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Thread: The Irish are Not Celts

  1. #91

    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Quote Originally Posted by oudysseos View Post
    I'd also like to know what cmacq and elmetiacos (and anyone else) think of the descriptions of the Irish units on the EB web-site (about the statements concerning ethnicity, not the names of units)
    [...]
    I'm asking about this because my (lay-man's) interpretation of the genetic evidence that we have been discussing is that the ethnic heritage common to Ireland and Iberia dates to the meso- or neo-lithic, thousands of years before q-celtic language and culture became part of Irish life. The McEvoy study says explicitly that two to three thousand year old Iberian haplogroups are not found in Ireland. To put it another way, the people who built Newgrange were not Celts/Gaels/Goidels/whateveryouwantotcallthem. So does a stone-age connexion between the Irish and Iberian populations warrant identifying an Ibero-Celtic culture? I'd say not, but there may be other information that those with more expertise have knowledge of.
    Oudysseos, I actually think this correct, besides a very good point! as mentioned by Elmetiacos, much of it seems based on O'Rahilly's model... but I would go further to suggest the rub is in assumed truthiness of Iberian/Ivasion legend from Irish oral tradition. As you make good points, there is not so much evidence to point to a truely late Iberian invasion of Ibero-Celts or whatnot, but there is some late Iberian material culture that doesn't dispel the entire notion and which leaves it on the menu as 'theory,' but the descriptions don't say this. I actually mentioned this as the head of my argument (sorry I don't mean to take away from your poignant argument- just showing some how I have made efforts on the issue) with other EB members in our own discussion to why the Goidelic and Brythonic British Isles stuff in the future needs some tweaks, imo - my own studies have shown this all the be theoretical and should be treated as such, but that doesn't mean we have to un-do everything but it does mean we need to take out those extra bits that spout as if fact and replace them with 'it is thought' and extra tidbits of comparative knowledge. The whole wiki thing in the future should also greatly help this by listing sources and showing the base openly which we've used- the only drawback is all the time it will take for us to log entries into it.

    PS - we're not patting each other on the back... I was going to type this before he made a nice post defending the attempt at truth in my words. much thanks for not assuming the worst. i do admit i am rubbed by 'the rub' far too often

    PROOF I am an annoying person, sometimes rabble-rouser... AND PROOF, EB is not close-minded:
    Quote Originally Posted by Blitzkrieg80
    I must say that I myself question some of the theoretical assertions made as fact such as the Iverni/Milesians being Iberian, based solely on these unorthodox 'Cycles' as has recently come up, and concerning the Iverni/Milesians, Irish people may SAY it is true but it has just as much historical reality as Wessex being ruled by Odin's descendants. I thought it was based on Megalithic [or Atlantic Bronze] culture (which is theoretical but much more convincing than a specific family story) but it seems to be a folk legend made fact in our game.

    https://forums.totalwar.org/vb/showthread.php?t=100255 (thread questioning Celtic invasion which I have helped answer with one of my not so great for Celtic but good IE summation sources)

    some of it seems to be in relation to this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaels and Míl Espáine, Fir Bolg, as well as T. F. O'Rahilly's model?
    [...]
    Maybe this kind of stuff is more appropriate for the building descriptions (such as temples- it's mythology after all) rather than ethnicities and units? If Anthony can help us with this there might be a way to preserve Ranika's great work without leaving somewhat mythological/nationalistic (no offense intended at all- I am Irish myself. it's no suprise that Germans want to have a rich history or Irish either- but it can lead to bias) information in places it really should not be? we don't have to touch it either- i'm not assuming my way is best or will be agreed with... might we all agree though that very theoretical history, esp. based in mythology shouldn't be in the faction histories? i dont mind synthesizing and having information not commonly known, esp. concerning oral cultures / barbarians, but that doesn't seem to be the case from the little i have looked into this.
    Last edited by blitzkrieg80; 03-13-2008 at 14:34.
    Last edited by blitzkrieg80; 12-09-2008 at 21:41.
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  2. #92
    EB Nitpicker Member oudysseos's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    I'd be happy to help typing entries into a Wiki database, or indeed any other clerical scut-work you've got going.
    οἵη περ φύλλων γενεὴ τοίη δὲ καὶ ἀνδρῶν.
    Even as are the generations of leaves, such are the lives of men.
    Glaucus, son of Hippolochus, Illiad, 6.146



