The contributions of the Iberian Peninsula, consisting of the nations of Spain and Portugal, are mind boggling. These two nations made an indelible imprint on the history of the modern world.
This is about genetics, not culture. I don’t think there was a lot of intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews, although I wonder if, after the start of the Inquisition, conversos assimilated more into the general population.
BTW proud Spanish American here of grandparents from Spain. I am very proud of the fact that Spain is the most ethnically mixed people in all of Europe throughout time. WE have at least 13 different mixes in our DNA. They would be Iberian, Celtic, Phoenician, Greek, Roman, Carthaginian, Moorish, Berber/ Guanche tribes, Arab, Germanic, Viking, Persian, Jewish, Gitano and a few more.
@@josee18 And the lot of more and more peoples...los guanches eran tribus de las Islas Canarias, en efecto. Cuántos fueron los que conformaron nuestros ADN? Todos los pueblos que pasaron por Hispania, se pasearon por ella, tuvieron religión y vida privada? Qué análisis genetico se ha hecho de todos ellos, comparandolos con nuestros analisis reconstructivos de apellidos y familias desde 1585, nuestros expedientes de limpieza de sangre (siglos XVI-XVII) expedidos por los Justicias municipales en base a los datos citados para acceder a universidades y empleos gremiales en toda la Corona Hispánica? Estos dos puntos basados en registros simultáneos eclesiásticos, judiciales y administrativos son los que fedatan y validan nuestro ADN: son los equivalentes a nuestros actuales registros civiles. Que no te engañen, España. Nosotros tenemos validada ya nuestra historia y nuestro origen. Saludos a todos.
Bro, you are not spanish you were not born there you are not accepted and you likely don’t have all the dna of the people you mentioned, that’s not your history. Have some self respect 😭 por que los latinoamericanos somos tan acomplejados? Dios.
@@angyliv8040 -Con todo respeto, y siendo español y habiendo estudiado mucho el ADN y la historia y las migraciones, discreparía en varios aspectos. Por supuesto que este es un mundo libre, cada uno tiene derecho a creer lo que hace. Si bien estoy de acuerdo, somos principalmente un pueblo y una nación ibérica, hubo muchas mezclas adicionales en la tierra ibérica, esto incluiría a Portugal. Sin embargo, dicho esto, España ha tenido más mezclas y colonizaciones que su país vecino. Esto podría deberse al componente mediterráneo o al comercio y la influencia e interacción que tuvo España en todo el mundo. Existen al menos 13 mezclas de complementos en el pueblo español. Estas serían las tribus originales de íberos del norte de África, los celtas, los fenicios, los cartagineses, el imperio persa, los romanos, los griegos, los vikingos, los visigodos, los moros, los bereberes, los guanches, los visigodos, los vándalos, los Comunidad gitana, Los judíos.
Martínez is not of Arabic origin: it means son of Martin, thus seams Visigoth. But Martin or Martinus is Roman, so it probably originated by the way Visigoths (whom also spoke Latin) designated the son of Romans called Martinus!
Your main dish in Spain came from west African rice your castle your paved roads in street irrigation system! Baths etc we cultivated ALL OF EUROPE!! Dnt forget that go look it up
@@kennywilliams6991 All of those were copied, stolen, appropriated from the Persians and Greco-Roman Byzantines by Arabian Desert tribesmen . . . *Qur'an 7:166* “When they persisted in violation, We said, “Become disgraced APES!’” *Qur'an 5:60* "Those who made Allah angry He made them APES, PIGS, slaves.'" *Qur'an 31:29* “Do you not see that Allah has subjected the sun and the moon, _each_ ORBITING for an appointed term, and that Allah is All-Aware of what you do?” *Qur’an 36.38* “The _sun_ TRAVELS for its fixed term. That is the design of the Almighty, All-Knowing.” *Qur'an 13:3* “It is He who spread the Earth…” *Qur'an 15:19* “The Earth, we have spread it…” *Qur'an 20:53* “Who has made for you the Earth as a bed...” *Qur'an 43:10* “made the earth as a bed . . .”
@@Frasco... Mentira: no nos convertimos nunca al Islam porque nos pusieron un pago de impuesto. Desde 711 hasta 1492 batallamos contra ellos. En 1212 los tres reyes de Navarra, Castilla y Aragón en la enorme batalla de las Navas de Tolosa echaron a los moros a la cuenca del Guadalquivir. De alli en adelante Castilla los redujo a territorio de Granada hasta que Isabel I y su esposo Alfonso II de Aragon, los Reyes Catolicos, tomaron Granada y Boabdil les entrego las llaves de aquella ciudad. Despues comenzamos el Descubrimiento de nuestro planeta REDONDO y creamos la España de la Hispanidad: reproduccion de España en virreinatos y las leyes de proteccion de gentes primeras en el mundo. Ver shorts: TH-cam:"Enigmas de la Historia" cientificamente hechos por profesionales de la Historia. Saludos a todos.
Please do not invent García is of basque origin not arabic.. Díaz is patronimic of Diego (James) not Celtic. Pérez is patronimic of Pedro (Peter). Not arabic. Etc OMG.
@@lapislazulii141 Last time I checked, the suffix EZ is of CELTIC origin, baby. Have you even ever wondered the relationship, the similarities in sound between the suffix in the names of Celtic warriors like Vercingetorix (IX), and (EZ)?
"I don’t know where you got this study; I worked on a genetic analysis project of Spaniards just two years ago, where over 300,000 Spaniards participated, and the results were very different, aligning perfectly with the history of Spain. There was no mixing between Muslims and Christians (Christians in the territories conquered by Muslims were treated as second-class citizens and were prohibited from marrying Christians). Furthermore, Spain expelled Muslims and Jews from the peninsula and its islands, and in fact, the Moorish/Arab genetic lineage left in southern Spain is less than 2%."
Do you have a link to your study? Because 2% of arab DNA doesn't make much sense, since many people in LATAM that have arab DNA they have 2%? Another point, most Arabs left Spain slowly, not all at once, it was a long process.
@@DEonaraRacaso no sabes que en Latinoamérica llegaron entre los siglos XIXy XX más de 14millones de árabes y de medio oriente….. hoy contando sus descendientes tal vez lleguen a ser millones y millones más…..ahí lo tienes, la misma Shakira tiene origen árabe o Shalma Hayek….. qué tiene que ver eso con la península ibérica…..
¿García, Martínez y Pérez de origen árabe?. García, probablemente del vasco "hartz", oso o de garza. Martínez de Martín, nombre que alude a Marte, dios romano de la guerra y Pérez viene de Pero, que es Pedro. Precisamente gente con estos apellidos pelearon en la Reconquista contra los musulmanes. Para que te fíes de un documental sobre España hecho por anglosajones
Garcia de Garza. De Vasco no tiene nada, en todo caso de Navarra. Garcia Rey de Galicia y Portugal. Falleció siendo prisionero de su hermano, el Rey Alfonso, en el castillo de Luna Barrios en León. Fue el tercer hijo varón del Rey Fernando I y la Reina Sancha de León. Sus abuelos paternos fueron el Rey Sancho Garcés de Pamplona y la Reina Muniadona de Castilla. Sus abuelos maternos fueron el Rey Alfonso V de León y la Reina Elvira Menéndez. Sus hermanos Sancho y Alfonso recibieron los reinos de Castilla y León. La división del patrimonio, a la muerte de Fernando, produjo grandes conflictos entre los hermanos García y fue el primero en perder la corona. El Rey Garcia de Galicia, está enterrado en el Panteón de Reyes de León, junto a sus padres y algunos de sus hermanos. Murió en 1090.
Te das cuenta de que cuando mis antepasados llegaron a esta parte de los Estados Unidos de América, eran mestizos y lobos de Méjico que eran "soldados españoles" estacionados en presidios españoles en lo que era Nueva España. También tengo una gran cantidad de ADN maya en mí. La línea Y-DNA sigue solo la línea de machos.
Spain doesn't mean "land of rabbits", that's something some used to repeat in the past but it's been refuted. It was the most western land in the old ancient known world and that's very significant. It was also very relevant because of its metals so the academy now debates between something related to "west" or "where the sun sets" or "land of metals". Other mistakes: The surname Garcia comes from the north of Spain and it's vasque origin, not arabic. Also, the fact of having an arabic surname it doesn't mean arabic dna, it only means arabized ancestry, locals arabized. Another one, Guadalupe is a mix of arabic and latin "wadi + lupus", "river of wolves". Also, to associate most of the andalusian dna with arabs is an old stereotype and wrong. When muslims left, many towns were without population and people from the north occupied these towns. You can find unexpectedly many people with blonde hair and blue eyes in the south.
I love all the information, thank you. Muslims who ruled over the Iberian peninsula for almost 800 give or take because the Christians did a good job never giving up. Fun fact though, it's really not that you have a bias against muslims, don't want to make any assumptions here, majority of muslims didn't leave, they were murdered. They were murdered. I liked this one, was quick and well done th-cam.com/video/I114iWNpDTs/w-d-xo.htmlsi=Eyy1WFojE_j13zYZ Enjoy, and again, thank you.
En el siglo XVIII el rey Carlos III repobló Jaén con alemanes ubicados en las minas de Almaden de mercurio. De ahí provienen los rubios con ojos azules de una parte de la poblacion española.
@@luzortizgarcia-bustelo Los rubios de ojos azules de una parte de la poblacion Espanola de esa region, claro. Porque los pocos rubios de ojos azules los hay en otras regiones de Espana.
@@telemakhos31 the name of Spain "land of rabbits" was wrotte by Strabon when he drescribe ancient Spain. I'm agree with you in your's commentary. The spanish population was controlled the ADN of everybody insideland by the individual document named "limpieza de sangre" .
Being Hispanic is the most rich mixed. Among the many mixed of ethnic backgrounds we have in our blood, we are descendants of the powerful Spanish Empire, Inca and Aztec Empire. Also, let's not forget that in our veins, run blood directly from the mighty and powerful Roman Empire.
@@Burujithe think is...muslim dont mix with iberians. They kill them or enslave them.the most % of árab dna in Spain is in the north...not in any región dominated by the califates....learn history.
There are many examples of anglo-Hispanics, including Irish influence especially in South America, e.g., Anya Taylor-Joy an Argentine actress, O'Higgins, the liberator of Chile, Vicente Fox, ex-president of Mexico, Almirante Brown of Argentina, Paraguayan writer Juan O'Leary, etc.,
New mexico was not colonized until 1598 when Don Juan De Onate arrived from Zacatecas. NEW MEXICO WAS Colonized before Arizona, Texas and California. Only florida , the Caribbean, south / central americas were colonized prior to the sourhwest. There were no spanish towns prior to that. I TOO am a decended of those who came with Onate in 1598 and then in 1692 after the spanish returned to new mexico after the pueblo revolt of August 10th, 1680. The spanish crown did leave some priests at some of the pueblos pior, but they were killed once the expeditionary forces left prior to 1598. Coronado did explore 30 yrs prior to onate but only did just that.
I completely believe you. Even Mexicans ignore their European roots? Those bunch of mestizos have been brain-washed and still think that they descent entirely from Aztecs; even those blue-eyed ones believe so, as if they only have one physical nature. Ever wondered why some Mexicans are "whiter" than let's say Andalucia? Well, the reason is that Mexico was colonized mostly by Cantabrians and Basques, specially in the north. Just look at important names like Durango, Reinosa, y Matamoros. The Spanish spoken in Mexico and other regions of Latin America where Basques migrated was GREATLY INFLUENCED by Basques. Example: in Mexico, to describe a short person, they use BREVE(Castillian) but CHAPARRO(Basque) is the usual word. That's why they refer to a short bush as chaparral. Strong cultures with strong roots certaily have an impact in the world.
Martinez comes from Martins not Visigoth, what's wrong with you people? Why are you guys so eager to tie yourselves to a nonexistent made up history? There were no Germanic speaking Hungarian Barbarians in Iberia! Stop the nonsense!
@@gundisaluusmenendiz MARTÍNEZ, It comes from the name Martín plus -ez which, like other patronymic surnames ending in -ez, means "son of". The map shows the most common surname in each of the provinces of Spain. Martin is a patronymic surname of Latin origin, very common in Europe.
@@ardibeltzak1197 Ez means son of? Not Eres? No Es? No Hijo de? But instead EZ??lol God you guys are killing me on this thread. I agree with your last sentence though.
