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These with the Polish first names are very likely Poles, yes. But they are not the testtaker and do not have that pedigree. You don't know their pedigree. They may descend from such an autochtone just 1/4 or not even, but hail from nearby Kashubia, where lilkely were also some surnames like in Eastern Farther Pomerania.
I'm not sure why you do introduce speculations about some individuals that are not even tested.
Target: rothaer_scaled
Distance: 1.0091% / 0.01009085
39.8 (Balto-)Slavic
39.0 Germanic
19.2 Celtic-like
1.8 Graeco-Roman
0.2 Finnic-like




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Only as a response to "accusation" that my new nickname is from Germany.
Today this surname does not exist east of Słupsk County, only there. So I don't think it existed among Kashubs from West Prussia.
BTW, Kashubia and Eastern Farther Pomerania are not mutually exclusive terms.
The region known as Kashubia wasn't limited just to north-western part of West Prussia, it also included eastern parts of Pommern.
Dr J. Mordawski, "Geography of Kashubia" (2018), published by Zrzeszenie Kaszubsko-Pomorskie, has a map with Kashubia borders.
This map is even on the cover of this book (also Mordawski's "Atlas of history of Pomorze & its inhabitants: Kashubs" has this map):
^^^
You might want to disagree with this, but this is what scholars (such as Dr Jan Mordawski) consider as Kashubia.
Kashubians themselves (and their Zrzeszenie Kaszubsko-Pomorskie) also agree with such borders of Kashubia.




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BTW have you seen this thread, "Regions of Pomerania and Prussia according to German 1858 book"?:
https://www.theapricity.com/forum/sh...rman-1858-book
List of regions - https://i.imgur.com/WSqnSDd.png
^^^
Apart from regions listed in this 1858 book, I also marked here Kashubia, with a yellow checkerboard:
https://i.imgur.com/TI2wq7e.png


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There are 122 hits in Germany vs. 16 in Poland. For what it's worth.
http://geogen.stoepel.net/?q=piotraschke




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But in 1890 most lived in what is today Poland: https://nvk.genealogy.net/map/1890:Piotraschke
It is an obvious Kashub surname, because these areas were Kashub-speaking well into the 1800s:
Kashubian / Wendish, whatever you prefer.
According to Georg Hassel there were 65,000 Wenden und Kassuben in Provinz Pommern in 1817-1819.
That was 1/10 of all inhabitants of Pommern. And of course in eastern counties the % was much higher.
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Edit:
Comparison of 1890 distribution vs. 1996 distribution in Germany:
https://nvk.genealogy.net/map/1890:P...96:Piotraschke
Last edited by Peterski; 01-21-2022 at 03:29 PM.




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^^^ That area where Piotraschke family lived in 1890, was over 75% Kashubian just 90 years prior (about 1800):
https://i.imgur.com/Ef4gnWV.png - map
And was still strongly Kashub in 1892, according to Stefan Ramułt (who travelled there and visited many villages):
https://i.imgur.com/9W9rFj6.png - map
![]()


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