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Sabtu, 21 Juli 2018

Genealogical numbering systems - Wikipedia
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Several genealogical numbering systems have been widely adopted for presenting family trees and pedigree charts in text format. Among the most popular numbering systems are: Ahnentafel (Sosa-Stradonitz Method), and the Register, NGSQ, Henry, d'Aboville, Meurgey de Tupigny, and de Villiers/Pama Systems.


Video Genealogical numbering systems



Ascending numbering systems

Ahnentafel

Ahnentafel, also known as the Eytzinger Method, Sosa Method, and Sosa-Stradonitz Method, allows for the numbering of ancestors beginning with a descendant. This system allows one to derive an ancestor's number without compiling the list and allows one to derive an ancestor's relationship based on their number.

The number of a person's father is the double of their own number, and the number of a person's mother is the double of their own, plus one. For instance, if the number of John Smith is 10, his father is 20, and his mother is 21.

The first 15 numbers, identifying individuals in 4 generations, are as follows:

(First Generation)   1  Subject    (Second Generation)   2  Father   3  Mother    (Third Generation)   4  Father's father   5  Father's mother   6  Mother's father   7  Mother's mother    (Fourth Generation)   8  Father's father's father   9  Father's father's mother  10  Father's mother's father  11  Father's mother's mother  12  Mother's father's father  13  Mother's father's mother  14  Mother's mother's father  15  Mother's mother's mother  

Ahnentafel with generation

In order to readily have the generation stated for a certain person, the ahnentafel numbering may be preceded by the generation, hence (with more readable alternative):

(First Generation)   1-1 (01-001)  Subject    (Second Generation)   2-2 (02-002) Father   2-3 (02-003) Mother    (Third Generation)   3-4 (03-004) Father's father   3-5 (03-005) Father's mother   3-6 (03-006) Mother's father   3-7 (03-007) Mother's mother    (Fourth Generation)   4-8 (04-008) Father's father's father   4-9 (04-009) Father's father's mother   4-10 (04-010) Father's mother's father   4-11 (04-011) Father's mother's mother   4-12 (04-012) Mother's father's father   4-13 (04-013) Mother's father's mother   4-14 (04-014) Mother's mother's father   4-15 (04-015) Mother's mother's mother  

This method's usefulness comes readily into view when applied further back in the generations, e.g., 08-146, is a male preceding the subject by 7 (8-1) generations. This ancestor was the father of a woman (146/2=73) (in the genealogy line of the subject), that was the mother of a man (73/2=36(.5)), further down the line the father of a man (36/2=18), father of a woman (18/2=9), mother of a man (9/2=4(.5)), father of the subject's father (4/2=2). Hence, 08-146, is the subject's father's father's mother's father's father's mother's father.

atree

atree or Binary Ahnentafel method uses the same numbering of nodes in the binary ancestors tree as Ahnentafel method, but uses binary numbers instead. For a female in the root the correspondence between binary and atree numbering is straightforward, but for male in the root - the first digit is 1 (i.e. M anyway) - to avoid trimming 0s. The advantage of atree system is easier understanding of the genealogical path (as a path from the root) and binary numbering system is natural for the binary tree.

The first 15 numbers in 4 generations in atree system (note that "M" and "F" represent "male [ancestor]" and "female [ancestor]" respectively, as opposed to "mother" and "father"):

_  [Placeholder for subject, to be filled with M if subject is male or F if subject is female]  _M  Father  _F  Mother  _MM  Father's father   _MF  Father's mother  _FM  Mother's father  _FF  Mother's mother  _MMM  Father's father's father  _MMF  Father's father's mother  _MFM  Father's mother's father  _MFF  Father's mother's mother  _FMM  Mother's father's father  _FMF  Mother's father's mother  _FFM  Mother's mother's father  _FFF  Mother's mother's mother  

Explanation of the correspondence between atree IDs and Ahnentafel decimal IDs:

Surname methods

Genealogical writers sometimes choose to present ancestral lines by carrying back individuals with their spouses or single families generation by generation. The siblings of the individual or individuals studied may or may not be named for each family. This method is most popular in simplified single surname studies, however, allied surnames of major family branches may be carried back as well. In general, numbers are assigned only to the primary individual studied in each generation.


Maps Genealogical numbering systems



Descending numbering systems

Register System

The Register System uses both common numerals (1, 2, 3, 4) and Roman numerals (i, ii, iii, iv). The system is organized by generation, i.e., generations are grouped separately.

The system was created in 1870 for use in the New England Historic and Genealogical Register published by the New England Historic Genealogical Society based in Boston, Massachusetts. Register Style, of which the numbering system is part, is one of two major styles used in the U.S. for compiling descending genealogies. (The other being the NGSQ System.)

      (-Generation One-)   1 Progenitor       2     i  Child            ii  Child (no progeny)           iii  Child (no progeny)       3    iv  Child  
      (-Generation Two-)  2 Child             i  Grandchild (no progeny)            ii  Grandchild (no progeny)  3 Child       4     i  Grandchild  
      (-Generation Three-)  4 Grandchild       5     i  Great-grandchild            ii  Great-grandchild (no progeny)       6   iii  Great-grandchild       7    iv  Great-grandchild  

NGSQ System

The NGSQ System gets its name from the National Genealogical Society Quarterly published by the National Genealogical Society headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, which uses the method in its articles. It is sometimes called the "Record System" or the "Modified Register System" because it derives from the Register System. The most significant difference between the NGSQ and the Register Systems is in the method of numbering for children who are not carried forward into future generations: The NGSQ System assigns a number to every child, whether or not that child is known to have progeny, and the Register System does not. Other differences between the two systems are mostly stylistic.

