogical numbering systems), de cujus (Latin term meaning 'about which').

Genealogical Numbering System Support

Reports Descendant Systems Ancestor Systems
Simple
numbering
d'Aboville de Villiers
(Pama)
Henry Modified
Henry
Meurgey
de Tupigny
Modified
Register
Ahnentafel Sosa-Stradonitz
Graphs:Hourglass Graph
Graphical Reports:Descendants Lines
Text Reports:Ahnentafel Report
Text Reports:Detailed Ancestral Report
Text Reports:Descendant Report
Text Reports:Detailed Descendant Report
Web Pages:Descendant Indented Tree

Simple numbering

Gramps features using this system

Fig. .1 Descendant Report - descending generation numbering using Example.gramps


Ahnentafel

An ascending system for numbering pedigree ancestors starting with '1' at a focal person. The number of the father is double that of the child. The mother is double the child's number plus one.

Fig. .2 Ahnentafel Report - ascending numbering focused on Jennie S. Garner of Example.gramps


Origin

An Austrian nobleman, diplomat, historian, and publicist named Michaël Eytzinger (circa 1530-1598) introduced a new functional theory of numeration of ancestors in 1590 with the Cologne publication of the Thesaurus principum hac aetate in Europa viventium ("lexicon of officials in this age in Europe living"). The Ahnentafel (German for "ancestor table") was first illustrated with a 5 generation pedigree of Henry III of France on pages 146 and 147.

Gramps features using this system

External Links

d'Aboville

Gramps features using this system

External Links

de Villiers

Also called the Pama numbering system

A descendant numbering numbering system that assigns letters to generations, and then appends family subgroup birth order numbers. Listed in outline form with a concatenated form used for inline references to the list. In concatenated form, the generations are separated by a decimal point.

Developed in South Africa by Christoffel Coetzee de Villiers 1850-1887 for use in the 1894 posthumous Geslachtregister der Oude Kaapsche Familien. Refined by Dr. Cornelis "Cor" Pama 1916-1994 for the 1966 translation, Genealogies of Old Cape Families.


Gramps features using this system

Henry

Fig. .3 Numbering System example from R.B.Henry's ©1935 book

The Henry System is a descending system created by Reginald Buchanan Henry (1881-1969) created a numbering system assigning a number for his 1935 book, Genealogies of the Families of the Presidents. In the Henry System, each President was a Progenitor and restated the list with and index number equal to their birth order. The progenitor's offspring is Generation 2 and appends a birth order digit to the index in the 2nd place. If there are more than 9 children, the tenth child is given the letter 'X' and the eleventh starts alphabetical letters A through V. So a 4 digit index of 64X3 would be a child of the fourth generation. That descendant would be described as the 3rd child of the 10th child of the 4th child of the progenitor. And the progenitor was 6th born in their family.

The original book also used an outline form which successively indented for each generation. Although simple to comprehend, the Henry format is not accepted for most genealogical publications.

Gramps features using this system

  • Modified Henry Systems

The Modified Henry system substitutes a parenthetical number if more than 9 offspring were in a generation. So the 64X3 Henry system example from the section above would be 64(10)3 in the Modified Henry system.

Gramps features using this system

External Links

Meurgey de Tupigny

A descendant numbering numbering system that assigns Roman numerals to generations, and then appends family subgroup birth order Arabic numbers with a hyphen. Listed in outline form, normally in conjunction with pedigree charts.

Developed in France by Jacques Meurgey de Tupigny 1891-1973 for single surname studies and hereditary nobility line studies. Initially published in the 1956 Guide des recherches généalogiques aux Archives nationales.

Gramps features using this system

Modified Register

Also known as the NGSQ (National Genealogical Society Quarterly) system, "Record System" or the "Modified Register System" Descendant Numbering System

created in 1870 for use in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register (NEHGR) published by the New England Historic Genealogical Society. Adopted with a NGSQs

The big difference between the NGSQ and the Register Systems is that the Record (Modified Register) System only assign a new number for progeny that list descendants later in the index. The NGSQ System assigns a number to every child, whether or not that child is known to have progeny.

Gramps features using this system

External Links

Sosa-Stradonitz

Origin

Spanish Genealogist Jerónimo de Sosa was a 17th-century Spanish Franciscan friar and a genealogist who based a genealogical numbering system of ancestors on the Ahnentafel numbering system first published by Michaël Eytzinger. Sosa's 1676 work Noticia de la gran casa de los marqueses de Villafranca established a standard.

The system was popularized on a large scale by Stephan Kekulé von Stradonitz (1863–1933) when he published his interpretation of Eytzinger's and Sosa's method in his Ahnentafel-Atlas: Ahnentafeln zu 32 Ahnen der Regenten Europas und ihrer Gemahlinnen, 1898–1904, containing 79 charts of the sovereigns of Europe and their wives. (In 1895, Kekulé's prominent organic chemist father was ennobled by Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany, giving him the right to add "von Stradonitz" to his name, referring to a possession of his patrilineal ancestors in Stradonice, Bohemia.)

Gramps features using this system

External Links


Other numbering systems

Hybrid Approaches

Comparative References

Articles comparing & contrasting merits of competing numbering sysytems

Development Resources

  • Add a 'numbering' data class - Gramps feature request 0004169
  • PseudonymTree.gramps - example (gzip compressed) multi-generational Gramps format Tree that uses intuitive pseudonyms & IDs for testing & exploration use.