The information on the maps and graphs of this atlas has mainly been derived from digitised historical and contemporary databases containing causes of death. Information on both aggregated and individual-level data was used. Additionally, information has been derived from the civil registers of birth and death of the studied cities.
On the infographic below, you can find a timeline that shows which periodes are covered by which datasets. More information about each source can be found below the infographic.
From 1851 onwards, every Belgian municipality was required to keep a register in which the presumed cause of death was recorded for each deceased person. This system was introduced following the cholera epidemics of the 1840s and provided, for the first time, a detailed picture of the population’s health. In cities, a physician usually determined the cause of death, but in many villages this task fell to family members or neighbours, resulting in a wide range of descriptions—often vague or imprecise—being added to the registers. Because there was initially no uniform list of diseases, many terms were difficult to compare. With the introduction of an official Belgian nomenclature in 1867 and the later adoption of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) in the early 20th century, the quality of the registration improved significantly.
From the 1930s onwards, Belgium gradually shifted to confidential, anonymous cause-of-death forms: first in East Flanders (1930) and subsequently in all provinces by 1954. This transition marked the end of the traditional registers.
For privacy reasons, most of the historical causes-of-death registers were destroyed over time. However, a small number of municipalities have preserved (parts of) their series. The longest uninterrupted sequence is found in the city of Antwerp (1820–1946). The Antwerp data have been made accessible through the S.O.S. Antwerp database. In other municipalities as wel, such as Châtelet (1867–…) and Zele (1852–1920), the surviving register data have been compiled into scientific databases.
The Mouvement de la Population et de l’État civil is a series of annual statistics that provide detailed information on population trends in Belgium. Alongside the censuses, it forms the second pillar of historical population statistics. The registers begin in 1841 and run until 1976. They contain basic statistics on births, deaths, marriages, divorces, migration and, from 1852 onwards, causes of death. These data were compiled by local authorities on pre-printed forms and forwarded to the central government via the districts and provinces.
The digitized images and inventories of the registers can be consulted on the website of the Belgian State Archives.
A selection of data derived from this source is also available in the HISSTER database of the Quetelet Center.
For policy purposes, the Belgian central government organized general population censuses at regular intervals from the early 19th century onwards. For every inhabitant of the country, a range of basic information was collected and recorded, including name, age, marital status, place of birth, occupation, and education.
Between 1800 and 2001, nineteen general censuses were conducted on Belgian territory: in 1801, 1816, 1830, 1846, 1856, 1866, 1876, 1880, 1890, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1947, 1961, 1970, 1981, 1991, and 2001. The 2001 census, known as the Socio-Economic Survey, was the last of its kind.
Since 2011, population censuses have been based solely on administrative databases, without new direct surveys of all residents.
The results of the censuses from 1801 to 1970 that are available at the municipal level have largely been compiled in the LOKSTAT database of the Quetelet Center.
S.O.S. Antwerp is the name of a database containing information on all individuals who died within the city of Antwerp between 1820 and 1946. It includes basic data on more than 480,000 persons, with detailed information on each death (cause, date, place, institution, attending physician, undertaker) and each deceased individual (age, marital status, occupation, place of birth, residence).
The S.O.S. Antwerp database is the result of the citizen science project S.O.S. Antwerp: Social Inequality in Mortality, 1820–1946, a collaboration between Ghent University, the University of Antwerp, the Felix Archives, and Histories vzw. During this project (2020–2025), 761 volunteers transcribed all death cause registers of the city under the supervision of researchers from the Quetelet Center.
The data can be consulted via the website of the website of the Antwerp Felix Archives.
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ICD10h, and other resources used for the creation?
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