"They may take away our lives, but they'll never take our freedom !" - William Wallace, as spoken by some Aussie bloke, Mad Max - the Road Warrior, aka Mel Gibson (in that 1990's "Braveheart" movie)
@@frankklein4872 me? Racist? I don't want to give a thousand reasons why am not racist. Lemme just say, AM KENYAN, bet that would be enough to refute your accusation. Me, Racist, Mmppffff 😂😂😂😂
@@fannybuster No I wouldn't, the nose and the structure around it are totally different. The darker woman has a higher nasal bridge and the lower part of her nose is broader and tilts down while the presenter's nose tilts up. Also Wilson's chin is much larger and she has a heavier jaw overall. Reid appears to have heavier brow ridges though that may be due to eyebrow fashion and Wilson is only seen from the front, not the side.
@Kes Mangkuk your probably right, I was born in Yorkshire UK, but I knew my dad's family are Irish but I thought my mum was English, my DNA came back as 67 percent Irish and he rest was northern Scandinavian...the Vikings we're in Ireland in the 2nd and 3rd century and Yorvik now modern day York was the Viking capital of the UK
Thor, the Norway/Norseman Viking, a thunder god, with a giant hammer - thanks to Marvel Comics (with the late Stan Lee and a handful of other fun/creative writers); the Spider was a Brit comic book character.
@Straight White Plastic Straw Dublin was established as a Viking settlement in the 10th century and, despite a number of attacks by the native Irish, it remained largely under Viking control until the Norman invasion of Ireland was launched from Wales in 1169.[27] It was upon the death of Muirchertach Mac Lochlainn in early 1166 that Ruaidrí Ua Conchobair, King of Connacht, proceeded to Dublin and was inaugurated King of Ireland without opposition.
My mom was British and White. My dad is African American. I was surprised to see my British DNA was 62%. My dad side of the family have British DNA probably from the slave days. I am also 32 %African, 5 % Scottish and Irish,and 1% percent Spanish.My brother was 68% British.
Well your both the same exact bloodline... so you're prolly not actually 62% British... it just represents what % of those genes you got... some people have more dominant genes and vice versa
LOL... you will be a huge blend of many ethnicities.. Upload you raw dna file into Gedmatch and use the tools there to dig past 5/600yrs and so on.. you'll be surprised..
I love it that Piers DNA is a majority of Ireland Scotland and Wales, pretty close to %100. My being American by birth and a Hispanic ethnicity, we also have Irish, Scottish and Wales too, along with some Morocco. I was excited to see that because I love Ireland.
My results said I’ve got 3 ethnicities & 5 genetic groups. I’ve over 17,160 DNA matches. 83% Irish Scottish Welsh 11.4 Greek South Italian 5.6 Baltic . So glad I took the test . Now doing my mums too .
So glad I took the test too and my dad has done his also. The my heritage app has updated so now my results are: English 91.7% Germanic 4.6% Danish 2.1% and Dutch 1.6%
Yes Jeff but he really should have corrected Piers when Piers started to assume Robert The Bruce was his ancestor just because the distant cousin in NZ said he was hers. While Piers could also be related to Robert The Bruce, it is far far more likely he isn't.
@@rossmacintosh5652 Eh, not worth it. Let Piers be a blowhard, as usual. It’s obvious that he was partially joking but also partially just having an ego trip as usual.
Hello from the US ... where I am more English than either Piers or Susannah according to MyHeritage: 52% English 29% Irish/Scottish/Welsh 16% Iberian 2% Finnish and 0,8% Native American ... very interesting!
My cousin did our tree, and we have scotch-Irish also and descend from Robert the Bruce. She took us back to Charlemagne, she says don’t get to excited, with all the illegitimate children they had back them, most Scottish people are descended from them. There was actually a woman from Scotland on my paternal grandmother’s side, her great grandmother who was Nobel, it said that she “married beneath her station”. She married a Canadian Mounty and immigrated to Canada, and to Detroit through Canada and that’s where our branch of the family started. This stuff is so interesting.
If I were you I would research before I start talking. The Noblemen of Europe were all Blackmen. You also need to research when blacks ruled Europe. You will learn about the Black King James and learn that the names you are using are Black people.
I am 8% English, 13% Wales and 10% Scottish then 12% Irish 20% Finnish 2% Russian, 5% Poland, 10% German, 2% Spanish 13% French, 1% Jewish, 1% Middle Eastern. That is all my dad’s side of his family. I will find out my mums side soon.
No They are all celts but different type of celts the Irish are Gaels same with highland Scotland although they are also Pictish celts low land Scotland is more Anglo Saxon,Wales and Cornwall are Britonic celts
A PERSON You’re referring to offshoots of the original Celtic bloodline. Celtic blood are what they all have in common. You’ve not gone back far enough.
Juan Franco Di Lorenzo Some of them are Celtic in and around Galicia. The Vascos, etc. . Most Spaniards are chiefly Moors mixed with some sort of European from up down the trade routes .
But a lot of people from Ireland Scotland and Wales seem to forget is that the Vikings played a big role in those areas. Doubled it self was a Viking settlement. My ancestors responsibility was to guard the coast against Irish and Norse Raiders. But many times the Vikings would settle down and intermarried with the locals. Not big news for me anyways.
