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Keywords = family genealogy

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28 pages, 362 KB  
Article
A Human Rights-Based Perspective on the Integration Experiences and Vulnerabilities of Zimbabwean Migrants Living in Johannesburg, South Africa
by Mutsa Murenje and Sipho Sibanda
Genealogy 2026, 10(1), 8; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy10010008 - 2 Jan 2026
Viewed by 343
Abstract
The integration experiences and vulnerabilities of migrants in host states are a critical area of study. This qualitative research, grounded in a human rights and social justice framework, investigates the systemic injustices and integration challenges faced by Zimbabwean migrants in Johannesburg, South Africa. [...] Read more.
The integration experiences and vulnerabilities of migrants in host states are a critical area of study. This qualitative research, grounded in a human rights and social justice framework, investigates the systemic injustices and integration challenges faced by Zimbabwean migrants in Johannesburg, South Africa. Through in-depth interviews with 16 participants and six key informants, the study employs thematic analysis to uncover the socio-cultural, economic, and political barriers that impede successful integration. The findings reveal pervasive issues such as prejudice, discrimination, xenophobia, and language barriers, which exacerbate the migrants’ vulnerabilities and make it difficult to support their families. They, at times, fail to buy food and pay school fees for their children. Despite these challenges, the resilience and creativity of Zimbabwean migrants are evident. The study’s unique contribution lies in its widening of the genealogy of theories of migration by incorporating African-centred migration perspectives, which are grounded in social justice perspectives. This critiques the Global North-dominated narratives that have historically sidelined the lived experiences of migrants from the Global South. The study offers a comprehensive examination of the interplay between systemic barriers and migrant resilience, offering new insights into how migration involves and affects families. This research calls for the development and implementation of rights-based integration frameworks to address systemic issues and enhance the well-being of migrants so that they can better support their families and kinsmen. Full article
21 pages, 350 KB  
Review
Matrimonial Property and Inheritance Laws in Kosovo: Genealogical Insights on Family Continuity and Heritage
by Bedri Bahtiri and Kastriote Vlahna
Genealogy 2026, 10(1), 5; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy10010005 - 1 Jan 2026
Viewed by 375
Abstract
This study examines the impact of Kosovo’s matrimonial property and inheritance laws on intergenerational inheritance and family connections. It explores how the division of property during marriage or upon divorce influences inheritance outcomes and the continuity of family lineage. The research employs a [...] Read more.
This study examines the impact of Kosovo’s matrimonial property and inheritance laws on intergenerational inheritance and family connections. It explores how the division of property during marriage or upon divorce influences inheritance outcomes and the continuity of family lineage. The research employs a comparative approach, including genealogical case studies, to analyze these effects. Findings demonstrate that legal provisions significantly influence the preservation of family property and help prevent intra-family disputes. Well-structured laws ensuring the participation of children and the surviving spouse promote gender and social equality, respect heirs’ rights, and support economic sustainability. Comparative experiences from Germany and France offer practical examples for harmonizing property management in Kosovo. Additionally, the study highlights the importance of accurate property data and the use of genealogical records to maintain continuity in material inheritance and the construction of family history. Overall, matrimonial property and inheritance laws are more than legal instruments; they uphold social order and safeguard families’ material legacies. The study concludes with concrete recommendations for policy and legal practices that address communities’ real needs while acknowledging family history. Full article
16 pages, 3135 KB  
Article
Szwarc, Schwarzenberg or Czerny? Heraldic Memory of the Polish Nobility from the Middle Ages to the Present: The Case of the Czerny Family
by Joanna Brzegowy
Genealogy 2025, 9(4), 151; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9040151 - 11 Dec 2025
Viewed by 780
Abstract
This article examines the evolution of heraldic memory and genealogical consciousness within the Czerny family from the Middle Ages to the 20th century. Focusing on this single lineage makes it possible to trace, in a longue durée perspective, how heraldic narratives emerged, were [...] Read more.
