Me and Yoonji from Bangtan Blondes take a DNA Test! Am I 100% Filipino? Is she 100% Korean? ----- Remember to subscribe to Rice Squad! Follow me on Instagram! / paulbacera Subscribe to Bangtan Blondes here - / bangtanblondes
It was sooo fun! Also the map shows that my family is from South Korea but my mom's parents moved to South Korea right before the Korean war....... (from N.K) ?? thought it was interesting lolll. If you're Asian and have taken the DNA test.. pls share with us, I'm very curious !!
@@SagaRydberg Filipinos are Filipinos. They belong to Austronesian tribes who settled in the Philippines. Therefore, Filipinos aren't Spanish. Go to the Philippines and you'll see what their facial features are like.
I think South Korea and North Korea might not have been divided long enough for their DNA to diverge. Also, the testing company might not have had very many reference samples from North Korea, so they just decided to leave North Korea unhighlighted on the map
Not all filipinos have spanish blood.The reason why foreigners sometimes assume that we have spanish blood is simply because of our surnames. But that’s because during the spanish colonization era, they forced filipinos to change their names into a spanish one. 😊
yes exactly, probably only 1% of the entire Ph population have hints of Spanish blood, because the number of Spanish soldiers stationed in the Philippines during the spanish era is estimated to be only 2 thousand to 5 thousand spanish people, and believe you me not everyone of those 2-5 thousand had interest in Filipinas as we Filipinos were discriminated against by the Spaniard because they despised how we looked
@@adamwon3012 lm Filipino and l know my history, most of the Spaniards saw Filipinos as low class citizens because of our looks such as brown skin, black hair, and short height, they called us "indios" and treated us like slaves
Ive also seen filipinos identifying themselves as islanders too. When u think Pacific islander, ur reminded of tall, heavyset, rugby NFL players or like the rock / jason momoa types... they look nothing like filipinos who are normally quite petite, south east asian looking...why do they call themselves pacific islander? If Filipinos are pacific islander wouldn't that mean Indonesians, Malaysians and even some areas of japan are pacific islanders too?...it doesnt make sense. Genuinely curious
@@bbbkkk3034 Hi! I'm not too sure if there's a history behind that (filipinos identifying themselves as islanders), but my theory is maybe because the Philippines is actually composed of thousands of islands (in filipino, "pulo"), and filipinos who actually lives in the Philippines, we would say "the island of Boracay" or the "island of Catanduanes." And so maybe, that's one reason why they would identify themselves as "islanders", not because they are gentically related to Pacific Islanders like Samoans (although, I think some filipinos also carry a tiny amount of polynesian blood), but because they grew up in an island, hence them being an islander. But in the Philippines, we don't care much about islander label to be honest haha. Now, if you're talking about Filipino-Americans identifying themselves as islanders, I think maybe lack of cultural heritage or misunderstanding in geography. Because the Philippines is right next to the Pacific Ocean and we're also close to some PI countries like Palau. Or maybe because we literally look like we came out of an island haha. There was a lot of blood mixing in the South east Asia, especially in PH (some due to colonization, modern migration, or interracial families) that's why we look the way we look right now haha. But geographically and historically speaking, we are for sure south-east asians. All in all, it really depends on the history of every families too, so maybe the one you talked to really have PI blood or just a misundertanding. Those are just theories based on my own observation. I wish I could give you a more accurate answer but my history is a little rusty now hahaha
@@JM-is4dz but tbh I also dont think they look any more "mixed/interracial" than other south east asians. I think Indonesia also has hundreds of islands too. I think ur right though. Its just an american thing.
Yoonji's 6% Japanese shouldn't be surprising since Japan and Korea have a long history of political, economic and cultural contacts for centuries. One Japanese or two might have left their genes with Yoonji's ancestor/s during one of these contacts.
Korea was literally the protsititue nation for the Japanese, the comfort women of Korea had many sexual encounters with the Japanese during ww2 and had babies, it’s no wonder Koreans have Japanese dna
Just letting everyone know that not every person who identifies as Filipino has Spanish or European ancestry. Many have been shocked because they expected Spanish ancestry, due to the Spanish colonizing the Philippines. It’s not common for Filipinos to have Spanish ancestry, but it’s not uncommon. Also, Filipinos are not Hispanic. It doesn’t matter if you have Spanish ancestry or not, it’s more than just that. You do not call Native Americans Asians, right? They descend from people that inhabited Siberian long ago, but that doesn’t make them Asian. I’m Afro American. I have Native ancestry, 2%. But that doesn’t make me Native American.
Agreed! I'm annoyed when people say Filipinos are Hispanic which they are not really. I understand the argument but Filipinos are first and foremost Asians.
FYI.... Filipinos in the Philippines will ALWAYS First and Foremost identify as ASIAN/SOUTHEAST ASIAN and never Hispanic or Pacific Islander. That seems to be an American thing.
we have been invaded many times with 400 yrs of western colonization..thats a long time for mixing unlessyou are implying that spanish and other europeans and american soldiers did not like women?
@@omgreensexpress5396 Kaunti lang nalahian,hindi naging permanent settlers ang mga Spaniard o ibang lahing Puti sa Pilipinas. Ang mga Intsik Beho at ibang mga Asiano ang nakipag lahi at nakipag asawa ng mga Pinay/noy sa bansa natin. At Iyan ang Mapait na Katotohanan sa mga Karamihan ng mga Pilipino na hanggang ngayon naniniwala sa Kasinungalingan ng mga kamag anak nila na 'Ang Lolo ko ay may Lahing Kastila at may blue eyes'. Kung totoo yan o eh di nakikita mo sana sa mga hitsura ng tio o tia mo,pinsan mo ,sa nanay mo, isa o dalawa sa mga kapatid mo dapat mukhang medyo tisay/soy maski na 3rd generations na kayo. Pero nakikita mo ang sarili mo sa salamin na pango,ang hugis ng mukha malaki o mala buwan at ang mata ay singkit o medyo singkit ay wala talagang lahi kayo katulad ng mga kapitbahay nyo,katrabaho mo,mga kapitbahay nyo ,mga tao sa mall,kalsada,sa bus ,sa jeepney, mga sundalo at mga politico purong Asiano ang mga pag mumukha at halatang walang lahing mga Puti o Kastila..
