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Romany Gypsies Came Out Of India
ABC Science News ^ | 9-6-2004 | Anna Salleh

Posted on 09/06/2004 3:51:50 PM PDT by blam

Romany Gypsies came out of India

Anna Salleh
ABC Science Online
Monday, 6 September 2004

A Romany woman dances in downtown Prague during the third annual Khamoro Festival of Roma music and culture (Image: Reuters/Petr Josek)

Legend has it that European Gypsies came from Egypt but a new genetic study has shown they came from a small population that emerged from ancestors in India around 1000 years ago.

The research, by Professor Luba Kalaydjieva of the University of Western Australia and team, looked at the origins of eight to 10 million people in Europe commonly known as Gypsies.

Roma, Romani or Romany are other names for this community, which has featured in movies such as Latcho Drom.

"[The research] is the best evidence yet of the Indian origins of the Gypsies," the researchers write in an article published online ahead of print in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

The researchers were first alerted to the idea that the Romany may be descended from a small founder population when they discovered that certain genetic mutations in the population were shared in people who were not directly related.

This occurs in other groups that have developed from small founder populations such as the Finns, Ashkenazi Jews, the population of Quebec in Canada and possibly the Australian island state of Tasmania, Kalaydjieva, told ABC Science Online.

Kalaydjieva and team have been studying the genetics of Romany people for over 10 years.

In this recent study, which will be published in the October issue of the journal, the researchers analysed five genetic mutations linked to certain diseases, such as the neuromuscular disorder myasthenia.

The aim was to try and estimate when the original founder population arose and when it split off into different groups of Romany.

The researchers studied the diversity of the chromosomes that carry the genetic markers. Over successive generations, the region around the genetic markers become more and more diverse.

By applying a known rate of genetic change in DNA, the researchers worked out the founder population emerged from the ancestral population 32 to 40 generations ago, or 800 to 1000 years ago.

An Indian origin

As well as looking at over 1100 samples of Romany from Europe, they studied six samples from India and found that the similarity in genetic markers supported the theory that the founder group, of perhaps under 1000 people, came from India.

The idea that Romany people came from India was first proposed 200 years ago based on similarities between their language and the Indian language Sanskrit, said Kalaydjieva. But such studies were inconclusive.

"There are quite a few examples where a population adopts a language but this does not necessarily mean its biological roots belong to the same place as the larger population that speaks this language," she said.

"So from the biological point of view we have provided we have provided the best evidence so far that this is indeed a population that derives from the Indian subcontinent."

Kalaydjieva and team's analysis of disease genetic markers supported the scientists' previous research on male and female genetic markers.

"It all points in the same direction," she said.

Gypsy: a loaded term

Kalaydjieva said scientists commonly used the term "Gypsy" but this was politically and historically loaded.

"Initially Gypsies were called Gypsies because Europeans believed, and this was a legend that the Gypsies maintained themselves, that they came from Egypt," she said.

But she said Gypsies had been persecuted due to superstition, racism and prejudice. The term Gypsy had become increasingly given a pejorative meaning, being used to describe a social category with a wandering nomadic way of life, rather than a biological population. Many people from that group now preferred to be called Roma, Romani or Romany.

She said the term Romani or Romany, strictly speaking linguistically and historically, described Balkan Gypsies. These people were a sub-group of European Gypsies and the scientific term Gypsy was a more generic term to cover the biological population.

Today people descended from European Gypsies live all over the world, even Australia. In Bulgaria alone there are at least 50 groups with different traditions, cultures, dialects and adopted religions.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: archaeology; ggg; gipsies; godsgravesglyphs; gypsies; history; india; out; roma; romany
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To: Mamzelle
It may be a fine point (which I do NOT think it is at all!),but it is NOT "uninteresting",since YOU found it interesting enough to reply to and attempt to refute.Anyone who know what Hungarian gypsy music sounds like and then hears Spanish gypsy music will automatically hear the difference.And there is a massive dissimilarity between the Spanish gypsy dance steps and traditional Hungarian dances,which are folk dances to Hungarian gypsy music and NOT "gypsy dance steps".

