Probate records, wills, and succession documents are among the most underutilized genealogical sources because they reveal not just who inherited what, but family structure, relationships, and migration patterns that birth records alone won't show. These records often survive when earlier vital documents have been lost, and they frequently list multiple family members by name, making them invaluable for bridging gaps in your timeline or confirming relationships that seem tenuous elsewhere.
Succession and inheritance records, including probate files, wills, estate inventories, and land transfer documents, often name family relationships explicitly and can reveal children, spouses, and siblings who appear nowhere else in the historical record. These records are especially valuable for time periods and regions where vital registration was incomplete or nonexistent.
AI can accelerate the analysis of these documents by extracting named individuals and their stated relationships, flagging inconsistencies between a will and other known records, and suggesting follow-up searches in connected repositories. Understanding the genealogical value of inheritance records helps you prompt AI tools to look beyond birth, marriage, and death certificates when your standard sources run dry.
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