Results 1 to 8 of 8

Thread: R1b-M269 subclades in Poland

  1. #1
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"


    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Last Online
    Today @ 07:36 AM
    Location
    Pole position
    Ethnicity
    Polish
    Country
    Poland
    Y-DNA
    R1b
    mtDNA
    W6a
    Gender
    Posts
    21,462
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 20,923
    Given: 18,997

    8 Not allowed!

    Default R1b-M269 subclades in Poland

    My estimated (but based on few good sources) proportions of R1b subclades in Poland:

    R1b-M269 = 16,5%
    R-M269* = 0,4%
    L23(xL51) = 3,5%
    L23* = 1,0%
    Z2103 = 2,5%
    Z2103>Y5587>BY593 = 1,5%
    other Z2103>Y5587 = 0,5%
    other Z2103 = 0,5%
    L51(xL11) = 0,3%
    L11* = 0,3%
    P312 = 6,0%
    P312* = 0,3%
    U152 = 3,4%
    U152>L2>FGC8158 = 0,5%
    other U152>L2 = 2,0%
    other U152 = 0,9%
    DF27 = 1,3%
    DF27>Z196 = 1,0%
    other DF27 = 0,3%
    L21 = 1,0%
    U106 = 6,0%
    U106>L48 = 4,0%
    L48>L47>Y6451 = 0,5%
    other L48>L47 = 1,5%
    L48>Z9 = 1,5%
    other L48 = 0,5%
    other U106 = 2,0%

  2. #2
    New Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Last Online
    10-20-2019 @ 09:50 AM
    Ethnicity
    Hungarian
    Ancestry
    Hungary
    Country
    Hungary
    Y-DNA
    R1a1a1/M417 > P278.2
    mtDNA
    H1f
    Gender
    Posts
    4
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 4
    Given: 3

    2 Not allowed!

    Default

    this is quite interesting. I have just received the result from FTDNA that my grandfathers Y-haplogroup is R-BY593 (SNP-test, Z2103-SNP-pack, positive for the BY593-SNP but negative for SNP-Y14306). He was ethnic Hungarian, most likely from the northern part of the historial Hungary, so basically todays Slovakia, close to Poland. Where could I learn more about the origin and spread of BY593? Is it mainly in Polish people? Would it be meaningful to looking for surnames at this level?

  3. #3
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"


    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Last Online
    Today @ 07:36 AM
    Location
    Pole position
    Ethnicity
    Polish
    Country
    Poland
    Y-DNA
    R1b
    mtDNA
    W6a
    Gender
    Posts
    21,462
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 20,923
    Given: 18,997

    2 Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by andorp View Post
    this is quite interesting. I have just received the result from FTDNA that my grandfathers Y-haplogroup is R-BY593 (SNP-test, Z2103-SNP-pack, positive for the BY593-SNP but negative for SNP-Y14306). He was ethnic Hungarian, most likely from the northern part of the historial Hungary, so basically todays Slovakia, close to Poland. Where could I learn more about the origin and spread of BY593? Is it mainly in Polish people? Would it be meaningful to looking for surnames at this level?
    Z2103>Y5587>BY593 is generally common in East-Central and Eastern Europe, not just Polish.

  4. #4
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Last Online
    08-30-2020 @ 12:58 PM
    Ethnicity
    .*.
    Country
    Canada
    Y-DNA
    R1b>BY593
    mtDNA
    U5b2a2
    Gender
    Posts
    582
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 242
    Given: 883

    2 Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by andorp View Post
    this is quite interesting. I have just received the result from FTDNA that my grandfathers Y-haplogroup is R-BY593 (SNP-test, Z2103-SNP-pack, positive for the BY593-SNP but negative for SNP-Y14306). He was ethnic Hungarian, most likely from the northern part of the historial Hungary, so basically todays Slovakia, close to Poland. Where could I learn more about the origin and spread of BY593? Is it mainly in Polish people? Would it be meaningful to looking for surnames at this level?
    Y14306 is only found in Poland[so far]. BY-593 stretches from Sweden Poland Czech Hungary Ukraine Romania Russia. Hungary also has Yamnaya and Bell Beaker R1b. He might be related to Szigetszentmiklós Cemetery (Santa's Six Foot Elves)
    http://bellbeakerblogger.blogspot.co...antas-six.html


