The magic and Pure Alchemy of Iron

Ancient Scandinavia

Book of the month (June)

Hilda Roderick Ellis Davidson is quickly becoming a favorite author of mine. Great detail and everything kept in context. I do love comparatives though I am biased.

Hrøð-


Anglo Saxon ƿord of þe Dæġ: þeodlēas

Ænglo Saxon Word of þe dæg:
þēodenlēas : (leaderless, without leadership) ( insert political joke here)
 
Bonus:
Sāwelcund: (Spiritual).
 
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Hroð-


Anglo Saxon Word of the Day: Fersċ

Ænglo Saxon Word of þe dæg:
ᚠᛖᚱᛋᚳ᛫
 
Fersċ (fresh)
 
West Germanic: *frisk
Old English: fersċ
Middle English: fersh, fresch, fresk, freche, versh
Scots: fresch, frech, freish
English: fresh
→ Welsh: ffres
Old Frisian: fersk
North Frisian: fersck
Saterland Frisian: frisk
West Frisian: farsk
Old Saxon: *frisk, *fersk
Middle Low German: vrisch, versch
Low German: frisk
→ Icelandic: frískur
→ Faroese: frískur
→ Danish: frisk
→ Norwegian Bokmål: frisk
→ Norwegian Nynorsk: frisk
→ Polabian: frišă
→ Swedish: frisk
→ Estonian: priske
Old Dutch: *frisc
Middle Dutch: versch, varsch
Dutch: vers
Afrikaans: vars
Limburgish: vèrsj
Old High German: frisc
Middle High German: vrisch
German: frisch
→ Hungarian: friss
Luxembourgish: frësch
Vilamovian: fryś
Yiddish: פֿריש‎ (frish)
→ Middle Dutch: vrisch, frisch
Dutch: fris
Afrikaans: fris
→ West Frisian: fris
→ Walloon: frisse
→ Medieval Latin: friscus (see there for further descendants)
Old Norse: ferskr
Icelandic: ferskur
Faroese: feskur
Norwegian: fersk
Swedish: färsk
Danish: fersk
Bonus:
ᚠᛁᚦᛖᚱᛖᛒᚫᚱᛖ᛫
 
Fiþerebǣre: (winged, with feathers, bearing feathers)

Hroð-


New Mjølnir’s (Saxon and Norse)

New items Are available on Etsy.com/norsewest http://etsy.com/norsewest

Hroð-


Glæd Efenniht

haelusunne

Hroðbeorht-


Anglo Saxon Ƿordes of þæs Dæġ:Brēme

Anglo Saxon word of se dæg:

ᚪᚾᚷᛚᚩ ᛋᚪᛉᚩᚾ ᚹᚩᚱᛞ ᚩᚠ ᛋᛖ ᛞᚫᚷ᛫

Brēme (poetic) (renowned, famous, glorias) from Proto Germanic “Bromiz”. ᛒᚱᛖᛗᛖ᛫

Compare:

Old English: brēme, brœ̄me

Middle English: brem, breme

English: breme

Scots: breme

———

Bonus:

Hærfest (autumn, harvest) directly cognate to Norwegian “høste”. From Proto Germanic “harbistaz”. Literally modern English “Harvest”. In Anglo Saxon the “f” in this position likely says “v”.

Compare:

West Germanic: *harbist

Old English: hærfest

Middle English: hervest, harvest

Scots: harvest, hervest, hairst, harsit

English: harvest

Old Frisian: herfst

Saterland Frisian: Häärst

West Frisian: hjerst

North Frisian: Hārefst (Sylt)

Old Saxon: herƀist

Middle Low German: hervest

Low German: Harvst

Plautdietsch: Hoafst

Old Dutch: hervist (attested in compound: heruistmanot)

Middle Dutch: hervest, herfst

Dutch: herfst

Limburgish: herfs, harves

Old High German: herbist

Middle High German: herbest, herbst

Alemannic German: Herpscht

Walser: harpscht, herbscht, hérbscht

Bavarian: herbast, herbischt, hörbist

Cimbrian: herbest, herbust

Central Franconian:

Hunsrik: Herrebst

German: Herbst

Luxembourgish: Hierscht

Old Norse: haustr, haust (< *harbustaz)

Icelandic: haust

Faroese: heyst

Norwegian:

Norwegian Bokmål: høst

Norwegian Nynorsk: haust

Old Swedish: høster

Swedish: höst

Danish: høst

Hroðbeorht:


Anglo Saxon Ƿordes of þæs Dæġ: Græs

Anglo Saxon word of þe dæg:

ᚪᚾᚷᛚᚩ ᛋᚪᛉᚩᚾ ᚹᚩᚱᛞ ᚩᚠ ᚦᛖ ᛞᚫᚷ᛫

Græs (grass) from Proto Germanic “grasą”. ᚷᚱᚫᛋ᛫

Compare:

West Germanic: *gras

Old English: græs, gærs

Middle English: gras, grasse, gresse, gres, gers, grece, græs, grace, gars, grys, grisse, grese

English: grass

Scots: gress, gres, grais, graiss, grase, gers, girs

Old Frisian: gers, gres

North Frisian:

Föhr-Amrum: gäärs

Sylt: Gērs

Saterland Frisian: Gäärs

West Frisian: gers, gjers, jers

Old Saxon: gras

Middle Low German: gras

Dutch Low Saxon: gras

German Low German: Gras

Plautdietsch: Grauss

Old Dutch: *gras

Middle Dutch: gras, gars, gers

Dutch: gras

Limburgish: graas

West Flemish: ges, gas

Zealandic: gos

Old High German: gras

Middle High German: gras

Alemannic German:

Italian Walser: gras, gros

Cimbrian: gras, grass

Udinese: gròs, gros, groos

Hunsrik: Graas

German: Gras

Luxembourgish: Gras

Pennsylvania German: Graas

Vilamovian: gros

Old Norse: gras

Icelandic: gras

Faroese: gras

Norwegian:

Bokmål: gress (< *grasja-)

Norwegian Nynorsk: gras

Old Swedish: græs, gras (hapax legomena)

Swedish: gräs (< *grasja-)

Danish: græs (< *grasja-)

Elfdalian: gras

Gutnish: gras

Gothic: 𐌲𐍂𐌰𐍃 (gras)

————-

Bonus:

Weder (weather) from Proto Germanic “wedra” ᚹᛖᛞᛖᚱ᛫

Example:

Þæt weder tōdæġ biþ hāt and drȳġe.

The weather today will be hot and dry.

Hū is þæt weder þǣr þū eart?

What’s the weather like where you are?

On Īra lande ne mæġ man þæt weder nǣfre forecweðan.

You can never predict the weather in Ireland.

Iċ hine ǣrest ġeseah on þæs ġēares anġinne. Iċ wāt for þon hit wæs ċeald weder, swīðe ċeald on þā tīd.

I first saw him at the beginning of the year. I know because it was cold weather, very cold at the time.

Compare:

Old English: weder

Middle English: weder, wethyr

English: weather

Scots: weddir, wethir, wathir

Old Frisian: weder, wedder

Saterland Frisian: Weeder

West Frisian: waar

Old Saxon: wedar

German Low German: Weder

Old Dutch: wedar

Dutch: weder, weer

Afrikaans: weer

Old High German: wetar, *wedar

Middle High German: weter (classical), wetter (late), weder (Central German)

Alemannic German: Wätter

Bavarian: Wetta

Austrian: Weda

Cimbrian: bèttar

Mòcheno: [Term?]

Central Franconian: Wedder, Wäder, Weader, Wäer

Hunsrik: Wetter

Luxembourgish: Wieder

Transylvanian Saxon: Wadder, Wodder

Upper Saxon: Wättr

German: Wetter

Pennsylvania German: Wedder

Old Norse: veðr, -viðri

Icelandic: veður

Faroese: veður

Norwegian:

Norwegian Bokmål: vær

Norwegian Nynorsk: vêr

Old Swedish: væþer

Swedish: väder

Old Danish: wæthær

Danish: vejr

Elfdalian: weðer

Gutnish: vädar

Scanian: væðer

Westrobothnian: ver, vider-

Hroðbeorht:

Anglo Saxon Ƿordes of þæs Dæġ: Cnyssan

Anglo Saxon word of the day:

Cnyssan: ᚳᚾᛇᛋᛋᚪᚾ᛬
Verb, To Strike, Beat, Overcome.
Bonus:
ūre: “our”. Singular nominative.
ūrre: “ours”. Genitive plural.

From proto Germanic: Unseraz.

Hroðbeorht-


Anglo Saxon Fuþorc

futhorcrun

Free redistributable Runic chart (Leave copyright in place). It is a bit clunky/cluttered but it is thorough in its sounds and Anglo Saxon Runic names. Some Runes are omitted as they do not currently have known names or sounds. The Anglo Saxon or Anglo-Frisian Runic set is the most complicated and has the most characters. This is due to the complex nature of the Anglo Saxon Language. The title is in West Saxon “The Fuþorc’s Runes”.

Hroðbeorht-


Audio Book Mini Review 2020.

horse-wheel-language

A book of intense detail. The only downside of the audio book is no maps or reference photos. A PDF does exist as a companion but I have not found it. Given the books release date it does not have any of the Modern DNA discoveries and largely ignores what DNA evidence may have been had then which it references at the first. Some of the strongest arguments for the Homeland of Indo-Europeans are in this book and presented with great detail and chronology. A+

 

516fXf8kN7L

The best audio version I have heard, the narration is great and engaging. Beowulf is not a story to jump into with little or no base knowledge on Germanic history, culture, kennings or geography. I recommend reading about some of the well known characters first and getting a grasp of the world it is set in. The poem itself is bogged down by shoe horned Christian themes that would have been unknown in Scandinavia as they remained pagan in many places past 1000AD. Still the finest example of Epic Germanic Poetry in The tongue of the Anglo Saxon. Recent scholarship has led to new theories of its authorship and strange symmetry of Pagan and Christian narratives. A+

(Note) Check out the unabridged Anglo Saxon Audio CD version by Trevor Eaton with a 1 to 1 OE/English translation book. Its quite fun.

 

cxw0-square-1536

The works of Classical European stoic thinkers and modern stoics. A wonderful work to be heard instead of read, filled with ageless advice, viewpoints and rationality. Arguably the ideological foundation of western civilization. A+

 

Edda-Crawford

Read and translated by one of (thee) modern scholars on Norse subjects and language. A joy to listen to but for not seeing the spellings of names and places. I have read the Edda’s and Havamal multiple times but listening was an awesome experience. The (American Western) version of some Havamal stanzas was very entertaining. A+

 

 

hbg-title-9781472107596-5

Much more a history of the English Church and its characters than an in depth view of the traditional Heroic Anglo Saxons at the formation of what would be England. Not entirely missing from the story just dwarfed by the detailed focus of English Christianity, its contributions and reforms set against evolving political strife up until the Norman Invasion. Interesting, detailed and well paced. The last quarter of the book is the best in my opinion and certain sections highlighting female actors in England’s history that could easily be born for the title of shieldmaiden. The most interesting thing I took away from the overall work is that the Heathen Anglo Saxon never actually changed, just names changed. The cults of Anglo Saxon saints kept alive the previous ancestral worship just in a new name. Also the veneration of Nerðus seemed to simply evolve into cults of female worship of Mary or certain admired female elites/royals (My opinion) Very interesting book and worth a listen but a tad tedious. Would love this exact style book but focusing only on the Heathen Anglo Saxon period. B+

Hroðbeorht-


The Hunters Night (Heathen Yule tale)

yulehuntwoden

Late is my departure from this station far afield-

I know too well the night upon I ride-

hooves through ice rip on moor and heath-

the cold night air cuts my face like the sword of winter-

my mistake now inflight hard born to the back of my horse-

the moonlit frozen fields giving solace-

before me swelling in black the holt awaited my ill fated journey-

the closing in of the night sky I know who rides on mist and moonlit ray-

Herne with hound, Woden Shinning Eye-

my faithful gold comb holds the line-

blackened oaks reach for heaven as if clutching hands from the mound-

the narrowing path closing in alas, the oak gate is in site-

the flickering of Elven eyes behind each stone and post betray my flight-

I have drawn the gaze of those unseen in this midwinter charge to home-

merry I made too well and left my host to late to escape the swelling night-

there it it is the gate of the wood-

reigns taut and pace held fast as the cover of oaks break-

a swell of mist has taken the moor, the wind has grown restless-

the path now obscured still bearing hard, a visage doom in the mist grim and unmoving-

upon a ghostly steed the figure stood, a hunter with hat and cloak in grey-

my horse stopped cold as if by unseen reigns, my personage thrown thusly to the earth-

my wits shattered with the doom of my situation-

the hunter now dismounted towards me moves like an eagle to prey, I fail to stand awaiting the cursed spear-

The figure spoke: Know I do you traveler? brave dumb or both is any man in want to wander on such a night-

I lay speechless, The figure spoke: Stand up now son of men. The figure put forth his hand ghostly white in the light of the moon-

In my state I grasped the hand and was pulled to my feet-

The hunters face obscured but for a glint of his one eye-

he returned to his horse procuring a flagon-

The figure spoke: Of this drink take for all chill should leave you traveler-

I drank from the vessel a brew of strange import, my eyes saw, ears heard and of sudden importance could see as if daylight shown-

The Figure spoke: Take to your mount traveler, us to join you are required-

My eyes now gleaming from the brew could see the hunters and hounds in a host of ghostly fury all around me-

To my horse I took, the hunter with spear outreached touched my horses reigns and as if by the haunting ring of that iron doom myself and horse became as the host-

The figure Spoke: Ride hard son of men, cut the sky and moonlit night , the souls await our roaring host-

Ride I did with the host, a booming throng, from the lands bellow came men of ancient times each brought up into the host-

a fleet ghostly horse given until the host could hold no more-

over town and wood we rode bringing the departed Wigenda to our fray-

My mind was lost, sight blurred as the fury rolled-

Awakened by my horse under an oak with still clinging to green, old gold comb you are still in good standing-

I looked upon myself to see if mortal wound had befell me but Lowe to my hands did find ingots of gold-

among the gleaming bits a strange addition did I find, an amulet of a mask with horns becoming birds, it shown blue as if fired from within-

my journey of which could never be told to another I kept at heart-

on the witching night of those old fires, of that old Winterfylleth tide the amulet would begin to ring and glow until the Yule had passed-

To the holt I returned some winter eves but to only hear the din Woden Shinning Eye passing with his furious hunters in the ghostly mist.