En Es paña el ADN se mantuvo casi intacto desde las invasiones de los Yannayas hasta la llegada de los íberos y los celtas. Luego apenas cambió con los romanos, visigodos o árabes, por la simple razón de que estos pueblos apenas se mezclaban con los nativos.
Incredible affirmation: 'The Germanic tribes, Romans, and Arabs did not mix with the Spanish women.' A group of men from different cultures, all invaders, who refused to breed with local women even while they were single-very interesting. Please provide the sources of the studies that support your extraordinary affirmation
Increíble afirmación: 'Las tribus germánicas, los romanos y los árabes no se mezclaron con las mujeres españolas.' Grupos de hombres de diferentes culturas, todos invasores, que se negaron a cruzarse con las mujeres locales incluso cuando estaban solteros-muy interesante. Por favor, proporcione las fuentes de los estudios que respalden su extraordinaria afirmación
They did mix, and a lot of them did.! ; sources : Roman and Germanic Integration: Archaeological and Social Evidence "The Archaeology of the Iberian Peninsula: From the Bronze Age to the Modern Era" edited by J. A. Fernández and S. D. M. Gallagher (2018) This edited volume includes studies on Roman and Germanic interactions in Iberia. It provides archaeological evidence of cultural exchange and the intermingling of Roman and Germanic material culture, which reflects the social and genetic integration that occurred over time. "The Legacy of Al-Andalus: A Historical and Cultural Overview" edited by M. A. López and J. M. Martínez (2016): This collection of essays explores the cultural legacy of Al-Andalus and includes references to the intermarriage and integration of Arab-Berber and local Iberian populations. "Islamic Spain, 1250 to 1500" by David Waterman (2004): This book explores the Arab rule in Spain and the interactions between Muslim invaders and the local Christian population, including intermarriage and cultural exchange. "The Moors in Spain" by Stanley Lane-Poole (1909): An older work, but it provides insights into the social and cultural exchanges between the Moors and the local populations, including marriage and integration. 4. Genetics and Population Studies: "The Genetic Legacy of the Iberian Peninsula: A Tale of Migrations, Mixtures, and Population Shifts" by José A. M. Ramírez et al. (2017): This study discusses the genetic contributions of various groups, including Romans, Visigoths, and Moors, to the modern Spanish population. "Genetic Evidence for the Mediterranean Origin of the Spaniards" by P. González et al. (2016): This paper looks at genetic studies and highlights the mixed ancestry of the Spanish population, including North African influences from the Arab-Berber period.
A very illustrative and fairly comprehensive video of Spain and its people throughout the ages, all captured in less than 20 minutes. Said DNA, culture and language extend to most countries in Latin America, making the Spanish heritage much richer and diversified. Thank you for sharing.
@@sherrw6837 Both Sephardic/Ashkenaxi news have a distinct DNA, the reason is classified in a different group. Yes, I doubt very much his/her mother is an authentic Galician with Sephardic DNA.
@freyalove3831 Yep. DNA genealogy is a joke. That Scandinavian thing is a reality. I had my parents' DNA tested and no Scandinavian DNA. So how could I have a small percentage? Right!
Usted esta correcto . Soy brasileña casada con un español y en el teste genético de mi nieta hay DNA judío sefardita y asquenaze además del ibérico , italian, etc
I also noticed that! Those groups had a large influence in Spain. The video also failed to mention the J haplogroup which many Spanish men carry and which likely came from the groups you mention. I myself carry the J2 haplogroup.
In Atapuerca, Cantabria, in the north of the peninsula, hominid remains dating back 800,000 years have been found. The oldest human remains in Europe are found in Spain
Cierto, ya que en tiempos de la última glaciación la zona templada, obligadamente, era la única habitada. El video ha puesto un origen ridículamente cercano para las primeras ocupaciones de la península.
The comments on surnames are very misleading, confused, and sometimes contradictory. Had never heard of Garcia as being of Arab origin. It's always mentioned as Basque origin, with a possible Celtic connection.
Fascinating how you completely skipped over the dominance of Punic peoples and culture in the Iberian peninsula from 700 to 200 BC. Spain was part of the Phoenician mercantile empire, from the founding of Carthage until her destruction by the Romans.
Yes, Hannibal, the Carthaginian, was from Spain. He prayed at the temple of Melqart, in Gades (present day Cadiz) prior to crossing the Pyrenees with his elephants.
North african 10-15%? Andalusia high north african? OMG The place with highest north african is Galicia and below 10%> Do you know that reconquista led to dna north-south similarities? There is more similarity between Huelva and Asturias than between Almería and Huelva
Andalucía Occidental tiene un 11% y la Oriental un 6%, casi nada, según Carracedo ("Pattern of Iberian..."), siendo en Galicia la ascendencia norteafricana-bereber o "musulmana" más alta (hasta un 16%) y de los más bajos del haplogrupo R1b relacionado con los celtas. Este video no hace nada más que promover estereotipos.
@@felix8523esas referencias tampoco tienen mucho sentido. Todo depende de dónde tomen las muestras. Se observa una diferencia notoria entre el fenotipo de un ourensano y de un coruñés. Y tiene su lógica porque hubo una repoblación con moriscos en el sur de la región.
@@alaskaen3177 Las muestras tienen que ser recogidas cumpliendo unos requisitos de validez y representación. No se cogen muestras "dependiendo de" porque no serían representativas y el estudio sería invalido por metodología. Nadie dice que sean todos los gallegos, evidentemente habrá gente que incluso tenga cero como otra tendrá 30. Se puede consultar el estudio, y ver el mapa al detalle, aunque más en la mitad sur gallega, Galicia es la más clara de toda España y por tanto con más ADN norteafricano en casi su totalidad (hay más estudios que lo corroboran). Es de libre acceso, solo hay que poner en Google "Carracedo pattern Iberia", además dirigido por un gallego, Carracedo. Aquí no puedo poner enlaces.
El norteafricano, es porque tendras antepasados de las Islas Canarias. Ese gen norteafricano, es de norteafricano antiguo, no es el norteafricano de hoy. Ni es de origen arabe, sino bereber. El primer pueblo que pobló esa zona en la epoca neolitica.
Los bereberes son totalmente blancos y predomina mucho el ojo azul,cuando los mulsumanes los invaden huyen hacia las montañas,no se querían mezclar,aún hoy les tienen mucha rabia a los Marroquíes....@@adleglez5592
Primera vez que escucho que el apellido Garcia viene del árabe. Eso no es cierto, tampoco Martínez, nada que ver. Este vídeo en cuestión del origen de apellidos no tiene ni pies ni cabeza. Una completa estupidez. Antes de hacer el vídeo debería haber consultado heráldica ibérica. Es una completa tontería. En parte un vídeo fake. Y existen cientos de estudios genéticos europeos, estadounidenses, israelíes etc. la huella genética norteafricana en la península ibérica es incluso inferior que en otras zonas mediterráneas como Italia y Grecia. En fin…. Ya viendo la información sobre el origen de los apellidos….. me hago una idea de la cantidad de errores del mismo.
Hispania (Hispania) was created in 219 BC by the Roman Senate. It was created as a single political unit (Province) later subdivided in 109BC. So this story is as fake as the names of the regions. They were named after the rivers: Baetica after the river Baetis (Muslim Guadalquivir), Iberians after the river Iberus (Ebro), etc. A little more real research would do wonders to your story.
This is found only in very old roots nations. Romanians have the same tradition. River ARGES are called ARGESENI. River MURES are called MURESANI Etc. India was called from the River Indus. Egypt from river Egypt. The Nile name came later from a king named Nilus. Visigoths were not Germanic, they were Gete/Gaeti Romanian ancestors. Very wrong history is taught in the Universities.
Eight hundred years of Muslin Arab rule, Abad and Medina are definitely Arabic names -on my parents birth certificates. Moorish ancestry strong in Malaga.
Only 4% of my DNA is of Spanish origin, but I see them as our forefathers. I'm of Tlaxcalteca descent. Together, our ancestors conquered the new world. I have found indigenous family from the north western USA to the southwest, northern and southern México, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Honduras, el Salvador, Costa Rica and Perú. My grandmothers family lost their fortune during the Mexican revolution. In my family, we also have a Spanish sword from the 1600s. Viva España 🇪🇸 y viva todo Latino America .
@@socalgsr1 that's cool bro. My regions are Cdmx, Puebla/ Tlaxcala and Morelos. My grandmothers sister got 100% Indigenous America's Mexico in her ancestry dna Test. Same regions as mine but with 3% Yucatan Peninsula added. My mom 97%
@@carlosalbertohernandezrami2230 Tienes razón. Solamente quisiera añadir que el rascacielo de la ciudad de Méjico se llama "La Torre Latinoamericana." "Latino" y "Hispano" los dos incluyen Brasil.
La música Flamenco no representa a España sino a los 700 mil gitanos que hay aqui, la música folklórica tradicional española es la música medieval, y nuestras raíces son romanas, celtiberas y germánicas, africana menos de un 5%, ARRIBA ESPAÑA VIVA CRISTO REY!
This is poorly documented .I am history teacher in the university , here int the Spain .I have scientists friends from the best universities here in Spain and from foreign ones .You left a lot to say , The spanish DNA is much diverse that that . What happens to the Alans, Suevi, Jews, Goths, Visigoths, Barbarians, Vikings, Carthaginians, Phoenicians, Tartessians, Iberians, Celtiberians, etc. AND Spain was the most important kingdon of Roman where lived the richest romans for many centuries .It is very incomplete
Only 4% of Iberians possess the North African haplogroup, E. That’s less than Italy, Greece, Albania, and many Balkan countries. So the # that this video states is wrong.
No acabo de entender porqué separan vasca de ibérica, vale que hay una parte vasca en el sur de Francia… pero vamos, cualquier español puede arrojar esa composicíón de ADN, especialmente la sefardí, uno de cada cinco españoles tenemos ascendencia sefardí actualmente. Y en LATAM debe ser incluso mayor ya que a América pasaron muchos sefardíes.
@@alaskaen3177 Ni idea, según yo , los vacos son españoles ( o celtiberos) como mayoría, no es como que fuera una raza distinta ,aparte del idioma, no hay diferencia entre un vasco y cualquier otro español, a menos que el test tome Francés sureño como vasco , que sería muy raro.
@@alaskaen3177 Así fue. Muchos Sefardís huieron de Iberia cuando Fernando y Isabel exilaron a todos los hebreos de la península en 1492 ce. También hubieron judíos y otras tribus de la supuesta Palestina entre los hebreos iberianos, pero la mayoría fueron Sefardí.
Hay un error que estoy viendo en muchos de los comentarios, cuando se dice "Iberian" no significa España, significa pueblos de Iberia o Íberos, actualmente España y Portugal, cuando dicen "Basque" es un linaje más antiguo que corresponde a la zona vasca, pero sigue siendo España (y una parte menor Francia). No hay que mezclar Íbero con España, de hecho Hispania o Iberia era tanto el territorio actual de España como el de Portugal. Por eso los Hispanoamericanos o Iberoamericanos (muchos portugueses prefieren el segundo término por temas nacionalistas ya que Iberia es el nombre griego de la península y no fue adoptado para nombrar al país vecino) se denominan así, por su ascendencia cultural y política.
I'm Northern Spain, through my decendent, who ended, up in New Zealand 🇳🇿 East Coast of the North Island, he ended up living with the local Maoris east coast, the Maoris described Jose - Manuel..as being 7 -foot tall red hair green eyed fair...skin, 1800 hundreds was roughly the time Jose settled in New Zealand, many of the Maori Cheifs, would hand there daughters over...to Jose Manuel..for breeding, Myself I am a descendent of Jose...Manuel, with Maori, features & Spanish features too!! My ex - wife was red hair green eyes aswell..my youngest son who's 22, years of age but his height is 6 foot 6, my wife height is 5/7 and I am 5/8..with a bit of searching I found out Jose manuel was of Visigoth, blood...
@@ontstoppingsdienstors my original post was D e l e T Ed , so sorry. So let’s try again in a manner more conducive to the times. In the 12th and 13th centuries, the Almohads and the Almoravids thought that the north of Africa was such a beautiful place to visit and sent tens of thousands of Christians ( Iberians) to emigrate and see how nice it would be to WORK there. That’s why you have that beautiful DNA!
I´m Mexican from Mexican parents and all Mexican grand parents. However, my ADN is 51% Spanish, 28% Mexican indigene, 10% masque country, 3% Scotland, 2% France
García, Martínez and Pérez are not surnames of Arabic origin, but rather a given name of "Christian" origin + Visigothic suffix "-ez"... Thus Martínez=Son of Martín, Pérez=son of Pedro, López=son of Lope, Fernández=son of Fernando, etc... The suffix "-ez" means "son of" There are also surnames of purely Iberian origin, such as Vega, Guijarro, Zarza... And then, there are surnames of Jewish origin, Basque surnames, etc... Romeo, Bianchi and Rossi are not Spanish surnames, btw...
I'm 100% Spanish with 16 Spanish family names. All my known ancestors are from the same northwestern region of Galicia. My DNA is 20% Irish and 10% English. I'm only 50% Iberian.
Thanks, learned a lot! My grandparents were from Galicia, Asturias and Leon. My DNA test results stated I was 47% Portuguese 😃…so I think it’s worth mentioning the makeup of them… as the borders changed over time and people migrated back and forth…
@@virginiasanchis1717 becareful with that acertions they are not true portuguese are a distinct autosomal than galegos , is true that gallegos close to vigo carry some residuals of portuguese but are not portuguese just have the same origins from the alpes
Los españoles somos el pueblo más importante y trascendente en la historia de la humanidad, los primeros en dar la vuelta al mundo y descubrir cómo era el planeta y su geografía de mares y continentes.
Jajajajaja, pero qué dices, España ni siquiera está en el top 10 de los mejores países. Todas las colonias españolas son un fracaso y nuestro mayor explorador fue un Italiano.
Por mas HISPANOFILO QUE YO SEA, te tengo que acosejar que no hagas alarde de cosas importantisimas en la historia de la humanidad, pero que actualmente CARECEN DE IMPORTANCIA EN UN MUNDO REGIDO POR ESTANDARES ECONOMICOS COMO EL PRODUCTO INTERNO BRUTO DE UNA NACION, o EL INGRESO PER CAPITA. Tu comentario es contra producente, y no hace mas que dagnar la reputacion de los Espanoles. Si tienes 8 agnos de edad, se justifica lo que acabas de escribir. SUERTE.
I suspect DNA companies identify everybody as some small percentage Jew ... strength in numbers. The fact that some genes line up a certain way doesn't make you that. I'm supposed to be part Australian! WHA? I'm mostly Spanish 77%, with some Méjica (Magic Ah) 17%. That matches my Family Tree very well. (No Australian. LMAO)
You just can't talk about Spanish DNA without mentioning the Sephardis. Our Middle East genes come from them. Sephardic Jews. Moors didn't mix. They did because many of them converted to Catholism to stay in the country after 1492.
I knew a woman of Basque descent named Echeverry, which is supposedly the origin of the Spanish Echevarria. My last name is Pinol, I know nothing of the origin.
There were a significant number of Jewish/Hebrew people (witness Jewish Quarters in every Medieval town) throughout the peninsula yet they weren´t even mentioned or are they supposed to be lumped in with "Middle Eastern"?
That's because the Jews hardly ever mixed with other native cultures, preferring to remain true to their religion and traditions unless forced to do so by threats of expulsion or violence.
Por la península ibérica han pasado todas las civilizaciones más importantes del planeta ( incluidos mesoaméricanos, Incas, sudamericanos) y añado cuando medio mundo estaba helado inhabitable y los Neandertales hacían procesiones y botellón en Iberia.
1 no habléis con los piratas en su idioma 2 ya están cocinando nuevas leyendas negras viendo que la Hispanidad crece cada día nuevamente 3 ese en su miedo y comenzarán a crear información contra España y la Hispanidad 4 ellos fueron los genocidas y mayores enemigos de España,5 creando la leyenda negra
Absolutamente. Fueron los autores del mayor genocidio de la historia, invadiendo exterminando a todos los nativos de norteamerica en tan solo 200 años. Mientras que a los españoles los presentan como los grandes asesinos y lo que hicieron fue mezclarse y llevar su cultur., si, impusieron, seguramente se aprovecharon de los recursos, cometerían atrocidades, etc. pero el hecho es que vas a México, Perú, Colombia, Bolivia, Venezuela, Ecuador, etc... y la población es mayoritariamente de la raza originaria de cada lugar. En Norteamerica ya no quedan... apenas ni hay "reservas indias" (ghettos)...
@@drakethesnek6429 DNA haplogroups are the people that people come from such as your mom or dad and their parents and grandparents and great grands etc. going all the way back that’s found in DNA.
I'm Mexican. I got my DNA results back, stating I was 74% European of part Irish 33%, Italian/Greek 12%, British and Swedish and Northern African 5%. Upon watching this series, my DNA started to make sense. My ancestors were part of all that history.
I have heard that Hispania (=Spain) comes from the Phoenician language, from words meaning "the island of the north" or "the coast of the north". Regarding the "Flamenco dance" it is very little Spanish: it was "designed" or "created" approximately in 1860 by the Italian Silverio Franconetti, (as a show called "gypsy dances" that he offered in a café theater that he owned in Seville) mixing the "Forge songs" of some gypsy blacksmiths who lived in the area of Seville and who were nicknamed "the Flamencos" ( =Flemish) because they said they had arrived from Flanders with the dance of the Uruguayan cowboys or gauchos called "Malambo" (Falconetti had lived many years in Uruguay before settling in Seville).
Se les olvida siempre,Suevos Álanos Vándalos y Bizantinos en el Sur los han borrado de la Historia y es parte nuestra también como son los Yamnayas...en Fin.
Thank you for this so respectful study of our DNA history. Coming from England it's no so often the objective and full of respect video I can clearly see into this yours . Thank YOU
Funny, I’m Rivera from my father’s side and my DNA says my family came from the area of Galicia/ northern Portugal and migrated to Seville where they mixed with locals which gave us North African blood. I have between 6-9% North African-Middle Eastern blood. My mother’s side is Basque.
My paternal side are from Galician, my family members and my dad have done DNA ancestry. They have not found absent North African/Middle Eastern. So definitely your father is from Andalucia, migrated to the North. If you have father had North African DNA isn't Galician.
@@freyalove3831 Most Spaniards regardless of geography have North African blood and that is because the moors where in the entire peninsula for +/- 800 years. That is why Portuguese people also have North African blood.
@@TheSimmpleTruth it is a misconception as much as Irish are distant cousin to Galician/basques. My paternal Spanish Family are absent of North African/Middle East DNA (nothing wrong to have North African DNA). Even 1-5% isn't high level to influence the Iberian DNA. Yes, Moors lived in the Iberian pensinsula, pretty much the South, Andalucia (Al-Andalus), since they didn't fully controlled the North thanks to the Christian resistance located in the North of Spain. Even Moors brought major technologies to Spain, Interfaith marriage was frowned upon especially in Islam. Furthermore Moors brought Arab slave trade, many Iberians were slaves(along with European countries) and abducted by the moors. My Spanish/French ancestors fought these Habibi. .Now they are back in the Northern countries.
@@freyalove3831 I didn’t say every Spaniard, but if it makes you happy to think I don’t have Galician blood, here I am going to make your day. I don’t have Galician blood. Hope that makes you happy. Have a wonderful day! God bless you!
You want to see a MIX?! My Puerto Rican mother has indigenous island, Spaniard, French, Portuguese, and African DNA - now THAT is impressive! No wonder she’s a powerhouse ❤
Los gitanos llegaron desde Paquistan y apenas se han mezclado con los españoles ibéricos, de hecho tienen otro ADN diferente al convencional en España.
si y los gitanos se casan entre ellos y no son españoles ,hay gitanos en todos los paises ,y su origen es rumano y hungaro, por eso practicamente nadie tiene ,raza gitana en su ADN al menos que seas gitano,
I'm from north South America, and according tk my DNA study I'm 44% native American (Andes Highlands) and the remaining is a combination from Mediterranean, Northern Europe, Asia and Oceania)
Duro con estos BASTARDOS revisionistas.....Cuando aluden a la Catedral de Cordoba se refieren a ella como la Mezquita de Cordoba....estos maricones nunca mencionan que antes de Mezquita fue una Iglesia! Saludos desde California de parte de un Hispano genuino.
I knew my mother's family came from Spain. But the DNA said way more Italian than Spanish. We were jews so maybe when the Sephardims left for Italy, that may be it. No, idea. However, Rome banished jews to Spain and Tunisia around 70 CE. So, who knows.
Some of the Spanish who came to the Americas had much earlier migrated from Italy. For instance, one of my ancestors was a Cantuti-Castevetri. It was shortened to Cantu' in Spanish.
Soy española y por el lado materno tengo ancestros judeoconversos (comprobado con árbol genealógico) y lo que me dí cuenta en estos análisis genéticos es que cuando aparece un porcentaje italiano o un porcentaje judío askenazi es un posible indicador de ancestros judíos. Estos análisis consisten en comparar tu ADN con poblaciones modernas, posiblemente estos antepasados judios tenían esa herencia de Roma, la propia judía y el resto sería Ibérica.
Si, por lo cierto, muchos Sefardis, vinieron a España, esclavos de los Romanos. Otros, por ejemplo, viviendo en tierras Persas (Babylonia) vinieron mas tarde.
I remember trying to research Spanish anthropology in the 90s. It was almost impossible because no one wanted to have their blood drawn and analyzed. Most especially the very private basque. . I'm fascinated to learn that they have finally allowed the studies. It's the end of the road west, so logically, it got complicated. I often wonder if the Intuit and Eskimos and native Russian traveled over the antarctic to the Americas, while there were six months of daylight. It's quite literally the shortest route.
Martínez means "son of Martín" and Pérez "son of Pedro", so they arent arabic at all. Garcia is believed to have basque or Iberic origin. And Alcalá or Medina surnames are mainly toponymic, as there are many towns in Spain called like that, but doesnt necesary mean you have arabic ascendance. And Galicia is not the "most celtic" región of Spain. In fact, southern Castile is even more celtic genetically speaking.
I would believe you. My mother’s DNA has “Irish” (Celtic) 8% but I have done her genealogy back to Spain and there was never an Anglo marriage within the last two hundred years. However, her grandfather’s line was from Avila in Castilla La Viega. Her Father’s line was pure Basque.
There was no Spain in ancient times as you mentioned. U5 is a maternal haplogroup, you didn't mention it, same with H. There is no need to go on about the WHG or Neolithic farmers because no modern Europeans existed before the coming of the Indo-European speakers. So no Swedes, no Irish, no Italians, no Greeks, so not just people who call themselves Spanish.
U5b1b1, es un adn europeo que hoy no esta en europa. Sino en el norte de africa. Viene de poblaciones muy antiguas de europa, cuando europa tenia hielo.
Just got my DNA results. Mostly Scandinavian, with some English/Irish and German/Dutch. Very Northern European. But there was 2% Spanish! That was totally unexpected.
I doubt what you said, I am sure you believe it, but most people are hopeless at guessing the origins of others they think are foreign looking. I know as I was born in another coutry to the one I have citizenship with, and the nationality I identify with. I have seen many Mexicans in Mexico, and in the USA, and I haven't seen one that passes as Greek or Italian. Mexicans even the lightest ones have a non European look, even non Middle Eastern look. I wouldn't take what the punters in the street tell you about your ethnic appearance.
There are misgivings regarding Andalusia. Most of the population has been shown to descend from the repopulators of the plateau and the north. During the 600 years of the Roman Empire there was a lot of human trafficking from Roman Africa and Hispania, hence the Syrian or Maghreb genetic contribution. Finally, indicate that there were very few Moriscos who remained after the war of the 16th century.
I'm sorry to desagree about Andalusia. In fact, the Moorish were expelled at the begenning of the XVIi century and this population was replaced by farmers coming from Flanders and Bavaria. In Seville, there are people descending from Vikings and even Japanese from Nagasaki.
@@patxi601 There were as well Danish women. They were not so odd for the people living in Seville as Vandals, Suevi and Visigots descendents also lived there. But of course they caused a deep impact. If you visit some of the villages next to the river, it seems that they were much more than 800.
@@patxi601 That was After the attack in 966. They became muslims and helped establish trade relations with Denmark. In fact, the story comes from more than a century before. In 966, more of Vikings were Christians, therefore one of the three religions of the Book and able to settle in muslim lands provided that they pay taxes. In 844, Vikings devastated Seville but they were seriously defeated by the toops of Add al-Rahman II. 1000 were killed, 400 taken prisoners and other run. 30 vikings ships were also taken. Abd al-Rahman took this incident very seriously and sent an embassy to the Vikings king (some chronicles say to Denmark, some say to Ireland). The fact was that he sent Al-Ghazal together with some of the vikigs. The rest of the story was witten by Iban Dihya, an Umayyad official. They caused a great impression among vikings. The Vikings crowded arround to look at them and were very astonished at their appearance and their way of dressing. The king asked them to stay longer and they did It for several months. Al+Ghazal met a queen called Nud and it seems that they both fell in love. The thing is that they established trade relations and many vikings settled next to Guadalquivir River as free men and women. Thousands. They suffered two more vikings attacks but from other countries and much less harmful. On the other hand, Castillan had very close relations with Norway.
@@patxi601 Sorry Patxi for a second response, but I have new details. In fact the prisoners were slaughtered in Tablada, the same area where nowadays is the Feria. The one who settled were the rest of the party, a big group who became strong in the Aljarafe area. They made a request to the Emir to accept his rule and become muslims. This request were accepted and they settled in Coria del Río, Carmona and Morón. If you go to the area you'll see that not only there are a much bigger proportion of blonde people with blue eyes compared to the rest of Spain, but as well they make cheese in the Skandinavian way. Coria del Río is specially interesting because they not only have Danish ancestors but also Japanese from Nagasaki as well.
García, Martínez and Pérez lastnames have absolutelly nothing to do with arabic origins, all being much older than the islamic invasion of the peninsula and also some of the most common spanish surnames. Its strange that this substancial error is made, given the fact that is very absurd, and that most of the video is very well documented. García, Martínez and Pérez all come from very common names in northern Spain during medieval and ancestral times. García is the name of the first spanish kings, and has a preromanic basque and navarre origin. The first king of León was called García, as well as the first king of Navarre also called García Iñiguez, son of Iñigo Arista. Martínez on the other hand, means son of Martín, Martín comes from the name of the roman god of war Marte (Mars). Pérez means son of Pére, which means Pedro or Peter, which comes from the word Stone in latin, because the apostol Pedro (Petro) was considered the founding stone of the Catholic Church. This is just basic understanding of etimology and basic knowledge of european history. Lastnames influenced by arabic origins in Spain usually start with the letter "A", being some examples of this Álamo, Albarracín, Alcalá, Alcántara, Almodóvar.
Mexican- American my DNA shows France and Nothern Spain, and 25% Indigenous Meso-American. Crazy mix. Many Mexicans from Mexico City are the about the same.
North África, before before being muslim was christian for centuries. The muslims Who invaded the península did not mixed with the christians or with what they call 'infidels', the same thing the jews didn't do.
Discrepo totalmente con respecto a el origen de algunos apellidos y denota una falta de rigor académico en este video . El origen del apellido García se remonta a la península ibérica y está firmemente vinculado a raíces prerromanas y vasconas, lo que lo sitúa cronológicamente mucho antes de la llegada de los árabes a la región en el año 711 d.C. Diversos estudios onomásticos y lingüísticos han demostrado que García deriva del término vasco "gartzia", que significa "joven" o "valiente", y que se utilizaba como nombre propio entre las tribus vasconas y pueblos del norte de Hispania desde tiempos prerromanos. Otra teoría sugiere que puede derivar de la palabra vasca "artz" (oso), indicando “hijo del oso” como símbolo de fuerza o poder, lo que refuerza su vínculo con la tradición vasca de utilizar animales totémicos para denotar cualidades de liderazgo. Este uso está documentado en textos y registros medievales de los siglos VIII y IX, como en el rey García Jiménez, perteneciente a la nobleza navarra mucho antes de la influencia árabe en la península. Además, el apellido estaba asentado en regiones como Navarra y La Rioja, territorios que no estuvieron bajo control musulmán durante el período de ocupación árabe, lo que evidencia un origen autóctono. Por lo tanto, la hipótesis del origen árabe carece de validez etimológica y cronológica, ya que los registros más antiguos y la estructura fonética de García apuntan claramente a un linaje prerromano y vasco, independiente de cualquier influencia semítica. Por otro lado, Martínez y Pérez son apellidos patronímicos derivados de nombres propios latinos -Martín y Pedro, respectivamente- con el sufijo “-ez” que significa "hijo de". Esta estructura se desarrolló durante la Edad Media y no tiene ninguna relación con la onomástica árabe, ya que ambos nombres (Martín y Pedro) eran populares en la Hispania cristiana mucho antes de la influencia árabe. Un saludo
The contributions of the Iberian Peninsula, consisting of the nations of Spain and Portugal, are mind boggling. These two nations made an indelible imprint on the history of the modern world.
What a joke
Just for the Record Perez is a jewish surname
Los íberos, eran los nativos, primeros, la raza ibérica por antonomasia.
This is about genetics, not culture. I don’t think there was a lot of intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews, although I wonder if, after the start of the Inquisition, conversos assimilated more into the general population.
BTW proud Spanish American here of grandparents from Spain. I am very proud of the fact that Spain is the most ethnically mixed people in all of Europe throughout time. WE have at least 13 different mixes in our DNA. They would be Iberian, Celtic, Phoenician, Greek, Roman, Carthaginian, Moorish, Berber/ Guanche tribes, Arab, Germanic, Viking, Persian, Jewish, Gitano and a few more.
@@josee18 And the lot of more and more peoples...los guanches eran tribus de las Islas Canarias, en efecto. Cuántos fueron los que conformaron nuestros ADN? Todos los pueblos que pasaron por Hispania, se pasearon por ella, tuvieron religión y vida privada? Qué análisis genetico se ha hecho de todos ellos, comparandolos con nuestros analisis reconstructivos de apellidos y familias desde 1585, nuestros expedientes de limpieza de sangre (siglos XVI-XVII) expedidos por los Justicias municipales en base a los datos citados para acceder a universidades y empleos gremiales en toda la Corona Hispánica? Estos dos puntos basados en registros simultáneos eclesiásticos, judiciales y administrativos son los que fedatan y validan nuestro ADN: son los equivalentes a nuestros actuales registros civiles. Que no te engañen, España. Nosotros tenemos validada ya nuestra historia y nuestro origen. Saludos a todos.
Bro, you are not spanish you were not born there you are not accepted and you likely don’t have all the dna of the people you mentioned, that’s not your history. Have some self respect 😭 por que los latinoamericanos somos tan acomplejados? Dios.
😂😂 no lo veo así. Si miras los resultados de la gente española en realidad son muy homogéneos, siendo ibero el mayor porcentaje.
@@angyliv8040 -Con todo respeto, y siendo español y habiendo estudiado mucho el ADN y la historia y las migraciones, discreparía en varios aspectos. Por supuesto que este es un mundo libre, cada uno tiene derecho a creer lo que hace. Si bien estoy de acuerdo, somos principalmente un pueblo y una nación ibérica, hubo muchas mezclas adicionales en la tierra ibérica, esto incluiría a Portugal. Sin embargo, dicho esto, España ha tenido más mezclas y colonizaciones que su país vecino. Esto podría deberse al componente mediterráneo o al comercio y la influencia e interacción que tuvo España en todo el mundo. Existen al menos 13 mezclas de complementos en el pueblo español. Estas serían las tribus originales de íberos del norte de África, los celtas, los fenicios, los cartagineses, el imperio persa, los romanos, los griegos, los vikingos, los visigodos, los moros, los bereberes, los guanches, los visigodos, los vándalos, los Comunidad gitana, Los judíos.
Don't forget the Basques aka Euskal Herria
Martínez is not of Arabic origin: it means son of Martin, thus seams Visigoth. But Martin or Martinus is Roman, so it probably originated by the way Visigoths (whom also spoke Latin) designated the son of Romans called Martinus!
U right but the moor also ruled over Rodrick for 900 years Spain Portugal in parts of Sicily
In no mood is Arabic
Your main dish in Spain came from west African rice your castle your paved roads in street irrigation system! Baths etc we cultivated ALL OF EUROPE!! Dnt forget that go look it up
@@kennywilliams6991900 years ruled the Muslims Portugal and Spain? You are wrong.
@@kennywilliams6991 All of those were copied, stolen, appropriated from the Persians and Greco-Roman Byzantines by Arabian Desert tribesmen . . .
*Qur'an 7:166* “When they persisted in violation, We said, “Become disgraced APES!’”
*Qur'an 5:60* "Those who made Allah angry He made them APES, PIGS, slaves.'"
*Qur'an 31:29* “Do you not see that Allah has subjected the sun and the moon, _each_ ORBITING for an appointed term, and that Allah is All-Aware of what you do?”
*Qur’an 36.38* “The _sun_ TRAVELS for its fixed term. That is the design of the Almighty, All-Knowing.”
*Qur'an 13:3* “It is He who spread the Earth…”
*Qur'an 15:19* “The Earth, we have spread it…”
*Qur'an 20:53* “Who has made for you the Earth as a bed...”
*Qur'an 43:10* “made the earth as a bed . . .”
Muslim is not a race, it's a religion. They were either Arabs or Berbers. I am fed up witj the nonsense we are told om a daily basis.
Berber is a language though 😂 you mean Amazighs people.
Neither are Judaism and Sikhism. But Jews and Sikhs are still considered ethnic/racial groups. Even the Amish and Mennonites.
Igual que se convirtieron al islam los bereberes lo hicieron los españoles. Añádelos en la lista.
@@dawnemile7499 Van unidos en su historia.
@@Frasco... Mentira: no nos convertimos nunca al Islam porque nos pusieron un pago de impuesto. Desde 711 hasta 1492 batallamos contra ellos. En 1212 los tres reyes de Navarra, Castilla y Aragón en la enorme batalla de las Navas de Tolosa echaron a los moros a la cuenca del Guadalquivir. De alli en adelante Castilla los redujo a territorio de Granada hasta que Isabel I y su esposo Alfonso II de Aragon, los Reyes Catolicos, tomaron Granada y Boabdil les entrego las llaves de aquella ciudad. Despues comenzamos el Descubrimiento de nuestro planeta REDONDO y creamos la España de la Hispanidad: reproduccion de España en virreinatos y las leyes de proteccion de gentes primeras en el mundo. Ver shorts: TH-cam:"Enigmas de la Historia" cientificamente hechos por profesionales de la Historia. Saludos a todos.
Please do not invent
García is of basque origin not arabic..
Díaz is patronimic of Diego (James) not Celtic.
Pérez is patronimic of Pedro (Peter). Not arabic.
Etc
OMG.
GREAT! The best way TO COUNTER these REVISIONIST, BRAIN-WASHING FOOLS is with YOUR TRUE ARGUMENTS!
Te doy la razón
No a estado muy fino😂😂
Yo soy perez como patronimico(hijo de pedro)
Torres del latín turris
Ez is connected to Visigoth(Germans).
@@lapislazulii141 Last time I checked, the suffix EZ is of CELTIC origin, baby. Have you even ever wondered the relationship, the similarities in sound between the suffix in the names of Celtic warriors like Vercingetorix (IX), and (EZ)?
Es un canal inglés, ¿qué esperabas?
"I don’t know where you got this study; I worked on a genetic analysis project of Spaniards just two years ago, where over 300,000 Spaniards participated, and the results were very different, aligning perfectly with the history of Spain. There was no mixing between Muslims and Christians (Christians in the territories conquered by Muslims were treated as second-class citizens and were prohibited from marrying Christians). Furthermore, Spain expelled Muslims and Jews from the peninsula and its islands, and in fact, the Moorish/Arab genetic lineage left in southern Spain is less than 2%."
Do you have a link to your study? Because 2% of arab DNA doesn't make much sense, since many people in LATAM that have arab DNA they have 2%?
Another point, most Arabs left Spain slowly, not all at once, it was a long process.
I have more Arab in me and I am a descendant of Spaniards, very mixed.. unsure where the 2% comes from.
@@DEonaraRacaso no sabes que en Latinoamérica llegaron entre los siglos XIXy XX más de 14millones de árabes y de medio oriente….. hoy contando sus descendientes tal vez lleguen a ser millones y millones más…..ahí lo tienes, la misma Shakira tiene origen árabe o Shalma Hayek….. qué tiene que ver eso con la península ibérica…..
