roots


Meet Ireland's most 'prolific' king; you could be descended from him


Crest of the O'Neill clan. The family's patriarch, Niall of the Nine Hostages, was renowned for his exploits on the battlefield - and the bedroom.

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Millions of Irish Americans, especially those in New York , may be directly descended from Niall of the Nine Hostages, the most prolific warrior in Irish history.

A team of geneticists at Trinity College Dublin led by Professor Dan Bradley have discovered that as many as 3 million men worldwide may be descendents of the Irish warlord, who was who was the Irish “High King” at Tara, the ancient center of Ireland from A.D. 379 to A.D. 405.

Harvard Prof. Henry Louis Gates Jr., who made headlines when he was arrested by an Irish police officer while trying to break into his own locked home, is also a descendent of Niall of the Nine Hostages — and is related to the cop who booked him!

The story of Niall of the Nine Hostages is already the stuff of legend, which has been passed on to countless Irish schoolchildren over the years.

The supposedly fearless leader battled the English, the Scots, the French and even the Romans, and struck fear into the heart of his enemies. His dynasty lasted for centuries, continuing up until the Elizabethan conquest of Ireland at the end of the 16th century.

Legend has it that it was Niall of the Nine Hostages who on a raid in Wales, captured a young slave, and brought him to Ireland. That slave would later escape, and go to become Ireland’s patron saint, St. Patrick.

But one story not told to most Irish elementary schoolchildren was Niall’s prolificacy.

When it came to the bedroom, it seems that Niall of the Nine Hostages was even more fearless and energetic than he was on the battlefield.

This warlord was responsible for the very common Irish surname “O’Neill” (“Ui Neill in Gaelic) – which literally means ‘descendant son of Niall' – also the name of Irish pubs all over the world.)

The researchers also found that as many as one in 12 men in Ireland have the same DNA as the Irish king – and in Ireland’s northwest, that figure rises to one in five.

"We sampled 60 people with these names and found the strongest association was with them,” Bradley told the London Independent. “Before this, everything was mythology, but now there does seem to have been a single male ancestor of this group of powerful dynasties."

"In many countries, powerful men historically have more children, and it's not that hard to believe that it happened in Ireland too.

"We estimate there are maybe two to three million descendants in the modern age, with a concentration in Ireland, obviously. Then there are Scotland and New York  - you find the particular chromosome in reasonable frequency in New Yorkers of European descent.”


Nster.com


4 Comments

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cabbagehead44: I've done some genealogical investigating into my own family, and I've learned that 'Y' DNA, which is mentioned in the article above, is only passed from father to son, so whatever ancestry you have through your mother's side cannot be traced in that way. The best way would be to find a male relative with the surname you want to investigate, and then trace from there...and there are DNA test kits (with high accuracy) that you can have your male relative use, for this.
It may be of interest to readers that Glucksman Ireland House NYU will have Professor Dan Bradley speaking on this at their University Day "Who Do We Think We Are: Ireland and Irish America" on Saturday April 17th. Other participants include William Kennedy, Alice McDermott and John Patrick Shanley. Please see our website http://irelandhouse.fas.nyu.edu/object/ne.gihuniversityday for details. Eileen Reilly Glucksman Ireland House NYU
How did you get DNA from a dead Irish king?
Does anyone know what particular chromosome is the writer referring to with O Neill and does it occur in women as well as men?
 




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