    9tnleXFKaD6PcA8K-Region.png

    https://www.persee.fr/doc/mom_2259-4..._act_58_1_3493
    Current R1b samples found in -Yamnaya-3300–2600 BC, Afanasievo-3300 BCE — 2500 BCE, Vucedol-3000 BC – 2200 BC, Catacomb-2800–2200 BC, Bell Beaker-2800–1800 BCE, Poltavka-2700—2100 BC, Scythian-9th century BC up until the 4th century AD, Sarmatian-4th, 3rd and 2nd centuries BCE....

  5. #5
    Banned
    Join Date
    Aug 2018
    Last Online
    04-15-2019 @ 10:26 PM
    Meta-Ethnicity
    indo-uralopean
    Ethnicity
    indo-uralopean
    Country
    Bermuda
    Gender
    Posts
    699
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 299
    Given: 125

    1 Not allowed!

    Default

    R1b-M269 Origins.


  6. #6
    New Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Last Online
    10-20-2019 @ 09:50 AM
    Ethnicity
    Hungarian
    Ancestry
    Hungary
    Country
    Hungary
    Y-DNA
    R1a1a1/M417 > P278.2
    mtDNA
    H1f
    Gender
    Posts
    4
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 4
    Given: 3

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    Thank you for the information. I looked at your blog, and the PDF, too. The essay about the Szigetszentmiklós Cemetery was a particularly intersting one, especially the coincidence that the Y-chromosome haplogroup in grave 688 was Z2103 and a possible scenario about the merge of the Yamanaya and Bell Beaker cultures.

    What could be the reason that a young clade such as BY-593, which was formed only ca. 2000 ybp became generally common in East-Central and Eastern Europe (according to information from Peterski) and so widespread geographically (Sweden Poland Czech Hungary Ukraine Romania Russia)?

    Correct me if I am wrong, but I understand that 2000 ybp (=year before present?) corresponds to 1 AD, which was not so many generations ago. Is it "normal" that one single male living around 1 AD can have so many direct descendants that they constitute 1,5% of Polish men? That would mean hundreds of thousands of men only in Poland. Can this be explained by the expansion of the population in Europe between 1 AD and present (i.e. the single living male in which the BY593 mutation first appeared constituted 1,5% of the males in the group that today populates Poland?

    (we have no data about the frequency of BY593 in other countries as far as I know it, that's why Poland)

  7. #7
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Last Online
    08-30-2020 @ 12:58 PM
    Ethnicity
    .*.
    Country
    Canada
    Y-DNA
    R1b>BY593
    mtDNA
    U5b2a2
    Gender
    Posts
    582
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 242
    Given: 883

    2 Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by andorp View Post
    Thank you for the information. I looked at your blog, and the PDF, too. The essay about the Szigetszentmiklós Cemetery was a particularly intersting one, especially the coincidence that the Y-chromosome haplogroup in grave 688 was Z2103 and a possible scenario about the merge of the Yamanaya and Bell Beaker cultures.

    What could be the reason that a young clade such as BY-593, which was formed only ca. 2000 ybp became generally common in East-Central and Eastern Europe (according to information from Peterski) and so widespread geographically (Sweden Poland Czech Hungary Ukraine Romania Russia)?

    Correct me if I am wrong, but I understand that 2000 ybp (=year before present?) corresponds to 1 AD, which was not so many generations ago. Is it "normal" that one single male living around 1 AD can have so many direct descendants that they constitute 1,5% of Polish men? That would mean hundreds of thousands of men only in Poland. Can this be explained by the expansion of the population in Europe between 1 AD and present (i.e. the single living male in which the BY593 mutation first appeared constituted 1,5% of the males in the group that today populates Poland?

