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This one comes with an essay.
# Population Percent 1 Baltic 33.52 2 North_Atlantic 21.99 3 West_Med 14.77 4 East_Med 11.99 5 West_Asian 11.31 6 Red_Sea 2.49 7 Siberian 2.23 8 East_Asian 1.04 9 South_Asian 0.5 10 Oceanian 0.16
Single Population Sharing:
# Population (source) Distance 1 Moldavian 3.47 2 Croatian 6.74 3 Serbian 8.11 4 Romanian 10.13 5 Hungarian 10.31 6 Bulgarian 11.46 7 Ukrainian_Lviv 11.48 8 Ukrainian 12.88 9 South_Polish 13.11 10 Austrian 14.62 11 East_German 15.15 12 Southwest_Russian 15.41 13 Ukrainian_Belgorod 15.47 14 Polish 16.26 15 Russian_Smolensk 17.57 16 Tatar 18.03 17 Estonian_Polish 18.21 18 Belorussian 18.98 19 Kargopol_Russian 19 20 Erzya 19.81
Mixed Mode Population Sharing:
# Primary Population (source) Secondary Population (source) Distance 1 95.1% Moldavian + 4.9% Georgian_Jewish @ 2.57 2 95.2% Moldavian + 4.8% Assyrian @ 2.63 3 95.5% Moldavian + 4.5% Kurdish_Jewish @ 2.65 4 78.5% Ukrainian_Lviv + 21.5% Cyprian @ 2.65 5 63.8% Bulgarian + 36.2% Erzya @ 2.67 6 95.5% Moldavian + 4.5% Iranian_Jewish @ 2.68 7 95.4% Moldavian + 4.6% Armenian @ 2.7 8 94.4% Moldavian + 5.6% Turkish @ 2.71 9 95.6% Moldavian + 4.4% Lebanese_Christian @ 2.71 10 94.9% Moldavian + 5.1% Azeri @ 2.73 11 95.9% Moldavian + 4.1% Abhkasian @ 2.73 12 66.8% Romanian + 33.2% Erzya @ 2.74 13 95.4% Moldavian + 4.6% Iranian @ 2.74 14 95.4% Moldavian + 4.6% Kurdish @ 2.75 15 94.4% Moldavian + 5.6% Kumyk @ 2.75 16 95.7% Moldavian + 4.3% Samaritan @ 2.75 17 94.6% Moldavian + 5.4% Kabardin @ 2.76 18 95.7% Moldavian + 4.3% Georgian @ 2.76 19 94.9% Moldavian + 5.1% Adygei @ 2.76 20 94.9% Moldavian + 5.1% Balkar @ 2.77




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Wallachia had several official names, all used at the same time, including Țeara Rumānească, Vlachia, Vallahia, Ungrovlahia, Transalpina. The official name in Romanian has always been Țara Rumānească, but it needs to be said that the replacement of OCS with Romanian in administration was a slow process, accelerated only by the arrival of the printing press, which allowed Romanian translation and printing of the Bible, and with it education in Romanian.
But it's clear that Țara Rumānească has been in use for a long time, since the very first document in written in Romanian (an official document btw) names Wallachia as Țeara Rumānească. Oldest Wallachian chronicles written in Romanian also use the term Țeara Rumānească.





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The article explains that they are from Northern Bukovina, which is now Ukraine, Bukovina. It was historically part of northern Moldova but it was absorbed by the Austro-Hungarian empire. The area was inhabited by mostly Ukrainians and Romanians, but I've seen some ethnic maps from the late 19th century and the delimitation in terms of majority was visible, although they did mix. Poles were also present but not that much.
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





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Greetings I'm interested in the Romanian_Botosani. It is based on how many samples? What can you tell about it, I see many samples from ex-Yugoslavia are close to it, is it because is more Slavic shifted than other Romanian samples?


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So no Tara Romaneasca as you insisted, but Tara Rumaneasca. There is a massive difference between ruman and the roman. Roman being a fabricated ethnonym that entered popular use in the second half of the 19 century. You would be shocked travelling in time and realizing what being ruman meant. Calling yourself ruman meant asking to be whipped and put to work in the fields.
Yeah, they had no idea how to call their country. It was Tara Rumaneasca or Tara Munteneasca - Muntenia or Tara Basarabeasca - Basarabia or Ungrovlahia or Valahia or Transalpina and several other names. Moldova on the other hand was Moldova and still is despite the efforts of Romanians to erase its name.
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