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| Received: 2,928/25 Given: 512/0 |
Ofc not goys, it's very Southern/Balkan/Roman
WGS now says I'm E-L241 > E-Y251806 > E-BY5635
Bro:
Target: Slovakia_Roman_IA:CGG021935__AD_236__Cov_67.93%
Distance: 1.5342% / 0.01534191 | R3P
67.2 Montenegro_MLBA
18.4 Montenegro_Doclea_Roman.SG
14.4 Israel_PPNB
Target: Slovakia_Roman_IA:CGG021935__AD_236__Cov_67.93%
Distance: 2.0057% / 0.02005711 | R3P
52.0 Albanian_North_Macedonia
44.8 French_Corsica
3.2 Saudi
0.018 m = 92% Croat_Dalmatia + 8% Slovakia_Roman_IA:CGG021935__AD_236__Cov_67.93%





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R1b-M269>Z2103>Z2108>CTS9219>BY611>Z2705>Y32147>Y126039
Some of the ancient Macedonian samples from royal tombs of Vergina are R1b-Z2103 and their Paeonian and Dardanian neighbors were as well
There is a chance this was the haplogroup of many warrior kings of the Balkans
Skanderbeg Justinian Constantine Alexander the Great Belisarius


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I opened a new chat with OpenAI and shared with it my ancestral path: J-M304>M172>M410>CTS7683>L26>PF5088>...>Z28598>FT135488>Y36180>BY82631>Y95647>FTC5373
Perfect — that screenshot shows your exact paternal (Y-DNA) lineage from deep prehistory down to your personal terminal branch. I’ll decode what each major stage of your path actually means in real-world history and geography.
Your path:
J-M304 → J-M172 → J-M410 → CTS7683 → L26 → PF5088 → Z28598 → FT135488 → Y36180 → BY82631 → Y95647 → FTC5373
Let’s walk this from ancient to recent.
1. J-M304
�� Origin: Upper Paleolithic Near East (~45,000–30,000 years ago)
This is the root of all J haplogroups. This lineage formed among:
Early West Eurasian hunter-gatherers
Somewhere in the Near East / South Кавказ / Iran–Levant corridor
This already places your deep paternal origin firmly in West Asia, not Europe.
2. J-M172 (J2)
�� Neolithic Farmers (~12,000–9,000 BCE)
This is the big one for civilization history.
J-M172 is strongly associated with:
Neolithic farming expansion
Early:
Anatolians
Levantines
Zagros populations
This is one of the primary Y-DNA lineages that carried agriculture into Europe.
3. J-M410 (J2a)
��️ Core Mediterranean Civilization Line
This branch dominates among:
Ancient Greeks
Phoenicians
Romans
Anatolians
Coastal Levant
Southern Italy
This is the main “Mediterranean civilization” Y-DNA lineage.
4. J-L26
�� Aegean–Anatolian–Levantine Expansion
This branch explodes during:
Bronze Age Aegean
Mycenaean & Minoan world
Phoenician sea trade
Your line is now firmly inside the eastern Mediterranean network.
5. J-PF5088
⚓ Eastern Mediterranean Coastal Spread
Common in:
Greece
Southern Italy
Cyprus
Coastal Anatolia
Levant
This is a mariner / trader–heavy distribution.
6. J-Z28598
��️ Roman Imperial Diffusion Layer
This branch shows up repeatedly in:
Roman Italy
Roman Gaul
Roman Britain
Balkan provinces
This is where your paternal line likely enters Western Europe.
7. J-FTC5373
�� Your Specific Family Line (Medieval–Post-Roman Europe)
This is your personal modern branch. Based on the ancient matches you’ve shown earlier (Rome, Levant BA, Nubia, medieval Germany, etc.), your direct paternal history very likely follows this pattern:
Levant / Anatolia → Aegean → Italy → Roman Gaul → Northern Europe / Britain
Which fits perfectly with:
Your qpAdm “southern proxy” behavior
Your G25 Roman-province alignment
Your strongly NW European autosomal profile today
My paternal line comes from Belgium
That actually fits your Y-DNA story perfectly—and it tightens the historical interpretation in a very clean way.
If your documented paternal line is from Belgium, then the most parsimonious explanation for your Y-DNA (J-FTC5373 → J2a) is:
Eastern Mediterranean J2a → Roman Italy → Roman Gaul/Belgica → Medieval Belgium → Modern Northwest Europe (you)
This is one of the classic, well-documented diffusion paths for J2a into Northwestern Europe.
1. Why Belgium is one of the best possible landing zones for J2a
Roman-era Belgium wasn’t “backwater Europe.” It was:
The province of Gallia Belgica
Heavily settled by:
Roman soldiers
Administrators
Merchants
Craftsmen
With direct migration from:
Italy
The Aegean
The eastern Mediterranean
J2a is:
Extremely common in Roman Italy
Well-attested in Gallo-Roman burials
Rare in pre-Roman Celtic males
So when you see J2a in Belgium, the default assumption is:
Roman or post-Roman Mediterranean male line absorbed into a local Belgic / Gallo-Roman population.


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On cladefinder, I get I-S17250 and on FTDNA I have I-Y3548.


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G-L1266


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J-Y3612 is our common ancestor, 1974 BCE
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R1b





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