Mytrueancestry.com

This sounds positive, maybe we should send feedback to these guys to fix any errors regarding Longobards. The Viking samples seem very solid from what I saw. Anyone have details on the Saxons?
 
Those Serbs and that Bosniakised Serb on TA are now butthurt we got Ilyrian/Thracian and they didn't , so now they make up some new theories xD


They are literally some of the most delusional creatures I have seen.

I Used to be impartial about the Serbs, but now that I've found out that I’m probably related to them, I think they're amazing people. Sometimes they are also misunderstood. LOL

LE1U7Do.jpg
 
My Norwegian friend got this:
1. Swedish (2.862)
2. West_Norwegian (3.180)
3. North_Dutch (5.246)
4. Danish (5.937)
5. North_Swedish (6.825)
6. Orcadian (8.216)
7. West_Scottish (8.447)

Viking + Longobard (2.606)
Longobard (3.488)
Scythian + Longobard (3.598)
Viking (6.093)
Scythian (8.37)
 
I’ve just received this email from My True Ancestry:

Exciting news! We have a new feature ready.
As a valued premium member, you now have access to maps focusing on Central Asia.
This feature has been auto-activated on your account and is ready to use.
Login to view

- The MyTrueAncestry Team

It makes no difference to my results, but may help resolve the problems some people with Asian ancestry have been reporting.


Sent from my iPhone using Eupedia Forum
 
In case anyone should get confused, the Ostrogoth sample is the one which although part of the Ostrogoth community, was genetically Greek. The Goths seem to have incorporated people of various ethnic backgrounds.

Likewise, if people are getting Avar results, I think the one being used is "genetically" Slavic.

As for the "Scythians", I think they're mixed with Neolithic and hunter-gatherer European mtdna.

The Rostov Scythians have quite southern European like mtdna:
pPjZJje.png



The Moldova Scythians:
XHU1PmD.png
[/IMG]

"On the basis of published data concerning the phylogeography of mt lineages distribution in ancient populations of Europe and Asia, the 19 complete mt genomes of the NPR Iron Age Scythians produced in this study fall into three main groups of different ancestry. The first group of mt lineages is represented by U5 haplotypes that are considered to be a European Hunter-Gatherer genetic component44,45. The second group comprises haplotypes belonging to H, J, T, W and N1b, ultimately connected to the genetic package of the early Neolithic farmers44,46,47, and the third group includes A, D, M10 and F mt lineages considered to be of East Eurasian origin48,49,50,51."
https://www.nature.com/articles/srep43950

It's quite interesting how the results for British people clearly show the mixture between "Celts" and "Germanics", with some with higher "Celtic" and some with higher "Germanic". To think how many years of debate can now be so easily solved. :)

I know this is all fun, but remember to look at your fits.
 
mTmOGF5.png


Here's my updated map for Asia. I now get Rise 397 from the Armenian Bronze-Age. Which is consistent with the spread of ABA giving rise to groups like the Mycenaeans.
The Ostrogoth being Greek makes a lot of sense.

My results are still the same though, and it doesn't come up one the oracles.

The fact that they already have an update makes me feel more confident about my investment with this.

I hope they continue to let out a stream of new updates. They have a lot to work with:

https://reich.hms.harvard.edu/downloadable-genotypes-worlds-published-ancient-dna-data
 
Impressed big time, my results from MyTrueAncestry were spot on.
Even better than any gedmatch model I could find. I wonder how their model works and will probably upgrade to the archaeological map now.

1. Swedish (1.080)
2. Norwegian (2.856)
3. West_Norwegian (4.956)
4. North_Swedish (5.980)
5. North_Dutch (6.424)
6. Danish (7.272)
7. German_Central (8.821)
8. North_German (8.888)

And for fun: (also looks plausible)

Viking + Saxon (2.991)
Viking + Longobard (3.177)
Longobard (4.593)
Viking (7.343)
Saxon (9.21)



Holy crap, that is very close.
 
I Used to be impartial about the Serbs, but now that I've found out that I’m probably related to them, I think they're amazing people. Sometimes they are also misunderstood. LOL

LE1U7Do.jpg
You are definitely close to some populations.
 
Thanks a lot for linking this, very informative and easy to navigate. The ancient populations seemed slightly surprising but it's certainly left me intrigued.

