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Haguenau
Schoenenbourg
Bavaria
Surbourg
Hoffen
Dornbirn
Wingen
Lembach
Bretten
Durrenbach
Eggerten (Swiss)
Nothweiler
Hochsal
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On my paternal side, my great-grandparents were either from Elsass or Lothringen (Alsace-Lorraine), but we don't know which. I have a tiny bit of German on my mom's side, but I don't know if my aunt knows exactly where our ancestor was from, and my late grandmother had a grunge against Germans from WWII, so she wasn't particularly thrilled about that.
Only butthurted clowns minuses my posts. -- Лиссиы
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dfgdf
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Wait, oops, I guess I was supposed to call it : Elsaß-Lothringen. I guess Alsatian is close to Swiss German and Baden-Wurtemberg and Lorraine is more Deutsch Franconian with via Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland. Maybe, Lorraine has been ethnically cleansed since WWII , though.
Many, British people are a quarter German and I don't simply mean traditional Saxon either but straight up German this is especially the case in Southern England.
Maybe, genetic tests might show some Northern German too it depends I guess. I know I have a German grandmother from Elsaß-Lothringen for a fact without needing to do genetic tests.
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Western, Central and Southern Germany according to 23andme.
Western/Southern going off their names and settlements.
Slavic (AD 540–1270) 64.0%
Baltic (AD 260–540) 21.2%
Germanic (AD 100–630) 7.6%
European Jew (AD 1160–1400) 6.0%
Sinitic (1230 BC–AD 1670) 1.2%
Fit: 2.626
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