Anglo Saxon DNA

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • In today's episode we will be talking about Gertzinger et al 2022 paper on Anglo-Saxon DNA and the Anglo-Saxon migration into the British isles. I hope you enjoy and I look forward to chatting with you all in the comments section!
    if you want to read the paper you can find it here: doi.org/10.103...
    _____
    Buy me a coffee?: ko-fi.com/alex...
    My Patreon: / alexilesuk
    Iles Tours Website: www.ilestours.co.uk
    _____
    Introduction and Outro Video made by Lauren Kirkwood: / lauren-kirkwood-9b8750191
    Many thanks to Geza Frank and Event Horizon for permission to use their music - Pulsar ( • EVENT HORIZON - Pulsar... )

Комментарии • 427

  • @KevinArdala01
    @KevinArdala01 6 месяцев назад +56

    If the term 'Anglo-Saxon' was good enough for Alfred, it's good enough for me. 👍

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  6 месяцев назад +6

      Sing as Alfred really created the term and propagated it, then that's exactly correct !

    • @johnmurray8428
      @johnmurray8428 2 месяца назад +3

      And me!

    • @robinwolstenholme6377
      @robinwolstenholme6377 Месяц назад +3

      Did the Anglo-Saxons Exist? is wessex not west sax and essix east sax... and was it not inhabited by a few jutes angles and saxons a couple of friesians

    • @julianshepherd2038
      @julianshepherd2038 21 день назад +3

      Let's just call the Anglo saxons, German boat people

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  20 дней назад

      Oooh that's going to put the Cat amongst the pigeons. I almost want to put it as the pinned comment for the video just because of some of the comments and responses I've had to read over the months!! 🤣

  • @Prydwen3
    @Prydwen3 7 месяцев назад +100

    Just because the the early 'Anglo-Saxon' in habitants of Britain did not identify themselves as 'Anglo-Saxon, does not invalidate the label 'Anglo-Saxon' given to them. The inhabitants of what is now termed 'Celtic' Britain and Europe did not identify themselves as 'Celtic' at the time. Neither did people in what we term 'Medieval' societies identify as Medieval. These terms are useful identifiers to label particular cultural, political, linguistic and social phenomena in order to give coherent historical timeline. The current attack on the term Anglo-Saxon has its origins in people who have a particular political axe to grind and an agenda to undermine identities they don't like.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад +5

      I think it's made complicated by people who don't understand why academics are challenging these definitions. If we say everything that's within x area is Anglo-Saxon, because that's how it was taught we fail to see how things changed, developed and how much each region was so different and unique in this period. I think there's not a push to invalidate or have an agenda in the UK. The USA I'd agree a lot more with, but it's a small group of Academics not the whole bunch. Also I don't use Celtic as it's so wrong and tied up in nationalism way more than Anglo-Saxon is.

    • @Prydwen3
      @Prydwen3 7 месяцев назад +30

      @@AlexIlesUK Whilst there may be a legitimate debate about the spread of (for want of a better phase) ‘Anglo-Saxonisation’ over the regions in England, this is no different to the Romanisation that progressed, over a period of time, that is encompassed in what is termed ‘Roman Britain’. A term that is not under the same threat.
      However, the current ‘Anglo-Saxon’ controversy is not driven primarily by legitimate academic debate, but by a small number of socio-political activists within academia who usually end up getting their way. A case in point is the subversion of the International Association of Anglo-Saxonists. A virulent campaign was launched against its name led by its 2nd Vice President Rambaran-Olm. Her main concern was a more inclusive future for Medieval studies and the dislike of the term Anglo-Saxon which she associated with white-supremacism. When she initially did not get her way, she resigned. Then several ‘academic’ activist groups weighed in (including Queerdievalists, The Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship and Medievalist of Colour) and her cause was also supported by the likes of Adam Miyashiro (whose article ‘Decolonising Anglo Saxon Studies’ betrays his particular motives). The IAAH did what all establishments do when faced with a cancel-culture backlash and a fear of being labelled ‘racist’ - they capitulated and changed their name.

    • @brachiator1
      @brachiator1 7 месяцев назад +2

      This is very interesting, and I guess you could say that many people have an agenda. Some seem to want to look at the Anglo Saxon period as foundational and downplay the various peoples (apart from the Danes) who inhabited the land. Simply labeling these people as Celtic or even Briton may not be sufficient and may be hiding some interesting connections.

    • @Prydwen3
      @Prydwen3 7 месяцев назад +13

      @@brachiator1 I guess you could say that the Anglo Saxon period is foundational in that it witnessed, in earliest times, Germanic tribal incursions that then led to the establishment of individual kingdoms which eventually coalesced into the single nation 'England' that exists today. There is, of course, a sizeable amount of pre-Anglo Saxon genes in the mix but all were subsumed into a common English speaking identity along with aspects of their original culture. The same can be said of the Scot's incursions from Ireland into Northern Britain which led to them eventually absorbing Pictish, Brythonic and former English Northumbrian areas (in the Lothian area) into a Scottish Kingdom.

    • @danielryan570
      @danielryan570 7 месяцев назад +3

      Well said @prydwen3

  • @dianneatfeld687
    @dianneatfeld687 2 месяца назад +18

    Sussex=South Saxons, or South Seax, - Seax was the sword carried by the Saxons and where their name derived from. Wessex = West Saxons, Essex=East Saxons.

  • @shirleydesrivieres9592
    @shirleydesrivieres9592 7 месяцев назад +8

    Welcome back. You have raised a lot questions and I’m glad you have. Nothing is carved in stone yet!

  • @loweffortamv8407
    @loweffortamv8407 6 месяцев назад +6

    Fascinating stuff as always and it's exciting to be alive during the unfolding of such an elusive aspect of British history. Nothing brings us closer to the past than trying to understand how the past saw itself in its present.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  6 месяцев назад +3

      Really glad you're enjoying the episode!

  • @WheelieMacBin
    @WheelieMacBin 6 месяцев назад +12

    There is a lot of complexity contained within this period in history. A period that is only 'dark' due to by an unfortunate lack of written records. Maybe more will turn up at some point? Contained within the British people is the history of these islands. My ancestry, I am told via DNA and written records, is English (Anglo-Saxon), Irish and Scottish in almost equal measure, with a bit of Norse thrown in to complete the picture. This is pretty common in the modern UK, it is simply the percentages that vary. The 4th and 5th centuries AD were a time of mass movements of peoples within Europe, as the ailing Western Roman Empire folded-in upon itself. We are still missing huge chunks of the puzzle. The exciting 2020 discoveries at Chedworth Roman Villa were quite an eye opener too, and proved that what we thought we knew about the time post 410 AD was wrong.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  6 месяцев назад +1

      I'm hoping to do something on Chedsworth but I'll always be late to the party!!

    • @WheelieMacBin
      @WheelieMacBin 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK - It would be a good subject. A mosaic laid in the mid to late 5th century is a game changer. The heads of historians and archaeologists are still spinning.

  • @stannypk5k9
    @stannypk5k9 7 месяцев назад +3

    Good to see you’re back! I watched over your old videos recently as I genuinely missed your Saxon-focused content.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      I'll try to keep it up

    • @stannypk5k9
      @stannypk5k9 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@AlexIlesUK Please do. And whilst I'm here, I'd also like to invite you to the Jarrow Hall Museum & Anglo-Saxon farm. I'm a collections volunteer there, but I also get involved in experimental archaeology sector at the Museum. We recently received some funding and will be refurbishing a lot of the village. There are already plans to paint the thirlings in the main hall with authentic Saxon art. We're currently in the process of installing a beehive centre, with authentic Saxon 'skeps'.In the near future, the museum will also be setting up a wooden replica of the auditorium based on Ad Gefrin - the screens and all! We plan to test how well they worked, whether the screens indeed helped etc. All in all, some really exciting projects which could hopefully inspire some videos?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      @stannypk5k9 have a chat with Alice, I'm involved with training your volunteers! I tried to do a bit of filming today at the Thrillings but it was too dark by 3pm! Would love to chat further as I'd really like to do more filming there and work with you all on further projects!

  • @janice506
    @janice506 13 дней назад +2

    Well I’m 83% Irish Scottish & Welsh .
    11.4 % Greek & South Italian
    5.6% Baltic .
    I’m from north Lanarkshire in Scotland & I knew my dad was Irish & my mum a Scot , the rest came as a surprise. No English DNA so I know at least there was no mixing with any southerners.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  13 дней назад

      And if there had been would that have been a problem for you? Also if it's bunching Irish, Scottish and Welsh together it is likely is grouping the British isles DNA together so it's quite possible you have ancestry from the Southerners.

  • @MrBulky992
    @MrBulky992 3 месяца назад +6

    You say that there was no concept of English identity until the time of Alfred the Great and that people would have identified themselves by their family, tribal group or kingdom.
    Yet 150 years before Alfred and 60 years before the very first Viking raids which supposedly created it, in the year 731, Bede wrote his *Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum* . Am I wrong to assume that Bede saw exactly that: a common culture shared by all the people south of the Forth and the Clyde who were not the successors of the Romano-British inhabitants? If so, why did he use the word "Anglorum"?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  3 месяца назад

      Hi Keith,
      Bede isn't creating an identity, such as a national identity,and many scholars believe he's referring quite specifically to Northumbria as a tribal affinity rather than anything else.

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад +2

      @@AlexIlesUK But iirc he mentions the Jutes settling in Kent, IoW & Hampshire, so I think it is fair to conclude that he was interested in the whole history of what we call the Anglo-Saxons, though not so much the British

  • @johnmurray8428
    @johnmurray8428 2 месяца назад +5

    I am Anglo Saxon and will remain so!

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  2 месяца назад

      Do you mean your English, because I don't think you grew up within the geographic area of England and in culture and mindset of 5th - 11th century.

    • @realitywins9020
      @realitywins9020 Месяц назад

      Murray is a Scottish Gaelic Celtic name so how can you be Anglo-Saxon? English people are a mix that includes Celtic Britons, Danish Vikings, Normans, etc

    • @johnmurray8428
      @johnmurray8428 Месяц назад +1

      @@realitywins9020 according to Ancestry DNA I am 12% Irish, 14% Scottish 3% Norwegian & 70% English. Ancestry claim (I take this with a considerable grains of salt) accurate to a 1000 years!
      From family history research, I have heritage in Leicestershire, Nottingham, Devon, Essex, one potential line in Yorkshire, Counties Cork and Kilkenny in Ireland. Cork being the origin of the family name, not my male line (illegitimate birth 1877). Where the Scottish comes from? Run away after the Boyne (1690?) or the Jacobite rebellion of 1745? Who knows!
      So I will go with my 70% and assume, until someone disproves it, that my English was in England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 prior to 1066, therefore Anglo Saxon!
      Good enough case?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      @johnmurray8428 entirely possible, but I think you've missed the point of the episode.

