JFWR
Banned
- Messages
- 305
- Reaction score
- 8
- Points
- 0
- Location
- New York City
- Ethnic group
- Irish, English, French, German, Swedish, and Finnish
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- I-m223
- mtDNA haplogroup
- H64
What would be a good mapping of the general Y-DNA contribution of historical migrations/invasions of Great Britain? For instance, what haplogroups might we associate with these populations:
Pre-Celtic Britain (Suggestion: I2a2a-Isles?).
Briton.
Pictish.
Roman.
Anglo-Saxon (and Jutes, Geats, et cetera).
Viking/Norsemen.
Norman.
Post-Norman influxes of migrants from continental Europe (primarily French and Dutch?).
Also, how might these match with the native British population of today? What was the population change resultant from these historical movements?
I imagine Roman and Norman have comparatively less of an influence because of the smaller population shift in spite of their absolute political domination. Contrariwise, from what I gather, the Britons and Anglo-Saxons were very complete migrations that widely replaced previous populations or pushed them to the fringes. I imagine the Picts represent a small portion of the population, also, and then mainly in Scotland.
Pre-Celtic Britain (Suggestion: I2a2a-Isles?).
Briton.
Pictish.
Roman.
Anglo-Saxon (and Jutes, Geats, et cetera).
Viking/Norsemen.
Norman.
Post-Norman influxes of migrants from continental Europe (primarily French and Dutch?).
Also, how might these match with the native British population of today? What was the population change resultant from these historical movements?
I imagine Roman and Norman have comparatively less of an influence because of the smaller population shift in spite of their absolute political domination. Contrariwise, from what I gather, the Britons and Anglo-Saxons were very complete migrations that widely replaced previous populations or pushed them to the fringes. I imagine the Picts represent a small portion of the population, also, and then mainly in Scotland.