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Assyrian deportations affected mainly the heartland(the area between modern day Mosul and Arbil basically), and most likely mostly Nineveh which was sacked and destroyed. Assyrians today probably descend from the smaller settlements around the plains of Northern Iraq.
Most of the deportees came btw from the south, probably Babylonians. Few came from the Aramean lands in the western part of the empire.
Roads and Mass Deportations in the Neo-Assyrian Empire (David Danzig 2011)
Where did they become a majority? In the Assyrian heartland? Ofc not. In Imperial Assyria overall? Myabe since the Neo-Assyrian empire conquered the Levant and beyond. But even then they were hardly in majority, considering at it's height Assyria included Babylon and Hittie areas, aswell as Egypt.Whether Aramaic became the most spoken language as a result of deportations or something else isn't very important. I just mentioned that to show how they became a numerical majority. The point is they demographically overwhelmed the Assyrians in Assyria and this is what led to the language replacement.
So there's agreement that Aramaeans outnumbered Assyrians in Assyria? What happened to them after they outnumbered Assyrians? Did they assimilate into Assyrians or get killed off/deported out of Assyria? If they assimilated (after outnumbering Assyrians), this implies that Assyrians have more Aramean ancestry than ancient Assyrian ancestry.
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