Rodovid

Rodovid is a free online collaborative family tree portal. Originally a Ukrainian project, as of 2012 it had active communities in 25 languages.[3][4] It provides a web service built using MediaWiki and its own Rodovid Engine software to help store and visualize family relationships.[5][6]

Rodovid.org
Type of site
Family history
Available in22 languages
Created byJarosław Boychuk
URLrodovid.org
Alexa rank 127491 (February 2018)[1]
CommercialNo
RegistrationYes
Users12,634 in English localisation (August 2013)[2]
Launched20 May 2005 (2005-05-20)
Current statusActive
Content license
Creative Commons Attribution License

About the project

Rodovid was founded in September 2005 by a group of developers and genealogy enthusiasts in Kiev, Ukraine.[3] The name comes from the Ukrainian word rodovid, meaning "lineage" or "genealogy".[3] As of 2015, Rodovid had over 1,001,000 total records for individuals across all languages, including over 290,000 in Ukrainian and Russian, making it the second largest free genealogy service online, and the largest in any language other than English.[7][8][9]

In 2016, Rodovid is ranked #82 in "Top 100 Genealogy Websites of 2016" of GenealogyInTime Magazine.[10]

Data storage and export

It has experimented with supporting imports of GEDCOM files.[11] Its Engine software is proprietary, but there have been discussions of releasing it openly.[12] It supports layouts of family trees optimised for browsing and for printing, and claims it can generate trees of thousands of people in seconds.[13]

The Rodovid project's data and descriptions are stored on servers in Kiev, and available under the Creative Commons Attribution license where not already in the public domain. Its data is periodically archived by the WikiTeam project at the Internet Archive.[14]

gollark: Great, I'll set up teleports now.
gollark: I guess so, I have space.
gollark: Ah, 11, not 7.
gollark: I mean, exact to within a second or so, sure.
gollark: It turns out that my two things have times of death about seven seconds apart, so multiple people is probably good.

References

  1. "Rodovid.org Site Info". Alexa Internet. Retrieved 6 February 2018.
  2. "Statistics". Rodovid. Retrieved August 26, 2013.
  3. Rodovid website and Credits
  4. (in Ukrainian) Pravda Life article, September 30, 2009. Retrieved October 7, 2009
  5. Discussion about the engine
  6. Ancestry Magazine, June 2007, pg 53
  7. The Rodovid statistics page
  8. (in Russian) Russian Main Page
  9. "Collaborating on the Internet using a Wiki", Solveig Quass, Foundation for On-Line Genealogy
  10. www.genealogyintime.com
  11. GEDBot discussion
  12. Opening Source? FAQ
  13. Beagle portfolio page about the site.
  14. See the Archive.org repository. Last updated August, 2012. Retrieved April, 2013.
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