As to Russian gypsy music,it is absolutely NOT like Hungarian and played on different instruments.The Hungarian cymbolum,which gives the music its haunting sound,is NOT used by any other gypsies.

As to what gypsies may or may not have added to American culture,outside of a word or two,frankly,I can't think of anything the gypsies have added.

81 posted on 09/07/2004 2:54:10 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: wideminded
"Sometimes I see elderly people in the bank who are withdrawing money and who appear to be accompanied by someone who is waiting for payment. The banks should be very suspicious of this."

Bank DID get suspicious, actually chased EVERYONE out...including their customer who had triggered the event.

Had they reacted and separated the players things might well have come out differently.

It took five hours for anyone to notify me.

82 posted on 09/07/2004 8:20:14 PM PDT by norton
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To: muawiyah
"Gypsies have no monopoly in that regard."

A little defensive are we?

I'll say it again - not worth the air they breathe.

83 posted on 09/07/2004 8:22:15 PM PDT by norton
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To: norton
I should probably add that I'm normally a pretty accomodating guy. Typically able to separate individuals from a crowd, or a sect. But democrats and gypsies have given a new lease on my utterly intolernt side.

I hate them for that as well!

84 posted on 09/07/2004 8:24:50 PM PDT by norton
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To: Jeff Chandler

My dear deceased Dad told me that on Pepin Hill in MN during the
Great Depression every one took care of their neighbors. The only time anything was stolen was when the gypsies would sweep through. Any animals that weren't locked up would disappear. That is a fact he has mentioned many times to me.


85 posted on 09/07/2004 8:29:25 PM PDT by savagesusie
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To: blam

Strangely enough, the Gypsies in India are from the Western state of Rajasthan and are supposed to be descended from nomadic Scyths etc who invaded India in the years pre-Alexander.


86 posted on 09/07/2004 11:15:36 PM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: Mamzelle
A cryptic culture, with no music, art, storytelling.

huh? Most slavic music is highly influenced by gypsy music -- the Gypsies also brought the Indian sitar to the west where it morphed into the guitar
87 posted on 09/07/2004 11:17:43 PM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: Mamzelle
more Hungarian than Romani. To be frank, Gypsies have contributed practically nothing to Western culture except their own image as romantic vagabonds.

Not really -- as I said above, Western music before the Gypsies was similar to what you hear in the medieval movies -- twingy lutes. Real mazurka style music comes fro the Gypsies. The Magyar Hungarians, being Turkic/Mongoloid had a differnt, oriental music, similar to what you hear in the steppes of Mongolia or in China today
88 posted on 09/07/2004 11:24:16 PM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: blam

Though, that is one pretty girl dancing there in the pic


89 posted on 09/07/2004 11:24:42 PM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: Mamzelle
Scots-Irish-Welsh are not always blue-eyed and freckled--look at Catherine Zeta Jones

Actually the Welsh are supposed to be dark haired and brown skinned -- the English call them dark welsh (not meaning tha tthey were negroid, just darker than the blue-eyed blonde English) -- the blue eyed blonde Scots are mostly due to intermingling of the blood with Norsemen
90 posted on 09/07/2004 11:28:30 PM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: Restorer
It is most likely that they are descended from one of the many "criminal castes" of India, which you can still read about in the old pre-PC Indian literature.

That is interesting -- I was reading some Indian newspapers and they still refer to criminal tribes. Mayhaps the gypsies were descended from these who were pushed out of India?
91 posted on 09/07/2004 11:30:48 PM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: Cronos

Sitar=father of guitar? I think that may have been the lute.


92 posted on 09/08/2004 6:29:31 AM PDT by Mamzelle
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To: Cronos
I rather doubt it--but there is certainly no way to disprove it, either. I couldn't disprove that the czardas was Gypsy, just that a lot of Hunkies wouldn't like the idea.

The first thing that happens when a culture comes to America--everybody wants to try the food. No Gypsy food.

Music? From where I sit, and what I've heard, the music people tell me is Gypsy sounds more like what a Western ear might like to think is Gypsy. That is, the vagabond romance of it all, not an authentic sound. I doubt we have anything in our repetoire that is anything but pastiche.

