Angela
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Roman emperors have a grave? Their Y DNA is detected in the graves?
No, they don't. It's impossible to know.
Odds are, imo, they were R1b U-152 of some kind.
Roman emperors have a grave? Their Y DNA is detected in the graves?
That's because J2a was not one of the original Indo-European haplogroup in the founding Italic population of the ancient Romans. J2a was presumably assimilated from neighbouring Etruscan and Greek populations. By the time the Romans conquered Gaul and Britain there would have been many J2a men among the Romans (be them legionaries, administrators or merchants).
Maciamo, do you have plans to update your descriptions on J2 L70 based on this statement?
No, they don't. It's impossible to know.
Odds are, imo, they were R1b U-152 of some kind.
Agree they could also so be some branches
Of G and j2 though....
P.s
Most of the eastern roman emperors were likely mix of i2 and
E-v13 as some of them can trace there paternal line to moesia
R1b-U152>Z56>Z145>CTS6389
- Cecchinelli (surname found in Latium, Tuscany, Liguria and Lombardy) => possibly from Caecinus, an Etruscan gens. The Latin 'Cae' invariably becomes 'Ce' in Italian. The Latin 'ci' becomes 'chi' in Italian to keep the hard k sound. That gives the root 'Caecin' => 'Cecchin' + the '-elli' ending.
A little bit curious about the DF90 ancient latin sample(800-500BC),seems that German Roman Empire Kaiser House of Habsburg is under DF90 too. Does this branch actually origin from latin roman, or german or celts?From the existing samples,seems have lower possibility from Sweden or north Germany (local celts most probably).U152 is harder to identify than R1b-Z2118,R1b-Z2118 has strong link with latin roman,maybe the real Latin language contributor.
Uh, just so we're on the right page here, the modern Habsburg line is not descended in male line from the Swiss founder. Starting with Joseph II, the modern male-line Habsburg lineage is that of the French House of Lorraine, as Joseph's father was Francis Stephen, Duke of Lorraine. The earliest recorded ancestor of that line was Gerard of Metz, with an origin in northeastern France.
That's right, but it is the original Habsburg line that is R1b-L2>DF90, not the Lorraine line. According to this page, two living members of the Habsburg-Lorraine line tested their Y-DNA, but one was G2a and the other J2.
https://www.eupedia.com/forum/threads/28880-Possible-Habsburg-Y-DNA-haplogroup
''The only member of the Habsburg Project related to the Habsburg-Lorraine is also the only one with a slightly different haplotype, though he also belongs to R1b-U152. That, on the other hand, would be highly unlikely for the Carolingians if they were indeed of patrilineal Germanic descent. It is not impossible though. The first documented Carolingian was Pepin of Landen, born in 580, many centuries after the Franks settled in modern Belgium. It cannot be ruled out that Pepin was paternally descended from an assimilated Gallo-Roman rather than a German.''
Maciamo;600460 [B said:J2a-L26>Z438>L70>Z435
[/B]
- Caruso (common surname, sample from Calabria) => maybe from Carus?
Here are two other related branches of Z438, also common in Italy.
This Y-DNA is present in at least one modern lineage:
R-P312/S116 > Z40481 > ZZ11 > U152/S28 > Z56 > BY3548 > Z43/S366 > Z144 > BY28794 > PF6582 > PF6577 > FGC36902/BY3953 > FGC36897 > FGC36895 > A8380 > FGC41936
The families that have this (FitzRandolph and Randoll) are genealogically male-line descendants of Count Eudon Penteur (c999-1079), de facto Duke of Brittany from 1040 to 1057.
FGC41936 is estimated to be a 12th century mutation of A8380, which we would therefore expect to be Eudon's Y-DNA.
Eudons' children, the Eudonids, claimed descent from the Roman families Rutilius Rufus and Aurelius Cotta, specifically Rutilia, mother of Aurelia, mother of the dictator Gaius Julius Caesar.
Gildas's war-orphan hero Ambrosius Aurelianus's surname indicates that he was born an Aurelius but adopted into another (unnamed) family, just as Gaius Octavius was adopted by Julius Caesar and became Octavianus.
Some Aurelii were in Britain in the 200s as evidenced by the gravestone found at Carlisle of Aurelia Aureliana, wife of Ulpius Apolinaris.
