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Split Between English and Scots Older Than Thought
The Scotsman ^ | 11APR04 | Louise Gray

Posted on 04/11/2004 6:50:11 PM PDT by WoofDog123

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To: blam
The reason the incidence of red hair in Ireland and Libya is the same is because the two peoples are very much relatied -- from proto-Basques. The Basques are notoriously blue eyed, and do have some red hair; I have seen a Basque with reddish hair, but not out right orange-red like you find in Ireland. At any rate, the blue-eyed Basque element is what accounts for the blue eyes and blonde hair found in a large percentage of the Berbers of North Africa -- NOT from the Vandals as is so erroneously and popularly believed. In short the Libyans are largely proto-Basque-Hamitic, with Arabic overlay; the Irish are proto-Basque, separated from Basques-proper by several thousand years in a more northern environment which accounts for the more fair skind and hair among the Micks, who also, obviously have a minor, continental celtic overlay. It has often been remarked upon how closely the many Libyans resemble many Scots...
41 posted on 04/29/2004 12:08:09 AM PDT by JohCol (The DNA results are in on ALL of Scotland: the Picts were proto-Basques...)
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To: WoofDog123; blam
The only surprise here is that the basque are genetically related to the celts

Not really, the Basque have been surrounded by Celtic folk for thousands of years. Its no surprise that, while they maintained their language, they interbreed with the neighbouring regions.
42 posted on 04/29/2004 12:21:42 AM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: WoofDog123
BEsides which, the Celts moved into Europe only around 3000 BC or later, in consistance with other Indo-European migrations from Central Asia-Persia-India
43 posted on 04/29/2004 12:23:00 AM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: JohCol; WoofDog123
I would think that the Picts are not related to the Celts at all.
44 posted on 04/29/2004 12:26:27 AM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: Benrand
If 't aina Sco'ish, IT'S CRAP!

ROFL! My wife has this on a sweatshirt we got in Canada 10-12 years ago and it's still her favorite.

45 posted on 04/29/2004 12:26:43 AM PDT by Heatseeker
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To: JohCol
That is why so many Britons were so easily absorbed in to the Anglo-Saxon society

Are you sure? Most history shows that the Britons were pushed back by the invading GErmanics and moved into Cymru (Wales) and Cornwall. Their land was occupied by the Angles or Saxons or Friesians
46 posted on 04/29/2004 12:28:27 AM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: rightofrush
The term Scythian seems to have been a generic Sumerian-Akkadian word for Barbarians. The Scythians also seem to have consisted of a wide range of tribes -- Slavic, Germanic, etc.
47 posted on 04/29/2004 12:32:20 AM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: JohCol
Ghaddafi in a kilt?????
48 posted on 04/29/2004 12:32:42 AM PDT by Cronos (W2K4)
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To: JohCol
bttt
49 posted on 04/29/2004 12:37:15 AM PDT by nopardons
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To: JohCol
Note also there was a Viking kingdom based in Dublin during the early middle ages which might account for some of those blond locks. ;)

As for the Celts-as-Basques thing, when one considers the great antiquity of the "tin route" (the trade route out of the central Mediterranean, around/stopping off in Iberia, and ending in Cornwall and vicinity) it seems fairly reasonable.

That said, I think more DNA testing and statistical analysis is required.

50 posted on 04/29/2004 1:11:56 AM PDT by Heatseeker
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To: Heatseeker
A few points:

-I agree Picts were likely not at all related to Celts;
- The incoming Anglo-Saxons, from coastal Frisia and Denmark, displaced the elite of the celticised blonde population of England which was already related to their North Sea cousins, and in turn anglicised the mass of the population; point being the blond element of celtic britain and the blond saxons were genetically related while Doggerland still existed.
- As for the Norse vikings of Dublin: no genetic trace remains of them in Ireland, and the Norwegians are not a particularly blonde people; the Norse of Dublin were driven out with their wives and townies to found Iceland, where 50% or more of the population is genetically British...
51 posted on 04/30/2004 12:07:47 AM PDT by JohCol (The DNA results are in on ALL of Scotland: the Picts were proto-Basques...)
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To: JohCol
...50% or more of the population [of Iceland] is genetically British.