This article examines the evolution of heraldic memory and genealogical consciousness within the Czerny family from the Middle Ages to the 20th century. Focusing on this single lineage makes it possible to trace, in a longue durée perspective, how heraldic narratives emerged, were transformed, and became embedded in family identity. The study employs a mixed methodology combining historical and genealogical analysis of municipal and noble registers, heraldic artefacts, epitaphs, and family archives with critical interpretation of early modern panegyrics and oral traditions. This approach enables reconstruction of both material and symbolic aspects of heraldic memory and its adaptation to changing political and social contexts. The findings reveal three major patterns. First, in the 15th and 16th centuries, the Czerny (Szwarc/Czarny) family consolidated its noble status by linking the Nowina coat of arms to heroic myths, especially after the death of Mikołaj Czerny at Pskov. Second, in the 17th century, Michał Czerny introduced the “Szwarcenberg” element to the surname, signifying aspirations to aristocratic prestige rather than actual heraldic adoption. Third, these narratives persisted in epitaphs, literary texts, and oral tradition into the modern period. The case illustrates how heraldic memory operated as a dynamic instrument of symbolic self-legitimation among the Polish nobility. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Genealogical Communities: Community History, Myths, Cultures)
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16 pages, 847 KB  
Article
Common Ancestry from Southern Italy: Two Families with Dilated Cardiomyopathy Share the Same Homozygous Loss-of-Function Variant in NRAP
by Maria Elena Onore, Martina Caiazza, Catia Mio, Gioacchino Scarano, Pasquale Di Letto, Sarah Iffat Rahman, Emanuele Monda, Cristiano Amarelli, Rossella Nicoletta Borrelli, Flavio Faletra, Vincenzo Nigro, Giuseppe Limongelli and Giulio Piluso
Genes 2025, 16(12), 1470; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes16121470 - 8 Dec 2025
Viewed by 466
Abstract
Background: Cardiomyopathies are a heterogeneous group of heart muscle disorders with diverse genetic origins. Biallelic loss-of-function (LoF) variants in the nebulin-related anchoring protein (NRAP) gene have been linked to dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and left ventricular noncompaction cardiomyopathy, though only a few [...] Read more.
Background: Cardiomyopathies are a heterogeneous group of heart muscle disorders with diverse genetic origins. Biallelic loss-of-function (LoF) variants in the nebulin-related anchoring protein (NRAP) gene have been linked to dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and left ventricular noncompaction cardiomyopathy, though only a few families have been described. NRAP, a member of the Nebulin family, plays a key role in cardiomyocyte development, structural integrity, and muscle function. Methods: We investigated two Italian siblings with DCM born to consanguineous parents from a small village in Campania. Exome sequencing, homozygosity mapping, and comparative analyses with other reported cases were performed. Genealogical research was conducted using civil registry data to reconstruct extended family pedigrees. Results: Both siblings were homozygous for a LoF variant in NRAP (NM_198060.4:c.619del; p.Val207TrpfsTer20). A third brother with tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy, as well as their living mother, who did not have cardiac abnormalities, were found to be heterozygous. The same homozygous variant was recently identified in another Italian family with DCM coming from North-eastern Italy, whose proband also originated from a nearby village in Campania. These two families exhibited heterogeneity in clinical presentation. Homozygosity analysis revealed a >25 Mb shared region on chromosome 10 encompassing NRAP, supporting a common ancestral origin. While genealogical reconstruction did not allow identification of a shared ancestor, it confirmed consanguinity and enabled the recognition of potential carriers across both families. Conclusions: Our findings strengthen the evidence for NRAP as a disease-causing gene in cardiomyopathies and highlight a likely founder effect in Campania. Incorporating NRAP into genetic testing panels is warranted, especially in populations with high rates of consanguinity or suspected founder variants. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Insights into the Genomic and Genetic Basis of Cardiovascular Disease)
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11 pages, 439 KB  
Article
Kinship as Evidence: Genealogy, Law, and the Politics of Recognition
by Oluwaseyi B. Ayeni, Oluwajuwon M. Omigbodun and Oluwakemi T. Onibalusi
Genealogy 2025, 9(4), 138; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9040138 - 1 Dec 2025
Viewed by 441
Abstract
Genealogy has shifted from the private domain of family history to a central mechanism in law and governance. This article examines how genealogical claims are used as evidence in three critical domains: citizenship, inheritance, and indigenous recognition. Using a comparative socio-legal approach, the [...] Read more.
