No that must all be a misunderstanding!
Therefore, when asked about what to dislike most about one's own country, Peterska answered: It's neighbors.
Printable View
I see the names of the German pops are still in English. Did you decide to leave them in English? Smitty was right saying that people unfamiliar with Germany won't know where Lower Saxony, Franconia, etc. are either.
Good.
I wonder why other Germans are not participating. I don't know too many of them. The OP never posts here, Kyp is mixed and apparently doesn't care much about German/European genetics (he identifies more with Turco-Muslim culture than whites). Teutone never cared about Gedmatch either. Armatus? I don't know if he's still around.
Would be nice to have Aynoora back, she was lovely and very interested in genetics :)
Euroogenes K13 PCA. Central East Prussia is from Braunsberg, she plots like extreme NW German with Baltic (old Prussian) admixture.
Target: German_East_Prussia_Central
Distance: 3.0671% / 3.06710522 | R2P
68.7 German_Frisian
31.3 Latvian
Missed this. Stop trolling.
A Lithuanian census carried out in the region in 1925 found its total population was 141,000. Declared language was used to classify the inhabitants, and on this basis 43.5 percent were German, 27.6 percent were Lithuanian, and 25.2 percent were "Klaipėdan" (Memelländisch).
The inhabitants of the area were not given a choice on the ballot whether they wanted to be part of the Lithuanian state or part of Germany. Since the pro-German political parties had an overall majority of more than 80% in all elections to the local parliament (see election statistics below) in the interwar period, there can be little doubt that such a referendum would have been in favour of Germany. In fact, the area had been united since the monastic state of the 13th century, and even many Lithuanian-speakers, regarding themselves as East Prussians, declared themselves as "Memellanders/Klaipėdiškiai" in the official census (see below for demographic information) and did not want to belong to a Lithuanian national state.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaip%C4%97da_Region
Yeah and she's very Germanic, although doesn't look like Judith Rakers.