There is a strong decrease in the percentage of R1b in north central France, compared to the regions of Antlantic France, in a situation maybe similar to north western Iberia.
I wonder if it was already the case in the bronze age, because the Bell Beaker settled mostly on the coast and the...
Here are some examples of French-derived English and Scottish surnames, dating from the time of the Norman conquest and the Plantagenet Era:
-DISNEY => derived from a Norman family called D'ISIGNY from the village of ISIGNY in Normandy .
-CHURCHILL=>Descended from Roger DE COURCIL...
Tolan has posted this on anthrogenica, showing that an early bronze age individual from the region of Montpellier in southern France (PIR3037AB) apparently belonged to L21 DF21...
Interesting to see that Basque and Welsh people have more than 50% of their mtdna haplogroup (H1+h3+J) in common besides having both more than 80% of R1b P312.
Philosophy is a compulsory subject for scientific students at the lycée which means that they also have to write a philosophy essay for the baccalaureate.
http://forwhattheywereweare.blogspot.de/2013/04/central-european-bell-beaker-mtdna-88-h.html
The unusual rate of haplogroup mtdna H in this central european site reinforce the hypothesis that the Bell Beaker people came from the Iberian Peninsula.
Thank you for the exhaustive answer Maciamo.
I'm wonderig if haplgroups J and T presence in northern Europe are responsible for the fact that scandinavian are dolycocepahlic like middle east people.
Furthermore, the mediterranean admixture in Scandinavia despite the fact that Scandinavia lack...
According to Jürgen Udolph, hydronymy shows that the Proto-Germanic homeland is Central germany which would be very close to the Homeland of Italic and Celtic languages. I'm wondering if some territories usually attributed to the Celts might not have been originally germanic.
On this blog...
It is possible that Horses have also been domesicated in the Iberian Peninsula. As wikipedia states:
It would explain the specific Basque word for Horses.
te Italo Celtic family
To me it seems like Celtic arrived first in western Europe during the early bronze age or even earlier and that the Urnfield spread both the Germanic parent language and Lustatian to the north and Italic to the south and west.
Celtic and Italic common features are...
In A Grammar of Proto-Germanic by Winfred P. Lehmann, it is argued that the Germanic language family shares more vocabulary with the Italic family than with the Celtic language family.
Concerning the relationship between Venetic language and the Germanic languages, Wikipedia says:
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