Vitruvius
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Una faccia una razza.Charts C and D show how alike are modern Italians and Greeks.
Una faccia una razza.Charts C and D show how alike are modern Italians and Greeks.
The Venetic language is more closely related to Latin than to Illyrian.veneto and friuli are venetic tribes they are trading with liburnian island traders since the late bronze-age.....usually grain from veneto for liburnian wine from Issa (Viz)....picenes as their history states also traded with Liburnians from trading towns of Tronto and Martinscuro, to name 2.
there is no way that i will dismiss Liburnian contribution to the adriatic italians.
we have already discussed the heel of Italy and the Messapics.....if they are Greek in origin, then i am in error.
when the Romans took Durres during the hannibal war, might be the first time a roman-greek mix occurred.
as for myself...proud to be from italy, but do not try to thrown any greek on me when it does not exist....same with slavic
Well, give us your take on the ancient ethnic origins of modern Veneto people.the venetic language is part of the faliscan group, same group as the romans....
we have NO illyrian language....we have no idea if the illyrian tribes spoke anything similar to each other.
they could even have spoken a old-italic substream language...with the centuries of liburnian and venetic trading plus picene and liburnian, they must have had something similar in syntax of language......we will never know
you seem to be going down the "random stream ".......path
That is something we can hopefully confirm or not with future testing.It would've been a similar phenomenon to the rest of C. Italy. They were effectively swamped with an Aegean genetic structure during the early empire and then later likely diluted to their current position by an influx of northern Italians in late antiquity and the middle ages. My presumption is that the northern Italian outlier is not a continuation of local Picene ancestry but someone from Po Valley or the alps.
With all due respect to Greeks, that is a statement I've always found overrated.Una faccia una razza.
I was referring to charts C and D in Jovialis' post 145 which, apart from Sardinia with its greater Anatolian Neolithic and lesser EHG,With all due respect to Greeks, that is a statement I've always found overrated.
I'm not saying there is not phenotypical overlap, there is and to a significant extent. It's that a significant overlap exists with quite a few European ethnic groups and it often goes in accordance with geography (i.e. people from Piemonte will overlap with Southern French more than with Greeks, Lombards will overlap with Ticinese more than with Greeks, etc.), the only exception occurring in Alto Adige with a stark difference in frequency of purely Nordic types between ethnic Italians and ethnic Austrians.
The Arpitan- and Occitan-speaking areas of north and west Piedmont (with the Aosta Valley) resemble Provence genetically but the east and south of Piedmont are closer to Lombardy and Liguria respectively.With all due respect to Greeks, that is a statement I've always found overrated.
I'm not saying there is not phenotypical overlap, there is and to a significant extent. It's that a significant overlap exists with quite a few European ethnic groups and it often goes in accordance with geography (i.e. people from Piemonte will overlap with Southern French more than with Greeks, Lombards will overlap with Ticinese more than with Greeks, etc.), the only exception occurring in Alto Adige with a stark difference in frequency of purely Nordic types between ethnic Italians and ethnic Austrians.
Sorry for making myself not so clear I was talking about phenotype, casually commenting the saying "una faccia una razza".I was referring to charts C and D in Jovialis' post 145 which, apart from Sardinia with its greater Anatolian Neolithic and lesser EHG,
show that the various Italian and Greek areas, while not identical, overlap quite a bit.
This was linked by Franscesco, who took it from Nrken on X. It is an abstract from an upcoming study. There's a thread on it somewhere on eupedia. Other users who are paying attention can vouch for this:
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Always with your old theories?The only reason is that the Indo-European Italic people were those who had the Near Eastern ancestry, Etruscans and other non-Indo-European people were natives.
We see that some academics use "Near East" to refer to "Non-steppe-related CHG/Iran_N". I personally believe it is likely Greeks from Southern Italy that brought it to the North in Roman times. There was also Non-steppe-related CHG/Iran_N in southern Italy before the arrival of the Greeks, so I would assume it is a formative component from the beginning, likely brought by earlier Neolithic/ChL and EBA Helladic people in the Balkans/Greece. The author of the study of this thread wrote this to me on X:Here it seems that they are using the Etruscan samples from Felsina/Bologna, published so far in a doctoral thesis from 2023, in a newly dedicated study.
I wonder, but does this new study have anything to do with it?
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i have no idea...plusWell, give us your take on the ancient ethnic origins of modern Veneto people.
Why Not?i have no idea...plus
do not care about migration from imperial roman times
This is what you are not understanding,i have no idea...plus
do not care about migration from imperial roman times
Totally agree. The current sample size is low.That is something we can hopefully confirm or not with future testing.
I see a lot of similarities between the Greeks and Italians, similar to how I view Swedes and Norwegians. They are separate nations, certainly, but very closely genetically related with a closely tied history.With all due respect to Greeks, that is a statement I've always found overrated.
I'm not saying there is not phenotypical overlap, there is and to a significant extent. It's that a significant overlap exists with quite a few European ethnic groups and it often goes in accordance with geography (i.e. people from Piemonte will overlap with Southern French more than with Greeks, Lombards will overlap with Ticinese more than with Greeks, etc.), the only exception occurring in Alto Adige with a stark difference in frequency of purely Nordic types between ethnic Italians and ethnic Austrians.
we agreed these admixture calcs for oneself from companies are flawed and now you accept these results....make up your mindThis is what you are not understanding,
You cannot be Italic, plus Germanic/Celtic, otherwise you would not be genetically a modern Venetian.
Direct-to-consumer DNA tests (i.e. AncestryDNA, 23andme, etc.) are done on the basis of modern DNA. We are talking about ancient DNA studies.we agreed these admixture calcs for oneself from companies are flawed and now you accept these results....make up your mind
and
which in your eyes is accurate
Totally agree. The current sample size is low.
I see a lot of similarities between the Greeks and Italians, similar to how I view Swedes and Norwegians. They are separate nations, certainly, but very closely genetically related with a closely tied history.
Ticinese are simply other Italians so of course they overlap with Lombards. This is no surprise. The city was controlled by Milan, historically, and Ticino has been inhabited by Italics since at least the iron age according to Polybius.
The Piemontese do overlap Northern Greeks more so than southern french, although the distance between the two is not excessive.
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