From my Ancestry DNA results:

Vandal + Frank (4.865)
Vandal + Longobard (5.047)
Vandal (7.678)
Longobard (7.754)
Frank (8.46)

1. Bell Beaker Southern France (2050 BC) (4.077)
2. Nordic-Celtic Gladiator York (250 AD) (5.973)
3. Vandal Chieftain (375 AD) (7.678)
4. Nordic Lombard (590 AD) (7.754)
5. Nordic Lombard (670 AD) (8.195)
6. Czech Velke Prilepy (0 AD) (8.383)
7. Frankish / Hungary (590 AD) (8.46)
8. Pict (670 AD) (9.015)
9. Alemannic Bavaria (465 AD) (9.163)
10. Ireland Copper Age (1880 BC) (9.223)
11. Bronze Age Celt England (1000 BC) (9.253)
12. Celtic Briton (70 BC) (9.275)
13. Alemannic Bavaria (500 AD) (9.668)
14. Celtic Briton (0 AD) (10.19)
15. Anglo Saxon (700 AD) (10.4)
16. Late Medieval Gotlander (1600 AD) (10.45)
17. Corded Ware Denmark (2450 BC) (10.48)
18. Nordic Lombard (670 AD) (10.52)
19. Celtic/Viking Iceland (1000 AD) (10.84)
20. Anglo Saxon (700 AD) (10.9)

1. Southwest_English (4.076)
2. Southeast_English (5.709)
3. Orcadian (6.045)
4. Welsh (6.289)
5. West_Scottish (7.092)
6. Irish (7.265)
7. North_Dutch (8.297)
8. Danish (8.927)

Update from my Living DNA results:

Celt + Longobard (6.315)
Celt + Frank (7.539)
Longobard (8.688)
Celt (9.14)
Frank (10.29)

1. Czech Velke Prilepy (0 AD) (7.505)
2. Bell Beaker Southern France (2050 BC) (7.945)
3. Nordic-Celtic Gladiator York (250 AD) (8.019)
4. Nordic Lombard (590 AD) (8.688)
5. Celtic Briton (0 AD) (8.8)
6. Alemannic Bavaria (465 AD) (9.008)
7. Bronze Age Celt England (1000 BC) (9.108)
8. Celtic/Viking Iceland (1000 AD) (9.14)
9. Pict (670 AD) (9.238)
10. Ireland Copper Age (1880 BC) (9.309)
11. Briton Gladiator York (250 AD) (9.333)
12. Germano-Celtic Gladiator York (250 AD) (9.506)
13. Germano-Celtic Gladiator York (250 AD) (9.536)
14. Nordic Lombard (670 AD) (9.645)
15. Celtic Briton (70 BC) (9.924)
16. Bronze Age Jutland Denmark (1400 BC) (9.975)
17. Frankish / Hungary (590 AD) (10.29)
18. Frankish / Hungary (590 AD) (10.5)
19. Late Medieval Gotlander (1600 AD) (10.82)
20. Bell Beaker Southern France (2120 BC) (10.95)

1. Southwest_English (5.000)
2. Southeast_English (5.341)
3. Irish (6.490)
4. West_Scottish (6.531)
5. Orcadian (6.720)
6. Danish (9.105)
7. North_Dutch (9.241)
8. Welsh (9.597)

It completely eliminates the Vandal connection and has more similarity to the Celtic samples, though the population distance is significantly larger.
 
Last edited:
mTmOGF5.png


Here's my updated map for Asia. I now get Rise 397 from the Armenian Bronze-Age. Which is consistent with the spread of ABA giving rise to groups like the Mycenaeans.
The Ostrogoth being Greek makes a lot of sense.

My results are still the same though, and it doesn't come up one the oracles.

The fact that they already have an update makes me feel more confident about my investment with this.

I hope they continue to let out a stream of new updates. They have a lot to work with:

https://reich.hms.harvard.edu/downloadable-genotypes-worlds-published-ancient-dna-data

Where in Italy do your ancestors come from? I'm guessing the south because the Hittites show up.

It would be interesting to see unmixed Italians from Basilicata in these tests as they don't seem to have inflated northern admixture from historic migrations unlike, for instance, Sicilians.

Edit: Basilicata Y-DNA indicates some north European admixture, but it's minor.


