byz
Full Member
rodostamo na ginesai
Posts: 171
|
Post by byz on Nov 15, 2005 3:49:35 GMT -5
I know there is already a decent amount of literature about Greek DNA, but none of it seems to explore the ethnic components of the Greek nation. Now I know from Cavali-Sforza and Barbujani that the Greek ethnic core appears to descend from ancient speakers of the Greek language, but to what extent? What is the extent of admixture? And I have another question - does anyone really know where the Greeks came from in the first place? Were they a neolithic people (J2) who assimilated paleolithic peoples (R1B) in the Greek peninsula? Thanks guys.
|
|
|
Post by Pepe friend of obelix on Nov 15, 2005 5:36:50 GMT -5
I have a question too,how old are Greek boarders? what you see here ^^^how old is that Greece?
|
|
byz
Full Member
rodostamo na ginesai
Posts: 171
|
Post by byz on Nov 15, 2005 5:38:58 GMT -5
Do you mean - how old is Greece as a modern nation state?
|
|
|
Post by Pepe friend of obelix on Nov 15, 2005 6:05:36 GMT -5
Do you mean - how old is Greece as a modern nation state? yea
|
|
byz
Full Member
rodostamo na ginesai
Posts: 171
|
Post by byz on Nov 15, 2005 6:10:18 GMT -5
The Greek people declared their independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1821 - in practise they weren't a free people until 1830.
|
|
|
Post by Pepe friend of obelix on Nov 15, 2005 6:38:57 GMT -5
Thank you.
|
|
|
Post by olympian on Nov 15, 2005 8:34:34 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Pepe friend of obelix on Nov 15, 2005 8:36:17 GMT -5
share with us,what does it say?
|
|
byz
Full Member
rodostamo na ginesai
Posts: 171
|
Post by byz on Nov 16, 2005 2:32:48 GMT -5
Yeah, someone please translate - my Greek is hardly good enough to read that, lol.
|
|
oguz
New Member
Posts: 33
|
Post by oguz on Nov 16, 2005 9:45:00 GMT -5
There isn't such a thing as greek dna. Greeks are the amalgam of Turks, africans, ancient greeks and this goes on..... Most greek dna they called are Turk dna.I think for example J2 is brought by Turks to Anatolia and Greece...
|
|
byz
Full Member
rodostamo na ginesai
Posts: 171
|
Post by byz on Nov 16, 2005 19:12:17 GMT -5
Turks and Africans? Methinks not.
|
|
oguz
New Member
Posts: 33
|
Post by oguz on Nov 17, 2005 1:26:33 GMT -5
Why not?please tell me. I meant they were genetically related to sub-sharans saying Africans. That's impossible they haven't mixed with Turks....
|
|
byz
Full Member
rodostamo na ginesai
Posts: 171
|
Post by byz on Nov 17, 2005 3:44:20 GMT -5
The percentage of Sub-Saharan African DNA in Greece is no greater than the average for Europe, and is therefore negligible. Greek DNA has influenced Turkey to a much greater extent than Turkish DNA has Greece - the Turkish language and culture are relative newcomers to Asia Minor. Before the Turks, these regions were inhabited by Greeks, Armenians, Anatolians, Phrygians, and other peoples of Eastern Rome. Greeks and Turks rarely intermarried - it did happen, but hardly enough to warrant consideration of a sizeable Turkish influence to the Greek gene pool. Most of the Turks who were in Greece are long gone.
|
|
|
Post by Funky Kong on Nov 17, 2005 13:03:21 GMT -5
Aren't many Turks just Turkified Greeks?
|
|
|
Post by anodyne on Nov 17, 2005 13:44:03 GMT -5
I can't believe some people are still pushing this false belief. I can only think of one article that showed Greeks had a significant Sub saharan background. The article that came out from a university in Madrid. That study has been ripped apart.
|
|