It's been almost two years since I last wrote about Family Tree DNA and thought I'd check in and explore how I'm doing so far (You can see my first post about FTDNA here...just don't laugh because it was also my very first blog post). It looks like FTDNA is now up to over 204000 records as of July 17, 2008. My haplogroup was updated and is now E1b1b1b2 because the Y-chromosome tree changed. FTDNA has also added some cool maps allowing you to pinpoint where potential DNA cousins come from...Here are my 25 marker Y-DNA and high resolution mtDNA maps. I still have no matches I would call a verifiable genealogical possibility.
While my Y-DNA test has enlightened me somewhat on the origin of my paternal family, it has also puzzled me. According to my haplogroup, my paternal family is of North African origin (Berber specifically). This makes complete sense because of the Muslim expansion across the Mediterranean into Spain and Southern Italy. Most of the matches I've received come from people with Spanish or Arabic sounding names completely in line with my haplogroup and my understanding of the history of the Mediterranean world. The puzzling part is represented by the red markers as shown in the 25 marker Y-DNA map in the link above.
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I've had a genealogical break-through of sorts recently. This wasn't one of those eureka moments where I found a name leading to a hundred others going back in time, but it may eventually allow me to push my paternal linage back further than I thought possible. This discovery has also given me great historical background I never had before on my paternal grandfather's place of birth - San Giovanni in Fiore in the Cosenza Province of the Calabrian Region.
While using my grandfather's place of birth as a search term, I found a 1995 article titled A Social-Demographic, Isonymic and Genetic Investigation on an Isolated Calabrian Village, in the International Journal of Anthropology. This was both good and bad. The good news is the "Isolated Calabrian Village" in the title was San Giovanni in Fiore, but in order to access the information I had to buy it. Because I hoped it would provide me good info on my grandfather's hometown, and because I'm a sucker for spending money for genealogy reasons, I paid my $32 to download a 9 page article even though I had no clue what the title meant. Sometimes being a sucker pays off and this time it did. Copyright provisions won't allow me to reprint the entire article here, but what I found excited me.
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Continue reading "New (to me) Italian Genealogy Resource" »
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