J2a: 24%
G: 21%
E: 16%
R1b: 16%
J1: 7%
I2: 7%
T: 5%
I1: 2%
R1a: 2%

(from ftdna)
 
0cCH8Zl.png


Interestingly, I get Illyrian in my premium map, but not for my Full archaeological map. This happens for both AncestryDNA raw data, and the combined raw data.

HodK1l2.png

I get the Same Illyrian results as you :)
23 v4:


c5Xd4or.jpg



g724Xyo.jpg
 
@ markod

My family comes from two towns in the region of Bari. Which was used as the modeling of SItaly3. I think the results of this calculator are consistent with what I had expected.

In the thread on the Arrival of Steppe and Iran-like Ancestry, I tied together my observations with the Raveane et al paper:

BGh7sR7.png


In this admixture chart on line 550, it shows that the Ibiza_Phoenician sample's autosomal components looks very close to that of the Mycenaean. Let us see how things pan out in the final peer-reviewed version of the paper.

Here's another aspect of the paper I found to be intriguing:

WCdBVmt.png


The Reich paper states that it is plausible that the Caucasus-related ancestry reported in Ravenae et al is likely to have been there since the early or middle Bronze-Age. Thus it stands to reason that this makes Southern Italian mainlanders; especially SItaly3 (see figure G, below) are indeed different from Sicilians. But who knows how Reich would model them. This is just my observations and speculation. At any rate, here are examples of the difference, below. If the plausibility is indeed correct, than the mainland south owes a lot of it's ancestry to the early to middle bronze age. While Sicily took a different route to get where it is today (Perhaps with Messina being an exception).

dGcNc3F.png


Furthermore, I noticed that Anatolian_BA is also very similar to the Minoan and Mycenaean samples; More than it is to Levant_BA, as observed in the ADMIXTURE analysis below. One of the samples even overlaps with SItaly1

3TqJZbA.png


ve5Ua4q.png
 
@Jovialis

Thanks! Exactly my thoughts regarding the difference between Sicilians and mainland South Italians.

It will be interesting to see what coastal western Anatolians looked like in the Bronze Age. My guess is that the Anatolians we have thus far have inflated CHG admixture, pulling them away from Europe.
 
It seems that what this company has done is straight up run an individual's whole genome against the whole genomes of ancient samples, presumably ones that are high quality. What could be more accurate than that? I don't know what anyone else is doing, whether all the samples used are of high quality, whether the run was "supervised", etc. etc.
Do you think they compare the genomes directly, using just short IBD segments or some sort of statistics? I wonder if population genetic structure/drift could occasionaly inflate relatedness with IBD sharing, diverting us from the reality of ancestry. For example, if your father is Italian and your mother is half British and half Japanese, what IBDs and admixture would tell you, considering that Italian and British are much more similar to each other than to Japanese? F-statistics, for example, shows us Basques are the second more similar to the original EEF, but not admixture. Could admixture, in this case, be more informative for tracking their " ancestry" ? Not sure, but what MyTrueAncestry seems to be doing is a comparison of admixture results (using informative ancestral components); i.e., Oracle. Also, MyTrueAncestry's similarity list based on modern pops does resemble K15 Oracle. I wonder if it's a mere coincidence. :) If not, why using different methodologies for modern and ancient, if the goal is the same (identifying not just genetic similarity, but "true" ancestry)? That does seem a simple Oracle, rather than a complex calculation made by some native algorithm, which doesn't mean it's not good enough. The approach seems to work relatively well, as we could notice empirically.
(I may be wrong, of course.)
 
I think what it means is that particular sample is not really "Longobard", as in Germanic in origin. This is Hungary, and we know the "Celts" in a broad sense were present there. Many papers have posited that some of the "Celts" who came to Italy, i,.e. the Boi, came from Hungary.

@Gash,
As to the "Roman" samples in Szolad, i.e. Central Roman, Gallo Roman and Hellenic Roman, what they're talking about is the Roman inhabitants of Pannonia. If you go back to the Amorim paper you'll see that the authors are careful to consider the archaeology, and the settlement was built in an area known for its Roman forts and villas in the period preceding the arrival of the Langobards. I don't know why it would be surprising that descendants of those people would still be there. Of course, their fate is not enviable.