Fin-

obviously by influenced other poems, myths and folklore but In my own words.

Copyright 2020 COS.

Glæd Ġēol

Hroðbeorht-


Yule-Ġēol-Jul (hāliġdæg)

Chambers_Yule_Log1864

(Public Domain)

Anglo-Saxon-Norse reference:

þ Th-(Th)or “Thorn”

ð Th-Wi(th) “Eth”

The Yultide is a custom or holiday from Germanic culture predating the suppression and removal of native European customs by the church. The month begins at “ǣrra ġēola” Yule is a season/month of the year. Most of the customs associated with modern day Christmas are lifted from Germanic and Celtic traditions.  The Tannenbaum stems from early modern era Germany  however the custom of evergreens as symbols of immortality in dark winter times goes well back to our Ancient past, possibly even as far back as the hunters and farmers. It should be noted the evergreen decorations were widely used across the world in indigenous polytheistic religions. The word Yule comes from Anglo Saxon Ġēol (G says Y) and is believed to have derived from PIE word meaning joy, however I have found etymology suggested it is related to a word meaning wheel as in the cycle of seasons or Sun. In Nordic countries the word still stands for anything related to Christmas or Yule in the form “Jul”.  Yuletide meaning the “Yule-Time” referring to the period of Yule. In Anglo Saxon there is “ǣrra ġēola” (Before Yule)    and “æfter ġēola” (After Yule). One of Odin’s names is Jolfaðr (Yule Father). This period is also known as Midwinter. In the Anglo Saxon seasons October 31st is Winterfylleð thus making ġēol Midwinter. Many customs representing various aspects of lore like Santa Clause comes from a mixing of stories and traditions. The Jolfaðr gift giver likely derives from Odin but the Greek Saint Nicholas had its influences and various traditions began to merge across Europe. Characters like Krampus, The Tomtens, Elves and more are derived from Pre Christian traditions of the Midwinter. We also see in Sweden the Julbocken (Yule Goat) in Sweden. These Goats draw a carriage with the Tomten aboard carrying gifts. Many traditions in the Alps have Krampus or other Woodwose like creatures who travel with A Jolfaðr like figure dishing out whippings on naughty children. Also Young men dress as creatures and chase young women, a custom likely primordial in nature. The Baltic Countries have similar traditions as well as Slavic regions. Some of these traditions likely passed down to us from the Alpine Celtic tribes. It pervades Indo European culture even after the suppression of our native religions. What we have in America or other western English speaking areas is a spattering of all the traditions brought by our ancestors from Germany, Poland, Scandinavia, Holland, England etc. In reality it is a beautiful and positive Holiday centered around feasting, folk legends, ancient cultural customs and a sense of joy or merriment in the dark half of the year. Those in the Northern hemisphere have a period that is long and drawn out till spring. The prospect of good fun, feasting, mead and rituals to keep kin safe and in prosperity brought hope to our ancestors in the dark winter. Had they not persisted where would we be?

The Wild Hunt:

1920px-La_caza_salvaje_de_Odín,_por_Peter_Nicolai_Arbo

The Wild Hunt or Wild Host is a mythological event from the deep past believed to be taking place between Between Winterfylleð and ġēol. Customs from Germany, England, Scandinavia and The Alps all  depict some form of this ghostly procession. Each depiction lends a local flavor to the cycle but the central theme is Ancient Gods and hunter spirits drive horses and hounds across the night sky in a great booming host. Most well known perhaps is that Oðinn/Woden/Wotan leads this host and has returned to Middangeard to collect the lost souls wandering the Earth. Other stories have þorr leading or Frigga in the form Frau Wode (Wodan’s wife). I have a very deep ancestral connection to this particular folk story in Mecklenburg and Uckermark North Eastern Germany. Frau Wode or Frekka leads the host and brings either misfortune or good fortune depending certain circumstances, she is also followed by a pack of hounds with glowing eyes who can wrought serious damage. Other tales have her simply assisting while Wodan leads though  It should be noted that this Goddess or Form of Frau Frekka/Frick  is deeply entrenched in the folk legends of North Eastern Germany. In England local versions exist with unique local Deities or spirits wandering the winter nights with packs of hunters and hounds such as Herne the Hunter. The concept of the Wild Hunt could derive  from Celtic roots or be equally shared amongst Germanic and Celtic peoples of antiquity. The concept of the Wild Hunt follows the basic native European view that Samhain or Winterfylleð (Among other names) is the opening of the energetic spiritual veil where these mystical beings enter our reality to do any number of tasks on Earð.  Frau Wode would as described above be accompanied by hounds who may slip into your home to warm itself by the fire. If you attempted to remove the hound it would turn to stone and return to life every night at midnight to howl. Each howl was a curse on the family of the offender. Only Frau Wode can break the spell on Christmas eve. I associate the Goddess Frau Wode with Frigga given a decent amount of etymological/linguistic evidence. 

Tannenbaum:

12690-580.TIF

                                                        Glade Jul by Viggo Johansen (Danish Painter)

We know the basic modern Tradition of the Tree is from Germany and was introduced elsewhere by Germans however we do not know how deep the tradition stems back to pre christian times. Germanic tribes worshipped trees and had the Sacred Yggdrasil and Irminsul. The bringing in of Greenery in the winter is ancient in origin and possibly associated with a Yule-Tree like concept  but evergreens as stated above were used across the world. As with many of the discussed traditions it is now merged with other later traditions. I personally view the Tannenbaum as a symbol of life in dark cold times and that sentiment is repeated in the book “The Solstice Evergreen” by Sharyl Karas (1991) that covers the use of Evergreens in several cultures.

A unique tradition among  Shetlanders (Scotland). Article link bellow.

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https://www.scotsman.com/heritage-and-retro/heritage/intriguing-and-unsettling-scottish-island-tradition-skekling-3060580?fbclid=IwAR0Ho7JE-NLu1WgdUz1OGyBYykFJliK8re_psj79LMPNxvlD5a1S5ixYqc8

Photo is from Scotsman.com

Krampus:

Gruss_vom_Krampus

Krampus who has risen to modern popularity is arguably a hold over of much earlier Native European customs amongst Alpine Celts and Germanic tribes who was easily applied to later traditions. We see this custom of dark and light play a roll in the Winter Solstice across Europe. the Dark and sinister yet humorous Krampus and the Jolly wise gift bringer. This combined with ancient beliefs in the Woodwose, Ettins, Elves , Wild men and Gnomes bring these beings front and center for the Yule Tide festivities. We see similar characters across Europe in similar but unique customs to their regions. The magic of snowfall over mountains and the whisping presence of Wotan’s host as the beings of ancient lore visit for a Glühwein or Gløgg. Best be a good host or Krampus might cut a switch. Bruce, Mourice (1958) writes that no other figure could Krampus reflect than the Horned God of Ancient Europe. Depictions of the Celtic God Cernunnos show him fully adorned in Antler headdress in a meditative state. 

1280px-Gundestrupkedlen-_00054_(cropped)

Credit: National Museum of Denmark. Natmus.dk. Gundestrup Cauldron.

Tomten or Nisse:

Glædelig_Jul,_1885

Credit: Nasjonalbiblioteket Norway.

The Nisse (Danish/Norwegian) and Tomten (Swedish) is a small (but sometimes 2ft t) house spirit in Scandinavia who looks like the popular depiction of Gnomes. These generous fellows help out with the farm or house and keep prosperity or good luck for the property.  The Book (The Tomten) by Astrid Lindgren based on poems by Viktor Rydbergand Karl-Erik Forsslund is one of my all time favorite Holiday stories and is available on Audible (Not sponsored). The collecting and decoration of Tomtens is now very popular and has become popular outside of Scandinavia. Should you fail to give the Nisse his due (a special porridge) and the butter be misplaced he may exact revenge on you or your property. In modern Sweden he is the gift giving character. 

John_Bauer_Julbock

John Bauer (1912)  Julbocken.

Jolfaðr-Ġēolfæder:

5a03490076f0bc4bb98d27aa2ea798c2

(Photo Copyright unknown)

There is a myriad of articles about the nuance that led to Santa Clause so I will leave that be. I will however talk about Oðinn as Santa Clause. The old wise one eyed God was known also as Jolfaðr (Yule Father) or Jolnir (Yule one) and he brought gifts but the Reindeer were nowhere to be found. He rode across the sky upon his horse Sleipnir. The tradition of hanging stockings originates hear from my research as carrots were left out for Sleipnir to eat. Oðinn also is one of many figures associated with the Wild Hunt where he rides and claims lost souls from Winterfylleð to Ġēol. Oðinn is among the most multi faceted Gods in that he is both a grim  and stern God of death, battle, honor and war but also a God of wisdom, poetry, ecstasy, mirth, victory (Sig) and feasting.

Georg_von_Rosen_-_Oden_som_vandringsman,_1886_(Odin,_the_Wanderer)

Georg von Rosen – Oden som vandringsman, 1886 (Odin, the Wanderer.

Yule Lads (Iceland):

The Yule Lads are a fairly modern (17th century) Holiday custom in Iceland where 13 Yule lads come to town and cause havoc if not given their favorite snacks. If given their snack a gift will be left in a shoe n the window sill. Some of the terminology is older like their Mother Gryla who appears as a Troll in older stories.

https://icelandwithaview.com/the-13-yule-lads-of-iceland/

Yule Log:

1725 Henry Bourne suggests:

Our Fore-Fathers, when the common Devices of Eve were over, and Night was come on, were wont to light up Candles of an uncommon Size, which were called Christmas-Candles, and to lay a Log of Wood upon the Fire, which they termed a Yule-Clog, or Christmas-Block. These were to Illuminate the House, and turn the Night into Day; which custom, in some Measure, is still kept up in the Northern Parts. It hath, in all probability, been derived from the Saxons. For Bede tells us, That [sic] this very Night was observed in this Land before, by the Heathen Saxons. They began, says he, their Year on the Eight of the Calenders of January, which is now our Christmas Party: And the very Night before, which is now Holy to us, was by them called Mædrenack, or the Night of the Mothers … The Yule-Clog therefore hath probably been a Part of those Ceremonies which were perform’d that Night’s Ceremonies. It seems to have been used, as an Emblem of the return of the Sun, and the lengthening of the Days. For as both December and January were called Guili or Yule, upon Account of the Sun’s Returning, and the Increase of the Days; so, I am apt to believe, the Log has had the Name of the Yule-Log, from its being burnt as an Emblem of the returning Sun, and the Increase of its Light and Heat. This was probably the Reason of the custom among the Heathen Saxons; but I cannot think the Observation of it was continued for the same Reason, after Christianity was embraced.

(Wikipedia)

The Date:

The overwhelming accepted date of Yule is on the Winter Solstice (12/21/12/22) . This being said some scholars have suggested dates such 1/28 based on theories around a lunar calendar. The Mōdraniht of the Anglo Saxons was set at what is now Christmas Eve as attested by Bede but in January (See above) A Night/Ritual/Holiday celebrating female ancestors. This may have been related to fertility ritual aspect at Yule-Tide. The exact date can be described as up for debate but currently most hold events on or around the currant Solstice dates. It should be noted that both January and December held the name Ġēol and the calendar did not match what we have today which has led to debate and theories on the exact debate.

