The Development of Microhistorical Databases in Norway A Historiography
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31850Date
2023-05-11Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Norwegian work on microdata started out with the full count 1801 census and census and vital records from
around the capital. Today, most census and ministerial records from 1801 until the mid-20th century have
been scanned, transcriptions are being completed, much is encoded and made available via the websites of
the Digital National Archives and UiT The Arctic University of Norway. This article complements a previous
publication on empirical results from historical microdata. It is primarily organized by technical issues: digitization
of source materials, encoding and standardization, building of the Historical Population Register for the period
since 1800, record linkage and source criticism as well as GIS. Presently, partner institutions are building the
Historical Population Register with prolonged support from the Norwegian Research Council. This will contain
longitudinal records of the nine million persons who lived in Norway since 1800. The register increasingly
makes it possible to follow the entire population. Unique personal IDs with corresponding URLs to the person
page providing links to many sources introduce a new level of historical documentation. Cross-sectional and
vital records are being interlinked with automatic and manual record linkage software. Longitudinal data is
available for searching as timelines and in Intermediate Data Structure format from UiT The Arctic University
and for searching at Histreg.no, which also caters for manual editing. We are well on the way to creating a
database that can fill the void in the two centuries before the Central Population Register starts in 1964.
Publisher
EHPS-NetCitation
Thorvaldsen, Holden. The Development of Microhistorical Databases in Norway A Historiography. Historical Life Course Studies. 2023;13:127-147Metadata
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