  3. #93
    Bruadair a'Bruaisan Member cmacq's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Quote Originally Posted by oudysseos View Post
    I'd also like to know what cmacq and elmetiacos (and anyone else) think of the descriptions of the Irish units on the EB web-site (about the statements concerning ethnicity, not the names of units).
    Good question, although to tell the truth, I've never actually thought about it. At least in this venue, when I research something, its not with the ultimate goal of changing a given application per se, rather its to provide evidence that either supports, rejects, or defines a given argument. Now, about this genetic evidence; my gut tells me, its not what it appears, although I must say, I've yet to read your post on it. This I'll do today, and will get back to ya, on it, most licitly-split. Yes indeed prejudged, as I know the ways of my kind. This serves not to prejudice my investigation against, rather it will be more critical.




    CmacQ
    Last edited by cmacq; 12-10-2008 at 09:10.
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  4. #94
    Bruadair a'Bruaisan Member cmacq's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    The Longue Durée of Genetic Ancestry: Multiple Genetic Marker Systems and Celtic Origins on the Atlantic Facade of Europe


    Brian McEvoy, Martin Richards, Peter Forster, and Daniel G. Bradley

    The American Journal of Human Genetics; Published online 2004 August 12.


    Right, the McEvoy study sample consisted of 200 analyzed mtDNA sequences from maternally unrelated subjects from Ireland. To this 100 mtDNA sequences from previous Irish studies were added. The study also reanalyzed the published European and Near Eastern mtDNA hypervariable segment I (HVS-I) sequences from 8,533 individuals from 45 discrete populations. Now, this is very strange; samples from some small and/or isolated populations were excluded from the analysis. These included all samlpes from the Western and Northern Isles of Scotland. I believe the paper states that collectively, these were compared with the Y-chromosome and autosomal markers of the same individuals to determine the extent to which genetic markers within this group shared or differed from the demographic histories that have been reconstructed for the Atlantic zone of Europe.

    Basically, what the first stage of their analysis demonstrated was that from the sample of 300 Irish, 155 discrete haploid genotypes were identified, with only one sample that could be classified as within the western Eurasian haploid genogroup. There also was no significant difference between samples from eastern vs western Ireland, which stands in stark contrast to the Y-chromosome pattern. Apparently, the significant difference in the Y-chromosome data among individuals from eastern and western Ireland is a well established pattern.

    The second stage analysis compared different mtDNA lineages by examining the levels of nucleotide diversity accumulated around haplotypes matched to dominate examples found in the Near East. The study states that haplogroups J, T1, and U3, are proposed to represent this category, and of European samples on average 20% of these haplogroups have been documented. Of the Irish sample about 13% was noted, which is comparable to Scandinavia and the western Mediterranean samples. This appears to be consistent with the dilution of the genetic impact based on the distance from the source area. Moreover, these haplogroups did not reflect the east/west pattern noted above and were rather evenly distribution throughout Ireland. Now, to me this relationship with the Near East together with the even distribution pattern actually suggests that these haplogroups represent founding population, and I believe the study makes the same observation.

    The third stage analysis plotted the supplemental sample of the 8,533 individuals as per the 45 discrete populations, using the weight value of distance form source and I believe sample composition. This data is displayed below. One may note that the BA, or Basque Country sample is situated at what would be the far western extreme of the graph. In contrast, although the Irish sample is found on the western edge of the main cluster, it is more similar to the samples from Scotland, France, Switzerland, and England than to the Basque.