@@omgreensexpress5396 true, and the looks of filipinos are different from each other from malay, indonesian, indian, caucasian, chinese, japanese, mexican, spanish, and some other latin countries, and some looks of other countries. We don't know because philippines have different tribes and they don't know we're they come from before they settled in the philippines. It makes sense if all filipinos will be tested, and i doubt that philippines have only 3% spanish ancestry since there are millions of filipinos has not been tested. And there are many filipinos mixed with europeans and americans right now because filipinos are around the world and work there that's why they settled there because they marry other ethnicity. The largest community of filipinos are in USA with over 1 million and many one of them are in europe. And it makes sense that there are many filipinos who are mixed with europeans and americans right now.
for centuries too, many from outside the philippines stayed in the philippines and intermingled within the philippines... there are communities more heterogenous in the philippines
@@omgreensexpress5396ol... Philippine is a homogeneous country!.. majority of Pilipinos have like 90-95 percent Austronesian blood...we aren't racially nor genetically diverse
As a British descendant (Welsh and Scottish) it's really interesting to see people from other parts of the world have similar questions about their own DNA.
@@Humiliatusservus_Altissimo it's the result of seven years war. British occupy the capital of spanish philippines in the span of 2 yrs. Maybe british soldiers partake in r*ping of the natives too
@@joeyjuandiaz6195 I do think people tend to identify with the largest majority of the ancestry, unless they are, for example, 8 percent Native American, and have knowledge of that culture. I would certainly identify with Mexican (Native, Spanish) ancestry, but I don't tell people how to feel about their ancestry. If you came to a Scottish festival, I would certainly welcome you.
genetically welsh people are more closely related to the spainish and portugese then they are to the english which somehow help explain your welsh ancestry
@@Ama94947 They aren't. Both Irish and Welsh are significantly closer to Scots and English. Spanish and Portuguese are closer to Southern French and Northern Italians. You just have to look at a dna cluster map or a population distance table to see what populations are closest to each other.
Received my 23andMe results today which is why I am here watching this video. Talk about interesting DNA results, mine said I am 7% Spanish/Portuguese when all my huge family knows is that we are Filipinos with small Chinese & Indonesian %s and NO Spanish blood. I was born, raised & lived in the Philippines till my early 20s. Always proudly described my looks as "Filipino" to my western friends. My Asian friends know I look Filipino. Boy! did it surprise me and my family to know that we have no Indonesian but we do have North Indian (2%) & Spanish percentages? I am a senior now & retiring soon and I am in awe at the thought that I had believed most of my life that only Mestizo-looking people have Spanish blood and only a small percentage of Filipinos do. I suspect some more do have more complex DNA make-ups that might include other surprising markers including Spanish-Portuguese. They just haven't been tested. In any case, now I can also start celebrating my North Indian ancestry:)
The reason why 99.9% of Filipinos dont have Spanish blood is because when the Spaniards went to the Philippines, the Spaniards didn't impregnate native Filipino women since the Spaniards looked down on the Filipino people just because they had dark skin. This is why Filipinos today don't have Spanish blood running in their veins. therefore, Filipinos are not Spanish rather they are Southeast Asians/Austronesians
@@DrNotDr Since you chose to post on my thread, I guess my ancestor wasn't raped as what I had suspected since my clan's discovery that we have Spanish/Portuguese blood in our DNA. Too dark skin? Immaculate conception? 99.9% is an exaggeration - no need to pump up 95%.
@@DrNotDr Yeah but it didn’t mean none of them had interest or no advantage if they did. Those with true Spanish ancestry had ancestors who were either 1) Precolonial nobility (they were somewhat respected and encouraged to marry the Spaniards so the Spaniards can make use of the blood ties and complicate/prevent more potential future rebellions) 2) Raped (friars notoriously did this) 3) Some Spanish mestizo from latinoamerica who married a Filipino mestiza (such marriages were encouraged) 4) The Spanish or mestizo guy really loved the Indio woman (rare but I’m sure it could have happened within 333 years, plus according to the racial class of the time union between a Spaniard or mestizo with an Indio woman was seen better than union with a Chinese (because they were not christianized). Also the discrimination against Indios were on a less intense level to Indios supportive under Spanish rule. It was there but the discrimination was mainly to those who rebelled against the Spanish. Basically they treated them in a certain way so they pit themselves against their own kind. They treated the Spanish supportive Indios a bit “better” than Indios from clans that were not under their authority (usually the unchristainized ones).
Hispanic is a term used for people that grew up in a Spanish speaking country. Philippines language is not predominantly Spanish. So you are not a Hispanic.
@@adamwon3012 i was trying to say that it would be strange not to have at least 30 % of filipinos to have spanish and even american blood after 400 yrs of western colonization occured...its just human to mix and have mixed children
@@gussmann6580 the official language was Spanish for 400 years until 1970s when it was abolished in the 80s suddenly were no longer Hispanic? My mom still speak Spanish fluently so she’s hispanic and I’m not?
I once had a debate with an old friend who moved to america from the Philippines. He said in his post that Filipinos are part asians and part pacific islander. I said we are not. We are asians. Period. Not once did any teacher in the Philippines nor any text book in school say that we are pacific islanders. We are part of southeast asia. Hence, Asia. You dont hear indonesians claiming they are from the dutch race nor malaysians and indians claiming they are british race. We are not latinos either. We are asians. I really dont like this whitewashing of our history from filams. We are filipinos, we are asians.
It's only the Fil-Ams claiming their Pac Islander. Yk, just a western thing. Filipinos are clueless abt that not unless they heard on the internet (like me). So, this Pac islander thing is not up for a debate in the Philippines.
