Tamil ancestry • Mauritius

Research Tamil ancestry in Mauritius
without generic ancestry sites.

Tamil-first family history tools for Mauritius

TamizhConnect is built for Indian and Sri Lankan Tamils in Mauritius and across the global diaspora. Map your family, villages and migration story using tools that actually understand Tamil names, places and relationships.

No DNA kits, no confusing contracts. Just your family, your history, in your control.

A better fit for Tamil families

Why people switch from generic ancestry tools

  • Works with Tamil names, villages and scripts.
  • Connects branches in India, Sri Lanka, Mauritius and beyond.
  • Uses evidence-first genealogy workflows — no DNA required.
  • Private by default – you decide who sees what.

Made for Tamil families in Mauritius, the Gulf, Europe, Malaysia, Singapore and North America – not a generic ancestry clone.

Mauritius Tamil ancestry: what usually helps

  • Track older migration-era story fragments as hypotheses until verified.
  • Store multiple surnames/name forms when families shifted naming conventions over generations.
  • Preserve temple/community anchors as context (not proof) to guide further research.

Why generic ancestry tools don't work well for Tamils

Most genealogy sites were built around English names and Western records. If you're Tamil, you've probably hit at least one of these:

  • Names split differently on every form – initials, father's names, village names all mixed.
  • Villages missing, misspelt or merged into big city entries.
  • No idea how to record caste / clan / "oor" information without making things awkward.
  • Hard to show migration from villages to Gulf, Malaysia, Europe or back to India.

TamizhConnect is opinionated around how Tamil families actually work, so you're not constantly fighting the software.

What you can do with TamizhConnect

Build a Tamil-first family tree

Record names the way your family says them – Tamil script, English spelling, initials, pet names. Connect parents, siblings and in-laws the way they actually exist.

Find your native village and roots

Use Tamil-focused records (where legally available) to connect names to districts, taluks and villages. See how your family moved from village to town to abroad.

Map your global Tamil story

Show branches in Chennai, Jaffna, Mauritius, Toronto, Dubai and beyond on a single map. Useful for second-gen kids who only know “we're from somewhere near Madras”.

Share privately with family

Invite trusted relatives to add their side of the story, upload photos and correct spellings – without exposing everything publicly. You control who sees each person.

Where our data comes from

Behind TamizhConnect is origin-worker, our ingestion pipeline for Tamil-focused records. It pulls together publicly available data and the information you and your relatives choose to add. We don't buy or sell data, and we don't do DNA.

Electoral rolls & registers

origin-worker indexes publicly accessible electoral rolls and similar registers where this is legally permitted.

Exact coverage depends on what's published and allowed in each jurisdiction.

Government open data portals

For Tamil diaspora contexts, origin-worker can read open data from government portals where it helps with context and mapping.

Historical archives & collections

For deeper historical context, we may reference national archives and maritime collections as supporting context for Tamil migration and trade routes, not as person-level “match” databases.

Your family & uploaded records

The most important source is still your own family: conversations with elders, documents you upload, and corrections only your family knows.

TamizhConnect and origin-worker are not affiliated with or endorsed by any of these organisations. We reference publicly available records and open data to help Tamil families reconnect, while keeping your personal tree private by default.

How it works in 3 steps

  1. Create your free account

    Sign up with email or Google, set your base country, and create yourself as the first person.

  2. Add close family and key places

    Add parents, grandparents and siblings. Record birthplace, native village and current country for each person.

  3. Use evidence, not guesses

    Attach records/notes to support villages and relations. Keep “uncertain leads” as hypotheses until verified.

New to Tamil ancestry research?

These guides will help you think clearly about language, identity and where Tamil records actually live.

Explore pages tailored for Tamil families in other countries:

Ready to start researching Tamil ancestry?

Capture the real story while the older generation is still here to tell it — names, villages, and relationships in a structure your family can validate.