    MDS plot of interpopulation ΦST values calculated from mtDNA control-region sequence data. The matrix has been condensed to two dimensions, which account for 82% of the original variation. Population labels are as follows: AL = Albania; AR = Armenia; AU = Austria; AZ = Azerbaijan; BA = Basque Country; BE = Belgium; BR = Brittany; BU = Bulgaria; CZ = Czech Republic; CO = Cornwall; DE = Denmark; EN = England; ES = Estonia; FI = Finland; FR = France; GA = Galicia; GE = Germany; GR = Greece; HU = Hungary; IC = Iceland; IQ = Iraq; IR = Ireland; IT = Italy; JO = Jordan; KA = Karelia; KU = Kurdistan; NO = Northern Ossetia; NY = Norway; PA = Palestine; PC = Portugal Central; PN = Portugal North; PO = Poland; PS = Portugal South; RO = Romania; RU = Russia; SA = Sardinia; SC = Scotland; SE = Sweden; SI = Sicily; SN = Spain North; SS = Spain South-Central; SW = Switzerland; SY = Syria; TU = Turkey; and WA = Wales.


    So far the claims of a Basque affinity do not appear to be supported by the data. I’m not at all sure were this study is headed? Again, I’ll have to reread as well as finish reading the entire article. I still find their claims strange, as the data seems to demonstrate that the dispersal points for the majority of 146 Irish mtDNA haplotypes (positions 16093–16362) are centered in Austria/Hungry. More to follow.





    CmacQ
    Last edited by cmacq; 12-10-2008 at 07:20.
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  5. #95
    Member Member Shylence's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    I have really enjoyed reading this thread so far.
    Last edited by Shylence; 12-10-2008 at 03:05.
    As I walked through the Glenshane Pass I heard a young girl mourn
    The boy form Tamlaghtduff 'she cried 'is two years dead and gone'
    How my heart is torn apart this young man to lose
    Oh I'll never see the likes again of my young Francis Hughes ....

  6. #96

    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    I’ve a few things to get done right now, and as their second stage analysis is a bit confusing, I’ll have to review it again. However, I find their claims strange, as they seem to demonstrate that the dispersal points for the majority of 146 Irish mtDNA haplotypes (positions 16093–16362) are centered in Austria.
    You mean right between Hallstat and La Tène? Hmmm....
    Last edited by Sumskilz; 12-10-2008 at 03:37.

  7. #97
    EB Nitpicker Member oudysseos's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    You mean we might be....[drumroll]....CELTS?

    Who'd a thunk it?
    οἵη περ φύλλων γενεὴ τοίη δὲ καὶ ἀνδρῶν.
    Even as are the generations of leaves, such are the lives of men.
    Glaucus, son of Hippolochus, Illiad, 6.146



  8. #98
    Member Member Berg-i-dum's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Quote Originally Posted by cmacq View Post
    [B]One may note that the BA, or Basque Country sample is situated at what would be the far western extreme of the graph. In contrast, although the Irish sample is found on the western edge of the main cluster, it is more similar to the samples from Scotland, France, Switzerland, and England than to the Basque.

    Hey but they are pretty close to Galicia (NW region of Spain, That it is known by his "celtic" heritage in Spain) (and where I live ). It is interesting to see as Wales and Scotland are close to Galicia too. Well I think we must think in megalith age or better in Late Bronze Atlantic to understand these connections and explain the celtic concept itself in these regions (proto-celts long way, more than Iron Age invasions). If somebody understand spanish this study about Galician genetic can be useful: http://archivo.50megs.com/genetica1/..._caboverde.htm

    After all basque people it is an ancient preindoeuropean people but in Spain we dont think we can call them Iberians -well there are some theories but the ones wich indetify them as the "last" live iberians are almost forgotten (vascoiberismo)-, they arent the same people and they probably are even more ancient than them ( if they dont came with Hannibal as a strange theory I tried to explain supra -I dontk think so-). May be the iberians you shall search are those galicians or people from the north shore of Spain that went to British Islands, not the basque, they arent the same people and I think that this study about Ireland and the other famous one about England are actually referring to Iberians not "Basques". But it is easy to confuse them.