So if your a Filipino with a European ancestor 6 generations ago, that is (.5 to the power of 6 = 0.015625) 1.5% DNA (on average). Spanish colonization and immigration ended 6 generations ago (over 120 years) so this is a completely expected result if one of your ancestors was a Spaniard in 1890s. He's a little bit more than that so it means very likely that at least 2 people were Spanish in his ancestry 6 generations ago. The Welsh ancestry is probably around the same time. What one has to realize about DNA is that you only inherit half of your parent's total DNA. Which means the other half is not inherited by you (maybe your siblings). Its quite possible that after 6 generations, you won't have much DNA from a particular ancestor while your distant cousins might have (assuming no secret affairs are discovered). Even if the documentation is absolutely clear.
@@mdc3148most people in the past had kids in their late teens and twenties. Today, it’s more like thirties on average if they went to college. 4 generations to span that time would be 4 generations being born to parents in their 30s back to back. Possible but not likely for most.
It’s so ridiculous how a lot of Filipinos want to claim Spanish. Why???? You guys have good food, naturally beautiful people, beautiful country and Filipinos are sharing and kind. Be proud of that!!!! Stop being ashamed
It's not that they "want" it like some sort of self-loathing. They're just uneducated, thinking that having a Spanish surname connotes Spanish ancestry when it doesn't.
@@chewy6487 coming from someone who previosuly commented that you "hate Filipino Americans," and that "they steal Polynesian culture." I'm not surprise you go with such a racist tirade. It's sad really. I highly suggest visiting a psychiatrist . Anonymity breeds psychopathy.
I’m a white looking Mexican. I rather look like native Mexican to. Be honest I don’t care I have 70 percent Spanish dna 🧬 also Spaniards look down on me cause they pure blood soo why claim that blood anyway lol
@@telltruth7027 we have own languages in fact it’s 100+, why would we stole other language that don’t belong to us ? We have own identity, language, culture, traditions, beliefs that make us Filipinos unique from the rest, there’s no place for Colonial mentality to us Filipinos, don’t pull it out to us cuz we already awake 🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭
Matsing Ka 7 minutes ago (edited) Most or 90% of Filipinos are direct descendants of Indo/Malay Chinese Negritos ,the rest are of pure Chinese, a minority of Caucasian and pure Aeta or little Black Pygmy or Negritos people like Manny Pacquaio..
Thats so interesting that you got, not Spanish, but basque! Thats even somewhat rare in spain! Btw by what company was the kit? Greetings from Bilbao, Basque country!!
My sister took the same DNA test and had about the same result. Mostly Filipino, then Southern Chinese and some Indonesian. Some very small trace (less than 1%) of Native American, Japanese, Basque and Jewish ancestry. No Spanish DNA but most likely the Spanish ancestor came from a Basque majority region somewhere in Spain. That or most likely from Portugal (which has a number of Basque ancestry). I’m guessing Filipinos with that rare Basque ancestry probably were from Filipino mestizos. The Spanish DNA got dilute further down the ancestral line.
@@bmona7550 if u look at most of the big named "spanish" filipino families in the philippines today like ayala, aboitiz, araneta, and even the historical figures like legazpi, urdaneta, loyola, elcano, ricarte, salazar, corcuera, uyanguren, or other spanish surnames in the philippines like lardizabal, arnaiz, andaya, arandia, olayvar, tamayo, sarabia, vergara, zubiri, zulueta, zuñiga, montoya, narvaez, mendiola, etc. etc. these are all basque surnames and basques in the philippines have a notable historical footprint, besides other spanish filipino ancestries. also, southern chinese, especially hokkien ancestry is very common in the philippines. most chinese filipinos in the philippines also have that ancestry and historically there were many chinese mestizos during spanish colonial times. they were the most numerous type of mestizo in fact. there were a few also from latin america like mexico or peru or central american countries too sometimes, and also the occasional japanese and rare hudyo jew. in davao, there is a fairly sizable japanese filipino community there and also a bit in baguio, subic, cebu, iloilo, etc.
the reason why "Korean" and "Japanese" are ethnicities and at the same time also nationalities is because korean and japanese histories were historically more often more ethnically homogenous although they did share ancient history together as well, where ancient proto-japonic yayoi ancestors in japan also initially came from the korean peninsula, especially the south. its no surprise a south korean would exhibit both ancestral traits.
@@user-tp7ne1du1n Southern parts of the Korean peninsula were inhabited by rice-farming Japonic people in ancient times. And proto-Koreanic speakers originated from Manchuria and migrated the peninsula, mixing/absorbing Japonic people. Most interestingly, the largest genetic component of modern Koreans--around 40%--would gene characteristics as same as the Northern Han Chinese.
6% comes from the superior Yamato(Yayoi) Japanese race, Not the inferior sub human Ainu in Hokkaido. Yamato race has always been the superior Japanese race. Koreans only have a small portion of that which is why they fail to compete with the superior beings of the Yamato people.
@@supercal3944 Do u like singing Battōtai as well? Just march to south and especially north korea singing that or even china and tell them about the glory of yamato kingship
Which DNA test did you guys use / recommend? I've heard of 23&me, ancestry, but want to know if some are better tham others. I'm Chinese, parents are from Hong Kong but I know my grandparents emigrated from mainland China during or before the cultural revolution. I also get a tonne of comments from Filipino people asking if I'm Filipina, but I'm not(or so i think?). So I've always been curious. But also, I know my ancestors are from different parts of China, which is a vast piece of land with multiple cultural populations I just don't want to spend a whole bunch of money on a kit and just find out I'm 100% Chinese (like i wanna know, how much of it from where in China?!?!)
Don't worry, if you're a 100% Chinese then you're a perfect example of alwhat Filipino means. Filipino is a nationality, never an ethnicity. Which means Filipinos can literally look like straight up white European to austronesian kike the Binays, to Chinese which we call Sangleys before. The commont miaconception is that Filipino ONLY means Austronesian.
For western companies, 23andme has the best break down ($100+). I didn't want to spend that much so I used MyHeritage DNA then import raw data to Wegene ($36+$30). Wegene is the only company that can break down Chinese into specific ethnicities, but they don't ship internationally.
