Y-DNA of a Scots-Irish Diaspora (James Irvine)

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024

Комментарии • 19

  • @Jamestele1
    @Jamestele1 3 года назад +5

    So happy to see people from my same ancestry here and still have love for their culture. I have roots from all over Scotland, and it saddens me sometimes that the southern Scots and Scots-Irish get treated like second class. We're all native Britons: let's all get along-now excuse me whilst I mix up a drink, it's damn near 11:00am!

  • @danamvc57
    @danamvc57 3 года назад +2

    I myself have only been doing this 5yrs but an aunt started i1970's . Amuses me my great great grandfather was James Montgomery Irvine 5/17/1842 and we are all questioning his birthplace which has previously as Belfast married in Airdrie, Scotland to a King from Airdrie Scotland . So 2 yrs ago ask my brother to get a y dna to try to get some clarity. Name changed from Irvine to Irwin great grandfather on marriage liscense 1897 in AMERICA

  • @Peekie2202
    @Peekie2202 3 года назад +3

    Ervin here. So far traced my family back to Northern Ireland but DNA shows mostly Scottish.

    • @Valhalla88888
      @Valhalla88888 Год назад +3

      Ulster plantation was a Scottish colonial endeavor

    • @BigRed2
      @BigRed2 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Valhalla88888Yes too many don’t understand Northern Ireland History, My DNA is also Scottish and my ancestors came from Northern Ireland to US around 1720. I’m part of the Campbell Chifley branch and i’m more Campbell then many Campbells in the Campbell DNA project but my Surname is McCutcheon which is claimed as a MacDonald sept😂

  • @thomasmccauley414
    @thomasmccauley414 6 лет назад +4

    Andy Irvine is considered to be one of the great revivalists of Irish traditional music in the 1970's.

  • @breas2746
    @breas2746 2 года назад +2

    O'Breasail, from Breas king of the Tuatha de Dannan, whose Mother was Eiru and Ireland is named after.

  • @mikesorensen1981
    @mikesorensen1981 3 года назад +5

    You cannot go by surnames, just get the dna!

  • @hayleyfell9797
    @hayleyfell9797 4 года назад +3

    The entimology of win is very close to the Brithonic word wyrn meaning dragon. This is the origins of the words worm and warren.

    • @hayleyfell9797
      @hayleyfell9797 4 года назад

      @Leo Proctor It dates to the 6th century Strathclyde therefore pre-dates both west saxon and viking eras. It is also spelt with a 'n' but i would expect that in some other locations it could be spelt Wyrm which became worm, and also warren meaning burrow. The wyrn was said to come from a hole in the ground then live on top of a hill. It also was referred to as a knock or knochen, as in knockhill etc. Before the 6th century the entomolgy is less certain. The Linton worm is just one example. Yes wyrn and wyvern are the same, the question is did the romans give it to the britians or did the britians give it to the romans. It is also linked to the white sea monster called the campus or hippocampus horse sea monster, as in place names like cambusnethan, cambuslang etc. It is clear the british believed in a great serpent that wondered the earth carving out streams and rivers, the romans superimposed the campus name on these rivers. Campus and wyrn are not limited to strathclyde they are found throughout britian. The horn known as a Carnyx was seen by the romans as being british. The entomology of the carnyx it like to predate the romans and come from the canannite punic word Khar meaning round or enclosure which itself comes from the Assyrian word Ka meaning round or mouth.

    • @hayleyfell9797
      @hayleyfell9797 4 года назад

      Scotland was only occupied for a short time by the romans and therefore we can expect that they had a very limited or no impact on the native religions. England was occupied for longer, hundreds of years but then they had limited success in merging religions, evidence for this is on www2.rgzm.de/transformation/unitedKingdom/Deities/Deities.htm you will see very little merging of even names.

    • @hayleyfell9797
      @hayleyfell9797 4 года назад

      Knock or knocken was the original word or creature, later developed into the norse creature known as the kracken. There are places in scotland called crack water etc showing the this origin. Interesting that the use of the suffix 'en' is semitic in origin and can mean plural or mean the people off. So kracken means the followers of the dragon.

  • @justinirvine7455
    @justinirvine7455 6 лет назад +2

    Irvine right here👈

  • @ChrisJones-rt8tu
    @ChrisJones-rt8tu 6 лет назад +3

    beer,,,, you need a beer

  • @michaelwoodsmccausland915
    @michaelwoodsmccausland915 2 года назад +1

    I am always a Ire/Scotia son of Auslane/Absolom
    Hyksos

  • @michaelwoodsmccausland915
    @michaelwoodsmccausland915 2 года назад

    Auslane /Absolom

  • @michaelwoodsmccausland915
    @michaelwoodsmccausland915 2 года назад

    750 AD Ire/Scotia
    Auslane/Absolom
    1638 AD NA Re Colinization
    1801 AD Ca
    1961 AD Ca
    Mitochondrial DNA 1844 AD NA Ca
    Shine Bright
    Auslane Absolom