I didn't know this - can you point me to a source about it online?

52 posted on 04/30/2004 1:52:10 AM PDT by Heatseeker
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To: A.J.Armitage; AdmSmith; Alas Babylon!; abner; adam_az; Benrand; billorites; blam; buwaya; Ciexyz; ..
Hello all. Thanks Val for the ping.
WoofDog123 wrote: What about any of this (besides basque-celtic genetic link) is a surprise at all? Obviously the celts would be genetically related to each other (brittany received its current celts from wales and cornwall celts running from anglo-saxons, etc).
The Celtiberians occupied Iberia -- it was the hybrid of Celtic migration and the earlier Iberian settlers. Basque is an isolated language family, but probably has some loan words as do almost all languages.
WoofDog123 wrote: I would think genetic studies could clear this up once and for all in the east and northeast of scotland.
Genetic studies can't tell anything much about culture or language, or even geographic origins.
xkaydet65 wrote: So complete was the Anglo Saxon triumph that some say there is not a place in England that bears a Celtic name, nor a word in English that remains from the Gaelic of the Celts. Is it so hard to believe that the descendants of these invaders would dominate the land genetically.

WoofDog123 wrote: There are like a whopping 2 or 3 loanwords surviving into modern english. Crag is one, i think but am not sure tor is another.
"Galore" as in "to repletion" came directly from Scots Gaelic, and unlike other modifiers in English, properly appears after the word modified. So the grammar came with it. Although not commonly used (because it's archaic, as is the word form "youse", which some folks occasionally use today; that one is straight out of Saxon times), we also have "bairn" and others. Not a ton of others, but they are there. Scots Gaelic is more widely spoken in daily use than Irish Gaelic (its closest relative).

posted to: A.J.Armitage; AdmSmith; Alas Babylon!; abner; adam_az; Benrand; billorites; blam; buwaya; Ciexyz; Corin Stormhands; Cronos; Domestic Church; dennisw; Eala; ecurbh; Fedora; farmfriend; Gvan; Heatseeker; JimSEA; JohCol; jnarcus; LiteKeeper; Michael2001; muawiyah; nopardons; olde north church; rightofrush; risk; Tax-chick; TigerLikesRooster; U S Army EOD; ValerieUSA; Wally_Kalbacken; Welsh Rabbit; WoofDog123; wagglebee; xkaydet65; Zuben Elgenubi
53 posted on 06/06/2004 8:39:46 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (George W. Bush will win reelection by a margin of at least ten per cent.)
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To: SunkenCiv

The sleeping civ has awaken and is treating us to posts galore.
There must be an ancient gaelic fairy tale about this sort of thing.


54 posted on 06/06/2004 9:05:41 PM PDT by ValerieUSA
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To: SunkenCiv

The Old High German and Old English word for hair is haar, my mother still uses it, she's 87.


55 posted on 06/06/2004 9:22:46 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam; ValerieUSA
ValerieUSA The sleeping civ has awaken and is treating us to posts galore. There must be an ancient gaelic fairy tale about this sort of thing.
I'm no longer so large that no house can hold me nor ship carry me. Still got the gloves Conan gave me for Beltane though.
blam The Old High German and Old English word for hair is haar, my mother still uses it, she's 87.
Check out the origins of various meats (beef, mutton, lamb, etc) for a fun time. :')


George W. Bush will win reelection by a margin of at least ten per cent.

56 posted on 06/06/2004 9:30:43 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Unlike some people, I have a profile. Okay, maybe it's a little large...)
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To: SunkenCiv

"There are like a whopping 2 or 3 loanwords surviving into modern english. Crag is one, i think but am not sure tor is another."

Hi, the above was in reference to the p-celtic being spoken in britain by the romano-celtic people being displaced/absorbed by the A-S migration/invasion into what would be england...as far as I know very few words other than place-names form p-celtic were absorbed into the invader's dialects of west germanic.

