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New study claims that Irishmen descended from Turkish farmers



This Irish sheep farmer has a good chance of getting lucky in love at this year's Matchmaking Festival in Ireland
A new study claims that Irish men descended from Turkish farmers

A new study has revealed that many Irish men may be able to trace their roots back to Turkey. Focusing on the role of the Y chromosome, which is passed from father to son, the research indicates Turkish farmers arrived in Ireland about 6,000 years ago, bringing agriculture with them. And they may have been more attractive than the hunter-gatherers whom they replaced.

The genetic patterns for Irish females differ from those of men. “Most maternal genetic lineages seem to descend from hunter-gatherers,” an author of the study, Patricia Balaresque, told the London Times. “To us, this suggests a reproductive advantage for farming males over indigenous hunter-gatherer males during the switch to farming.

“Maybe, it was just sexier to be a farmer,” she added.

Eighty-five per cent of Irish men are descended from farming people from the Middle East and especially Turkey, according to the research that was conducted by scientists at the University of Leicester.

The switch from hunting and gathering to farming was a crucial one in human development. Increased food production meant that populations were able to grow.

In Britain, 60-65 per cent of the population has the Turkish genetic pattern, while in parts of the Iberian Peninsula it’s almost as the same as in Ireland.  The research contradicts what was previously thought about Irish genealogy – that hunter-gatherers from Spain and Portugal who survived the Ice Age were our main genetic ancestors.

“This particular kind of Y chromosome follows a gradient, gradually increasing in frequency from Turkey and the southeast of Europe to Ireland, where it reaches its highest frequency,” Mark Jobling from the University of Leicester told the Times.

 We are saying that most of that original hunter-gatherer male population in Ireland was probably replaced by incoming agricultural populations,” he added.

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it was published in PLoS Biology
"what do I think" --- I think first that it would have been more than informative to have a citation to the study in question, rather than having to read through Walshie's interpretation of the Times of London's interpretation of Patricia B.'s blatherings, unless of course the University of Leicester didn't publish their study and what "parts" of Iberia? wouldn't be surprising that antecedents' genes should be quite similar in Gallicia and Galatia,let alone Galway or at least Connemara and by all means read Oppenheimer, but also read Sykes
Odd but true. They didn't bring a few poppy seeds or other exotic herbs to Ireland when they migrated far beyond the Turkish hills with their 'genes'. Many years years ago in Istanbul I was offered a lump of stuff the size of a bar of bath soap in The Grand Bazaar in exchange for a pair of Levi blue jeans. It looked like a clump of hard turf. I was so dumb at the time I didn't know what it was--Hashish. However; I was back-packing around Asia Minor and wherever with a Swiss and an Austrian (who remain life-long friends). One of whom immediately bartered for and bought a Jallaba robe at another stall, took off and handed the guy selling copper urns and carpets the very jeans he had on. For the next few days the three of us wandered round ancient Constantinople as high as kites. It's architecture and customs. Mea Culpa. We went to the Hagia Sophia Mosque removed our shoes at the door and did all the bowing and stuff on the mats. Being Irish Catholic I of course had scuples but comforted myself that it's walls had known the chants of Christianity. The Swiss and Austrian nodded in accord though Protestant if not Atheist. I have only the best memories of my Turkish ancestors.
I suggest reading Stephan Oppenheimer's 2006 book The Origins Of The British for a more detailed explanation. Parts 1 & 2 focus on Ireland and the Celts.
This should not be a major surprise since the Celts have had a branch of their migration stay in Turkey as well as coastal France, the northern coast of Spain and other areas in Europe as well as in Wales & in Ireland.
The Jews are descended from the tribe of Judah which is one of the 12 tribes of the Israelite s just to correct some posters on here, The rest of the tribes are people of many beliefs and religions and are generally unknown which makes them "Lost" in there actual whereabouts.


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