    • @johnmurray8428
      @johnmurray8428 Месяц назад

      @@AlexIlesUK probably!

  • @gregw8976
    @gregw8976 Месяц назад +2

    Wondering if geneticists would have issues distinguishing Anglo-Saxon DNA from Danish or other Norse cultures? Are they not very closely related?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      A later paper about Scandinavian aDNA touches on this but it is possible.

    • @Northsideman1
      @Northsideman1 24 дня назад

      @@AlexIlesUK In my observation north-eastern Germans - never mind any other part of Germany - look very different to Scandinavians. Never bought the nordicist Anglo-Saxon trope for this reason alone.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  24 дня назад

      @Northsideman1 please read the paper and also one of the issues with that is your comparing people from 1600 years ago with today.

  • @danielryan570
    @danielryan570 7 месяцев назад +8

    It is pleasing that the evidence largely did not support woke academias attempts to rewrite Anglo Saxon history, and in some cases write them from history completly.
    It should not be a revelation that the Anglo Saxons were not the only tribes to migrate/invade, or that peoples were already here. The Angles and Saxons became the dominate tribes over the centuries, much like France is named for the Franks or Belgium for the Belgae, both were still made up of many other tribes

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      Like all things there's exceptions to the rules and also nuance. I would really like more data from the North, but it may never happen due to the soils being more acidic.

    • @danielryan570
      @danielryan570 6 месяцев назад

      Indeed. How about the migration of the Ingvaeon/Ingwine peoples as a more inclusive term for the early migrations? Ingwine may have been something they all indentified with at the time

  • @differous01
    @differous01 7 месяцев назад +10

    East Saxon Essex, in East Angl-ia, disappeared under the Danelaw, reappeared in Alfred's England, and has continued to be addressed as both Anglian and Saxon ever since. The Angle settlers of Brynach (Northumbria) initially preserved the name in translation (Beornicia: Land of the Bear), and they are also considered Saxon-ish (Sassenach) by their Northern neighbours. Memes transcend genes.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад +2

      Brynach actually translates as the land of the mountain passes.

    • @differous01
      @differous01 7 месяцев назад

      @@AlexIlesUK Bryn (like Bjorn, Beor, Bear, Brun, Brown) is a euphemism for the Unnameable beast (Arth/Arctos/Arthur...). The earliest record of an Arthur ("He was no Arthur" Y Gododdin) came from this land.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад +1

      Jackson, Language and History in Early Britain (1953:701-705)

    • @jcoker423
      @jcoker423 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK As in Bernicia & Deira ?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  5 месяцев назад +1

      Yes.

  • @michaeldpa1333
    @michaeldpa1333 7 месяцев назад +6

    3rd Generation British (Saxon) German American. Subscribed!
    Loved the Saxon Chronicle Series!

    • @seanbouk
      @seanbouk 7 месяцев назад +2

      How do you know your British side is Saxon? I’m currently looking for the dna tests that show this

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      Thanks for subscribing!

    • @FrederickDunkley-vs8ut
      @FrederickDunkley-vs8ut 7 месяцев назад +1

      My British side did some background research. My last name is of Saxon origin.

    • @gwyn2
      @gwyn2 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@FrederickDunkley-vs8ut In what is now England last names came into use for the mass of the people in post Norman times.

    • @jacquelinevanderkooij4301
      @jacquelinevanderkooij4301 7 месяцев назад

      @@seanbouk
      Indeed, is not possible.😊

  • @robinwolstenholme6377
    @robinwolstenholme6377 Месяц назад +3

    Did the Anglo-Saxons Exist? is wessex not west sax and essix east sax... and was it not inhabited by a few jutes angles and saxons a couple of friesians

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      Sorry, I'm not sure I understand

  • @Clans_Dynasties
    @Clans_Dynasties 7 месяцев назад +4

    Great to see you alive and well. Now I get to sit back and enjoy as always

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      Thank you! Hope all is well over the sea!

  • @lukewhite8930
    @lukewhite8930 7 месяцев назад +4

    Eh, if we’re talking about genetics, it’s worth remembering that samples from Anglo-Saxon and Dane graves have yielded indistinguishable results

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      That's flagged up in the paper but they use samples from before the Viking age and after the Roman period.

  • @robertdavie1221
    @robertdavie1221 2 месяца назад +3

    Procopius, a Byzantine historian wrote in the mid 6th century, "Now in Britain there were three very numerous nations, each ruling over a portion of the island: the Angili, the Frisians, and after these the Britons." (Book VIII, Chapter 20).

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  2 месяца назад

      Thank you

    • @jonkaasman693
      @jonkaasman693 2 месяца назад

      ​@@AlexIlesUKyou : Chatbot or real person reacting?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  2 месяца назад

      I'm a real person. Something I'm just short of time to write long replies

  • @tobyplumlee7602
    @tobyplumlee7602 3 месяца назад +3

    Excellent video. Thank you!

  • @sophiabee8924
    @sophiabee8924 7 месяцев назад +4

    Hello Alex, I loved this truly well researched, highly informative episode. What a great teacher you'd make.
    I hope this finds you and the family well and happy.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      I said to my wife yesterday that I would like to have teaching as some part of my future, but I know it wont be in a school! Thank you!

  • @tomtaylor6163
    @tomtaylor6163 3 месяца назад +3

    Big Weather Change around the 6th Century AD that would be caused by an enormous Volcanic Event in either the Americas or SE Asia.

  • @ole7146
    @ole7146 7 месяцев назад +3

    From Jutland, Denmark and other than Scandinavian DNA my test showed markers from Scotland/Ireland and East Europe. I have no known realatives from either EE or Scotland/Ireland so it may reflect where a certain seafearing people went or maybe comes from later historical events, cause a lot of history has happend since the “Viking age” afterall.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      I'm going to do an episode on Scandinavian aDNA and you'll hopefully be pleasantly surprised!

  • @Ivanowich
    @Ivanowich 7 месяцев назад +4

    Nice and informative video... Thanks...

  • @Saor_Alba
    @Saor_Alba 7 месяцев назад +2

    As far as I'm aware when I had my DNA test the conclusion was I am mostly/overwhelmingly Celtic, not surprising as I am Scottish and traced my ancestors many years ago and found my family originates from The Isle of Skye, on my mother's branch of the family, and the Blair Athol area of Scotland, the true centre of Scotland, for my father's. I found this interesting as I had no idea there was such a thing as Anglo-Saxon DNA.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      With all of these we are putting modern names onto ancient groups, but you can see groups of people moving at different times with this study and understand migrations, and groups in the past.

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад

      Is Isle of Skye DNA purely "Celtic"? I thought there was a substantial % of Scandinavian (Norse) + Gael + original British.

  • @crowznest438
    @crowznest438 Месяц назад +1

    I'm reading Ivanhoe, written in 1819 and an eye opener to someone raised under Hollywood's false influence, and has led me to research what he got right, or not, about the social and cultural aspects of the time. And has brought me here.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      Well I'm really glad you've come here and I hope you are enjoying it!

  • @robinwolstenholme6377
    @robinwolstenholme6377 Месяц назад +1

    did romano britan exsist? because most of the troops were not roman and they were outnumbered at least 10 to 1 by the britons

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад +1

      It's a book review watch the Anglo-Saxon DNA episode for more info

  • @helencoates3624
    @helencoates3624 5 месяцев назад +2

    Bede and Gildas we're talking about two different forms of Christianity. Gildas was early (Celtic) Christianity, Bede was Catholic christianity. At the time Bede was writing the majority were Catholic Christians and this benefits his church as gifts (money) were donated to his church. The pagans (read the rest of Christianity in Britain), didn't make absurd gifts which they saw as useless, either God would take you to heaven or he wouldn't, giving money to a large business was a waste of resources. That's why Beds castigated the 'pagans'. - just my take on this argument 🤔

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  5 месяцев назад

      People make far too much of a distinction between the Celtic and Roman church - when ultimately it boils down to a haircut and when Easter was. Bede would never have referred to other Christians as pagans as his whole aim is to ensure orthodoxy in the church. The 'Celtic' believers made just as many wealthy gifts - just look at Whithorn and other sites on the West of the British isles!

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад +1

      I've always found it interesting that Gildas never mentioned the Irish invaders. He must have been aware being originally based in Wales. Presumably didn't fit his argument since they were Christian at the time.

  • @jacquelinevanderkooij4301
    @jacquelinevanderkooij4301 4 дня назад

    Gildas is 6th century.
    He lived while there was a worldwide catatrofy going on.
    The reason why people started looking for food. Many many died of to less food. 536 AD.
    So Gildas will have seen this.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  3 дня назад

      Thank you for your insight.

  • @markmorrid8144
    @markmorrid8144 Месяц назад +1

    Interesting talk I've had my ancestral dna done and its 56% Anglo saxon 27% welsh 10% nordic and 7% greek .

  • @gwynwilliams4222
    @gwynwilliams4222 2 месяца назад +3

    I used to watch time team channel 4 and loved it but when they found an Anglo Saxon grave with goods they assumed it was Anglo Saxon but because someone is buried in England doesn't make them English I believed that the programme was wrong in identifying graves because someone has Anglo Saxon grave goods doesn't mean that they were Anglo Saxon and the Welsh were here 10 thousand years but more DNA research needs to be done there are lots of unanswered questions about this period of time my believe is that English people are 50 % Welsh and Anglo Saxon and other we maybe closer related than we think

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  2 месяца назад +1

      I'm sure the British and native British population were far more integrated with the incoming Anglo-Saxons than we realised before.

  • @darrylhalden1948
    @darrylhalden1948 15 дней назад +1

    The endurance of an icon of early english literarture(Beowulf) whose setting in the area of northern Europe which this study associates with the source of the anglo-saxon genetic "wave", would be unlikely if the dominant population & culture was latinised and briton - that would seem to imply extreme cultural subjugation by an elite over a period of centuries while this epic circulated & gained popularity - doesn't resonate for me.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  15 дней назад

      I did a update video on Anglo-Saxon DNA, you can find it on the channel.

