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Genealogy Links
I use Legacy 7.0, a full-featured professional genealogy program that helps you track, organize, print, and share your family history. Includes sourcing, reports, merging, To Do list, slide shows, multimedia, Web pages, spell checking, import and export.
Cyndi's List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet claims to have 263,500 genealogical links, with 253,200 that are categorized & cross-referenced in over 180 categories.
thePeerage.com is the work of Darryl Lundy in New Zealand, who has created the most complete genealogical source of European royal lineage that I have found with about 130,000 people and he lists his sources. If you've found a link to royalty on my site, it's worth a sidetrip to his.
Digitalarkivet gives you access to various historic census' in Norway. It is the work of the University of Bergen and the National Archives of Norway. It allows access in English. Since the fall of 2005 the site has also made available digitized copies of church records at the Skannede kirkebøker.
Tore Nygaard's Genealogy is a distant cousin. His site contains detailed information about his personal ancestors, but is also an excellent site for those who lived in Europe during and before the middle ages. It is primarily in Norwegian with some English pages.
Ingers hjemmeside is the homepage of Inger Helene Falch-Jacobsen. She is an even more distant cousin. She has documented her personal ancestors and we have many relatives in common.
Directory of Royal Genealogical Data, by Brian Tompsett, contains more than 30,000 individuals from the earliest times to the present. I have been guided by it extensively.
Heimskringla, a history of the Norse Kings was written in Old Norse in about 1225 A.D. by Snorri Sturluson. This is an English translation.
Personal Links

"Adam at Moss Rocks" is a 360 degree panoramic photo overlooking Victoria, British Columbia. Be patient, it's high quality.
"Sailin" is what I'd rather be doing. Images are worth a thousand words. Sailin's worth a thousand images.
"My father was a creole, his father a Negro, and his father a monkey; my family, it seems, begins where yours left off." ~ Alexandre Dumas |
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