Genealogy has shifted from the private domain of family history to a central mechanism in law and governance. This article examines how genealogical claims are used as evidence in three critical domains: citizenship, inheritance, and indigenous recognition. Using a comparative socio-legal approach, the study analyses statutes, case law, and interdisciplinary scholarship to reveal both convergences and divergences in evidentiary practice. Across legal systems, descent remains decisive in allocating rights and recognition, yet the hierarchy of proof varies. Civil law states privilege documentary records, common law courts increasingly rely on DNA testing, and indigenous forums continue to give authority to oral genealogies. The rapid growth of genetic genealogy databases adds new complexity. While these technologies expand opportunities for verification, they also create ethical challenges concerning privacy, consent, and the extension of genealogical data into surveillance. To address these dynamics, the article develops an evidence regime framework that treats genealogy as criteria of proof, media of proof, institutional gatekeepers, and social consequences. The findings highlight genealogy’s dual character: it enables claims to rights yet also reproduces exclusion when evidentiary hierarchies are imposed. The article argues for pluralist standards that respect documentary, genetic, and oral genealogies, offering a pathway toward more inclusive and just legal recognition. Full article
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49 pages, 355 KB  
Article
Cherokee Dispossession Through Claimant Self-Declaration: Assessing Cherokee Heritage Claims in the 2020 U.S. Census
by Daniel Heath Justice
Genealogy 2025, 9(4), 131; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9040131 - 19 Nov 2025
Viewed by 3219
Abstract
Despite extensive and multigenerational efforts by the three federally recognized Cherokee tribes to educate the larger public about the sovereign right and authority of Cherokee governments to determine affiliation, well over a million unaffiliated and unsubstantiated American claimants still declare Cherokee heritage in [...] Read more.
Despite extensive and multigenerational efforts by the three federally recognized Cherokee tribes to educate the larger public about the sovereign right and authority of Cherokee governments to determine affiliation, well over a million unaffiliated and unsubstantiated American claimants still declare Cherokee heritage in official records, deforming public understanding and reinforcing dangerously anti-Native racial logics. This article considers the problems associated with the “Cherokee” population categories in the 2020 U.S. census, its relationship to genealogical stereotypes in mainstream family history research, its dangers to Cherokee nationhood, and its consequences for Indian Country as a whole. Full article
15 pages, 1040 KB  
Article
The Villafañe Lineage in Santiago del Molinillo: Hypotheses on Its Origin and Formation
by Jorge Hugo Villafañe
Genealogy 2025, 9(4), 121; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9040121 - 1 Nov 2025
Viewed by 632
Abstract
This article formulates and evaluates historical hypotheses on the origin and formation of the Villafañe lineage in Santiago del Molinillo (León) within the broader dynamics that connected the urban patriciate and the rural hidalguía (minor nobility) of late medieval and early modern Castile. [...] Read more.
This article formulates and evaluates historical hypotheses on the origin and formation of the Villafañe lineage in Santiago del Molinillo (León) within the broader dynamics that connected the urban patriciate and the rural hidalguía (minor nobility) of late medieval and early modern Castile. Through an integrated examination of population registers, parish records, hidalguía lawsuits, and notarial protocols, the study reconstructs the family’s trajectory and its institutional anchoring in the concejo and parish. The evidence suggests an urban origin on León’s Rúa through Doña Elena de Villafañe y Flórez, whose marriage to Ares García—an hidalgo from the Ordás area—established the local house and the compound surname “García de Villafañe” as both an identity marker and a patrimonial device. The consolidation of the lineage resulted from deliberate family strategies, including selective alliances with neighboring lineages (Quiñones, Gavilanes, Rebolledo), participation in municipal and ecclesiastical offices, and the symbolic use of heraldry and memory. The migration of Lázaro de Villafañe to colonial La Rioja and Cordova in the seventeenth century extended this social status across the Atlantic while maintaining Leonese continuity. Although the surviving evidence is fragmentary, convergent archival, onomastic, and heraldic indicators support interpreting the Molinillo branch as a legitimate and adaptive extension of the urban lineage. By combining genealogical and microhistorical analysis with interdisciplinary perspectives—particularly gender and genetics—this article proposes a transferable framework for testing historical hypotheses on lineage continuity, social mobility, and identity formation across early modern Castile and its transatlantic domains. Full article
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43 pages, 2028 KB  
Article
Migration in the Early Chesapeake: Dorchester Co., MD, as a Case Study, 1650–1750
by Thomas Daniel Knight
Genealogy 2025, 9(3), 96; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9030096 - 13 Sep 2025
Viewed by 2247
Abstract
This article examines the migration patterns that shaped the early settlement of Dorchester County, Maryland. Dorchester County is located on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, an area distinctive in terms of its geography, history, and culture. In U.S. history, migration has generally proceeded from eastern [...] Read more.
