How Japanese Am I Really | Checking my DNA Test Results

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
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    In this professional genealogist reacts I watch "How Japanese am I really? | Checking my DNA Test Results O__O" by Max D. Capo
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Комментарии • 78

  • @nicolelittrell2937
    @nicolelittrell2937 2 года назад +24

    I am so glad you always talk about centimorgans. I had a relative that came up as a first cousin on 23 and me. I contacted them and his father was adopted so I was a bit confused for a minute. Then my brain came back to you talking about the companies doing their best to guesstimate using centimorgan amounts as to how people are related. So I went to my ancestry to see how many centimorgans my children shared with my husband's half brother and I had the realization that this was my nephew! Son to a half brother I had never met!!! Yay so happy!! I have done Ancestry, 23 and me, and transferred my results to Heritage in attempt to find my half brother and while I didn't find him. I found his son!!! Hopefully to meet sometime in the next few months! So thanks for helping me think outside of the box and find my nephew :)

  • @brianlewis5692
    @brianlewis5692 2 года назад +38

    Northern Japan with Ancestry really means what we would think of as simply 'Japan'. They split Japan into 2 regions, "Southern" which is the Ryukyus (Okinawa, etc.) and "mainland" Japan, which it designates as "Northern Japan". It does not mean 'Hokkaido', which the youtuber alludes to when he says 'Ainu' - I've explained this to him already on his site. He mispelt 'Yayoi'

    • @calebrw
      @calebrw 2 года назад +2

      On Ancestry currently (post Sept. 2021 update), there are two groups within Japan: "Hiroshima, Yamaguchi, Fukuoka, OIta & Kumamoto" and "Okinawa". Ancestry must no longer differentiate between Northern and Southern Japan. Presusablably you're either marked as Japan, or within one or both of the two communities.

    • @JANN-JAPAN
      @JANN-JAPAN 2 года назад

      If that’s the case, why the dashed outline on the map that didn’t correspond to what is mainland Japan?

  • @barghast
    @barghast 2 года назад +8

    Love the Useful Charts partnership 🥰 it's a great history channel. This was a fun video! You have a good analogy saying these tests are like a pixelated image of your family tree

  • @AllenWalker15735
    @AllenWalker15735 2 года назад +41

    The Mistyping of the Yayoi People into Yaoi People is Super Funny to me.

    • @emilieg4336
      @emilieg4336 2 года назад +2

      I'm glad I'm not the only one 😅. Yaoi means something VERY different 😂

    • @nonenone9338
      @nonenone9338 2 года назад

      Boy love people 🤣

  • @Dotz_Sumimasen
    @Dotz_Sumimasen 2 года назад +6

    I wonder if this Max would consider being part of your RUclipsr Family Tree series. 🤔

  • @curtisyeomans1333
    @curtisyeomans1333 2 года назад +5

    There has been an update as you were saying, and I am of mixed heritage, and Originally had 28% Mainland Japan, and 22% Southern Japan (Ryukyu Origins) - Now , as of Sept 2021, I have been updated to 11% Mainland Japan, and 39% Southern Japan (Ryukyuan Origins). I am familiar with Max D. Capo and his Vlogs, and He is from North Carolina and resides in Japan. Love your work, thanks for your Info!!

    • @kstudios6767
      @kstudios6767 2 года назад

      May I ask which DNA test did you take?

    • @curtisyeomans1333
      @curtisyeomans1333 9 месяцев назад

      Recent update as of Aug 2023... I am now roughly 46% Southern Japan (Ryukyuan) and 4% Mainland Japanese .

  • @LAHIBRIDA13
    @LAHIBRIDA13 2 года назад +3

    i watch usefulcharts every now and then. Its a cool channel

  • @thomasspicer4130
    @thomasspicer4130 2 года назад +7

    He is clearly heavily European before I even start I’d imagine he’s half Northern European half Japanese.

  • @erikagholston6610
    @erikagholston6610 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for breaking down his results.

  • @vickiibendit943
    @vickiibendit943 2 года назад +5

    Yeah - I’ve been trying to figure out how I’m .5% Nigerian. I was talking to my oldest surviving cousin on one side and he told me an old family story he remembers. First of all, my mother is a change of life baby. Her closest sibling was 14 years older than she was. This cousin is her nephew who is a year older than she was. My grandparents were born in 1894 (grandfather) and 1896 (grandmother). Anyway, he said that according to the story around 1750 our ancestor came from Ireland with his brother and sister as indentured servants. They were sold separately even though they were supposed to be kept together. He was 18, his brother 16, and his sister 12. He was given his freedom two years later when he saved the lives of his owner and his entire family. According to the family story the house caught fire in the middle of the night and he ran inside (he slept in the barn) and pulled everyone out. He was given land and money in gratitude for his actions. He farmed and earned more money, then found his brother and purchased his indentured papers and they looked for their sister. Even though it was against all laws, the man who purchased the sister’s papers used her to breed light skinned slaves. When they found her, she had 3 children with light skin. They tried to purchase her papers, but the owner refused. She wasn’t yet 21, and her children were considered slaves, and his property, because their fathers were slaves. The story goes that they ended up killing the man, who didn’t have any children, stole their sister and her children, and went back to Maryland where the older brother owned land. He never married, and the sister died along the way back to Maryland (he said suicide was whispered because she’d never be able to marry having been used essentially like a brood mare). He raised her three children as his own, even stated they were his. They evidently were able to pass as white, and the oldest son is who we’re descended from. He served as an aide de camp to General Washington. So! Mystery solved, I think.

    • @MariaRoza2011
      @MariaRoza2011 2 года назад

      Do you look mixed?

    • @mikkibarker8671
      @mikkibarker8671 2 года назад

      Well technically if the 2 Nd great grandmother was Irish, the kids, even with aa Black father would have been free. I can see why the house caught o. Fire. Interesting.

    • @JANN-JAPAN
      @JANN-JAPAN 2 года назад +1

      @@mikkibarker8671 I think that you’re not understanding this correctly. The house that burned down was the house where the eldest brother was an indentured servant. No connection to where the sister lived.

    • @vickiibendit943
      @vickiibendit943 2 года назад +1

      @@MariaRoza2011 nope! I’m extremely pale skinned, my eyes are an extremely pale blue, and my hair was dark blond, and now stark white. My oldest son is a platinum blond with my eyes, my middle child was a strawberry blond with green eyes, and my daughter has dark blond hair and her dad’s brown eyes. I’m also 7% Native American. Those Irish and English peasant genes are strong in this one! LOL wish I could post a pic of me on England. You can see my jeans, cane, and hoodie but my hair and face blend into the white stone I’m standing in front of. LOL. I have a friend who calls me the whitest white woman she’s ever known. I’m so pale I have had doctors test me for anemia based on how little color I have. Nope. I’m 68 and only take a pill for asthma. That’s it. One doctor told me I was the closest he’s ever seen to being an albino without actually being an albino. Sigh. All three of my kids are extremely pale completed also - well my daughter does tan. My son and my late son have never tanned. The three of us wear what my late son used to refer to as “industrial strength” sunscreen. And my ex husband has a very swarthy complexion. Like I said - good Irish and English peasant genes rule our genetics.

    • @vickiibendit943
      @vickiibendit943 2 года назад +1

      @@JANN-JAPAN right. The children of indentured servants were automatically indentured until they were 21 unless a parent was a slave. Children of slaves were automatically registered as slaves.

  • @alyssadiceflipper5201
    @alyssadiceflipper5201 2 года назад +2

    I would say his family stayed mostly in Hokkaido. Back in the day, people did not move around or explore. Having some Korean DNA might be a ancestor who fought a war 200 years ago in Korea.

  • @Chaotic_Pixie
    @Chaotic_Pixie 2 года назад +4

    The Latvian may also be attributed to his Italian forefather. I forget which famous 'Italian' chef is actually genetically Hungarian (if I'm remembering correctly)... but apparently it was really common to just be like, yup, I'm Italian/Sicilian/etc now depending on who was in power in whatever region of Italy at any given point in history.

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat5733 2 года назад +3

    The posters are great!
    Get one, go get them all!
    Wish I had the whole.... collection on my wall!
    😄👍😍 Really!
    They are an amazing treasure! How do you connect with these charts Genea Vlogger?
    Enjoyed his video too! Just guessing that Bali, Jakarta? , Sicily instead of Italy and some other place in Asia is missing in his results. Cool guy! He reminds me though of someone amongst the Navajo People. Small world. 🌍🌎

  • @Chaotic_Pixie
    @Chaotic_Pixie 2 года назад +6

    I'm constantly pointing out the pronunciation thing to people in baby name enthusiast groups. I know someone named Hannah who studied abroad and now lives in France. She responds to 'Anna" as easily as she would respond to Hannah here in the US because French doesn't have an H the way English has an H. It just drives me absolutely batty bonkers when people have hysterical fits over their kid's name being pronounced differently, especially when there may be multiple correct ways to say it in just one language, particularly American English.
    Side note: My surname has 3 acceptable US pronunciations. Also, if anyone ever sees this and is or knows someone with my surname who is living in Croatia or Germany... I'd love to know how they say it. (It's a French surname but we are most definitely culturally a German family.

  • @MercyAlwyz23
    @MercyAlwyz23 2 года назад +2

    That’s awesome if he’s of the original people of Japan.

  • @Blessings.429
    @Blessings.429 2 года назад +1

    Wow, I am amazed and as you say so much information. Fantastic

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat5733 2 года назад +1

    As far as your commission goes... Win win is great for us too and I knew what you meant as that comes with a casual sense of humor and fearless communication. Words.

  • @tammystratford7079
    @tammystratford7079 2 года назад +3

    Imagine my surprise when my Scottish heritage became British, German, East Asian. I'm so white! My breakdown shows Gujarati Indian, Toscani and Japanese, too! Huh.

  • @Opinionated-By54nder
    @Opinionated-By54nder 2 года назад +4

    Northern japanese "ainu" ( which are part to an extent of the Siberian gene pool, I believe) by historical means are "actual japanese", plus the natives of the various islands they posses... most of japanese are a combination of northern Chinese plus southern korean immigrants plus the northern Japanese.... I am writing this from historical records I read, I'm an Israeli... so i might be wrong

  • @MikeJones-mf2fw
    @MikeJones-mf2fw 2 года назад +1

    The northern part of Japan held the populations of the original hunter gatherers of Japan before the Japanese migrations from the mainland. The mitochondrial test would probably show that he's from the older population of Japan

  • @karmagal78
    @karmagal78 2 года назад +1

    I have found out that there are a few different ways of pronouncing a great great grandfather’s surname. Depending on if the member of the family was born during France ownership of the Alsace-Lorraine region or the Germany ownership. I’ve seen the surname a few different ways (and misspelled a few different ways on census records). Buchel/Büchel/Buçhel/Buschel are just a few different ways. Also 2 different ways to pronounce an ancestral surname. Grone: 1 way is to pronounce the e on the end the long way (like Lee). The other way is to pronounce it with a very strong G (almost giving it a K sound) and sounding like the word groan.

  • @rosrychaplet
    @rosrychaplet 2 года назад +1

    i honestly thought you were checking your dna for asian ancestry. thanks for the response video to his.

  • @cmndrkool321
    @cmndrkool321 Год назад

    My DNA had Baltic DNA, and had the dotted line for Central Lithuania, which is correct. They also had one for Southern Poland. The new update is pretty spot on for me.

  • @chinamiw
    @chinamiw 2 года назад +1

    I just checked my Ancestry map to see if there were any updates to it. I'm 50% Southern Japanese Islands and pretty much all of Japan except Hokkaido is circled with a dotted one. It does mention that my region is Okinawa, which is accurate, but interesting that so much of Japan is circled.

  • @elizabethelias1005
    @elizabethelias1005 2 года назад

    I love Useful Charts. I bought their book last year!

  • @sassytoonsball-ruck58
    @sassytoonsball-ruck58 2 года назад

    Useful Charts- ✅✅ going to check them also

  • @Mantolwen
    @Mantolwen 2 года назад +1

    He said his dad was part Irish and part German. I would imagine a lot of that Irish ancestry has English mixed in.

  • @nasiibkheyr8946
    @nasiibkheyr8946 2 года назад +5

    1:01 I am going to say 50% full Japanese

  • @caitlincooper8351
    @caitlincooper8351 2 года назад

    The shared ancestors and thrulines helped me build a tree for my paternal grandmother's side. She was my only non-New Orleanian grandparent and died really young, so I didn't know anything.

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat5733 2 года назад

    I have met Latvian Americans, Serbian Americans and descendants of Polish Americans who have an Asian appearance, especially when they smile, which is a picture of
    joy. This young man looks like he could be a cousin of a great Navajo RUclipsr. Do any companies have a wealth of information about USA/First Nation Indigenous DNA? To know where their 'Adams and Eves' originated, would be amazing.

  • @bonitagringo9903
    @bonitagringo9903 Год назад +1

    Most Japanese doesn’t have that much other Asian.. ryukyu and Ainu have common roots which is Jomon which is Europe Asian that’s why they are taller and have Facial hair .. yayoi is Asian Koran and Chinese.. most Japanese have kida northern Russian face

  • @furturisticfrontierfilms
    @furturisticfrontierfilms 2 года назад +1

    Species: Human, Home Planet: Earth, Galaxy: the Milky Way

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat5733 2 года назад

    Oh my, your Useful Charts wake the🐉Envy Dragon🐉, which usually doesn't wake up for anything here. What a treasure. 🎇🎆👑📿🎸🥁💍💎📀💰🌊

  • @Elke_KB
    @Elke_KB 2 года назад +1

    I'm curious as to which part of Germany and Poland his ancestors came from as that could help explain some of his ethnicity results. His Polish community is the same as mine and I'm German. However, my dad was from Koenigsberg (family identified as German), so I have Baltic in my ethnicity mix, my sister has Baltic and Eastern Europe, in addition to our germanic, and everyone I know with East German roots has some Baltic/Eastern Europe. Most people think of Germans as just germanic, but in reality, those from the east would have some Baltic or Eastern Europe, Bavarians some French or NW Europe and the Hannoverian or northwest regions some Scandinavian. Of course, postwar and post reunification the eastern groups were blended into the west. Many people visualize Germany and Poland by todays borders, but to understand the ethnicity results you need to look at the old maps of the kingdoms, separate from Germany or Poland as we know them today. What a lot of people fail to realize is how culturally diverse the region was prior to the 20th century and we can't segregate all our ancestors into neat little countries.

  • @shaunl5400
    @shaunl5400 2 года назад +1

    I would guess the England and Northwestern Europe is mostly English/British. People often don't have good knowledge of colonial ancestors origins due to it being so far back, and those people just being thought of as "American".

    • @tassia1954
      @tassia1954 2 года назад

      Northwestern people are mostly English?How about Spanish Bascs French Celtic and Roman ?

  • @KimHelm
    @KimHelm 2 года назад +1

    I liked this vid prob because he showed something different like the maps.

  • @tysonl.taylor-gerstner1558
    @tysonl.taylor-gerstner1558 2 года назад

    Jorthern Japan is the mainly the Island of Hokkaido, but people from the long Island also settled in the North, and there were efforts to "civilize" the natives of Hokkaido. Intermarriage being one of the "civilization" factors.
    People also forget that the Anglo-Saxons were also "Germanic" The modern British are essentially German-Celts with other things mixed in there!

  • @JANN-JAPAN
    @JANN-JAPAN 2 года назад +3

    As I was listening to this, I was thinking the “northern Japan” was code for Ainu. Even to this day, there is sensitivity to this label and possibly discrimination against them. At some point in time (I’ve forgotten when) people from mainland Japan were sent to Hokkaido, the northern island where the native population were called Ainu, in order to populate it with “Japanese.” Like the Chinese have done in Tibet. Change the population and who they identify with and they are easier to control.
    Also, using Jomon people and Yayoi people is suspicious. Those are periods of history not, necessarily different genetic groups.

    • @mfreak1126
      @mfreak1126 2 года назад

      It's not suspicious. Yayoi people actually means all people who lived in Japan during the Yayoi period. They're not really a specific racial group, but we know from archaeological evidence that people in Japan started to get genetically closer to today's Koreans and Northern Chinese during the Yayoi period. From that, we can surmise that people who were genetically close to today's Koreans and Northern Chinese came to Japan and mixed with the direct descendants of Jomon people. So Yayoi people in this context specifically means those who came to Japan and influenced the change of the Japanese genetic pool at the time. I mean, that's not the original meaning of Yayoi people, but what's important here is what he means by Yayoi people.

  • @seaneendelong8065
    @seaneendelong8065 2 года назад

    I find it interesting that so many people do not realize the diversity of Japanese features as well as admixtures...
    Including the very different indigenous from Okinawa islands.
    But not many originating from the rest of Japan have Ainu/Hokkaido as the weather/strait between combined with cultural divides.
    Only in immigrant populations like America when two different origin areas marry is it more likely to have multi Japanese ethnicities...
    Like my girls' dad, who's Dad's side was from by Kyoto and Mom's was from Hokkaido- they looked very different in features from each other, AND various paternal cousins manifested 2 or 3 different types of Japanese facial features...
    But boy did the Hokkaido unique features try to be dominant on Mom's side siblings! Flatter wide cheekbones, much larger round eyes, long curled up eyelashes, curly hair trued out in 75% and 10% some blend, and about 50% of their kids had one or multi strong features carrying through... then to all THEIR kids 50% regardless of that gen parent looks; in those who did not in 1st gen mixed with Japanese it tended to vanish in their kids.
    This young man looks like a male 1st cousin who is their dad's sister's child:
    She got classic oval face high cheekbones narrower eye shape, and all 3 of her 1/2 English-American kids look similar.
    Meanwhile, my girls' Dad got the same cheekbones but tilted mahogany cateyes and a wide forehead with pointed chin, fuller lips... and red highlights in sun in his supposedly black dead straight hair... one daugher got his features heavily with green/hazel eyes, one actually could pass for Italian or Latina if you do not know to look closely at her samurai nose and eye corners and got soft curls I def did not give. And they both got naturally red highlights in lighter and darker brown hair and my strong German Irish teeth.
    Grandkids are a crazy mixture, with a remarkable continuity of Hokkaido features carrying through even with tons of other genetics: both boys having dead straight near black hair and all the girls having lighter brown to nearly blonde with waves or curls, only one boy having his grandfathers tilted mahogany cateyes and other having big eyes in HIS father's very dark brown, the girls having light brown to green eyes either large and tilted or outright round, one girl having heart shaped face, one slim oval, and the other two having the wider with flatter cheekbones look.

  • @33piolin
    @33piolin Год назад

    Aren’t the Ainu the oldest known ancestors from Japan, and specifically from Hokkaido⁉️

  • @stevelknievel4183
    @stevelknievel4183 2 года назад +3

    I've always understood a kickback to be the same thing as a bribe. Is there something I'm missing?

    • @GeneaVlogger
      @GeneaVlogger  2 года назад +3

      I always thought it just meant like a general commission, but in looking up the definition it looks like you are correct. I imagine I've said that elsewhere and really confused some people...sounding like I take bribes and openly brag about it 😂

    • @lindah.1104
      @lindah.1104 2 года назад +2

      😀😀😀He should have used the word “commission “.

    • @calebrw
      @calebrw 2 года назад

      "A bribe is usually defined as the giving or receiving of a “thing of value” to corruptly influence the actions of another, most commonly to influence a contract award or the execution of a contract. A “kickback” is a bribe paid incrementally by the contractor as it is paid." -- Source: International Anti-Corruption Resource Center
      A YT channel earning a commission on a product sales is a legal form of kickback, called commission. Rather than Channel Y stating "hey go here and buy this stuff, I'm a totally impartial person," Channel Y could be getting a kickback from Brand X and therefore maybe influenced in recommending that particular product in favor of other products they don't earn a commission on. If Channel Z comes and says, "Go to Brand X and buy their new product, but note I may earn a commission," Channel Z has notified their audience that they are other factors at play may influence their recommendation.

  • @Videotubelord
    @Videotubelord 2 года назад

    You are wrong, the sound you was making would be ДЗ (not ДЖ). ДЖЕРАРД pronounces exactly the same as GERARD. In Lithuanian would be DŽERARD.

  • @sebbog
    @sebbog Год назад

    the link does not work

  • @joshdelany5189
    @joshdelany5189 2 года назад

    He might not have made the tree yet for privacy reasons.

  • @lauraleecreations3217
    @lauraleecreations3217 2 года назад

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @themadmanwithapen
    @themadmanwithapen 2 года назад

    who else was waiting for him to say "maybe theres some jewish in there"

  • @businesspurchase2827
    @businesspurchase2827 2 года назад

    银座

  • @lindah.1104
    @lindah.1104 2 года назад +1

    He thinks his mom might be Inca because of her looks, but aren’t the Inca from Polynesia and the ancient Polynesia from Japan? Or the Inca came across the Bearing Straits from Asia,? Either way , more correct to say his mother is Japanese and the Inca are descended from Japanese?

    • @destyon9966
      @destyon9966 2 года назад

      Dude u misunderstanding lol he said his mom looks inca which could be related to ainu which he thought of when he saw Hokkaido highlighted lol i don’t fully know why he connected all that in his mind

    • @destyon9966
      @destyon9966 2 года назад

      Dude u misunderstanding lol he said his mom looks inca which could be related to ainu which he thought of when he saw Hokkaido highlighted lol i don’t fully know why he connected all that in his mind

    • @Opinionated-By54nder
      @Opinionated-By54nder 2 года назад +1

      I'm pretty sure the Ainu are a far extension of the western Siberian tribes.... Korean records say when they immigrated to southern Japan they met "darker" looking northern asian nomads

    • @pisangmelinjoe34
      @pisangmelinjoe34 2 года назад +1

      Ancient polynesia from Japan? aren't they're from Taiwan?

    • @mfreak1126
      @mfreak1126 2 года назад

      No, he doesn't necessarily think like that. He just said her mom had been told by people around her that she looks like that. And he isn't saying she might be partly Inca. He's implying she might be partly Ainu because he thinks the Ainu look similar to Inca people.

  • @svennielsen633
    @svennielsen633 2 года назад

    A little to many "extremely".

  • @jefferyschirm4103
    @jefferyschirm4103 2 года назад

    You'll probably find your DNA goes back to a man name Noah !! So save your money !! Ha ha !!