People knew and still remember that we were the "noble ones" when we came across them.:D;)
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R1a1a*
I remember it as if it were yesterday....
I was waiting very impatiently, for weeks, for my results to be published. Checking my e-mailed every 20 minutes.
Then one day, I checked my inbox and saw an unopened email from 23andme. I was so excited. I felt like a child on Xmas morning.
So I rushed to open the email and followed the link to my 23andme home page, clicked on my paternal line page and couldn't believe my eyes. R1a1a!!! I was so surprised! I was quite pleased, to say the least. I was expecting R1b of course, but this R1a deal was just as good, perhaps even better!
Then I checked my maternal line and ancestry painting. Again, repeating a good deal of the process above. I felt.....blessed that day. :p
I1a, Vikings all day! :viking ship
N1c1 Finland , maybe some Swedes from the 15th century
via maternal male cousin
My Y-DNA haplogroup is R1a1a.
Maybe a passing Mod can put me among the pR1bileged few? Us Ancient tR1besmen of the West should stand and be counted among our brethren. :strokebeard:
My Y-DNA is I1. Not sure about the modal haplotype though. I1 Anglo-Saxon and I1 Ultra-Norse are ruled out so it´s some form of I1 Norse, either just I1 Norse or I1 Norse-Bothnia. :)
My haplogroup is R1b1b2a1a2d3*
My Y-DNA is R1b1b2a1a1* and I've traced it to Eastern England in the 1600's.
http://forums.skadi.net/photoplog/im..._me23andme.jpg
^ I also scored right in the middle of the German box. (or just under the small England box). I'm surprised how closely this matched my ancestry.
As in my signature, my Y-DNA haplogroup is R1b with the L21 mutation.
23andMe call it R1b1b2a1a2f*, but I've seen that FamilyTreeDNA and Y-search operates with another name.
R1b and waiting on my subclade test results. should be ready by no later than next week (i hope).
g2a5 from Kvaisi, South Ossetia.
R1a1a, from 23andme. I have traced this line to an Ivan Ivanovich back in 1791 in the Vyatka Region of Russia.
I am E1b1b (have not tested the subclade yet). I am 100% Sicilian.. Lenny says "•For those looking for a "Southern Italy is not fully European" weapon:◦[R1b+R1a+I] Frequency in Northern Italy - 69.5%
◦[R1b+R1a+I] Frequency in Central Italy - 56.5%
◦[R1b+R1a+I] Frequency in Southern Italy - 39%."
Europe is a diverse region, and really just amounts to a geographic mass, just as Asia & Africa. The reality is that everything in Genetics exists in Clines & so naturally if you define "European" as being descended from Paleolithic hunter-gatherers then call me a mixed European, but the reality is that everyone is mixed to some extent and we should be more tolerant of this and realize that most reality exists in the gray area of the spectrum.
E1b1b, specifically E1b1b1a2* [E-V13].
I2b1 (National Geographic Genographic Project)
my Y-DNA is R1b1b2a1a2f*
I was told it is called L21 which is common on the British Isles, France and Norther Spain. I am thinking mine is the Iberian version.
My y-DNA Haplogroup: J2a4b*
R1b1b2a1a2c.
I'm R1b1b2a1a2
E1b1b1a2* (E-V13)
I'm I1*. Apparently I have some odd STR markers so I'm not sure if I fall into the Norse or Anglo-Saxon groupings. I have no subclade home to call my own :(
I'm an R1b1b2a1a2f (R-L21). Honestly, I'm a bit surprised nobody else here shares my haplogroup. Based on my understanding, it's most common in Ireland, although my father's side identifies as German. I've heard people claim that R-L21 are Celts, although I've also seen this disputed. That said, my father looks like a prototypical Celt.
I just realized there are other L21s here. I haven't gone through this entire thread, and searching for my haplogroup yielded nothing, so I mistakenly assumed I was the only one here. :embarrassed
Don't know :(
I've convinced my Dad to get a 23andMe test, so I'll find out soon! I'm excited about it. :D
I'm currently waiting for the results.
I should know them after 11th of November ;D
The so called 'atlantic gene' dominates the male gene pool in the British Isles,with I1(a) subclass m-253 a distant second.
I live in the US and the tiresome use of anglo saxon white male is completely erroneous. In fact,most English men share the same Y chromosome as their Irish brothers. So much for the difference perceived between the two countries. There is very little genetic difference.
The mtdna which is primarily haplogroup H is the same when comparing Ireland and England.
I will say though that there is definitely an Irish 'look' which differentiates the two countries.
I posted too quickly because I also wanted to say that the anglo saxon influence,although immense culturally,etc certainly didn't change the genetic make up of the Isles.
R1a
http://img833.imageshack.us/img833/6553/mojahaplooo.jpg
R1a1a*. I haven't made an additional test for specific subclades.
My father & the fathers of my grandmothers are R1a which is the most common haplogroup in my home country. My maternal grandfather is R1b.
http://i607.photobucket.com/albums/t...ithuanians.jpg
E1b1b1* from Moldavia (non-slav and non-Turk)