    To explain a bit more this if my english works: the Ancient Iberian language and the nowadays Basque language arent the same, and even the basque cant help to translate iberian. There are some theories about the origin of Iberians: they are the megalithic mediterranean people and probably the first settlers in Neolithic in the same way as ancient Picts (here it is where they can be confused with basques depending on the theories). Or they came from North Africa later, or they are as Etruscians and came from east mediterranean.
    "This war between the Romans and Celtiberians is called the fiery War, for while wars in Greece or Asia are settled with one or two pitched battles, the battles there dragged on, only brought to a temporary end by the darkness of the night. Both sides refused to let their courage flag or their bodies tire". Polybius.


  9. #99
    master of the wierd people Member Ibrahim's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    @ cmaq: of the Basque sample, how many were there? were there equal numbers of each?


    @ everyone else: either way, Its still too early to call this conclusive for sure, but one thing is clear: if the results are accurate, then we're dealing with an indo european (or Cletic to be exact), substrate.
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  10. #100
    Bruadair a'Bruaisan Member cmacq's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Right,



    I've read this article five times now and I can not understand how the data supports their claims? I've looked the data over, looked at the graphs, and collectively this supports an entirely different conclusion. It's possible that the pertinent part of the paper is missing? I'm going to post the forth stage analysis below, and if anyone can figure out how this data supports a Basque affinity for the Irish sample, please let me know how.

    ________________________________________
    [4th Stage Analysis]
    Focusing on the relationships between Ireland and its neighbors, we investigated the geographical provenance of matches to Irish mtDNA haplotypes. This was implemented by comparing each haplotype found in Ireland (positions 16093–16362) with a world database of mtDNA HVS-I sequences assembled from previous studies (Röhl et al. 2001). By use of the geographical information system “mtradius” (Forster et al. 2002), which uses information on the location and frequency of the closest matching haplotypes, we calculated a center of gravity (or center of distribution), with an SD in kilometers (km) as an indication of the dispersal range of the haplotypes. Higher SDs tend to occur with common ancestral haplotypes that have widespread distributions, which are phylogeographically rather uninformative. The less widely and more recently dispersed haplotypes were identified here as point estimates, with an SD of <500 km and an intermediate category of 500–1,000 km.

    The results are displayed on a map of Europe in figure 3. The most frequent Irish haplotypes, represented by larger circle size, also have high SDs, indicating that they are widespread throughout Europe. Haplotypes with intermediate SDs are more common in western Europe, whereas haplotypes with low SDs are concentrated almost exclusively in Atlantic and (to a much lesser extent) Mediterranean Europe. The concentration of center-of-gravity estimates with low and intermediate SDs within or adjacent to the Atlantic zone (seen in fig. 2A) is notable. However, the most striking result is the very strong sharing of localized haplotypes with Britain, particularly Scotland. These are widely distributed throughout Ireland and are not concentrated in particular areas. A lesser degree of sharing is also apparent between Ireland and Pyrenean Spain. It is also noteworthy that particular mtDNAs that are characteristic of central Europe, such as J1a (Richards et al. 1998), are virtually absent from the Atlantic facade.


    Figure 3
    Estimated “dispersal points” (centers of gravity) for the 146 mtDNA haplotypes (positions 16093–16362) found in Ireland. Each circle represents a distinct haplotype. Circle size indicates the frequency of that type in Ireland, with the largest representing the CRS (n=56) and the smallest indicating a frequency of 1; intermediate frequencies are proportional to circle area. SDs are indicated as follows: black = <500 km, gray = 500–1,000 km, and white = >1,000 km. Eleven centers (ten in Asia and one in Africa) are outside the range of this map.

    Previous studies of Y-chromosome variation demonstrated strong levels of differentiation within Europe (Rosser et al. 2000), and variation in autosomal loci often exhibits a similar structure (Cavalli-Sforza et al. 1994). However, a detailed portrait of mtDNA structure in Europe has hitherto remained elusive. Yet concordance between different marker systems is an important means of demonstrating that geographical patterns are the result of demographic history and not (for example) of selection. These results strongly suggest—for the first time, to our knowledge—that the demographic histories of Europe, in general, and Ireland, in particular, are similarly recorded in loci with different inheritance patterns. The use of a very large data set that was checked for quality, analyzed at the level of individual lineages, and subdivided into fine population units appears to have been a key factor in the identification of the hitherto-undetected mtDNA patterns seen here.