  • @jacquelinevanderkooij4301
    @jacquelinevanderkooij4301 7 месяцев назад +3

    The Angelen lived in a very small region.
    It can't be a very large group to migrate.
    Saxons were a large group, actually living more to the easter part of germany
    The frisians lived along the west-and northcoast of the Netherland and the north- and northwestcoast of germany.
    They drowned in that region because of the rising sealevels and moved abroad.
    Frisians were known with Brittons by trade and working in the roman army.
    Old english and Old frisian are very very similar.
    So...

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад +3

      It's interesting as the Anglian's cover more of the geography of the British isles, it'll be one for future research for certain!

    • @eponymousarchon7442
      @eponymousarchon7442 3 месяца назад +2

      The Angles lived in a smaller area than the Saxons but that doesn’t mean they had less numbers to migrate. Many Saxons remained in Europe and as you will be aware there are still Saxons in Germany. The Angles all moved to Britain in their entirety or as a political entity and no noticeable numbers remained in Denmark/Northern Germany.

    • @neilog747
      @neilog747 3 месяца назад +3

      There is a viking account which states that as he sailed along the Western Baltic, that the islands on one side used to be occupied by the English. If true, this expands Angeln considerably, possibly into Finn Island. Add that Jutland was Western Germanic speaking before its later occupation by Danes, and the Angelcynn, if not the Anglish alone, dwelt in a large area. Then, we can understand how the Angles may have had enough manpower to fight Scots/Picts for the British, and still have enough men left over to expand within Britain. The idea that Anglen was just a small area seems to memetic, i.e. the notion is not contested at all, just copied from one source to the next.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  3 месяца назад

      That's an interesting one to read more into!

  • @SG-D
    @SG-D 24 дня назад +1

    Wasn't Gilda's from arounds Strathclyde area when it was a Brythonic Kingdom? I know it's difficult to differentiate the Saxon root "wielisc", Welsh / Briton / Insular Celt / Roman Briton, but just calling him Welsh doesn't really do it justice, and maybe confuses modern geographic Wales / Welsh, for Medieval Welsh and what I think your talking about, but still love your videos.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  24 дня назад +1

      People keep trying to guess where he's from and they throw the net as wide as Dumfries and Galloway right down to Devon and Cornwall, but he doesn't like the Welsh princes that's for certain!

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  24 дня назад +1

      Its a hard one for 'Welsh' because I need to keep it at a level where everyone can understand with little background and also short enough that people will watch so I know, I would love more nuance! Thank you that you like all the same!!

    • @SG-D
      @SG-D 24 дня назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK yes and have subscribed 👍

  • @Arthagnou
    @Arthagnou Месяц назад +1

    it would be good to see what the ratio of Native British Y chomosome vrs Mainland Saxon, Anglo, Jutuish DNA. If the amount of native british Y Chromosomes are diminished vrs Saxon/Jutish/Anglo would indicate "replacement" or genocide. all other topics are irrelevant to the discussion.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      I believe it's covered in the paper, I put a link in the description and it's in the final pages.

  • @dalehill4714
    @dalehill4714 Месяц назад +1

    The people of northwestern Europe have been mixing since the time of the ancient Egypt. Marrying , and taking slaves was common throughout our history...Isn't it easier to say that all of the people from that region are basically the same, with minor regional and tribal differences? Thanks for a great site and all of your insight.

  • @purrdiggle1470
    @purrdiggle1470 Месяц назад +1

    Can any DNA study of the British Isles be reliable considering the massive population loss that came with the Plague in the 14th century? With outward migration beginning in 1607 England's population did not return to pre-Plague levels until Victorian times.
    Also consider how chromosomes break apart and reform during meiosis. The breaks don't always happen in the same place generation after generation and the breaks are never in equal-sized amounts. Every individual gets 1/2 of his DNA from each parent, but nobody gets 1/4 of his DNA from each of his 4 grandparents. It's physically possible for any individual person to not be a genetic descendant of all of his ancestors. Consider Charles III: he is a direct descendant of William the Conqueror, but he doesn't have William's Y chromosome (which didn't survive among William's grandchildren). Neither does Charles have the Y chromosome of Prince Albert, George III, James I or Henry VII.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      They only used human remains from the period they are studying.

  • @tobyplumlee7602
    @tobyplumlee7602 3 месяца назад +2

    Im English American but my dna is majority native Briton dna it seems. To be fair my mothers family were mostly of lowland Scots ancestry though with most of those families being historically "Anglo-Norman" such as my mother's surname of Montgomery. I was expecting to find more Germanic dna considering my fathers ancestors overwhelmingly came from England with a small distant component of Scots, and Welsh.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  3 месяца назад +1

      Very interesting!

    • @realitywins9020
      @realitywins9020 Месяц назад +3

      Normans intermarried with natives as did the Anglo-Saxons and other Germanics, so your DNA shouldn't be that surprising. Robert the Bruce was a Norman, but his mother was a Gaelic speaking Scot

  • @irenejohnston6802
    @irenejohnston6802 7 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you Alex. What is an Anglo Saxon? A dirty word for UK Post colonialism etc. I'm fascinated. We don't know how pre/post Roman people wldve described themselves. Iron age tribal groups fits the bill. I'm from Liverpool. River Mersey I believe means boundary river. Age 83

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      I think I understand, while I've made points about the use of Anglo-Saxon I'm not against it. I need to look up the meaning of Mersry

  • @tillik1004
    @tillik1004 2 месяца назад +4

    Crow Indian people called themselves Apsaalooke, but we called them "Crow". Now they call themselves Crow and Apsaalooke, the older term in their own language. They are both Crow and Apsaalooke. The Anglo-Saxons not calling themselves "Anglo-Saxons" in that historical time period, doesn't mean they weren't Anglo-Saxons, as that is the label we use for who they are. We can call them anything we want to designate them as a group or culture and long ago we settled on Anglo-Saxon. Why is it a problem now? Did the Denisovans call themselves "Denisovan"? Did the Neanderthals call themselves "Neanderthal"?? We call Germans "Germans", but they call themselves Deutsch. We call Germany, Germany, but they call it Deutschland. Can we not use the terms Germans or Germany any longer then? 🙄🙄This is all maddening and unnecessarily politically correct and nitpicking. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Using the term Anglo-Saxon wasn't broke.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  2 месяца назад

      Thanks for your regional information that's really interesting. I expect because it helps with nuance.

    • @tillik1004
      @tillik1004 2 месяца назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK You're welcome. Thanks for your videos, very informative.

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад

      Ignoring the modern politico/cultural idiocy, there are genuine questions about the previous assumptions (Anglo-Saxons were Germanic migrants who took power in England and brought the original language and a specific culture; and originally were invaders who killed the native British). Main opposing theory is culture change, but you have to start being very nuanced with your terms when you are talking about someone with British DNA who is buried according to Anglo-Saxon rites.

  • @ronnyjambo2226
    @ronnyjambo2226 18 дней назад +1

    Would there be an argument for referring to the Saxon settlers as Danish and not Germanic? Considering the larger land mass of Denmark during the medieval times compared to today, and the fact that Germany didn't technically exist until 1871.
    Although I am aware the Romans used the terms Germani and Germania as early as the fourth century B.C.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  18 дней назад +1

      So it refers to the cultural group of Germanic peoples. Denmark doesn't exist until later.

  • @michaeltaylor8030
    @michaeltaylor8030 14 дней назад +1

    If the Anglo-Saxons invaded, where are all the English people that look like Wim Hof or Geert Wilders? Why do English people just look like the Irish and Scottish? It doesn't add up.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  14 дней назад

      How people look makes up a small part of genetics, but the Dutch are the closest relatives of the English. As for the Scottish and Irish populations - all peoples in the British isles have mixed since the industrial revolution due to new methods of travel and the need for jobs.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  14 дней назад

      Also food, exercise and lifestyle have a huge impact on how people look.

    • @TheVMYak
      @TheVMYak 14 дней назад

      Go take a walk around Denmark, Jutland peninsula, even Copenhagen It’s peopled with folks who look like the English. They also have our sense of humour 🧐

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  14 дней назад

      Aye I did my Erasmus in Copenhagen. I did think the Danes were a tad short, but lovely people

    • @michaeltaylor8030
      @michaeltaylor8030 12 дней назад

      @@AlexIlesUK I'm sorry if I'm being a nuisance, but have you ever seen Eurogenes? MyTrueAncestry places Southeast English people as being most closely related to the Welsh and Bretons, and not the Dutch. The same is true for Eurogenes K15 and K13. Only K36, which uses the most components, shows the Southeast English as being most closely related to Belgians. Something tells me that the Celts of Iron Age France and Britain were closely related somehow. There's an old blog of an East Anglian man called 'are the Southeast English actually Belgian?' He and his mother are 100% Southeast English in ancestry, but he clustered most closely to Belgians, Bretons and Irish, and not so much with the Dutch or Danes relatively speaking. This is why I'm a bit sceptical.

  • @F6blue
    @F6blue 22 дня назад

    Have a look at Tolkien's translation of the Battle of Maldon..the narrator stated that the 'English' fought with the fyrd..were they Angles possibly from Mercia or East Anglia? Also it is likely that many of the Anglo Saxons were Frisian. Some studies indicate that the Dutch and English have close DNA..

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  22 дня назад

      Yes, the Dutch and English are very closely related.

    • @julianshepherd2038
      @julianshepherd2038 21 день назад

      Anglo Saxon or German Small Boat People

  • @THEScottCampbell
    @THEScottCampbell 3 месяца назад +3

    MAYBE not using click bait titles would get uou less comments and you'd really hate that, right? Anglo-Saxons wouldn't call themselves by that term. The Welsh wouldn't call themselves "Welsh"; Deer wiukdn't call themselves "deer". Therefore, there were no deer in the 4th Century. And YOU don't like the term Celtic"; How about "Pillock"? Or "Berk"? "Git"? Maybe you are one third each. Maybe not. Great visuals, though! I learned a lot staring at your walls.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  3 месяца назад +1

      You've made me laugh, best comment I've come across on this episode, well done!

  • @gameb1te
    @gameb1te 20 дней назад +1

    Sorry thought it said Anglo Saxon DAY... hahaha I wish!

  • @stumccabe
    @stumccabe 7 месяцев назад +1

    I've just googled "A DNA" - wikipedia states that it is one of three structural forms (A,B & Z) that DNA can take. It does not mean "ancient DNA".
    I suppose the term "A DNA" might have two meanings.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      Try Ancient DNA: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_DNA#:~:text=The%20majority%20of%20human%20aDNA,good%20conditions%20for%20DNA%20preservation.
      Best wishes

    • @stumccabe
      @stumccabe 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK OK, I see that "aDNA" and "A DNA" are different! Rather confusing nomenclature!

  • @Cartamandua
    @Cartamandua Месяц назад +1

    My brother just had his dna done. I can find only 1 ancestor in 200 years who was born outside Yorkshire or north east england. They were Irish. However his dna was 45% celt 30% English. 20% viking.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад +1

      I'd say any Genetic test telling you that you are Viking is not to be trusted. There were populations of Native Britons who lived side by side with Anglo-Saxons and intermarried, as seen by the paper this is based on.

    • @purrdiggle1470
      @purrdiggle1470 Месяц назад

      Commercial DNA tests are not very reliable. The most they can do is compare your DNA to the DNA of the testing company's other customers. My mother had her DNA tested a while back and it came back as 85% British Isles. But I know from documentary sources that her maternal ancestors were nearly all Rhenish/swiss/Prussian going back to around the year 1530.

  • @krisinsaigon
    @krisinsaigon 29 дней назад +1

    The DNA from south East England that is from Iron Age France- maybe they were Roman Gauls who fled the Visigoths and other Germanic tribes to a place - Britain- safe from those attacks and where they could continue to live in a Roman style? I did hear there were refugees who fled to britain at that time

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  29 дней назад

      It's really interesting as it shows two way migration across the English channel and North Sea.

  • @rsfaeges5298
    @rsfaeges5298 7 месяцев назад +2

    ALEX: PROPS! this video is top tier/first rate. As it went on i realized "this is very much like--is essentially--a conference presentation, and rates among the very best Ive attended across 40+ years". EXCEPT that i just watched it on my phone @ home, early on a Saturday morning: what a treat!
    "Full disclosure" Your topic falls in a field which Ive never studied formally nor worked in, altho it is adjacent to mine--or the next over...or perhaps in the next valley🤔--and so broadens my horizons.
    For which you are a fabulous guide. I know just enough about migrations of peoples and the New DNA-ology (if i can say that) to be able to follow YOUR extremely lucid presentation.
    I would tag this video a "review essay", meaning an overview/precis of what is known currently about a topic and the questions/directions for further research.
    Its true that I am unfamiliar with the researchers & studies that you cite, but your presentation bears the hallmarks of someone who has that literature at their fingertips and who is analyzing and synthesizing it with sound methods and without an agenda (other than love of their topic).
    And, i enjoyed your response to the internet orcs who attacked the comments section of one your previous videos😂

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      Thank you I really appreciate it! I'm enjoying filming again and hope to share more with everyone shortly!!

  • @snufkinhollow318
    @snufkinhollow318 6 месяцев назад +2

    Another really helpful video, thank you so much for keeping them appearing. I've watched the Anglo-Saxon and Pict ones so far and can't wait for the others.
    For me, all the harsh comments on the 'Anglo-Saxons Didn't Exist' video represent an inability to get past modern national identities - whether 'Anglo-Saxon' or 'Celtic' (both terms that I think muddy the waters even further) - to appreciate the greater fluidity of cultural, spiritual and social identities in this period. Personally, I think there is an argument for calling this the 'Early Medieval Migration Period' rather than the A-S Ages or, worst still, the 'Dark Ages' and applying this same descriptive to much of western Europe at the time. But again, the problem of modern national identities causes this to be a contentious term because of the perception of migration in that context. Finding out the fascinating truth about the past of the place you live in doesn't mean you can't be proud to live there, it just means that you can acknowledge cultural expression outside your own and celebrate that too.

    • @danielryan570
      @danielryan570 6 месяцев назад +3

      I think you make a good point. However I think its that the English people are tired of being told by progressives that their national identity is problematic, does not matter and that they need to look beyond it as you put it. When the opposite is true

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  6 месяцев назад +3

      Thank you both @snufkinhollow318 and @danielryan570 - I do understand both positions and see why the Radicals on one side denying any identity in England is really frustrating. To give you a prospective from me, I was born in Scotland, but don't sound Scottish so because of that face hostility from a minority of Scots as I can't be a part of their national identity (but any American can as long as they buy a kilt and some shortbread on the way!) I think the important thing is to say that the first settlers were not Anglo-Saxons and the Anglo-Saxon were not English, but these identities grew out of events and people who mixed and became the next thing. I see myself as British but this feels like a dying identity.

    • @snufkinhollow318
      @snufkinhollow318 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@danielryan570 I don't think I singled out the English for criticism here, rather as you say 'the opposite is true'. My point was that modern national identities have a tendency to exclude any period involving migration from areas outside their national borders from history (or their origin mythology) because it is perceived as a threat to their 'purity'. Whereas, for me, it enhances the richness of their history and should be celebrated. If pointing that out makes me a 'progressive', then, yes, I will happily sit in the camp of progress. I am of Welsh ancestry, born in England and now live in Ireland, all countries that I love for their natural beauty, and I have travelled around the world too, sometimes to places where I felt completely at home within days of arriving. But do I feel like I 'belong' to any of the countries I have been to or they to me? No, I belong where my home is and where I feel safe and if there are national identities that come into conflict with that, I will criticse them, wherever they are.

    • @snufkinhollow318
      @snufkinhollow318 6 месяцев назад

      @@AlexIlesUK I'm not sure that it is 'radical' to deny national identities (not just that of the English) when they are relatively modern creations that, in their turn, deny the richness of our history, but a do take the overall point you are making. Ireland where I live is also subject to the 'kilt and shortbread' phenomenon that you identify in the form of what some Irish people call 'plastic Paddies', incomers from the US who buy up what they believe to be their ancestral land in some rural area and then complain that they can't get all the services and consumer goods that they want.
      I had another curious experience of this the other day when I went into a shop I've been using for over a decade and the owner was giving a hate-fuelled speech about 'immigrants' to several other customers. So I place my goods on the counter and went to walk out. He called me back and when I said I found his speech against me offensive he said "But you're not like them, you're ...." and then tailed off when he realised that it was impossible to finish that sentence without either contradicting himself or sounding like an out-and-out racist. I find it almost impossible to believe that a country will one of largest global diasporas in modern history can be so hateful towards immigrants. I expect many people from outside Ireland have heard about the recent riots in Dublin, supposedly sparked by the stabbing of a woman and child by an immigrant. Not many news reports here in Ireland or overseas, however, have included the fact that it was a Brazilian immigrant who put his own life on the line to save the victims whilst many Irish people stood and did nothing.
      I'm so sorry to rant and ramble but I do feel very strongly that national identities are more a source of disharmony than of unity.

    • @DarkAngel2512
      @DarkAngel2512 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@danielryan570this is why I will continue to just call myself what I was raised as and understand myself to be. English mixed with Scottish. Im not Anglo-Saxon the same way what we call AS prob didnt call themselves that.
      I dislike how people are now saying the term Anglo-Saxon is racist or that even being English and British is racist. So I dont want to develop some weird and fake "proud" identity crisis and suddenly start calling myself AS like how some black Americans turned Afrocentric and claim they were the first black ppl everywhere. I knew who I was before all this and never used the term Anglo before despite etymologically-speaking that is the origin of England (Angleland). Ppl can call me racist all they like. I didnt pick my genetics any more than they did.

  • @alunevans380
    @alunevans380 23 дня назад +1

    Celtic/Anglo are todays millions of indigenous people of the British isles and we have the DNA to prove this.
    The finest scale genetic map of any country offers a detailed look at the history and ancestry of the people of the British Isles, Nature News reports. Scientists analyzed the DNA of thousands of living people in Britain​ for a study reported in this week's issue of Nature and ​found that many still live where their distant ancestors did, in regions defined by ancient tribal kingdoms. The study also found that today's Welsh have the most ​genes in ​common with the earliest inhabitants of the islands, who arrived about 10,000 years ago. ​​Invaders such as the Vikings and the Romans left less of a genetic legacy than expected, although 25% of the genome of people in the far north Orkney Islands stems from the Vikings.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  23 дня назад

      Which paper are you refering too? The 2016 one? Fine scale genetic map? It's a complex one and I've gone over it before. It uses modern DNA and works backwards so is skewed by migrations and mixing. I don't put too much weight behind that one.

    • @alunevans380
      @alunevans380 23 дня назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK Do you deny that Britain and Ireland's population has remained mainly unchanged for thousands of years, accept for a few invasions and the like from other similar Northern European populations mainly Gemanic and Scandanavian which are very similar to each other anyway? ok the Romans were Southern European in some cases and had a few Middle Eastern, North African and such in their armies but also a lot of Germanic but the Romans left very little genetic legacy behind in Britain as did the British in India, you keep mentioning migrations and mixing you seem obsessed with this, but you don't say that these migrations are all coming from the same places for thousands of years France, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Germany all North western European migrations nothing like the migration we've had from the 1950s onwards to today which these islands have never experienced in their long history.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  23 дня назад

      @alunevans380 the focus of your question seems to be on the modern migrations, which may be a personal frustration.
      The migrations may have came from the same geographic locations but there were migrations from the North and East that occured between the bronze age migrations in the the Bronze age until the migrations at the end of the Roman period. I cover those in my Anglo-Saxon DNA episode.
      Why would I be denying migrations? I'm not obsessed, I'm explaining the data. Could you be a bit clearer about why you want to compare the migrations after the 1950s and Historical migrations prior to that?

    • @alunevans380
      @alunevans380 22 дня назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK The migrations after the 1950s came mostly from Sub Saharan African people from the West Indies, people also from Pakistan (Muslim), India, Bangladesh (Muslim), also now the Middle East (Muslim), North Africa (Muslim), Albania (Muslim), Romania,
      people who had never lived in Britain before or if they did it was tiny, tiny amounts as the evidence shows.
      Britain remained homogenous for nearly a thousand years after the Norman conquest and even before that it was still only Celtic/Anglo Saxon really.
      Certain disengenuous people on the far left or other groups for whatever reason i don't understand will try to deny this and say that there's always been huge African, Asian, Middle Eastern etc communities in Britain, even going so far as to brainwash the younger generation with this now in historical dramas, childrens education books and the like, criticizing and falsifying the indigenous culture of Britain.
      this is all obviously false and can be proven very easily,
      Certain people desperately want the multiculturalism the British people have had foisted onto them over the last 70 years or so to work so badly,
      There's now a population of 4 million plus Muslims in Britain, in 1961 there where just 50,000 who ever thought this was a wise thing to allow? In my opinion these insane levels of mass immigration into Britain over the last 30 years especially have been very destructive and deliberate.
      i probably sound Islamophobic but i feel the same about other cultures and ethnicities that have arrived here now in their millions and not integrated, anyway we were never asked and if this makes me a racist for expressing my opinion then so be it, who knows where it will all end.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  22 дня назад +1

      @alunevans380 while it will have me being accused of all sorts of things, I don't discuss modern politics on this channel.

  • @billwiersma9371
    @billwiersma9371 5 месяцев назад +2

    I think there is too much heresy when it comes to UK history of early settlers. I suspect that Britton was primarily settled by Frisians. Ask yourself why the English language is so close to Frisians?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  5 месяцев назад +1

      I think the argument is that both frisia and the early kingdoms were settled at the same time by the same people.

    • @purrdiggle1470
      @purrdiggle1470 Месяц назад

      Modern day English speakers have to learn the Old English Language as a foreign language because the 2 forms of English are so different. Modern Frisian is believed to be the modern language that sounds the most like Old English. I took German Language classes for grades 8-12 and I can recognize some modern Dutch words as German words with a different spelling, but then some Dutch translations of German words sound like modern English translations for the same German word. The German word for house is Haus, and the Dutch word is Huis. The German word for leader is Fuehrer, but the Dutch translation sounds like Lighter, which is close to the English leader.
      I don't know how English, German and Danish relate to each other, but I think the Netherlands has at least as much do with English history as Denmark does.

  • @Knappa22
    @Knappa22 26 дней назад

    I remember when at university a post doc was very fervently arguing that ‘Celtic’ was not an accurate term to describe the early Britons, even though they spoke Celtic languages, worshipped Celtic deities, made Celtic artefacts and lived in Celtic model settlements. His argument was that these were mere waves of influence on the populace.
    I said then, and say now, if that is to be believed then there was no such thing as Romans or Anglo Saxons either.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  26 дней назад

      Are you an academic?

    • @Knappa22
      @Knappa22 26 дней назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK No. I did a degree but didn’t proceed further than BA.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  26 дней назад

      I would argue the diffrence between the title 'Celtic' is diffrent than later Romans or Anglo-Saxons is because of how it is used. The Celts are first metioned by the Greeks in the 6th century BC, while the Romans subdivide them into Britons, Gauls, Iberians etc. They dont even call the people living in Northen Italy Celts but Gauls. So the term Celt was used in the 19th century to apply it to items, peoples and language, while we have Romans (a identity that could be gained, granted or adopted rather than biologically determined) and the Anglo-Saxons who developed in the 9th century as a identity in contrast to the Danes to create a political unit. We do not get Gildas refering to himself as a Celt or the welsh princes calling themselves Celtic, they are Britons and see themselves as being connected to the Roman world. Thats why I would disagree with that post doc.

  • @fitfrog65
    @fitfrog65 23 дня назад +1

    My Y chromosome is Saxon according to a family dna test. However, 23 and me says my dna is most similar to people living in Northern France and the German border (Alsace). This jives with the video's conclusions.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  23 дня назад

      Good to see that's the case!

  • @joannmay-anthony1076
    @joannmay-anthony1076 Месяц назад +1

    Do you have any videos on NW england and isle of man where my english ancestors and mother's family comes from.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      It's on the list because I have had a few requests. It takes a while for me to plan them but stick around and I'll do some research

    • @joannmay-anthony1076
      @joannmay-anthony1076 Месяц назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK great because my english bit and some of my norwegian bits come from NW england and Isle of Man. I am mainly about 39% scandy, abit of german and a bit of fin as well. I have less english than my brother and sisters, and no irish or scots like they have.

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад

      @@joannmay-anthony1076 I have DNA results from all the main sites. They don't agree very well. And they change over time as their database increases and improves.

    • @joannmay-anthony1076
      @joannmay-anthony1076 Месяц назад +1

      @@akaDorM yes I have Ancestry, 23&me, and heritage and they all say the same thing. I am 39% Swedish with a touch of Nowegian. My viking heritage is Baltic, but part of my scandyness comes from NW England. NW England, Isle of Man is where my mom's family comes from and Varmland Sweden is where 3 great grandparents and 1 grandparent came from with a touch of Finland and Germany. My great great grandfather was a German brew meister in Varmland Sweden who had 5 children to his upstairs maid and that is the branch i am from. My maiden surname is May which is old German and came from my great great grandfather. Now, my younger brother and sister are not quite 30% scandy with touch of German and finland (my dad's side) and the rest are NW England Ireland and Scotland.

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад +1

      @@joannmay-anthony1076 Remarkable that it's so consistent. Though if it's a deep ancestry in one place that's represented in all their databases that makes sense.

  • @greggoodson9082
    @greggoodson9082 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks Alex. Well presented and considered.......though still not fully convinced by the modelling done in the most recent AS DNA paper....

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      Can I ask why?

    • @greggoodson9082
      @greggoodson9082 7 месяцев назад

      @@AlexIlesUK of course. If I'm remembering correctly, it was firstly the selection of Southern French IA populations to represent the hypothetical Frankish input, rather than the more Northern populations. Some of hose individuals are paractically British IA on a lot of PCAs. Secondly, with respect to moderns, and county level inputs, again if I'm remembering correctly, was the use of Irish as a blanket representative for IA equivalents. We know from the York paper, that the gradation from English-Welsh- Scottish then Irish is not insignificant! If possible the authors should have perhaps selected Welsh populations as bieng reflective of Enlish IA populations. Finally, although the recent British IA paper, did not show PCAs for them, I have seen private PCAs that indicate a lot more variability in the IA populations alongside the Viking and AS paper. The 'author' found that many imodern ndividuals (of course not the PoBI dataset) could be effectively modelled with qpAdm just bey British IA and AS inputs,, without the high order of magnitude of AS input, at least not to the same degree............so for me jury is still out

    • @greggoodson9082
      @greggoodson9082 7 месяцев назад

      I would add the caveat., Iam probably remembering certai details of the AS paper incorrectly. It's been a while since I read it. Probably got the Irish blanket wrong,.......

  • @AmandaSamuels
    @AmandaSamuels 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you, Alex for this interesting presentation and for recommending the Gretzinger paper.
    I haven’t had the chance to read it in detail yet but the finding that you mentioned at the end of your presentation touched on something I already wanted to ask you about. I sometimes read that the Norman Invasion didn’t have much demographic impact because only the elite was changed and they represented only about 2% of the population. I don’t think this is true. The histories of England and France were intertwined for 300 years (to the end of the 100 years war). France had a much bigger population than England during this period and led England in the development of towns and trades. I think this would have led to a slow but ultimately significant migration of French and Flemish (also heavily populated and more urbanised) people migrating into England; mainly craftspeople moving into the growing towns. I think the Frenchified English language as we know it today was nurtured and developed in this environment.
    In Gretzinger’s paper, the addition of the French Iron Age ancestry is inferred by comparison with the contemporary British population. I would suggest the this is not the addition of a French Iron Age population but rather the addition of a French Medieval population. I understand that France is rather behind on using genetic studies to unravel its History but presumably this could be tested.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  5 месяцев назад

      I think they clarified it by saying that the human remains analysed were all from the early medieval period (400-1066), so that they couldn't reflect later migrations. But it's a valid point, the Normans and later groups did settle Flemish populations in the British isles.

  • @Wotsitorlabart
    @Wotsitorlabart 7 месяцев назад +2

    Regarding the 'French' DNA found in southern England the Guardian's report on the Oxford University 10 year genetic study of Britain (completed 2014) makes the following comment:
    'People living in southern and central England today typically share about 40% of their DNA with the French, 11% with the Danes and 9% with the Belgians, the study of more than 2,000 people found. The French contribution was not linked to the Norman invasion of 1066, however, but a previously unknown wave of migration to Britain some time after then end of the last Ice Age nearly 10,000 years ago'.
    So, not a migration at the time of the 'Anglo-Saxons' but thousands of years earlier - a quite different conclusion to the later study referenced in the video.

    • @greggoodson9082
      @greggoodson9082 7 месяцев назад

      The French inclusion in both studies are not the same. The PoBI study has 2 separate populations included FRA14 and 17. The FRA14 is indicative of pre- AS arrival, whilst the FRA17 component arrived later. The authors argue for it being possibly representative of AS DNA, but Frankish would make more sense.......or perhaps even French during the Norman Invasion?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад +1

      The paper clarified this, the Iron Age French aDNA is not found in previous populations. It's really interesting.

    • @Wotsitorlabart
      @Wotsitorlabart 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK
      This from the University of Oxford 'People of the British Isles' :
      'The most intriguing European contribution is that from Northern France, (EU17 red). This clearly post- dates the original settlers since it is entirely absent from the Welsh samples. It is, however, widespread elsewhere, even right through the north of England and Scotland to Orkney. It is also especially prevalent in Cornwall and Devon. These results suggest a previously not described substantial migration across the channel after the original post-ice-age settlers but before Roman times. DNA from these migrants spread across England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, but had little, if any, impact on Wales'.

    • @NordiCrusader7
      @NordiCrusader7 7 месяцев назад

      key word "share" why would we have 40% french dna?

    • @Wotsitorlabart
      @Wotsitorlabart 7 месяцев назад

      @@NordiCrusader7
      See my second post above for the answer.

  • @robertvermaat2124
    @robertvermaat2124 7 месяцев назад +3

    At 15.00 it's clear that your theories about mixing British with Anglo-Saxons that the police is sent to arrest you! 🤣

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад +1

      Trust me. There's some who would; sadly I can't afford a soundproofed room! It's more likely to be an ambulance as I live on a road that connects areas of Newcastle!

  • @krisinsaigon
    @krisinsaigon 29 дней назад +1

    I’m from very near West Yorkshire. Over there there is a region called Elmet, lots of villages called “something in Elmet”, and apparently Elmet was a Celtic kingdom that survived while the Anglo saxons conquered all around them, and it held out against the Saxons. Maybe that is why they is a different marker in West Yorkshire?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  29 дней назад +1

      Elmet was brought into Northumbria in the early 7th century but yes that is likely.

    • @krisinsaigon
      @krisinsaigon 29 дней назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK I think politically it was brought into it but it remained ethnically an enclave for some time after, under Anglo Saxon rule

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  29 дней назад

      @krisinsaigon do you have sources for that? The reading I have done is very sparse on information for Elmet

  • @alfheimr9541
    @alfheimr9541 8 дней назад

    Scientists make millions on their DNA research analyses. And say; "we have to rewrite history" every damn time. To get their own part in it, that's the problem now

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  8 дней назад

      What part do you disagree with or think is 'rewritten'.

  • @abelnodarse1841
    @abelnodarse1841 Месяц назад +1

    What about basque adn in Britain .

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      I've not come across that in my reading.

  • @robertvermaat2124
    @robertvermaat2124 7 месяцев назад +5

    @'Frankish dna' - I wonder if we should call it thus. The 'Franks' were originally from the NE Netherlands and/or from the Middle Rhine areas, and these people would be different from 'Iron Age France'. Now my questions would be this: do we know when this dna enters Britain? Because in my humble opinion (i'm NO dna expert!) we could also be looking at people who migrated to Britain during the (later?) Roman period, as Roman citizens.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад +2

      Hi Robert, I should have clarified this more! So this aDNA is not present in Roman or Late Roman British aDNA samples, it comes in during the Migration period. I believe it's been referred to as Frankish due to the connection to items referred to as Frankish and the fact this aDNA has been found in the Rhineland. Hope that clarifies!

    • @jcoker423
      @jcoker423 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@AlexIlesUK NE Gaul was Belgae? Didn't some cross into Kent before Caesar? I have a vague memory the Romans wrote the Belgae thought of themselves as Germans rather than Gauls.
      Thanks for mentioning the Britons were never considered Celtic by the Romans. Their Celts were in todays S Germany & Bohemia. The Gauls/Britons/Germans were just another, related, part of the Indo-European language group.
      I sound abit too certain in these paragraphs. I'm happy to be corrected.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  5 месяцев назад +1

      I always take the historical sources with a pinch of salt but with the distances over the channel migrations would have occured more easily. From the paper this aDNA is definitely early medieval though which is interesting in itself. Don't need to apologise you've done your reading, which is great!

  • @tomwatson1220
    @tomwatson1220 6 месяцев назад +3

    Hi Alex - I remember hearing (but I can't remember where) that the first time Anglo-Saxon was used was at a 6th century continental European meeting of bishops where it was to differentiate the British from the continental.....

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  6 месяцев назад +1

      Could it be Procopius describing the inhabitants of Britannia as Britons, Angles and Frisians?

    • @jcoker423
      @jcoker423 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK What do you think to the book 'Age of Arthur' by Morris. I know it was panned by historians, but it made sense to me.
      a) AS invited in, rebelled
      b) The Britons halted the advance at Mons Badon.
      c) Plague devastates the Britons more than the AS
      d) AS take over unoccupied lands, inviting in more AS families
      Morris (from memory) thinks that unlike Gaul it was not a elite takeover, but families. Explaining the loss of the British language because the women talking to the children were AS. In France there was more intermarriage of warriors with local women. If 'Arthur' had lost at Mons Badon, it would have been warriors marrying locals.

    • @jcoker423
      @jcoker423 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK Oh my name & DNA says British not AS. So no dog in the fight.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  5 месяцев назад

      I think it shows the academic work at the time, he researched and presented his argument based on what was known at the time and it's an enjoyable read but it is of its period.

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад

      @@jcoker423 Was there really a British language when the Roman Empire withdrew? Some will have spoken Latin. Most people would have stayed local. Even a thousand years later the dialects of distant districts were barely interpretable (if understandable at all). Judging by modern dialects, the move to English was primarily local, with English becoming the lingua franca of the ruling class who needed to converse over greater distances. Incoming germanic mercenaries or invaders didn't speak brythonic and British rulers who invited them would have had an incentive to communicate clearly with them.
      Irish/Scottish mothers don't seem to have stopped Icelanders szpeaking Icelandic.

  • @robertvermaat2124
    @robertvermaat2124 7 месяцев назад +1

    @gravegoods and identity - it seems to me that this question is treated differently when it comes to this period than when it comes to the start of the Roman period. I wonder why so much (more) stress is put on ethnic background and who they identitified with when it comes to the AS when compared to the Romans.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад +1

      I think it's because so many nations see their 'foundation' in the post Roman period, so ethnicity becomes a aspect of this. A lot of it can be traced back to the 19th century!

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад

      Very few Romans from Italy settled in Britain. There was a wider mix from the rest of the Empire. And some will have left when the legions withdrew. So the bulk of British DNA is either Pre-Roman or Post-Roman, and the Roman bit is very mixed.

  • @DarkAngel2512
    @DarkAngel2512 2 месяца назад +1

    Nice video

  • @jimmobley533
    @jimmobley533 2 месяца назад +1

    Good stuff. Makes you think.

  • @airborneranger-ret
    @airborneranger-ret 5 месяцев назад +3

    Weren't aliens involved somehow? ;)

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  5 месяцев назад

      Nah m8, that's the history channel.

  • @2gooddrifters
    @2gooddrifters 20 дней назад +1

    Im from a long line of Yorkshire people, east Yorkshire. My DNA is predominantly Anglo Saxon and Danish. A tiny amount of Belgian thrown in. It veriies a family legend of a Belgian bareback rider in a circus ancestry. Fascinating .

  • @pfcsantiago8852
    @pfcsantiago8852 28 дней назад

    I just go from the time of Alfred so no sweat.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  28 дней назад

      You miss out on some of the best bits

  • @halporter9
    @halporter9 7 месяцев назад +2

    Very well done!

  • @danielferguson3784
    @danielferguson3784 3 месяца назад +2

    But surely there were Saxons, Angles, Jutes, & probably other groups who identified as belonging to those groups, hence the naming of 'Kingdoms' as Wessex, Essex, East Anglia etc . Why assume Gildas & Bede were entirely wrong, surely their basic material must be in essentials correct. Limited samples of populations in specific areas may be of little use as indicators for a country wide assessment of people. One also does not know what proportion of continental DNA entered the British isles during the Roman period, or even earlier, & how certain is it that the assumed British DNA really is that. Have enough country wide samples of populations been identified for each period, & how distinct are these in reality? There is recorded a substantial migration of Britons into Gaul, enough to create the new country of Brittany, so these people movements need not have been all in one direction, nor need they be limited to those recorded by the ancient historical records.
    Clues may come from the archaeology, for instance the whole Sutton Hoo complex indicates a close connection to northern Europe/Scandinavia at a date as early as the 6th century, far earlier than the noted Danish/Norse invasions, but perhaps indicating that the originators of the Anglian line of kings there were sort of proto-vikings, & Angeln, the original home of the Angles is in that area. I think it is a little presumptious to simply dismiss Gildas & Bede out of hand, for whatever motives they may have had in telling their stories, they were using history, as known to themselves; & theirs was a semi-literate society so they could have had access to reliable records, & Bede especially records the searching out of older documents etc. Both of them certainly lived far closer to the events they record than we do, nor can we expect that archaeology & DNA will fill in all the details we would like, either in support of, or at variance to, their accounts, so we should allow them to still inform the narrative, at least on a basic level. After all we can hardly expect to find battle sites & war cemeteries for what must have fairly small scale clashes between competing groups of the period, when much greater & well recorded battles are also not evident in the landscape, even up to & including those of the English Civil Wars.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  3 месяца назад

      I think you'll enjoy my more recent episodes

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад

      The earliest definitions appear to be of far smaller groups, some of them probably/possibly originally British ruled with an evolution to an Anglo-Saxon culture. Apart from the early rulers of Wessex, there's Lindsey where the AS cemeteries ring Lindum Colonia, at a distance, possibly lands given to warrior groups to protect the territory, which is typical late-Roman behaviour.

  • @TontonMacoute
    @TontonMacoute Месяц назад

    Can we skip the preamble?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад +1

      I'm sorry you're the only person who has asked for that, it's important to set the scene and explain the data.

  • @BertPreast
    @BertPreast Месяц назад +1

    Interesting stuff but I would disagree with the "climate change migrants" theory. Climate changes, certainly, but not so swiftly that whole tribes would pack up and move. A natural disaster flooding their lands, perhaps, but it's a bit clickbait to call that climate change! To me the most likely candidate is a larger tribe encroaching on their lands, as usual.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад +1

      Thank you, there does seem to be some sort of change going on. One theory is that the Romans were cutting Peat and caused flooding in the low counties!

    • @BertPreast
      @BertPreast Месяц назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK Bloody Romans, they should have left Piet alone! I'd say a better suspect would be another lump of Norway falling off and making a tidal wave?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад +1

      @BertPreast no that would be devastating! The evidence shows gradual flooding not something devastating like that!

    • @BertPreast
      @BertPreast Месяц назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK Not a lump like the one that submerged Doggerland, but a smaller one could salt your fields and require a move on a tribal scale. If the flooding was gradual then the people would gradually leave.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад +1

      They did gradually leave, the migration occurred from 350~ to 800!

  • @alunevans380
    @alunevans380 23 дня назад +1

    All seems to be North west European to me.

  • @johnkaler4863
    @johnkaler4863 Месяц назад

    See in the east a silvery glow, out yonder waits the Saxon for We chant a soldiers song

  • @NordiCrusader7
    @NordiCrusader7 7 месяцев назад +1

    Anglo-Saxons created England. English people are Anglo-Saxon-Celtic

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      Have a watch of some of my episodes on the Anglo-Saxons. It may help you.

    • @NordiCrusader7
      @NordiCrusader7 7 месяцев назад

      @@AlexIlesUK I know my fathers ancestry and heritage.

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад

      Arguably the clear distinction between England and Scotland was created by the Norman kings of England and Scotland.

  • @petehoover6616
    @petehoover6616 7 месяцев назад

    I had a problem with the Master's thesis of Nicolas Fossannen that can illustrate the problem more clearly: he had done an archaeological study of bones found in a pit in an Ozark cave. They had been boiled and the fat removed. I had that sitting on my stove as i read the thesis and compared what he found to the bones in my soup stock. They matched. Of course I was thrilled. But I commented that this pit, 11,000 years old, had fat, it had fire, it had water, and it had ash. I said "that's soap!"
    Mr. Fossannen had to say he never meant to imply that 11,000 ago Indians had soap. The problem was that I have tried (and failed) to bed an Ozark woman who doesn't believe in soap. In 1978. It's a common hillbilly belief. If Mr. Fossannen had given the idea that Paleo-Indians had soap available it would have insulted the modern Ozark people he is reliant on for approval and funding. They would have hurt him. Perhaps literally. They are prettty violent.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад +1

      I'm not sure I follow.

    • @petehoover6616
      @petehoover6616 7 месяцев назад

      @@AlexIlesUK This was an attempt to illustrate the problems of dealing with present people who have their own ideas of the way things should be resisting evidence to the contrary. The words "English Identity" made me think of the Gilbert & Sullivan song from "The Pirates of Penance" "'e his a Hinglishman" which is rather nationalist. The song would have made no sense to an English community of Anglo-Saxon times because all around them that would be all their was. Coastal folks knew about the other side and even went there. They might have had a concept of "England" but I wouldn't bet money on them knowing their side was an island.
      They wouldn't have had an identity because all around them there had never been anything else.
      But I doubt there won't be a lot of resistance to the idea that Anglo-Saxons had no identity (and I bet the Norsemen changed that)
      I lived in Israel in the late 70's and knew some Southern English people. They were concerned about the influx of Levantines and Subcontinentals into England and how England was unable to stop the influx. They called Subcontinentals Pakis and "Roog Roydahs" for their habit of commuting to work on flying carpets.
      I think you might just have told them that English Identity has always included Levantines and others in its mix and I'm fairly sure they won't be happy to hear it.
      The mix they were concerned about seems from the outside to have been relatively smooth. You see, the English lifestyle seems to be stronger than any English race, and it's been going on for a very long time and people after people have moved into it, only to become Anglicized. Did they serve tea in Boxgrove? Maybe.

  • @maniplefringe
    @maniplefringe 6 месяцев назад

    Good overview of the DNA scholarship of this period - great refresher course for other more detailed podcasts to which I have listened. 'Climate change migrants' put me off a bit, although of course it is not impossible that climate - which has always been changing - could have been a factor for some migrations.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  6 месяцев назад

      Hi Maniplefringe, sorry for the time it's taken me to respond! Aye it's one theory that their homelands were flooded and were not suitable, but Britannia offered better opportunity. I think it's a combination of factors. I don't see them as slavering barbarians desperate to wipe out the Britons !

    • @AmandaSamuels
      @AmandaSamuels 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUKThat’s what I thought when I listened to the discussion of climate change. A lot of the farmland in Jutland is sandy and not nearly as productive as that of lowland England. Why wouldn’t the Angle and Saxon farmers be interested in getting possession of this land when the historical situation allowed it (Romans abandoning their Villa landholdings and local peasantry pacified and unable to defend themselves).

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  5 месяцев назад

      @@AmandaSamuels It could also be that with changing dynamics the land wasn't being used rather than it being taken from the Romans it was just available. People have been looking for evidence of violence for nearly a hundred years but I wonder if we should consider a large economic contraction meaning that it just wasn't worthwhile to produce in some areas as you didn't have an area to sell to anymore! Gaul and the Rhineland were not 'buying' British grain anymore so the world shifted. Still working on my thoughts on that one!

    • @chrishewitt8538
      @chrishewitt8538 3 месяца назад

      I don't think they were 'slavering barbarians', but possibly had a different value system to Christians and would have seen acts of violence ce against 'foreigners' differently. Pre Christian Romans had similar views about non-Romans. What mattered was your own nation, 'class', or family. The idea that you should 'care' about the stranger is largely (though not exclusively) a Christian idea. Also Germanic religio-cultural moral codes may have given the Anglo-Saxons a very different view of the morality of violence and war. I'm not making a value judgement here - what we see as amoral might not always have seemed so to them. Therefore if the Anglo-Saxons were violent invaders in some cases - we shouldn't be afraid of acknowledging this, as if its morally embarassing, when they may have not seen it that way and had a very different moral worldview than us. For example the Azrecs sacrificed 1000s of people a day to make the sun come up - does that make them monsters? Or just people operating on a moral axis determined by very different religio-cultural operating system to us (even if a lot of people are no longer religious in the West, our moral codes are still essentially based on a Christian operating system).

  • @annwitt4980
    @annwitt4980 2 месяца назад

    I totally agree with Prydwen!

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  2 месяца назад

      Have you looked at my reply as well?

  • @michaelbevan1081
    @michaelbevan1081 2 месяца назад +1

    I mean I’m in east England and my dna is 15% Denmark/Sweden

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  2 месяца назад

      I've made the point before, but do you know when that DNA was added to the UK population?

    • @michaelbevan1081
      @michaelbevan1081 2 месяца назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK unfortunately not precisely when. Though I would interested to know.

  • @Datacorrupter234
    @Datacorrupter234 4 месяца назад

    my ancestry results on gedmatch is nearly identical to early midevil saxon results im like literally identical within 1-2% despite my family being in america for the past few hundred years

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  4 месяца назад

      It depends on which company you are using but as I understand it no one can be identical to previous populations due to mutations that occur.

    • @Datacorrupter234
      @Datacorrupter234 4 месяца назад +1

      @@AlexIlesUK Saxons existed around 1500 years ago.. thats less than 100 generations ago and besides why should that matter? i am not my parents but my parents are still family heck pre indo european whg are still much more family than any immigrant would be. This whole “anglo saxon” thing is pointless when we are all so similar regardless because of our common ancestry from before the era

    • @Datacorrupter234
      @Datacorrupter234 4 месяца назад

      If you dont even know what gedmatch is or g25 you cant really speak much about ancestry

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  4 месяца назад

      It's a company that does genetic testing...

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  4 месяца назад

      That's the point I often make that the choices we make today are more important than our generic makeup. No one should draw their value from their genetics over their character and actions.

  • @waynemcauliffe-fv5yf
    @waynemcauliffe-fv5yf 7 месяцев назад +1

    Could you do some Irish DNA mate which is more my lot

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад +1

      They'll need to publish a paper! I'll see what I can find.

    • @waynemcauliffe-fv5yf
      @waynemcauliffe-fv5yf 7 месяцев назад

      Cheers mate. The world is awash in Irish DNA@@AlexIlesUK

    • @SunofYork
      @SunofYork 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@waynemcauliffe-fv5yf Especially Iceland where West Irish sex slaves were most valued.. Green eyes/black hair... I had bad luck and ended up with an east irish ginger

    • @waynemcauliffe-fv5yf
      @waynemcauliffe-fv5yf 6 месяцев назад +1

      I `ve ended up with too many hair/eye colours mate@@SunofYork

    • @SunofYork
      @SunofYork 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@waynemcauliffe-fv5yf Well at least they have hair, so it could be worse....

  • @SyIe12
    @SyIe12 6 месяцев назад +2

    👍⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Nice and informative video... Thanks...

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  6 месяцев назад

      You are welcome! Best wishes!

  • @CyberTribalism
    @CyberTribalism Месяц назад

    Most of these groups identified as 'Frisians' in the early day's of the migration, also from what is now Northern France... some also as Franks and Saxons, but the dominant pre-historic, pre-Christian culture in those days was still old Frisian. To have a better understanding of this period you need to take the Oera Linda book into account, and not believe the imperial narratieve, all the slander that continue's to this day. The Roman (Catholic) imperial version of history we've all been spoon fed. It should all be so obvious for any serious scholar. Hard proof for the authenticity of the Oera Linda book will come one day.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      I've not come across that book Until today.

    • @CyberTribalism
      @CyberTribalism Месяц назад

      @@AlexIlesUK Europe's best kept secret, the origins Hellenism and freedom culture in general. It's a very big story, pure cultural gold.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад +1

      I've read the synopsis.

    • @CyberTribalism
      @CyberTribalism Месяц назад

      @@AlexIlesUK organisations like fsb, cia, mossad, etc are very old... and the Romans where long time absolute masters at it. It's no coincidence that for the crucial 1st century AD period we only had (untill the fifties of last century) Flavius Josephus, the official Roman historian (Jewish turncoat, apparently one of the rebel leaders in the great Jewish uprising in the 7the decade of the first century AD). While there where several people's in the region (also according official history) with a long tradition of writing. You have to look at the power struglle within the Empire at that time, the end of the Claudian dynasty, the rise of the Flavi, Vespasianus and his son Titus, first they did the extermination campaign on the Druids in Gaul and Britain and then these two brought down the great Jewish revolt also, at least twice in their career they where confronted up close with the enormous power religion can have on a people. The First Catholic saints are also all Flavians. Old English is part of the Anglo-Frisian language group, maybe you can have a look at the Roman Minerva Nehallenia cult on Zeeland, Netherlands. There's a passage in the Bello Gallico where Ceasar remarks some Druids use a script that seemed similar to Greek writing (Ceasar would have certainly recognized standard Greek, until the 3 century AD Greek was the lingua Franca of the Roman elite) and then compare it with the Oera Linda script. By the 1st century BC the old prehistoric Frisian culture already collapsed, it lived on among large parts of the population for many centuries to come, but there was cultural exchange between some Druids and some Folkmothers, burgmaidens... much to the frustration of the skippers, steersmen and fishermen. In this prehistoric Germanic culture reading and writing was long time seen as something for women, numbers and calculating more something for men. The Phoenicians and wicked priests (from the Golan heights) play a big role in this whole story also, the 'new' system with gold and silver coins, international trade... the Lantins and parts of the Germans conspired against the Celtic people's... there has been a tribal vendetta in Europe that lasted millenia. Now we romantisize the Celtic people, but long time Gaulish people in general had a very bad reputation in the classic world. I could go on and on, why I'm sure the Oera Linda book is authentic and crucial to understand our history. Very important for our future also, Western freedom culture in general.

  • @darrylhalden1948
    @darrylhalden1948 6 месяцев назад +1

    My understanding is the 2022 study does not support the theory popular in recent times, of A-S migration as an influx of warrior elites grafting to a base Briton population over time. The suggestion is it was nearer to the other end of the spectrum - a significant genetic cascade which passed through the entire population in large areas of now England during this period(ie:tended to be replacement of genetic and cultural identity) - though western and northern areas, exhibited more genetically blended rather than replaced populations and cultural identity.
    An interesting question would be - the retreat of a dominant Roman presence was opportunity, but what factors fuelled this extended period of migration from now north-central Denmark,southern Sweden and lower Saxony

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  6 месяцев назад

      My question is did the Romans as we understand them actually leave? If you read the sources it suggests that they broke off from the main empire but did not 'leave' also Bede mentioned that Latin was one of the languages spoken during his time. What if that's not just church Latin but actually people talking lantin as their language? It's a fascinating period!

    • @darrylhalden1948
      @darrylhalden1948 6 месяцев назад

      .....I'm just letting my imagination run free on this...I have no evidence of course....undoubtedly there would have been an ongoing roman "presence" including a persitent use of latin but I guess the character of this presence might consist in a scattered and much diminished elite and other ranks {possibly Germanic and other peoples in any case)...and possibly facing adaption as renewed waves of Anglo-Saxons began to arrive@@AlexIlesUK

    • @akaDorM
      @akaDorM Месяц назад

      That study draws very sweeping conclusions from a very limited sample. It makes unsupported assumptions about how the heterogeneity should be interpreted. It assumes that their cemeteries reflect the whole population. It assumes a cultural homogeneity where fewer grave goods indicate lower status.

    • @Knappa22
      @Knappa22 26 дней назад +1

      @AlexIlesUK
      If that were the case then one would expect insular Latin to have left more traces in placenames for example. The Romans were keen on written / inscribed records and literature. There is practically none of this in post Roman occupation Britain. There is no evidence that Latin was widely spoken by the populace.

  • @georget5874
    @georget5874 Месяц назад +1

    French people's DNA showing up in 5th and 6th century burials. But they know that these people weren't here before then because they found some Roman and Iron age burials in that area and none of those burials had the French DNA right? Come on seriously how many burials are they talking about? And what were the circumstances of those burials.. I'd be willing to bet they were small numbers or clusters of burials in a small number of cemeteries. DNA evidence seems like dynamite in theory but when you get into it, you find there are lots of problems with drawing anything other than broad conclusions from it. For example when people are asked if all their family comes from a particular region of the UK - how do they actually know? Do they all have accurate family trees (where everyone's fathers who were they thought they were) going back generations? And what about genetic drift i.e. evolution that's gone on in the last 1000+ years messing other studies up. And whose is to say 'german dna' if it is in the 5-6th century burials didnt get here from German mercenaries employed by the Romans who had simply never bothered going home at the end of their service. - which by the way we do see evidence for in tombstones and the like.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      You ask some really good questions, and I think the evidence is in the percentages. 40% of South East England's aDNA from the 5th and 6th century was from the iron age France DNA group. That's substantial even with lower numbers of human remains as you say. As for the Germanic population they've only used burials which can be dated to the period to take away anything that could change the data. Hope that helps?

  • @PerksJ
    @PerksJ 7 месяцев назад +1

    Love the proposition of them being climate refugees

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      It's one of the theories

  • @petehoover6616
    @petehoover6616 7 месяцев назад

    I couldn't really understand what the problem was until at the end you said "English Identity." Living people have a sense of who they are and they are working backwards to prove the point they want to make. Someone in Rural England in 553 AD had likely never met or even heard of a person coming from farther than 15 miles away. But you pointed out that the Romano-British had JEWS. That would make someone with a concept of English Identity's head explode.
    There is a story I've heard, a Biblical one, that states that Joseph and Moses were Hyksos, and we got the dates wrong somehow. DNA of a Hyksos graveyard showed what had really happened. Joseph went down to Egypt alright. But he brought Jewish women who married into Egyptian wealth. After 200 years of steady female migration the yentas took over the government of the whole country, because after all, "they were the only ones who knew how to do it right." It took the Egyptian women another 200 years to drive the Jewish women out of Egypt.
    I laugh at this story told in the DNA because the kind of person who relishes an "English Identity" isn't going to be very friendly to data that demonstrates female domination.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  7 месяцев назад

      I don't think I mentioned Jews in this video. Not sure where you got that from

    • @petehoover6616
      @petehoover6616 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@AlexIlesUK Thanks for the reply. When I heard you say that Romano-Britain had Levantines buried there I wondered who they could be? Diaspora Jews seemed to be a guess. Egyptian grain merchants perhaps? Lebanese? I didn't think the Anatolian were a good guess. Armenians maybe? Diaspora Jews were the simplest explanation.
      The thing I'm pretty sure of about those Levantines is that they spoke Greek.

    • @bjornsmith9431
      @bjornsmith9431 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@petehoover6616 I maybe Ancient Cypriots there was a woman buried during the second century AD in Yorkshire that come form Cyprus, would be part of Levantine area lot of Greek, Cretans, Phoenician and Jewish settle there. The Greeks set up colonizes in Lebanon, Syria and Jordan after Alexander the Greek conquer this regions, most Greek carried J2-M172 48% of Greek DNA, Cypriot 13%, Italian 9-36%,Lebanese 30%, Syrian 14%, Ashkenazi 30%, Sephardic 14%, Palestine 29%, Maltese 21% and Armenian 24%

    • @petehoover6616
      @petehoover6616 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@bjornsmith9431 I have a recessive genetic weakness, a type of deafness. Ludwig van Beethoven had it and my best friend also has it. I had figured that we all shared a common ancestor on both sides of our family and my ancestors are Native American, English, and Bavarian. My friend's ancestors are Polish Ashkenazim. Beethoven is Bavarian. (If he's dead, isn't he still Bavarian? idk). I had guessed that that common ancestor had lived around the year 1000 CE and I guessed in Spain. I found out yesterday that the Jews of Germany went through a genetic bottleneck in 800 CE, when the population dropped to 300 individuals. That would be the source of an inherited recessive trait shared between myself, my friend, and Ludwig van. Ludwig van gave us an idea of what our prognosis is to be and it isn't good. But I was in Nebraska when I was diagnosed, and when I pointed out to the Nebraska Germans that I shared Jewish ancestry with Ludwig van they were racially offended and rejected me pretty forcefully. I would anticipate the same response from people who use the phrase "English Identity." It would seem that the idea that people who use the phrase "English Identity" would also reject quite forcefully and fancifully any suggestions that the English Identity includes Jews. The Cypriot connection doesn't help the case because before the bottleneck the Ashkenazim had interbred with local South Italian population. Magna Grecia. It's a replay of what I found in Nebraska: insult, offense and fear to suggest that there were Jews in England and Germany, and they had children. The mental gymnastics people go through to keep from admitting that pretty obvious fact resemble panic. The panic, like the identity, is an attempt to take a world we have now and try to square it with an imagined past that doesn't include "our present enemies," (whoever those may be)
      I am often disappointed in reading what archaeologists write because so often I find them to be racists. I figured out some years ago this is because Archaeology professors are racists and they only advance students who are also racists and I don't know how to get the infection out of the field of archaeology since racists won't give a doctorate to someone who isn't racist.
      The English ones don't want to remember that King John expelled all Jews from England so any English person who has a cookie bite hearing loss is not really English.

    • @bjornsmith9431
      @bjornsmith9431 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@petehoover6616 Thank you for the information on Ludwig Van Beethoven, he was a musical genius who taught himself to used vibration to read and write notes to his piano during is lost of hearing, he never gave up his dream, has for Jewish ancestry the Jewish religion during second temple period in the Mediterranean was converting people at that time they said 1 in 10 people in the Roman empire belong to the Jewish faith and also Armenian kingdom convert to Judaism before the Romans adopted Christianity so the pure Hebrew bloodline was already deluted with non Jewish by the 3 AD century. One thing in common with these mixed people is there faith and strict married custom, Cousins marriages and Avuncular marriages (Uncle and Niece) which run the risk genetic variation and sometime problems, I sadden by your treatment you was given by your pairs the world is strange. I remember the Austrian Painter parents was Uncle and Niece, had Jewish ancestry this marriage was not his source for his madness no it was hate and blaming others, a lot of people born from Avuncular marriages and Cousins marriages lived health productive lives, it they way there mines turned to evil.

  • @Amleththebearwolf83
    @Amleththebearwolf83 13 дней назад

    I dont trust anyone who wears perfectly circular glasses

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  13 дней назад

      Good news that mine are not perfectly circular

    • @Amleththebearwolf83
      @Amleththebearwolf83 13 дней назад

      The lenses are circular

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  13 дней назад

      facebook.com/share/p/tjG2gQmHjHJoCX2H/ congratulations you're my favourite comment today!

    • @Amleththebearwolf83
      @Amleththebearwolf83 13 дней назад

      They are still circles no matter how many posts you make

    • @Amleththebearwolf83
      @Amleththebearwolf83 13 дней назад

      Your Facebook posts get so many likes

  • @jeannieheard1465
    @jeannieheard1465 Месяц назад

    Get to the point. I am aging quickly now. Tell us about "Kingdom of the Hwicce". I am a Hicks. What was the DNA of one of these Hwicce?

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  Месяц назад

      It wasn't covered. Hope you did not pass during the video.

  • @GlobalRage
    @GlobalRage 5 месяцев назад

    Angles were Suevi and they burned the bodies. Angles should be a DNA population, a fairly large population that was not large before Christianization and then after Christianization should have a dramatic increase in percentage. Saxons buried their bodies because they were not odin they were thor and they have thor hammers in their grave goods- the Angles will have tweezers and no hammer- that was not a joke I am serious.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  5 месяцев назад

      I'm sorry it's really hard to understand what you're trying to convey. Could you try again please?

    • @GlobalRage
      @GlobalRage 5 месяцев назад

      @@AlexIlesUKThe Angles were a Suevi people that practiced cremation, The Saxons practiced inhumation. On a simple line graph you should be able to identify Angles by marked increase of U106 subclades post Christianization after the inhumation burial practice was adopted. You will also be able to identify Angles by the recovery of tweezers from cremation burials as apposed to Thor Hammers, that will give you advice on what geographical areas should be examined. The subclades of U106 that are Migration Period, "people from the east", will be new and different. I am CTS4528 but there are too few of us to be considered a measurement, But the U106 that you find buried along side us will also be eastern migration period reflux back into Europe during Attila's "reorganization of management" Hatherdene Close, Collegno Italy and Sopron Hungary have already been run through the DNA process and I know because I have looked at it. I looked because other than Slonk Hill Man 150 BCE near Hangleton England and two in Sopron Hungary there are no BCE recoveries of CTS4528 so I needed to find who we were moving with. Hatherdeane Close 425 AD was the first post Christianization found and then a family plot in a Longobard site in Collegno. Look for the U106 subclades in those two sites and then cross examine DNA from post Christianization burials in the UK and you will find the Angles- and remember Thor Hammer vs tweezers. Suevi were Aesir and the Saxons Vanir. If I need to break any of this out, and refine- please feel free to ask.

  • @MrEolicus
    @MrEolicus 5 месяцев назад

    Alex Lies... silly anagram... liked and subscribed, so therefore you know where that silly anagram lies... pun intended.
    Cheers.

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  5 месяцев назад +2

      I've had worse, Ailes, i-les, eeles, all sorts. Unfortunately one of my ancestors was french, we're still dealing with it as a family...

  • @elijahmcmurtrie268
    @elijahmcmurtrie268 2 месяца назад

    AI

    • @AlexIlesUK
      @AlexIlesUK  2 месяца назад

      There's no AI in this video.