Yule belongs to all of us who’s ancestors contributed to it over thousands of years. It has changed as all things do. some deny its origins, others embrace the ancient past while others see it as something secular however factually inaccurate that might be.  Thankfully we live in a time and place where if we disagree on such details the worst it might end up is a dirty look or argument. Yule is an inspiring time of year for us not unlike it was for our ancestors. Never fear to dig deeper into the past for it is full of wisdom from our forefathers. These posts are just small samples of the folklore from Northern Europe. Take a stroll on Yule at midnight and see if you can hear the distant cry of hunters or Wodan calling his wayward souls.

female-versions-of-santa-claus

(Public Domain)

Glæd Ġēol

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The Nordic Bronze Age (A unique Expression)

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The Bronze age in Europe brought about the most radical change in a world that had been fairly stable under the rule of Hunting and Farmer cultures in Northern Europe. The Chalcolithic saw the arrival of Europe’s defining moments in that the dawn of the Indo Europeans was between the latest period of the Neolithic and Chalcolithic. The Yamnaya culture had expanded from the western Steppe in the form of the Corded Ware Culture with some metal working knowledge. It could be argued that the arrival of the CWC in the already natively established hunter/farmer groups (Hunters since 11000-17000 years ago) (Farmers Since 6000-8000 years ago) brought about the unique conditions of the Nordic Bronze age. In my previous article I discussed the genetic similarity between Scandinavia, Germany, Poland, Czechia, Britain/Ireland, Baltic Sea and the North Sea. These regions became associated with varying cultures of Bronze Age technology. Bell Beaker, Unetice, Hallstatt, Urnfield, and Tumulus culture being in affinity with CWC but leading to what we know as Celts and other Central Europeans. The unique elements of the Funnelbeaker culture of Scandinavia and Norther Europe who’s lineage is the result of indigenous Europeans who had descended from (WHG/SHG/EHG) and arrivals from the Caucasus and Balkans (EEF/LBK cultures) had influence on how CWC evolved after contact.

Again described in my DNA article we know that by the arrival of CWC the dominant Y DNA was I1 and I2. The MTDNA was originally U5 and U2, with Neolithic farmers we see MTDNA H (H is from the Caucasus) arrive and become widespread while the YDNA G2a2 did not persist. This indicates that the arriving farmer women married into pre existing native European groups in large part. Nothing however is absolute. We see the Unetice and Urnfield culture influence what becomes the Nordic Bronze Age and even Hallstatt influence in Denmark. We have discussed the relationship between The Bell Beaker Complex and Single Grave culture who likely installed the high levels of R1B in Scandinavia during the Chalcolithic. The contributions of these groups became what we know as Germanic people. We do not know when exactly each unique branch of Indo European split from PIE but we know that Celtic languages were being spoke by at least the Hallstatt period and Germanic likely by the Nordic Bronze Age. This unique condition in Scandinavia became among the most enigmatic Bronze Age Cultures in the world.

Exactly what elements of Germanic religion derive from the earlier cultures we do not know but we can guess perhaps Shamanic and Animistic elements. Linguistically in various opinions I have read and researched it has been suggested that some functions and elements of Germanic cannot be traced back to PIE. We do not know what languages EEF or Hunters spoke but it would be hard to think that no loan words from the Funnelbeaker culture were absorbed. That being said most of Germanic although distinct can be traced to PIE roots. Germanic mythology appears nearly all derived or comparable to other IE religions give or take the aforementioned shamanistic elements. We also do not know what if any influence Uralic Shamanism had on Germanic religion given their close proximity in the Baltic Coast, Finland and North Eastern Europe.

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The material culture of the Nordic Bronze Age sets a standard that which all Germanic material culture would follow in that the detail only increased over centuries. The Axes, Razors, Helmets, Shields and swords show a flare for design setting it apart from  other Bronze Age expressions in their proximity. 

Denmark:

Bronse-Lurer-Danmark

Public Domain (Wikipedia)  Ritual Lur from Bronze Age Denmark. These are arguably in the same family as the Irish Dord.

Rorby_bronze_age_sword,_Nationalmuseet_CopenhagenSword from Zealand Denmark. Its uniqueness is unrivaled Northern Europe. Open license to repost (Wikipedia) Credit Simon Burchell. 

1280px-Bronze_Age_Helmets,_Nationalmuseet_Copenhagen

Ritualistic Bronze Helmets and Axe from Veksø, Denmark. We see here a culture that forming apart from its neighbors into some truly artistic and enigmatic directions. We can see a comparable with other parts of Europe in many artifacts but these are unique to the Nordic BA.

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The Trundholm Sun Chariot Denmark. Wikipedia Open license to repost. Danish National Museum. The linkages to the later Norse mythology is visible in this spectacular artifact. Sunne or Sol carried across the sky on a chariot led by horses. The origin of this symbol is in contrast to native Scandinavians who venerated the boat but we see in the Bronze Age the chariot of the Indo-European Corded Ware people begin to be see on rock carvings and objects like this.

Axes, Solar or wheel symbols, Phalic fertility symbolism and Chariots…The Indo Europeans have arrived. The emphasis on Axes extends into cultures of Yamna origin such as the spectacular Hallstatt axes but no weapon is more widely depicted than the axe in Nordic glyphs. The stone age Axes of the “Battle Axe Culture” retained symbolic meaning well into the age of metallurgy. We see a similar tradition amongst Bell Beaker People who were buried with both copper and stone axes. the Beaker Folk are believed genetically to have risen from the “Single Grave Culture” in Denmark who were a subset of the CWC/Battle Axe Culture. Pics 1/2/3 Wikipedia Public Domain. 

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Stone Ships found on Gotland Island. (Wikipedia Public Domain)

Stone ship from Gotland Sweden. Another unique element of Nordic Bronze Age however the concept and use may date to the late Neolithic peoples. The tradition regardless persisted well through the Viking age in that boats were a noted tradition in Norse times either being burned or buried. These stone ships are found all over Scandinavia and Northern Germany. The tradition itself may predate Indo European migration and stem from the FunnelBeaker culture or older.

Photo credit Håkan Svensson. (Source Wikipedia). Gallery two (Wikipedia Public Domain) Germany, Sweden, Latvia. Some ships may date from the Iron Age but traditionally originated in Bronze Age or Earlier. *It is my speculation that these could be a late cultural remnant of the megalithic builders who entered and mingled with the Native Hunters in Scandinavia.

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The mighty Axe. Symbol of power among more than just the Ancient Scandinavians. The axe was the default status weapon of the Northern Indo European peoples. Hallstatt and Scythians axes are among my favorite designs however the Nordic Axes are truly interesting  due to the variety. (Top Picture is Public Domain) Pic 2/3 National Museum of Denmark.

Grooming:

Rakkniv_av_brons_skåne

Nordic-Bronze-age-razor

These unique bronze razors from Scandinavia give us a series of designs very distinct in Nordic art. These appear to share design elements with later Gotland picture stones. Do they also tell us of grooming habits?. Photos are of unknown origin. Credit to original artist.

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Combs have traditionally been signs of status and good grooming. The Germanic people have produced beautifully detailed combs well through the Viking age.  Comb is from Gotland Sweden. (Public Domain Wikipedia)

Farewell: 

The Nordic Bronze age is marked by a change in burial practices. The Indo Europeans favored kurgans with rich grave offering. This tradition replaced preexisting burial practices in Scandinavia. A mound and oak coffin are customs of the Nordic Bronze Age but also across the whole of Indo European culture. The Bell Beaker culture brought the custom to Britain and Ireland.

An Oak coffin (Right) Danish National museum.

A Mound or Kurgan Dated to the Bronze Age in Sweden. Photo credit (Richard Johansson) or Kallerdis. (Source Wikipedia)

Burial practices differed in the NBA from the the earlier Neolithic tradition of tombs and communal burials. Grave offerings and elite single graves mark the period. This is to some extent consistent across Yamna dominated Europe.

Spirituality:

We can only compare and make educated guesses as to what the Nordic Bronze Age religion looked liked. We can obviously see a solar worship element. The Solar element can also be seen amongst Beaker folk and Central European cultures. But we are left to wonder what the Deities looked like. We do see figures in the stone carvings that could be Gods however we have no coherent view of what it all looked like. The Indo Europeans had a set mythology and we could postulate that these Gods were worshipped in Scandinavia likely with the Gods of the Native Scandinavians. The Sky Father, Thunder God and Mother Earth would be good guesses. Did the Axe Culture come from a lineage of worshiping an Axe/Hammer wielding God?. Did Nerðus begin her veneration amongst the Mesolithic Hunters who inherited an Earth Goddess from their Paleo European Ancestors? or was she an expression of an Indo European Earth Goddess. We have a statue from the NBA that shows two horned figures wielding axes though to represent sacred twins in Indo European mythology.

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Also shown are other human figures from Bronze Mountings. Picture is from natmus.dk.

We see the themes of Indo Europeans culture fully take hold of all of Europe by the Bronze Age as well as the genetic lineage matching the CWC throughout Europe. Upon the arrival of the Bell Beaker People in Britain it is speculated that these people were responsible for the axe images carved into Stonehenge dated to the Copper/Bronze Age. It is roughly at this time we the greater split in IE groups into the culture and languages recognizable today. The Celts had long existed as the Nordic Bronze Age dawned as it was a later evolution than the rest of Europe due to the remote nature of Scandinavia. This is likely why native Hunter lineage also survived in a higher number  (Haplogroup) than in other parts of Europe. It is the these unique features that make the Nordic Bronze highly fascinating.

Regions included in the greater Nordic Bronze Age horizons might include Scandinavia/Jutland, Northern Germany, Northern Poland and The Baltic States to some extent. This is not absolute however, as finds denoting NBA origin are found further afield than its traditional realm. The Haplogroups associated with the Late Neolithic and Nordic Bronze Age are I (Native European) and R1A/R1B (Indo European/Yamna).

Language:

The information I have read and looked over appears to point to this era as the origin of Proto Germanic splitting from PIE. We have no writing by Germanic people until they were regularly using the Elder Futhark to inscribe. We do not know the age of the Elder Futhark or its origin for certain though a plethora of opinions exist. 

I hope you enjoyed this small glimpse into this era/speculated birth of Germanic Culture.

Interesting Links:

https://www.dandebat.dk/eng-dk-historie9.htm

http://natmus.dk

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What religion were European Hunter Gatherers?

I felt the need to write a bit about this because I failed to cover it in detail in my DNA article. In that article I talk about my closest populations and their culture but what I had not discussed is I have very high Hunter Gatherer Ancestry thus I match cultures who also descend at least partly from Hunters. This is common among Scandinavians which is my Haplogroup, Surname and closest genetic group. Specifically Sweden/Denmark. The downside is we know so little about these people from 40,000-10,000 years ago and although we have found their shamanic tools and burials in Germany and other places we can only guess at the context. What I have found through reading various academic opinions is that they likely followed some form of Animism and Shamanism. *This may reflect why Germanic religion has elements of Animism and Shamanism is not really found in other IE cultures*.

Some opinions shared in this article are based in my own personal beliefs in Animism and I owe no explanation as to why I believe only that I do and it benefits me. I am an Asatruar existing within the reality of an Animistic view. Sections with * denote my opinion and sections not noted are from traditionally accepted sources.

meso

Starcarr UK Antler headpiece.

Animism:

Animism in the most simple explanation is a belief that everything has a spirit. Mountains, trees, rocks, animals, the sky, elements and air have a soul or energy that can be felt. *My view of Animism personally is more related to tangible energy running through animate and inanimate things. I travel purposely to certain areas for reasons of tapping into these energy fields and gaining spiritual harmony. I believe in Ancient times this formed a base spirituality for what later becomes Germanic religion upon the arrival of the Yamna peoples in the north*. *These Hunters had an intimate relationship with the landscape upon which they subsisted. Every forest, rock formation, mountain and seaside cover likely had a meaning related to the life and death nature of the Paleolithic and Mesolithic Europeans. From Mother Earth came stones for cutting, scraping, arrows and spears. From the Herds of Reindeer and Mammoths gave bone and antler for weapons, tools, jewelry. *On cave walls we see beautiful artistic depictions of animal native to Ancient Europe like Bears, Lions, Wooly Rhino, Mammoth, Reindeer and Horse. This to me sheds light on the personal relationship between these hunters and the animals/places they lived. A spirit undeniable in every stone and blade of grass. The sun, an all encompassing power who’s light shown down on man and animals alike. The Indo Europeans had a similar relationship with the Sun as a holy venerated Goddess well attested across Indo-European mythology*.

Deities:

The Earth may have been seen as a Goddess of sorts although we can only speculate. The “Venus Figurines” however show us something unique to the Hunters. An exaggerated female form arguably showing either pregnancy or representing abundance perhaps? The body and genitalia are exaggerated with a purposely obscure face/head. The oldest of these is the “Venus of Hohle Fels” in Germany dated between 40,000 and 35,000 years old. This area of Germany’s Swabian Alb is unique for its evidence of behavioral modernity with carved figurines and musical instruments dating from the Aurignacion. The researcher who discovered the Venus (Nicholas Conard) speculates that the area may show the earliest evidence of recognizable religious practice and spiritual belief.

Venus-of-Schelklingen

Venus of Hohle Fels Germany. 40,000 years.

