The word 'genealogy' is one of the oldest scholarly terms in European languages, reflecting humanity's deep and persistent interest in knowing who begot whom. Greek 'genealogia' combined 'genea' (generation, family, race) with '-logia' (study of, account of), from 'logos' (word, reason, account). The literal meaning is 'an account of generations' or 'the study of family descent.'
The Greek 'genea' derives from 'genos' (race, kind, offspring), itself from PIE *ǵenh₁- (to give birth, to beget). This makes genealogy, etymologically, 'the study of begetting' — the systematic tracing of who brought whom into the world. The word's PIE root connects it to the vast family that includes 'gene,' 'genetics,' 'genesis,' 'generate,' 'genus,' 'nation,' 'nature,' 'native,' and dozens more.
Genealogy as a practice far predates the word. The earliest known genealogies are Sumerian king lists dating to approximately 2100 BCE. The Hebrew Bible contains extensive genealogies, most notably the 'toledot' (generations) passages in Genesis and the genealogy of Jesus in Matthew's Gospel. These ancient genealogies served multiple purposes: establishing
The word entered English around 1225 through Old French 'genealogie,' from Late Latin 'geneālogia.' In medieval English usage, genealogy was primarily an aristocratic concern — establishing noble descent, proving claims to inheritance, and documenting the legitimacy of royal lines. The Domesday Book (1086), the Heralds' Visitations (sixteenth to seventeenth centuries), and the elaborate pedigrees of the College of Arms all represent institutional expressions of genealogical practice in England.
The democratization of genealogy in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries has transformed the word's associations. Where it once connoted aristocratic lineage and heraldic display, 'genealogy' now refers primarily to popular family history research. The founding of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' genealogical program (now FamilySearch), the digitization of census records and vital statistics, and the emergence of DNA-based ancestry testing (23andMe, AncestryDNA) have made genealogy accessible to millions. Consumer DNA testing has added a biological dimension: genetic
The common misspelling 'geneology' — substituting '-eology' for '-ealogy' — is one of the most frequent spelling errors in English. It arises from analogy with words like 'geology' and 'theology,' where '-ology' is the standard combining form. But 'genealogy' preserves the Greek 'genea' (generation) intact, requiring the '-ealogy' spelling. The persistence of this misspelling is itself a small lesson in folk