Family research in San Vito Romano, Lazio, Italy

Genealogy in San Vito Romano

Region: Lazio   |   Province: Roma
Coat of arms of San Vito Romano

Tracing your Italian roots back to San Vito Romano (in Roma province, Lazio 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 San Vito Romano.

San Vito Romano family history at a glance

  • Region: Lazio
  • Province: Roma
  • Type of records: civil and parish records
  • Civil registration: from the 19th century onwards (Papal States / post-unification)
  • Parish records: often older than civil records (in some cases from the 1600s)

Research experience on families in San Vito Romano

Over the years, ItalianSide has conducted genealogy research on historical families from San Vito Romano, involving many surnames traditionally found in the town, including branches of the following families: Testa, Troiani, Rossi, Ronci, Cianfriglia, Quaresima, Gentili, Denni, Sallusti, Tariciotti, Cinti, De Paolis, Maccaroni, Carrarini and others.

Many records relating to families and individuals are already stored in our databases and include, in addition to names and dates, further information such as occupations, residential addresses, and key family and social relationships within the San Vito Romano community in past centuries.
Part of the information used by ItalianSide in genealogy research derives from a proprietary archive of on-site research conducted over many years in San Vito Romano and by our experts. This archive includes studies, family trees, and data not available online, such as cross-referenced family relationships, occupational histories, deciphered or translated documents, residential patterns, and visual documentation.

Research activities may include all major sources available at municipal, provincial, and regional level:
• civil records
• parish registers
• notarial archives
• military records
• historical and photographic sources
Direct access to archives and a deep understanding of the local context allow for more complete and accurate results than research conducted remotely or based on partial sources alone. Research may be carried out using all available sources in both public and private archives.

Genealogy in San Vito Romano

If your ancestors came from San Vito Romano, in Roma province (Lazio 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 San Vito Romano

Vital records for people born, married or deceased in San Vito Romano are usually preserved in:

  • San Vito Romano City Hall archives: civil records (births, marriages, deaths) from 1809 onwards.
  • San Vito Romano parish churches: in Lazio religious registers, which can often take your research back to the 1600s and sometimes as far as the 1500s.

Civil Records (Stato Civile) in San Vito Romano

In the areas of Lazio that were part of the Papal States, including Roma province, civil registration offices were gradually established during the 19th century and after Italian unification. This means you can often find your ancestors’ civil records in the Town Hall archives of San Vito Romano starting from those years (the exact starting year can change from town to town).

This means you can often find your ancestors’ civil records in the Town Hall archives of San Vito Romano from that year onwards.

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

If your ancestors lived in San Vito Romano during the past centuries, the City Office of San Vito Romano 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 San Vito Romano.
  • 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.

Street names in San Vito Romano

The names of the street in San Vito Romano, can help identify ancestral addresses found in civil records, parish documents, and old family papers.

At today, some of the main streets in San Vito Romano are: VIALE PAOLO SESTO, VIA BORGO MARIO THEODOLI, VIA DELL’ARRINGO, VIA GUIDO BACCELLI, VIALE PIAVE, VIA REMIGIO DE PAOLIS, VIA SAN VITO, VIA DEL MONTE, VIALE GIOVANNI VENTITREESIMO, VIA SAN BIAGIO, VIA VITTORIO EMANUELE, VIA DELLE LOGGE, VIA DEI MARTIRI, VIA CASTELLANA, VICOLO DI VIA DELL’ARRINGO, VIA CARROZZA, VIA DANTE ALIGHIERI, VIALE TRENTO E TRIESTE, CONTRADA COLLEPICCOLO, VIA CASARINO and others.

If you want help to identify street names connected with your ancestors in San Vito Romano just follow the link below.


Search all street names in San Vito Romano

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 Lazio and specifically in San Vito Romano.

Population trends in San Vito Romano

The chart below shows the demographic trends in San Vito Romano 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 San Vito Romano

Church Records in San Vito Romano

Church archives in Roma 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 Lazio, 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 San Vito Romano 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 San Vito Romano:

S. MARIA DE ARCE – P.zza di S. Maria

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.

Historical and photographic sources available in private archives

Historical photographs, prints, and documents from private collections—including ItalianSide’s archive of vintage images from San Vito Romano and Lazio region are available. Old pictures add significant value to your family history research and offer a real sense of the places where your ancestors once lived.

old picture from San Vito Romano
An historical photo of San Vito Romano from ItalianSide pictures archive

Military records

Conscription lists and service records documenting physical descriptions, dates and places of enlistment, units and ranks held, periods of service, military postings, transfers, and movements, often providing detailed insight into an individual’s life beyond civil registration.

Cadastral and property records in San Vito Romano

Historical cadastral and land records used to identify property ownership, track real estate transfers over time, and confirm the historical presence of families within San Vito Romano. ItalianSide provides professional assistance in accessing and interpreting these records, where available.

Planning a visit to San Vito Romano

From our experience, if you plan to visit San Vito Romano 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 San Vito Romano

If you need professional support from our local genealogist in the San Vito Romano area, write to sanvitoromano@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 San Vito Romano

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

5 comments on “Genealogy in San Vito Romano”

  1. Surname of Gaetani. Grandfather, Serafino Augusto emigrated to US c. 1915 +/- Any records of relatives in San Vito?

  2. Greetings.

    From birth records, I have found out that my grandmother Eva Orlando (nee Tarisciotti) was born in San Vito Romano on September 16, 1886 in a house on Via Ma?ello Vecchio (Macello Vecchio?)

    On current maps of San Vito Romano, I do not find a street by that name. Would you be able to help me locate that street? Perhaps it has been renamed? I would love, some day, to travel there and find her birth place.

    Thank you.

  3. I am looking for information on Sabbia Rossi Her date of birth is 9-23-1885
    from SanVito Italy. Do you records go back that far?

  4. Hello, I have been searching the birth, death and marriage records of San Vito Romano. There are missing years in the birth and marriage records so I haven’t found my grandfather and his siblings birth records except two that I have found. My grandfather’s grandfather’s death record isn’t the same as the rest and refers to another record and doesn’t give his parent’s names and doesn’t list his wife who is alive and active in the community. She is a midwife.
    So my question is do you have access to the missing years?
    Also do you have access to the church records to get earlier records information?
    I have found quite a bit of info from the film but would love to find my missing family info and make connections where possible. ( There are 3 Gasbarra lines and would like to know if they are related to each other.)
    My line is Gasbarra and my grandfather is Luigi Gasbarra and his father is Angelo Gasbarra and his father is Lorenzo Gasbarra(with the different death record abt 31 July 1884, Morte #3 Part B) His wife’s name is Agata Ruggeri Gasbarra.
    Anyway I was wondering if you could help me?
    Thank You so much,
    Grazie Mille
    Pam

    1. Hi Pam! Recently started researching my dads Italian ancestry, we believe his great grandfathers name is a Cosma Gasbarra , possible birth year around 1872 – have you come across that name in your research? Looking forward to hearing from you!

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