You might want to read about Roman Pannonia at this late date. The Keszthely is the culture that was present in that precise area. Now, the authors of the article say the people were "Romanized". I'm not sure. Archaeologists for the last 50 or more years haven't wanted to admit that people moved, and not just pots. These people are too "Italian" like, it seems to me, being variously Gallo-Roman, Central Roman, or Hellenic Roman, to be mostly of "local" ancestry, and as I said upthread, this is the precise area where there are the remains of Roman forts and villas, and which maintained, with great difficulty, its "Roman" culture into the 7th century, when all around them in Pannonia it had perished.

As for the "Illyrian" and "Thracian" samples, that's precisely what they are, and that's the context in which they were buried. It seems that what this company has done is straight up run an individual's whole genome against the whole genomes of ancient samples, presumably ones that are high quality. What could be more accurate than that? I don't know what anyone else is doing, whether all the samples used are of high quality, whether the run was "supervised", etc. etc.

This is also the Bronze Age we're talking about. I don't see anything unusual in "Illyrians", i.e. mixed Indo-European and Southeastern European MN farmers moving into both Dalmatia and Northeastern Italy. Since then there were obviously changes, but maybe in one place the incoming people were "more" different, and so the overall similarity to Illyrians dropped.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keszthely_culture

"The characteristic garb of women included earrings with basket-shaped pendants, disc brooches with early Christian motifs, and garment pins. The early Christian symbols include crosses, bird-shaped brooches and pins decorated with bird figures (one bird-shaped brooch bears an incised cross). The Romanized populace of Pannonia in general became ‘Avarized’, and their ‘island’ of late antique culture is documented only in the immediate vicinity of Keszthely, where their traditional costume was worn until the beginning of the 9th century."

"The name Keszthely (IPA [ˈkɛst.hɛj]) could be related to the IstriotVenetian castei, which means "castle", and is probably an original word of the Pannonian Romance language, according to the Austrian linguist Julius Pokorny.[2] He also posits that the word Pannonia is derived via Illyrian from a Proto-Indo-European root *pen- "swamp, water, wet". If true, that would suggest that the pre-Roman language of Pannonia was an Illyrian language.



Modern South Slavs aren't the same people as the pre Slavic people that lived in the Balkans.

South Slavs also get Scythian on this which is basically East European like ancestry. Albanians mostly got Roman, Ancient Greek and Ilyrian/Thracian. Some South Slavs also got Roman but also Scythian, therefor it is unlikely that the people that live there today are the same as the ones that lived there during Roman times. This is backed up by plenty of other genetic tests. If this is what you mean ?

What you said also doesn't explain why some Albanians are only getting Roman and no Ilyrian/Thracian.


I find it unlikely that this Roman is actually Roman ancestry also.


Not sure what you mean by the rest. But Albanians are closer to ancient Balkan samples than South Slavs are and these ancient samples also carry Albanian yDNA markers.


This test didn't include Vucedol or Bronze Age Montenegro or old Thracians either which were even closer to us IMO.
 
@Jovialis

Thanks! Exactly my thoughts regarding the difference between Sicilians and mainland South Italians.

It will be interesting to see what coastal western Anatolians looked like in the Bronze Age. My guess is that the Anatolians we have thus far have inflated CHG admixture, pulling them away from Europe.

Earlier in the thread, I posted this graphic from the paper linked for the Hittite sample. For the Anatolian CA to MLBA, it looks to be about the same as Yamnaya. But these are all in the center of Anatolia.

WeXhhXp.jpg
 
I forgot to mention South Slavs also get Avar.


I Used to be impartial about the Serbs, but now that I've found out that I’m probably related to them, I think they're amazing people. Sometimes they are also misunderstood. LOL

LE1U7Do.jpg

This doesn't mean that you have such ancestry. Its just Serbs are mixed with natives who were probably similar to modern Albanians which of course they deny. These calcs some of them dont use Albanian samples or else you would probably get Albanian as close as Greek and Tuscany.

Serbs are propgandists who have been pushing Caucasus theory on Albanians for generations only to get disproven by genetics, linguistics etc. so now they make up some new theory that can suit their agenda.
 
Modern South Slavs aren't the same people as the pre Slavic people that lived in the Balkans.

South Slavs also get Scythian on this which is basically East European like ancestry. Albanians mostly got Roman, Ancient Greek and Ilyrian/Thracian. Some South Slavs also got Roman but also Scythian, therefor it is unlikely that the people that live there today are the same as the ones that lived there during Roman times. This is backed up by plenty of other genetic tests. If this is what you mean ?