This article examines the migration patterns that shaped the early settlement of Dorchester County, Maryland. Dorchester County is located on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, an area distinctive in terms of its geography, history, and culture. In U.S. history, migration has generally proceeded from eastern areas to western ones and from northern areas to southern ones, a pattern dating back to the earliest colonial settlements. Settlement in Dorchester County proceeded primarily from east to west and south to north, with additional migration streams coming from the north out of Delaware and from the west out of Somerset County. This gave Dorchester County an unusual historical dynamic because of the different socio-cultural and religious backgrounds and settlement patterns from the regions in which those migrants came. The Eastern Shore’s geography, shaped by an extensive coastline and major riverways, contributed to this settlement pattern, for the Chesapeake Bay region, with its complex network of rivers and streams, forms one of the world’s three largest natural estuaries. In terms of genealogy and family history, this mix of settlers importantly shaped the cultural dynamics of the Eastern Shore, leading to complex family histories that blended different cultural, religious, and linguistic influences. Free European-American settlers dominated migration into early Dorchester, but unfree laborers, including slaves and, early on, white indentured servants, came to Dorchester in substantial numbers along these same routes and made important contributions to the cultural development of Dorchester and surrounding areas. In later years, out-migration from the Eastern Shore took settlers of all backgrounds throughout the growing United States and carried the influence of the Eastern Shore to the south and west as well as into the urban areas of the northeast. Full article
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19 pages, 308 KB  
Article
Heritage in the Social Media Age: Online Genealogy Communities and Their Managers as Knowledge Hubs in the Genealogical Ecosystem
by Dorith Yosef and Azi Lev-On
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(8), 501; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14080501 - 20 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1047
Abstract
Genealogy is the study of family history and ancestral lineage, tracing relationships across generations through records and narratives. The digital revolution has shifted genealogical research from traditional archives to online platforms. Grounded in knowledge co-creation theory, this study examined the role of social [...] Read more.
Genealogy is the study of family history and ancestral lineage, tracing relationships across generations through records and narratives. The digital revolution has shifted genealogical research from traditional archives to online platforms. Grounded in knowledge co-creation theory, this study examined the role of social media communities and their managers as knowledge hubs within the genealogical ecosystem. Its central innovation lies in identifying two emerging actors in modern genealogical knowledge ecology: the online community as a hub of expertise and the community manager as a key figure in knowledge creation. Drawing on interviews with fifteen Facebook managers of genealogical communities from diverse Jewish backgrounds worldwide, the study explored their perceptions of online genealogical spaces and their roles as facilitators of knowledge. Participants demonstrated a high level of professionalism and thoughtful engagement with sources; however, verifying the accuracy of genealogical claims was not within the scope of this study. Interviews were conducted in English and Hebrew based on participant preference. Thematic analysis revealed five key areas: two focused on the community’s role as a knowledge hub for both members and outsiders, and three on the manager’s role through self-perception, member engagement, and strategic initiatives. As part of a broader dissertation, this chapter deepens understanding of collaborative, community-driven genealogical knowledge in the age of social media. Full article
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11 pages, 213 KB  
Essay
“Turns Out, I’m 100% That B—”: A Scholarly Essay on DNA Ancestry Tests and Family Relationships
by Lisa Delacruz Combs
Genealogy 2025, 9(3), 73; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9030073 - 24 Jul 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1148
Abstract
With increasing attention on DNA ancestry tests, scholars have explored how these tests inform modern understandings of race. Current research reveals the flaws and misinterpretations that arise when DNA tests, such as those offered by 23andMe and AncestryDNA, are used as a proxy [...] Read more.