About the Welsh percentage, well it could be because there's an attempt of British occupation in the Philippines. Or someone of Filipino descent in Wales has identified himself as Welsh. Either way, we shouldn't be surprised by this. My mom always pointed out that our side of the family have descended from the maternal side of Enrique Iglesias, which are also part Spanish btw, through Valentin Roncal Arrastia.
Being that Spanish populations often get mistaken as British/Irish (Celtic) populations by Ancestry DNA, there's a strong chance that the total 4% is all Spanish/Basque DNA
Not shocking to hear Filipinos having genomes coming from multiple places. I knew it but didn't know exact percentages. In the history of the Philippines there has been people from China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Spain, Mexico (Via Spain), Japan, USA (Via Native American, White American and Black Americans) over it's history via colonization. This is like living in the USA where the genomes come from multiple places. In some parts of the USA there are people that have part Native American Tribe in their Genomes and never knew about that given their history. The Korean Genome one I was expecting Chinese, Mongolian to be in the mix along with Japan.
Matsing Ka 7 minutes ago (edited) Most or 90% of Filipinos are direct descendants of Indo/Malay Chinese Negritos ,the rest are of pure Chinese, a minority of Caucasian and pure Aeta or little Black Pygmy or Negritos people like Manny Pacquaio..
@@adamwon3012 I think it's not for he's from Mindanao just like the rest of his clan.The jungle Asian Mankky Pacquiao doesn't have any connections to Cebu and to the rest of Visayan province
The Filipino guy looks like an average Austronesian. He doesn't look like a Mestizo at all. That 3% Spanish didn't do anything to change his appearance.
He can pass as Vietnam or Thai. He looks Asian (chinito-moreno). Asian going back to the Ice Age. Austronesian migrated from only 1k to during the Spanish era from Aussie side. Maniq people of Thailand or Orang of Malaysia etc. They are part of admixture LIKE ALL Southeast Asian/Oriental realm/Malay people who all descent from Far east since Asia broke up into Islands.
@@tnazealot2143 You said going back to the ice age. Really? Jesus! why not say that we are all Africans since humanity originated in Africa. Austronesians have a very different genetic makeup and culture than other Asians.
@@tnazealot2143 He can also pass as an Indigenous Canadian and an Indigenous American. Race is not based on a scientific fact. Race is just a social construct.
hi guys, you may or may not know that the Welsh and Basque have common ancestry as "original" inhabitants of Western Europe before that area was inundated by Celtic, Phoenician, Roman, and German peoples, so I would guess that your Spanish ancestry is 100% Basque country - the "original" Europeans! Also, can you tell me what test you took? Some tests are really focused on Europe, to the point that thier results for non-Euro people are pretty meaningless. Thanks!
@@hiphipjorge5755 Basque and Spanish are quite distinct from Irish and Welsh. It will even tell you what countries these results are most common on Ancestry. Ireland Primarily located in Ireland Also found in: Channel Islands, Faroe Islands, France, Iceland, Isle of Man, Northern Ireland, Scotland. Wales Primarily located in: Wales Also found in: England. For Scotland Primarily located in: Scotland Also found in: Channel Islands, England, Faroe Islands, France, Iceland, Isle of Man, Northern Ireland. If you get Spain or Basque you can see where those results are primarily located in also. So Ireland and Scotland are similar but Wales is primarily found in England.
You must be American cause I grew up in the Philippines and we were taught in school that we’re Asians specially southeast Asians never Hispanic or Pacific Islander💀💀💀 like go to the Philippines and say that we’re Hispanic they will laugh at u lol
@@RiceSquad it doesn’t change the fact that we’re not Hispanic we’re not period no one in the Philippines identity themselves as Hispanic. If u don’t believe me go to the Philippines and ask any Filipino there lmfao I grew up in the Philippines we were taught that we’re southeast Asians that’s it. The only Filipinos I see who identify as Hispanic are the ones who live in the US💀
@@RiceSquad there are 21 Hispanic countries the Philippines are not included. And every time there’s a Hispanic heritage month, the Philippines are not included
@@RiceSquad there are Filipinos who live in the ph, Pacific Islanders and even Hispanic people who are telling u that Filipinos are just southeast Asian like there’s nothing wrong to be southeast Asian. U can identify that yourself that even if it’s false but don’t bring us Filipinos in it you’re making us look stupid, u have an identity crisis it ain’t our fault
All through the comments it has this but nothing to back it up. Basques in fact are not close to Insular Celtic populations and speak an non Indo-European language. Welsh speak an Insular Celtic Byrthonic language. They are neither close genetically nor culturally. The Welsh are closest to English even before Irish and Scots. There isn't even an Insular Celtic cluster either. There are lots of genetic studies available online. Not sure where people get the idea that Basques are close to Insular Celtic populations? Even such notions that there is Celtic dna is not accurate. Basques anyway aren't Celts obviously.
Basque and Welsh are related DNA's. That's how the Welsh snuck in there. I didn't know that the difference in North and South PH was detectable, though. There's a difference when you look at them but I didn't think a test could catch it.
@@adamwon3012 Oh, Ilocanos really have their own look, especially compared to Visayan. Even if you compare from Cebu to Bohol, people look pretty different, espcially the men. I can't believe the DNA test can track these things. Kind of scary! Also weird that a lot of people are really from certain provinces. You'd think there'd be more Filipinos of mixed provinces, but there's a lot of 'pure' people, like 95% Ilocano, etc. Fascinating!
I've lived in the Philippines my whole life and I can never tell Filipinos apart until they speak lol. Heck, I can't even tell us apart from Indonesians. 😂
@@suzunome47 It's really, really slight between Indonesians, and only some. Indonesians do have more Hindu features. It was really trippy the first time I watched The Raid. It was like, they look Pinoy, but they don't? The language sounds like Tagalog with mouthwash, hahaha
@@DrNotDr No one claimed that. You are imagining it was said. Having a Euro great great great great grandfather certainly would not make a descendant European. That left over sliver was reported by the laboratory. Go argue with the science lab.