Photo is under fair Use (Wikipedia)

Evidence of grave goods in burials and anthropomorphic figures in cave paintings  from the upper Paleolithic shows signs of developing belief in the supernatural and ancestry related practices. It should be noted that some evidence exists that Neanderthals may have been developing the worlds first form of Totemism, animal worship and purposeful  burial of the dead. It is suggested but also disputed that a Bear Cult may have existed amongst Neanderthal and persisted into the Upper Paleolithic where it continued in hunting rituals. Although disputed, evidence of Ancestral cult related religious practice and burial customs can possibly be detected in the Upper Paleolithic. * Many scholars have suggested the Venus figurines represent an Earth Goddess among other things. In our Germanic traditions we continue this Ancient European concept with Nerðus, Jord or Erda. We unfortunately have no way of knowing what if anything these ancient Hunters called their deities.

Rhinos_Chauvet_Cave

Cave paintings of European Rhinos from the Aurignacian. Chauvet Cave France. 32,000 years. 

Photo is fair use/Public Domain (Wikipedia)

Lion_man_photo

Löwenmensch (Lion Human) figurine from Germany. 40,000 years. The worlds oldest anthropomorphic figure. 

Returning to the topic of Hunter Gatherer religion we see in this amazingly detailed figure what could be possibly construed as a humanoid animal hybrid, a concept found in Shamanic practices. Nicholas Conard Speculates that the Lion Man figures show strong evidence for the practice of Shamanism, Symbolic communication and modernity. 

Wikipedia.com excerpt:

Jill Cook, Curator of Paleolithic collections at the British Museum, suggests that “unless the sculpture was created slowly at odd moments over several months, someone as skilled as an artist may have been excused from other subsistence tasks to work specially on this piece.

In his October 2017 BBC Radio 4 series Living with the Gods, Neil MacGregor asked Cook

“… so why would a community living on the edge of subsistence, whose primary concerns were finding food, keeping that fire going, protecting children from predators, allow someone to spend so much time away from those tasks?”

She replied that it was

about “… a relationship to things unseen, to the vital forces of nature, that you need to perhaps propitiate, perhaps connect to, in order to ensure your successful life”.


The Cave of the Trois-Frères “Sorcerer” actual cave art VS Later drawing. Arguably a anthropomorphic figure painted on a cave wall in France around 13,000 BCE. *This continues ideas and speculations of Shamanic practice and a deep connection between man and beast. Other arguably Shamanic paintings such a Bison-Man and ritual killing of a bear and “Small Sorcerer” were found in the same cave.

*So far what patterns have we found?:

Possible worship/Veneration of animals.

Totemic Animal/Human hybrids.

Detailed Cave Paintings  of animals.

Increasing number humanoid figures as time moves forward.

Use of Red Ochre in burials and daily life.

Purposeful Burials.

Musical Instruments.

By the Gravettian period we start to see Fox and Wolf teeth being used practically and as decoration and a refinement in the Venus figures of the period. *Close relationships with a proposed Earth Goddess and important repour with local animals species. Burial practices now show signs of ornamented bodies with possessions and purposeful offerings left in burials or simple tombs*. Innovation begins to be seen with tanged arrows, blunt back knives, woven nets and stone oil lamps.

Moravianska_venusa

Credit: Martin Hlauka. Moravian Venus.

DNA tells us U2, M and U5 were discovered MTDNA groups  and males were of YDNA I, IJK, BT,  C1A2 and F.

This period of European history was bitterly cold. We see a retreat from the advancing ice in Northern Europe and a continuation of traditions now migrated into Southern Europe. 

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Credit: Didier Descouens. Gravette points. (Public reposting allowed)

Mesolithic Europe:

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Mesolithic antler object from Poland. Credit Bogdan Walkiewicz.

*I have always been rather mystified by this piece of Antler in that it bares such a great resemblance to the Mjölnir amulet. Of course I cannot confirm this idea, it is just an observation. Did this oddly shaped object relate some spiritual meaning to its owner in Mesolithic Poland?

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Depiction of Western Hunter Gatherer in Alpine Europe. Copyright COS 2020.

It is hypothesized that the Mesolithic WHG of Europe was a union of Paleo European Cro-Magnon (Bichon Switzerland) and Eastern Hunter Gatherer. This group of Hunter Gatherers became the dominant people in Europe and descend from Haplogroup I. Haplogroup I (M-170) is indigenous to Europe. The Baltic Hunter Gatherers were of WHG ancestry. Scandinavian Hunter Gatherer was of WHG/EHG Ancestry but carried WHG Haplogroups. 3/4 of the ancestry of EHG was ANE (Ancient North Eurasian). ANE is an ancestral component for Europeans, Native Americans and Siberians.

The primary components to modern Europeans is majority Steppe Derived Yamna ancestry with secondary Ancestry from Neolithic Famers and Hunter Gatherers. These rates vary depending on the regions of Europe. Hunter Haplogroup I is highest in Scandinavia/Jutland.

Music:

*In our much more well attested Germanic culture as well as other post Indo-European cultures we see music, noise making, singing, Galdor etc.. related to spiritual use. In the Paleolithic as is referenced above we see the signs of modernity with musical instruments that have been preserved as well as depicted in cave paintings. I can imagine music being an inspiring element of possible spiritual traditions as well as social settings. Although so far back in time it might not be too different than how we would view music through a spiritual or cultural prism today. We are after all descended at least in part from these hunters.

Super_alte_Flöte

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Paleolithic Flutes from Germany. Photo Credit: Marco Ciaramella and José-Manuel Benito Álvarez. Publicly redistributable (Wikipedia)  

Conclusion:

My take away from my research is that we can confidently see elements of Shamanism and Animism. We see increasingly complex burial practices and ritual use of figurines, pigments and even *maybe music. The late Mesolithic we see very interesting graves in Germany for just one example. The female Shaman of Bad Dürrenberg Germany from 9000 years ago shows spectacular details:

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Artistic recreation of grave finds from Bad Dürrenberg Germany. An enigmatic and somewhat Awe-inspiring to behold if you imagine it in real life. Artist credit unknown/Cannot see signature.

 

Recreation and grave good from Brno Shaman (Speculated) Burial Czechia 26,000 years ago. Credit Donsmaps.  https://www.donsmaps.com/brnoburial.html

The unique human figure was part of a sort of marionette.

Animism and Shamanism :

The veneration, love and worship of nature and the natural world. The intimate relationship with the world around us and a belief that a spirit exists in all things from animals to forests, stones, lakes and fields.

The ecstatic inner journey towards the Gods and spirit world through intense ritual, trance and musical frenzy. The commune with the primordial  spirit of animals, nature  and the universe.

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meso

An enigmatic but probably not overwhelmingly foreign era of European history and spirituality . We still hunt, love nature, sing to our gods and ancestors and engage in complicated burial practices. They were us, we are them. They are a keystone of our European Identity and culture.

Further reading:

https://www.donsmaps.com/aurignacian.html

https://www.donsmaps.com/iceagehunters.html

https://www.donsmaps.com/hamburgian2.html

I hope you found this enjoyable, I barely scratched the service as usual, I myself am still deep diving into the subject.

Skål

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Celto-Germanic Book List (Non fiction)

Here is a few recommendations of books I have enjoyed over the years or am currently reading.

(I am not responsible for antiquated views or pseudo history in these books but I believe they still may contain interesting information or images)

)))))))Some books may be difficult to find(((((((

The Early Germans By Malcolm Todd.

Rise of the Celts by Henry Hubert.

The Goths by Peter Heather.

Norsemen of the Viking age by Christiansen

The Anglo Saxon Mead Hall by Stephen Pollington.

Aspects of Anglo Saxon Magic by Bill Griffith.

The German Folklore Handbook by James R. Dow.

Hallstatt 7000 by Kern/Lammerhuber.

Bronze age Metal work by Heide W. Nørgaard

Time life books The Celts: Europe’s people of Iron.

The Mound People by P.V. Glob

The Bog People by P.V. Glob

The Celts: Conquerers of Europe by Mohen/Eluere (Abrams Discoveries series)

The Bronze Age in Europe by Eluere (Abrams discoveries series)

The Pictish Guide by Elizabeth Sutherland.

All Osprey “warrior” illustrated books on Norther Europe.

The Northern World by Abrams Publishing.

Stephen Pollingtons wordcraft Old English dictionary.

Old English Grammar/Reader by Robert E. Diamond.

Introduction to Old English BY Peter S. Baker.

The World Guide to Gnomes, Fairies, Elves, And Other Little People by Thomas Keightley.

Norwegian Troll Tales by Joanne Asala.

Swedish Folk Tales and Legend by Blecher/Blecher.

Scandinavian Folk Belief and Legend by Kvideland/Sehmsdorfs.

Th Vikings by Else Roesdahl.

Looking for the lost Gods of England by Kathleen Herbert.

Hippocrene Beginner Language books with Audio Cd’s.

The Complete Grimms Fairy Tales by The Brothers Grimm.

Teutonic Mythology by Jacob Grimm.

Elves Wights and Trolls by Kveldulf Gundarsson.

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Photo from the web. Credit unknown.

Enjoy!

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Rūnes of Þæs Dæġ (Beorc)

Rune of þē dæġ: (Beorc)Beorc: ᛒ᛬ Modern “B”. Birch Tree.

(Purity, Birth, Becoming, Reward)

A Rune of seeds sown, rewards earned through past effort and is often seen as a positive Rune in divination. The Birch is one of the first tree species to repopulate Northern Europe and Scandinavia after the last glacial maximum. It is not to be confused with the Poplar/Salicaceae (Aspen) as they are not actually a related species. Birch is in the family Betulaceae (Alder,Birch,Hazel,Hornbeam) and closely related to the Beech/Oak family. Aspen are of the Salicaceae family or Poplar (Aspen, Cotton Wood, Willow) The Anglo Saxon Rune poem confuses this distinction in the line:

“Beorc” byþ bleda leas, bereþ efne sƿa ðeahtanas butan tudder, biþ on telgum ƿlitig,heah on helme hrysted fægere,geloden leafum, lyfte getenge.

The “poplar” bears no fruit; yet without seed it brings forth suckers, for it is generated from its leaves. Splendid are its branches and gloriously adorned its lofty crown which reaches to the skies.

Note that the line clearly shows in OE “Beorc” but is translated as Poplar when the word for a Poplar is Æspen in OE. I am not sure why the translation is presented in this way. The fact two words exist in OE describing two different trees leads me to believe the confusion is not from the ancient source.

Beorc

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Comparative mythology: Irish/Norse. Odin/The Dagda

Comparative mythology: Irish/Norse.

Irish The Dagda: A great bearded God who has a never emptied cauldron, magic staff and is typically hooded. He is a God of fertility, agriculture, Druidry, magic and wisdom. He is husband of the Morrigan, lover of Boann and father of Brigit, Aengus and others. His staff is called Lorg Mor. His other names include Eochaid Ollathair “Horseman All Father” and Ruad Rofhessa “Lord of Great Knowledge”. He is associated also with the God Crom Dubn. Dagda lives in Brú na Bóinne according to Irish myth. You may know it better as the Neolithic passage tomb Newgrange. In Irish myth it is told the Tuatha De Danaan retreated to the mounds.

Norse Odin/Oðinn: The creator and wisest of Gods , the Allfather and great host who carries the spear Gungnir. God of magic, wisdom, victory, sacrifice and shamanic frenzy. His names include (of over 200) Gautatyr, Grimner, Fjölnir, Fimbultyr and Ein sköpuðr galdra. He is betrothed to Frig and lover of Freyja (same Goddess) father of Thor and Bældæg among others. It should be noted that Odin who is likely a later name for Tyr (Allfather) has cognates with Nuada first king of the Tuatha De Danaan who lost his hand in battle but gained a silver hand. Lugh took over the Tuatha De Danaan. Balor the formorian slew Nuada, Lugh Slew Balor (his maternal grandfather).Both are fatherly Gods who have associations with death, magic, wisdom, traditional masculinity and victory. Scholars connect Odin and Dagda as cognate deities in Proto Indo European mythology along with Deyis Pater of the Romans and Saucellos of the Gauls among others.

gothicsymbol122

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Žaltys of Saule

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Large Snake charm inspired by Žaltys of Saule. The Grass snake in Baltic mythology is a sacred animal of the Sun Goddess Saule. Forged iron.

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Alpendahl Forge.


DNA Testing, Genealogy and European Ancestry: My Journey .

I have thought long about doing an in depth article about my study of family DNA/genealogy and have finally have begun collecting my thoughts. This article is centered on North Western European descent based on the study I have done of my own DNA and family but I hope the content can help anyone of any background with their search.

 

TERMINOLOGY:

Ancient Groups:

SHG (Scandinavian Hunter Gatherer)

WHG (Western Hunter Gatherer)

EEHG (Eastern European Hunter Gatherer)

EEF (Early European Farmer)

Sredny Stog: First horse domestication on the steppe (Pre Kurgan Period) Possibly earliest iteration of the IE.