With increasing attention on DNA ancestry tests, scholars have explored how these tests inform modern understandings of race. Current research reveals the flaws and misinterpretations that arise when DNA tests, such as those offered by 23andMe and AncestryDNA, are used as a proxy for racial identity. While prominent in popular culture, the legitimacy and implications of these tests remain contested in the scholarly literature. Some researchers have explored how the increased availability of DNA tests affects how multiracial individuals identify and disclose their racial and ethnic identities, though this exploration remains limited. As discourse about mixed race identity and ancestry tests becomes more nuanced, I argue for the utility of using diunital perspectives, an expansive lens that resists either/or thinking, to complicate conversations about ancestry tests and multiraciality. This scholarly essay integrates personal narrative and a genealogical deconstruction of monoracialism to explore the question, “How can DNA tests contribute to the unlearning of monoracialism?” I share two personal vignettes to illustrate how these tests can reveal a preference for discrete racial categories. Drawing from Critical Race Theory, strategic essentialism, and diunital perspectives, I examine how DNA tests intersect with identity, family, and monoracialism, concluding with implications for disrupting monoracial logics. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Exploring Family Ancestral Histories Through Genetic Genealogy)
13 pages, 1942 KB  
Article
The Evolution of Noun Prefixes in West-Coastal Bantu Languages of Gabon
by Japhet Niama Niama
Languages 2025, 10(6), 144; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10060144 - 17 Jun 2025
Viewed by 1642
Abstract
This study offers a detailed comparative analysis of the reflexes of Proto-Bantu noun class prefixes within nine Gabonese languages belonging to the B50, B60, and B70 groups of Guthrie’s referential inventory of the Bantu languages. Genealogically speaking, all of them are part of [...] Read more.
This study offers a detailed comparative analysis of the reflexes of Proto-Bantu noun class prefixes within nine Gabonese languages belonging to the B50, B60, and B70 groups of Guthrie’s referential inventory of the Bantu languages. Genealogically speaking, all of them are part of the Kwilu-Ngounie subclade of the Bantu family’s West-Coastal Bantu branch. Starting out from a robust dataset comprising over 4000 lexical items collected through fieldwork and existing descriptions, the Comparative Method is used to distinguish changes in noun class morphology due to regular sound shifts from those emerging from analogical reanalysis and levelling. The comparative study shows a systematic reduction and reorganization of the inherited Proto-Bantu noun class system, notably the loss of classes 12/13 and 19 across all languages, variable retention and loss of classes 7/8 and 11, and complex patterns of reshuffling involving classes 5, 9/10, and 1/2. Key innovations, potentially reinforcing lexicon-based hypotheses of phylogenetic subgrouping within Kwilu-Ngounie, include the development of a class 7 allomorphy conditioned by stem-initial segments in the B50 languages and the emergence of vocalic prefixes restricted to the B60 and B70 languages. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Developments on the Diachrony and Typology of Bantu Languages)
17 pages, 2093 KB  
Article
Thousands of Famous People Are Closely Related to One Another
by Karl Vachuska and Thomas J. Kelly
Genealogy 2025, 9(2), 58; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9020058 - 29 May 2025
Viewed by 1696
Abstract
Wealth and power have been recognized as being unequally concentrated within specific families. While research on social mobility has been limited to defined outcomes (e.g., occupation, income, and education) in specific contexts, the rise of big data has spurred broader network analysis. Using [...] Read more.