      (-Generation One-)   1 Progenitor    +  2     i  Child       3    ii  Child (no progeny)       4   iii  Child (no progeny)    +  5    iv  Child  
      (-Generation Two-)  2 Child       6     i  Grandchild (no progeny)       7    ii  Grandchild (no progeny)  5 Child    +  8     i  Grandchild  
      (-Generation Three-)  8 Grandchild    +  9     i  Great-grandchild      10    ii  Great-grandchild (no progeny)    + 11   iii  Great-grandchild    + 12    iv  Great-grandchild  

Henry System

The Henry System is a descending system created by Reginald Buchanan Henry for a genealogy of the families of the presidents of the United States that he wrote in 1935. It can be organized either by generation or not. The system begins with 1. The oldest child becomes 11, the next child is 12, and so on. The oldest child of 11 is 111, the next 112, and so on. The system allows one to derive an ancestor's relationship based on their number. For example, 621 is the first child of 62, who is the second child of 6, who is the sixth child of his parents.

In the Henry System, when there are more than nine children, X is used for the 10th child, A is used for the 11th child, B is used for the 12th child, and so on. In the Modified Henry System, when there are more than nine children, numbers greater than nine are placed in parentheses.

Henry		                   Modified Henry  1. Progenitor 		               1. Progenitor      11. Child		                  11. Child         111. Grandchild		              111. Grandchild              1111. Great-grandchild                1111. Great-grandchild              1112. Great-grandchild                1112. Great-grandchild         112. Grandchild		              112. Grandchild     12. Child		                  12. Child         121. Grandchild		              121. Grandchild              1211. Great-grandchild                1211. Great-grandchild              1212. Great-grandchild                1212. Great-grandchild         122. Grandchild		              122. Grandchild              1221. Great-grandchild                1221. Great-grandchild         123. Grandchild		              123. Grandchild         124. Grandchild		              124. Grandchild         125. Grandchild		              125. Grandchild         126. Grandchild		              126. Grandchild         127. Grandchild		              127. Grandchild         128. Grandchild		              128. Grandchild         129. Grandchild		              129. Grandchild         12X. Grandchild		              12(10). Grandchild  

d'Aboville System

The d'Aboville System is a descending numbering method developed by Jacques d'Aboville in 1940 that is very similar to the Henry System, widely used in France. It can be organized either by generation or not. It differs from the Henry System in that periods are used to separate the generations and no changes in numbering are needed for families with more than nine children. For example:

1 Progenitor    1.1 Child        1.1.1 Grandchild              1.1.1.1 Great-grandchild              1.1.1.2 Great-grandchild        1.1.2 Grandchild    1.2 Child        1.2.1 Grandchild              1.2.1.1 Great-grandchild              1.2.1.2 Great-grandchild        1.2.2 Grandchild              1.2.2.1 Great-grandchild        1.2.3 Grandchild        1.2.4 Grandchild        1.2.5 Grandchild        1.2.6 Grandchild        1.2.7 Grandchild        1.2.8 Grandchild        1.2.9 Grandchild        1.2.10 Grandchild  

It should be noted the Huntington Family Association used this numbering system in their family memoir published in 1915, 25 years before Jacques d'Aboville is credited with inventing it. It may very well be true the Huntington family invented this numbering system.

Meurgey de Tupigny System

The Meurgey de Tupigny System is a simple numbering method used for single surname studies and hereditary nobility line studies developed by Jacques Meurgey de Tupigny of the National Archives of France, published in 1953.

Each generation is identified by a Roman numeral (I, II, III, ...), and each child and cousin in the same generation carrying the same surname is identified by an Arabic numeral. The numbering system usually appears on or in conjunction with a pedigree chart. Example:

I Progenitor    II-1 Child         III-1 Grandchild               IV-1  Great-grandchild               IV-2  Great-grandchild          III-2 Grandchild         III-3 Grandchild         III-4 Grandchild    II-2 Child         III-5 Grandchild               IV-3  Great-grandchild               IV-4  Great-grandchild                IV-5  Great-grandchild         III-6 Grandchild  

de Villiers/Pama System

The de Villiers/Pama System gives letters to generations, and then numbers children in birth order. For example:

a Progenitor    b1 Child       c1 Grandchild          d1 Great-grandchild          d2 Great-grandchild       c2 Grandchild       c3 Grandchild    b2 Child       c1 Grandchild          d1 Great-grandchild          d2 Great-grandchild          d3 Great-grandchild       c2 Grandchild       c3 Grandchild  

In this system, b2.c3 is the third child of the second child, and is one of the progenitor's grandchildren.

The de Villiers/Pama system is the standard for genealogical works in South Africa. It was developed in the 19th century by Christoffel Coetzee de Villiers and used in his three volume Geslachtregister der Oude Kaapsche Familien (Genealogies of Old Cape Families). The system was refined by Dr. Cornelis (Cor) Pama, one of the founding members of the Genealogical Society of South Africa.


Common Numbering Systems Used In Genealogy | romantic birthday ...
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See also

  • Ancestral File Number
  • Ahnentafel
  • Cousin chart (Table of consanguinity)
  • Family tree
  • Family tree mapping
  • GEDCOM
  • Genogram
  • Kinship terminology
  • Pedigree chart
  • Pedigree collapse

New Developments
src: www.ancestrallines.net


References

Notes

Genealogy - Wikipedia
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External links

  • Encyclopedia of Genealogy-Numbering Systems
  • Numbering Systems in Genealogy

Source of article : Wikipedia