    [Conclusion]
    Previous studies indicated particular affinities within the Atlantic zone of Europe on the basis of the distribution of both the Y-chromosome haplogroup R1b (which reaches frequencies approaching 100% in some parts of western Europe) and the mtDNA haplogroup V (which, however, amounts to <5% of European mtDNAs) (Torroni et al. 1998, 2001; Hill et al. 2000; Semino et al. 2000; Wilson et al. 2001). During the last glaciation, human habitation is thought to have been largely restricted to refugial areas in southern Europe; one of the most important of these is likely to have been in southwestern France and the Iberian Peninsula (Dolukhanov 1993; Housley et al. 1997; Gamble et al. 2004). The recolonization of western Europe from an Iberian refugium after the retreat of the ice sheets ~15,000 years ago could explain the common genetic legacy in the area. An alternative but not mutually exclusive model would place Atlantic fringe populations at the “Mesolithic” extreme of a Neolithic demic expansion into Europe from the Near East.

    In any event, the preservation of this signal within the Atlantic arc suggests that this region was relatively undisturbed by subsequent migrations across the continent. The identification of likely dispersal points for some Irish haplotypes in northern Spain and western France is further evidence for links between Atlantic populations. Cunliffe (2001) has used Braudel’s term, the “longuedurée,” to describe the long-term sedimentation of traditions on the Atlantic facade, which he suggests may stem from the late Mesolithic period, perhaps even predating the arrival of agriculture in the region. Our results support the view that the genetic legacy, at least, of the region may trace back this far and perhaps even to the earliest settlements following recolonization after the Last Glacial Maximum.

    An alternative explanation might simply be restricted patterns of long-term gene flow within these two major ecogeographical zones in Europe, facilitated by the Atlantic and Mediterranean seaways. It is difficult to distinguish genetically between a common Paleolithic origin and more recent contacts. However, haplogroup R1b3f Y chromosomes, which have a recent origin in Iberia (Hurles et al. 1999), have not been found in Ireland (Hill et al. 2000), arguing against the migration of very large numbers of men by this route, at least, in the past 2,000–3,000 years. This would be consistent with the suggestion that most contacts over this period would have been small scale, rather in the manner of the Kula ring in the western Pacific (Cunliffe 2001). On the female side, the presence of putatively Neolithic mtDNA haplogroups in Ireland does indicate some gene flow from the continent after the initial peopling of the island (~9,000 years before the present) following the postglacial reexpansion (see Wilson et al. 2001), although this could have been at any time in the past 6,000 years or so.

    A degree of genetic heterogeneity in the British Isles is apparent, at least on the Y chromosome and much more tentatively on the mtDNA, with southeastern England tending to show a greater affinity to neighboring areas of continental Europe. Anglo-Saxon mass migration has been proposed as the explanation for this pattern in Y-chromosome variation (Weale et al. 2002; Capelli et al. 2003). Such explanations may seem feasible for the Y chromosome, given the high levels of drift that might be associated with disproportionately high numbers of offspring among conquering elite males. However, the weight of archaeological evidence is against population replacement associated with the Anglo-Saxon conquest (Esmonde-Cleary 1989), suggesting that alternative explanations should be considered. It may be that the genetic landscape of southeastern Britain has been shaped by older links with the continent, perhaps during the Neolithic period or even before the filling of the North Sea, when Britain was still connected to the continent via the Doggerland plain (Coles 1998).

    The multiple mtDNA links between Ireland and Britain, particularly Scotland, are especially striking (see O’Donnell et al. 2002). Archaeological evidence supports contacts during prehistory, and early historical accounts describe the establishment of Irish colonies in Scotland from at least a.d. ~500 (indeed, the name “Scotland” derives from the Latin word for “Ireland” at this time). Linguistically, modern Scottish Gaelic is a clear derivative of the Irish language. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the plantation of Ulster led to the arrival of substantial numbers of settlers moving in the opposite direction. However, the widespread distribution of these mtDNA haplotypes within Ireland suggests they may be largely the result of earlier contacts.

