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As somebody of Western Scottish heritage, all I can say to that is thank God!! I'm rather of the opinion at this point that Europe is like a huge tribe with close clans clustering genetically together. It's nice to feel like you're a part of something bigger than yourself, you know?
The Anglo-Saxon invasion is nowadays thought to be more of a cultural change than a genetic change. In even the most highly occupied areas the average Englishman carries at most 20% of the DNA from the invaders. There's a thin topsoil of Germanic DNA on the bedrock of Celtic Briton DNA to loosely paraphrase a quote from geneticist Bryan Sykes.
The indigenous ancestral NW European peoples are all very closely related though.



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The English in general (not just the south-east) have about 45 to 50% German/Scandinavian type DNA but the Welsh and Scots have similar amounts as well, so the problem is trying to work out how much of the Germanic stuff was already in the Celtic/Roman Britons before the AngloSaxons and Vikings came. But the two most recent studies both estimated a contribution of around 25% from post-Roman invaders/immigrants. That seems a reasonable guess to me, taking into consideration the change in language and culture during the Dark Age.
I've posted this map a few times but you might have missed it: http://i657.photobucket.com/albums/u...pswv58tnlo.jpg




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They do but that's not the point. Groups like Franks/Saxons/Frisians etc and Celtic groups in British Isles/Ireland were probably genetically quite similar and had same/similar sources. That's one of the main reasons why NW Europeans are still genetically very close to each other on these maps.
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