Karabars
Regular Member
- Messages
- 42
- Reaction score
- 24
- Points
- 8
- Ethnic group
- Hungarian / Transylvanian
- Y-DNA haplogroup
- R-CTS7822
- mtDNA haplogroup
- J1c
(Your haplogroup seemingly indicates a Germanic origin from the Alpes.)
Great reading, glad to see some Romanians leaning towards the Migration or Admigration theory. It's not like Hungarians would gain anything from claiming or proving Romanians were not ethnically native there, as Romania is close to being an ethnostate and thus an undisputable modern claim to their lands anyway.
I'm also curious what genetics will prove. Like recent studies indicate Romanians are 50-60% Slavic genetic-wise. Transylvanian Romanians cluster near other Central Europeans (while remaining close and basically identical to other Romanians). Linguistically it seems that "Romanian" split in the 10th century to the "Vlach languages". And genetically almost every migration is low impact, meaning that language, culture and political shifts are the default, not a genetic one, so modern Romanians have Dacian genes, even if Dacians were not part of (or not the main one of) their ethnogenesis. Just like how English folks are mostly Celtic genetically, despite their Anglo-Saxon-Jutes-Norman (Germanic) origin.
A small sidenote on the Gesta: Gleu (Gyalu) was the ruler of Vlachs and Slavs, while Menumorot (Ménmarót) ruled over Khazars and Seklers. Not sure why he is portrayed as Vlach in Romanian historiography.
Great reading, glad to see some Romanians leaning towards the Migration or Admigration theory. It's not like Hungarians would gain anything from claiming or proving Romanians were not ethnically native there, as Romania is close to being an ethnostate and thus an undisputable modern claim to their lands anyway.
I'm also curious what genetics will prove. Like recent studies indicate Romanians are 50-60% Slavic genetic-wise. Transylvanian Romanians cluster near other Central Europeans (while remaining close and basically identical to other Romanians). Linguistically it seems that "Romanian" split in the 10th century to the "Vlach languages". And genetically almost every migration is low impact, meaning that language, culture and political shifts are the default, not a genetic one, so modern Romanians have Dacian genes, even if Dacians were not part of (or not the main one of) their ethnogenesis. Just like how English folks are mostly Celtic genetically, despite their Anglo-Saxon-Jutes-Norman (Germanic) origin.
A small sidenote on the Gesta: Gleu (Gyalu) was the ruler of Vlachs and Slavs, while Menumorot (Ménmarót) ruled over Khazars and Seklers. Not sure why he is portrayed as Vlach in Romanian historiography.