Sunday, September 20, 2020

Roots

The oral traditions of those that came before me always maintained that my roots were one-half Irish and one-half German.  

Mom's laborious genealogy research supported the tracing of our immigrant ancestors back to both Ireland and Germany – at which point the trail went cold.  Mom’s work predated the internet so much of it was conducted in-person while researching dusty birth, baptismal and death records in small Midwest communities including a trip to Salt Lake City, Utah to delve into accounts maintained by the Church of Latter Day Saints – the Mormons. 

Through it all the ethnic pie remained 50/50. 

Since mom departed this earthly realm DNA technology has turned old-school genealogy on its head.  Sure, those dusty old birth, baptismal and death records remain incredibly important – nonetheless the arrival of online, searchable databases along with easy and affordable DNA technology has stirred the pot and added ease of detail and historical color that had previously been missing.  

Four years ago I took the plunge and had my DNA analyzed for purposes of learning more about my origins.  A number of my acquaintances and family have since done the same.  Admittedly, the results of this testing include plenty of disclaimers and caveats about the imprecise nature of what you will learn yet it certainly opened the door to additional – shall we say – assumptions.  For quite some time the premise of the 50/50 conclusion continued to hold sway - yet become sketchier as DNA science and region began to supplant borders.


Behold my 2016 ethnicity map: 



By 2018 it had been updated to this:



And almost a year ago I received this update just before we left to visit Ireland.  

That oral tradition in my family that supported the ½ Irish and ½ German?   Ten months ago there was very little remaining that was specific to Germany.  The German component was shrinking.
 
This is complicated on a number of levels but what is clear is that roughly half of my DNA reflects the history of Western European migration patterns and invasions.  If you go back far enough it was the Celts who dominated much of what is now Europe and the British Isles.  Tribal and warlike the Celts had no written language and as a consequence there are no complete records.  

What we do know is that the Romans displaced them and the Celts retreated to Britain and Ireland.  Following that the barbarians displaced the Romans.  Armies ebbed and flowed and conquering Anglo-Saxons, Vikings and Normans left their mark upon this part of the world both politically, culturally and ethnically as well.  The DNA persists.
 
Modern studies suggest that these earlier populations weren’t necessarily wiped-out but adapted and absorbed new arrivals.  Invaders and migrators left their seed in their wake and as a consequence the story has become both clearer - and more complex.  Trace DNA is quite persistent which makes my roots both diverse and more than a wee bit ambiguous. 
 
The other day this arrived.




Anything that refers to German or Germany – Gone! 

Stay-tuned.......


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