Page 15 of 24 FirstFirst ... 5111213141516171819 ... LastLast
Results 141 to 150 of 236

Thread: New improved World Medieval G25 unscaled calculator

  1. #141
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"


    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Last Online
    Yesterday @ 07:51 PM
    Location
    Pole position
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Slavic
    Ethnicity
    Polish
    Country
    Poland
    Y-DNA
    R1b-BY194358
    mtDNA
    W6a
    Gender
    Posts
    24,487
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 23,661/743
    Given: 20,526/1,184

    0 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Grace O'Malley View Post
    Well there you go another example of the problems with labelling people Celtic or Germanic genetically.
    These problems are only with labeling modern populations. But ancient populations were less mixed.

    For example ancient inhabitants of the Netherlands were quite different than the modern Dutch:

    I4070 with R1b-U106 from North Holland, dated to 1900-1650 BCE, in Eurogenes K15 PCA:

    As you can see, modern Dutch average plots between Ancient Dutch I4070 and Ancient Brits:



    If I do my own G25 list I will add I4070 as one of Germanic samples (assuming that I4070 is in Global25):


  2. #142
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    Grace O'Malley's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Last Online
    @
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Gaelic
    Ethnicity
    Irish
    Ancestry
    Ireland
    Country
    Australia
    Gender
    Posts
    19,757
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 30,123/159
    Given: 35,294/35

    0 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Peterski View Post
    These problems are only with labeling modern populations. But ancient populations were less mixed.

    For example ancient inhabitants of the Netherlands were quite different than the modern Dutch:

    I4070 with R1b-U106 from North Holland, dated to 1900-1650 BCE, in Eurogenes K15 PCA:

    As you can see, modern Dutch average plots between Ancient Dutch I4070 and Ancient Brits:



    If I do my own G25 list I will add I4070 as one of Germanic samples (assuming that I4070 is in Global25):

    I plot where the Dutch are on that so that doesn't mean anything. There might be ancient Dutch that plot differently. I'm not disagreeing that ancient samples might be more pure or whatever else but they should be called what they are not using a label like Germanic which is a language group. Not all the ancient genomes from Germany are "Germanic". That's my whole point. You can't label pre-Germanic and pre-Celtic genomes as that. The Irish spoke a Celtic language up to the recent past but they are mostly of pre-Celtic genetics i.e. Bell Beaker. It remains to be seen if they actually do have any "Celtic" genomics. We don't know yet.
    The Irish Brigade's battle cry at Fontenoy, "Cuimhnigí ar Luimneach agus ar feall na Sasanaigh," translates to "Remember Limerick and the treachery of the English." After seeing the devastation caused by the Irish Brigade, the Duke of Cumberland reportedly remarked, "God curse the laws that made those men our enemies".


  3. #143
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"


    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Last Online
    Yesterday @ 07:51 PM
    Location
    Pole position
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Slavic
    Ethnicity
    Polish
    Country
    Poland
    Y-DNA
    R1b-BY194358
    mtDNA
    W6a
    Gender
    Posts
    24,487
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 23,661/743
    Given: 20,526/1,184

    1 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Were Bell Beakers Celtic?
    First / oldest Bell Beakers were probably neither Germanic nor Italic nor Celtic because they were older than these groups emerged.

    We could as well ask: were "Adam and Eve" Chinese, Germanic, Russian, Melanesian? No, they were too old to be any of those groups.

    However, I think that by 900 BC (LBA) there were Celtic languages spoken in Britain. That is just few centuries before Pytheas of Massalia visited Britain:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythea...ery_of_Britain

    No they weren't
    How do you know this for sure? Linguistics is not exact science and if you ask different linguists, they usually have contradictory theories.

    You can't label pre-Germanic and pre-Celtic genomes as that.
    I4070 is not "pre-Germanic", he has typically Germanic Y-DNA, clusters autosomally with Scandinavians, and spoke a Germanic language - or Proto-Germanic or "old Germanic", you name it. But it is generally agreed that North Holland was among the oldest areas of Germanic settlement. Unlike Britain.

    but they are mostly of pre-Celtic genetics i.e. Bell Beaker
    Celts evolved from Bell Beakers - Bell Beakers were ancestral to Celts.

    On the other hand, Germanic people also received Corded Ware input.