Wealth and power have been recognized as being unequally concentrated within specific families. While research on social mobility has been limited to defined outcomes (e.g., occupation, income, and education) in specific contexts, the rise of big data has spurred broader network analysis. Using a comprehensive genealogical database of 30 million individuals in the Western Hemisphere, we analyzed how familial background, gender, and occupational domains influence the probability of individuals attaining “fame” in their lifetime. Individuals with famous parents are more likely to become famous themselves, especially males. Unexpectedly, we identified more than 10,000 famous individuals who are closely related, comprising 25.6% of all famous individuals in the entire dataset. While the underlying sample may have representativeness issues, the findings suggest that famous individuals are not isolated figures but often part of broader interconnected family networks. Full article
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6 pages, 171 KB  
Editorial
The Manifestation and Contestation of White Privilege in Multiracial Families: A Disruption
by Chandra D. L. Waring
Genealogy 2025, 9(2), 51; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9020051 - 2 May 2025
Viewed by 1368
Abstract
“Genealogy is the retrieval of vital and familial data from records of various types, and its ordering into meaningful relationship patterns” (Durie 2017, p [...] Full article
21 pages, 301 KB  
Review
The Double-Edged Nature of Whiteness for Multiracial People with White Ancestry in the US and UK
by Miri Song
Genealogy 2025, 9(2), 46; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9020046 - 22 Apr 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2195
Abstract
The privileges of Whiteness have been theorized and debated for some decades. Because White privilege has been manifested, historically, in myriad forms, it has been possible to treat the privileges of Whiteness as a given, even when its changing manifestations are acknowledged. The [...] Read more.
The privileges of Whiteness have been theorized and debated for some decades. Because White privilege has been manifested, historically, in myriad forms, it has been possible to treat the privileges of Whiteness as a given, even when its changing manifestations are acknowledged. The continuing growth of multiracial people with White ancestry in the US (and other societies) provides an opportunity for scholars to rethink what we mean by White privilege, and how the workings of White privilege for multiracial people and families may differ from those associated with traditional understandings of Whiteness. One of the important questions posed in this special issue concerns the question of how multiracial people may benefit from the unearned privileges of their genealogical and lived proximity to Whiteness, including a White appearance, White relatives and networks, and White spaces. The key question I address in this review article is this: How is White ancestry and proximity to Whiteness and White people experienced by part-White multiracial people, and how does it differ from traditional forms of White privilege? First, I review various bodies of literature to address this question, and second, I draw upon examples from my research on racially mixed people with White ancestry in both the US and Britain. I argue that although many multiracial people benefit from their White ancestry (in a variety of ways), not enough attention has been given to the double-edged and negative aspects of Whiteness for multiracial people with White ancestry. Full article
21 pages, 300 KB  
Article
From Mortal Sins to Individual Pride: Transformations of Sexually Motivated Crimes in the Czech Lands from the Middle Ages to the Present
by Martin Slaboch and Petr Kokaisl
Genealogy 2025, 9(2), 40; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9020040 - 4 Apr 2025
Viewed by 3036
Abstract
The legal and social perception of sexually motivated crimes has undergone profound transformations in the Czech lands from the Middle Ages to the present. Acts once considered grave moral transgressions, punishable by death, have been gradually decriminalised or even integrated into the realm [...] Read more.
The legal and social perception of sexually motivated crimes has undergone profound transformations in the Czech lands from the Middle Ages to the present. Acts once considered grave moral transgressions, punishable by death, have been gradually decriminalised or even integrated into the realm of personal identity and cultural self-expression. This article examines the evolving legal frameworks and societal attitudes towards such offences, with a particular focus on their implications for family structures, inheritance rights, and genealogical continuity. By analysing historical judicial records—primarily early modern pitch books—alongside contemporary legislation, we highlight the shifting boundaries between crime, morality, and individual rights. Methodologically, this study combines a historical–legal analysis with comparative criminology to elucidate the changing regulatory mechanisms governing sexual behaviour. The findings illustrate that, while legal norms have progressively moved away from religious morality toward individual freedoms, some taboos persist, reflecting enduring social anxieties. The Czech case serves as a model for broader European trends, offering valuable insights into the interplay between law, social norms, and genealogical structures across different historical periods. Full article
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