What you said also doesn't explain why some Albanians are only getting Roman and no Ilyrian/Thracian.


I find it unlikely that this Roman is actually Roman ancestry also.


Not sure what you mean by the rest. But Albanians are closer to ancient Balkan samples than South Slavs are and these ancient samples also carry Albanian yDNA markers.


This test didn't include Vucedol or Bronze Age Montenegro or old Thracians either which were even closer to us IMO.

We're going to have to agree to disagree.

I'm closer to one of the "Romans" in Szolad than I am to any modern Italian population. I think that means something.

Those people were "absorbed" in one generation in an area which we know maintained a Romano-Christian culture into the 7th century, spoke a Romance language, and where one can find many Roman villas and forts. We also know it was retaken by the Eastern Roman Empire for a good chunk of time. I'm not at all surprised some of the samples look like Greeks. Those forts would have been manned by Byzantium.

Now, I'm sure that most of Hungary was not like the area around Lake Balaton, but this area was indeed different.

One can also look at the Collegno graveyard. There are actual "Germanic" Langobards, some Gallic like women, which makes sense since France is so close, one "Tuscan" like person and a number of "Hellenic" like or Greek shifted people. Collego is in Italy. What else could those people be but late Antiquity Romans?

I know it goes against what some people have thought for so long, but it is what it is. The "locals" from Italy and from Szolad are very similar.

I'm not going into the minefield of Balkan genetics. I don't know why people from the western Balkans get lower "Illyrian" and "Thracian" than some Northern Italians. I just know that archaeology, linguistics, and now genetics confirm that these types of people also went to Northern Italy, particularly Northeastern Italy. Again, it is what it is.

It goes without saying that the people from Hungary today are very different from the ones of the 6th century. From what I can tell a lot of their ancestry is south German/eastern French like, probably the result of the great west to east migrations of later Medieval periods.

Ed. Whether these Romans are like the Romans of the Republic and the early Empire we will know when those ancient samples are released. I think it's suggestive, however, that from what the author has said, there were two groups, one northern Italian like, and one Southern Italian like. Doesn't that seem to be about what the Collegno and Szolad samples show?
 
We're going to have to agree to disagree.

I'm closer to one of the "Romans" in Szolad than I am to any modern Italian population. I think that means something.

Those people were "absorbed" in one generation in an area which we know maintained a Romano-Christian culture into the 7th century, spoke a Romance language, and where one can find many Roman villas and forts. We also know it was retaken by the Eastern Roman Empire for a good chunk of time. I'm not at all surprised some of the samples look like Greeks. Those forts would have been manned by Byzantium.

Now, I'm sure that most of Hungary was not like the area around Lake Balaton, but this area was indeed different.

One can also look at the Collegno graveyard. There are actual "Germanic" Langobards, some Gallic like women, which makes sense since France is so close, one "Tuscan" like person and a number of "Hellenic" like or Greek shifted people. Collego is in Italy. What else could those people be but late Antiquity Romans?

I know it goes against what some people have thought for so long, but it is what it is. The "locals" from Italy and from Szolad are very similar.

I'm not going into the minefield of Balkan genetics. I don't know why people from the western Balkans get lower "Illyrian" and "Thracian" than some Northern Italians. I just know that archaeology, linguistics, and now genetics confirm that these types of people also went to Northern Italy, particularly Northeastern Italy. Again, it is what it is.

It goes without saying that the people from Hungary today are very different from the ones of the 6th century. From what I can tell a lot of their ancestry is south German/eastern French like, probably the result of the great west to east migrations of later Medieval periods.

Ed. Whether these Romans are like the Romans of the Republic and the early Empire we will know when those ancient samples are released. I think it's suggestive, however, that from what the author has said, there were two groups, one northern Italian like, and one Southern Italian like. Doesn't that seem to be about what the Collegno and Szolad samples show?

Angela,could it be that after the defeat of the Illyrian Uprising of around 6-9 AD the Romans engaged in some genocide/ethnic cleansing? They sold a lot of them as slaves, they moved a lot of the tribes around the Balkans, brought some people from Dacia into Illyria. Could that have messed the genetics of the whole area? The Illyrians are not heard from again.
 

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