  4. #144
    Dinkum
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    J. Ketch's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2018
    Last Online
    @
    Meta-Ethnicity
    British
    Ethnicity
    Antipodean
    Ancestry
    English & Irish Midlands
    Country
    Australia
    Region
    Victoria
    Y-DNA
    R1b-DF109
    mtDNA
    K1a10
    Politics
    Diversity is our greatest weakness
    Hero
    Those who made a better world
    Gender
    Posts
    14,585
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 17,390/194
    Given: 8,212/117

    1 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Peterski View Post
    These problems are only with labeling modern populations. But ancient populations were less mixed.

    For example ancient inhabitants of the Netherlands were quite different than the modern Dutch:

    I4070 with R1b-U106 from North Holland, dated to 1900-1650 BCE, in Eurogenes K15 PCA:

    As you can see, modern Dutch average plots between Ancient Dutch I4070 and Ancient Brits:



    If I do my own G25 list I will add I4070 as one of Germanic samples (assuming that I4070 is in Global25):

    Call it Nordic, including it as Germanic would be simply incorrect.

    Like Grace said, I don’t understand the compulsion to equate everything with linguistic groups. That is the issue that people have with Celtic vs Germanic, not that they can’t be separated, but that nobody seems to agree what defines them.

    e.g., most of my Ancestors 2000 years ago were Celtic, but a minority of my ancestors were Celts, and I’m not Celtic at all (well very little).
    Spoiler!

  5. #145
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    Grace O'Malley's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Last Online
    @
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Gaelic
    Ethnicity
    Irish
    Ancestry
    Ireland
    Country
    Australia
    Gender
    Posts
    19,757
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 30,123/159
    Given: 35,294/35

    1 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Peterski View Post
    First / oldest Bell Beakers were probably neither Germanic nor Italic nor Celtic because they were older than these groups emerged.

    We could as well ask: were "Adam and Eve" Chinese, Germanic, Russian, Melanesian? No, they were too old to be any of those groups.

    However, I think that by 900 BC (LBA) there were Celtic languages spoken in Scotland. That is just few centuries before Pytheas of Massalia visited Britain:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythea...ery_of_Britain



    How do you know this for sure? Linguistics is not exact science and if you ask different linguists, they usually have contradictory theories.
    You know enough about genetics to know the answer. Even if populations spoke Celtic what does it mean genetically? That's what I've asked you previously about what does Celtic mean genetically? We have Hallstatt Celts but Irish and Scots don't cluster with them.
    The Irish Brigade's battle cry at Fontenoy, "Cuimhnigí ar Luimneach agus ar feall na Sasanaigh," translates to "Remember Limerick and the treachery of the English." After seeing the devastation caused by the Irish Brigade, the Duke of Cumberland reportedly remarked, "God curse the laws that made those men our enemies".


  6. #146
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"


    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Last Online
    Yesterday @ 07:51 PM
    Location
    Pole position
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Slavic
    Ethnicity
    Polish
    Country
    Poland
    Y-DNA
    R1b-BY194358
    mtDNA
    W6a
    Gender
    Posts
    24,487
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 23,661/743
    Given: 20,526/1,184

    0 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by J. Ketch View Post
    Call it Nordic, including it as Germanic would be simply incorrect.
    I'm of the opinion that Germanic ethnogenesis was in the Nordic Bronze Age culture, so for me Nordic and Germanic is the same.

  7. #147
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"


    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Last Online
    Yesterday @ 07:51 PM
    Location
    Pole position
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Slavic
    Ethnicity
    Polish
    Country
    Poland
    Y-DNA
    R1b-BY194358
    mtDNA
    W6a
    Gender
    Posts
    24,487
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 23,661/743
    Given: 20,526/1,184

    0 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Grace O'Malley View Post
    Even if populations spoke Celtic what does it mean genetically?
    At some point in time there was a population of Proto-Celts and that population later migrated in various directions, giving rise to different Celtic populations.

    We have Hallstatt Celts but Irish and Scots don't cluster with them.
    They were from Hallstatt Bylany - which was but one sub-branch of the Hallstat culture, probably mixed with local people similar to Bronze Age Hungarians.

    Also those were Late Hallstatt samples, we don't heavy Early Hallstatt yet. And it is also unlikely that the Celtic ethnogenesis took place in Hallstatt culture.

    Just like it is unlikely that Proto-Indo-Europeans were the Yamnaya. Yamnaya was only one sub-branch of Indo-Europeans, descended from something else.

