I was adopted as an infant and didn't find out until I was 25 that my bio father was Italian. Fast forward to DNA and turns out he was part Native American and part Spanish. I tell people, "I used to be Italian."
but...was she descended from Italians? Also, Ancestry teaches us that not all DNA is passed down from all our ancestors. So while David isn’t Italian, it’s not really proof that she wasn’t. This is because only half of each parent’s DNA continues on. I’m sure they researched her more On the full episode though.
Kendra Werner The man in the video should study his genetic cousin matches and see if he has any cousin matches who are Italian and use chromosome painting to see if there is any mediterranean” DNA markers. Ancestry DNA especially with their recent algorithms has not been good in detecting “Italian” and other ancestry including “Iberian”. People of Italian ancestry have recently stated that the update by Ancestry DNA provided no estimates of Italian DNA.
Exactly, my sister and I both took the test and mine showed 13.7% sub Saharan African her showed zero. Hers also showed nearly 10% Irish mine showed zero. We have the same parents and we look alike except she is fair complexion with blonde hair and I am darker with brown hair. 🤷♂️ dna is a weird thing as well
It was one guy who did a test and he thought he was Italian as well and turns out him and his mom only had a small bit of it. They were mostly something else. That’s crazy how you’ve been told all your life that you’re one thing and then find out you’re something else.
I do have Italian ancestry and even my mother (whose paternal grandparents were born in Italy) does not show any "Italian" ancestry in her Ancestry DNA test results and I don't either. I am not that concerned with the DNA ethnic origins. But, I DO have a kind of frustrating brick wall in our Italian ancestry and it has to do with her actual paternal surname. And I really do think it all started in the City of Torino in 1825 and the birth of Valeriano Guglielmino in April 18 of that year born in the Maternity Hospital. But then there is a large gap of records for him (that I have found so far) until two marriages in 1844 (only church parish) and 1868 and with that marriage under the civil system there is an "Allegati" (Attachment). But his name as an adult in Prascorsano was Guglielmo Valeriano. And in that "Allegati" is the information that he was born on April 18 and in the Maternity Hospital in the City of Torino and was shortly after an Abandoned Infant and given a specific number and it also lists some of the families he was placed with as a child. However it states that he was born in 1821. Years and ages stated in records for Italian research are often not correct. But it is somewhat frustrating that I feel they are the same person and he just switched his first and last names. And that Valeriano Guglielmino, born 18 April 1825 in the Maternity Hospital in the City of Torino, Italy, son of Gaspare Guglielmino and Maria Teresa Silvano is the same as my great great grandfather known in Prascorsano as Guglielmo Valeriano and later known in Illinois as William Valerio. But I don't have the exact documented proof that they are definitely the same person just some items that indicate the probability that they are. Hence my frustration. Last time I checked the State Archives in the City of Torino were closed. I'm learning Italian and trying to get better. So, maybe one day (if I can't find the needed documentation myself online at Family Search) I may write a letter to them in Italian and see if they have anything more concrete to prove my theory or disprove it if they have that.
There was a guy in YT who was a quarter north Italian and ancestry Dna didn't sow any Italian for him. But showed his mom that she was Italian when she took a test. Ancestry DNA is flawed
Its definately individualized. You might have gotten a complete different amount of DNA or percentage of DNA as your full sibling. That's the magic in the blueprint of life
A. Take another test, maybe a different company. B. If the mother was half Italian, she could have given him the other other half, her non-Italian genes, at least the ones that are tested for. C. He could have been secretly adopted.
@@67claudius very false, even after all of southern Europe's history you can still clearly see who's Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Greek, Croatian, etc
@@Jordi_Llopis_i_Torregrosa96 i'm Portuguese and i can tell you southern Europeans can look very different from each other. some have blonde hair blue eyes, others are tanned and brunette. It's not always obvious to see who is from those places
@@Sean-jc6cu I'm Italian and I've also lived in Europe he doesn't look Italian at all, they literally tell him he does have any Italian DNA in the video
Holaaa excelencia que gusto saludarte estoy buscando información de un ingeniero civil italiano radicado en Cienfuegos Cuba de 1913 a 1917 su nombre Alfredo Colli Fenchonati y dirigió la construcción de uno de los palacios más hermoso posiblemente del caribe El Palacio de Valle, excelencia me gustaría encontrar alguna información soy coleccionista y museologo sobre ese extraordinario inmueble saludos
Aren't you incredibly outraged! That could not be your great grandmother do you know how rare and expensive photos were in those years....do you think an Ethiopian could afford such a luxury?
I was adopted as an infant and didn't find out until I was 25 that my bio father was Italian. Fast forward to DNA and turns out he was part Native American and part Spanish. I tell people, "I used to be Italian."
What was his other percentage??
but...was she descended from Italians?
Also, Ancestry teaches us that not all DNA is passed down from all our ancestors. So while David isn’t Italian, it’s not really proof that she wasn’t. This is because only half of each parent’s DNA continues on.
I’m sure they researched her more On the full episode though.
Kendra Werner The man in the video should study his genetic cousin matches and see if he has any cousin matches who are Italian and use chromosome painting to see if there is any mediterranean” DNA markers. Ancestry DNA especially with their recent algorithms has not been good in detecting “Italian” and other ancestry including “Iberian”. People of Italian ancestry have recently stated that the update by Ancestry DNA provided no estimates of Italian DNA.
Fk that you are ALL THE THINGS THAT MAKE UP YOUR BLOODLINES AND FAMILY TREE EVEN IF U DIDNT QUITE GET THAT PIECE ITS STILL IN U
Exactly, my sister and I both took the test and mine showed 13.7% sub Saharan African her showed zero. Hers also showed nearly 10% Irish mine showed zero. We have the same parents and we look alike except she is fair complexion with blonde hair and I am darker with brown hair. 🤷♂️ dna is a weird thing as well
@@donrainesoh I don't believe on this
@@michelealbanese3261 Just because you inherit 50% of each parent's DNA, which 50% siblings get can be different.
Am I the only one who thought of Mr. Bean with some of his initial facial expressions? 😄
I thought the same!
It was one guy who did a test and he thought he was Italian as well and turns out him and his mom only had a small bit of it. They were mostly something else. That’s crazy how you’ve been told all your life that you’re one thing and then find out you’re something else.
I really wanted him to have Italian ancestry.
Hey, if you learn the language and get into the culture Italians are pretty inclusive. No need to be Italian to be an honorary Italian.
What is David’s total DNA ethnicities composition?!?!? PS I’m 1% Norwegian since the Vikings raided around Europe. 🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴
What was the other 25%? I'm really curious now.
My mother, Manchester, Scots and e English background, was dark haired olive skinned. Only 2 put of 5 of her kids
Took after her. 1 blonde, 1 ginger. No telling how we come out!
I do have Italian ancestry and even my mother (whose paternal grandparents were born in Italy) does not show any "Italian" ancestry in her Ancestry DNA test results and I don't either. I am not that concerned with the DNA ethnic origins. But, I DO have a kind of frustrating brick wall in our Italian ancestry and it has to do with her actual paternal surname.
And I really do think it all started in the City of Torino in 1825 and the birth of Valeriano Guglielmino in April 18 of that year born in the Maternity Hospital. But then there is a large gap of records for him (that I have found so far) until two marriages in 1844 (only church parish) and 1868 and with that marriage under the civil system there is an "Allegati" (Attachment). But his name as an adult in Prascorsano was Guglielmo Valeriano. And in that "Allegati" is the information that he was born on April 18 and in the Maternity Hospital in the City of Torino and was shortly after an Abandoned Infant and given a specific number and it also lists some of the families he was placed with as a child. However it states that he was born in 1821. Years and ages stated in records for Italian research are often not correct.
But it is somewhat frustrating that I feel they are the same person and he just switched his first and last names. And that Valeriano Guglielmino, born 18 April 1825 in the Maternity Hospital in the City of Torino, Italy, son of Gaspare Guglielmino and Maria Teresa Silvano is the same as my great great grandfather known in Prascorsano as Guglielmo Valeriano and later known in Illinois as William Valerio. But I don't have the exact documented proof that they are definitely the same person just some items that indicate the probability that they are. Hence my frustration.
Last time I checked the State Archives in the City of Torino were closed. I'm learning Italian and trying to get better. So, maybe one day (if I can't find the needed documentation myself online at Family Search) I may write a letter to them in Italian and see if they have anything more concrete to prove my theory or disprove it if they have that.
There was a guy in YT who was a quarter north Italian and ancestry Dna didn't sow any Italian for him. But showed his mom that she was Italian when she took a test. Ancestry DNA is flawed
Its definately individualized. You might have gotten a complete different amount of DNA or percentage of DNA as your full sibling. That's the magic in the blueprint of life
A. Take another test, maybe a different company. B. If the mother was half Italian, she could have given him the other other half, her non-Italian genes, at least the ones that are tested for. C. He could have been secretly adopted.
Is anyone else here related to the Grimaldi family who ruled Monaco and Genao Italy 200 years ago?
I wish they do me the same way This Would be exciting
Elizabeth Johnson I actually could, and for free lol 😂
There will never be a test that says a Swede is any Italian not even1 or2percent😨
He looks just like Clara and he looks Italian as well as her
I’m Italian. No, he really doesn’t look Italian except for the dark hair and a lot of ethnicities have dark hair.
No he doesn't look Italian at all lmao he literally looks like a regular Englishman
I didn’t see Italian features on him, so I wasn’t surprised on hearing that.
There are no Italian features, too many peoples have passed through the peninsula.
@@67claudius very false, even after all of southern Europe's history you can still clearly see who's Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Greek, Croatian, etc
@@Jordi_Llopis_i_Torregrosa96 Then obviously you have never been to Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal or Croatia
@@Jordi_Llopis_i_Torregrosa96 i'm Portuguese and i can tell you southern Europeans can look very different from each other. some have blonde hair blue eyes, others are tanned and brunette. It's not always obvious to see who is from those places
volume is too low
He doesn’t even look Italian in the least and neither does his grandmother maybe Jewish.
You have no idea what you're talking about. Have you ever been to Italy?
@@Sean-jc6cu I'm Italian and I've also lived in Europe he doesn't look Italian at all, they literally tell him he does have any Italian DNA in the video
She looks British!
Very likely Spanish, Miranda is Spanish, so. What's the other 25%?
It can also be Portuguese.
Holaaa excelencia que gusto saludarte estoy buscando información de un ingeniero civil italiano radicado en Cienfuegos Cuba de 1913 a 1917 su nombre Alfredo Colli Fenchonati y dirigió la construcción de uno de los palacios más hermoso posiblemente del caribe El Palacio de Valle, excelencia me gustaría encontrar alguna información soy coleccionista y museologo sobre ese extraordinario inmueble saludos
Awesome
He looks like clara
What was the other 25%?
Maybe she’s has eastern Indian dna. Lots of English soldiers went there.
But what is the other 24%? Funny they didn't share that
So Why is this show on a great Britainn twist we in america want to see it too
I would love to know who my great grandparents are you
Great to hear!
Berkshire is pronounced Barkshire
Whats with the location and all the weirdo spectators in these trailers hangi
How is my ancestry mire british than his
Aren't you incredibly outraged! That could not be your great grandmother do you know how rare and expensive photos were in those years....do you think an Ethiopian could afford such a luxury?