Family #117 in the 1775 Grimm census.
Family #114 in the 1798 Grimm census.
Family #84 in the 1834 Grimm census.
He was born after the 1775 census was taken therefore is not included in that document. The 1834 census shows he was 41 years old in 1816, making his birth year 1775.
Head of the Household Johann Georg Muth, age 41 in 1816, deceased 1833
Wife Elisabeth Margaretha Muth, age 64
Child #1 Johann Adam Muth, age 25
Wife of Child #1 Katharina Elisabeth Muth, age 21
Grandchild #1 Johann Philipp Muth, age 1 year 6 months
Grandchild #2 Anna Margaretha Muth, age 6 weeks
Child #2 Kaspar Schäfer, age 25, step son of Johann Georg Muth, son of Elisabeth Margaretha Albrandt Muth and her first husband
Wife of Child #2 Anna Katharina Schäfer, age 29, step son's wife
Grandchild #1 Charlotta Schäfer, age 9 years 6 months, step son's daughter
Grandchild #2 Katharina Elisabeth Schäfer, age 5, step son's daughter
Grandchild #3 Elisabeth Schäfer, age 2, step son's daughter
Sources
↑The 1775 and 1798 Census of the German Colony on the Volga, Lesnoy Karamysh, also known as Grimm; Published by the American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA; Published date: 1995; family #117 in the 1775 Grimm census, Nikolaus Mud [Muth?] family.
↑The 1775 and 1798 Census of the German Colony on the Volga, Lesnoy Karamysh, also known as Grimm; Published by the American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA; Published date: 1995; family #114 in the 1798 Grimm census, Katharina Mud [Muth?] family.
↑1834 Census of Grimm in the District of Saratov, Russia, dated 2 February 1835; Translated by Brent Mai, Concordia University, Portland, Oregon; Published by Dynasty Publishing, Beaverton, OR, USA; Published 2011; page 27, family #84, Johann Georg Muth family.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Georg by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line.
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Georg: