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Very intriguing Besa, but what led this man to that conclusion? Was it based on his yDna? Do you know how much resolution there was in terms of sub-clades?
Also, is there documentation that the auxiliaries at this particular fort were always from that specific area in the Balkans?
there is a document written by steven bird about haplogroup ev-13 found in britain in small numbers and that it came from illyrian/thracian soldiers in the roman empire. the wright brothers carried the same haplogroup and they were originally from the essex area(?).. his claim about it coming from kosovo is based I think on the fact that its highest peak is among kosovar albanians. the region was under roman conquest like most of the balkans. The Dardanians became a big source among the roman empire with constantine the great, and justinian. but you are right to conclude that it exactly came from that area is not enough, but the conclusion is that it came from thracian/illyrian soldiers. this to me explains why haplogroup ev-13 and j2 is spread across the balkans, even in bulgaria where the thracians lived, it's high:
I think the Illyrians and thracians were majorly haplogroup EV-13 and J2 carriers, and maybe r1b (it might of come from celts and romans though or maybe through anatolia) I think they (illyrians&thracians) were related people, kinda like the Ingush and Chechens or like the Norwegians, Swedes and danes all these people carry much the same haplogroups.
I will try to find out more about this man.
for all I know it could also of come from south-Italy, where ancient greeks and messapians lived. but then again it goes back to the balkans
I suggest you read this book for the area in question
https://books.google.com.au/books?i...A&ved=0CEgQ6AEwCA#v=onepage&q=dardani&f=false
Dardani are not illyrian, they are either alone or a branch of the thracians.
Illyrian origins in the late bronze-age are around modern east austria, hungaria, slovenia , croatia and northern parts of bosnia...........history states, as the celts pushed into the illyrians in the north, the illyrians pushed into thracian montenegro, the dardani, the macedonians and eventually into the epirotes.........but mostly they failed having been stopped by the Macedonians as per my link.
Illyrians have barely any E marker in there origins in the northern balkans.
The thracians are the majority in the balkans in terms of tribes and number of people in the pre roman times.............as herodorus states.....the Thracians are the most populus nation after the Indians
This is what I could quickly find out about the subject. Here is a British government website on the Roman conquest, occupation, and settlement of Wales:
http://cadw.wales.gov.uk/docs/cadw/publications/InterpplanRomanConquestofWales_EN.pdf
It includes a map not only of the major (and minor) Roman fortresses, but of the roads and smaller vici or settlements of Roman soldiers and their "unofficial" families. I found it quite interesting.
View attachment 7149
This site lists the major Roman fortresses in Britain. The last two are in Wales:
http://www.heritagedaily.com/2014/01/top-10-roman-forts-in-britain/100677
From what I can tell from that link, the Cohors Sunicorum was recruited in Belgica, and the Legio II Augusta from Italy, southern France and Spain. In southern France and particularly parts of Italy you can certainly find E-V13.
Also see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legio_II_Augusta
The Cohors Sunicorum is mentioned here in this article on Seguntium. The only connection I see with the Balkans is when it was stationed there centuries later.
http://www.betws31.freeserve.co.uk/Bath-house/Segontium/segontium.html
Of course that doesn't mean that there couldn't have been some legionnaires of Balkan descent.
Also, I wonder if it could have moved from the Chester area (Deva) over the border. The forts there were manned by the Legio II Adiutrix, many of whose Legionnaires were recruited in Egypt. (We probably wouldn't be talking about E-V13 in that case, however.)
Also involved was the XX Valeria Victrix, which was indeed stationed in the Balkans (Illyria).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legio_II_Adiutrix
Interestingly, assuming that we're talking about E-V13, as it wasn't mentioned in the article in the OP, the old Weale et all study found a high incidence of E-V13 in a small sample in Abergele, which is in northeast Wales, not northwest like the major Roman fortress in Wales, although I'm sure the Dna can travel distances like that.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/tcga/tcgapdf/Weale-MBE-02-AS.pdf
There was also the mention of this testing of northeast Wales and over the border into England:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/2753008/posts
Has anyone heard any more about it? It's a pity that the recent POBI study hasn't released their yDna information yet.
I think I read on 23andme that the Sinclairs of Scotland are also E-V13. Is that right?
Anyway, while I think one could speculate that the E-V14 arrived with Roman Legionnaires, given that there are important mineral deposits in this area, I don't know why an earlier arrival connected with Copper Age mining is out of the question either.
I do get, btw, that for some men there's more allure in being a descendent of a soldier than of a miner or farmer, but I think both speculations are reasonable. What is needed is detailed subclade information.
Go ahead and tell me what haplogroup Illyrians belonged to?
Dardani are Illyrians. there lived Illyrians, thracians and Celts, it was a contact zone. Constantine the great who was from Dardania was Illyrian. so was Justinian. both are recorded of being illyrians. Thracians and illyrians might of been related as I said, of course they were. they were neighbors. Dardani might of been thraco-illyrians.
i2a? for that I suggest you take a look at the thread ''how did i2a get to the balkans'' take a look at some of the last pages. Its already explained i2a is from a recent immigration to the balkans. That leaves mostly EV-13, J2, and R1b left.
Actually Illyrians lived all the way down to modern day south-Albania. these were actually the ''real'' Illyrians. from south albania and montenegro/dalmatia today. they came in contact with greeks. it's even said the northern neighbors of the greeks were illyrians. The Liburnians were not Illyrians. I know you're one of those persons who actually thinks illyrians were i2a, this has already been disproven. But no one wants to face the truth. Illyrians don't have origin in the northern balkans, their origin comes from the south where they immigrated north.
As for the epirotes, they might of been a mix of ancient greek and illyrians, it doesn't really matter, they carried the same haplogroups. tell me how EV-13 and J2 became so high among greeks?
CoNstantine the Great, Justinianus etc where Romans from Italy Naples,
They were Flavians,
so stop your sturpidty,
Greeks Serbs now Albanians, who nobody spoke about them at that time claim The Flavians
it is a pitty and stupidity. besides of a cheap propaganda,
Illyrians were from Norici, meaning no E no J Hg,
CoNstantine the Great, Justinianus etc where Romans from Italy Naples,
They were Flavians,
so stop your sturpidty,
Go ahead and tell me what haplogroup Illyrians belonged to?
Dardani are Illyrians. there lived Illyrians, thracians and Celts, it was a contact zone. Constantine the great who was from Dardania was Illyrian. so was Justinian. both are recorded of being illyrians. Thracians and illyrians might of been related as I said, of course they were. they were neighbors. Dardani might of been thraco-illyrians.
i2a? for that I suggest you take a look at the thread ''how did i2a get to the balkans'' take a look at some of the last pages. Its already explained i2a is from a recent immigration to the balkans. That leaves mostly EV-13, J2, and R1b left.
Actually Illyrians lived all the way down to modern day south-Albania. these were actually the ''real'' Illyrians. from south albania and montenegro/dalmatia today. they came in contact with greeks. it's even said the northern neighbors of the greeks were illyrians. The Liburnians were not Illyrians. I know you're one of those persons who actually thinks illyrians were i2a, this has already been disproven. But no one wants to face the truth. Illyrians don't have origin in the northern balkans, their origin comes from the south where they immigrated north.
And allot of the ''illyrian'' tribes in Bosnia were actually Celts or became celticized
As for the epirotes, they might of been a mix of ancient greek and illyrians, it doesn't really matter, they carried the same haplogroups. tell me how EV-13 and J2 became so high among greeks? Are they also Thracians? most of ancient greece was EV-13 and J2.. I believe there was a time in the balkans were most of it was EV-13 and J2 and maybe R1b...
It's not proof by any means but the Romans made a point of mentioning that the population of Wales was darker than the rest of the Britons so I think the E ydna in Wales is more likely to be pre-Roman which I think is most likely to be descended from Atlantic Megalith.
It's not proof by any means but the Romans made a point of mentioning that the population of Wales was darker than the rest of the Britons so I think the E ydna in Wales is more likely to be pre-Roman which I think is most likely to be descended from Atlantic Megalith.
After the Neolitich Revolution, there were no South to North movements along the Atlantic coast.
Britain and Ireland were settled by people from the East only: Germany, Belgium, etc...
The Irish have higher ANE than the English. So did the Belgae from Southern England 2000 years ago.
There are more such stories like this one about J2b in the SE of Netherlands who claim to be descendants of Thracian legionnaires :
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=473217516068948&set=gm.594232983927034&type=1
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=473217516068948&set=gm.594232983927034&type=1&theater
I guess they tell this kind of stories because people like to hear them.
They may be true but there is no proof. It just helps to sell DNA tests.
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