1


Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 2,876/11 Given: 3,561/7 |
Just a 26.6% European individual
G25 "26.6% Austrian:Austria6 + 73.4% Romanian:G408" "0.0096"
EU TEST 86.9% RO + 13.1% West_&_Central_German @ 4.98
K13 56.9% Tu(ran)scan + 43.1% Ukrainian @ 4.02
Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 2,876/11 Given: 3,561/7 |
I have plenty of good things to say about our people. I do not like posts that throw away our Slavic ancestry nor do I like the ones that throw away our Thracian/Dacian/Vlach one. Both are clearly visible.
Now if there's another thing I don't like, that's Romanboos and bored ppl with Decebal avatars that subscribe to Slavic pages just to comment under Romanian posts *Romanians aren't Slavic*.
Delusion helps noone and I am extremely interested in seeing the evolution of our people across the times. Unfortunately Romanians have some of the poorest ancient samples and we need to revolve around some strange Scythian ones, BGR_IA, HRV_IA, STR_300, all of them preceding or barely showing proper ancestry to Romania.
I also have threads of how Romanians look in my opinion, you can check them in the Romania section. Nothing cherry-picked, no half blonde ppl, not half turkish ones, no football players.
Just a 26.6% European individual
G25 "26.6% Austrian:Austria6 + 73.4% Romanian:G408" "0.0096"
EU TEST 86.9% RO + 13.1% West_&_Central_German @ 4.98
K13 56.9% Tu(ran)scan + 43.1% Ukrainian @ 4.02
Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 2,876/11 Given: 3,561/7 |
I only checked the claim that "Poles, Ukrainians" have been in N. Moldova before Vlachs. Verifiably false if we think of Cucuteni culture, debatable in a more early-medieval way. Probably also false since Vlachs roamed around the mountains and Suceava is near, or at least they lived together. Signs of more intensive cultural relations with Ukrainians is clear though.
In terms of Aeduard, he's fine but overstates the impact of Romans.
Just a 26.6% European individual
G25 "26.6% Austrian:Austria6 + 73.4% Romanian:G408" "0.0096"
EU TEST 86.9% RO + 13.1% West_&_Central_German @ 4.98
K13 56.9% Tu(ran)scan + 43.1% Ukrainian @ 4.02
Thumbs Up/Down |
Received: 52,629/1,011 Given: 43,539/788 |
I PMed him.
PS, he is half from Krk, and half from this village in Senj municipality
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jablanac
So technically he is fully western Croat but actually population of Lika-Senj coast is of same origins as in Lika, they are more Balkanic than Croats from Krk (native Čakavians).
His village was settled by Bunjevac Croats.
Full autochthonous North Adriatic Croats should be closest to Slovenians.After liberating from the Turks in the mid-17th century, the authorities decided to repopulate the area, and Bunjevac Croats were elected as new settlers. They settled in several waves. The first wave of 1645 (from Jasenica and Pozrmanja) failed because the violent behavior of the Senj captain caused these settlers to continue on to Pag, Rab and the surroundings of Razanac and Vinjerac. In 1655, Bunjevci came from the vicinity of Obrovac, Zelengrad and Karin. Although the settlement was not completely successful, it encouraged the Bunjevci from Lič, Krmpot and Kriv Put to move to Podgorje, among others Jablanac.
There are currently 124 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 124 guests)
Bookmarks