    What seems clear is that neither the mtDNA pattern nor that of the Y-chromosome markers supports a substantially central European Iron Age origin for most Celtic speakers—or former Celtic speakers—of the Atlantic facade. The affinities of the areas where Celtic languages are spoken, or were formerly spoken, are generally with other regions in the Atlantic zone, from northern Spain to northern Britain. Although some level of Iron Age immigration into Britain and Ireland could probably never be ruled out by the use of modern genetic data, these results point toward a distinctive Atlantic genetic heritage with roots in the processes at the end of the last Ice Age.


    ______________________________________________________

    Thanks in advance for any help,

    CmacQ
    Last edited by cmacq; 12-11-2008 at 02:11.
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  11. #101

    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Their conclusion makes sense until the last paragraph which just seems irrational when referenced against the evidence as illustrated in figure 3. Am I missing something?
    Last edited by Sumskilz; 12-11-2008 at 01:10.

  12. #102
    Member Member Shylence's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    YES CMACQ!!!


    Can you or somone else perhaps translate this into a form of english an idiot would understand?!?!

    I think i understand what it means, and it kinda makes sense to me. That The people who live on the Atlantic coast of Europe from Gaelicia to Stornoway share the same genetic material with a good smattering of genes from central europe. Given the time scale and population migrations within history and pre history this makes sense??! YES?! NO?!?! im lost
    As I walked through the Glenshane Pass I heard a young girl mourn
    The boy form Tamlaghtduff 'she cried 'is two years dead and gone'
    How my heart is torn apart this young man to lose
    Oh I'll never see the likes again of my young Francis Hughes ....

  13. #103
    Like the Parthian Boot Member Elmetiacos's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Without understanding a bit more of the methodology of this geographical information system “mtradius” they talk about, it doesn't seem to make sense... here's this massive circle showing that the Irish can trace their matrilineal heritage back to smack in the middle of the Hallstatt and La Tene cores, and so they conclude there was no Iron Age migration? Huh? Or is that exactly what it doesn't say?

    EDIT: it seems the method was developed for DNA evidence in criminal cases, to speed things up by narrowing the search to populations most likely to yield a match. So I just don't follow their argument here.
    Last edited by Elmetiacos; 12-11-2008 at 02:53. Reason: bafflement
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    Bruadair a'Bruaisan Member cmacq's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Quote Originally Posted by Shylence View Post
    I think i understand what it means, and it kinda makes sense to me. That The people who live on the Atlantic coast of Europe from Gaelicia to Stornoway share the same genetic material with a good smattering of genes from central europe. Given the time scale and population migrations within history and pre history this makes sense??! YES?! NO?!?! im lost
    Please read this line from the last para; What seems clear is that neither the mtDNA pattern nor that of the Y-chromosome markers supports a substantially central European Iron Age origin for most Celtic speakers.

    However, Figure 3 suggests basically what you wrote.


    Now, can anyone tell me why I always caution about trust and science? The more technical the study, the less trust should be given the claim.






    CmacQ
    Last edited by cmacq; 12-11-2008 at 03:19.
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  15. #105

    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    seems to clearly support early Frank, Jute, Anglo-Frisian DNA colonization that composed the identity of early Britain and was subsequently misunderstood to be absent by the time of greater cultural invasion later under Germanic cultures.

    let's not forget that all Indo-Europeans would have a similar DNA at some point before mixing with the wonderously large population of native Others so it really doesn't make much sense to suppose that Germans are genetically different than Celts and all that... pale, ruddy, blond and blue at times, with other varieties, of course... (awaiting the anti-Aryan backlash...ever present)
    Last edited by blitzkrieg80; 12-11-2008 at 08:07.
    HWÆT !
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    “Gørið eigi hárit í blóði.” “Do not get blood on [my] hair.” -Sigurð Búason to his executioner [Óláfs Saga Tryggvasonar: Heimskringla]

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    Bruadair a'Bruaisan Member cmacq's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Just want everyone to know that I found another paper about a Basque genetic study conduce after the Irish study. This study indentified the same features concerning the outlier nature of the Basque sample, however it attributes this to other factors. In effect the second study, more or less refutes the basal interpretation of the Irish study.

