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True. I mean, the word "Copt" back in the day used to describe the native ethnic Egyptians. Now, it refers to the local Egyptian ethno-religious group. I have a Coptic friend here who's name is Oblivion, and her paternal family's Y-DNA is J1-P58 which belongs to the same clade as Arabians which suggests that there had been Arabs who had converted and assimilated to the Coptic faith back in the day. Remember, the Coptic church isn't a closed religion to outsiders as those found among Zoroastrians, Druze, Yazidis and etc, and people who convert to the Coptic faith become Coptic themselves.



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Three mummies are not well suited to study ancient Egypt as whole. However ancient Egypt was a mixed race society from the beginning.
My genetic results
1 50% Azeri_Dagestan +50% BedouinA @ 2.879975
One nation and one destiny






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I wish someone could reupload them or something. Such a shame that they had been deleted.


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I found this post in another forum and according to me he's right:
I am rather skeptical about these remains being of pure, unadulterated Ancient Egyptians. Abusir el-Meleq is indeed a Hyksos site, plus AFAIK there's no archeological or any other evidence pointing at a pre-Canaanite/Hyksos presence in Egypt of the Iran_Neolithic component which seems to be present in the three individuals.


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Yh, J1-YSC234 in these samples suggests Hyksos/Semitic input as the origin date of this clade is in line with the development of the first Semitic language in the Levant and can thus be linked with Semitic movements. Though the E1b1b guy could've been a native, i'm not sure
23andme: 100% Balkan https://www.theapricity.com/forum/sh...3andme-results
MyOrigins 2.0: 100% Southeast Europe
Geneplaza K25: 100% Greek-Albanian
Eurogenes K36 oracle: 50.64% Albania_North+ 49.36% Kosovo. Population distance: 1) 1.27 Northern Albania&Kosovo
Ydna: J1-ZS241
Maternal Ydna: E-V13>CTS5856*
The Albanians, these tigers of mountain wars ... have as their religion rebellion. Even their worst warrior is one of the strongest and bravest on the battle-field, just as if he was a knight on the legendary horse. But he has no horse, nor proper weapons for battle. Instead of the horse, he has a lance which strikes as lightning, he has spears who's points are full of posion as the sting of hornets, he has also a wooden bow with some arrows. Furthermore, he is stronger than iron ...
- Ibn Kemal, Historian of the Turkish court during Skanderbeg's war against the Turks.





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That subclade of J1 is 5,800 years old. The back migration to Africa from the Middle East was in its last stages during this time. Thats still before dynastic Egypt began and at the beginning of pre-dynastic Egypt. So that allowed plenty enough time for it to be a subclade found among ancient Egyptians.





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Abusir El Meleq is not a Hyksos site. It was an area home to Osiris cult followers, as the Shuenemann et al. 2017 study points out. I seriously doubt the Hyksos were in an Osiris cult. As for Iran Neolithic component, well there is no other genome-wide DNA test results of any Egyptian mummy ever, so I don’t see how that assumption could be made.
These type of folks are only skeptical because the results do not correlate to their desires. People with bias and agenda are often guilty of this. These results are from three different time periods showing continuity among time periods.
In addition to this, two other DNA studies were released, one in 2017 and the other in 2018, which reveals haplogroups from tested ancient Egyptian mummies from the 11th and 12th dynasties (both of these dynasties were before any foreigners, this includes Hyksos) All three of these mummies had West Eurasian derived haplogroups, including two of them had an African adapted West Eurasian haplogroup, meaning a subclade formed inside of Africa which signals evidence of the back migration population into Africa from West Eurasia. All three of these mummies from these two studies have their haplogroups and even subclade represented among the haplogroups of the Abusir mummies, including one of the genome-wide mummies that tested as a West Eurasian.
I wouldn’t buy into those hypothetical fantasies from folks whose feelings have been hurt by modern science.
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