Patrick Murray That percentage of Scandinavian DNA is too high to come from what we call Vikings. It’s most likely that there was a great great grandfather or mother of her that immigrated to England or had children ( sometimes out of wedlock). I don’t think the average English person has more than 8% Scandinavian blood.
This is what I don't get.... English, Scottish and irish people all have the same Y- DNA Haplogroups (genetic markers traced through paternal lines), R1a (Germanic) and R1b (celtic) how the hell do they separate the three.... I'm from the Balkans (Albanian) and every Albanian who has taken the test and every Italian and Greek that has taken these dna test come up with the same out come which is "greek/Italian"... because all three cultures share the same Y-DNA haplogroups ( j2 and e-v-13 ). So how the hell can they separate Irish and Scottish and English (who have the same DNA) when they cant do the same with Italians Greeks and Albanians???
gazmend subrahimi really, British people invaded Ireland and made it Northern Ireland and most likely the Scottish people just have similar DNA genes just as English people and Irish people.
#1. when did I say that I2a (I-L621) is not from the Balkans... and when did this conversation deal with the South slavs, Y-DNA Haplogroup of I2a I-L621 ??? #2. both haplogroups I1. and R1. (in Britain) are associated with germanic Saxons ....not slavs. (I should have made that clear from the beginning I apologize) #3. the haplogroup associated with southern Italians who are considered descendants of indigenous latins or pre-middles ages populations of people that lived in Italy before the great migrations into italy, have over 40% of J2 and E near-eastern haplogroups which is the reason why when any one takes the dna tests if they have either haplogroups E-or j2 they are considered Greek or Italian "greek/Italian" (because the largest populations (numbers of people) with those haplogroups in Europe ARE GREEKS AND ITALIANS. #4. yes E (v-13) is from north Africa (the horn of Africa some even speculate) and is associated with the first Neolithic farmers that came into Europe ...like J2 and G (p.s. J2 is not Turkish). #5. why are you using Quotation marks when referring to " 'Albanian' " ?
You may learn more about Haplogroups (Y-DNA/patrilineal and mtDNA/matrilineal) and Autosomal DNA in eupedia ( www.eupedia.com ), among other places. By the way, not everything i read above is accurate. I suggest everyone makes his/her own research on the matter. For example, Southern Italians are considered descendants of both indigenous pre-migratory populations as well as Greeks (see Magna Graecia). Also, not all companies divide people in Greek/Italian. In fact, i have only seen it in one company. Other companies do differentiate between Italian, Greek, Balkan, West Asian, etc..
Don't anybody say white or asain or black anymore. It is known fact white folks come from the Caucaus Mountains region. They can call themselves anything the want but for other people we go to the Holy Bible and the History book dated before the 1700's.
Good on you, it is a great thing to do. I have done 2 different tests, Ancestry.com and MyHeritage, just to see if there are/were huge differences. I am basically 1 third East Asian (Chinese on my father's side), and the rest is British ie English, Irish, Welsh and assorted. Mum, 2 sisters and a paternal uncle also tested. Mum is 99%European, mostly English, Irish and West European. Uncle 2 thirds Chinese 1 third Irish. Sisters are various % similar to me but interestingly different. Let us know if you have the test.
@@FilipeVasconcellosAKAJeeForce the the Spanish celts from Northern Spain migrated after the ice age and later to the British Islands and Ireland, mainly Wales
Piers Morgan’s real name is O’Meara, after his Dad died when he was very young he later took his stepfather’s name. I would never have done that to my child.
O'Meara is Irish: son of Meara, and it may not have been his choise to take his stepfathers name is his mother remarried and wanted Peirs to take the SF name so that the household would all have the same surname. It could also mean that the SF saw Peirs as 'his son' out of love for his mother too. Morgan is a Welsh name, so his bio family and SF has Welsh ancestry.
P Morgan may not be related to Robert the Bruce, his cousin is may be and he not unless she relates to Morgan through both her parents. P talks more than he listens or thinks sometimes, the expert needed to check him. Him going off to the races on any given topic is why he is controversial.
I'm african american and was not shocked that over 21% of my dna was european; Irish, English, Swedish, Netherlands Hmm! I guarantee it wasn't consensual!
She looks very much Iberian (Portuguese/Spanish), our main gentic marker is Celtic and Celt-Iberian. Most English people are genetically closer to us than they realise, with other small gentic influences of course. Much of upper central and Northern Portugal also has Germanic DNA from the Suebi peoples, and Spain with the Visigoths.
Many British and Irish have Celtic origins coming from Spain (Celtics Spanish) instead of the Celtics from Central Europe. The haplogroups from Spanish and Irish\British are more similar than you would expect.
@@rgproductions5358 Iberian is Spain and Portugal. Both are the same. Do you Know What is Peninsula Iberian ?. It's the same people with different languages.
thehoneyeffect She can pass for many nationalities in Europe. South but the north of Europe to. I have a friend who's Turkish and looks similar, skin tone and hair.....her look is everywhere northern Europe and Mediterranean.
