Zwartewaterland, Overijssel

Zwartewaterland is a municipality in Overijssel. It is located around the Zwarte Water river in western Overijssel, between Kampen and Zwolle.

The municipality contains the following places: Hasselt, Genemuiden, Zwartsluis, Baarlo, Kievitsnest, Cellemuiden, De Velde, Genne, Haarst, Hasselterdijk and Mastenbroek.

It was formed in 2001 by merging Hasselt, Genemuiden and Zwartsluis.

Church Records
Zwartewaterland was, and still is, a strongly Protestant area. There were only two non-Dutch Reformed places of worship before 1811. Church records can be accessed either from the Historich Centrum Overijssel inventory, VPND or Zoekakten. GeneaKnowHow is also a good source. Some of the records have been transcribed or indexed, and these are detailed in the text below. It can generally be assumed that all images are online at Zoekakten, except for those records specified.

Dutch Reformed
In Zwartsluis, baptisms were recorded from 1657 and marriages from 1692. Transcriptions are available from VPND

In Hasselt marriages from recorded from 1673 and baptisms from 1591. Baptisms from 1689-1702 are only accessible through VPND.

In Genemuiden a fire in 1868 destroyed all church records.

Another possibility for finding ancestors in Genemuiden is a book called:

"Oude Families uit Genemuiden 44 genealogieën uit de 17e en 18e eeuw" by H. W. Hammer

This book is available in the Family History Library in Salt Lake City; call number 949.223/G2 D2h as well as on fiche: FHL INTL Fiche 6001922

Other Religions
There was (and still is) no Catholic church in Zwartewaterland. Catholics who lived there had to attend the nearest church in a different place, for example Zwolle, Kampen or Vollenhove

In Zwartsluis a Mennonite (doopsgezinde) church kept records from 1754, and a Jewish synagogue kept records of circumcisions from 1761.

Civil Records pre-1811
Post-1794.when the Netherlands fell to French-inspired rule, the former authority of the Dutch Reformed church waned. It was now required to marry civilily (whereas previously all marriages had been registered by the Dutch Reformed church). From 1806-1811, more detailed death and burial registers were kept.

Civil Registration
In 1811 the Napoelonic Regime began the civil registration of births, marriages and deaths. This has been continued by the Dutch government ever since. Civil registration is organized around municipalities of the time of the events.

For Zwartewaterland and its former municipalities, births from 1811-1912, marriages from 1811-1932 and deaths from 1811-1960 are on WieWasWie and OpenArch. The exception is births from Zwartsluis, and births from Hasselt from 1903-1912.

The original images are not linked to this index, so use Zoekakten to access them. Zoekakten or the FamilySearch Catalog may also have images for births 1913-1916, marriages 1933-1941 and deaths 1961-1966. Births older than 100 years, marriages older than 75 years and deaths older than 50 years are able to be publicly released but archives can be up to ten years behind putting them online.