history bump
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)
This is a fairly stupid conclusion. To believe it, you would have to think that the 200,000 Anglo-Saxon males brought their women with them to ravish and pillage fair England. I doubt it.
They came and conquered a portion of central England, then took the Celtic maidens as the spoils of their conquest - breeding lustily with favorable laws, etc. The result is the 50% Germanic Y-DNA chromosome, which is passed only from father to son. It doesn't matter whether the mother was Celtic or German origin. Surely, she was Celtic in the main.
"For example, these laws stated that if an Anglo-Saxon was killed, the "blood money", or "Wergild", payable to the family was up to five times more than the fine payable for the life of a native Celt."
And the Saxons got paid back when the Normans took over, e.g. "Presentment of Englishry."
Still, I favored the Celts first, then the Saxons, the Normans least. But then they cleaned out the Muslims from southern Italy and Sicily and were outstanding Crusaders which I suppose makes up for it.
![]() |
Genetic Genealogy |
| Send FReepmail if you want on/off GGP list Marty = Paternal Haplogroup O(2?)(M175) Maternal Haplogroup H |
|
| GG LINKS: African Ancestry DNAPrint Genomics FamilyTree DNA mitosearch Nat'l Geographic Genographic Project Oxford Ancestors RelativeGenetics Sorenson Molecular Genealogy Foundation Trace Genetics ybase ysearch |
|
| The List of Ping Lists | |
bump for later
Would this segregation be the "Dane Law" established in the eastern part of England? I believe you can note its spread by the germanic names of towns. The locals paid the germanic people a Danegeld to keep them from raiding.
The Viking people who populated Iceland brought their wives and livestock, but the freeman of the farmstead commonly had celtic slaves. I don't know why it would be different in England.