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Caveat Emptor
12-05-2018, 09:43 AM
How many other haplogroups do you know of from your broader ancestry / family tree?

For example do you know what is the haplogroup of your father's mother etc? I know of the following haplogroups: R1a, R1b, I1, U5b, H, K2a5

Kelmendasi
12-05-2018, 01:32 PM
I have tested my maternal Ydna, so my maternal grandfathers haplogroup. They turned out to be E-V13>CTS5856* despite me predicting them to be J2b2-Y82533.

Coolguy1
12-05-2018, 03:34 PM
J2a-M319 and I2a2-M223

xripkan
12-05-2018, 04:33 PM
R-M269 from my grandmother's family. Does anyone know where it is originated from?

Caveat Emptor
12-11-2018, 09:33 PM
I have tested my maternal Ydna, so my maternal grandfathers haplogroup. They turned out to be E-V13>CTS5856* despite me predicting them to be J2b2-Y82533.

E1b is interesting for many of the historical reasons :D I was wondering whether I'd have an E somewhere in my family.


J2a-M319 and I2a2-M223

Nice


R-M269 from my grandmother's family. Does anyone know where it is originated from?

Interesting, it's related to indoeuropean migrations

xripkan
12-11-2018, 09:46 PM
Interesting, it's related to indoeuropean migrations

I searched in eupedia and I found this: Most of the R1b found in Greece today is of the Balkanic Z2103 variety. There is also a minority of Proto-Celtic S116/P312 and of Italic/Alpine Celtic S28/U152. Z2103 could have descended from Albania or Macedonia during the Dorian invasion (see below), thought to have happened in the 12th century BCE. The Dorian regions of classical Greece, where Doric dialects were spoken, were essentially the southern and eastern Peloponnese, Crete and Rhodes, which is also the part of Greece with the highest percentage of R1b-Z2103.

Mazik
12-25-2018, 07:30 AM
Yeah I have the Y-DNA of 28 lines in my family tree. The distribution looks like this:

https://s22.postimg.cc/wg4zr60sh/chart.png

I last updated it around 6 months ago, there night be more tested lines now.

Artek
12-25-2018, 03:07 PM
I didn't test that much but I have plans to test more lines, especially those belonging to Lesser Polish nobility. All lines tested so far are available in my signature.


R1a-Z282>Z280>CTS1211>Y35>CTS3402>Y33>CTS8816>Y2902>Y3226>YP5224>BY27800 modern Central Poland, historical northwestern Lesser Poland

N1c-L1026>CTS10760>VL29>Z4908>L550>L1025>M2783>Y5580>L591>BY158>Y5576 modern Eastern Poland, historical northwestern Red Ruthenia

R1a-Z282>Z280>CTS1211>YP1019>YP1020* modern Eastern Poland, historical northwestern Red Ruthenia

R1b-U152>L2>DF103>S14469 Prussian settlers Lower Silesia(?)


Interestingly, all of my "eastern" lines so far were Baltic-speaking at some point. N1c-Y5576 seems to be Samogitian whereas R1a-YP1020 has potentially a lot of relatives among Baltic people such as Latvians or Estonians (but also Northern Lithuanians).


Yeah I have the Y-DNA of 28 lines in my family tree. The distribution looks like this:

https://s22.postimg.cc/wg4zr60sh/chart.png

I last updated it around 6 months ago, there night be more tested lines now.

That's a huge sample for an individual, although some of my colleagues from R1a Project know 30+ haplogroups of their ancestors.
Interestingly, in sample from your known family percentage R1b is very low. Are these lines wholly from Northern Sweden?

Mazik
12-25-2018, 05:08 PM
That's a huge sample for an individual, although some of my colleagues from R1a Project know 30+ haplogroups of their ancestors.
Interestingly, in sample from your known family percentage R1b is very low. Are these lines wholly from Northern Sweden?

Yes, they are all from northern Sweden. And most of them from the region of the Bure family. Which explains the high G2a.