Interesting majority of Filipinos taking DNA test from 23 and me are average 60-80% Austronesian, 15-30% South Chinese... While Indonesians and Malaysians were 60% Austronesian 30-40% Austroasiatics... Some were even higher Austroasiatics DNA to Indonesians... But the Austronesian language won the linguistics spreading towards Malaysia and Indonesia.. Philippines is actually the highest per Capita % of population as Austronesian people in the world, carrying DNA Paternal haplo group O1a
Maybe bcoz Philippines is so close to the Austronesian homeland in Taiwan as well as to southern China our ancestors didn’t mix with other racial groups.
You have to recheck your Philippine history. There was British occupation in Manila and some parts of Cavite from 1762 to 1764. Chinese traders had been going back and forth in the Philippines pre-Spanish era.
Basically, Japanese and Koreans are very close genetically. Several studies support this. For example, the genetic difference between mainland Japanese and Koreans is smaller than that between mainland Japanese and Okinawa and Ainu, Hokkaido. In short, the relationship between Japan and Korea is similar to that between Britain and Denmark Anglo-Saxon, the mainstream English nation, came from Denmark and subsequently subjugated and assimilated the Celtic peoples of the north and west The mainstream Japanese people came from the Korean Peninsula and subjugated and assimilated the Jomon people of Kagoshima in southern Kyushu and the Ainu people of Tohoku In fact, on 28 And Me, a famous overseas DNA analysis site, Koreans and Japanese are grouped in the same cluster
Proto-Korean speakers are from Manchuria, and 20% of modern South Korean males fall under that lineage Y-DNA Haplogroup C. Southern parts of the peninsula were Japonic and their language is called Peninusular Japonic in the field of linguistics.
This is because Japanese people originally lived in the southern part of the Korean Peninsula about 2000 years ago. In the first place, the Yayoi O1B2 originated in southern China, came to the Japanese archipelago, and then migrated to the southern part of the Korean Peninsula. After that, the Mongolian C invaded mainland China, and the northern Han people O2 fled to the southern part of the Korean peninsula, and the present Koreans were born. After that, when the nations such as Baekje and Goguryeo collapsed, they fled to Japan and emigrated.
@@adamwon3012 Half correct, half wrong. The Yayoi people are an ethnic group that came from the southern part of the Yangtze River in southern China. Genetically speaking, they are O1b2 people. It is possible that they migrated around 3000 BC. It is speculated that they were probably the people who created the Yangtze River civilization. People living in Wu, China today are a completely different people because they have almost no O1b2 genes. The Yayoi people came to the Japanese archipelago via the ancient Chinese continent, but I don't think they have much to do with the Chinese of today.
Filipinos who takes DNA here in youtube always 95% filipino above in result so Filipinos for me still homogeneous like other asian countries in general.. compare to other countries especially peeps in White countries where their backgrounds are really mutiple and almost divided in a fair way, I think interracial marriages were really common there.. I even read an article before that Philippines is the most homogeneous country in Southeast-asia even we’ve been colonized and has different ethnic groups.
Most or 90% of Filipinos are direct descendants of Indo/Malay Chinese Negritos ,the rest are of pure Chinese, a minority of Caucasian and pure Aeta or little Black Pygmy or Negritos people like Manny Pacquaio..
@@matsingka921 bro what? Manny isn’t negrito. Anyways we’re not Indi Malay but more specifically we are Austronesian. Filipinos were the first austronesian to start sailing and filos have very high Filipino DNA, some are 100%. Manny looks austronesian like 100%.
AFTER 400 HUNDRED yrs of western colonization some even say 480 yrs there is no mixing or little mixing ? just use your IQ...even spanish priests had their own babies what more the soldiers
Korea for the longest time was a tributary state to either China or Japan on occasion. They were and stayed mostly homogenous because they were between two countries with violent and domineering rulers in their history. Trade was often limited to the Chinese, Japanese, the Mongols and the Dutch. Also the sea surrounding Japan is considered turbulent so if they did want to migrate or trade with other countries somewhere it would have been difficult and for the longest time Wakko pirates dominated the waters near Taiwan. If anything China and Japan as well as Confucianist ideals had significant influence in isolating Korea from most of Asia.
@@MarkMiller304 maybe in height and appearance[as defined by the western standards of beauty] but not in intelligence and rapidity of movements ..try a friendly fight with one of our boxers
@@Hazy-Sky Yeah i believe you're Filipino Chinese,Vietnamese,Cambodian and Really don't have a Spaniard ancestry at all. Be proud bcoz you're lucky to have a pure Asiatic heritages just like the 90-95% of the Philippines total population..
Hispanic is not solely about blood or language. It's like being American. Hispanic is cultural. Indigenous peoples of Latin America even Equatorial Guinea don't have populations with Spanish blood but many can speak Spanish, Catholic etc.
What are you talking about?? Yes it does. That’s why people in Spain are considered Hispanic and even though Brazilians are Latinos they aren’t hispanic because THEY DONT SPEAK SPANISH. That’s what literally Hispanic is. A lot of South Americans do have European and it shows. On an average Filipino it doesn’t. They look more Chinese. Idk what the problem is though trying to claim Spanish and why alot of Filipinos want to claim it. Spanish people literally took your last names and replace it with theirs for tax reasons and they also took their religion and changed it to Catholic. I have 53 percent Spanish and I will never claim those people 🤢
Bro what lol Hispanic is from Spain my guy Native Americans are native Americans not Latin or Hispanic they came from Spain and mixed with native South Americans etc
Because they're part of our history, malungkot man what the colonizers did to us, spanish empire, american and japanese, having that blood wouldn't always mean a product of marriage but a product of rape 😢 bayan ko hanggang ngayon marami paring mahirap and helpless 🇵🇭 "padayon" gigugma taka, kaluguram daka, ay ayaten pinas ♥️
And also because of beauty standards, locals preferred light skinned, pointy nose, straight hair and foreign looking chena basta ganun, but now some are starting to love their own, that includes me i have curly hair and uneven skin tone but i let it like that no more hair straightening
Matsing Ka 7 minutes ago (edited) Most or 90% of Filipinos are direct descendants of Indo/Malay Chinese Negritos ,the rest are of pure Chinese, a minority of Caucasian and pure Aeta or little Black Pygmy or Negritos people like Manny Pacquaio..
According to a recent DNA study conducted by National Geographic, 5% of Filipinos have Southern European/Iberian ancestry. Interestingly, 36% have Eastern Asian; 3% South Asian and 2% Amerindian/Native American.
The reason why 99.9% of Filipinos dont have Spanish blood is because when the Spaniards went to the Philippines, the Spaniards didn't impregnate native Filipino women since the Spaniards looked down on the Filipino people just because they had dark skin. This is why Filipinos today don't have Spanish blood running in their veins. therefore, Filipinos are not Spanish rather they are Southeast Asians/Austronesians
I'm a Filipino and I often get asked if I have Indian or Middle Eastern blood (particularly Iranian, Egyptian or Levantines). My dad told me we have Spanish but funny thing is apart from me, my dad and my grandma/his mom, the rest of my family looks straight up East/Southeast Asian. Still I want to know whether the Spanish is actually Moorish or Jewish or Gitano/Romani because to be honest, for some reason I feel an affinity with Middle Easterns and love their foods and follow their make up tips since I have their same features. I work in a US based company and whenever I fill out their online forms regarding race and ethnicity, I identify as two or more races, same with ethnicity.
@@latinauniversal I saw one video on her account, and I can imagine that she looks PART Middle eastern with Filipino. its more clear than her profile picture. @jackie :-)
Some people told me that I look like arab, indian and caucasian. But my mother once told me that we have spanish ancestry in our bloodline I guess that's the reason.
for my theory, filipino is mixed, but the most that will come out to filipino DNA test is filipino, Spanish, japanese and American just 10 or lower to 5% is Chinese and mixed africans Possibly Most Show in Filipino DNA Spanish: (colonized Philippines till 16 or 18 century) American: ( i forgot the reason) japanese:(in world war2 they raped many of filipino women) maybe this can be most show in filipino DNA. 20% to 10% of FILIPINO DNA Jewish: (stayed in Philippines because they were saved by Manuel Quezon) 10% to 5% of FILIPINO DNA Chinese:Chinese (a business partner of Philippines in old ages) Africans: (visited Philippines to send Graff as a gift) British or European:(no sure maybe they same to Africans)
no they're not, only 2 percent or less of the Filipino population have Spanish blood, while 95 percent of the Mexican population have Spanish blood. Sometimes most Filipinos have no link to Spanish ancestry. They're not the same.
actually the colonization of the Philippines and latin America are completely different. It might look but it's a completely different scenario. Unlike Latin America, they still speak they're own language over 187 languages still spoken. Despite Tagalog have some Spanish words in it, it doesn't mean that the average Tagalog and Spanish can mutually understand one another.
Bro... Spanish DNA in the country is only like 1-2 percent! Majority of Pilipinos have 90-95 percent Pilipino blood(Austronesian) The Spanish did not leave much genetic genes DNA Philippines is a homogeneous country!.. We aren't racially nor genetically diverse like the US! That has alot of multiple racial background
@@yanoopa1805 no they're not, only 2 percent or less of the Filipino population have Spanish blood, while 95 percent of the Mexican population have Spanish blood. Sometimes most Filipinos have no link to Spanish ancestry. They're not the same.
I think I can clear this up. Those referred to as Filipino-Americans (the children, grandchildren, or great-grand children of expat Filipino parents) have a tendency to have some Spanish ancestry, or as Paul found, some Basque ancestry, because Basque was the most numerous Iberian peninsula group in the Philippines during the Spanish colonial period. Many Filipinos with Spanish ancestry migrated out of the country during the following times: 1910s-1930s, 1945, and 1965-1970s. As far as I know, the Filipinos migrating more recently tend to be more Asian. And before someone brings up the Catalogo Alfabético de Apellidos, not all Filipino surnames are from the Catalogo. You can check which letter: B, F, T, and so on, corresponds to which town. So if you know what town your ancestor lived in and your surname doesn't begin with the assigned letter, it is most likely a surname which preceded the Catalogo. Some Filipino-Americans may have ancestry from European countries other than Spain or the Basque Autonomous Community, such as Italy, and as Paul found out, Wales. Some Filipino surnames are actually Italian and not Spanish. Other surnames I've not been able to find their country of origin. And as for your looks, you look actually more mestizo than the average Filipino-American five generations removed from their Spanish or other European ancestor or ancestors. Which province in the Philippines are your parents or grandparents from? You can look at the Spanish or Basque names in your province, and trace them to where they originate in Spain or the Basque Autonomous Community.
Just like most older indian migrants to the UK were mixed when compared to those who came from the 1960s onwards and just like indo-portuguese who live in Portugal are more mixed than current day Goans
@varoonnone7159 Filipino migration is different from Indian migration though, even though both groups' early migrations were both mixed. The early period of Filipino migration consisted of Filipinos coming from areas which had been severely devastated by the Philippine-American War and subsequent Americanization. Filipinos with a connection to the Spanish, both non-mestizo Filipinos adopting the Spanish language and literary forms as a vehicle for resistance against the American occupation, and mestizo Filipinos who were also hostile to domination by America, blocked the Americanization of the Philippines. The Americans thus focused their military, economic, and forced educational efforts to eradicate the Spanish-speaking centers of Filipino resistance against American domination. The result was the end of Spanish as a common language in the Philippines and the migration of a lot of mestizos and non-mestizos from the Spanish-speaking centers of Filipino resistance. I'm not familiar with the Indian situation, but the precursor to Filipino migration was revolution against the Americans.