@@braaron77ify Because you are slave descendant of north África too.
@@DEonaraR Slaves of north Africa.
¿García, Martínez y Pérez de origen árabe?. García, probablemente del vasco "hartz", oso o de garza. Martínez de Martín, nombre que alude a Marte, dios romano de la guerra y Pérez viene de Pero, que es Pedro. Precisamente gente con estos apellidos pelearon en la Reconquista contra los musulmanes. Para que te fíes de un documental sobre España hecho por anglosajones
Pérez es de origen sefhardi
@@sergiocalvo42 ....Para nada, Pérez deriva de Per ,palabra nórdica que significa vigilante o guardián.
Tal cual, compañero
Historia para guiris, sandeces a granel, le faltó hablar de los toreros y la siesta
Garcia de Garza. De Vasco no tiene nada, en todo caso de Navarra.
Garcia Rey de Galicia y Portugal.
Falleció siendo prisionero de su hermano, el Rey Alfonso, en el castillo de Luna Barrios en León.
Fue el tercer hijo varón del Rey Fernando I y la Reina Sancha de León.
Sus abuelos paternos fueron el Rey Sancho Garcés de Pamplona y la Reina Muniadona de Castilla.
Sus abuelos maternos fueron el Rey Alfonso V de León y la Reina Elvira Menéndez.
Sus hermanos Sancho y Alfonso recibieron los reinos de Castilla y León.
La división del patrimonio, a la muerte de Fernando, produjo grandes conflictos entre los hermanos García y fue el primero en perder la corona.
El Rey Garcia de Galicia, está enterrado en el Panteón de Reyes de León, junto a sus padres y algunos de sus hermanos. Murió en 1090.
I am an American of Mexican descent. My Y-dna haplogroup is R1b-L21 which means My ancestors were Celtiberians.
En verdad no. El subgrupo ibero del R1b es el DF27. Méjico es de los países donde hay menos ascendencia española. Saludos desde España 🇪🇸
Te das cuenta de que cuando mis antepasados llegaron a esta parte de los Estados Unidos de América, eran mestizos y lobos de Méjico que eran "soldados españoles" estacionados en presidios españoles en lo que era Nueva España. También tengo una gran cantidad de ADN maya en mí. La línea Y-DNA sigue solo la línea de machos.
Eso no es Verdad, México es grande y diverso. Hay de todo. Incluso mucho raíz Español
@@torrezno1990 Because the Conquistadors didn't try hard enough.
@@torrezno1990cómo puedes decir tamaña tontería. Si México es de los que tienen menos, entonces nadie la tiene.
Spain doesn't mean "land of rabbits", that's something some used to repeat in the past but it's been refuted. It was the most western land in the old ancient known world and that's very significant. It was also very relevant because of its metals so the academy now debates between something related to "west" or "where the sun sets" or "land of metals". Other mistakes: The surname Garcia comes from the north of Spain and it's vasque origin, not arabic. Also, the fact of having an arabic surname it doesn't mean arabic dna, it only means arabized ancestry, locals arabized. Another one, Guadalupe is a mix of arabic and latin "wadi + lupus", "river of wolves". Also, to associate most of the andalusian dna with arabs is an old stereotype and wrong. When muslims left, many towns were without population and people from the north occupied these towns. You can find unexpectedly many people with blonde hair and blue eyes in the south.
I love all the information, thank you. Muslims who ruled over the Iberian peninsula for almost 800 give or take because the Christians did a good job never giving up. Fun fact though, it's really not that you have a bias against muslims, don't want to make any assumptions here, majority of muslims didn't leave, they were murdered. They were murdered. I liked this one, was quick and well done th-cam.com/video/I114iWNpDTs/w-d-xo.htmlsi=Eyy1WFojE_j13zYZ Enjoy, and again, thank you.
GREAT! The best way TO COUNTER these REVISIONIST, BRAIN-WASHING FOOLS is with YOUR TRUE ARGUMENTS!
En el siglo XVIII el rey Carlos III repobló Jaén con alemanes ubicados en las minas de Almaden de mercurio. De ahí provienen los rubios con ojos azules de una parte de la poblacion española.
@@luzortizgarcia-bustelo Los rubios de ojos azules de una parte de la poblacion Espanola de esa region, claro. Porque los pocos rubios de ojos azules los hay en otras regiones de Espana.
@@telemakhos31 the name of Spain "land of rabbits" was wrotte by Strabon when he drescribe ancient Spain. I'm agree with you in your's commentary. The spanish population was controlled the ADN of everybody insideland by the individual document named "limpieza de sangre" .
Cuban American here with Spanish ancestry ,I hope to visit the mother land one day,God willing
You're from Africa.
@@Joescuderiatell me more about myself,since you know me so well
You will love it. Barcelona, south of Spain, etc. It's wonderful. Best wishes.
Habla en español. Eres cubano. Mas americano que los estadounidenses.
Y ven cuando quieras. Aquí no te vamos a preguntar de donde eres.
We Cubans are conversos and marranos descent..Jews...All the major leaders of that revolution were jews..
Being Hispanic is the most rich mixed. Among the many mixed of ethnic backgrounds we have in our blood, we are descendants of the powerful Spanish Empire, Inca and Aztec Empire. Also, let's not forget that in our veins, run blood directly from the mighty and powerful Roman Empire.
Don't forget the mighty one of them all was the Islamic Empire.
You seem to take history literally, and mistake mighty with great. You obviously learned history as it's been told to you by TV.
@@Burujipass.
@@Burujino thanks, away from that cancer
@@Burujithe think is...muslim dont mix with iberians. They kill them or enslave them.the most % of árab dna in Spain is in the north...not in any región dominated by the califates....learn history.
Let's REMEMBER this is about Spain and Spaniards from Western Europe and NOT Hispanics from South America. There's a BIG difference.
*Amen!* 🇪🇸
What do you think runs in our blood? 67 percent of my DNA comes from the Iberian peninsula. I'm an American from Colombian parents.
Lots of hispanics have grandparents from Spain due to immigration waves in the early XX century.
I’m hispanic but my last name is British. All it takes is one ancestor to change things.
There are many examples of anglo-Hispanics, including Irish influence especially in South America, e.g., Anya Taylor-Joy an Argentine actress, O'Higgins, the liberator of Chile, Vicente Fox, ex-president of Mexico, Almirante Brown of Argentina, Paraguayan writer Juan O'Leary, etc.,
@@nenaj1 Asking for perfection is is too much to ask.
the irish lived in spain during ice age.
@@padredemishijos12 Lots of Gringos are moving to Mexico, Costa Rica, Colombia.
@@casper-z9rkls6gl creating apartheid.
I am Gallegos from Galicia. We have been in New Mexico n Arizona since 1560's w the Coronado expedition.
Old New Mexico family here too. Family settled in New Mexico in the 1600’s . Expedition of Francisco de Ibarra through Durango and Chihuahua.
New mexico was not colonized until 1598 when Don Juan De Onate arrived from Zacatecas. NEW MEXICO WAS Colonized before Arizona, Texas and California. Only florida , the Caribbean, south / central americas were colonized prior to the sourhwest. There were no spanish towns prior to that. I TOO am a decended of those who came with Onate in 1598 and then in 1692 after the spanish returned to new mexico after the pueblo revolt of August 10th, 1680. The spanish crown did leave some priests at some of the pueblos pior, but they were killed once the expeditionary forces left prior to 1598. Coronado did explore 30 yrs prior to onate but only did just that.
Wow . Familia was be proud
@chuche249 my grandfather was logistics for Francisco Coronado 1565... you don't know EVERYTHING just because you read a book...
I completely believe you. Even Mexicans ignore their European roots? Those bunch of mestizos have been brain-washed and still think that they descent entirely from Aztecs; even those blue-eyed ones believe so, as if they only have one physical nature. Ever wondered why some Mexicans are "whiter" than let's say Andalucia? Well, the reason is that Mexico was colonized mostly by Cantabrians and Basques, specially in the north. Just look at important names like Durango, Reinosa, y Matamoros. The Spanish spoken in Mexico and other regions of Latin America where Basques migrated was GREATLY INFLUENCED by Basques. Example: in Mexico, to describe a short person, they use BREVE(Castillian) but CHAPARRO(Basque) is the usual word. That's why they refer to a short bush as chaparral. Strong cultures with strong roots certaily have an impact in the world.
Martinez is Of Visigoth origin, meaning Son of Martin, not Andalusian origin
Martinez comes from Martins not Visigoth, what's wrong with you people? Why are you guys so eager to tie yourselves to a nonexistent made up history?
There were no Germanic speaking Hungarian Barbarians in Iberia!
Stop the nonsense!
@@gundisaluusmenendiz
MARTÍNEZ, It comes from the name Martín plus -ez which, like other patronymic surnames ending in -ez, means "son of". The map shows the most common surname in each of the provinces of Spain.
Martin is a patronymic surname of Latin origin, very common in Europe.
@@ardibeltzak1197 Ez means son of? Not Eres? No Es? No Hijo de? But instead EZ??lol
God you guys are killing me on this thread.
I agree with your last sentence though.
and perez is celtiberian not andalusian and garcia is basque(proto basque)
@@gundisaluusmenendiz in Dutch we got a simular adhesive for a bunch of names: like eg. Janssens whereby the last part refers to the sons of Jan.
Este vídeo necesita una revisión seria, mezclar errores y aciertos conduce al fracaso.
Es una estrategia. Las mentiras que se cuentan entre verdades, pasan por verdades.
En Es paña el ADN se mantuvo casi intacto desde las invasiones de los Yannayas hasta la llegada de los íberos y los celtas. Luego apenas cambió con los romanos, visigodos o árabes, por la simple razón de que estos pueblos apenas se mezclaban con los nativos.
Incredible affirmation: 'The Germanic tribes, Romans, and Arabs did not mix with the Spanish women.' A group of men from different cultures, all invaders, who refused to breed with local women even while they were single-very interesting. Please provide the sources of the studies that support your extraordinary affirmation
Increíble afirmación: 'Las tribus germánicas, los romanos y los árabes no se mezclaron con las mujeres españolas.' Grupos de hombres de diferentes culturas, todos invasores, que se negaron a cruzarse con las mujeres locales incluso cuando estaban solteros-muy interesante. Por favor, proporcione las fuentes de los estudios que respalden su extraordinaria afirmación
They did mix, and a lot of them did.! ; sources :
Roman and Germanic Integration: Archaeological and Social Evidence
"The Archaeology of the Iberian Peninsula: From the Bronze Age to the Modern Era" edited by J. A. Fernández and S. D. M. Gallagher (2018)
This edited volume includes studies on Roman and Germanic interactions in Iberia. It provides archaeological evidence of cultural exchange and the intermingling of Roman and Germanic material culture, which reflects the social and genetic integration that occurred over time.
"The Legacy of Al-Andalus: A Historical and Cultural Overview" edited by M. A. López and J. M. Martínez (2016): This collection of essays explores the cultural legacy of Al-Andalus and includes references to the intermarriage and integration of Arab-Berber and local Iberian populations.
"Islamic Spain, 1250 to 1500" by David Waterman (2004): This book explores the Arab rule in Spain and the interactions between Muslim invaders and the local Christian population, including intermarriage and cultural exchange.
"The Moors in Spain" by Stanley Lane-Poole (1909): An older work, but it provides insights into the social and cultural exchanges between the Moors and the local populations, including marriage and integration.
4. Genetics and Population Studies:
"The Genetic Legacy of the Iberian Peninsula: A Tale of Migrations, Mixtures, and Population Shifts" by José A. M. Ramírez et al. (2017): This study discusses the genetic contributions of various groups, including Romans, Visigoths, and Moors, to the modern Spanish population.
"Genetic Evidence for the Mediterranean Origin of the Spaniards" by P. González et al. (2016): This paper looks at genetic studies and highlights the mixed ancestry of the Spanish population, including North African influences from the Arab-Berber period.
@@ross23233 ...¿ De donde eres, porque se ve que sabes poco de España..
ESOS PUEBLOS YA TRAIAN A SUS MUJERES, PERO MEJOR LEES HISTORIA UNIVERSAL
A very illustrative and fairly comprehensive video of Spain and its people throughout the ages, all captured in less than 20 minutes. Said DNA, culture and language extend to most countries in Latin America, making the Spanish heritage much richer and diversified. Thank you for sharing.
Spaniard here. This video is wrong. Please do not use it as a reference. Cheers.
My mother was Spanish and from the area of Galicia. We have 12% Shepardic jew.
Woah that's a lot, might be as recent as 2 -3 generations ago
@conitorres9774 How can your DNA say how much jews. Judaism is a religion. Hebrew people are different. That is a DNA.
@@sherrw6837 Both Sephardic/Ashkenaxi news have a distinct DNA, the reason is classified in a different group. Yes, I doubt very much his/her mother is an authentic Galician with Sephardic DNA.
@@sherrw6837It seems to be in fashion to have Jewish, Basque, Scandinavian, and Native Americans DNA.
@freyalove3831 Yep. DNA genealogy is a joke. That Scandinavian thing is a reality. I had my parents' DNA tested and no Scandinavian DNA. So how could I have a small percentage? Right!
I don’t buy this presentation. No mention of the influence of the Jews of Spain whatsoever. Unbelievable. 🙄
Usted esta correcto . Soy brasileña casada con un español y en el teste genético de mi nieta hay DNA judío sefardita y asquenaze además del ibérico , italian, etc
The video skipped the Phonecians, and Greeks that lived and traded with the Native Iberians.
they forgot so many ...gipsys, jews, other germanic tribes, alans, french, italian and german migrations...slavic...
I also noticed that! Those groups had a large influence in Spain. The video also failed to mention the J haplogroup which many Spanish men carry and which likely came from the groups you mention. I myself carry the J2 haplogroup.
Esos solo venían a hacer intercambios comerciales
@@tonirc5122 Tenían colonias en las costas.
@@tonirc5122Estas equivocado. Estos formaron muchas colonias y ciudades en el sur de Espana desde 800 bc.
My great grandparents came to the Dominican Republic from Spain.
My mother was Indian from, according to my DNA, Orinoco area of Venezuela.
lol
In Atapuerca, Cantabria, in the north of the peninsula, hominid remains dating back 800,000 years have been found. The oldest human remains in Europe are found in Spain
Enough discrepancies to review this report which obviously many are interested in 👌
Cierto, ya que en tiempos de la última glaciación la zona templada, obligadamente, era la única habitada. El video ha puesto un origen ridículamente cercano para las primeras ocupaciones de la península.
Atapuerca no está en Cantabria. Está algo más al sur, en la provincia de Burgos. Saludos
The comments on surnames are very misleading, confused, and sometimes contradictory. Had never heard of Garcia as being of Arab origin. It's always mentioned as Basque origin, with a possible Celtic connection.
There is similar Garcea in both Italy and Romania.
Siempre se consideró García como apellido vasco-navarro, derivado de Garzo
I am a proud mix and love every thing about our heritage.
Fascinating how you completely skipped over the dominance of Punic peoples and culture in the Iberian peninsula from 700 to 200 BC. Spain was part of the Phoenician mercantile empire, from the founding of Carthage until her destruction by the Romans.
Exactly! Haplotype J2... Around 8% of the average spanish DNA.
Yes, Hannibal, the Carthaginian, was from Spain. He prayed at the temple of Melqart, in Gades (present day Cadiz) prior to crossing the Pyrenees with his elephants.
North african 10-15%?
Andalusia high north african?
OMG
The place with highest north african is Galicia and below 10%>
Do you know that reconquista led to dna north-south similarities?
There is more similarity between Huelva and Asturias than between Almería and Huelva
This video is full of lies
Andalucía Occidental tiene un 11% y la Oriental un 6%, casi nada, según Carracedo ("Pattern of Iberian..."), siendo en Galicia la ascendencia norteafricana-bereber o "musulmana" más alta (hasta un 16%) y de los más bajos del haplogrupo R1b relacionado con los celtas. Este video no hace nada más que promover estereotipos.
@@felix8523esas referencias tampoco tienen mucho sentido. Todo depende de dónde tomen las muestras. Se observa una diferencia notoria entre el fenotipo de un ourensano y de un coruñés. Y tiene su lógica porque hubo una repoblación con moriscos en el sur de la región.
@@alaskaen3177 Las muestras tienen que ser recogidas cumpliendo unos requisitos de validez y representación. No se cogen muestras "dependiendo de" porque no serían representativas y el estudio sería invalido por metodología. Nadie dice que sean todos los gallegos, evidentemente habrá gente que incluso tenga cero como otra tendrá 30. Se puede consultar el estudio, y ver el mapa al detalle, aunque más en la mitad sur gallega, Galicia es la más clara de toda España y por tanto con más ADN norteafricano en casi su totalidad (hay más estudios que lo corroboran). Es de libre acceso, solo hay que poner en Google "Carracedo pattern Iberia", además dirigido por un gallego, Carracedo. Aquí no puedo poner enlaces.
@@felix8523 Galicia tiene un 2% de país nórdico (por los suevos) es la única región de España con ese gen
I’m Haitian🇭🇹and I have Spanish (Iberian)and northern African(Berber) DNA
El norteafricano, es porque tendras antepasados de las Islas Canarias. Ese gen norteafricano, es de norteafricano antiguo, no es el norteafricano de hoy. Ni es de origen arabe, sino bereber. El primer pueblo que pobló esa zona en la epoca neolitica.
Proclaim that to Dominicans.
Los bereberes son totalmente blancos y predomina mucho el ojo azul,cuando los mulsumanes los invaden huyen hacia las montañas,no se querían mezclar,aún hoy les tienen mucha rabia a los Marroquíes....@@adleglez5592
I’m glad to see you are not ashamed of yourself African blood.
@@blackbiker1961 I never was
Primera vez que escucho que el apellido Garcia viene del árabe. Eso no es cierto, tampoco Martínez, nada que ver. Este vídeo en cuestión del origen de apellidos no tiene ni pies ni cabeza. Una completa estupidez. Antes de hacer el vídeo debería haber consultado heráldica ibérica. Es una completa tontería. En parte un vídeo fake. Y existen cientos de estudios genéticos europeos, estadounidenses, israelíes etc. la huella genética norteafricana en la península ibérica es incluso inferior que en otras zonas mediterráneas como Italia y Grecia. En fin…. Ya viendo la información sobre el origen de los apellidos….. me hago una idea de la cantidad de errores del mismo.
👌
Hispania (Hispania) was created in 219 BC by the Roman Senate. It was created as a single political unit (Province) later subdivided in 109BC. So this story is as fake as the names of the regions. They were named after the rivers: Baetica after the river Baetis (Muslim Guadalquivir), Iberians after the river Iberus (Ebro), etc. A little more real research would do wonders to your story.
Who or what were the rivers named after ?
Keep your mouth shut and dont watch the video
This is found only in very old roots nations.
Romanians have the same tradition.
River ARGES are called ARGESENI.
River MURES are called MURESANI
Etc.
India was called from the River Indus.
Egypt from river Egypt.
The Nile name came later from a king named Nilus.
Visigoths were not Germanic, they were Gete/Gaeti Romanian ancestors. Very wrong history is taught in the Universities.
AMSTELVEEN IS NAMED AFTER AMSTEL (RIVER) NOT THE BEER!
@@umarheadcutter7189Go and learn about your contry and live hispania alone. Spain do not need any more lies from English country.
Eight hundred years of Muslin Arab rule, Abad and Medina are definitely Arabic names -on my parents birth certificates. Moorish ancestry strong in Malaga.
Only 4% of my DNA is of Spanish origin, but I see them as our forefathers. I'm of Tlaxcalteca descent. Together, our ancestors conquered the new world. I have found indigenous family from the north western USA to the southwest, northern and southern México, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Honduras, el Salvador, Costa Rica and Perú. My grandmothers family lost their fortune during the Mexican revolution. In my family, we also have a Spanish sword from the 1600s. Viva España 🇪🇸 y viva todo Latino America .
Si no me equivoco, "Latinoamerica" es feminina en forma, y entonces la frase debe ser "toda Latinoamerica" o "toda America latina."
Same . I’m 85% Mixtec and 11% Spanish , I forgot the other percentage .
@@socalgsr1 that's cool bro. My regions are Cdmx, Puebla/ Tlaxcala and Morelos. My grandmothers sister got 100% Indigenous America's Mexico in her ancestry dna Test. Same regions as mine but with 3% Yucatan Peninsula added. My mom 97%
Es Hispanoamérica
@@carlosalbertohernandezrami2230 Tienes razón. Solamente quisiera añadir que el rascacielo de la ciudad de Méjico se llama "La Torre Latinoamericana." "Latino" y "Hispano" los dos incluyen Brasil.
You completely forgot the phoenician influence during the bronze age.
I'm Spanish and have no Berber, but have Cypriot, Egyptian, Yemenite at 3.0% in total, 1% Angolan, .5% Indian, .5% Chinese, 1% Danish, 1.5% Ashkenazi.
Omg
The “Indian” you have is from Gypsies!
You’re the first I’ve seen!
Damn you got a little bit of everything huh? 😂
@@thearyamehrrf6886 it’s Gugarati They came with the Umayyad from the Sultanate of Deli.
I have Cypriot as well. I also do have North African but it’s mainly from the Canary Islands but it’s still a low percentage.
I have Spanish, Greek, Basque and Sephardic Jewish from my dad
Todos los vascos tienen ADN judío, es la tribu perdida de israel, el Rh es judío.
@@jorgeo4483Ochoa de parte de mi mamá tenemos Basque y Sephardi.
Si mi tambien, en el DNA salio 12% basque, mi Tio dijo que en la familia Lugo eran de Galicia.
Vasco = Español
@@jorgeo4483de donde has sacado esa fumada?
La música Flamenco no representa a España sino a los 700 mil gitanos que hay aqui, la música folklórica tradicional española es la música medieval, y nuestras raíces son romanas, celtiberas y germánicas, africana menos de un 5%, ARRIBA ESPAÑA VIVA CRISTO REY!
Bien dicho!! A pesar de ser ateo, siento un orgullo por mi pasado CULTURAL CRISTIANO medieval. En pocas palabras lo has dicho todo con claridad.
Menos incluso de Africanos y en todo caso del norte ; saludos ; Viva la Reconquista !!♥️🇪🇦💪
Deberían estudiar el importante aporte genético hispano en Gran Bretaña. Es interesante.
En Irlanda
@@socheoteyza6211no, en toda gran Bretaña, buscalo, verás que sorpresa te llevas😂
I'm basque and i was here 50.000 years ago so, learn more about us.
Where is the Basque
@@MariaGasca-Reyeson the border with France.
This is poorly documented .I am history teacher in the university , here int the Spain .I have scientists friends from the best universities here in Spain and from foreign ones .You left a lot to say , The spanish DNA is much diverse that that . What happens to the Alans, Suevi, Jews, Goths, Visigoths, Barbarians, Vikings, Carthaginians, Phoenicians, Tartessians, Iberians, Celtiberians, etc. AND Spain was the most important kingdon of Roman where lived the richest romans for many centuries .It is very incomplete
Don’t forget the large migration of poor Spanish people specially Basque and Galicians to the Americas.
More of the expeditions had soldiers from Extramadura.
Only 4% of Iberians possess the North African haplogroup, E. That’s less than Italy, Greece, Albania, and many Balkan countries. So the # that this video states is wrong.
Mexican and I got: 69% Iberian (Spain), 14% basque, 10% Sephardi Jew, 5% Native American (Mexico), 2% welsh.
No acabo de entender porqué separan vasca de ibérica, vale que hay una parte vasca en el sur de Francia… pero vamos, cualquier español puede arrojar esa composicíón de ADN, especialmente la sefardí, uno de cada cinco españoles tenemos ascendencia sefardí actualmente. Y en LATAM debe ser incluso mayor ya que a América pasaron muchos sefardíes.
@@alaskaen3177 Ni idea, según yo , los vacos son españoles ( o celtiberos) como mayoría, no es como que fuera una raza distinta ,aparte del idioma, no hay diferencia entre un vasco y cualquier otro español, a menos que el test tome Francés sureño como vasco , que sería muy raro.
@@manuelamavizcanavarro9011 no hay nadie mas español que un vasco. Probablemente son los iberos que quedaron sin romanizar
@@alaskaen3177 Así fue. Muchos Sefardís huieron de Iberia cuando Fernando y Isabel exilaron a todos los hebreos de la península en 1492 ce. También hubieron judíos y otras tribus de la supuesta Palestina entre los hebreos iberianos, pero la mayoría fueron Sefardí.
Hay un error que estoy viendo en muchos de los comentarios, cuando se dice "Iberian" no significa España, significa pueblos de Iberia o Íberos, actualmente España y Portugal, cuando dicen "Basque" es un linaje más antiguo que corresponde a la zona vasca, pero sigue siendo España (y una parte menor Francia). No hay que mezclar Íbero con España, de hecho Hispania o Iberia era tanto el territorio actual de España como el de Portugal. Por eso los Hispanoamericanos o Iberoamericanos (muchos portugueses prefieren el segundo término por temas nacionalistas ya que Iberia es el nombre griego de la península y no fue adoptado para nombrar al país vecino) se denominan así, por su ascendencia cultural y política.
funny..spain is always represented by flamenco..never show the culture of music like bagpipe (celtic heritage from north spain)
I'm Northern Spain, through my decendent, who ended, up in New Zealand 🇳🇿 East Coast of the North Island, he ended up living with the local Maoris east coast, the Maoris described Jose - Manuel..as being 7 -foot tall red hair green eyed fair...skin, 1800 hundreds was roughly the time Jose settled in New Zealand, many of the Maori Cheifs, would hand there daughters over...to Jose Manuel..for breeding,
Myself I am a descendent of Jose...Manuel, with Maori, features & Spanish features too!! My ex - wife was red hair green eyes aswell..my youngest son who's 22, years of age but his height is 6 foot 6, my wife height is 5/7 and I am 5/8..with a bit of searching I found out Jose manuel was of Visigoth, blood...
I am a berber from Northern Morocco (Rif) according to familytreedna I have 15% Iberian and 10% Italian and 75% Noord African
Yes ! The Almoravid and the Almohads fearing the Reconquista banished tens of thousands of Christians to North Africa in 900ths.
Si eres mediterráneo
❤
@@ontstoppingsdienstors my original post was D e l e T Ed , so sorry. So let’s try again in a manner more conducive to the times. In the 12th and 13th centuries, the Almohads and the Almoravids thought that the north of Africa was such a beautiful place to visit and sent tens of thousands of Christians ( Iberians) to emigrate and see how nice it would be to WORK there. That’s why you have that beautiful DNA!
Martinez is not of Arabic origin? It’s Comes from the Latin For Mars and EZ is Son of Martin.
The Spanish are mixture all tribes of Europe.
I´m Mexican from Mexican parents and all Mexican grand parents. However, my ADN is 51% Spanish, 28% Mexican indigene, 10% masque country, 3% Scotland, 2% France
Vasque
García, Martínez and Pérez are not surnames of Arabic origin, but rather a given name of "Christian" origin + Visigothic suffix "-ez"...
Thus Martínez=Son of Martín, Pérez=son of Pedro, López=son of Lope, Fernández=son of Fernando, etc... The suffix "-ez" means "son of"
There are also surnames of purely Iberian origin, such as Vega, Guijarro, Zarza...
And then, there are surnames of Jewish origin, Basque surnames, etc...
Romeo, Bianchi and Rossi are not Spanish surnames, btw...
I'm 100% Spanish with 16 Spanish family names. All my known ancestors are from the same northwestern region of Galicia. My DNA is 20% Irish and 10% English. I'm only 50% Iberian.
Thanks, learned a lot! My grandparents were from Galicia, Asturias and Leon. My DNA test results stated I was 47% Portuguese 😃…so I think it’s worth mentioning the makeup of them… as the borders changed over time and people migrated back and forth…
Basically people from that área in Spain create the county of Portugal inside the kingdom of León - Galicia and later Portugal became independent.
Galician & Portuguese same people, see the languages how they match
@@virginiasanchis1717 becareful with that acertions they are not true portuguese are a distinct autosomal than galegos , is true that gallegos close to vigo carry some residuals of portuguese but are not portuguese just have the same origins from the alpes
I certainly hear the Arabic influence in traditional Spanish music.
Beautiful!
Los españoles somos el pueblo más importante y trascendente en la historia de la humanidad, los primeros en dar la vuelta al mundo y descubrir cómo era el planeta y su geografía de mares y continentes.
Jajajajaja, pero qué dices, España ni siquiera está en el top 10 de los mejores países. Todas las colonias españolas son un fracaso y nuestro mayor explorador fue un Italiano.
Por mas HISPANOFILO QUE YO SEA, te tengo que acosejar que no hagas alarde de cosas importantisimas en la historia de la humanidad, pero que actualmente CARECEN DE IMPORTANCIA EN UN MUNDO REGIDO POR ESTANDARES ECONOMICOS COMO EL PRODUCTO INTERNO BRUTO DE UNA NACION, o EL INGRESO PER CAPITA. Tu comentario es contra producente, y no hace mas que dagnar la reputacion de los Espanoles. Si tienes 8 agnos de edad, se justifica lo que acabas de escribir. SUERTE.
I am 13% Iberian, .1.7% Basque, 2% Roma, 1.5 Sephardim, 0.3 North African, along with English, Irish, Scots, Welsh.
I am 78% Iberian
maternal H Haplogroup Visigothic/Asturias paternal J2 L70 Haplogroup 2% Jewish// 8% Basque/7% French.This video is amazing Thank you
I suspect DNA companies identify everybody as some small percentage Jew ... strength in numbers. The fact that some genes line up a certain way doesn't make you that. I'm supposed to be part Australian! WHA? I'm mostly Spanish 77%, with some Méjica (Magic Ah) 17%. That matches my Family Tree very well. (No Australian. LMAO)
What dna company do you use to know this?
You just can't talk about Spanish DNA without mentioning the Sephardis.
Our Middle East genes come from them. Sephardic Jews.
Moors didn't mix. They did because many of them converted to Catholism to stay in the country after 1492.
Garcia from what I read is Basque origin from Gartzea
hartz bear in basque
I knew a woman of Basque descent named Echeverry, which is supposedly the origin of the Spanish Echevarria. My last name is Pinol, I know nothing of the origin.
@@melissapinol7279 could be piñol? or pinyol...catalan origin, i's the bone of the olive
@melissapinol7279 pinol parece catalan, valenciano o mallorquin
@@CarlesPerez77Thank you, it is Catalan.
La visión más actual es que "España" viene del fenicio, y significa "Tierra de metales". Aquí venían para proveerse de plata, oro y otros metales.
There were a significant number of Jewish/Hebrew people (witness Jewish Quarters in every Medieval town) throughout the peninsula yet they weren´t even mentioned or are they supposed to be lumped in with "Middle Eastern"?
Son Semitas
That's because the Jews hardly ever mixed with other native cultures, preferring to remain true to their religion and traditions unless forced to do so by threats of expulsion or violence.
@@CarlosRomero-u6h Plenty preferred to convert and stay. Their genes are still around here (Spain).
Some groups do not mix enough to be counted???
@@clisediagonzalez5010 Clearly in those days the levels of tolerance were lower than now and elite interests and Mob rule were more prevalent.
Por la península ibérica han pasado todas las civilizaciones más importantes del planeta ( incluidos mesoaméricanos, Incas, sudamericanos) y añado cuando medio mundo estaba helado inhabitable y los Neandertales hacían procesiones y botellón en Iberia.
1 no habléis con los piratas en su idioma 2 ya están cocinando nuevas leyendas negras viendo que la Hispanidad crece cada día nuevamente 3 ese en su miedo y comenzarán a crear información contra España y la Hispanidad 4 ellos fueron los genocidas y mayores enemigos de España,5 creando la leyenda negra
Absolutamente. Fueron los autores del mayor genocidio de la historia, invadiendo exterminando a todos los nativos de norteamerica en tan solo 200 años. Mientras que a los españoles los presentan como los grandes asesinos y lo que hicieron fue mezclarse y llevar su cultur., si, impusieron, seguramente se aprovecharon de los recursos, cometerían atrocidades, etc. pero el hecho es que vas a México, Perú, Colombia, Bolivia, Venezuela, Ecuador, etc... y la población es mayoritariamente de la raza originaria de cada lugar. En Norteamerica ya no quedan... apenas ni hay "reservas indias" (ghettos)...
Spain also has DNA haplogroups of L2 lines that are older.
What does that mean?
@@drakethesnek6429
DNA haplogroups are the people that people come from such as your mom or dad and their parents and grandparents and great grands etc. going all the way back that’s found in DNA.
@bluetinsel7099 no, mean where does L2 come from?
@@drakethesnek6429
L2 is a daughter branch of L and a sister branch of the Hamitic L3, L2 is Shemetic lineage.
I'm Mexican. I got my DNA results back, stating I was 74% European of part Irish 33%, Italian/Greek 12%, British and Swedish and Northern African 5%. Upon watching this series, my DNA started to make sense. My ancestors were part of all that history.
Your not Mexican. You are a Criollo
Born in Mexico but not actual Mexican.
I am Albanian and I have Visigothic ancestry from Spain
Yeah Iam Spanish and ancestry of Andrómeda lol
@@Benito-lr8mz Don't be mad, it's according to my DNA test.
Be proud that you have Arab DNA & ancestry and don't hate on others.
Do not take this documentary too seriously. It misses facts and contrasted modern data.
I have heard that Hispania (=Spain) comes from the Phoenician language, from words meaning "the island of the north" or "the coast of the north". Regarding the "Flamenco dance" it is very little Spanish: it was "designed" or "created" approximately in 1860 by the Italian Silverio Franconetti, (as a show called "gypsy dances" that he offered in a café theater that he owned in Seville) mixing the "Forge songs" of some gypsy blacksmiths who lived in the area of Seville and who were nicknamed "the Flamencos" ( =Flemish) because they said they had arrived from Flanders with the dance of the Uruguayan cowboys or gauchos called "Malambo" (Falconetti had lived many years in Uruguay before settling in Seville).
Only talked about visigoths. What about Alans, Vandals, Suevii?
Se les olvida siempre,Suevos Álanos Vándalos y Bizantinos en el Sur los han borrado de la Historia y es parte nuestra también como son los Yamnayas...en Fin.
Thank you for this so respectful study of our DNA history. Coming from England it's no so often the objective and full of respect video I can clearly see into this yours . Thank YOU
Respectful study? They are a bunch of lies.
Funny, I’m Rivera from my father’s side and my DNA says my family came from the area of Galicia/ northern Portugal and migrated to Seville where they mixed with locals which gave us North African blood. I have between 6-9% North African-Middle Eastern blood. My mother’s side is Basque.
My paternal side are from Galician, my family members and my dad have done DNA ancestry. They have not found absent North African/Middle Eastern. So definitely your father is from Andalucia, migrated to the North. If you have father had North African DNA isn't Galician.
@@freyalove3831 Most Spaniards regardless of geography have North African blood and that is because the moors where in the entire peninsula for +/- 800 years. That is why Portuguese people also have North African blood.
@@TheSimmpleTruth it is a misconception as much as Irish are distant cousin to Galician/basques.
My paternal Spanish Family are absent of North African/Middle East DNA (nothing wrong to have North African DNA). Even 1-5% isn't high level to influence the Iberian DNA. Yes, Moors lived in the Iberian pensinsula, pretty much the South, Andalucia (Al-Andalus), since they didn't fully controlled the North thanks to the Christian resistance located in the North of Spain. Even Moors brought major technologies to Spain, Interfaith marriage was frowned upon especially in Islam. Furthermore Moors brought Arab slave trade, many Iberians were slaves(along with European countries) and abducted by the moors.
My Spanish/French ancestors fought these Habibi. .Now they are back in the Northern countries.
@@freyalove3831 I didn’t say every Spaniard, but if it makes you happy to think I don’t have Galician blood, here I am going to make your day. I don’t have Galician blood. Hope that makes you happy. Have a wonderful day! God bless you!
@@TheSimmpleTruth I didn't say that. I don't know your family ancestry.
You want to see a MIX?! My Puerto Rican mother has indigenous island, Spaniard, French, Portuguese, and African DNA - now THAT is impressive! No wonder she’s a powerhouse ❤
Viva España! 🇪🇸🫶🏼
I'm Puerto Rican with spanish ancestry. This was very interesting. 😊
Isn’t flamenco actually a gypsy thing not an ethnic Spaniard thing?
Yes Flamenco 🦩 is Romani Gypsy
Very beautiful 😍❤️
@ I know that
Long live Spain! Proud to have the blood of this beautiful country 🎉 Saludos desde México 🎉
Nobody noticed the Gypsies or the Jews. They're also Spanish.
Jajaja. that is true. Why do not you mention them?
Los gitanos llegaron desde Paquistan y apenas se han mezclado con los españoles ibéricos, de hecho tienen otro ADN diferente al convencional en España.
@@mar_csbu7503 hay un millón o más, y sí se han mezclado con los demás españoles.
si y los gitanos se casan entre ellos y no son españoles ,hay gitanos en todos los paises ,y su origen es rumano y hungaro, por eso practicamente nadie tiene ,raza gitana en su ADN al menos que seas gitano,
@@artvandelay8830 mentira. Los gitanos vinieron desde la India y no son caucásicos como los españoles en su ADN prehistorico.
I'm from north South America, and according tk my DNA study I'm 44% native American (Andes Highlands) and the remaining is a combination from Mediterranean, Northern Europe, Asia and Oceania)
Solo con leer que tenemos mas influencia de los norteafricanos que de los romanos, he salido de este mal intencionado video
Duro con estos BASTARDOS revisionistas.....Cuando aluden a la Catedral de Cordoba se refieren a ella como la Mezquita de Cordoba....estos maricones nunca mencionan que antes de Mezquita fue una Iglesia! Saludos desde California de parte de un Hispano genuino.
I knew my mother's family came from Spain. But the DNA said way more Italian than Spanish. We were jews so maybe when the Sephardims left for Italy, that may be it. No, idea. However, Rome banished jews to Spain and Tunisia around 70 CE. So, who knows.
DNA can't determine borders. It's a scam. DNA can't even determine race.
Some of the Spanish who came to the Americas had much earlier migrated from Italy. For instance, one of my ancestors was a Cantuti-Castevetri. It was
shortened to Cantu' in Spanish.
@@Lynn-s2ino olvidéis que el reino de Aragón dominó durante muchos años la mitad sur de Italia.
Soy española y por el lado materno tengo ancestros judeoconversos (comprobado con árbol genealógico) y lo que me dí cuenta en estos análisis genéticos es que cuando aparece un porcentaje italiano o un porcentaje judío askenazi es un posible indicador de ancestros judíos. Estos análisis consisten en comparar tu ADN con poblaciones modernas, posiblemente estos antepasados judios tenían esa herencia de Roma, la propia judía y el resto sería Ibérica.
Si, por lo cierto, muchos Sefardis, vinieron a España, esclavos de los Romanos. Otros, por ejemplo, viviendo en tierras Persas (Babylonia) vinieron mas tarde.
Irgullo de España, arte, , arquitectura, cultura inigualable, tradiciones, divers y plural. TE AMO ESPAÑA, madre de ultramares 🥰💜🌹🇪🇦
The author has a great great great imagination and this video is full of imprecisions.
I remember trying to research Spanish anthropology in the 90s. It was almost impossible because no one wanted to have their blood drawn and analyzed. Most especially the very private basque.
. I'm fascinated to learn that they have finally allowed the studies.
It's the end of the road west, so logically, it got complicated.
I often wonder if the Intuit and Eskimos and native Russian traveled over the antarctic to the Americas, while there were six months of daylight. It's quite literally the shortest route.
Martínez means "son of Martín" and Pérez "son of Pedro", so they arent arabic at all. Garcia is believed to have basque or Iberic origin. And Alcalá or Medina surnames are mainly toponymic, as there are many towns in Spain called like that, but doesnt necesary mean you have arabic ascendance.
And Galicia is not the "most celtic" región of Spain. In fact, southern Castile is even more celtic genetically speaking.
I would believe you. My mother’s DNA has “Irish” (Celtic) 8% but I have done her genealogy back to Spain and there was never an Anglo marriage within the last two hundred years. However, her grandfather’s line was from Avila in Castilla La Viega. Her Father’s line was pure Basque.
Thank you. I appreciate learning about the origin of my last name, Sanchez. ❤❤❤
Está lleno de errores el video ni caso
My grandfather was from Asturias and he was an Obaya and Cueto.
ty for his very interesting topic! greetings from Belgium!
Interesting? are you rtrdd or something like that? this sh*t is full of lies and mistakes...
I am Mexican so you know i have Spanish Blood.
@@severelychanged3679 All Mexicans are New Spanish.
Solo un 18% de los hispanos son 100% españoles.
@@jorgeo4483ni tan siquiera tú tienes 100%.
@@jorgeo4483I have 50% Iberian 2% levant you don’t need to be 100% Spanish to have Spanish blood you don’t need to be white to have Iberian blood
@@cowboycigarettes4769 No, you even can be esquimo.
Spain is a beautiful country
There was no Spain in ancient times as you mentioned. U5 is a maternal haplogroup, you didn't mention it, same with H. There is no need to go on about the WHG or Neolithic farmers because no modern Europeans existed before the coming of the Indo-European speakers. So no Swedes, no Irish, no Italians, no Greeks, so not just people who call themselves Spanish.
My daughter is U5b1b1g
U5b1b1, es un adn europeo que hoy no esta en europa. Sino en el norte de africa. Viene de poblaciones muy antiguas de europa, cuando europa tenia hielo.
Just got my DNA results. Mostly Scandinavian, with some English/Irish and German/Dutch. Very Northern European. But there was 2% Spanish! That was totally unexpected.
I'm of Mexican ancestry, people always think I'm Italian or Greek never Mexican I'm a bit brown
Have you ever taken a DNA test? You might have Spanish ancestry as well
I doubt what you said, I am sure you believe it, but most people are hopeless at guessing the origins of others they think are foreign looking. I know as I was born in another coutry to the one I have citizenship with, and the nationality I identify with. I have seen many Mexicans in Mexico, and in the USA, and I haven't seen one that passes as Greek or Italian. Mexicans even the lightest ones have a non European look, even non Middle Eastern look. I wouldn't take what the punters in the street tell you about your ethnic appearance.
Who cares what other people think. Stop seeking validation. You are New Spanish. It doesn't get better than that.
@@padredemishijos12for real
You are Mestizo. Most Mexicans and Hispanics are. This means half Spanish, and have Native.
Where do you get reliable genetic testing ?
I’m Mexican, half of the family looks Indian the other half Spanish.
Native American . Indians are the one from India 🇮🇳
@@alreddog2655 here in the United States the natives America don’t want to be called Indian.
Ahh indigenous or Indian
@@tonyvega7268 correct
@anajano07 we are either indigenous or native of America but not Indian
Chilean-Canadian here, my families come from the Basque region and extremadura region and from county sligo in ireland
There are misgivings regarding Andalusia. Most of the population has been shown to descend from the repopulators of the plateau and the north. During the 600 years of the Roman Empire there was a lot of human trafficking from Roman Africa and Hispania, hence the Syrian or Maghreb genetic contribution. Finally, indicate that there were very few Moriscos who remained after the war of the 16th century.
I'm sorry to desagree about Andalusia. In fact, the Moorish were expelled at the begenning of the XVIi century and this population was replaced by farmers coming from Flanders and Bavaria. In Seville, there are people descending from Vikings and even Japanese from Nagasaki.
It's a fact that more than 800 vikings were stablished in Seville near the 9th century. Tall and strong I can imagine the impact in women..😊
@@patxi601 There were as well Danish women. They were not so odd for the people living in Seville as Vandals, Suevi and Visigots descendents also lived there. But of course they caused a deep impact. If you visit some of the villages next to the river, it seems that they were much more than 800.
@@rafaelcuevas3209 the 800.vikings were prisioners of the 3er invasion of Sevilla. I know some warriors could be women.
@@patxi601 That was After the attack in 966. They became muslims and helped establish trade relations with Denmark. In fact, the story comes from more than a century before. In 966, more of Vikings were Christians, therefore one of the three religions of the Book and able to settle in muslim lands provided that they pay taxes.
In 844, Vikings devastated Seville but they were seriously defeated by the toops of Add al-Rahman II. 1000 were killed, 400 taken prisoners and other run. 30 vikings ships were also taken.
Abd al-Rahman took this incident very seriously and sent an embassy to the Vikings king (some chronicles say to Denmark, some say to Ireland). The fact was that he sent Al-Ghazal together with some of the vikigs.
The rest of the story was witten by Iban Dihya, an Umayyad official.
They caused a great impression among vikings. The Vikings crowded arround to look at them and were very astonished at their appearance and their way of dressing. The king asked them to stay longer and they did It for several months. Al+Ghazal met a queen called Nud and it seems that they both fell in love. The thing is that they established trade relations and many vikings settled next to Guadalquivir River as free men and women. Thousands. They suffered two more vikings attacks but from other countries and much less harmful.
On the other hand, Castillan had very close relations with Norway.
@@patxi601 Sorry Patxi for a second response, but I have new details. In fact the prisoners were slaughtered in Tablada, the same area where nowadays is the Feria. The one who settled were the rest of the party, a big group who became strong in the Aljarafe area. They made a request to the Emir to accept his rule and become muslims. This request were accepted and they settled in Coria del Río, Carmona and Morón. If you go to the area you'll see that not only there are a much bigger proportion of blonde people with blue eyes compared to the rest of Spain, but as well they make cheese in the Skandinavian way.
Coria del Río is specially interesting because they not only have Danish ancestors but also Japanese from Nagasaki as well.
García, Martínez and Pérez lastnames have absolutelly nothing to do with arabic origins, all being much older than the islamic invasion of the peninsula and also some of the most common spanish surnames. Its strange that this substancial error is made, given the fact that is very absurd, and that most of the video is very well documented. García, Martínez and Pérez all come from very common names in northern Spain during medieval and ancestral times. García is the name of the first spanish kings, and has a preromanic basque and navarre origin. The first king of León was called García, as well as the first king of Navarre also called García Iñiguez, son of Iñigo Arista. Martínez on the other hand, means son of Martín, Martín comes from the name of the roman god of war Marte (Mars). Pérez means son of Pére, which means Pedro or Peter, which comes from the word Stone in latin, because the apostol Pedro (Petro) was considered the founding stone of the Catholic Church. This is just basic understanding of etimology and basic knowledge of european history. Lastnames influenced by arabic origins in Spain usually start with the letter "A", being some examples of this Álamo, Albarracín, Alcalá, Alcántara, Almodóvar.
Mexican- American my DNA shows France and Nothern Spain, and 25% Indigenous Meso-American. Crazy mix. Many Mexicans from Mexico City are the about the same.
Very poorly documented. The most common surname in Spain (Garcia) is of Basque origin
North África, before before being muslim was christian for centuries.
The muslims Who invaded the península did not mixed with the christians or with what they call 'infidels', the same thing the jews didn't do.
Discrepo totalmente con respecto a el origen de algunos apellidos y denota una falta de rigor académico en este video . El origen del apellido García se remonta a la península ibérica y está firmemente vinculado a raíces prerromanas y vasconas, lo que lo sitúa cronológicamente mucho antes de la llegada de los árabes a la región en el año 711 d.C. Diversos estudios onomásticos y lingüísticos han demostrado que García deriva del término vasco "gartzia", que significa "joven" o "valiente", y que se utilizaba como nombre propio entre las tribus vasconas y pueblos del norte de Hispania desde tiempos prerromanos. Otra teoría sugiere que puede derivar de la palabra vasca "artz" (oso), indicando “hijo del oso” como símbolo de fuerza o poder, lo que refuerza su vínculo con la tradición vasca de utilizar animales totémicos para denotar cualidades de liderazgo. Este uso está documentado en textos y registros medievales de los siglos VIII y IX, como en el rey García Jiménez, perteneciente a la nobleza navarra mucho antes de la influencia árabe en la península. Además, el apellido estaba asentado en regiones como Navarra y La Rioja, territorios que no estuvieron bajo control musulmán durante el período de ocupación árabe, lo que evidencia un origen autóctono. Por lo tanto, la hipótesis del origen árabe carece de validez etimológica y cronológica, ya que los registros más antiguos y la estructura fonética de García apuntan claramente a un linaje prerromano y vasco, independiente de cualquier influencia semítica. Por otro lado, Martínez y Pérez son apellidos patronímicos derivados de nombres propios latinos -Martín y Pedro, respectivamente- con el sufijo “-ez” que significa "hijo de". Esta estructura se desarrolló durante la Edad Media y no tiene ninguna relación con la onomástica árabe, ya que ambos nombres (Martín y Pedro) eran populares en la Hispania cristiana mucho antes de la influencia árabe. Un saludo