Yamna (Proposed center of Indo European expansion)

WSH (Western Steppe Herder) (Indo European)

CHG (Caucasian Hunter Gatherer)

SGC (Single Grave Culture) 

BBTC (Bell Beaker Trade Complex)

CWC (Corded Ware Culture)

FBC (Funnel Beaker Culture)

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cMs, Chromosomes, SNPs and Distance

Chromosomes: The 23 human Chromosomes.

SNPs: SNPs are markers with the same alleles as a given sample. Larger SNP chains means higher mathematical likelihood of shared ancestry. SNP’s also determin Haplogroups.

cMs:  The measurement of distance between chromosomes and genetic closeness.

Distance: The distance between you and a sample (Lower number is a closer match)

Some websites use closeness instead of broken down percentages. GEDMATCH.COM and Mytrueancestry.com use closeness in some areas and percentages in others. Both use mixed population and single matching which can reveal very close results. Example being my own DNA matches Sweden on most models and has a low number (Very close) but if compared to samples from Scandinavia and Britain it drops to low 0 numbers meaning an identical admixture. GEDMATCH.com is great fore diagnostics like this.

 

HAPLOGROUPS:

These are descriptions but do not reflect all possible positions or distribution and does not account for all possible groups within Europe.

THE I GROUP:

IJK Group: Originating in Anatolia or Caucusus 45,000 years ago.

IJ (Caucuses/Iran)

I-M170 (I) (Originated in Europe, Possibly in Austria 31,000 to 34,000 years ago) Associated with the Gravettian culture. (I is considered an original Paleo European Haplogroup”

I2: Subclade of I-M170 ( WHG and SHG) Widespread across all of Europe and Scandinavia. Hunter Gatherer.

I1 Subclade of I-M170 starting in the Alps and then moving into Denmark/Scandinavia or possibly originating in what is now Hungary. It is the dominant paternal group of Nordic Europe. Possibly Associated with the FunnelBeaker Culture.  Funnelbeaker Culture was the result of an admixture of Incoming EEF people and indigenous Hunters. 

OTHER PALEO GROUPS IN EUROPE:

C (An ancient Haplogroup in Europe in the paleolithic)

K ( A paleolithic group in Europe descended from IJK)

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R Group:

R (NAHG) Contributed to Yamna.

R1A (North Eastern Europe/Scandinavia) Yamna origin.

R1B (Britain/West/Central/Northern Europe/Scandinavia) Yamna origin. (Dominant Western European group)

G2A (EEF and CHG?) Exists in all of Europe but mainly a Southern and South Eastern European group.

N-N1C (Urallic) (Finland/Estonia/Hungary/Eastern Europe, Steppes, North Asia, Asia)

Distribution map of Groups In Europe: (Wikipedia)

1024px-Percentage_of_major_Y-DNA_haplogroups_in_Europe


Modern DNA and Autosomal results:

Many different companies offer Autosomal DNA testing and it can be quite accurate if you take the time read into the history of different populations and their migrations. Depending on the service your sample panel may be categorized differently and you may notice different results from different sites  like FTDNA, Ancestry, Gedmatch.com etc.

Example using my own DNA:

Ancestry.com lists my highest percentage genetic match as Anglo Saxon/North German/Danish as a region. FTDNA lists this same % as Scandinavian. To someone familiar with Germanic history this makes sense but could be confusing to see different results per site. Both Ancestry and FTDNA list my Continental German ancestry at the same %.

A good comparison of differences is on FTDNA I am listed at 41% Irish and Ancestry.com 3% Irish. This is not an inaccuracy as much as it is a different view of how to place the DNA on the chart. Given the continuity of DNA in the British Isles since the Chalcolithic Beaker Horizon it would be difficult to perfectly decipher between DNA in the Isles, Germany and Scandinavia. Ireland having a fairly high WSH admixture even before the Arrival of Celtic Speakers.

On independent sample analysis from various sites, any comparison of my DNA can come up  Germanic, Celtic and Baltic . My distance numbers are very low (Low is close) regardless if the Sample is Swedish, English, German, Irish etc.. My family has more Germanic ancestry historically but has significant Celtic genetic ancestry as well. . You can use services like GEDMATCH.com to do chromosome analysis, population comparisons etc. You can use Mytrueancestry.com to see your sample matching, chromosome chart by culture and see your actual ancient genetic relatives and analyze the genetic background of each sample. FTDNA provides  YDNA and MTDNA as well as Autosomal and Ancient group origin however the Ancient feature seems a bit hokey to me. One of the more interesting metrics with http://www.mytrueancestry.com is the distribution of Haplogroups across all ancient samples you match. These are organized in an easy to use format broken down into colored pie charts with samples listed as you highlight colors on the chart. Seeing how populations of people with different paternal lineage have effected your Autosomal DNA is very interesting but should be taken with a grain as Haplogroups do not infer Autosomal admixture. I was skeptical of My True Ancestry but with some analysis and comparison it has fairly accurately reflected my DNA that I can check against actual Family Records and other tests.  The service is however expensive, the upside being it is based on Ancient only so they focus well on that subject and constantly update results. They also compare you to well known DNA subjects which is quite fun to see if you match. Not yet mentioned is Myheritage.com whom I had analyze my Ancestry.com DNA raw data and got strangely simplified results. These results omitted almost all but 2 regions but  I did like the platform for seeing living genetic relatives by country. I have yet to use 23/me and will post an update if I do.

A few examples of my results from various sites:

Gedmatch.com: Sweden.

MytrueAncestry.com:  (Ancient) Viking Age Denmark.

Ancestry.com:  Germany, Scandinavia, British Isles and Baltic

FTDNA: Scandinavian-German, Irish and Baltic.

Myheritage.com: North Western Europe and Baltic.

MY DNA BROADLY: Closeness based DNA and Geneaology.

blank_map_of_europe

MY DNA ACCUTE: Closeness Based on DNA only.

blank_map_of_europemydna

I may update these or try to detail this better at a latter date.

MY Haplogroups:

FTDNA.com: YDNA I1a (Origin Sweden) (Anglo-Frisian branch of I1a) (Paleo European Haplogroup)

FTDNA.com: MTDNA H39a1(Origin Ireland/Britain) (H MTDNA origin is the Caucasus)

Northern Genetics and Ancient material cultures:

Cultures/Complexes of Central and Northern Europe during Yamna migration:

Corded Ware Culture (Battle Axe Culture Scandinavia) (North Eastern/Central Europe, The Alps) Arrived in Europe from the steppe. Yamna people mingled with existing Neolithic/Hunter peoples already established to create the CWC horizon.

Single Grave Culture (CWC branch) (North Sea Coast, Denmark)

Bell Beaker Complex (Western, Northern, Central Europe,Denmark, Britain Ireland) Genetically a descendant of the SGC.

Unetice (Central Europe)

Tumulus (Central Europe)

Urnfield (Proto Celtic? )(Used Hallstatt type Swords) Was bordering The Nordic Bronze Age horizon.

HallStatt (Celts) 

Le Tene (Celts)

Funnel Beaker (EEF-LBK/EEHG/WHG) CWC’s arrival in FBC areas may have led to the Protruding Foot Beaker culture which then became the Single Grave and perhaps finally Bell Beaker culture.

))))))THIS ABOVE LIST IS NOT EXAUSTIVE((((((

The development of the Germanic cultural branch of the Indo-Europeans or (Yamna) is subject to heavy debate. The Celtic expansion from the Hallstatt Culture is fairly well accepted and that it descended from earlier cultures like the Tumulus and Urnfield culture is plausible. The debate regarding Germanic expansion is more nebulous but now in modern times the picture is becoming clearer.  The Corded Ware culture is the debated dawn of elements associated with Germanic civilization although they are the forebears of the Celts as well. This culture crossed into north western Europe from the Western Steppe and arguably brought IE culture/Language into Northern Europe. The history of Scandinavia and Northern Europe belonged to the WHG and EEHG who had hunting cultures across all of Europe and combined to become the SHG in the Baltic and Scandinavia. The Kunda Culture is also a likely result of this union. The Mesolithic hunters were joined by the EEF (LBK) across Europe and the Hunter societies largely married into these new people because the Hunter YDNA eclipses the EEF YDNA in Northern Europe. Autosomal DNA remnants of these early Hunters/farmers can still be detected . A culture of people that combined the farming and hunting groups existed at the time of the Corded Ware arrival and we see a major genetic shift in Western Europe but the Haplogroup I1a in Scandinavia remained dominant while R1B and R1A began expanding. The I1a YDNA lines again seemed to marry into arriving R groups but then we see a leveling where R1A and R1B become large groups as well. The Autosomal DNA is derived in Scandinavia and Northern Europe from the Corded Ware culture with sometimes larger admixtures of Hunter Gatherers than in Southern Europe.  The Corded Ware were a late stone age/very early chalcolithic IE group also known as the Battle Axe Culture in Scandinavia due to the large amounts of Axe artifacts found in burials.  We see a new cultural branch begin out of the Corded Ware called the “Single Grave Culture” which rises out of Northern Germany and Denmark. This “Single Grave Culture” is believed to be the genetic ancestor of the Bell Beaker people but a certain amount of confusion had arisen because it was believed that R1A was the line associated with Corded Ware yet all Yamna burials are of R1B lineage. Most “Beaker Culture” was also R1B as well and seems to overtake all of western Europe yet no determined second wave from the Steppe is obvious. The DNA associated with the “Bell Beaker Culture” in the north has affinity with the CWC.  In Britain, Scandinavia, Northern Germany/Jutland/Eastern Europe all have affinity with Bell Beaker and CWC DNA. The confusion however is not as deep as it may seem because new DNA research has shed light that more and more CWC finds are of R1B. This now informs us that CWC was an R group including both R1B and R1A in possibly the same migration. The Single Grave Culture began expanding in the late Neolithic and possibly became the early Copper Age “Beaker Complex” that was not a people but a technological horizon. This horizon was carried by the Western Copper Age expression of the CWC expanding west to Britain and North to Scandinavia from Holland/Frisia with Bronze age Technology that began the Nordic Bronze Age. Hallstatt Celts would also have some influence on the Nordic Bronze Age. The culture that entered Britain had traditions that seemed as well to denote CWC ancestry in that “Beaker People” buried their warrior elite with axes. These early IE Britons match closely in DNA to the North Sea SGC and CWC sites. This would suggest that the majority Northern Europe, Central and Eastern Europe are of basically the same IE lineage since the early copper age with maybe some fluctuation in how much mixing with Indigenous Europeans had taken place then and before as CWC moved across Europe. The further north and especially east in Europe you go the higher admixture of Hunter Gatherer is found. Interestingly in the later Unetice Culture in Bohemia we see some samples with I2 haplogroups showing that males with Hunter ancestry continued to influence and marry into IE groups. In Switzerland we see some CWC sites also carrying I2 haplogroups. Czechia has CWC sites that are R1B and R1A as well as Poland having  R1B CWC sites. In summary the Haplogroups do not tell the whole story  but Autosomal DNA does tell us more that we can use. 

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1WhUiR1AoupXETsh0h9XocLKMq8ics4QrUl4m8BLf6t8/edit#gid=0

Above link is to CWC R1B sites.

——————–

Here is a simple comparison study that I conducted on various samples and their modern day closest DNA matches:

These samples are the distance between the sample and the target population compared. 10 and under are exact ancestry. Above 10 is a contributing Ancestry. Above 15 is a component of Ancestry. Based on mytrueancestry.com’s description. Numbers bellow 10 shows ever greater affinity. 

