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“The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new dark age.”
- H.P. Lovecraft



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All your images are gone, I would try imgur.com for hosting instead. They stay forever in my experience



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Bronze age and ancient:
Iron age:
Antiquity to middle ages (including Hunter Gatherer/Farmer):
Modern:
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Last edited by Zroota; 01-18-2023 at 12:07 PM. Reason: A more descriptive layout




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There is another thread about this floating around.
These are my results.
Bronze Age
Iron Age
Migration period
Middle Ages
Closest Modern Populations
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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".


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very cool results
mine were quite diverse:
European Farmer (6300–2800 BC)44.8%
Central Steppe (2100–1800 BC)40.0%
Canaanite (1800–1100 BC)11.2%
Northwest African (5200–4900 BC)4.0%
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Italic and Etruscan (900–200 BC)48.2%
Insular Celt (600 BC–AD 100)16.2%
Germanic (AD 100–600)12.4%
Egyptian (780–400 BC)9.0%
Berber (760–540 BC)7.4%
Iberian (700–50 BC)6.4%
Ancient Ancestral South Indian0.4%
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Roman Iberia (AD 260–500)34.6%
Roman Gaul (AD 130–500)22.4%
Roman Sardinia (AD 400–500)15.4%
Pict (AD 300–500)10.8%
Arabian Peninsula4.4%
Roman North Africa (AD 120–220)4.2%
Roman Illyria (AD 100–600)3.8%
Baltic (AD 260–540)1.8%
Khwarazm and Transoxiana (100 BC–AD 950)1.8%
Roman Italy (20 BC–AD 600)0.6%
Papuan (400–200 BC)0.2%
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Simplified
France (AD 130–1400)42.4%
Iberian (AD 300–1200)21.4%
Sardinian (AD 770–1000)13.0%
North African (AD 580–1160)6.2%
Insular Celt (AD 100–1000)6.0%
Germanic (AD 700–1000)3.8%
European Jew (AD 1160–1400)3.6%
Arabian Peninsula3.4%
Papuan (400–200 BC)0.2%




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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".


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“It is better to live one day as a lion than 100 years as a sheep.”


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