    Need sleep now, I’ll post a link tomorrow.



    CmacQ
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  17. #107
    EB Nitpicker Member oudysseos's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    I'm glad that cmacq has had a look at the study as I read it twice and reached the same conclusion but had no confidence in the value of my own opinion. I do wonder, cmacq, what you think a good label would be for the Irish?

    I did just want to say to Riastradh that I have enjoyed this thread immensely, even though I disagree that Gael is a better term (than Celt) to describe the inhabitants of Ireland in 272 BCE. It has been a popular thread (and I hope it's not dead yet) with a lots of replies and views, so well done!
    οἵη περ φύλλων γενεὴ τοίη δὲ καὶ ἀνδρῶν.
    Even as are the generations of leaves, such are the lives of men.
    Glaucus, son of Hippolochus, Illiad, 6.146



  18. #108
    Like the Parthian Boot Member Elmetiacos's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Quote Originally Posted by blitzkrieg80 View Post
    seems to clearly support early Frank, Jute, Anglo-Frisian DNA colonization that composed the identity of early Britain and was subsequently misunderstood to be absent by the time of greater cultural invasion later under Germanic cultures.
    You can't really say that, because it's not a general map of European haplotypes; only the ones common in Ireland are considered.
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  19. #109
    Bruadair a'Bruaisan Member cmacq's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Quote Originally Posted by oudysseos View Post
    I do wonder, cmacq, what you think a good label would be for the Irish?
    With all do respect and not to sound flippant, but the word ‘Irish’ has always worked for me. In fact it seems to have been common to name Islands and the associated inhabitances after a particular deity. For example we have Skye, Latin Scitis or Scetis, which is clearly a reference to Scathach (shadowy one), the warrior goddess. Then the Orkneys, Latin Orcades, possibly associated with an underworld goddess. Others include the isle of Lewis, in Latin Danu, of the Tuatha Dé Danann; Mull, Latin Malaius, possibly associated with Mil. So the Greeks called Ireland Ἰουερνία and Ἰέρνη which appears to represent īwerion, a reference to the goddess Erin.



    CmacQ
    Last edited by cmacq; 12-12-2008 at 08:36.
    quae res et cibi genere et cotidiana exercitatione et libertate vitae

    Herein events and rations daily birth the labors of freedom.

  20. #110

    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Now I've been absent from the EB forums for a few months now. In truth, a bit turned off by what I saw as self-serving folks bashing other folks. You may wish to replace folks with other choice words. However, the biggest reason - to be honest - was b/c my computer crashed big time and to date I am still without it. When you don't play the game, sometimes the forum loses it's pull. I happened across this thread by chance and was reminded of why I love this game and have for years now.
    This conversation - for the most part - has been informative and interesting. Thanks for pulling a lost EBer back into it.
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  21. #111

    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Quote Originally Posted by cmacq View Post
    With all do respect and not to sound flippant, but the word ‘Irish’ has always worked for me. In fact it seems to have been common to name Islands and the association inhabitances after a particular deity. For example we have Skye, Latin Scitis or Scetis, which is clearly a reference to Scathach (shadowy one), the warrior goddess. Then the Orkneys, Latin Orcades, possibly associated with an underworld goddess. Others include the isle of Lewis, in Latin Danu, of the Tuatha Dé Danann; Mull, Latin Malaius, possibly associated with Mil. So the Greeks called Ireland Ἰουερνία and Ἰέρνη which appears to represent īwerion, a reference to the goddess Erin.



    CmacQ
    so... Orcish it is
    HWÆT !
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  22. #112
    Bruadair a'Bruaisan Member cmacq's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    The only way that the claims of the McEvoy study could match the data on Figure 3, is that their key info, is incorrect. In this case the black circles would represent the Irish data and the White ones the 8,000 plus individuals of the comparative sample. However, clearly this is not what the key says. The problem is the value (n=?) of the individual circles is not displayed so there is no way of checking this, short of contacting the authors.





    CmacQ
    Last edited by cmacq; 12-12-2008 at 19:51.
    quae res et cibi genere et cotidiana exercitatione et libertate vitae

    Herein events and rations daily birth the labors of freedom.

  23. #113
    Member Member LuciusCorneliusSulla's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    To throw my own theory on the table:

    Irish Wales and Scotland all have a common characteristic in classical history.
    They were never fully conquered by the romans.
    Meaning they never had the same genetic diversity, nor the european mixed blood (to the same degree)

    Now lets take all the rest of celtic europe that these researchers are talking about.
    They were conquered by the romans.
    They did receive mixed european blood mingling.

    Answer - the current European blood being compared to the Irish blood OBVIOUSLY doesnt match, its been through 2000 years of diversification.

    As an Irishman I can tell you that any research done in my country can be taken with a pinch of salt. The researchers probably had a heavy night the night before and came up with this bafflingly ignorant theory nursing a hangover and a heavily fortified coffee....

  24. #114
    Member Member LuciusCorneliusSulla's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    I might add that art, history and the basic literature in the form of poetry etc. of this period markedly mirrors Celtic influence

  25. #115
    EB Nitpicker Member oudysseos's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    I do have to point out, LCS, that there is very little evidence of Roman genetic material in the English gene pool. This somewhat invalidates your dichotomy.
    Even the Normans have only 2 %, according to Stephen Oppenheimer. For a good overview of the situation you might want to take a look at his book The Origins of the British.
    οἵη περ φύλλων γενεὴ τοίη δὲ καὶ ἀνδρῶν.
    Even as are the generations of leaves, such are the lives of men.
    Glaucus, son of Hippolochus, Illiad, 6.146



  26. #116
    Member Member Shylence's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    History does seem to show that after the romans left Britain. The language of power still seemed to be brythonic, It would seem they didnt have much impact at all.
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  27. #117
    Member Member LuciusCorneliusSulla's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Quote Originally Posted by oudysseos View Post
    I do have to point out, LCS, that there is very little evidence of Roman genetic material in the English gene pool. This somewhat invalidates your dichotomy.
    Even the Normans have only 2 %, according to Stephen Oppenheimer. For a good overview of the situation you might want to take a look at his book The Origins of the British.
    I didn't say Roman, I said mixed European. Within roman controlled borders peoples were mixed through auxiliary soldiery, forced en mass migrations, voluntary familial migrations, slavery. The gene pool expanded in Britain, not in the Celtic countries. I would laugh at the idea of the population of any city having any serious impact on an entire nation.

  28. #118

    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    I didn't say Roman, I said mixed European. Within roman controlled borders peoples were mixed through auxiliary soldiery, forced en mass migrations, voluntary familial migrations, slavery. The gene pool expanded in Britain, not in the Celtic countries. I would laugh at the idea of the population of any city having any serious impact on an entire nation.
    Yes, we have to make a distinction between the genetic affect of being a part of the Roman Empire and genetic influence of having been settled by people specifically from Latium. By the time of Claudius, what percentage of the Empire's population would have been of primarily Latin Ancestry? Of course there were Latin Colonae all over the empire but I doubt they made as significant of an impact genetically as they did culturally.
    Last edited by Sumskilz; 12-12-2008 at 20:50.

  29. #119
    Like the Parthian Boot Member Elmetiacos's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    I don't think anyone has ever suggested the Roman conquest affected the genetics of anywhere in Britain (or any other country apart from Romania, possibly) but that's a separate topic in any case.
    'you owe it to that famous chick general whose name starts with a B'
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  30. #120
    Jesus Member lobf's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Irish are Not Celts

    Quote Originally Posted by Elmetiacos View Post
    I don't think anyone has ever suggested the Roman conquest affected the genetics of anywhere in Britain (or any other country apart from Romania, possibly) but that's a separate topic in any case.
    Post #113.

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