It's true, she looks very Spanish, but also very French, very Italian, very british, very Irish. She could pass for anything in EUrope really. Actually, the only place she might stand out a little bit more would be Scandinavia, but she would still pass as a native I think. She has a very standar European look to her.
Im from Spain I think her skin is darker than mine. About his features she is like a mix of Europe. But she is more sharp than in the south. Has a lot of west Europe look.
@@goodaimshield1115 Being a 100% Scandinavian I can say I probably wouldn't take her for a native Scandinavian. Dark hair (like you see mine is as well) is very normal but you hardly ever see it in combination with brown eyes. Not to say it never happens but had I met her in Norway I would have suspected her of having southern European ancestry in her. Likely iberian, as shipwrecked sailors from the Spain/Portugal area are known for having sown wild oats along the western coast of Norway in the great age of the sail ships
That ending was classic! And there's always that deep manly laugh coming from the background. Hilarious! Great mix Susanna! You look Spanish. I was shocked when I found out that Catherine Zeta Jones is Welsh. Thought for sure she was Spanish. Maybe you gals are related! :-)
@@davidedbrooke9324 the Celtic part of you comes from Spain instead of central Europe. From the iron age there was a big migration from Iberia to your islands
When this lady listens to the Iberian Peninsula her laughter escapes her, which is funny because her physical appearance is quite Iberian. Come on, it looks like my cousin who is more Spanish than the Spanish omelette. I said
In the UK they hate Spanish bc of historical reasons and it's something to be ashamed. Racism? But they don't want to know the Celtic part of their genes come from Spain
As pointed in the comments, Middle Eastern does nt mean Arabs. There's quite a bit of European blood, from Roman's, Greeks, Hittites, the Vandals etc. Even the Turks came from the Steppes, and there's been loads of invasions by various horse nomads from the Steppes mostly that reached as far as India.
Ireland was originally populated by people from the Middle East by way of Spain and Irish people should have Irish, Iberian and Middle Eastern DNA, and then mixed with other ethnicities over the years.
Lots of Iberians are also very fair and blue eyed as the Goths and Vandals invaded and settled there after the fall of the Roman Empire as part of the barbarian Germanic invasions.
Robert “The Bruce” is in my family tree as well as the Morgan family line. That’s probably how he’s related to Robert “The Bruce” & where his Scottish/Welsh ancestry comes from.
@@kaseyminor6623 The expert really should have corrected Piers when Piers incorrectly started to assume Robert The Bruce was his ancestor just because the distant cousin in NZ said he was hers. While Piers could also be related to Robert The Bruce, it is far far more likely he isn't.
Robert the Bruce was of Norman French decent ''Robert the Bruce was the eighth descendant of a Norman knight who was called Robert de Bruce after a Norman castle known as Bruis or Brix. The first Robert de Bruce came to England with William the Conqueror. The fourth Robert de Bruce married the daughter of William I, king of Scotland''
Hi Rebecca, Robert the Bruce on his mother's side was Gaelic....many of the Norman Conquest folk were Bretons who fled Britain in the 400,s and returned in 1066...
Was Pierce born with a space in his teeth? :-) Runs in our family ... my mother has it ... Terry Thomas had the space as does Lauren Hutton. I think it's cute now but didn't like it when I was younger so adjusted it. Some of this dna stuff can be really interesting.
Dominique Blagojevic Your mother doesnt know at all who it might been? This why I feel babies before legal bind should not be allowed. If it happens the father and mother has to be registered ! So many kids dont know their fathers or mothers
West Asian and 'Middle Eastern' (South West Asian) is quite common, as a minority element among Europeans, it's a sign of Neolithic Farmer's admixture - Near Easterners brought agriculture to Europe. You can see a gradient in Europe, where the Southeast - Greece, The Balkans and Southern Europe has the most percentages and the North West has the least admixture percentages.
No actually this kind of trait mix is unique to England and Spain in Europe and historically (in the english case) this has to do with the Phoenicians and other migrations from ancient times between 2000-200 BC approximately. So it's more recent
I would guess that Susanna's mother's family would be from the British Isles. In some of the DNA tests a cousin that has been identified has found to actually be an Aunt or sibling.
I would have thought Suzanna has more Irish DNA.She looks more like an Irish Coleen who's ancestors came over on the Spanish Armada and docked in Cobh in Cork.
I had my done at my heritage. I was 56 percent irish.scottish 28 percent scandinavian 6 percent baltic 8 percent 8 balkan the rest english 4 percent. My grandmother was irish .i had no middle eastern african or asian
I have thousands at 12 markers, but most are from someone from thousands of years ago, by the time you get to 37 markers most of those have gone, even at 67 markers I only have three at 4 Generation Difference.
@@autumnphillips151 English really isn't an ethnicity... No I don't have any. Scottish/Irish/Welsh among others. A lot of Scottish/Irish have have Scandinavian due to the Viking invasions and settling..
@@moreporkowl1218 The update hasn’t happened for most people yet, so you might have to wait. My grandfather’s English DNA was showing up as Scandinavian prior to the update, but now he’s a quarter English.