That is particularly interesting as we know from a letter of Sidonius Apollinaris, dated before 470, that one of his friends was 'Riothamus', leader of the Romano-Britons in either Britain or Gaul or both.
Riothamus is a Latinised Brythonic title, probably meaning high king. It has been speculated that Riothamus is the same person as Ambrosius Aurelianus as they were contemporaries, performed similar roles, and both are described as exceedingly modest.
It is conceivable that Sidonius and Riothamus may have been related, through that 3rd century married couple who lived near the western extremity of Hadrian's Wall.
The Aurelii were a prolific family. Many Consuls and Emperors were Aurelii by ancient descent or by adoption. So it is not improbable for branches of the Aurelii to have descendants, even some male-line descendants, today.
The claim by the Eudonids of descent from the Aurelii is rendered plausible by their living male-line descendants' possession of ancient central Italian Y-DNA.
Had they fabricated any section of their long medieval or modern pedigree, or if non-paternal events occurred, it would be most likely for them to be R1b-L21, R1b-U106, I1 or I2, like the people who surrounded them during the many centuries they resided in Brittany, Normandy and England.
This Y-DNA is present in at least one modern lineage:
R-P312/S116 > Z40481 > ZZ11 > U152/S28 > Z56 > BY3548 > Z43/S366 > Z144 > BY28794 > PF6582 > PF6577 > FGC36902/BY3953 > FGC36897 > FGC36895 > A8380 > FGC41936
The families that have this (FitzRandolph and Randoll) are genealogically male-line descendants of Count Eudon Penteur (c999-1079), de facto Duke of Brittany from 1040 to 1057.
FGC41936 is estimated to be a 12th century mutation of A8380, which we would therefore expect to be Eudon's Y-DNA.
Eudons' children, the Eudonids, claimed descent from the Roman families Rutilius Rufus and Aurelius Cotta, specifically Rutilia, mother of Aurelia, mother of the dictator Gaius Julius Caesar.
Gildas's war-orphan hero Ambrosius Aurelianus's surname indicates that he was born an Aurelius but adopted into another (unnamed) family, just as Gaius Octavius was adopted by Julius Caesar and became Octavianus.
Some Aurelii were in Britain in the 200s as evidenced by the gravestone found at Carlisle of Aurelia Aureliana, wife of Ulpius Apolinaris.
That is particularly interesting as we know from a letter of Sidonius Apollinaris, dated before 470, that one of his friends was 'Riothamus', leader of the Romano-Britons in either Britain or Gaul or both.
Riothamus is a Latinised Brythonic title, probably meaning high king. It has been speculated that Riothamus is the same person as Ambrosius Aurelianus as they were contemporaries, performed similar roles, and both are described as exceedingly modest.
It is conceivable that Sidonius and Riothamus may have been related, through that 3rd century married couple who lived near the western extremity of Hadrian's Wall.
The Aurelii were a prolific family. Many Consuls and Emperors were Aurelii by ancient descent or by adoption. So it is not improbable for branches of the Aurelii to have descendants, even some male-line descendants, today.
The claim by the Eudonids of descent from the Aurelii is rendered plausible by their living male-line descendants' possession of ancient central Italian Y-DNA.
Had they fabricated any section of their long medieval or modern pedigree, or if non-paternal events occurred, it would be most likely for them to be R1b-L21, R1b-U106, I1 or I2, like the people who surrounded them during the many centuries they resided in Brittany, Normandy and England.
Italics & Romans
The Bronze Age was brought to Europe by the Proto-Indo-Europeans, who migrated from the North Caucasus and the Pontic Steppe to the Balkans (from circa 6,000 years ago), then went up the Danube and invaded Central and Western Europe (from 4,500 years ago). Italic-speakers, an Indo-European branch, are thought to have crossed the Alps and invaded the Italian peninsula around 3,200 years ago, establishing the Villanova culture and bringing with them primarily R1b-U152 lineages and replacing or displacing a large part of the indigenous people. The Neolithic inhabitants of Italy sought refuge in the Apeninne mountains and in Sardinia. Nowadays, the highest concentration of haplogroup G2a and J1 outside the Middle East are found in the Apeninnes, Calabria, Sicily and Sardinia.Source:https://www.eupedia.com/genetics/italian_dna.shtml#bronze_iron_age