Scotland - Death - 1559-1840

The following sources are listed in the order most likely to help you find a record of death in this time period.

1. Family Sources
Search family sources to determine an approximate place and date of death.

Were you successful?

If yes, do you have a known place of residence and a date of death? If yes, proceed to source 2, Church Records.

If no, there are two possibilities: either you have only an estimated place and date, or you have no date and place at all. If the former, go ahead and proceed to source 2. If the latter,

2. Church of Scotland: Church records
Church records are the christenings or baptisms, marriages, and burials recorded in registers by church officials at the time of an event. Death or burial records usually give only the name of the deceased and the date of burial. Sometimes the date of death and the deceased's age, residence, and parent or spouse's name may be given. A widow's burial record may give her maiden name. Church of Scotland parish registers are often missing burial records. Sometimes mortcloth dues (a fee paid for use of a funeral cloth) were recorded instead of burials.

What you are looking for Your ancestor's name in Church of Scotland records.

Accessing the records For more information about Church of Scotland records and how to access them, click here.

Why go to the next record You may want to go to the next record because: 1. You did not find any information in the above record. 2. You found information but it conflicts with what you know. 3. You found information but would like to find additional details.

3. Monumental Inscriptions
Transcriptions of monumental inscriptions, or gravestone inscriptions, are available for many parishes. The Family History Library has many transcriptions in booklet or microform. Look in the Family History Library Catalog for your place of interest and the topic of Cemeteries. The place could be a parish or a county. If the place is something else, such as a town or village, you should search for the place in a gazetteer to determine the parish and county it is a part of.

If the Family History Library does not have transcriptions of monumental inscriptions for your place of interest, you may wish to contact the family history society for the area in Scotland where the place is located. The society may have made a transcription of the monumental inscriptions for your parish or they may have someone who would be willing to visit the cemetery for you.

4. Dissenters: Church records
Anyone who did not adhere to the teachings of the Established Church of Scotland was considered a nonconformist or a dissenter. Dissenters could also include people who belonged to religious organizations that broke from the Established church. Dissenter groups kept separate records. In these records you may find baptisms, marriages, minutes of meetings, communion rolls, and other records of value.

What you are looking for Your ancestor's name in Dissenter church records.

Why go to the next record You may want to go to the next record because: 1. You did not find any information in the above record. 2. You found information but it conflicts with what you know. 3. You found information but would like to find additional details.

5. Kirk Session: Church records
The Kirk session is the lowest ecclesiastical court of the Presbyterian Church, held on the parish level. It consists of the minister and a number of elders of the parish. The records deal with the business and organization of the parish and discipline of members. They may include lists of communicants, accounts of money paid to the poor, testimonials of persons moving from one parish to another, and details about illegitimate births and alleged fathers.

What you are looking for Your ancestor's name in kirk session records.

Why go to the next record You may want to go to the next record because: 1. You did not find any information in the above record. 2. You found information but it conflicts with what you know. 3. You found information but would like to find additional details.

6. Testaments: Probate records
Testaments are records of the settlement of a person's estate when they die. Testments are like wills except they could not be used for transfering land, only for transfering personal property, such as household furniture, from the deceased to their heirs.

Prior to 1876, testaments were proved by courts called Commissariat Courts. A county in Scotland could fall under the jurisdiction of one or more courts.

Testaments are indexed online at www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk.

Copies of testaments are on microfilm