As for poetry--there is none. What we know of Gypsy language is the little that the Gypsies could not prevent our learning.

No art, other than Artful Dodging.

Amazing, is it not? There is no culture like this one--an utter nothing.

93 posted on 09/08/2004 6:36:44 AM PDT by Mamzelle
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To: Mamzelle
There is no culture like this one--an utter nothing.

WEll, a secretive culture -- you can't call it nothing just 'cause you don't know about it.

I stick by the sitar origins for the guitar (thouh it can't be proved) for the overall design, the similar name. In hungarian, a guitar is a gitár. A lute is an altogether different animal. Plus the spread of the guitar from Eastern Europe to the West is pretty well known.
94 posted on 09/08/2004 7:42:53 AM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: blam
When I was a child, my mother told me that Gypsies steal babies.

Don't know about babies, but if you aren't careful when visiting tourist sites in Europe, they will steal your wallet. ;~))

95 posted on 09/08/2004 7:48:31 AM PDT by Ditto ( No trees were killed in sending this message, but billions of electrons were inconvenienced.)
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To: Cronos
Maybe it was really the samisen that fathered the guitar? (g) They look alike, too. Dulcimers, harps, and lutes were the earliest wooden string instruments used by Western musicians--they became mandolins, guitars, and fiddles.

If a culture inhabits a land for hundreds of years, with no music, art, myths (poetry) or even a good meal...I'd say it's more likely that there's nothing there rather than some treasure remains tantalizingly hidden.

But a lot of academics have made fools of themselves searching.

96 posted on 09/08/2004 7:58:41 AM PDT by Mamzelle
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To: blam
I have been spending half of the last 3 years in central Europe. I am now in Cluj Romania until 21st, when I return
to Tennessee.

There is a huge Gypsy population in much of central Europe,
mainly in Romania, and Bulgaria.

I was always told that they came from India.

They are not liked by anyone, as they are mostly thieves and beggars.
It is normal for them to just walk up to you and ask for a handout, and they start doing it from the age they can walk.
They produce many children, then send them out to shill for money.
Some of them do make an effort to do something for money, such as a kid that gets on the tram and plays an accordion, but most just walk around and ask for money. By the way, people that think racism in the US is bad, it is nothing compared to racism in Europe, where one country sometimes thinks of their neighboring country as a different race, and there is a lot of animosity.
97 posted on 09/08/2004 8:12:04 AM PDT by AlexW
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To: muawiyah

If the Gypsies went to LA in WWII, why are there few problems with Gypsies in southern California? I've lived here all my life, and every year there is a story in the papers about the "Johnson families" but Gypsies here, such as they are, seem to stick to fortune telling and related scams. Maybe it's because most driveways here are concrete!


98 posted on 09/08/2004 8:28:31 AM PDT by SoCal Pubbie
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To: SoCal Pubbie
You ask a good question. I think the answer is that their venture in Southern California was so good they actually settled down, assimilated, and abandoned their old ways.

Having the opportunity for regular employment at good wages can have that effect. Several years back I met a fellow peddling hightech equipment for a Silicon Valley company ~ he was named Majoram and his father had grown up in a traveling wagon.

You have to remember, Gypsies, as a people, have been subjected to intense persecution and isolation from mainstream life for a long time.

Much of their less savory behavior is a reaction to their lives' conditions.

BTW, not all the folks in fortune telling are Gypsies.

99 posted on 09/08/2004 9:22:20 AM PDT by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah
Of course the fortune tellers are not all Gypsies. My late aunt used to give "readings" for pay, but she wasn't really a "fortune teller". Also, some fortune tellers may want to appear Gypsy to project more "credibility" when they are not.

My wife told me they used to have Gypsies come into Nordstrom all the time to shoplift. That and other stories show that there has been some Gypsy problems here, just not the way it has been in other areas. The same holds true for the Mafia, for whatever reasons, and they are many I think.
100 posted on 09/08/2004 10:17:04 AM PDT by SoCal Pubbie
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