@@unemployedscholar4320 hmmm so thats why theres more purer spanish filipino descendants living abroad amongst ofw communities. i met a dude online before living in the US who says hes a descendant of General Rafael T. Cramé, one of the chief generals of the philippine constabulary before that preceded the PNP today and the namesake of Camp Crame where the police headquarters in metro manila is. the dude showed me a pic of himself and booooiii he looked like a legit pure spanish descendant but living and grew up in the US but he used to have family ties in the philippines before
i dont bet the basque were the most numerous in the philippines before among spanish filipinos, probably just was populous enough to be one of the big groups before
some surnames in the philippines are basically from native languages or former sanskrit or malay or hokkien chinese loans that all later was just spelled in spanish orthography as how the spaniards would've spelled words and the spanish education system by the friars taught the few before that could afford it, since the spaniards brought the latin letters first to the philippines before the americans came introducing english in a mainstream sense.
That's not true lol, Basques are a result of isolation, they are just as Spanish as anyone else the only difference is they partly lack the Indo-European component that Spanish people have. Spanish people are same as basques except they have celtic and indo-european genes. The iberian cultures before the arrival of the celts were basques
I know one pinoy ball player who has a blck american great grandfather but he looks 100% filipino. I have a great great grandparents that are spanish and chinese, but i now look like 100% filipino. What im trying to say is that most filipino now dont know that they do somehow have a hispanic blood in them coz most of us has a dominant asian genes now.
From 23&Me, I am 59.8% Filipino/Austronesian, 21.6% Spanish/Portuguese, 14.4% Chinese (mostly Southern Chinese), .7% Korean, .9% Italian, .8% Bengali & Northeast Indian, .3% South East Africa, and the rest broadly East Asian.
Never, *EVER* met a Filipino with more than 8% Spanish. I've met some with 20%+ Chinese though, that ancestry is a lot more common and makes sense seeing how close China is.
@@Nutty151 in manila go to ayala alabang, forbes park, bel air, damarinas village, etc , there you will see a lot of mixed filipinos..some dont even look asians anymore and you dont even need to do dna tests
The reason why 99.9% of Filipinos dont have Spanish blood is because when the Spaniards went to the Philippines, the Spaniards didn't impregnate native Filipino women since the Spaniards looked down on the Filipino people just because they had dark skin. This is why Filipinos today don't have Spanish blood running in their veins. therefore, Filipinos are not Spanish rather they are Southeast Asians/Austronesians.
The first people that came to America were Asians not necessarily Filipinos but, if you are from the state of Guerrero or near that state you may have some Filipino ancestry.
Austronesian filipinos mixed with malay, chinese, hindu, arab, polynesian, and spanish, with maybe some english, japanese and African and some native americans thrown in
@@adamwon3012 yes, filipinos is mix with different groups of asian and other ethnicity. That's why the filipinos feature is diverse and not homogeneous.
Those from the South are more related and culturally connected to their neighbors especially Indonesia and Malaysia. Northerners are more related and have a hint of cultural connections with East Asia.
3% doesn't make you close to Hispanic and the Basque region are French. You have British too. Spanish only went there as missionaires via Magellen of Portugal then ousted centuries ago by Filipinos who many took Christian surnames into their families. Filipinos kept their languages updating kanji into modern writing & other Western influences.The 1st Europeans called Filipino natives "Chinito" (Spanish for Asian looking). Its ok to say in PH bc your Asian but that is slur in Latin America bc Asians are minority migrants.
The Spaniards called the Aeta people Negritos and the other tribes INDIOS. I have never seen Chinitos in the Historical Texts/Writings/Memoirs of the Conquistadors.
You’re wrong. The Chinese in the Philippines were treated as a completely different race from the native Filipinos- who were called Indios and Negritos. They were so different that the Spanish considered Chinese-Filipino mixes to be mixed race- “Chinese mestizos” and they made sure that census records kept track of their population
@@mitchs3559 how ironic the Chinese didn’t even want to assimilate or intermixed with other ethnicity, I would say they are only a Chinese community in the Philippines, not one of the ethnic of the Philippines, to oversimplified they only traders who used to live in the Philippines
3 % is still significant ,remove that and the person above will cease to exist meaning he had a great grand parent who was 100 % white 5 to6 generations ago
I’m Filipino. I can’t deny the strong Spanish influence in our culture, but our culture is also comprise of other cultures…So I can say that Filipinos culturally only has strong Spanish influence, but not overall hispanic. So also overall, Filipinos are NOT hispanics. It makes more sense because we don’t speak Spanish. Though i wish we did since Spanish is just soo damn attractive and beautiful. Also it could help us reconnect to our former dominant hispanic culture, also to help with economy, and most importantly to have the potential to make better music. Cause the only genre Filipino languages are good at is opera
@@sirius5657 is it wrong to have a preference? Also it’s a worldwide thing where people find Spanish as an attractive language, and Spanish music is one one of the most popular in the world.
@@amo_res9266 That's not preference you're pushing the colonial mentality, this white supremacist thinking is so funny to me coz how is Spanish is attractive to you lmfao and if you really preferred that language learn it by yourself. We don't need to revive that colonizer language that ruined our ancestors, us today’s society and almost cause genocide and culture destruction. INDIO!
only 2 percent or less of the Filipino population have Spanish blood, while 95 percent of the Mexican population have Spanish blood. Sometimes most Filipinos have no link to Spanish ancestry. They're not the same. actually the colonization of the Philippines and latin America are completely different. It might look but it's a completely different scenario. Unlike Latin America, they still speak they're own language over 187 languages still spoken. Despite Tagalog have some Spanish words in it, it doesn't mean that the average Tagalog and Spanish can mutually understand one another. NOTE: TAGALOGS ARE NOT THE ONLY ETHNIC GROUP IN THE PHILIPPINES. THE MARANAO, TAUSUG, BADJAO, MAGUINADANAON, YAKAN, AND KALAGAN OF MINDANAO ARE KNOWN FOR NOT BEING DEFEATED BY THE SPANISH AND HAS THE LEAST SPANISH INFLUENCE.
Yes we Filipinos really are Hispanics not just culturally speaking . Don’t forget most filipinos who are from the visayas and some parts of Mindanao region especially in Zamboanga really have Iberian dna in them that is why it’s not surprising it will shows in dna test even tho most of them doesn’t look like mestizo anymore . Remember in history during Spanish colonial times during 1600s there are 15,000 Spanish soldiers sent in visayas and another 22,000 during 17th century in Zamboanga Mindanao .