    Sredny Stog II for example was also an Indo-European culture.

    don't cluster with them.
    DA111 and DA112 - the two Hallstatt Bylany samples - don't even cluster with each other. They have quite different results.

    And DA111 is genetically intermediate between modern Irish and modern French. So it could be partially ancestral to both groups.

  8. #148
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"


    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Last Online
    Yesterday @ 07:51 PM
    Location
    Pole position
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Slavic
    Ethnicity
    Polish
    Country
    Poland
    Y-DNA
    R1b-BY194358
    mtDNA
    W6a
    Gender
    Posts
    24,487
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 23,661/743
    Given: 20,526/1,184

    1 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    I don't believe that Hallstatt were Proto-Celts just like I don't believe that Yamnaya were Proto-Indo-Europeans.

    Hallstatt was one of early Celtic cultures, but not the oldest one and not Proto-Celtic (not ancestral to old Celts).

    Yamnaya was also one of early subdivisions of Indo-Europeans, but not THE oldest culture ancestral to all IE groups.

    Some branches of Indo-Europeans - such as Proto-Anatolians - split from the rest before the emergence of Yamna.

    And Satem languages are descended from Sredny Stog (culture older than Yamnaya) which gave rise to Corded Ware.

  9. #149
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"

    Grace O'Malley's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Last Online
    @
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Gaelic
    Ethnicity
    Irish
    Ancestry
    Ireland
    Country
    Australia
    Gender
    Posts
    19,757
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 30,123/159
    Given: 35,294/35

    0 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Peterski View Post
    At some point in time there was a population of Proto-Celts and that population later migrated in various directions, giving rise to different Celtic populations.



    They were from Hallstatt Bylany - which was but one sub-branch of the Hallstat culture, probably mixed with local people similar to Bronze Age Hungarians.

    Also those were Late Hallstatt samples, we don't heavy Early Hallstatt yet. And it is also unlikely that the Celtic ethnogenesis took place in Hallstatt culture.

    Just like it is unlikely that Proto-Indo-Europeans were the Yamnaya. Yamnaya was only one sub-branch of Indo-Europeans, descended from something else.

    Sredny Stog II for example was also an Indo-European culture.



    DA111 and DA112 - the two Hallstatt Bylany samples - don't even cluster with each other. They have quite different results.

    And DA111 is genetically intermediate between modern Irish and modern French. So it could be partially ancestral to both groups.
    Obviously then there needs to be more samples but people like the Irish are similar to other Northwestern Europeans so either the Celts are like the Irish or Irish are not just Celtic. Either way labelling ancient genomes by later language groupings is problematic.
    The Irish Brigade's battle cry at Fontenoy, "Cuimhnigí ar Luimneach agus ar feall na Sasanaigh," translates to "Remember Limerick and the treachery of the English." After seeing the devastation caused by the Irish Brigade, the Duke of Cumberland reportedly remarked, "God curse the laws that made those men our enemies".


  10. #150
    Veteran Member
    Apricity Funding Member
    "Friend of Apricity"


    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Last Online
    Yesterday @ 07:51 PM
    Location
    Pole position
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Slavic
    Ethnicity
    Polish
    Country
    Poland
    Y-DNA
    R1b-BY194358
    mtDNA
    W6a
    Gender
    Posts
    24,487
    Thumbs Up/Down
    Received: 23,661/743
    Given: 20,526/1,184

    0 Not allowed! Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Grace O'Malley View Post
    Obviously then there needs to be more samples but people like the Irish are similar to other Northwestern Europeans
    Northern French are similar to the Irish too.

    And wait for the study called "Genetic history of France", which will show that before the Roman conquest also Central France was like modern Northern France.

    Recent study about the genetic history of Iberia showed, that modern Iberians are heavily mixed with Italians who migrated there during Roman rules.

    The same conclusion will be reached about France, except Northern France which remained untouched by Roman/Italian settlers.

    BTW, I suppose that there was also a migration of Iberians (maybe already Romanized Iberians) to Southern/Central France during Roman times.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. ph2ter's IA-Roman-Medieval European Calculator
    By Kaspias in forum Autosomal DNA
    Replies: 93
    Last Post: 06-21-2023, 08:07 PM
  2. updated new K15 World calculator
    By Hadouken in forum Autosomal DNA
    Replies: 58
    Last Post: 12-06-2017, 09:44 AM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •