I'm an Anglo Indian living in India, and you'd have guessed by my name that I have Portuguese roots. Along with that, I also have Anglo-Burmese roots from my granny who escaped with her family into India when the Japanese invaded Burma. An interesting story we hear in our family that the my great-great grandfather had a twin and when they set sail for the East from Portugal, one brother camped at Tellicherry in Kerala and the other set sail for Malaca.
One of my English ancestors fought in India in the 2nd Anglo-Sikh war. He defeated the Sikhs and took the Punjab region for Britain. He was an officer in the 1st Horse, a cavalry regiment of the British Presidency Army. We have stories in our family of him being a brave horseman who cut down many Indians in the war. It must have been fun.
this in depth video was incredible and really resonated with me as I'm dutch Indonesian. I'm about 60% european and 40% indo with some small mixes of Filipino, Vietnamese, Chinese, and thai. it's true when you talk about how there is a distinct culture and identity in being mixed. Much of my family is eurasian to different degrees yet we all share that common "Dutch indo" culture which is essentially an amalgamation of both. I'm from Southern California and I recently got to meet much of my family in the Netherlands this summer and it was insane. much of family looks East Asian or super white. I was the most "mixed" looking out of all of them. it was weird to think we were all related. being interested in anthropology and genetics, I couldn't get over how cool it was and how proud I am of my culture and heritage. merry Christmas and happy holidays to all you guys still reading! :)
@Austronesian Incel nah, not all of them, there were some that still in the country, they just blend in very well the natives and they dont call themselves as an "indo"
You’re not completely correct about Spanish in the Philippines. They didnt all absorb into the Filipino population. Most of the wealthiest families only married Spanish or other Europeans in the Philippines and sometimes Americans. So even after 300 years of being in the Philippines some families still look pure European. For example, the man in the thumbnail Enrique Razon could pass in Southern Europe. Most of the Ayala family too. Most of the Aboitiz family as well. There’s lots of other families that arent well-known but they look European
Bernard Garcia look at actual statistics. Only 1% of Filipinos in the US mark Hispanic on the census. www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2019/11/11/who-is-hispanic/ And in the Philippines it would be even less than that because people there dont care about Spanish anything anymore. The main foreign influences are American and Korean. They dont even show Spanish tv shows anymore
I think you are wrong. And its not about Spain that we are discussing here. Some might dont look like have ancestry from Spain its because of the dominant factors in his/her genes. This was/is the characteristics of old Manila. That is why most provinces flocks and ultimately destroyed Manila...(and I wander why?). The chinese community in our country have two factors...the "closed" and the "open". Some of them have mix malay, spanish, etc, too. Please look up dominant factors in genes. There is a saying..."do not judge a book by its cover". ... This is the dominant sickness in the Philippines. And theres also called adaptation which most European grasp to their surroundings and became the dominant "abnormal" genes. And most in that regions have to fight for survival whilst in the tropics seems very relaxed. This will gives us the idea how other races reacts in a certain situations.
KD6 - 3.7 it’s just sad to think this may be a grown man just commenting racist stuff on a RUclips like go get a life and if you’re young go out with people this is just sad
Never forget the tragedy that was central asia. Ancient Iranian cultures all erased by invasion from the east. The only survivors were afghanistan, iran, the pamiris and the Tajiks. No more scythians or sogdians. And before anyone calls me racist, no I don't hate turks. I just think it's sad these unique cultures were wiped out
Thats not true. Turks and Iranians lived together for many decades in various regions and empires. We did not wipe them out as you imply. They just evolved into different populations as did we. We adopted cultural and langistuic elements from each other. We Turks are heavily influenced by Iranians and some could say that we lost our core identitity because of them. So in that sense, Iranians have "asimilated, influenced and wiped out the ancient Turkic civilisations" into the modern civilisations. So I could use the same argument back to you. And no I dont hate Iranians but I hate that we adopted Islam because of them and incorporated many Farsi words into our language.
jeems007 after the independance of Indonesia our (grand)parents had the choice to stay in Indonesia, where they were seen as traitors, or go to Holland. Most choose to go to Holland. Between 1945 - 1968 300.000 Indos left indonesia for the Netherlands.
@@grahamcracker121 there are many here in Indonesia, but they blend in with the natives many of their descendents even forget about it. i know it, because my great grandparent was one
jeems007 not really. First generation like my grandparents Really Just look indonesian to be honest. Not white at all. They left Because they felt indo european, spoke dutch ( next to indonesian language), were all Christians and worked for and with the Dutch. After 1949 the situation for Indo Europeans was bad in Indonesia so they had to go.
@Qabileghor You can be proud or ashamed of your ancestors and regardless of your current status, but I understand when people try to live in the glory of the distant past without much accomplishments it's a little pathetic.
@@pozk-tf6ey There are multiple Lenins. Pictures of "Lenin" show different people. So, it's probably the same story as "Putin". Nobody knows how actual Putin looks like.
Mixed Ancestry Filipino here! The Philippines is full of diverse admixtures. The Chinese have a significant influence on both the culture and admixture on the population, with the Spanish contributing mostly religion and language. My great-great-grandmother was a 2nd generation Spanish settler who married a Filipino, and whose daughter married a Chinese businessman. As far as I know, I am 1/8th Spanish, 5/16ths Chinese, and 9/16ths Native Filipino.
300 years of colonisation in the Philippines from Spain. That's a lot of time for cultural absorption from the hegemonic colonial power. That's probably why a lot of Filipinos have Spanish surnames and are RC, right?
@@AviChetriArtwork That is true, but the main reason is that the Spanish governors "convinced" most of the people to adopt a Spanish-based last name. I do forget when this was, but I definitely remember it from my history classes.
@@AviChetriArtwork All former colonies had no choice but to adopt the culture of their European masters. Why do you think imitating Western culture and speaking English is so prevalent in India?
@@anonrandom7765 Only as a de facto language, specifically for officiality. Most Indians would speak at least one native language, most of the time it is Hindi. I'm from Nepal, and almost everyone speaks Nepali over English.
Don't forget sexpats. If you're White, Asian women are VERY easy. I went on a tour across S.E Asia and Japan/Korea 3 years ago (I was 18), and bedded 50+ Asian women at least in a span of 3 months. I'm pretty sure I have at least a couple Eurasian bastards running around back there now.
It seems we are the original Eurasian rh negative breeds, and we were bred down into the archaic hominids to make the rh positive mutts that are now common throughout the world. Rh positives can not make a race of rh negatives. We are alien to your blood. A parallel development of many races may have mixed, but the rh negatives had to be the first or independent of that.
@anthony k northern Europeans looked like central asians with blonde/bronze hair...basically the original mixed with the later mainland euro population that moved into Scandinavian/Russian areas , back then long time ago people in the northern hemisphere had blonde/bronze hair because of the cold ice age climate
@anthony k not exactly if you look at some Asians they have African features depending upon were you go I can show people vietnamese Chinese that have the African rock structure face
The father of my mom's dad came from Sardinia, Italy and went to Malaysia and married a Eurasian Kristang lady. That gave birth to my mom's dad who later in life married a Malay woman.
Not really, Native Americans are a mix of dark peoples grouped as 1 by Europeans. NA actually have so called Middle Eastern dna which is not surprising.
Because it’s been thousands of years ago that Amerindian’s ancestors came from Asia, I don’t agree they are or should still be considered Asian today. But it’s all opinion anyway.
If thats the case then the aboriginal Australians would still be black despite scientists saying they are not when they came directly from blacks. However when its black people its a different story..they would never admit the truth.
@@lobsterbalelegesse9919 Native americans dont have middle eastern DNA, they have Ancient North Eurasian DNA which is a population mostly related to northern and eastern europeans than anything else, they are also related to central asians and north indians but thats because those populations descend from european migrations during the bronze age.
For any culture to survive it is necessary that it not only be taught to the children of those who have that culture but also embraced by those children. This is most frequently done when there is some reason for that culture to be valued as distinct from those around it and worthwhile preserving.
It's amazing how culture can remain unchanged while people come and go all around it. That's because culture is made up of many things that are traded and genes are only one of those things.
Ncie video ! My father is a Singaporean Eurasian., born and bred as with me, although our roots comes from the Hong Kong/ macau Eurasian community. I do know those of Portuguese ancestry tend to speak of themselves as “Portuguese” first rather than Eurasian. What’s also interesting during the British colonies in Hong Kong and Singapore were the private sporting clubs that Eurasian communities form such as SRC on the Padang where cricket / hockey were played often against other European clubs such a s cricket club. Post independence would see many Eurasians members joining both clubs. Also interesting to see the role that Eurasian would play in the civil service governments of both port cities of Hong long & Singapore. Anyway pah seh this comment very long sia!
jenny pai girl are you slow? He didnt say 50% of Filipinos are Eurasian. He said less than 1% of the population are Eurasians (at least 50% European ancestry) and I believe that. Most Filipinos only have a small amount of European DNA. But a small minority could be considered Eurasians. Here are some examples of Spanish-Filipino families still living in the Philippines today even after it was decolonized a century ago Scroll to the part of the post about Spanish-Filipinos www.tapatalk.com/groups/anthroscape/european-eurasian-colonial-populations-in-asia-t90325.html Some of them even look full European but they’re Filipino. So it’s very clear that they didnt all assimilate because they still look white.
@@minim6981 yeah, tapatalk is a very "reliable" source. Are you so ashamed of your native ancestry that you gloss over whatever European genes? Even 1,000,0000 half Europeans in the Philippines is an overkill. Maybe achievable in 10 years due to SEXPAT migration to the islands, you know when those cash-strapped white boomers retire in an "exotic land" and bang a local woman young enough to be their granddaughter "Looking white" has nothing to do with assimilation. There are many "brown Filipinos" who are culturally white - only speaking English, while Enrique Razon speaks and acts like a brown folk. Get off your white worship
@@jennypai1776 I personally know most of the people in the pictures. I can send you a PM if you want proof that they still live in the Philippines and they're actually Filipinos. Any picture you doubt, just let me know and I can prove it. Also, 1 million half Europeans is not hard to believe because some half Filipinos still look mostly Filipino themselves and can kinda blend in with the crowd. Not all, or most of that 1 million would pass as white, only a few would
@@minim6981 what is up with your white worship? Many half white half Filipinos are basically outside the Philippines. The ones in the Philippines are either descended from the old Spanish families or children of sexpats and abandoned children of US servicemen, and they aren't 1 million. If you include those who are 1/8 white, that's believable. And you really proud that Filipino women are whoring themselves to European creeps? And you are actually creepy. You are willing to send personal photos of non-celebrities to an internet stranger just to "prove your point"?
Here Masaman has shown the consequences of colonization by the European sea powers and left out the continental perspective (Germany, Russia, Iran, China). As a German, I associate the "original Eurasians" and Eurasia as the realm between the Ural mountains and the Yenisei river plus Central-Asia. That's the wide and thinly populated space between Europe, East-Asia and Iran. The steppes were originally populated by Indo-Aryans and over the last 2500 years, Turkic and Mongolic speaking people came in waves of invasions and mixed with the remaining native Europeans. fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fichier:Kazakh_genesis_Ismagulov.jpg
Well, in North Africa, Turkey (Byzantium), Caucasus too once lived Europeans 1000-2000 years ago. Now there were only Arabs, Africans, and Turks left. In southern, western and northern Europe, the same thing is happening today.
@@КастетГлебов The people in north Africa aren't connected with asia so they can't be Eurasians. The people in Turkey would be considered Eurasian but I don't don't think that what the creators of the term had in mind when they came up with with it. Like van Rensburg said the turn was mostly for people living on the Eurasian steppe that mixed with the mongols and the Turks during the steppe invasions/migrations in the dark ages and medieval eras.
“Waves”??? no they didn’t change anything of the European makeup. They wished they did but they didn’t. The Europe side that might be affected with some Mongolian or Turkic ancestry is the furthest East Europe. West/South Europe is European. Also those “Ural” people are central asian, they’re not technically Eurasian (Asian or European fully)
The term was originally applied to part European and Indian in the English lanquage the ones in the East Indies had Portuguese terms including the Dutch Indos at one time. The uk usually refers to an asian person to be of the indian subcontinent. There was a time in history were European explorers once though that inland southeast asia part of the Indian subcontinent
Take the channel census here: docs.google.com/forms/d/1M2PibH4PYDgjq239IxSwqH_Y1Dy-ovlBqN4sHVEW9HQ/prefill Full breakdown before the new year! Thanks oh, and merry Christmas, happy Hanukkah and all that.
Jc Dizon HALF EURO only though, as in 50% European and 50% Asian, not including descendants of foreigners from earlier generations. Yes those of 50% European mix is rare and mostly ends up in showbiz here, but some have at least one foreign ancestor from the last 100 years.
Middle Easterners share the same genetics as Europeans. While Indians also has Middle Eastern ancestry with some carrying hapologroup J2, they have their own Indian hapologroup H that is found only in India and the Roma people in Europe who are descended from Indians who migrated there. That makes Indians different from Middle Easterners and Europeans enough to be considered Asians.
【2:33】I think the Kalmyk people are missing in this table. ☺ Mason, please make a video about Kalmyk people when you have a chance because they are very unique people. 🌷🌷Kalmyk people are the only one who believes in Tibetan Buddhism in Europe. Thank you for your time. 👍
There’s also another form of the name of the old world if you consider it as a single continent as there isn’t a natural separation border called Afro-Eurasian (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Eurasia) is there an ethnicity called Afro-Eurasian, if there is can you make a video about it.
Just an observation of Eurasians... When young they children have very attractive and striking features which stays with them into youth... However, as they age, somehow the stereotypical Asian features seem to dominated and the features start to look rounder, or as we would say, prosperous 😅
I have cousins who are half Eurasians here in Malaysia. My dad's brother married a Eurasian by the surname Gasper. My late grandmother's sister in law was Dutch & Irish (it means my late granduncle was Indian) so that makes my uncle & aunties (my dad's cousins) Eurasians. My dad's sisters married Australians British, Irish & Anglo-indian. My dad's cousin married a Singaporean Eurasian. Another cousin of his married an Australian British. I basically have 70% Eurasian relatives in my family from an Indian heritage 😁
@@noname6756 I guess so because my paternal grandfather & his family migrated to Malaya in the 1920s. I have no idea about his relatives living in India. No trace on them but I believe there is some still alive maybe his cousin's family or someone who didn't migrate but decided to stay in India until today 🤷🏽♀️ but my paternal grandmother's grandparents came from Vellore (Naidu) & Tanjore (Pillay). That's all I know about them.
Filipino Eurasian here. Personally I don't consider myself Hispanic although my father and grandmother have Hispanic ancestry. I speak Spanish as well but its not enough to be labeled Hispanic.
@@luelzone7474 People in different countries define stuff differently, and in the case in the Philippines, culture wise Spanish/Castille settlers are similar to the natives to a degree (rooted in Catholicism probably), that there's probably no need to identify differently - we use ethnolinguistic classification, as an archipelago means language is very varied.
imo Hispanic is more of a cultural term, so to me Filipinos still count in the general family given how Spanish culture is a root of the modern culture and how much the influence still remains
I have a friend who was adopted into the US from Guyana. They were told their mother was from an Amerindian tribe, and their father was possibly African. When they took a DNA test, they found they were almost 50/50 Amerindian and West African, with a couple percent Middle Eastern thrown in. I think they were rather surprised by the West African part, as are most people who see them. I'm aware that makes them an oddity, but I just think it's neat.
One point of criticism. I may be dealing with semantics here but I digress. The term Hispanic and it's meaning is very relative. Various standards of what constitutes "hispanic" were made such as that of the now defunct "Latin Union" which defines hispanic while considering various factors such as linguistics, cultural practices, and ethnicity. The Philippines was a member hence considered hispanic/latin under such standards set by The Union, along with Timor Leste. They argued that it meets primarily the cultural factor and at a certain degree, linguistic and ethnicity. You need to dive into Filipino history, culture, and heritage to understand this better. Moreso prior to the US colonization where Spanish was still the lingua franca until 1987. Meanwhile, other institution like that of the US census back then has different criteria for what the classification "hispanic" entails. Even our informal culture has its own, mainly considering geography and whether they speak the Spanish language or not. In sum, most "labels of identity or classification" are ambiguously applied to Filipinos. Both by Filipinos and foreigners. Great video as usual anyways.
I really enjoy watching your videos. The only thing I found a bit problematic about this one is minute 9:27 when you show pictures of 8 different people that are supposed to show what a "Melanesian, Filipino, Timorese etc." looks like. I don't think 1 picture (1 person) represents a whole country/region/ethnic group...
Marcelo del Alamo right. There are actually Filipinos who look like every person in those pictures, but he makes it seem like all Filipinos look like that one guy
A lot of Macanese, Kristangs, and Anglo-Indians dont have much or any European ancestry. They’re just descendants of people who converted to Christianity and changed their last names to European ones. So no, most of them arent Eurasian. It would be like if Filipinos considered themselves Eurasians just because of their Spanish last names and Catholic religion. In the Philippines, mestizos (Eurasians) are only a specific group of people who look mixed enough to be considered Eurasian. If a regular Filipino calls himself mestizo, people would laugh at him
Very, very nice! I think I learned more new facts in this video than I have from some others in a while. In addition to some direct suggestions, I am going to give you some general links that'll enhance your creativity for 2020 (Happy New Year!): 1. Where did the Jewish diaspora lands get their names? I remember being told in Hebrew school that when the Jewish diaspora happened, Jews scattered throughout the known world. Since they would be living there and that would be essentially be their homes areas at the immediate moment back then, they decided to give each place a Hebrew name to help personalize it a little bit. That is why Ashkenaz is named after a biblical figure who was associated with the north, and thus "Ashkenazim". 2. Cultures that only have a handful of people left-but deeply analyzed. 3. Cultures of enclaves/exclaves. I think looking at the Llanitos of Gibraltar again would be interesting because they are a creole group of many different other groups. 4. Reiterate: Southeast Pacific/Insular Chile 5. Bolivia 6. Bougainville, Chuuk Islands, New Caledonia-the three most likely new countries in the near future (New Caledonia is having round 2 of their independence vote around November 2020. If they say 'no' again, then they will have their final round sometime in 2022; Bougainville just voted 'yes' to independence and is on it's way to achieving nationhood; the Chuuk Islands FSM tentatively have their independence vote scheduled for March 2020) 7. Are their Roman-Chinese in the modern world? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liqian 8. ruclips.net/video/pVDi5ua_1J4/видео.html 9. ruclips.net/video/0BhnFn7MbME/видео.html 10 .www.popularmechanics.com/science/environment/a30243505/deepest-point-antarctic-glacier/ 11. Distribution of Neanderthal and Denisovan populations in pre-history; the subdivisions 12. Neolithic cultural complexes-how are they related to today's people? 13. Was China a colony of ancient Egypt? Did the ancient Egyptians make it to Australia (Gosford Glyphs) 14. Tex-Mex 15. Chicano culture and general Hispanic culture 16. Tiburon Island, Mexico and the Seri/Comcaac people 17. Serer ethnoreligious group 18. Lesser known island groups off the coast of WEST Africa (beyond Macaronesia) 19. Native American Peoples of the Eastern US + Cahokia and the Mississippian culture 20. French/Dutch ethnicity represented on Saint Marten/Sint Maarten in the Caribbean
@@jinkiskhan1967 It means South Asians came about as a race due to mixing b/w Europeans (Aryans) and Natives (Dravidians + Veddoids). Just like Latinos came to be due to mixing b/w Europeans (Spaniards) and Natives (Amerindians).
it kinda depends on the filipino we're talking about, ph is in fact, a multi-ethnic territorial nation-state, tho yeah, a big majority are native austronesian, but let's not discount the existence of historically diverse urban mestiso groups
I won't consider us "Asian Latinos" also but we are the closest major people group that fits that description since we're the Asian group that has the most Latin/Latin American influence (mostly Spanish and Mexican) in the world
Mixed marriage (not necessarily between races but different ethnics) is nothing news in my family! I am a fourth generation Australian with more than 8 different ethnics groups possibility with non-European ancestry! I have a grandson who is a quarter filipino but he hardly look like one as he has blue eyes and paler skin! In Australia, there has been several changes in demography in the last 70 years. Moving from Anglo-Celtic ethnics with a few exceptions i.e. a large German population in both South Australia and Queensland to multi-European ethnical group then to an increasing Eurasian population. It may not look like one but it is fast increasing due to an increase in immigration from Eastern Asia and SE Asia. You will find many couples who are European and Asian, yet at the same time we are still Australians!
Nothing to get overly excited about. "Australian" culture is the weakest it's been since when people in Australia still considered themselves British. With no dominant ethnic-cultural group, Australia risks having no cultural glue to keep the nation together and our differences will be exploited by large, foreign powers (as well as skeezy local politicians).
Your videos are what youtube is made for. I have learned so much and after watching all videos can tell that i have a much higher understanding of human development and nature. I just wanted to say thank you before watching this video. Merry Christmas to all celebrating and reading. Spread love, joy and knowledge it's a lot better than the alternatives 💖😊📖
Nice video. You should do a video on the former peoples of the Kushan Empire/Kingdom and some the unique relics and feature they have left the world. Just a suggestion. Thanks for all you do, Masaman. Happy Holidays.
Who would share their DNA the most if not modern Egyptians? Even after waves of migrations, from Greeks, Nubians, Arabs and Bedouins, the core of the population stayed the same. The only way for the modern Egyptians to have less genetical similarity to ancient Egyptians is that the Ancient Egyptians were of Sub Saharan origin or something like that. But I don't know shit about genetics, so don't take my word for it. It's simply logic.
@@Vitalis94 Modern Egyptians don't share any genetic similarity with ancient Egyptians at all. Coptic people show a certain continuity but that's it. Ancient Egyptian Mummies have been found to have haplogroup R1b which is shared with more than half of Western European men, and these mummies had well preserved blonde/red hair, Europoid skulls, and traces of tobacco in their teeth (not native to the region). These are the facts. Derive from them what's obvious.
@@jamesturner4478 you dumb modern egyptians muslims are 70% north africans , they are arabized egyptians , even copts only speak arabic ! They prays with greek language! (You can write in youtube egyptian dna test result ) #ignorant_is_bliss
Im look like indian in the philippines but i figure it out that there something behind in colonization i think we filipino have been mixed through spanish and indian
Freemarkets appear to have the greatest success in laxing asian identity.. singapore seems to be the best example of this.. The chinese hate singaporeans.. thr going to have a tough time competing with the supurior innovating capabilities of the emerging euasion strains.. Shall be intersting
There are still Spanish-Filipinos living in the Philippines and many of them look full European. Scroll to the part of the post about Spanish-Filipinos www.tapatalk.com/groups/anthroscape/european-eurasian-colonial-populations-in-asia-t90325.html Those people still live in the Philippines. The post also talks about Dutch-Indos and Macanese, but their current populations in Indonesia and China are tiny and they mostly look Asian now
Spanish filipino population is small make only 3% mean 3 million out of 115 million people and Philippines has largest Eurasian population in southeast asia and east asia also there some eurasian who are mixed with other european but only 1% mostly white american descent So about 5% of population are considered eurasian
I think the Filipino Spanish got absorbed into mainstream Filipino culture cuz as even if most people deny it they make the other half bulk of Filipino Culture itself so it didn't really destroy their unique culture because Spain made the Intramuros Spanish lifestyle be the lifestyle of the rest of the Islands like Intramuros was the center of life culture religion and education
I take note that a lot of Filipinos in the comments are saying they have Spanish/European ancestry even though as said by Massaman the figure is in the single digits. I think this is telling that the European White race still holds power over the native population, I doubt most Filipinos would take note of an ancestor from Indonesia a few generations prior.
indonesia?? lol most likely just the philippines. this is like saying a german person has an ancestor from sweden 16 generations prior. also regarding spanish ancestry in the philippines, it is in the single digits because it is mostly concentrated in some of the upper and upper middle classes, which many also left during past historical events, the most recent being the marcos regime which had many leave for the US and australia, others died to ww2 bombing runs over rich historical districts in the urban capitals that got carpet bombed. the middle and lower middle classes (if we are talking about legitimate spanish ancestry) either have only a small partial amount from many generations back from that one great great grandfather, or they are just misremembering an ancestor who was only culturally hispanic, or they are generalizing their ancestry based on their hispanic surname that was decreed to their ancestors in the 1800s
@@xXxSkyViperxXx I imagine there's a lot of people that take overexposed photographs of their grandparents as "proof" of their Caucasian looks and pale skin, like my family does with my grandmother.
@@AviChetriArtwork no, they'd just tell you that this and that grandparent had this and that spanish ancestor in one of the branches somewhere then theyd reminisce how their ancestor was so good at spanish back in their time, but neat trick, i suppose hahahaha. tho, im serious, there are people with legit spanish ancestry, just not a particularly a lot, but if you stroll through the halls of top universities, or go through rich neighborhood subdivisions, or high-end malls, there are people that you can find with seemingly spanish facial features. got some classmates before where the common feature i always notice that lets me guess they do have spanish ancestry is the fact they have kind of a distinct eyebrows that seem bushy to me or something... and they're a little pale or maybe dusky but curiously dont seem east asian.
@@alirazarafie7479 well im from the philippines and not a brown person and sure maybe people here like light complexion, since much of the upper and upper middle classes are lighter toned and the advertisement models and tv stars too. the eyes tho, i dont think people care about that... hahaha since its such a small detail that no one thinks about here. colored contact lenses aren't popular. theyd rather dye their hair in some western or korean style hair color trend tho, my sister looks particularly korean due to that hahaha
I’m a half white half asian American. There were large numbers of white people and Asians in my community when I was growing up but neither really accepted me as one of them, the Asians especially did not accept me. Until high school when I met several other mixed race people who had similar experiences, I had seen so few hapas before that as soon as I met one that was a girl I caught feelings, she didn’t feel the same but we’re friends, I met a lot of people who were basically every ethnic mix you could think of, white and latino, black and white, black and Latino, latino and asian, white and asian, black and asian, black and Polynesian, Polynesian and white, asian and Polynesian, Native American and latino, Indian and white, Indian and black, etc. I know it sounds stupid but I think mixed people genuinely need people like them in order to foster a healthy and prideful identity and we served that purpose for those I went to high school with, we had a Biracial Student Union
Because they mixed with the local populations, most turks have a strong admixture of Greek, Armenian, Anatolian and to a lesser degree south Slavic and albanian Only in very rural regions of Central Anatolia will one still encounter turks with slit eyes
Turkic groups intermarried among local populations as they migrated. So modern day Turks from Turkey intermingled with the predominantly Greeks who inhabited Anatolia at the time. Which is why the average Turk has a massive amount of European ancestry.
Preoximerias Romans/ Byzantines ( or Greeks) didn't inhabit the whole of Anatolia, only the very western portions. Ancient groups such as Hitties inhabited the rest.
singapore has alot of mixed people but if its eurasian i dont think there is that much maybe only 10% since personally i only see like 3 europeans a day and i only know 5 mixed asian european people and alot of mixed asian x asian like chinese indians which are very common
Masaman: Wondering what your thoughts on the amount of sub-Saharan African admixture there would be in the Eurasian Communities with Portuguese orgins. I can find no literature or research on the matter, but given that there were black Africans (both slaves and freemen) working on Portuguese vessels during the golden age of Portuguese exploration, I would not be surprised if the Eurasians had in fact some African ancestry.
im about 10% Iberian (probably northern) and the rest is pure austronesian tagalog. The only distinct thing about me that looks european is my height and lighter skin which goes red instead of brown. My ancestry is not who i am however, but my nationality is
Quebec is not part of Latin America! The definition of Latinoamerica is not primarily language but the mutual sense of exploration during colonial times (and today) and latino culture. We're poor, most folks up in Canada are not.
Are there any Latin Americans here who are uncomfortable with the term "Latin America"? Basically it's just Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries in the Americas. Why not "Ibero-America" or something.
Latin america is based on language, Quebec is Latin America as they speak a latin language. I am from latin america and tell you the term literally means the part of anerica that speaks mostly a latin based language.
@@perthdude21 it exists, latin america also includes french speaking people, ibero america is for spanish and portuguese only. I don't like calling myself latino as we are different from each other, but we are part of the same language family and it's fair go say we share some culture from that.
@@alecity4877 In the most technical sense, yes Quebec is part of Latin America. But in reality the most technical definition of the term is not used. In practice, "Latin America" is only used to describe the Spanish and Portuguese speaking parts of the Americas (and sometimes the French speaking parts of the Carribean). Because of this particular but very common usage, I feel uncomfortable with the term "Latin America". Furthermore, some people completely exclude the French speaking parts (south of the US) from "Latin America". The problem is that many, many people equate "Ibero-America" with "Latin America". And tbh I can't blame them. Ibero-American countries tend to have more in common with each other culturally and historically. While they don't have much in common with Quebec. So "Latin America" has become a shorthand way of describing *only* the Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries of the Americas, even though it is technically incorrect to use the term for this very specific meaning.
Good video massaman. But please dont say that mixing was mostly a voluntary participant situation . Did it happen yes was it more common than rape or forced marriage no. That's so misleading for true understanding.
@d puski I dont know exactly how what you consider modern black humans were born .would love to hear it . Cause genetics say we have always been this way that's why there less mutations and foreign mixtures as the genes get older not the same for any.other humans that's what makes it so interesting. But please tell me how modern black folks were made always here to learn.
@d puski That's understood they came back after undergoing some changes . Especially after checking the ct line and were they come from I dont see where any thing I said is off. Accept what is considered modern or not .
Even though we don't know much of the Huns, it is highly likely that they were a Eurasian ethnic group as well. Probably the "original" most Eurasians in the definition you referred to.
@@jamesturner4478 Yes, of course. Just that too many people, when they imagine Huns, they see a picture of a Mongol like horse archer. Whilst we aren't sure about Hunnic royality, we are sure their army was full of non- Hunnic peoples.
I have a question since Asians and Caucasian's are similar by genetics (correct me if I amwrong) why do the San people look so similar to Asian's? Do they have the same ancestor??
Hispanic - The term commonly applies to the countries once under colonial possession by the Spanish Empire. Philippines being part of Spain for almost 400 years longer than Mexico. And not calling Filipinos Hispanic 🥴💯
I wonder if it is because the process of hispanicisation did not get as far in the Philippines as it did in Spanish America. In Spanish America, Spanish became the first language of the vast majority of people, at the great expense of many indigenous languages. However, this process of hispanicisation did not end with the independence of the Spanish American colonies from Spain in the 1820's. It continued throughout the 19th century and into the 20th century. I don't know if this is true, but I have heard that when Mexico gained its independence in the 1820s, only a third of its population spoke Spanish. Due to the process of hispanicisation, over 90% of the population nowadays speaks Spanish natively. I think the difference with the Philippines is that after its independence in the 1890's, the US colonised the country and imposed English. I've heard that the Americans discouraged the use of Spanish (idk if this is true). Filipinos also managed to preserve their own indigenous languages more successfully than the native americans did. I'm assuming that this could be because of government policies in the Philippines that allowed and/or encouraged the use of indigenous languages? Whereas in Spanish America, the speaking of indigenous languages was at times discouraged. Spanish was the language of the ruling classes. But somehow even the poorest people ended up speaking Spanish as their first (and sometimes only) language, while many indigenous languages lost ground. Also, much more people from Spain migrated to Spanish America than to the Philippines, so the influence of Spaniards in the Spanish American colonies could have been stronger because of that. So while the Philippines was a Spanish colony for longer than Mexico (and for longer than many other parts of Spanish America), the process of hispanicisation lasted for longer in Spanish America. This is not a good thing though, if force (either physical force or social pressure) was used to hispanicise the population. Nowadays more and more people are becoming interested in preserving their indigenous languages and cultures.
In the Philippines there were many ethnic groups...just like America, that's why they tried to do as Roma and to be able to use Spanish as a lingua franca but there were always problems in America, well today...
@Michi Geissbühler I agree, there is a lot of genetic divergence from the Indian population from the Romani. But the Romani have a cultural origination from the subcontinent.
Elbek Nosirov No question about that!! My family lives in North America, but we are 'Eurasian' in a less direct way. Our son would not look unusual to you! He is half-Korean, one-fourth British, and one-fourth Hungarian. Some of the Hungarians' ancestors came from much farther east in the 9th century. But the Bible says that we are all from one man, from one blood. And there is '...one God, and one mediator also between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.' (1st Timothy 2:5)
@d puski really, I have been with my wife for 15yrs and she been the perfect wife. Full of passion. She loves her swedish culture. We watch the st Lucia plays and eat the typical swedish foods during the holidays. She loves her swedish culture.
Anglo Indians would be the most interesting group. I'm from Canada so I'm also kinda bias. Hope everyone had a good Holidays plus a Happy New Year to come. Wishing everyone well from Canada.
@@mindrealminsights6517 Thanks bro. Australia is a way better place to live. You guys don't have like 6 months of cold winter like here in Ontario. Or even long depends on how North you live. Hope you won't be affected by those Fires we hear on the new you guys are having.
@@aldore6220 Cheers mate! We are OK as I live on the west coast and the fires have't been too bad here. The east coast has suffered a lot but hopefully the rain takes care of it for us! I spent some time in Toronto during winter and I understand what you say about the cold..I enjoyed it but I don't have to live with it I guess! Yes, Australia is a great place to live also. And the weather is awesome most of the time. cheers! :)
@@aldore6220 I miss the snow. I'd never seen flurries before I visited Toronto. Even the people in Vancouver don't see snow like that. But yes, I do feel lucky to have lots of sunshine, even in winter. The weather where I live is very similar to southern California.
In the near future, Chinese geneticists will hopefully clear up the Eurasian ancestry mystery regarding the stateless Hmong/Miao people. We have a unique recessive gene that show up in our people as blondes, redheads and brunettes with Anglo-colored pupils (see our Mongolian diaspora for reference). These traits have always existed since our ancestors' time. Our history pre-China is still a mystery to the world. ❤
South Asia is very diverse. So of of course not all people are going to look the same. They are dark, medium, light & very light people. It doesn’t make them not South Asian..
Funnily enough, I'm a Filipino and though I have Spanish blood on my mother's side, she seems to have no East Asian ancestors. Pretty uncommon in the Philippines.
are you from the upper classes? or at the very least upper middle? its not uncommon there, mind you. if ur mom has a very big portion of spanish ancestry with no east asian ancestry, that probably means her line were always on the upper middle to upper classes. if not, you'd just be a mestizo de espanyol, which isn't actually too rare. perhaps they're just hard to spot these days cuz many would falsely claim partial spanish ancestry just because of the spanish surname
@@xXxSkyViperxXx Actually, no. We live in the rural countryside. 10 minutes away from the city. I'm not the only one with this situation. I have neighbor who has the same genetically occurrence.
@@genericusername4316 probably ur a mestizo de espanyol from the countryside where small farming towns or haciendas had a few spaniards or mestizos de espanyol that lived as farm tenants or landlords
Western asians and east asians are separate ethnicities.. so who came first for example in the case of the turks?? are the original eurasians a product of admixture or are western euro/asians and east asians a product of them??
I'm an Anglo Indian living in India, and you'd have guessed by my name that I have Portuguese roots. Along with that, I also have Anglo-Burmese roots from my granny who escaped with her family into India when the Japanese invaded Burma. An interesting story we hear in our family that the my great-great grandfather had a twin and when they set sail for the East from Portugal, one brother camped at Tellicherry in Kerala and the other set sail for Malaca.
One of my English ancestors fought in India in the 2nd Anglo-Sikh war. He defeated the Sikhs and took the Punjab region for Britain.
He was an officer in the 1st Horse, a cavalry regiment of the British Presidency Army. We have stories in our family of him being a brave horseman who cut down many Indians in the war. It must have been fun.
Arminius - nothing to be proud of
Emma Wexler why would you be proud of the british taking advantage of lesser countries? Quite evil.
Pablo Abedul Agreed. Europe is cucking themselves and it looks like the past crimes of our white countries are coming back to haunt them.
@Belphegor Demon Well, that's just like, your opinion man....
this in depth video was incredible and really resonated with me as I'm dutch Indonesian. I'm about 60% european and 40% indo with some small mixes of Filipino, Vietnamese, Chinese, and thai. it's true when you talk about how there is a distinct culture and identity in being mixed. Much of my family is eurasian to different degrees yet we all share that common "Dutch indo" culture which is essentially an amalgamation of both. I'm from Southern California and I recently got to meet much of my family in the Netherlands this summer and it was insane. much of family looks East Asian or super white. I was the most "mixed" looking out of all of them. it was weird to think we were all related. being interested in anthropology and genetics, I couldn't get over how cool it was and how proud I am of my culture and heritage. merry Christmas and happy holidays to all you guys still reading! :)
TheWooka20 why arent there any Dutch Indos still in Indonesia?
@Austronesian Incel nah, not all of them, there were some that still in the country, they just blend in very well the natives and they dont call themselves as an "indo"
You’re not completely correct about Spanish in the Philippines. They didnt all absorb into the Filipino population. Most of the wealthiest families only married Spanish or other Europeans in the Philippines and sometimes Americans. So even after 300 years of being in the Philippines some families still look pure European. For example, the man in the thumbnail Enrique Razon could pass in Southern Europe. Most of the Ayala family too. Most of the Aboitiz family as well. There’s lots of other families that arent well-known but they look European
KD6 - 3.7 you’re racist
Bernard Garcia look at actual statistics. Only 1% of Filipinos in the US mark Hispanic on the census.
www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2019/11/11/who-is-hispanic/
And in the Philippines it would be even less than that because people there dont care about Spanish anything anymore. The main foreign influences are American and Korean. They dont even show Spanish tv shows anymore
KD6 - 3.7
‘superior bloodline’ 😶😶
I think you are wrong. And its not about Spain that we are discussing here. Some might dont look like have ancestry from Spain its because of the dominant factors in his/her genes. This was/is the characteristics of old Manila. That is why most provinces flocks and ultimately destroyed Manila...(and I wander why?).
The chinese community in our country have two factors...the "closed" and the "open". Some of them have mix malay, spanish, etc, too. Please look up dominant factors in genes.
There is a saying..."do not judge a book by its cover". ...
This is the dominant sickness in the Philippines.
And theres also called adaptation which most European grasp to their surroundings and became the dominant "abnormal" genes. And most in that regions have to fight for survival whilst in the tropics seems very relaxed. This will gives us the idea how other races reacts in a certain situations.
KD6 - 3.7 it’s just sad to think this may be a grown man just commenting racist stuff on a RUclips like go get a life and if you’re young go out with people this is just sad
Never forget the tragedy that was central asia. Ancient Iranian cultures all erased by invasion from the east. The only survivors were afghanistan, iran, the pamiris and the Tajiks. No more scythians or sogdians. And before anyone calls me racist, no I don't hate turks. I just think it's sad these unique cultures were wiped out
Thats life for ya
ok
@@FirstLast-hz8ut Uyghurs deserve what China is doing to them for wiping out the Tocharian language and culture :)
You forget that the Scythians wiped out cultures themselves. They weren't the first people in central Asia lol
Thats not true. Turks and Iranians lived together for many decades in various regions and empires. We did not wipe them out as you imply. They just evolved into different populations as did we. We adopted cultural and langistuic elements from each other. We Turks are heavily influenced by Iranians and some could say that we lost our core identitity because of them. So in that sense, Iranians have "asimilated, influenced and wiped out the ancient Turkic civilisations" into the modern civilisations. So I could use the same argument back to you. And no I dont hate Iranians but I hate that we adopted Islam because of them and incorporated many Farsi words into our language.
the comment section is racist but your videos are not racist thats why i watch your videos
True
Ikr. There's a reason the west are generalized as a buncha racist white supremacist nazis.
True
I am so happy you mentioned us Dutch Indos! We have a real big community here in the Netherlands that is quite unique.
JD Dipowirono how come there are none in Indonesia?
jeems007 after the independance of Indonesia our (grand)parents had the choice to stay in Indonesia, where they were seen as traitors, or go to Holland. Most choose to go to Holland. Between 1945 - 1968 300.000 Indos left indonesia for the Netherlands.
@@grahamcracker121 there are many here in Indonesia, but they blend in with the natives many of their descendents even forget about it. i know it, because my great grandparent was one
Netti Lee if they blend in with the natives then they have very little European bloods. Seems that the ones who look white left the country
jeems007 not really. First generation like my grandparents Really Just look indonesian to be honest. Not white at all. They left Because they felt indo european, spoke dutch ( next to indonesian language), were all Christians and worked for and with the Dutch. After 1949 the situation for Indo Europeans was bad in Indonesia so they had to go.
What is most important is that having good heart.
@Qabileghor You can be proud or ashamed of your ancestors and regardless of your current status, but I understand when people try to live in the glory of the distant past without much accomplishments it's a little pathetic.
Best comment ❤️🔥
AMEN
You still have all my heart
I liked the song at the end. For anyone else wondering it is "we're finally landing" by home
It'd offer you Kalmykia, a mongolic region in the Russian Caucasus.
And buddhists to boot.
Lenin is a half Kalmyk
@@pozk-tf6ey
There are multiple Lenins. Pictures of "Lenin" show different people. So, it's probably the same story as "Putin". Nobody knows how actual Putin looks like.
Mustafa Alam Yes, a group of Mongolians that migrated to the Caucasus.
@PRINCE K V
Because those are the countries where Buddhism prospered.
Mixed Ancestry Filipino here! The Philippines is full of diverse admixtures. The Chinese have a significant influence on both the culture and admixture on the population, with the Spanish contributing mostly religion and language.
My great-great-grandmother was a 2nd generation Spanish settler who married a Filipino, and whose daughter married a Chinese businessman. As far as I know, I am 1/8th Spanish, 5/16ths Chinese, and 9/16ths Native Filipino.
300 years of colonisation in the Philippines from Spain. That's a lot of time for cultural absorption from the hegemonic colonial power. That's probably why a lot of Filipinos have Spanish surnames and are RC, right?
@@AviChetriArtwork That is true, but the main reason is that the Spanish governors "convinced" most of the people to adopt a Spanish-based last name. I do forget when this was, but I definitely remember it from my history classes.
So basically you're a mutt
@@AviChetriArtwork All former colonies had no choice but to adopt the culture of their European masters.
Why do you think imitating Western culture and speaking English is so prevalent in India?
@@anonrandom7765 Only as a de facto language, specifically for officiality. Most Indians would speak at least one native language, most of the time it is Hindi. I'm from Nepal, and almost everyone speaks Nepali over English.
Also all the new Eurasians from the mostly US servicemen in Philippines, Vietnam, Japan, and Korea.
That’s more of a taboo subject’
And from travelling sex tourists too.
Jerald Macachor not most
Don't forget sexpats. If you're White, Asian women are VERY easy. I went on a tour across S.E Asia and Japan/Korea 3 years ago (I was 18), and bedded 50+ Asian women at least in a span of 3 months.
I'm pretty sure I have at least a couple Eurasian bastards running around back there now.
@Austronesian Incel You clearly don't understand time zones, mud skin.
Central Asians are the original Eurasians.
It seems we are the original Eurasian rh negative breeds, and we were bred down into the archaic hominids to make the rh positive mutts that are now common throughout the world. Rh positives can not make a race of rh negatives. We are alien to your blood. A parallel development of many races may have mixed, but the rh negatives had to be the first or independent of that.
Duncan Crow I’m Norwegian O-RH neg. so was my mom. She said it came from her basque lineage 🤷🏻♀️
@anthony k True
@anthony k northern Europeans looked like central asians with blonde/bronze hair...basically the original mixed with the later mainland euro population that moved into Scandinavian/Russian areas , back then long time ago people in the northern hemisphere had blonde/bronze hair because of the cold ice age climate
@anthony k not exactly if you look at some Asians they have African features depending upon were you go I can show people vietnamese Chinese that have the African rock structure face
The father of my mom's dad came from Sardinia, Italy and went to Malaysia and married a Eurasian Kristang lady. That gave birth to my mom's dad who later in life married a Malay woman.
Hmm..., that's great. Maybe my blood is Dutch.
Am earlier than usual. Thanks for this video!
Hi Dorat I am Uncle Ruckus - No Relation.
Enjoyed your video Masaman. Both my grandparents on my mother's side are Eurasian.
So if native americans have some asian DNA. And mestizos that are native/european mix, does that make some latinos eurasian?
Technically, yeah.
Not really, Native Americans are a mix of dark peoples grouped as 1 by Europeans. NA actually have so called Middle Eastern dna which is not surprising.
Because it’s been thousands of years ago that Amerindian’s ancestors came from Asia, I don’t agree they are or should still be considered Asian today. But it’s all opinion anyway.
If thats the case then the aboriginal Australians would still be black despite scientists saying they are not when they came directly from blacks. However when its black people its a different story..they would never admit the truth.
@@lobsterbalelegesse9919 Native americans dont have middle eastern DNA, they have Ancient North Eurasian DNA which is a population mostly related to northern and eastern europeans than anything else, they are also related to central asians and north indians but thats because those populations descend from european migrations during the bronze age.
First one here, love the channel ;)
Hi Bro I am Uncle Ruckus - No Relation.
For any culture to survive it is necessary that it not only be taught to the children of those who have that culture but also embraced by those children. This is most frequently done when there is some reason for that culture to be valued as distinct from those around it and worthwhile preserving.
It's amazing how culture can remain unchanged while people come and go all around it. That's because culture is made up of many things that are traded and genes are only one of those things.
Ncie video ! My father is a Singaporean Eurasian., born and bred as with me, although our roots comes from the Hong Kong/ macau Eurasian community. I do know those of Portuguese ancestry tend to speak of themselves as “Portuguese” first rather than Eurasian. What’s also interesting during the British colonies in Hong Kong and Singapore were the private sporting clubs that Eurasian communities form such as SRC on the Padang where cricket / hockey were played often against other European clubs such a s cricket club. Post independence would see many Eurasians members joining both clubs. Also interesting to see the role that Eurasian would play in the civil service governments of both port cities of Hong long & Singapore. Anyway pah seh this comment very long sia!
50% Eurasians in the Philippines is an overestimate, Mason. The thing you got correct though is the assimilation into the native population.
jenny pai girl are you slow? He didnt say 50% of Filipinos are Eurasian. He said less than 1% of the population are Eurasians (at least 50% European ancestry) and I believe that. Most Filipinos only have a small amount of European DNA. But a small minority could be considered Eurasians.
Here are some examples of Spanish-Filipino families still living in the Philippines today even after it was decolonized a century ago
Scroll to the part of the post about Spanish-Filipinos
www.tapatalk.com/groups/anthroscape/european-eurasian-colonial-populations-in-asia-t90325.html
Some of them even look full European but they’re Filipino. So it’s very clear that they didnt all assimilate because they still look white.
@@minim6981 yeah, tapatalk is a very "reliable" source. Are you so ashamed of your native ancestry that you gloss over whatever European genes?
Even 1,000,0000 half Europeans in the Philippines is an overkill. Maybe achievable in 10 years due to SEXPAT migration to the islands, you know when those cash-strapped white boomers retire in an "exotic land" and bang a local woman young enough to be their granddaughter
"Looking white" has nothing to do with assimilation. There are many "brown Filipinos" who are culturally white - only speaking English, while Enrique Razon speaks and acts like a brown folk.
Get off your white worship
@@jennypai1776 I personally know most of the people in the pictures. I can send you a PM if you want proof that they still live in the Philippines and they're actually Filipinos. Any picture you doubt, just let me know and I can prove it. Also, 1 million half Europeans is not hard to believe because some half Filipinos still look mostly Filipino themselves and can kinda blend in with the crowd. Not all, or most of that 1 million would pass as white, only a few would
@@minim6981 what is up with your white worship? Many half white half Filipinos are basically outside the Philippines. The ones in the Philippines are either descended from the old Spanish families or children of sexpats and abandoned children of US servicemen, and they aren't 1 million. If you include those who are 1/8 white, that's believable. And you really proud that Filipino women are whoring themselves to European creeps?
And you are actually creepy. You are willing to send personal photos of non-celebrities to an internet stranger just to "prove your point"?
Lmao other ASEAN neighbors are so ins3cur3 of us filipinos😂 @@minim6981
Merry Christmas Mason !
Loads of Love from India..
To you too
POO
Here Masaman has shown the consequences of colonization by the European sea powers and left out the continental perspective (Germany, Russia, Iran, China).
As a German, I associate the "original Eurasians" and Eurasia as the realm between the Ural mountains and the Yenisei river plus Central-Asia. That's the wide and thinly populated space between Europe, East-Asia and Iran. The steppes were originally populated by Indo-Aryans and over the last 2500 years, Turkic and Mongolic speaking people came in waves of invasions and mixed with the remaining native Europeans.
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fichier:Kazakh_genesis_Ismagulov.jpg
I agree! I only wish more people knew about this before they started started slapping labels on themselves.
Well, in North Africa, Turkey (Byzantium), Caucasus too once lived Europeans 1000-2000 years ago. Now there were only Arabs, Africans, and Turks left. In southern, western and northern Europe, the same thing is happening today.
@@КастетГлебов The people in north Africa aren't connected with asia so they can't be Eurasians. The people in Turkey would be considered Eurasian but I don't don't think that what the creators of the term had in mind when they came up with with it. Like van Rensburg said the turn was mostly for people living on the Eurasian steppe that mixed with the mongols and the Turks during the steppe invasions/migrations in the dark ages and medieval eras.
Read Adolpf Hitla (intentionally misspelled)
“Waves”??? no they didn’t change anything of the European makeup. They wished they did but they didn’t. The Europe side that might be affected with some Mongolian or Turkic ancestry is the furthest East Europe. West/South Europe is European. Also those “Ural” people are central asian, they’re not technically Eurasian (Asian or European fully)
Great video. Would like to something on Mauritius, Madagascar and Formosa.
Any French Vietnamese Americans I have French and Vietnamese Heritage and I was born and raise in the US
Your parents probably leaved Vietnam due the fall of South Vietnam, F.
A lot of Southern Vietnamese people I met are always part French for some reason
@@OatmealGrillBlazer "for some reason", you mean that they got fucked by their ex-colonialist French men??
There isnt even a French-Vietnamese population. There are alot more Ameriasians than Viets mixed with French
Yeah I know there's more Asian Americans then French Asian American most of a French Vietnamese I know are my family members
The term was originally applied to part European and Indian in the English lanquage the ones in the East Indies had Portuguese terms including the Dutch Indos at one time. The uk usually refers to an asian person to be of the indian subcontinent. There was a time in history were European explorers once though that inland southeast asia part of the Indian subcontinent
Take the channel census here: docs.google.com/forms/d/1M2PibH4PYDgjq239IxSwqH_Y1Dy-ovlBqN4sHVEW9HQ/prefill
Full breakdown before the new year! Thanks
oh, and merry Christmas, happy Hanukkah and all that.
Hi Masaman I am Uncle Ruckus - No Relation.
Filipinos are mostly Asian though. Some have European blood from Americans. And even further back the nobles has mixed Spanish blood.
He did state that fact, he said that Filipinos that has half Euro blood are 1% or less of the population
Jc Dizon HALF EURO only though, as in 50% European and 50% Asian, not including descendants of foreigners from earlier generations. Yes those of 50% European mix is rare and mostly ends up in showbiz here, but some have at least one foreign ancestor from the last 100 years.
Nyla Noel Thats literally nothing lol. Most filipinos have nothing European.
middle easterners ? You seemingly avoided perhaps the most important group.
there's too much African blood there for them to be just Eurasians
Middle Easterners share the same genetics as Europeans. While Indians also has Middle Eastern ancestry with some carrying hapologroup J2, they have their own Indian hapologroup H that is found only in India and the Roma people in Europe who are descended from Indians who migrated there. That makes Indians different from Middle Easterners and Europeans enough to be considered Asians.
my favorite part of the visual side of Masaman's videos, is the pictures of beautiful women from all the unique cultures being talked about.
Thanks for leaving the UK off the map !
【2:33】I think the Kalmyk people are missing in this table.
☺ Mason, please make a video about Kalmyk people when you have a chance because they are very unique people.
🌷🌷Kalmyk people are the only one who believes in Tibetan Buddhism in Europe. Thank you for your time. 👍
I thought this was going to be a video on the old Indo-Europeans
Just Vienna As did I.
same
Edward Douwes Dekker was a full blooded Dutchman, and had nothing to do with the creation of Indonesia. He was a writer.
Video says Masaman, music says Summoning Salt. Where's my speedrun history?
There’s also another form of the name of the old world if you consider it as a single continent as there isn’t a natural separation border called Afro-Eurasian (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Eurasia) is there an ethnicity called Afro-Eurasian, if there is can you make a video about it.
I think 100% of my DNA is Afro-Eurasian. 0% Native American, or Native Oceanic DNA.
Just an observation of Eurasians... When young they children have very attractive and striking features which stays with them into youth... However, as they age, somehow the stereotypical Asian features seem to dominated and the features start to look rounder, or as we would say, prosperous 😅
Dennis Y yes, i noticed that in Isabel Preysler, Enrique Iglesias' Filipina mom
Nyla Noel Filipinos are AUSTRONESIAN not really any European in them.
There is a online cult of half white and asian people who go on reddit and cry about how ugly they are.
@@belstar1128 Well, they're not wrong. Mutts do tend to be ugly as sin.
Great video! 😊
Can you do a video about the genetics of the people of Cyprus?
dont start war
Haplogroup DE(Negroid) was the first Middle Easterners and Southeast Asians
@@kivloli8385 white Europeans have a big chunk of Neanderthal DNA.
Cypriots also have Canaanite ancestry.
@@arishekels1264 true
Thank you for the video. Really appreciate the history. ☺️
Спасибо
Great videos, but the background music is giving me a headache !
Merry Christmas, Mason. I did not know about dutch Indonesians prior to this.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo_people
I have cousins who are half Eurasians here in Malaysia. My dad's brother married a Eurasian by the surname Gasper. My late grandmother's sister in law was Dutch & Irish (it means my late granduncle was Indian) so that makes my uncle & aunties (my dad's cousins) Eurasians. My dad's sisters married Australians British, Irish & Anglo-indian. My dad's cousin married a Singaporean Eurasian. Another cousin of his married an Australian British. I basically have 70% Eurasian relatives in my family from an Indian heritage 😁
By the last name "Pillai", I guess you have relatives from Tamilnadu (I've seen many people from Tamilnadu having that last name)
@@noname6756 I guess so because my paternal grandfather & his family migrated to Malaya in the 1920s. I have no idea about his relatives living in India. No trace on them but I believe there is some still alive maybe his cousin's family or someone who didn't migrate but decided to stay in India until today 🤷🏽♀️ but my paternal grandmother's grandparents came from Vellore (Naidu) & Tanjore (Pillay). That's all I know about them.
@@bernadettepillai ohh, that's interesting! The world is so beautiful, everyone of us are connected 😁
Filipino Eurasian here. Personally I don't consider myself Hispanic although my father and grandmother have Hispanic ancestry. I speak Spanish as well but its not enough to be labeled Hispanic.
Do you know the definition of Hispanic?
@@luelzone7474 People in different countries define stuff differently, and in the case in the Philippines, culture wise Spanish/Castille settlers are similar to the natives to a degree (rooted in Catholicism probably), that there's probably no need to identify differently - we use ethnolinguistic classification, as an archipelago means language is very varied.
Eurasian? Like your parents are one European and one Asian?
imo Hispanic is more of a cultural term, so to me Filipinos still count in the general family given how Spanish culture is a root of the modern culture and how much the influence still remains
@@gunnasintern exactly 💯👌
I have a friend who was adopted into the US from Guyana. They were told their mother was from an Amerindian tribe, and their father was possibly African. When they took a DNA test, they found they were almost 50/50 Amerindian and West African, with a couple percent Middle Eastern thrown in. I think they were rather surprised by the West African part, as are most people who see them. I'm aware that makes them an oddity, but I just think it's neat.
Why would they be surprised everyone I know from Guyana is black skinned.
4:19 where did I find that pictures
Busca en Google: Sistema de castas
De nada.
One point of criticism. I may be dealing with semantics here but I digress. The term Hispanic and it's meaning is very relative. Various standards of what constitutes "hispanic" were made such as that of the now defunct "Latin Union" which defines hispanic while considering various factors such as linguistics, cultural practices, and ethnicity.
The Philippines was a member hence considered hispanic/latin under such standards set by The Union, along with Timor Leste. They argued that it meets primarily the cultural factor and at a certain degree, linguistic and ethnicity. You need to dive into Filipino history, culture, and heritage to understand this better. Moreso prior to the US colonization where Spanish was still the lingua franca until 1987.
Meanwhile, other institution like that of the US census back then has different criteria for what the classification "hispanic" entails.
Even our informal culture has its own, mainly considering geography and whether they speak the Spanish language or not.
In sum, most "labels of identity or classification" are ambiguously applied to Filipinos. Both by Filipinos and foreigners.
Great video as usual anyways.
I really enjoy watching your videos. The only thing I found a bit problematic about this one is minute 9:27 when you show pictures of 8 different people that are supposed to show what a "Melanesian, Filipino, Timorese etc." looks like. I don't think 1 picture (1 person) represents a whole country/region/ethnic group...
Marcelo del Alamo right. There are actually Filipinos who look like every person in those pictures, but he makes it seem like all Filipinos look like that one guy
Wild about this channel 🦞
A lot of Macanese, Kristangs, and Anglo-Indians dont have much or any European ancestry. They’re just descendants of people who converted to Christianity and changed their last names to European ones. So no, most of them arent Eurasian. It would be like if Filipinos considered themselves Eurasians just because of their Spanish last names and Catholic religion. In the Philippines, mestizos (Eurasians) are only a specific group of people who look mixed enough to be considered Eurasian. If a regular Filipino calls himself mestizo, people would laugh at him
People these day really writing history according to them for views and selling books.
Many Filipinos try to use skin bleaching too.
There are Filipinos that have darker skin but looks like Eurasian. ...and mistakenly called half Indian.
Geo V truth
Well, some of them don't have much East Asian DNA either; most Indians are Caucasian regardless of if they have European blood in them or not.
Very, very nice! I think I learned more new facts in this video than I have from some others in a while. In addition to some direct suggestions, I am going to give you some general links that'll enhance your creativity for 2020 (Happy New Year!):
1. Where did the Jewish diaspora lands get their names? I remember being told in Hebrew school that when the Jewish diaspora happened, Jews scattered throughout the known world. Since they would be living there and that would be essentially be their homes areas at the immediate moment back then, they decided to give each place a Hebrew name to help personalize it a little bit. That is why Ashkenaz is named after a biblical figure who was associated with the north, and thus "Ashkenazim".
2. Cultures that only have a handful of people left-but deeply analyzed.
3. Cultures of enclaves/exclaves. I think looking at the Llanitos of Gibraltar again would be interesting because they are a creole group of many different other groups.
4. Reiterate: Southeast Pacific/Insular Chile
5. Bolivia
6. Bougainville, Chuuk Islands, New Caledonia-the three most likely new countries in the near future (New Caledonia is having round 2 of their independence vote around November 2020. If they say 'no' again, then they will have their final round sometime in 2022; Bougainville just voted 'yes' to independence and is on it's way to achieving nationhood; the Chuuk Islands FSM tentatively have their independence vote scheduled for March 2020)
7. Are their Roman-Chinese in the modern world?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liqian
8. ruclips.net/video/pVDi5ua_1J4/видео.html
9. ruclips.net/video/0BhnFn7MbME/видео.html
10 .www.popularmechanics.com/science/environment/a30243505/deepest-point-antarctic-glacier/
11. Distribution of Neanderthal and Denisovan populations in pre-history; the subdivisions
12. Neolithic cultural complexes-how are they related to today's people?
13. Was China a colony of ancient Egypt? Did the ancient Egyptians make it to Australia (Gosford Glyphs)
14. Tex-Mex
15. Chicano culture and general Hispanic culture
16. Tiburon Island, Mexico and the Seri/Comcaac people
17. Serer ethnoreligious group
18. Lesser known island groups off the coast of WEST Africa (beyond Macaronesia)
19. Native American Peoples of the Eastern US + Cahokia and the Mississippian culture
20. French/Dutch ethnicity represented on Saint Marten/Sint Maarten in the Caribbean
See? We're not "Asian Latinos", WE ARE FULL-BLOWN ASIANS/SOLID AUSTRONESIANS!
Pagbati mula sa Pilipinas!
Greetings from the Philippines!
@Kingshuk Monsur What does that even mean?
@@jinkiskhan1967 It means South Asians came about as a race due to mixing b/w Europeans (Aryans) and Natives (Dravidians + Veddoids). Just like Latinos came to be due to mixing b/w Europeans (Spaniards) and Natives (Amerindians).
it kinda depends on the filipino we're talking about, ph is in fact, a multi-ethnic territorial nation-state, tho yeah, a big majority are native austronesian, but let's not discount the existence of historically diverse urban mestiso groups
Filipinos are called Asian Latinos for the Spanish influence and not because they may be mixed.
I won't consider us "Asian Latinos" also but we are the closest major people group that fits that description since we're the Asian group that has the most Latin/Latin American influence (mostly Spanish and Mexican) in the world
Mixed marriage (not necessarily between races but different ethnics) is nothing news in my family! I am a fourth generation Australian with more than 8 different ethnics groups possibility with non-European ancestry! I have a grandson who is a quarter filipino but he hardly look like one as he has blue eyes and paler skin! In Australia, there has been several changes in demography in the last 70 years. Moving from Anglo-Celtic ethnics with a few exceptions i.e. a large German population in both South Australia and Queensland to multi-European ethnical group then to an increasing Eurasian population. It may not look like one but it is fast increasing due to an increase in immigration from Eastern Asia and SE Asia. You will find many couples who are European and Asian, yet at the same time we are still Australians!
Nothing to get overly excited about. "Australian" culture is the weakest it's been since when people in Australia still considered themselves British. With no dominant ethnic-cultural group, Australia risks having no cultural glue to keep the nation together and our differences will be exploited by large, foreign powers (as well as skeezy local politicians).
Your videos are what youtube is made for. I have learned so much and after watching all videos can tell that i have a much higher understanding of human development and nature. I just wanted to say thank you before watching this video. Merry Christmas to all celebrating and reading. Spread love, joy and knowledge it's a lot better than the alternatives 💖😊📖
Nice video. You should do a video on the former peoples of the Kushan Empire/Kingdom and some the unique relics and feature they have left the world. Just a suggestion. Thanks for all you do, Masaman. Happy Holidays.
For the love of god, please a video about Ancient Egypt. And who shares their DNA the most
Egyptians were haplogroup B proved by Cheik anta Diop.
m.ruclips.net/video/6Fk1CE7r6eU/видео.html
Who would share their DNA the most if not modern Egyptians? Even after waves of migrations, from Greeks, Nubians, Arabs and Bedouins, the core of the population stayed the same.
The only way for the modern Egyptians to have less genetical similarity to ancient Egyptians is that the Ancient Egyptians were of Sub Saharan origin or something like that.
But I don't know shit about genetics, so don't take my word for it. It's simply logic.
@@Vitalis94 Modern Egyptians don't share any genetic similarity with ancient Egyptians at all. Coptic people show a certain continuity but that's it. Ancient Egyptian Mummies have been found to have haplogroup R1b which is shared with more than half of Western European men, and these mummies had well preserved blonde/red hair, Europoid skulls, and traces of tobacco in their teeth (not native to the region).
These are the facts. Derive from them what's obvious.
@@jamesturner4478 you dumb modern egyptians muslims are 70% north africans , they are arabized egyptians , even copts only speak arabic !
They prays with greek language!
(You can write in youtube egyptian dna test result )
#ignorant_is_bliss
Im look like indian in the philippines but i figure it out that there something behind in colonization i think we filipino have been mixed through spanish and indian
My Wife is in this category. Dutch/Indonesian. Parents from Indonesian. She’s from the Netherlands.
TA Videos Her parents are a mix of both.
@@williamchristian8705 ah an "Indo"
@@TAVideos786 You're insane, bro.
@anthony k Wait and watch, a natsee revolution is coming.
anthony k They were Catholic.
Freemarkets appear to have the greatest success in laxing asian identity.. singapore seems to be the best example of this..
The chinese hate singaporeans.. thr going to have a tough time competing with the supurior innovating capabilities of the emerging euasion strains..
Shall be intersting
There are still Spanish-Filipinos living in the Philippines and many of them look full European. Scroll to the part of the post about Spanish-Filipinos
www.tapatalk.com/groups/anthroscape/european-eurasian-colonial-populations-in-asia-t90325.html
Those people still live in the Philippines. The post also talks about Dutch-Indos and Macanese, but their current populations in Indonesia and China are tiny and they mostly look Asian now
Spanish filipino population is small make only 3% mean 3 million out of 115 million people and Philippines has largest Eurasian population in southeast asia and east asia also there some eurasian who are mixed with other european but only 1% mostly white american descent
So about 5% of population are considered eurasian
I think the Filipino Spanish got absorbed into mainstream Filipino culture cuz as even if most people deny it they make the other half bulk of Filipino Culture itself so it didn't really destroy their unique culture because Spain made the Intramuros Spanish lifestyle be the lifestyle of the rest of the Islands like Intramuros was the center of life culture religion and education
I take note that a lot of Filipinos in the comments are saying they have Spanish/European ancestry even though as said by Massaman the figure is in the single digits. I think this is telling that the European White race still holds power over the native population, I doubt most Filipinos would take note of an ancestor from Indonesia a few generations prior.
@Dian Smith kinda sad that so many Asians have inferiority complex
indonesia?? lol most likely just the philippines. this is like saying a german person has an ancestor from sweden 16 generations prior. also regarding spanish ancestry in the philippines, it is in the single digits because it is mostly concentrated in some of the upper and upper middle classes, which many also left during past historical events, the most recent being the marcos regime which had many leave for the US and australia, others died to ww2 bombing runs over rich historical districts in the urban capitals that got carpet bombed. the middle and lower middle classes (if we are talking about legitimate spanish ancestry) either have only a small partial amount from many generations back from that one great great grandfather, or they are just misremembering an ancestor who was only culturally hispanic, or they are generalizing their ancestry based on their hispanic surname that was decreed to their ancestors in the 1800s
@@xXxSkyViperxXx I imagine there's a lot of people that take overexposed photographs of their grandparents as "proof" of their Caucasian looks and pale skin, like my family does with my grandmother.
@@AviChetriArtwork no, they'd just tell you that this and that grandparent had this and that spanish ancestor in one of the branches somewhere then theyd reminisce how their ancestor was so good at spanish back in their time, but neat trick, i suppose hahahaha. tho, im serious, there are people with legit spanish ancestry, just not a particularly a lot, but if you stroll through the halls of top universities, or go through rich neighborhood subdivisions, or high-end malls, there are people that you can find with seemingly spanish facial features. got some classmates before where the common feature i always notice that lets me guess they do have spanish ancestry is the fact they have kind of a distinct eyebrows that seem bushy to me or something... and they're a little pale or maybe dusky but curiously dont seem east asian.
@@alirazarafie7479 well im from the philippines and not a brown person and sure maybe people here like light complexion, since much of the upper and upper middle classes are lighter toned and the advertisement models and tv stars too. the eyes tho, i dont think people care about that... hahaha since its such a small detail that no one thinks about here. colored contact lenses aren't popular. theyd rather dye their hair in some western or korean style hair color trend tho, my sister looks particularly korean due to that hahaha
I’m a half white half asian American. There were large numbers of white people and Asians in my community when I was growing up but neither really accepted me as one of them, the Asians especially did not accept me. Until high school when I met several other mixed race people who had similar experiences, I had seen so few hapas before that as soon as I met one that was a girl I caught feelings, she didn’t feel the same but we’re friends, I met a lot of people who were basically every ethnic mix you could think of, white and latino, black and white, black and Latino, latino and asian, white and asian, black and asian, black and Polynesian, Polynesian and white, asian and Polynesian, Native American and latino, Indian and white, Indian and black, etc. I know it sounds stupid but I think mixed people genuinely need people like them in order to foster a healthy and prideful identity and we served that purpose for those I went to high school with, we had a Biracial Student Union
I got a question, if Turks originated from the Far East why do they look so similar to Greeks and Italians?
Because they mixed with the local populations, most turks have a strong admixture of Greek, Armenian, Anatolian and to a lesser degree south Slavic and albanian
Only in very rural regions of Central Anatolia will one still encounter turks with slit eyes
Turkic groups intermarried among local populations as they migrated. So modern day Turks from Turkey intermingled with the predominantly Greeks who inhabited Anatolia at the time. Which is why the average Turk has a massive amount of European ancestry.
Preoximerias well you say that but modern day Turks got 20% European DNA at most. Most don't even have it 🤷🏻♂️
Preoximerias Romans/ Byzantines ( or Greeks) didn't inhabit the whole of Anatolia, only the very western portions. Ancient groups such as Hitties inhabited the rest.
evansdrad The celtic nationalist
Myheritage Dna saying West asia is Turkic and Persian in official page
singapore has alot of mixed people but if its eurasian i dont think there is that much maybe only 10% since personally i only see like 3 europeans a day and i only know 5 mixed asian european people and alot of mixed asian x asian like chinese indians which are very common
The Mughal princess was NINE!
Masaman: Wondering what your thoughts on the amount of sub-Saharan African admixture there would be in the Eurasian Communities with Portuguese orgins. I can find no literature or research on the matter, but given that there were black Africans (both slaves and freemen) working on Portuguese vessels during the golden age of Portuguese exploration, I would not be surprised if the Eurasians had in fact some African ancestry.
im about 10% Iberian (probably northern) and the rest is pure austronesian tagalog. The only distinct thing about me that looks european is my height and lighter skin which goes red instead of brown. My ancestry is not who i am however, but my nationality is
Was your great grandfather a priest? Lol
My brother and father's haplotype is western and central Eurasian. I wasn't sure exactly what that meant. The video was helpful.
Quebec is not part of Latin America! The definition of Latinoamerica is not primarily language but the mutual sense of exploration during colonial times (and today) and latino culture. We're poor, most folks up in Canada are not.
No one said Quebec is part of Latin America.
Are there any Latin Americans here who are uncomfortable with the term "Latin America"? Basically it's just Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries in the Americas. Why not "Ibero-America" or something.
Latin america is based on language, Quebec is Latin America as they speak a latin language.
I am from latin america and tell you the term literally means the part of anerica that speaks mostly a latin based language.
@@perthdude21 it exists, latin america also includes french speaking people, ibero america is for spanish and portuguese only.
I don't like calling myself latino as we are different from each other, but we are part of the same language family and it's fair go say we share some culture from that.
@@alecity4877 In the most technical sense, yes Quebec is part of Latin America. But in reality the most technical definition of the term is not used. In practice, "Latin America" is only used to describe the Spanish and Portuguese speaking parts of the Americas (and sometimes the French speaking parts of the Carribean). Because of this particular but very common usage, I feel uncomfortable with the term "Latin America". Furthermore, some people completely exclude the French speaking parts (south of the US) from "Latin America". The problem is that many, many people equate "Ibero-America" with "Latin America". And tbh I can't blame them. Ibero-American countries tend to have more in common with each other culturally and historically. While they don't have much in common with Quebec. So "Latin America" has become a shorthand way of describing *only* the Spanish and Portuguese speaking countries of the Americas, even though it is technically incorrect to use the term for this very specific meaning.
Background music was very very irritating as it was overlapping with your narration. Particularly when you watch with earphones on
Sah,are you having off button?Push,khatam
Good video massaman. But please dont say that mixing was mostly a voluntary participant situation . Did it happen yes was it more common than rape or forced marriage no. That's so misleading for true understanding.
@d puski
I dont know exactly how what you consider modern black humans were born .would love to hear it . Cause genetics say we have always been this way that's why there less mutations and foreign mixtures as the genes get older not the same for any.other humans that's what makes it so interesting. But please tell me how modern black folks were made always here to learn.
@d puski
That's understood they came back after undergoing some changes . Especially after checking the ct line and were they come from I dont see where any thing I said is off. Accept what is considered modern or not .
Please do a detailed video on Anglo-Indians
sydjaguar He has already done one
Even though we don't know much of the Huns, it is highly likely that they were a Eurasian ethnic group as well. Probably the "original" most Eurasians in the definition you referred to.
Not to mention that the bulk of their army consisted of various East Germanic, Slavic and Iranic tribes, too.
@@Vitalis94 True. These were the tribes they subjugated, but I was referring specifically to the ethnic Hunnic element/royalty.
@@jamesturner4478 Yes, of course. Just that too many people, when they imagine Huns, they see a picture of a Mongol like horse archer. Whilst we aren't sure about Hunnic royality, we are sure their army was full of non- Hunnic peoples.
I think there was probably a Asian European hybrid race living in Siberia since prehistoric times
I have a question since Asians and Caucasian's are similar by genetics (correct me if I amwrong) why do the San people look so similar to Asian's? Do they have the same ancestor??
Dutch Indos = Eddie and Alex Van Halen
Loved the information ❣️❣️❣️
Hispanic - The term commonly applies to the countries once under colonial possession by the Spanish Empire. Philippines being part of Spain for almost 400 years longer than Mexico. And not calling Filipinos Hispanic 🥴💯
I wonder if it is because the process of hispanicisation did not get as far in the Philippines as it did in Spanish America. In Spanish America, Spanish became the first language of the vast majority of people, at the great expense of many indigenous languages. However, this process of hispanicisation did not end with the independence of the Spanish American colonies from Spain in the 1820's. It continued throughout the 19th century and into the 20th century. I don't know if this is true, but I have heard that when Mexico gained its independence in the 1820s, only a third of its population spoke Spanish. Due to the process of hispanicisation, over 90% of the population nowadays speaks Spanish natively.
I think the difference with the Philippines is that after its independence in the 1890's, the US colonised the country and imposed English. I've heard that the Americans discouraged the use of Spanish (idk if this is true). Filipinos also managed to preserve their own indigenous languages more successfully than the native americans did. I'm assuming that this could be because of government policies in the Philippines that allowed and/or encouraged the use of indigenous languages? Whereas in Spanish America, the speaking of indigenous languages was at times discouraged. Spanish was the language of the ruling classes. But somehow even the poorest people ended up speaking Spanish as their first (and sometimes only) language, while many indigenous languages lost ground. Also, much more people from Spain migrated to Spanish America than to the Philippines, so the influence of Spaniards in the Spanish American colonies could have been stronger because of that.
So while the Philippines was a Spanish colony for longer than Mexico (and for longer than many other parts of Spanish America), the process of hispanicisation lasted for longer in Spanish America. This is not a good thing though, if force (either physical force or social pressure) was used to hispanicise the population. Nowadays more and more people are becoming interested in preserving their indigenous languages and cultures.
@@perthdude21 ruclips.net/video/Gefe0bup3mc/видео.html
mostly of filipino are not pure blood
In the Philippines there were many ethnic groups...just like America, that's why they tried to do as Roma and to be able to use Spanish as a lingua franca but there were always problems in America, well today...
The tagalog that is a Linda Role of Spanish, English and native languages.
@Masaman, do you think Romani are Eurasian considering their ancestor from (Northwest) India and largely assimilated European Gene.
Michi Geissbühler I get it
Michi Geissbühler dravidian it self are also mixed.
@Michi Geissbühler I agree, there is a lot of genetic divergence from the Indian population from the Romani. But the Romani have a cultural origination from the subcontinent.
Avi Chetri Do everyone agree with Dravidian are partially Caucasoid/West Eurasian?
Michi Geissbühler Northwest Indian are mainly Aryo-Dravidian (Mixed Indo-Aryan people and Dravidian)
I am from Uzbekistan(Centural Asia).I think we're real eurasian
Wow nice to see another Uzbek
Elbek Nosirov
No question about that!! My family lives in North America, but we are 'Eurasian' in a less direct way. Our son would not look unusual to you! He is half-Korean, one-fourth British, and one-fourth Hungarian.
Some of the Hungarians' ancestors came from much farther east in the 9th century.
But the Bible says that we are all from one man, from one blood. And there is '...one God, and one mediator also between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.'
(1st Timothy 2:5)
@@jesusislordsavior6343 Yeap. As a muslim I can say there is only One God and we are children of Adam.
@@eltn2610 As a uzbek we dont have european we have turkic and east iranic blood
@@Capriocean Just look at uzbeks DNA test
Well made video mate!
Turks?
Selam
edboss Turks are Muslim Greeks
Pi Pi 😂fair enough
@@sigmaalpha8698 and the other half Turks are Armenian Muslims
Ari Shekels And Half Kurds
If i’m half Kazakh and half Tajik should I consider myself (racially) Eurasian?
You’re fully central Asian then. Even if you’re appearance is Eurasian.
I'm SE asian and my wife is European(swede/Armenian) so my kids are eurasians... lol!!!
@d puski ???
@White Man Why are you getting offended? Armenia is literally next to Europe.
@White Man calm down....sheesh I was light heartingly just commenting on the subject.
@d puski Racist and sexist at the same time. Good job, Puski.
@d puski really, I have been with my wife for 15yrs and she been the perfect wife. Full of passion. She loves her swedish culture. We watch the st Lucia plays and eat the typical swedish foods during the holidays. She loves her swedish culture.
That music at the end is making me think we're speedrunning genetics.
Sieur Fitz God im so glad i found another person who recognizes summoning salt
Video on bangladesh
Hi A I am Uncle Ruckus - No Relation.
Check out my video I released last year over just that topic
Girl named Ladesh: :O
@Kafferlord Muslim version of India is Pakistan tho. Bangladeshis are Muslim version of Indian Bengalis but uglier.
@@jayanths1221 Hey not cool
Anglo Indians would be the most interesting group. I'm from Canada so I'm also kinda bias.
Hope everyone had a good Holidays plus a Happy New Year to come. Wishing everyone well from Canada.
They also have delicious food! But I'm also biased ;) Canada is an awesome place to live, you are very lucky. Greetings from Australia
@@mindrealminsights6517 Thanks bro. Australia is a way better place to live. You guys don't have like 6 months of cold winter like here in Ontario. Or even long depends on how North you live. Hope you won't be affected by those Fires we hear on the new you guys are having.
@@aldore6220 Cheers mate! We are OK as I live on the west coast and the fires have't been too bad here. The east coast has suffered a lot but hopefully the rain takes care of it for us!
I spent some time in Toronto during winter and I understand what you say about the cold..I enjoyed it but I don't have to live with it I guess! Yes, Australia is a great place to live also. And the weather is awesome most of the time. cheers! :)
@@mindrealminsights6517 So lucky you have nice weather. Its snowing here right now. 🌨❄⛄
@@aldore6220 I miss the snow. I'd never seen flurries before I visited Toronto. Even the people in Vancouver don't see snow like that. But yes, I do feel lucky to have lots of sunshine, even in winter. The weather where I live is very similar to southern California.
Nice
Hi lancelot I am Uncle Ruckus - No Relation.
I have german portugese and chinese blood I am a proud chinese euasian
Sounds like a Lovely mixture! I am German hehe
I thought the dude in the middle of the thumbnail was Ronald Reagan.
Pedro Marcelino Gilbert Gottfried in the middle. Actor Michael Shannon on the left.
In the near future, Chinese geneticists will hopefully clear up the Eurasian ancestry mystery regarding the stateless Hmong/Miao people. We have a unique recessive gene that show up in our people as blondes, redheads and brunettes with Anglo-colored pupils (see our Mongolian diaspora for reference). These traits have always existed since our ancestors' time. Our history pre-China is still a mystery to the world. ❤
I identify myself as Eurasian, my mother's Korean and my father's European-American (English/Scots-Irish/German).
Pakistanis are South Asians. They definitely don’t look European. Also Turkish People & Armenians look very different than other Europeans.
South Asia is very diverse. So of of course not all people are going to look the same. They are dark, medium, light & very light people. It doesn’t make them not South Asian..
@@TAVideos786 excelent good points very. corect
@@medusachristo3725 euroasians or indo europeans ay finks
@@medusachristo3725 south asia is a geoggraphical location, not a genetic distinction.
As far as your ancestry says, it still comes down to your nationality
Broken branch
Ancestors cry
Grandparent sorrow
😂
I like seeing inbreds getting triggered
what about the west Asians from Russia, the Caucasians and north middle easterns ,they are in the middle of Europe and Asia?
That Timorese man at 9:33 is soooo hot!
My Great Grandfather ... Robert Hartland Stanley Miles is in a book called On Parade. It's about the Eurasians. Fantastic book.
Funnily enough, I'm a Filipino and though I have Spanish blood on my mother's side, she seems to have no East Asian ancestors. Pretty uncommon in the Philippines.
are you from the upper classes? or at the very least upper middle? its not uncommon there, mind you. if ur mom has a very big portion of spanish ancestry with no east asian ancestry, that probably means her line were always on the upper middle to upper classes. if not, you'd just be a mestizo de espanyol, which isn't actually too rare. perhaps they're just hard to spot these days cuz many would falsely claim partial spanish ancestry just because of the spanish surname
@@xXxSkyViperxXx Actually, no. We live in the rural countryside. 10 minutes away from the city. I'm not the only one with this situation. I have neighbor who has the same genetically occurrence.
By East Asian, are you talking about Chinese, Japanese and Korean?
@@genericusername4316 probably ur a mestizo de espanyol from the countryside where small farming towns or haciendas had a few spaniards or mestizos de espanyol that lived as farm tenants or landlords
@@JcDizon yes, hes talking about the southern chinese or rare japanese
Western asians and east asians are separate ethnicities.. so who came first for example in the case of the turks?? are the original eurasians a product of admixture or are western euro/asians and east asians a product of them??