Actually to be exact: its 15,600 Mexican soldiers immigrating and only 600 Spaniards out of a Philippine population of 667,612 people in the 1600s. And another 35,000 Mexicans in the 1700s out of a population of 1.5 Million. In both centuries (1600s and 1700s) pure Mexican immigrants formed 2.33% of the population. Here's the source. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_the_Philippines
What is difference between Latino and Hispanic? Hispanic refers to a person with ancestry from a country whose primary language is Spanish. Latino and its variations refer to a person with origins from anywhere in Latin America (Mexico, South and Central America) and the Caribbean. What countries are Hispanic? Hispanic countries are: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Equatorial Guinea, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Spain
The reason why 99.9% of Filipinos dont have Spanish blood is because when the Spaniards went to the Philippines, the Spaniards didn't impregnate native Filipino women since the Spaniards looked down on the Filipino people just because they had dark skin. This is why Filipinos today don't have Spanish blood running in their veins. therefore, Filipinos are not Spanish rather they are Southeast Asians/Austronesians
Bobo saglet Lang Nila na conquer Yun and they leave quickly because they don't have resource to defend manila which is only small part of the Philippines yeah I understand what your point is, but it's total bullshit,
Matsing Ka 7 minutes ago (edited) Most or 90% of Filipinos are direct descendants of Indo/Malay Chinese Negritos ,the rest are of pure Chinese, a minority of Caucasian and pure Aeta or little Black Pygmy or Negritos people like Manny Pacquaio..
The reason why 99.9% of Filipinos dont have Spanish blood is because when the Spaniards went to the Philippines, the Spaniards didn't impregnate native Filipino women since the Spaniards looked down on the Filipino people just because they had dark skin. This is why Filipinos today don't have Spanish blood running in their veins. therefore, Filipinos are not Spanish rather they are Southeast Asians/Austronesians
The reason why 99.9% of Filipinos dont have Spanish blood is because when the Spaniards went to the Philippines, the Spaniards didn't impregnate native Filipino women since the Spaniards looked down on the Filipino people just because they had dark skin. This is why Filipinos today don't have Spanish blood running in their veins. therefore, Filipinos are not Spanish rather they are Southeast Asians/Austronesians
@@DrNotDr I'll give the real reason, Filipinos are Matrilineal. Meaning The headhunting custom revolves around women. Before a man can marry, he must take a head of a woman's male family member in order for the woman's parents/family member to trust the man that he could protect their precious child. That's how valuable women to Filipinos are. Do you know Filipino Tribes practice headhunts before? What I've told you is one of those reasons.
@@norbe6534 he only has 1% British and that's not enough to say that he's mixed. Stop claiming Filipinos are from elsewhere because Filipinos belong to the native indigenous Austronesian tribes.
@@DrNotDr If you've been on the country and you only see pure blooded ones everyday in your neighborhood. You would immediately know if a person is mixed or not. That is the reason why, let's say a mother and her twins or triplet, the mother knows which ones is which. Its an instinct of people/animals. You don't have that instinct? And btw, that 1% or 3% or whatever percent you want to say is already enough to alter a characteristics natural instinct of a person/animal. Heres one, an Aeta/ Negrito has an incredible sense of smell and can detect people/animal/whatever's location with their noses. The Denisovan gene is also known as "Super-Athlete gene". Thats how potent Denisovan bloods are. And they only have 4-5% Denisovan blood I think. So... What are you saying about 1%-3% again?
i was happy you get your result more accurate. no polynesian or any pacific islanders which means you havea true filipino blood as filipinos are not pacific islanders
the reality is, Filipinos are malay Same as malaysia Indonesia and brunei . And most of filipinos are a middle east mix. Spanish mix is just a small group like cavacano
Filipino is not an ethnicity. It is a nationality. Which means Filipinos come with different shapes and colors. From the Basque Ynchausti to the very Austronesian Binays, to the Chinese Tans, to the Filipinos of Tlaxcalan ancestry. ALL are Filipinos. And that's the beauty of it. Filipino never meant to look a certain way, which is mostly austronesian. Even Magalona's song is a racist take to be frank on what Filipino must looks like.
Majority of Pilipinos have Austronesian ancestry and blood! 90-95 percent of people in the coutry have Pilipino blood(Austronesian) Pilipinos that have Spanish DNA are only 1-2 percent! The Spanish did not leave much genetic genes legacy in the country! We aren't racially nor genetically diverse like the US! That has alot of multiple racial background!... And Pilipinos are not Hispanic and we are not Pacific islander, sure theres common when it comes to cultures(But we are not one of them) Pilipinos are Asians..from South east asia....
I say so too. I met a Filipino myself and he had a spanish surname but he didn't look mexican/hispanic/latino completely. Only by asking him did he say he's mixed and it made sense. Filipinos have some hispanic/latino in them.
They don't, the type of colonization that the Philippines went through was a taxing one. Meaning that Spanish soldiers where there to simply tax, they did not intermingle with the locals. Maybe a few Spanish soldiers empregnated some locals, but not many.
1% could be a misread. This would have been updated a couple of times now so it would be interesting to see if he got the same trace results or they disappeared.
@@TheJpeabellera Thank you for letting me know. The trace regions are very unstable and on the next update you might get something different or they will disappear.
I always thought Filipinos dna would come back as Chinese. Actually, all those islands i thought the people were from mainland china. Migrated im shocked he not Chinese.
To be honest, I expected the Filipino dude to have more European blood in him. He's able to grow a thick beard which a lot of Filipinos including me are unable to grow.
It'd be cool if they could differentiate between migratory populations vs. sedentary/native populations. For example, we know that throughout history Koreans migrated to Japan either forcefully (via capture/slavery) or as subjects of the Japanese Empire, intermarriage between royal/noble families. Or whether it goes back to an even earlier time (Jomon period), or when Silla and Japanese were mutually intelligible. I think 6% would be pretty recent? Like great-great-grandparents?