I wasn't aware of the q-celtic loanwords introduced from scots gaelic, is there knowledge of when these words started appearing in written english (middle or modern?)

'WoofDog123 wrote: I would think genetic studies could clear this up once and for all in the east and northeast of scotland.'


"Genetic studies can't tell anything much about culture or language, or even geographic origins."

This was in reference to where the picts language family might have originated. My point was the looking for any genetic correspondence between scots living in formerly pictish areas and the DNA markers common among populations of finno-ugric language speakers here might tend to support or dismiss the remote suggestion that pictish was a F-Ugric language. Obviously the main problem here is that aside from some king-names, place-name remnants, there is to my knowledge no remaining samples of pictish extant to verify it as a p-celtic or not.

The idea (one that is being applied all over the place) is the, in the context of known or suggested historical circumstances, genetic studies and comparison can have a tendency to support or make implausible certain theories.

"Not a ton of others, but they are there. Scots Gaelic is more widely spoken in daily use than Irish Gaelic (its closest relative)."

From what I have seen first-hand in the heart of scots gaelic country, I would be very somewhat surprised if these languages are house-spoken at all in 2 generations. Unlike Welsh, the critical mass and emphasis doesn't seem to be there.


57 posted on 06/06/2004 11:31:41 PM PDT by WoofDog123
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To: SunkenCiv

I'm calling for 30%! But thanks for the ping!


58 posted on 06/07/2004 1:00:00 AM PDT by risk
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To: WoofDog123
Just noting the reference to Scandinavian folk in the Highlands, et al. Modern Alba, now known as Scotland (or Scotia), is a creation of a joint Irish-Scandinavian effort in the 900s. (I'm not sure all the Irish volunteered for this, but they were there ~ as they were there in Iceland at it's foundations).

To the degree Old West Gothics (the English) share a genetic background with the Norse (Old North Gothics), it's certain to be discovered in Scotland.

As far as Finno-Ugric ancestors among them, you need look no further than the appearance of Saami in Norway who were just then making a serious appearance in what was to them "the deep Souf'".

59 posted on 06/07/2004 3:52:09 AM PDT by muawiyah
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To: WoofDog123
Obviously the main problem here is that aside from some king-names, place-name remnants, there is to my knowledge no remaining samples of pictish extant to verify it as a p-celtic or not.
That's a problem for any connection between whatever it was the Picts spoke and any known language family.
Ask A Linguist For July 1998 - September 1998
Re: Language of the Picts
Larry Trask
I believe it is accepted by all specialists that the (sparse) Pictish inscriptions represent a Celtic language... [T]he only Pictish specialist I have talked to (Katherine Forsyth) is satisfied that all the inscriptions in fact represent a single Celtic language.

The Alphabetary Heraldic:
Genealogical Glossary:
Ogham alphabet:
Goidelic alphabet. Cf. alphabet
Glossemata Genealogicæ.Ogham inscriptions : [600 bc] primitive inscriptions of the old Q-Celt (600 bc) or the newer P-Celt (400 bc) that survive in the British Isles. We have a total of approximately 375 Ogham inscriptions. Ireland has some 316 Ogham inscriptions, Wales has 40 inscriptions, and the Isle of Man has 10 inscriptions. One inscription survived at Silchester in southern England, and a few Pictish Ogham inscriptions have been found in Scotland, as far north as the Shetland Islands. Ogham script often runs upward, in a vertical manner, for it was originally written as notches on wooden staves.Oghams : cypher alphabets; vestiges of the Celtic Ogham alphabet that are sometimes characterized by their appearance or the place of their discovery. The categories in the Book of Ballymote include the wheel Ogham, bird Ogham, pig Ogham, and color Ogham, as well as Oghams of the tree, hill, church, castle, fruit. Cf. cypher alphabets.

60 posted on 06/10/2004 11:51:49 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Unlike some people, I have a profile. Okay, maybe it's a little large...)
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