hrvat22
Regular Member
I noticed that west and east Slavs(Russia, Czech Republic, Poland, Ukraine etc) have a significant percentage of Balkans area in autosomally results.
Since nobody goes to Belarus from Balkans at least not large groups of people(there is no historical record) my opinion is that they share common ancestors (I2a and part of R1a peoples) in a common old homeland, probably Carpathians and southern Poland, southwestern Ukraine (White Croatia) or Baltic, north Poland area(R1a).
https://www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_I2_Y-DNA.shtml
We have some migrations in the Turkish period towards Carpathians but these are smaller Vlachs migrations and we have massive Croatian etc migrations to Hungary and Austria and for these countries we can assume that Balkans autosomality comes with these migrants but this has nothing to do with Lithuania or Russia.
It would be an older autosomal connection, and that we can see and in autosomal percentage of Baltic area because no one from direction of Baltic comes to Slovenia or Croatia, it is probably connection in place where R1a Z280 peoples lived.
https://www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_R1a_Y-DNA.shtml
Since nobody goes to Belarus from Balkans at least not large groups of people(there is no historical record) my opinion is that they share common ancestors (I2a and part of R1a peoples) in a common old homeland, probably Carpathians and southern Poland, southwestern Ukraine (White Croatia) or Baltic, north Poland area(R1a).
[FONT="]I2a1b-L621 to become a major Eastern European lineage was probably the Slavic migrations from the 6th to the 9th century CE. Most modern Eastern Europeans belonging to I2a1b fit into the L147.2 (aka CTS10228, CTS2180 or Y3111) subclade,[/FONT]
[FONT="]The minority of I2a1b-L621 individuals negative for L147.2 are all found around eastern Poland, Belarus and western Ukraine, suggesting that this is where this lineage survived since the Chalcolithic.[/FONT]
https://www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_I2_Y-DNA.shtml
We have some migrations in the Turkish period towards Carpathians but these are smaller Vlachs migrations and we have massive Croatian etc migrations to Hungary and Austria and for these countries we can assume that Balkans autosomality comes with these migrants but this has nothing to do with Lithuania or Russia.
It would be an older autosomal connection, and that we can see and in autosomal percentage of Baltic area because no one from direction of Baltic comes to Slovenia or Croatia, it is probably connection in place where R1a Z280 peoples lived.
- R1a-Z280 is also an Balto-Slavic marker, found all over central and Eastern Europe (except in the Balkans), with a western limit running from East Germany to Switzerland and Northeast Italy. It can be divided in many clusters: East Slavic, Baltic, Pomeranian, Polish, Carpathian, East-Alpine, Czechoslovak, and so on.
https://www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_R1a_Y-DNA.shtml