    (we have no data about the frequency of BY593 in other countries as far as I know it, that's why Poland)
    Long time ago I speculated that R1b-BY593 might be connected with Sarmatians/ALANS.
    R1b in Jászság, Hungary
    https://www.familytreedna.com/public...frame=yresults
    R1b1a2a2c1 Z2105+, CTS9219+, Y5586+, Ossetians/Alans,
    https://www.familytreedna.com/public...frame=yresults

    Alegno is close to Trent[Sarmatian/Alan units drafted into Roman army to protect borders]
    https://www.theapricity.com/forum/at...4&d=1540335714
    http://www.marres.education/sarmatic_traces.htm


    http://homeland.ku.dk/

    4Nw30DOdp6QiXYKy-Region.png
    Last edited by ALL; 10-24-2018 at 10:39 PM.
    Current R1b samples found in -Yamnaya-3300–2600 BC, Afanasievo-3300 BCE — 2500 BCE, Vucedol-3000 BC – 2200 BC, Catacomb-2800–2200 BC, Bell Beaker-2800–1800 BCE, Poltavka-2700—2100 BC, Scythian-9th century BC up until the 4th century AD, Sarmatian-4th, 3rd and 2nd centuries BCE....

  8. #8
    Ascending Roy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2012
    Last Online
    Yesterday @ 09:58 PM
    Location
    Somewhere
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Slavic
    Ethnicity
    Polish
    Ancestry
    Polish and distant Ashkenazi Jewish.
    Country
    Poland
    Y-DNA
    E-V13 Shqiptar in disguise
    mtDNA
    U5a1a1 Hyperborean
    Taxonomy
    Moderately not ugly something
    Politics
    Social Liberalism - apparently.
    Hero
    Goofy
    Religion
    Agnostic
    Gender
    Posts
    28,706
    Blog Entries
    1
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 20,604
    Given: 48,333

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by andorp View Post
    Thank you for the information. I looked at your blog, and the PDF, too. The essay about the Szigetszentmiklós Cemetery was a particularly intersting one, especially the coincidence that the Y-chromosome haplogroup in grave 688 was Z2103 and a possible scenario about the merge of the Yamanaya and Bell Beaker cultures.

    What could be the reason that a young clade such as BY-593, which was formed only ca. 2000 ybp became generally common in East-Central and Eastern Europe (according to information from Peterski) and so widespread geographically (Sweden Poland Czech Hungary Ukraine Romania Russia)?

    Correct me if I am wrong, but I understand that 2000 ybp (=year before present?) corresponds to 1 AD, which was not so many generations ago. Is it "normal" that one single male living around 1 AD can have so many direct descendants that they constitute 1,5% of Polish men? That would mean hundreds of thousands of men only in Poland. Can this be explained by the expansion of the population in Europe between 1 AD and present (i.e. the single living male in which the BY593 mutation first appeared constituted 1,5% of the males in the group that today populates Poland?

    (we have no data about the frequency of BY593 in other countries as far as I know it, that's why Poland)
    Some blind luck or some chieftain having a lot of male off-spring and limiting other men from procreation for some time. It is really not that much, keep in mind that like 8% of males in the former Mongolian Empire and 24% of Mongolians are direct paternal line descendents of Ghenghis Khan after all. And it is much more recent history than this Polish clad.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 8
    Last Post: 12-04-2016, 01:38 PM
  2. Classify Poland's richest men
    By Grab the Gauge in forum Taxonomy
    Replies: 9
    Last Post: 12-04-2016, 02:15 AM
  3. Phenotypes in Czech and Poland?
    By cocoNN in forum Anthropology
    Replies: 8
    Last Post: 11-23-2016, 01:18 PM
  4. Haplogroup subclades
    By Henbane in forum Genetics
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 09-29-2016, 02:02 PM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •