Family research in Carrara, Toscana, Italy

Genealogy in Carrara

Region: Toscana   |   Province: Massa-Carrara
Coat of arms of Carrara

Tracing your Italian roots back to Carrara (in Massa-Carrara province, Toscana region) begins with understanding which records exist and where they are preserved. On this page you’ll find a clear guide to the civil, parish and historical sources available for genealogy in Carrara.

Carrara family history at a glance

  • Region: Toscana
  • Province: Massa-Carrara
  • Type of records: civil and parish records
  • Civil registration: from 1809 onwards
  • Parish records: often older than civil records (in some cases from the 1500s)

Genealogy in Carrara

If your ancestors came from Carrara, in Massa-Carrara province (Toscana region), the first step is to identify the local archives where records are kept. Most family history research starts from the civil registry office at the Comune and continues in parish and notary archives.

Where to begin your ancestry journey in Carrara

Vital records for people born, married or deceased in Carrara are usually preserved in:

  • Carrara City Hall archives: civil records (births, marriages, deaths) from 1866 onwards.Before (1808–1865), Civil Status registers are preserved in historical archives.
  • Carrara parish churches: in Toscana religious registers, which can often take your research back to the 1600s and sometimes as far as the 1500s.

Civil Records (Stato Civile) in Carrara

In towns and villages of Toscana and in Massa-Carrara province, as in Carrara, civil registration offices were established in the Napoleonic era around 1809, continued under the Grand Duchy until 1865, and then merged into the unified Italian Civil Status after national unification.
Thus, the earliest modern registers for Tuscany date from 1808–1865, while records after 1866 belong to the Italian Civil Status.This means you can often find your ancestors’ civil records in the Town Hall archives of Carrara from that year onwards.

(If your goal is to obtain Italian citizenship and you need official certificates from Carrara, please follow this link.)

If your ancestors lived in Carrara during the past centuries, the City Office of Carrara is usually the first place to start your family research. Our local expert can access these records on your behalf and interpret them correctly.

  • Professions: discover what your ancestors did for a living.
  • Addresses: find the street or house where the family lived in Carrara.
  • Family links: identify parents, witnesses and neighbours that appear in the records.
  • Signatures and notes: see how your ancestors signed and read any marginal annotations.

If you prefer to contact the Town Hall by yourself, we suggest reading our genealogy tips for Italy. They include practical advice for research in Toscana and specifically in Carrara.

Population trends in Carrara

The chart below shows the demographic trends in Carrara from the Italian Unification (1861). Understanding how many people lived in the town over time is useful when interpreting migration and family movements.

Population statistics for Carrara

Surnames in Carrara and Massa-Carrara province

It is important to know whether the surname you are researching is frequent in Carrara.

The more common the surname, the more challenging it can be to identify the correct family branch, especially if you do not have precise dates.

The following gives an overview of some common surnames in the province:

some of the most common surnames in Massa-Carrara province are:
Andreazzoli, Baldini, Bartolini, Berti, Bianchini, Bonotti, Galli, Giusti, Lombardi, Lorenzini, Mallegni, Martinelli, Mazzei, Nardini, Pieri, Poli, Ricci, Rossi, Tognini, Tonelli.

Church Records in Carrara

Church archives in Massa-Carrara province often preserve information that predates civil records. Parish registers include baptisms, marriages and burials and sometimes allow you to push your family tree back into the 1700s and 1600s.

In many areas of Toscana, parish registers began around the 1500s. These manuscripts are not easy to access from abroad and can be hard to read without specific training.

Our local genealogists, graduated in history and archival studies, can consult the parish archives of Carrara on your behalf and reconstruct your family history through the centuries.

In case you want to visit churches, these are the addresses of parishes active today in Carrara:

S. PIETRO APOSTOLO – Localita’ Avenza

S. NICOLO’ DA BARI – Fr.ne Fontia

S. GIOVANNI BOSCO – Loc. Battilana – Battilanino

S. GIACOMO MARTIRE E S. CRISTOFORO – Salita San Giacomo

S. GENESIO – Fr.ne Bedizzano

S. CECCARDO VESCOVO E MARTIRE – Fr.ne San Ceccardo

S. ANTONIO ABATE – Fr.ne Codena

S. ANDREA APOSTOLO – P.zza Duomo, 3

NATIVITA’ DI MARIA VERGINE E S. ANTONIO ABATE – Fr.ne Castelpoggio

NATIVITA’ DI MARIA SS. – Localita’ Nazzano – Nazzano

NATIVITA’ DI MARIA – Fr.ne Sorgnano

MARIA SS. MEDIATRICE – Localita’ Covetta – Covetta

MADONNA DI LORETO – Localita’ Melara – Melara

MADONNA DEL CAVATORE – Fr.ne San Luca

CUORE IMMACOLATO DI MARIA SS. – Localita’ Fossone

BAMBINO GESU’ – Localita’ Perticata – Perticata

S. ROCCO – Fr.ne Bergiola Foscalina

SACRA FAMIGLIA – P.zza Gino Menconi

SPIRITO SANTO – Fr.ne Miseglia

SS. ANNUNZIATA – Via Bassagrande

Family records

Notary records and other historical sources

Another important source of information is represented by notary documents, which preserve wills, dowries, property sales and contracts. These records are usually kept in provincial and State Archives and can provide valuable details on the social and economic life of your family.

Planning a visit to Carrara

From our experience, if you plan to visit Carrara we always recommend starting the research months before your arrival. This way you avoid spending your holidays in offices or churches dealing with bureaucracy.

Remember that archives are not open to the general public and officers or priests are not required by law to grant direct access to the records.

With the results collected by our genealogist before your trip, you will have more time to enjoy the town and its surroundings, walking in the footsteps of your ancestors.

Professional help for research in Carrara

If you need professional support from our local genealogist in the Carrara area, write to carrara@italianside.com or fill the form here. Our expert will study your request and reply with a research plan and a quote tailored to your family history.

Messages from other visitors in Carrara

Here below you can read messages from other visitors in the Carrara forum. If you simply want to discuss genealogy in Carrara with other people, feel free to leave a message.

7 comments on “Genealogy in Carrara”

  1. I am researching my great-grandparents from Avenza. The surnames are Ceccarelli and Del Padrone. However, I am wondering if Del Padrone was a real surname or the possessive of Padrone amidst the mezzadria system, or? Could it be that people with the Del Padrone surname also went in some public records by their actual biological family surname? Any insight, please? Thank you in advance.

  2. I was wondering if there are any Baccei’s in Carrara Italy? My grandfather’s parents were from there originally. My grandfather started a genealogy book he left for me to continue with, I wanted to know if there are any living relatives still there.

  3. My Grandfather (Eurico Fabrie) was born in Massa Carrara 20 June 1875 and was married to Josephine Deangeles. Would appreciate any help locating resources to help research the family tree including date of immigration, wedding date, siblings and parents. Also, derivation of the surname, find Fabrie and Fabbri used together in same family

  4. hello looking for the family of Guiseppa Cannoncini born abt 1834 in Carrara, Massa-Carrara, Toscana, Italy
    father Francis Anthony Cannoncini
    mother Angeline Anna
    she is my 2nd great grandmother
    finding her birth certificate would help me apply for Italian citizenship.
    thank you
    wade

    1. Hi Wade,

      Francis/Francisco Cannoncini is my GGG Grandfather. My grandmother (Irene Cannon Dahlberg) visited Carrara between the two World Wars but was unable to find any record for Francisco. Some family stories had his birthplace as Sicily, but it appears that he did spend time in Carrara working as a stone cutter.

  5. Mu ggandfather: Alcibiade Umberto Poli was born May 22,1874 in Massa Carrara. I’m looking for his parents and siblings, and the town where he was born. I believe he had a sister, Aneta(Anna) b. 1882 and married ?Baccei. He listed her as his contact person on his WWI registration card. I know her parents were Micele Poli and Isolina Fortini, but they may have been cousins, and not siblings. Alcibiade eventually went to Putignano and married Maria Polignano. They then came to NYC in the 1920’s.

  6. My grandfather Andrea Battista Moise was born in Carrara Oct 28 1886 would like to find out names of his mother and father and if he was and only child. Thankyou for any help you can give.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ITA ESP BRA

coat of arm
Carrara
Main Page


Certificates from
Carrara
for Italian Citizenship


What People Say About Us

Read real stories and feedback from people who trusted our services.

Visit the Testimonials Page

Useful Free Tools
Italian Surnames Database
Italian Names Database
Italian Towns Database
Old Names of Italian Towns



Carrara
Gift Shop


ItalianSide gift shop

Scroll to Top