CWC Switzerland:

1. Danish (7.695)
2. North_Dutch (8.616)
3. Norwegian (8.748)
4. West_Scottish (8.783)
5. Swedish (9.095)
6. Irish (9.305)
7. West_Norwegian (9.326)
8. North_Swedish (9.999

Bell Beaker North Holland:

1. Danish (5.185)
2. North_Dutch (6.258)
3. West_Scottish (6.396)
4. Irish (7.347)
5. Norwegian (7.363)
6. Orcadian (7.364)
7. West_Norwegian (7.545)
8. North_German (8.184)

Bell Beaker Augsberg Germany:

1. North_German (8.033)
2. Irish (10.06)
3. Danish (10.99)
4. West_Scottish (11.21)
5. Southeast_English (11.21)
6. North_Dutch (11.42)
7. South_Dutch (12.09)
8. Southwest_English (12.31)

Bell Beaker Czech:

1. West_Scottish (11.60)
2. Irish (11.81)
3. Orcadian (13.12)
4. Southeast_English (13.52)
5. Danish (14.50)
6. North_Dutch (15.02)
7. Southwest_English (15.44)
8. North_German (16.54)

CWC Poland:

1. Czech (11.76)
2. North_German (12.89)
3. Danish (15.89)
4. East_German (15.92)
5. Southwest_Finnish (16.18)
6. Austrian (16.33)
7. Irish (16.42)
8. North_Dutch (16.99)

Czech Bilina_N_Baalberge CWC:

1. North_German (11.38)
2. Czech (12.82)
3. East_German (13.06)
4. Danish (13.16)
5. South_Dutch (13.33)
6. German_Central (13.86)
7. North_Dutch (14.41)
8. North_Swedish (14.61)

Bell Beaker Czechia:

1. North_German (7.462)
2. Southwest_English (7.625)
3. Danish (7.892)
4. Southeast_English (7.934)
5. South_Dutch (7.959)
6. Irish (8.558)
7. North_Dutch (8.595)
8. West_Scottish (8.907)

Spreitenbach CWC Switzerland:

1. North_German (7.639)
2. North_Dutch (9.500)
3. Irish (9.681)
4. Danish (10.04)
5. Southeast_English (10.21)
6. Southwest_English (10.21)
7. South_Dutch (10.38)
8. Welsh (10.70)

Bell Beaker Amesbury England:

1. North_German (5.343)
2. Danish (7.868)
3. North_Dutch (8.821)
4. Irish (9.065)
5. West_Scottish (9.683)
6. Southeast_English (9.993)
7. North_Swedish (10.71)
8. Swedish (10.72)

As you can see there is relative consistency across all samples indicating shared ancestry across Czechia, Germany, Poland, Jutland, Britain and Scandinavia. Now lets look at Hallstatt and Unetice Samples:

Unetice Culture Bohemia:

1. Danish (7.463)
2. Norwegian (8.418)
3. North_Dutch (8.493)
4. West_Norwegian (8.593)
5. West_Scottish (9.179)
6. Swedish (9.360)
7. Orcadian (9.656)
8. North_German (9.876)

Western Pomerania Unetice Culture:

1. Czech (6.785)
2. Southwest_Finnish (7.018)
3. East_German (8.078)
4. Finnish (9.912)
5. Polish (10.16)
6. German_Central (10.23)
7. South_Polish (10.23)
8. Austrian (11.44)

Hallstatt: (Bronze Age Celts)

1. East_German (8.761)
2. German_Central (8.868)
3. Hungarian (11.56)
4. Welsh (13.14)
5. Flemish (13.57)
6. West_German (13.74)
7. South_Dutch (13.86)
8. Southwest_Finnish (14.09)

Now lets look at Bronze age samples not specifically assigned to a culture:

Bronze Age England:

1. Swedish (5.954)
2. Norwegian (6.669)
3. West_Norwegian (6.997)
4. North_Dutch (7.069)
5. Danish (7.546)
6. North_German (8.859)
7. North_Swedish (9.277)
8. West_Scottish (9.516)

Bronze Age Germany:

1. Southwest_English (6.710)
2. Southeast_English (6.754)
3. Irish (6.831)
4. North_German (8.003)
5. West_Scottish (8.085)
6. South_Dutch (8.516)
7. North_Dutch (9.422)
8. Danish (9.586)

Bronze Age Czechia:

1. North_Swedish (8.055)
2. Swedish (9.576)
3. North_German (10.08)
4. Danish (10.24)
5. Norwegian (10.41)
6. Southwest_Finnish (11.00)
7. North_Dutch (11.20)
8. German_Central (11.87)

Bronze Age Orkney Scotland:

1. Danish (4.110)
2. West_Scottish (4.222)
3. Irish (5.146)
4. North_Dutch (5.550)
5. Orcadian (6.381)
6. Southeast_English (6.427)
7. North_German (7.335)
8. Norwegian (8.080)

Bronze Age Scotland:

1. Norwegian (5.838)
2. Swedish (6.177)
3. North_Swedish (6.426)
4. German_Central (6.436)
5. Danish (6.877)
6. North_Dutch (7.004)
7. North_German (7.108)
8. West_Norwegian (8.534)

Bronze Age Scotland:

1. Danish (5.730)
2. Norwegian (6.026)
3. Swedish (6.315)
4. North_Dutch (6.316)
5. North_Swedish (7.276)
6. North_German (7.318)
7. West_Norwegian (7.926)
8. West_Scottish (7.965

Bronze Age Germany:

1. Danish (4.947)
2. West_Scottish (5.464)
3. Irish (6.245)
4. North_Dutch (6.249)
5. Southeast_English (6.422)
6. Orcadian (7.151)
7. Southwest_English (7.422)
8. North_German (7.848)

Bronze Age England:

1. West_Scottish (5.093)
2. Irish (5.318)
3. Danish (6.308)
4. North_Dutch (6.643)
5. Orcadian (7.565)
6. Southeast_English (7.600)
7. North_German (8.738)
8. Norwegian (9.446)

Now lets have a look at Viking and Iron age samples:

Viking Age Denmark:

1. North_German (7.773)
2. Irish (9.522)
3. Southeast_English (10.55)
4. North_Dutch (10.63)
5. Danish (10.77)
6. West_Scottish (10.88)
7. South_Dutch (11.27)
8. Southwest_English (11.30)

Medieval Gotland:

1. Danish (3.446)
2. North_Dutch (4.082)
3. Norwegian (5.472)
4. North_German (5.526)
5. West_Scottish (5.676)
6. Irish (5.761)
7. Swedish (6.272)
8. Southeast_English (6.975)

Medieval Denmark:

1. North_German (10.38)
2. Czech (11.94)
3. Southwest_Finnish (12.39)
4. Danish (12.40)
5. East_German (12.88)
6. Irish (13.35)
7. South_Dutch (13.35)
8. Southeast_English (13.78)

Viking Age Sweden:

1. Danish (5.099)
2. North_Dutch (6.066)
3. Norwegian (6.093)
4. West_Scottish (6.825)
5. West_Norwegian (7.310)
6. Irish (7.494)
7. Swedish (7.540)
8. North_German (8.059)

Cambridgeshire England Iron Age:

1. Danish (6.357)
2. Southwest_English (6.651)
3. Southeast_English (6.669)
4. West_Scottish (6.770)
5. North_Dutch (7.039)
6. Irish (7.398)
7. Orcadian (7.601)
8. Welsh (7.677)

Iron Age Denmark: (This sample may show higher EEF or WHG admixture given the distances).

1. North_German (15.11)
2. Irish (15.37)
3. Southeast_English (16.24)
4. Southwest_English (16.54)
5. West_Scottish (16.67)
6. North_Dutch (16.74)
7. South_Dutch (16.79)
8. Danish (17.11)

Iron Age England:

1. Danish (6.357)
2. Southwest_English (6.651)
3. Southeast_English (6.669)
4. West_Scottish (6.770)
5. North_Dutch (7.039)
6. Irish (7.398)
7. Orcadian (7.601)
8. Welsh (7.677)

Celtic Briton 1AD:

1. Irish (4.913)
2. West_Scottish (6.180)
3. Southeast_English (6.636)
4. North_German (6.998)
5. North_Dutch (7.221)
6. Danish (7.586)
7. Southwest_English (7.887)
8. Orcadian (8.278)

Scythian Ukraine 600BC:

1. North_German (9.992)
2. East_German (11.11)
3. South_Dutch (11.72)
4. Irish (12.03)
5. Southeast_English (12.45)
6. Southwest_English (12.54)
7. Danish (12.57)
8. North_Dutch (12.58)

119728851_3388154407931774_3073723996123641933_o

(All Samples are derived from mytrueancestry.com and for full disclosure all samples are matched samples to my own DNA. For the sake of thoroughness I ran similar tests against donated samples from a person born in Eastern Germany who had documented ancestry to access even more samples. The results showed the same consistency in DNA. This does not however infer exhaustive surveying as conducted by larger scientific studies)

Again we see an admixture pointing toward a similar genetic base between Jutland/Scandinavia with Britain and East/Central Europe which would point to the advent of the Single Grave Culture as CWC combined possibly with Funnel Beaker groups. This led to the “Protruding Foot Beaker Culture” and hence could have been the catalyst for the Bell Beaker Expansion out of Frisia. Now carrying a popular “Bell Beaker” type of Pottery (See bellow for Iberian explanation). One thing across all these samples is a noticeable genetic similarity of Germanic and Celtic areas that holds up for a very long time across generations. All samples show this similarity when broken down in detailed comparison with ancient populations. As to why some scholars suggest the beaker pottery originates in Iberia is that the pottery itself may not be Indo-European but could have been traded to the invading CWC and associated Yamnaya groups. I think the Funnel Beaker culture could explain the transition from CWC/SGC and then Bell Beaker, this being said the proposed oldest Beaker is from Portugal and theories of it being  imported into Indo-European areas are popular. (See Beaker side note bellow)

Personally and this is my very amateur opinion but I see a greater likely hood of the Bell Beaker Complex as an evolution of the Protruding Foot Beakers of the SGC . As you can visually see the Corded Ware designs were already close to Bell Beaker designs and the PFBC seems to show even greater similarity after the the Funnelbeaker culture designs begin to merge with CWC. Another theory I have if they in fact were traded north originally the later Beakers could be cruder CWC copies as the further North you go the less like the Iberian Beakers they become. I base this purely on physical comparison. 

Compared Example of possible northern evolution of Bell Beaker Culture:

Funnelbeaker Culture:

Corden Ware:

 

Single Grave Culture:

csm_Lerkar_fra_Ny_AAgaard__A27175_01_5199599671_646566886e

Protruding Foot Beaker (Subset SGC)

Museum_für_Vor-_und_Frühgeschichte_Berlin_028

 

Bell Beaker Pottery: 

 

Through inspection one can see many similarities in evolution and design. See bellow for the Iberian origin concept. Because our oldest example is from Portugal the Iberian origin can be referred to, however The PFBC dates in evolution from the same time frame or Earlier than the BBTC.

An Iberian Bell Beaker Side Note:

Although genetically descending more than likely from the SGC in Frisia or Denmark, the Beaker design may have been brought in from elsewhere. The Amesbury Archer in Britain was from Alpine Central Europe however we do not have his DNA. It should also be noted that the Southwestern expressions of the Beaker complex is genetically distant or unrelated to the Irish, British, North Sea and Eastern Branches who are CWC derived. Evidence might point to the Beaker complex resulting from the expression of the Atlantic coastal traditions of Neolithic Europeans coming into contact with CWC or SGC. I said a similar idea in another part of this article but I wanted to expand  by also stating that the Atlantic chalcolithic culture stretched from Iberia to Scotland/Scandinavia and may have been the exporters of the popular Beaker design. This would explain the Corded Ware Genetic lineage of the people in the North using Beakers and its spread from West to East. The Amesbury Archer was from the Alps but was buried with Beaker artifacts in an Indo European style mound. Many items from the Atlantic Bronze age can be found along the West Coast of Europe and in the North via trade.   Some of the Iberian hypothesis led to the Idea that the Celts originated in Iberia but this is now challenged by the more likely Hallstatt origin for the Celtic languages and Culture.   

Article bellow has additional info.

https://www.archaeology.co.uk/articles/prehistoric-pop-culture-deciphering-the-dna-of-the-bell-beaker-complex.htm

The idea that this was a maritime Atlantic material product has plenty of supporters and the theory would explain why it was widespread in CWC territories as an import with no known immigration from Iberia along with the pottery design. The oldest Beaker site was found in Portugal so far yet some still hold the Rhine region as its original expansion because of the CWC genetics of the Northern Beaker burials. It should be noted that Kurgan type burials were not practiced in Iberia nor were there steppe genetics present before the expansion of R1B from the north east at least as far as I can find through research.  R1b later became a very dominant haplogroup in Iberia even though autosomal DNA shows a greater diversity of backgrounds in Iberia. Something that could be resulted from just my lack of access to the artifact catalog but not all of the  elements of the Beaker Culture appear in Iberia and seem more heavily practiced in Britain and Germany/North Sea. The Golden Lunula of Britain/Ireland seem localized as do the gold Sun crosses. The Lunula appear in Spain after Celtization and the Lusitanians. Diodorus Siculus describes the Lusitanians as the bravest of the Cimbri. Frontinus calls their leader Viriathus as leader of the Celtiberians. By the end of the late BC’s Celtic and Germanic people were living and fighting in Iberia. They coexisted with non IE people.

https://www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_R1b_Y-DNA.shtml#Maykop

https://www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_R1b_Y-DNA.shtml

————

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Beaker_culture

)))))Always take anything on Wikipedia with a grain of salt(((((

I do not have the answers to the mysteries surrounding the Beaker Trade Complex so I simply want to present the ideas about its origin. I have my opinions based on the information available to  me which I stated above. I should note that I am purely an amateur having a go at the data available to me and I am not a geneticist or DNA expert. That being said lets continue the anthropology rabbit hole down a bit further.


If we look a bit further forward we see a Celtic dominated central Europe by the Iron Age, who are also ultimately CWC descended. They  appear to follow out of the Urnfield group. The first definitively Celtic group might be the Hallstatt in Austria  however it has been proposed the Urnfield Culture may have spoken a Proto Celtic language. These Celts then spread across Europe covering previous Beaker territory entirely, and at least from a linguistic sense took over Britain but they would not have differed genetically much from the existing Beaker population in Britain/Ireland. At this point in the Bronze age we are seeing the recognizable cultures starting to split and evolve from the Yamna/CWC. Jutland shows Hallstatt/Urnfield influence materially and even possibly was partially Celtic speaking (Given some possibly Celtic Chieftain names) however shortly The Nordic Bronze Age becomes a very unique culture of its own. We see in the earliest Iron Age a new material culture arrive in Jutland, Germany and Poland from Scandinavia more than likely  speaking a Proto Germanic language since the Nordic Bronze Age. This is called the Jastorf Culture and it itself had contact with Celtic civilization upon entering Northern Continental Europe. Genetically we would still see largely no radical change as these groups are developing culturally but would still basically be descended from the CWC ancestry at the end of the Neolithic. By AD 1 the Wieldbark Culture has now migrated to Northern Germany/Poland and are believed to be The Goths from Sweden. Most of the North Sea, Denmark, Germany and Poland  are now inhabited by Germanic speaking Tribes in the vacuum left by the Celts. The Area of Holland/Belgium/Frisia are part of a culture that appears to be somewhere between Celt and Germanic known as the Hilversum/Elp culture. By the Roman and later Germanic Iron Age we begin to see the Known Tribes like Saxons, Angles, Jutes, Teutons, Sviar, Suebi, Ostrogoths, Visigoths, Vandals, Frisians, Rugi, Chatti etc. All of Germany, The North Sea, Denmark, Scandinavia and most of Poland/Czechia is now inhabited by Germanic speaking Tribes however in some cases Roman authors cannot distinguish between them and Celtic Tribes. The Belgae being described as both but contradicting reports are abound.  The Teutons are described as Germanic but some Chieftains hold what are Celtic or Celtic Influenced names. It should be noted that Roman authors were also sometimes confused in regard to separating Baltic and Germanic tribes on a few occasions like the Aestii.  They describe them as Germanic culturally “Like the Suebi” but British in language. Does this mean Ancient Germano-Celtic people were inhabiting Estonia before Uralic languages came to dominate or were they confused as to the difference between Celtic and Uralic languages?  We may not see a great change in genetics simply because the existing population of Central and Northern Europe was from the same evolving culture that arrived with CWC, then BBTC and later evolution was largely material and linguistic. To add to the confusion the Early Bastarnae tribe was listed as German, Celtic or both, even some suggesting Scythian who again were genetically believed to be IE.  The Teutons, Cimbri and Ambrones of Jutland also share this distinction as showing both Celtic and Germanic characteristics. Most likely having been Germanic speaking but show heavy influence from the earlier power of Celts as they controlled early Iron Age Europe. The leader of the Teutons  “Teutobod” shows a Celtic influenced name. Another connecting element between Celtic and Germanic tribes is the very word “Teuton” itself as it is exactly cognate to Celtic “Tuatha”  “Tuatha De Danann”  “People of Danann or Danu” and “Teuton” literally means people, a people. The Celts brought the Iron age to Scandinavia and that influence can be seen in swords and other artifacts as was the Hallstatt/Urnfield influencing some Nordic Bronze Age items. Celtic mythology when broken down shares a great deal with Germanic mythology as do they both with other IE cultures. In the next chapter we now get to dive past the archaeological migrations and basic DNA admixture and on to what separates these ancient Hyperborean tribes from each other by the Iron Age.

 

Cultural Lines:

So what is it then that made Germanic language and Culture so noticeably different than its neighbors by the time they arrive in the Late Bronze/Early  Iron Age?

Germanic culture might not be entirely Indo-European. At the time the Corded Ware arrive in Scandinavia and Denmark we have no evidence of what they spoke other than it was an IE language, we have no idea what the EEF or the WHG/EHG spoke either. The culture in Scandinavia at that time was Funnel Beaker ( hunter/Farmer) who built the stone megalithic sites in the north. Genetically this group (Assumed I1a) absorbed and took CWC women initially and I1a remained dominant. This group now partially Funnel Beaker and CWC produce the SGC and subsequent Bell Beaker cultures genetically. However the lines of I1a remain the dominant paternal line. So we see Autosomal affinity for CWC/Beaker but dominant indigenous I1a in better than 50% of the Germanic population in Scandinavia. As these tribes migrate into the continent they carry I1a,I2a, R1B, R1a and Some times N. In Germanic culture we see elements that are not IE such as the boat symbolism and Shamanic spiritual elements and Animism. Others have suggested a possibility that the Vanir represent the Gods of the FunnelBeaker people and the Asa the invading IE CWC? (TRSTJ) This theme is repeated in Celtic myth as well perhaps denoting the original EEF/WHG population of Britain having certain Gods and then the Beaker and Subsequent Celts bringing IE Gods. in Germanic language we easily see the IE cognates in Celtic, Baltic, Slavic and Latin however many elements exist in Germanic that simply do not follow the predictable IE root. Are these Hunter Gather or EEF language traces?. Whether this idea is correct or not the development of Germanic culture happened between waves of IE in CWC and then again with SGC/Bell Beaker interacting with the native Funnelbeaker group. Perhaps Isolation sets in as the now fully realized Celts dominate Central Europe and the Nordic Bronze age gives way to greater isolation (Maria Kvilhaug) . The admixture of Funnelbeaker/CWC/SGC/BBTC begins to homogenize into a new material culture. Do Uralic tribes contribute to it?  can we assume to some extent as their religion may have influenced Germanic spirituality?.  By the time of the Jastorf Culture and Wielbark Culture we see the new material culture, religion, burials and language groups crash on the shores of Northern Europe. These are now no longer ambiguous tribes possibly associated with archaeological sites  but well established groups with traditions, trading and conflicting in a newly broken open Northern Europe. The Romans had weakened the previously iron bound Celts, they are now moving around and by AD 100 Germany/Scandinavia/Eastern Europe is dominated by Germanic tribes.

What are the possible broken down ingredients of Germanic culture and DNA?

Bullet Points of possible influences:

CWC,SGC/BBTC DNA, Religion, burial customs, organization and weapons. (R1b) (R1A)

Hunter Gatherer and Neolithic farmer DNA. (I1a) (I2a) ( G2A2)

Possible Hunter Gatherer Animism/Shamanism remnants.

Possible Finnic/Uralic Shamanic elements.

Funnelbeaker boat cult and seasonal traditions?  (Hunter/Farmer)

Hallstatt Technology influence.

Celtic Iron Age/La Tene technology influence.

Possibly Hunter or EEF language remnants.

Indo-European languages spoken by CWC,SGC/BBTC.

All these details could have boiled down into the Nordic Bronze Age Culture. We are under the impression by the time of the Nordic Bronze Age they had split into the Germanic branch of Indo European languages.

An LBK/EEF Side Note:

Danish axes 2

 

An interesting note regarding the LBK culture is the practice of burying males with axes as status markers. Could this have contributed to the Battle Axe/Boat axe culture of Scandinavia as the Neolithic farmers began populating Nordic Europe?.


The Triskelion so widely put with Celtic culture was in fact probably an EEF symbol which is why it is found all over Europe from North to South. Found in imagery of both Norse and Celtic peoples with shared ancestry from these farmers is found. These farming people came from the Caucasus, Anatolia, Balkans and Mediterranean coast carrying new cereals and grasses to Northern Europe. They are closely related to the WHG and CHG in Ancient times and split from them around 23,000BC. CHG carry G2a  haplogroup as do the EEF people. Their legacy genetically varies in commonness today but the astounding megalithic monuments impress today as they have for thousands of years.

So in summary what do we see here as an explanation to our original question? Northern Europe is Autosomaly derived from the last SGC/Bell Beaker expansion whether in Britain, Central, Western, Northern Europe or the Atlantic coast. These are descended from CWC. R1B and R1A are both found among CWC as new evidence suggests. Older early finds of R1B in Western Europe could be from sporadic EEHG movement in the last 12,000 years. The further North in Europe the higher affinity with Hunters is found, the farther South the closer to the original EEF migrations. The further South East you see a resurgence in I2A hunter DNA in the Balkans and South Eastern Europe but a still close affinity with IE groups like Romans, Greeks and even Celts. The overall highest Autosomal representation across all of Europe is CWC  in one form or another including Eastern Europe and Scandinavia. Germanic culture is more linguistic/material culture oriented than genetic based on widespread available DNA samples. This true for Celts as they share amounts WHG/EEF but did not exist in a vacuum. They were active players in a massive swath of Europe and Central Asia which might be why post Nordic Bronze Age people evolved into something new was due to political isolation in Scandinavia and only re entered the fray after the Celtic domination of central Europe was interrupted by Rome and other hostiles from further East later on. Celtic Culture seems now a foot note relegated to Britain only but they represent a major point of Ancestry for all Northern European people. We also know through DNA that the Beaker populations of Britain, Scandinavia and Germany/Czechia share close affinity with Germanic DNA meaning that before the arrival of Proto Germanic languages the DNA already existed as the Beaker DNA profile does not change greatly after Germanic arrival but for the increase in Ancient I1A Haplogroups in Continental Europe. The Autosomal stays relatively consistent. This all means that Central, Western, Eastern Europe to an extent and Northern Europe has been genetically consistent since the late Neolithic arrival of CWC. 

I hope my amateur  take on this is found interesting and maybe inspires the reader to do their own research. At no point is any of this intended as a expression of superiority or best/worst people or cultures. I am Northern European so the research sticks within this category of European history and Genetics. I hope it can help those with any type of Ancestry to be open to viewing the concept outside the line of National borders as they have only existed for a short time compared to the age of humanity. Culture, Language, History and the wholeness it brings is much needed today and understanding migration and the difference between culture and genetics can go a long way to understanding your own folk soul.

The Material cultures of Europe:

The Paleolithic Europeans: ,Britain, Central Europe, Southern Europe, Anatolia, Caucuses, Near East) (Homosapien)

Aurignacian: Europe and the Levant. 43,000 ago.


Gravettian Culture: (Europe) I, CT, IJK, C2a2, BT Haplogroups. MTDNA M and U. 33,000 years ago.


Solutreans: (Iberia/Western Europe)  21,000 years ago.

Epigravettian: (in pink) (Europe) 20,000 years ago.


The Mesolithic: Britain,Scandinavia, Northern/Central, Eastern and Western Europe: Hunters (WHG,EHG,SHG)

(See Who are the German people part 2 for broken down Mesolithic Scandinavia maps with tools)


Neolithic Farmers: EEF,LBK and Lengyel Culture etc. (Southern Europe to North Western Europe and Scandinavia)

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Funnelbeaker Culture: (Scandinavia, Germany, Baltic coast, Central Europe)

*Photo credits are in file names* Photo source Wikipedia.com.

 

The material cultures of the North, East, West and Central Europe: Indo Europeans.

Yamnaya Culture: Northern, Eastern, Central Europe and Western Steppe.

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Corded Ware/Battle Axe Culture:

607c41205c1e10c46a2611e3d5e53d47

Single Grave Culture:

2d3660d8-fbb6-48c0-883a-2270e17fbd0c1538d98c701572f9b9feb6b597ff6608

 

https://en.natmus.dk/historical-knowledge/denmark/prehistoric-period-until-1050-ad/the-neolithic-period/the-single-grave-culture/  

 

Bell Beaker Culture:

 

Early Bronze Age/Late Neolithic Shaman England:

https://www.wiltshiremuseum.org.uk/?artwork=upton-lovell-shaman

The shaman has a G2a Neolithic Haplogroup but has elements of metal working buried with him.

 

British/Irish Bronze age:

 

Nordic Bronze Age:

http://www.germanicmythology.com/MISCELLANEOUS/KivikGrave.html

Central Europe: Bronze Age.

Únětice culture: A widely traded Bronze Age Culture in Central Europe.

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Tumulus Culture: 

 

Pomeranian Culture.

0857_Pomoranische_Kultur,_Hallstattzeitlicher_Bronzedolch_im_Kraków-Museum

 


Urnfield Culture. (Proto Celts?

 


Hallstatt Culture: Central Europe, East Britain. Celts.

 

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Iron Age Culture:

Iron Age Hallstatt:

La Tene Culture Celtic Iron Age: Central Europe/Britain. Celts

Hallstatt_LaTene

 
Fully developed Germanic Culture:
Wielbark Culture: (Northern Poland) (Associated with the Goths/Germanic people)
Jastorf Culture: Early Iron Age Germany/Denmark. RED.

Archeological_cultures_in_Northern_and_Central_Europe_at_the_late_pre-Roman_Iron_Age

 

 

Goths: Ostro/Visi.

Goths/Gutes/Geats: Gotland.

Denmark Iron Age:

Germania: (Franks, Lombards, Alemannic, Thuringians, Chatti etc..)

Anglo Saxon/Vendel Era: (Germany, England, Denmark, Holland, Frisia, Sweden) “Pre Viking age”.


Viking Age: 793-1100 CE

The images above are not owned by me unless otherwise stated. I have collecteed the images from google search, Pinterest and Wikipedia. If you own one of these images qand want it removed please leave a comment. Nothing here was done outside the realm of example, education and reference. No violation of rights are intended.

VIDEOS to further explore:

 

The European Bog Bodies:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bog_bodies#Kreepen_Man

A tradition in Northern Europe since the Mesolithic. Bodies have been found in Denmark, Ireland, Germany, Holland, Britain, Poland, Sweden and Norway.  These traditions begin in the mesolithic and and go through the Iron Age.

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The Wooden God Poles:

Shigir Idol Russia (Mesolithic)

 


Dagenham Idol Briain, 2250BCE.

800px-Replica_of_the_Dagenham_Idol_in_the_Museum_of_Londonethandoylewhite


Slavic Figure Brandenburg Germany. 5th century CE.

 

0450_Anthropomorpher_Pfahlgott_Altfriesack_anagoriaanagoria

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Wittmoor Figures Lower Saxony Iron Age.

800px-Wittemoor_Stelencreditbullenwachter


Broddenbjerg idol Denmark 535–520 BCE.

800px-Nationalmuseet_-_Cophenaghne_-_Male_figurestefanobolognini


Braak Bog Figure 2nd or 3rd century BCE Schleswig-Holstein.

Braak_Bog_Figurestievacredit

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropomorphic_wooden_cult_figurines_of_Central_and_Northern_Europe

 

Celtic Stone Figures:

Boa Island

https://www.flickr.com/photos/jorbasa/6108703723/in/gallery-celtico-72157630432487128/

https://www.flickr.com/photos/celtico/galleries/72157630432487128/

https://twitter.com/DarkCloudBeing

A few interesting Links on Celtic archeology:

https://www.dw.com/en/secrets-of-a-celtic-princess/g-18088352

https://womenofhistory.blogspot.com/2015/12/archaeologists-found-2600-year-old.html

geatishsymbol

 

Now on to some practical stuff about etymology and ancestral records.

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GENEALOGY:

This is the hardest part as far as writing an article but I will do my best share my tips on finding records and information.

Tip Number 1: Names.

Do not be married to your surnames spelling, there is a chance that the name has changed  and has many variants. If you live in America it could have been changed to be easier or more phonetic at Ellis Island or before. I have one ancestor who’s name had the same meaning but changed spelling, I had to purchase access to a record to get enough info to confirm it was the correct person.

Spellings:

All languages have etymological trees and those trees have branches.

Example:

Siegfried: A well known German Name.

Variants in German, Dutch Scandinavian dialects:

Sievert, Siever, Siefert, Sigvard, Siewart, Sievers, Sieffert, Sivert, (Sivrit (MHG) (Sigard(ON) Sigfred, Sigfrid, Sigfryd.

All names are from the same root name from Pro Germanic.

Each spelling can tell you what region the name came from and how it evolved. This method can be used to recognize either obviously related names or ones that very greatly but have the same origin.

English and Irish Names are no different, Germanic names were left by Germanic people and Celtic names were left by Celtic people or at least influenced by the culture related to the name. Norman names however were widely taken by Celts and Anglo Saxons alike. Norse and Anglo Saxons used “SON” or “Sen” in name endings but it was rarer on the continent but “sen” endings are found in Northern Germany. Similar endings exist in other languages for the same reasons. MAC and O before Celtic names denote “son of” and “Fitz” before Norman names have the same meaning “Son of or of this person”. In Slavic “Ski” denotes nobility. In Spanish names with EZ or IZ endings may denote Visigothic origins.  Germanic names have high numbers of variants and endings, the etymology is a hobby all its own but knowing something about words, languages and etymology can help you in your search. 

Italian and Greek names would obviously derive from those cultures but we find Roman and Greek names in other regions due to popularity. Many Italian and Spanish names are of Germanic and Celtic origin as well. Slavic names have influenced Germanic names and vise versa. The Celts spread as far east as Anatolia at one point and influenced many cultures.

http://www.vikinganswerlady.com/ONNames.shtml

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_name#:~:text=Adjectival%20names%20very%20often%20end%20in%20the%20suffixes%2C,typically%20Polish%20or%20typical%20for%20the%20Polish%20nobility.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanic_name

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_onomastics

Being Relentless:

 

The best advice I can give on the actual meat and potato’s part of ancestry is the relentless curiosity you need to have. Check again and again looking over multiple records, census, draft cards, comparing dates, names and variations. As stated above you are going to be hindered if you are emotionally attached to certain spellings or if your DNA comes in off from what you expect from geographic origins. Of course this never takes your culture away that you grew up with but may reveal more than you expected to find. Another skill to hone is trying to decipher hand writing on census and other ancestry related documents. This may seem obvious but I learned over time to be accustomed to the various ways the spellings looked in good and bad hand writing. This also applies to places of origins and country names. An example I could give is my great grand parents on my fathers side were from Poland or so we thought. Turns out their papers said Aust-Poland or an area within the Austro-Hungarian empire. They were specifically from Galicia and had a name more common amongst Croatians and Slovenians than Poles. The story was a bit more complicated but interesting in its own way. Don’t disregard records that may have one missing piece of data or a misspelled name. Many mistakes were made when recording this data and dates can be years off record to record. Often times a countries border could change and later be called something else in later records for example: Some of my ancestors were listed in later records as from Germany but in earliest records their kingdoms were listed such as Hesse, Prussia, Southern Denmark, Saxony-Anhalt, Frisia etc…when later they were states within the country of Germany. This to me is the fun part of research, going back and seeing what was happening at the time. I know my fathers line have a Swedish name and were from Prussia (North Eastern Germany) and the name is found in Sweden and North Eastern Germany. It is etymologically associated with the Goths. I found these details through maps, books, etymology lists, historical records and various documents found on current and defunct websites.

Websites I have used are:

Ancestry.com (Good records but can be costly, DNA is good)

FTDNA.com (Lots of tools and Haplogroups but can be expensive)

Myheritage.com (Good for finding living genetic relatives by country)

Familysearch.org (genealogy website associated with the Mormon Church but great records and data) FREE)

Rootsweb.com (Can have rare records)

Mytrueancestry.com (Great for ancient DNA, Culture comparison, tribal associations and modern DNA populations. Expensive)

Other websites that can be helpful are:

Youtube.com (cultural documentaries, history, DNA research)

Wiktionary.com (etymology, word/name origins)

Wikipedia.org (history, maps, DNA info, Archeology)

Eupedia.com (DNA, Articles, History, Human migration, DNA family trees)


I hope this amateur look at my European DNA proves interesting and can put some light on the subject. I am not myself even close to truly deep diving into the subject of European Anthropology.  It will be one of many coming up, including some fun comparative mythology, more Anglo Saxon word etymology, hopefully some serious writing in Anglo Saxon and new Blacksmithing works and cultural crafting. 

I am sure there are missed details and mistakes, I have edited this 25 times (not a joke) but will continue to refine it as I am sure I will notice issues as my knowledge base grows. All possible cultures and their interactions have not been named as the focus in that section is primary well defined pre historic cultures.

Skål

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serpentsshield


Image

The Call of Steel

Image1call


First strike 2020

Hammer strike that is.

120199524_2736901729931003_5120372170792157614_o

First forging since 2018. This amulet is inspired by a variety of sources, Primarily Hallstatt style spiral brooches but also Bronze age Axe cultures across Central and North Eastern Europe. The Axe could represent any of the Axe wielding Thunder Gods from Perkuns, þunar or Perun.

Forged Iron.

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Anglo Saxon word of se dæg: æþele

Anglo Saxon word of se dæg:

ᚪᚾᚷᛚᚩ ᛋᚪᛉᚩᚾ ᚹᚩᚱᛞ ᚩᚠ ᛋᛖ ᛞᚫᚷ᛫

æþele (noble, hero,) from Proto Germanic “aþalaz” . ᚫᚦᛖᛚᛖ᛫

Also: Ætheling (prince)

This was a dominant in Anglo Saxon naming tradition.

Example: Æþelstan, Æþelwulf, Æþelred etc…

Compare:

West Germanic: *aþal

Old Frisian: *athel, *ethel

Saterland Frisian: Oadel

West Frisian: adel

Old Saxon: *athal

Middle Low German: adel, adele, addel

Low German: Adel

Westphalian:

Ravensbergisch-Lippisch: iadel

Norwegian: adel

Swedish: adel

Finnish: aateli

Old Dutch: *athal

Middle Dutch: adel

Dutch: adel

Estonian: aadel

Old High German: adal, edil, athal, adhal

German: edel, adlig, adelig

Old Norse: aðal

Icelandic: aðal

Faroese: aðal

———

Bonus:

Sandwiċæ (Sandwich (a town) a settlement in Anglo Saxon England ( a town in Kent). The name passed down later to be related to the food. From the words “sand” ( to send, mission) and “Wic” (settlement)

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Anglo-Saxon wird of se dæg: Writan

Anglo-Saxon wird of se dæg:

ᚪᚾᚷᛚᚩ ᛋᚪᛉᚩᚾ ᚹᚩᚱᛞ ᚠ ᛋᛖ ᛞᚫᚷ᛫

Wrītan (to write, tó engrave) from Proto Germanic “writana” . ᚹᚱᛁᛏᚪᚾ᛫

Compare:

West Germanic: *wrītan

Old English: wrītan

Middle English: writen

Scots: writ, wryte, wret

English: write

Old Frisian: wrīta

Saterland Frisian: riete

West Frisian: write

Old Saxon: wrītan

Middle Low German: wrîten

German Low German: rieten

Low German: rieten, reeten (Westmünsterland)

Old Dutch: *wrītan

Middle Dutch: writen

Dutch: wrijten

Old High German: rīzan

Middle High German: rīzen

German: reißen

Danish: ridse

Luxembourgish: räissen

Norse: ᚹᚱᚨᛁᛏᚨ (wraita)

Old Norse: ríta; rita

Icelandic: rita

Faroese: rita

Norwegian: rita

Old Swedish: rita

Swedish: rita

———

Bonus:

Heofonlīċ Boga (Rainbow) or literally ( Heavenly Bow) from „heofonlic“ and “boga”.

More normalized as “Reġnboga” literally (rain-now) . ᚱᛖᚷᚾᛒᚩᚷᚪ᛫

Compare:

Old English: reġnboga, rēnboga

Middle English: renboge, reinboȝe, reinbowe

Scots: raynbow, ranebow

English: rainbow

Old Frisian: reinboga

Saterland Frisian: Rienbooge

West Frisian: reinbôge

Old Saxon: *reganbogo

Middle Low German: regenboge, regensboge

German Low German: Regenboog

Low German: Regenbaag, Regenbagen

Plautdietsch: Räajenboagen

Old Dutch: *reganbogo

Middle Dutch: rēgenbōge

Dutch: regenboog

Old High German: reganbogo, reginbogo

Middle High German: rëgenboge

German: Regenbogen

Hunsrik: Rehnbohe

Luxembourgish: Reebou

Vilamovian: ranaböga, rȧnaböga, rȧnböga, raenaböga, rǡnabȫga

Old Norse: regnbogi

Icelandic: regnbogi

Faroese: regnbogi

Norwegian: regnboge, regnbue

Old Swedish: ræghnbughi, ræghnboghi

Swedish: regnbåge

Danish: regnbue

Elfdalian: raingenbugi

Gutnish: regnbuge, regnbugi

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117228006_2691327584488418_5588624466758509305_n

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Anglo-Saxon word of se dæg: Hlutor

Anglo-Saxon word of se dæg:

ᚪᚾᚷᛚᚩ ᛋᚪᛉᚩᚾ ᚹᚩᚱᛞ ᚩᚠ ᛋᛖ ᛞᚫᚷ᛫

Hlūtor (pure, clear, sincere) from Proto Germanic “hlūtraz”. ᚻᛚᚢᛏᚩᚱ᛫

Compare:

West Germanic: *hlūt(t)r

Old English: hlūtor

Middle English: lutter

Old Frisian: hlutter

Old Saxon: hluttar

Old Dutch: luttira (plural)

Middle Dutch: luter (Middle and Modern Dutch louter is via High German)

Dutch: luyter (early modern)

Old High German: hlūtar

Middle High German: lūter

German: lauter

Dutch: louter

Gothic: 𐌷𐌻𐌿𐍄𐍂𐍃 (hlūtrs)

Bonus:

Orlæġ (Fate, Orlog, Orlay, Destiny) from Proto Germanic “uzlagą”. ᚩᚱᛚᚫᚷ᛫

Compare:

Old English: orlæġ, orleġ; orleġe

English: orlay

Old Frisian: orloch

North Frisian: oarloge

West Frisian: oarloch

Old Saxon: urlagi, *orlag; *orlagi, *orleg

Middle Low German: orloge, orlage, orlege

Low German: Orlog

Old Dutch: *orlog

Middle Dutch: orloge, oorlog

Dutch: oorlog

Old High German: urlag, urlac

Old High German: urlaga

Middle High German: urlage

Old Norse: ørlǫg

Icelandic: örlög; örlygi

Norwegian: orlog

Swedish: örlig

Danish: orlog

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94118862_2608456109442233_7389236485372772352_n

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