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In reply to the discussion: Want to be a Canadian? It's never been easier. [View all]pat_k
(13,437 posts)10. Countries that provide multigenerational pathways
Here's what AI (Gemini) had to say on the subject.
Take with whatever grains of salt you apply to all AI.
Several countries, particularly in Europe, offer citizenship by descent extending beyond one generation (grandparents or further), often through jus sanguinis (right of blood) rules. Key nations with generous, potentially multi-generational pathways include Italy, Poland, Hungary, Ireland, and Armenia, allowing descendants to claim citizenship if they can prove an uninterrupted lineage.
Countries with No Generational Limits (or very broad pathways):
Countries Offering Multi-Generational Pathways (2nd-3rd Gen+):
Important Notes:
Disclaimer
Countries with No Generational Limits (or very broad pathways):
Italy: Provides citizenship to descendants of Italian citizens without a limit on generations, provided the ancestor was alive and a citizen after 1861.
Poland: Allows citizenship through grandparents or great-grandparents, provided they left Poland after 1919 and maintained an "unbroken chain".
Hungary: Allows descendants with Hungarian ancestors (parents or grandparents) to claim citizenship, often without a limit on generations, provided they can prove ancestry and demonstrate basic language skills.
Armenia: Citizenship can be granted to those of Armenian descent with few restrictions.
Countries Offering Multi-Generational Pathways (2nd-3rd Gen+):
Ireland: Citizens can pass down citizenship if they have an Irish-born grandparent, or in some cases, via the Foreign Birth Registration.
Germany: If a parent was eligible, you may be as well; it often allows tracing back to grandparents, including restitution for those stripped of citizenship historically.
Spain: Allows grandchildren of Spanish-born citizens to apply under specific laws (such as the 2022 "Grandchildren's Law" ).
Slovakia: Allows for third-generation descent claims.
Croatia: Provides pathways for grandchildren of Croatian citizens who emigrated before 1991.
Portugal/Greece/Romania: Offer descent-based pathways that may extend to grandparents.
Important Notes:
Documentation: These claims require proving citizenship with documents (birth, marriage, death records) of ancestors.
Chain of Citizenship: Many countries, especially Poland and Italy, require that the chain of citizenship was not interrupted (e.g., the ancestor did not naturalize as a citizen of a different country before the next generation was born, or did so at a specific time).
Restrictions: Some countries, like Italy, have considered reforms to tighten these rules, making it essential to act quickly.
Disclaimer
Citizenship laws are subject to change. Always check the official website of the country's embassy or consulate for the most current information.
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I wish the UK were as lenient. My grandmother was born in Liverpool but that's not good enough for me.
PSPS
20 hrs ago
#1
Dang! I actually qualify for UK (father born in London). My partner qualified for an Irish passport via Grandparent.
pat_k
19 hrs ago
#8
Three of my husband's grandparents were born in Mexico, but he is not eligibile.
LeftInTX
19 hrs ago
#6
The Italy information is outdated. They tightened their restrictions to a parent or grandparent and there are
chowder66
13 hrs ago
#15
Both of my maternal grandparents came from Poland, but in 1912. My grandmother was 15
Rhiannon12866
12 hrs ago
#19
Matty Cash, fullback for Aston Villa FC, was born in the UK but has played on the Polish National Team
OnlinePoker
18 hrs ago
#13
This is cool! I'm Canadian/American or will soon be (in however many years it takes me to do this).
chowder66
13 hrs ago
#16
I wish I could qualify for the UK. I do have a 1st cousin there - she's there through marriage but we do
chowder66
11 hrs ago
#22
Unfortunately I'm screwed as I don't have any qualifying relatives not to , mention no money to escape even if I did.
cstanleytech
13 hrs ago
#18