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It shows a blank map no heat, maybe they do not have my surname in their database
I googled in serbo-croatian and found croatian sources
https://actacroatica.com/hr/surname/Plemi%C4%87/
But my surname is serbian, i think it is more common in serbia then anywhere else though... but it exists in croatians and bosnians too apparently
The Roma spirit, free and strong, In every heartbeat, in every song.
Through fields and forests, roads unplanned, They roam the world, a nomad band. Beautiful women, heroic men, In the Roma, life’s magic begins again.
"The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly. I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep." (John 10:10-11)
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Paternal grandfather
Paternal grandmother
Maternal grandfather
Maternal grandmother
23andMe 73.9% Eastern European 12.1% French & German 5.2% Greek & Balkan 0.2% Ashkenazi Jewish
My Ancestry
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Last edited by Melkiirs; 12-23-2023 at 03:23 AM.
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My paternal last name in English. It's in 1500-1600
In polish language
In German language
https://www.yfull.com/tree/E-BY7449/
E-V22 - E-BY7449 - E-BY7566 - E-FT155550
According to oral family tradition E-FT155550 comes from a deserter of Napoleon's troops (1808-1813) who stayed in Spain and changed his surname.
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I would say in case of surnames with specific letters for their own alphabet it's the best to check for surname sites of each separate country, but I guess it may be hard to find
On the one from OP my surname was count without specific letters so it only counted migrants instaed of local people, it worked out better for the Czech version of surname since it had only standard Latin letters
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The inconsistency arouse from the transliteration of Yiddish to Latin script. I found several with the spelling Seliubsky from Radun, Belarus around where my paternal line has recent connection to so that is probably the most accurate spelling. Schlubsky would be a more German influenced transliteration.
Edit:
It is actually toponymic originating from present day Vselyub, Belarus which Yiddish name was Shelub/Seliub/Silev:
https://groups.jewishgen.org/g/main/message/10492
Last edited by Melkiirs; 12-23-2023 at 05:27 AM.
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2023
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