How should identity groups based on a shared ancestor be recorded? #461
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I had a version of the following question sent to me which I think might have broader interest than the specific person who sent it to me:
The message I received had various examples, but the person who shared it with me asked that I not share those details publicly. I can probably recreate anonymized examples from that upon request. |
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Replies: 8 comments 2 replies
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I think the word "famous" here is a red herring. Descent from a common ancestor is common for family associations and reunions, and sometimes each child of the common ancestor is referred to as a separate branch of the family, and so at reunions or family associations, identifying membership in the family association or the branch of the family at a reunion is common. So I think the question here is how to track that in a GEDCOM file. |
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I agree, "famous" is a red herring and subject to interpretation of "famous". In the town my ancestors came from, my G-G-G-G-Grandfather was famous in town for building on to the church. But you will not find him in any history book (other than the local history). However, identifying anyone that is in direct line from an individual (not necessarily a common ancestor to all at a reunion) is normally done using a numbering system like Henry or d'Aboville. I've used a modified d'Aboville in my GEDCOM stored as a <USER_REFERENCE_NUMBER> with a REFN.TYPE indicating the referenced genealogy.
The numbering system could be modified for better display in reports:
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Perhaps I should have said "historical" or "ancient" instead of "famous." The question arose in a context where there were centuries of unknown descendancy between the identity-defining person and the living identity-possessing people. Consider a modern group of Gershonite (I don't know if there are modern Gershonites, but the example translates to similar groups in many older cultures). They are defined by being descendants of Gershon, son of Levi, son of Israel. But there is a gap of more than a millennium in most genealogies: if you are a Gershonite you probably know that because your parents told you that your family descends from Gershon without a firm genealogy being available. Additionally, it is likely that any given Gershonite believes they have ancestry from all of the tribes of Israel, but that they "belong to" Gershon's branch where others do not because of how they descended (patrilineally, with possibly a few official adoptions or tribe switches along the way). They also likely believe they are Jewish, a group defined by the union of three ancestor-based identities (Judah, Benjamin, and half of Levi).
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The answer I gave was
... but that answer didn't fully satisfy me because of the awkward ROLE, and it doesn't extend to merged family groups like Judah+Benjamin+Levi. I'd welcome other proposals, either using standard tags or extensions. |
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Because I don't fully understand what a Gershonite is even after reading the linked page I can't associate it with anything that I do understand. It seams to me like a tribe, clan or house. If my interpretation was correct then of course I would use the
Since the Levites are considered a "Tribe"
But if "tribe" makes someone uncomfortable, then:
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As an extension to what I noted above, and using my previous calls for better "Typefication" in future releases of GEDCOM I would also make the following suggested changes to GEDCOM with discussion of potential enumset values:
g7:enumset-NATI-TYPE Where these terms are not to be necessarily defined by GEDCOM, but rather defined by the user so the term matches their local use and understanding! |
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Discussion in GEDCOM Steering Committee 9 MAY 2024:
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ASSO requires an individual to be added to the database and in some cases may be disconnected from the tree, in the example of Gershonite! ASSO also requires an additional record query to retrieve the name of the person, and requires back pointers if a query is made to find all members associated with that individual, I.e. all descendants of a Mayflower passenger. If a partial GEDCOM is exported the ASSO individual may not get exported. An attribute using NATI may be faster to find in a query for all members of a clan or group. An individual’s association with a group follows the individual record when the NATI is used just like most other attribute/events. NATI is more likely provided in receiving applications over an ASSO relationship. |
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Because I don't fully understand what a Gershonite is even after reading the linked page I can't associate it with anything that I do understand.
It seams to me like a tribe, clan or house. If my interpretation was correct then of course I would use the
NATI
tag to indicate my inclusion in that group. Being a member of a a tribe/clan/house would use the follow structure:Since the Levites are considered a "Tribe"
But if "tribe" makes someone uncomfortable, then: