Y-DNA:R-S18894 There are also more detailed mtDNA tests available for those who wish to close the gap towards the modern period (equivalent to the BigY result). mtDNA:H54, Sample:VK87 / Denmark_Hesselbjerg Grav 41b, sk PC Y-DNA:N-Y10933 { Source: Finding Your Roots} Robert John Downey Jr. Downey is a US TV and movie actor. mtDNA:K1c1, Sample:VK269 / Sweden_Karda 24 Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE mtDNA:H7, Sample:VK531 / Norway_Troms 5001A FTDNA Comment:VK484 and VK486 both split R-FT103482 (Z283). mtDNA:U2e2a1a, Sample:VK533 / Oland 1076 28364 35 Location:Nordland, Nor_North, Norway Location:Church2, Faroes Y-DNA:I-FT13004 mtDNA:T2b3b, Sample:VK101 / Iceland_125 Location:Krakw, Poland Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Link to the locations to see the locations of the excavation sites, and the haplogroups for the tree locations. Y-DNA:R-FGC17230 Y-DNA:R-BY58559 Location:Bogvej, Langeland, Denmark Alora enjoys a privileged location in the Guadalhorce Valley, which it overlooks from the north, standing atop a small hill. Age:Early Norse 10-12th centuries CE mtDNA:N1a1a1a2. Y-DNA:I-Y18232 Y-DNA:I-Y22024 mtDNA:H3, Sample:VK210 / Poland_Krakw-Zakrzwek gr. mtDNA:H5c, Sample:VK489 / Estonia_Salme_II- mtDNA:H1c, Sample:VK159 / Russia_Pskov_7283-20 Derived for 8, ancestral for 6. Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Y-DNA:N-Y7795 Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Forms a new branch down of N-FGC14542. Y-DNA:R-A6707 Y-DNA:I-BY67827 mtDNA:V1a1, Sample:VK145 / UK_Oxford_#9 Location:Hesselbjerg, Jutland, Denmark Haplogroup T1 is not found among the. mtDNA:H1e2a, Sample:VK352 / Oland_1012 Y-DNA:I-Y4051 Y-DNA:I-Y98280 Y-DNA:J-BY62479 mtDNA: J1b1a1a, Sample: VK422 / Norway_Hedmark 4304 Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden mtDNA:K1d, Sample:VK223 / Russia_Gnezdovo 75-140 Y-DNA:I-BY61100 mtDNA:T2b, Sample:VK23 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-9 mtDNA:HV-T16311C! mtDNA:T2b6a, Sample:VK220 / Russia_Ladoga_5680-11 Y-DNA:R-FT264183 [7], Haplogroup T has also been found among Iberomaurusian specimens dating from the Epipaleolithic at the Afalou prehistoric site in Algeria. Age:Viking 8-16th centuries CE Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE New path R-Y66214>R-PH12 FTDNA Comment:Splits R1a-PH12. The clade is also found everywhere in Central Asia and deep into North Asia, as far east as Mongolia. FTDNA Comment:VK506 and VK367 split the I-BY67827 branch. mtDNA:H7a1, Sample:VK225 / Iceland_A108 mtDNA:HV9b, Sample:VK57 / Gotland_Frojel-03601 mtDNA:H-C16291T, Sample:VK539 / Ukraine_Shestovitsa-8870-97 Y-DNA:R-S764 T1a1a1 is particularly common in countries with high levels of Y-haplogroup R1a, such as Central and Northeast Europe. Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Mitochondrial clade T derives from the haplogroup JT, which also gave rise to the mtDNA haplogroup J. Y-DNA:I-FGC22153 mtDNA:H1q, Sample:VK504 / Estonia_Salme_I-1 During the BBC One documentary Meet the Izzards, the actor and comedian Eddie Izzard learns that her mitochondrial DNA is of Haplogroup T, specifically the subclade T2f1a1.[15]. Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK Sample:VK510 / Estonia_Salme_I-7 Location:Hofstadir, Iceland Location:Skmsta, Uppsala, Sweden Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Y-DNA:R-FT381000 mtDNA:HV6, Sample:VK508 / Estonia_Salme_I-5 mtDNA:T2b, Sample:VK289 / Denmark_Bodkergarden Grav H, sk 1 Y-DNA:I-Z73 Y-DNA:I-M253 Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE mtDNA:K1a-T195C! Y-DNA:R-JFS0009 Age:Viking 10th century CE Y-DNA:I-FGC15560 Particular haplogroups are associated with well-known ancestral groups such as the Vikings, Aboriginal Australians, and the Celts. mtDNA:U5b1c2b, Sample:VK31 / Sweden_Skara 194 mtDNA:N1a1a1, Sample:VK234 / Faroe_2 Y-DNA:R-FT31867 Y-DNA:R-BY32357 Y-DNA:R-YP1395 FTDNA Comment:Possible E-Y4972 (Shares 1 G>A mutation with a E-Y4972* sample) Forms a new branch down of R-FGC7556 (DF99). R1a1a1 (M417) was the most common haplogroup in the Corded Ware Culture (CWC) and was probably found before in the Pontic-Caspian steppe in cultures such as the Sredny Stog in Ukraine, which in my opinion may not have been originally Indo-European, but eventually became Indo-Eu Continue Reading More answers below Lars Eidevall Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE The I1b-M227 subclade is . Y-DNA:R-S695 Kyle, a 53-year-old man from Texas, said that his GAT showed that he "had a Viking haplogroup" (I-M253) and that it confirmed a "Viking lineage" on . Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Location:Ship_Street_Great, Dublin, Ireland mtDNA:I1a1e, Sample:VK173 / UK_Oxford_#17 mtDNA:J2b1a, Sample:VK379 / Oland_1077 Location: Hedmark, Nor_South, Norway Y-DNA:R-BY2848 Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden mtDNA:H1ai1, Sample:VK203 / Orkney_BY78, Ar. Location:Ladoga, Russia mtDNA:H6a2a, Sample:VK452 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-111 FTDNA Comment:Splits I2-FT12648, derived for 5, ancestral for 7. Age:Viking 10th century CE Location:Hvalba, Faroes Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK mtDNA:HV0a1, Sample:VK521 / Sol941 Grav900 Brondsager Torsiinre The other subclades are L41.2 (very rare) and L161.1 (found mostly in Germany and the British Isles). Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE HG02545 remains at R-FT263905 A study in 2015 estimated the origin as between 3,470 to 5,070 years ago or between 3,180 to 3,760 years ago, using two different techniques. Y-DNA:I-Z16971 Location:Kopparsvik, Gotland, Sweden mtDNA:V, Sample:VK549 / Estonia_Salme_II-J mtDNA:H1a1, Sample:VK469 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-260 Y-DNA:R-Z16372 Age:Viking 10th century CE Age:Early Viking 8th century CE FTDNA Comment:Possibly forms a branch down of I-Y15295. Location:Ladby, Funen, Denmark Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Sample:VK326 / Denmark_Ribe 5 Location:Karda, Sweden mtDNA:H3g1b, Sample:VK129 / Iceland_ING08 FTDNA Comment:Splits R-BY16590 (L47). FTDNA Comment:Shares 3 mutations with a man from Sweden. Y-DNA:R-CTS1211 Back to Homepage. New path = I-Y130659>I-Y130594>I-Y130747. Vikings raiding parties from Scandinavia originated in Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE mtDNA:I2, Sample:VK260 / UK_Dorset-3735 Y-DNA:I-BY86407 Age:Viking 10th century CE Vikings had rare mtDNA haplogroups DNA analysis have been made on skeletons from Viking tombs. Age:Viking 900-1050 CE FTDNA Comment:Shares 2 SNPs with an American of unknown origins. Age:Early Viking 8th century CE mtDNA:J1c3k, Sample:VK140 / Denmark_Galgedil PT Age:Viking 900-1050 CE Location:Ribe, Jutland, Denmark Y-DNA:R-S9257 Y-DNA:I-Y10639 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Y-DNA:R-M269 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia mtDNA:J1c2c1, Sample:VK295 / Denmark_Hessum sk 1 Age:Viking 10th century CE We also identified three potential susceptibility loci, including G13708A/rs28359178, which has demonstrated an inverse association with familial breast cancer risk. Y-DNA:I-Z2900 Call Us Today! mtDNA:K1a3a, Sample:VK183 / Greenland F6 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE The term " Viking " tends to conjure up images of fierce, blonde men who donned horned helmets and sailed the seas in longboats, earning a fearsome reputation through their violent conquests and. mtDNA:W6. mtDNA:K1a10, Sample:VK406 / Sweden_Skara 203 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Y-DNA:R-S6353 Y-DNA:I-Y79817 Location:Ladoga, Russia Age:Viking 880-1000 CE mtDNA:I4a. Y-DNA:I-FT347811 Forms a new branch down of R-FT20255 (Z18). Location:Church2, Faroes mtDNA:H1a, Sample:VK483 / Estonia_Salme_II-V Sample:VK143 / UK_Oxford_#7 mtDNA:H3a1, Sample:VK248 / Faroe_22 Age:Medieval 11-13 centuries CE Derived for 2, ancestral for 4 (BY18964+?). New path = R-Y13816>R-Y13833 (2004) also found several T and T1 sequences in ancient burials, including Kurgans, in the Kazakh steppe between the 14th-10th centuries BC, as well as later into the 1st millennia BC. Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Y-DNA:I-L813 Y-DNA:R-PH3519 Y-DNA:R-FGC71023 mtDNA:HV9b, Sample:VK172 / UK_Oxford_#16 For example, Doug McDonald maintains a map of the distribution of haplogroups at www.scs.uiuc.edu/~mcdonald/WorldHaplogroupsMaps.pdf. Age:Viking 10th century CE I have done Full Genome Scan of my MTDNA and am T1a1 I have exact matches whose ancestry is Irish, English, Dutch, German, Swedish, Finnish, Russian and Jewish. mtDNA:U5b2c2b, Sample:VK422 / Norway_Hedmark 4304 Just hours later, Science Daily published the article, "World's largest DNA sequencing of Viking skeletons reveals they weren't all Scandinavian." Science magazine published "'Viking' was a job description, not FTDNA Comment:Said to be brother of VK497 at I-BY86407 which is compatible with this placement, although no further Y-SNP evidence exists due to low coverage The Danish Viking . mtDNA:J1c3f, Sample:VK110 / Iceland_115S Age:Early Viking 8th century CE mtDNA:J2b1a, Sample:VK221 / Russia_Ladoga_5757-14 Age:Viking 10th century CE Age:Viking 10-11th centuries CE Y-DNA:I-S22349 Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE mtDNA:T2b-T152C! Furthermore, the specific subtype T1 tends to be found further east and is common in Central Asian and modern Turkic populations (Lalueza-Fox 2004), who inhabit much of the same territory as the ancient Saka, Sarmatian, Andronovo, and other putative Iranian peoples of the 2nd and 1st millennia BC. If the haplogroup you are seeking is NOT shown in your direct upstream branches, you can type the name of the haplogroup into the search box. Location:Nordland, Nor_North, Norway Y-DNA:R-Y16505 FTDNA Comment:Splits N-BY21933 (L550). mtDNA:V, Sample:VK551 / Estonia_Salme_II-U Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Location:Bogvej, Langeland, Denmark Y-DNA:R-CTS4179 ASH087 and I2923 Location:Salme, Saaremaa, Estonia Age:Viking 640-890 CE Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Age:Early Viking 8th century CE Age:Iron Age 300 CE New path = R-FT148796>R-FT148754 Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE Y-DNA:R-YP396 New path = I-FT8660>I-FT8457 Age: Viking 10th century CE Location:St_Johns_College_Oxford, Oxford, England, UK One study has shown Haplogroup T to be associated with increased risk for coronary artery disease (Sanger 2007) harv error: no target: CITEREFSanger2007 (help). Yesterday, in the journal Nature, the article "Population genomics of the Viking world," was published by Margaryan, et al, a culmination of 6 years of work. FTDNA Comment:Shares 3 SNPs with a man from Norway downstream of I-Y24625. mtDNA:K1a4a1, Sample:VK259 / UK_Dorset-3734 mtDNA:H6a1a, Sample:VK485 / Estonia_Salme_II-O Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden New path = I-Y22486>I-Y22478>I-Z24071 Age:Early Norse 10-12th centuries CE New study reignites debate over Viking settlements in England. Location:Oland, Sweden mtDNA:U5b2b5, Sample:VK444 / Oland_1059 Well, to simplify, according to the International Society of Genetic Genealogy, a haplogroup is a genetic population group of people who share a common ancestor on either their paternal or maternal line. mtDNA:J1c6, Sample:VK60 / Gotland_Frojel-00702 Age:Viking 900-1050 CE I among Vikings. mtDNA:H3g1, Sample:VK384 / Denmark_Hesselbjerg Grav 14, sk EU The haplogroup was previously thought to have originated 15,000 years ago in Iberia, but as of 2010 it was estimated to have originated between 4,000 - 5,000 years ago, in Chalcolithic Europe. FTDNA Comment:FT83323- You can also simply click on the FTDNA name haplogroup link in the table, below, considerately provided by Goran. Location:Oland, Sweden Mitochondrial DNA haplogroup, which means they are related along their maternal lines. Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE Location:Hedmark, Nor_South, Norway Everyone is so excited about this paper, and I want you to be able to see if your Y or mitochondrial DNA, or that of your relatives matches the DNA haplogroups in the paper. Y-DNA:R-FT7019 Location:Frojel, Gotland, Sweden Location:Ridgeway_Hill_Mass_Grave_Dorset, Dorset, England, UK Some Viking burials in both Orkney and Norway were actually genetically Pictish men. Age:Early Viking 8th century CE mtDNA:H3a1a, Sample:VK237 / Faroe_15 mtDNA:H3a1, Sample:VK46 / Faroe_19 mtDNA: J1b1a1a, I match Y-DNA sample VK174 / UK_Oxford_#18 Haplogroup: R-FGC17429, We are a group of 23 Reid males, ancestors from Scotland under R-FGC17427. mtDNA:U5b1-T16189C!-T16192C! On this Wikipedia the language links are at the top of the page across from the article title. mtDNA:U3b1b, Sample:VK380 / Oland_1078 If your haplogroup isnt showing, you could be downstream of the Viking haplogroup, so youll need to use the Y DNA Block Tree (for Big Y testers) or. Y-DNA:R-YP390 The geographic distribution within subclade T2 varies greatly with the ratio of subhaplogroup T2e to T2b reported to vary 40-fold across examined populations from a low in Britain and Ireland, to a high in Saudi Arabia (Bedford 2012). mtDNA:J1c9, Sample:VK127 / Iceland_HDR08 Y-DNA:G-Z1817 Within subhaplogroup T2e, a very rare motif is identified among Sephardic Jews of Turkey and Bulgaria and suspected conversos from the New World (Bedford 2012). Age:Viking 880-1000 CE Age:Viking 10-12th centuries CE FTDNA Comment:Shares 2 SNPs with a man from England. mtDNA:H16, Sample:VK484 / Estonia_Salme_II-Q Age:Early Viking 8th century CE mtDNA:U2e2a1d. Shares one C>T mutation with a BY195155* sample Age:Viking 986 38 CE Age:Viking 9-11th centuries CE mtDNA:H1m, Sample:VK205 / Orkney_Newark 68/12 New branch R-BY166438 Haplogroup T is composed of two main branches T1 and T2. Age:Viking 9th century CE Location:Buckquoy_Birsay, Orkney, Scotland, UK Y-DNA:R-CTS4179 Age:Viking 880-1000 CE mtDNA:H1b, Sample:VK496 / Estonia_Salme_II-W [citation needed], One study has found that among the Spanish population, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) also referred to as hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) is more likely to happen in those of T2 ancestry than those in other maternal haplogroups. But the recent discovery of a skeletal sample from 1200 BC in the Hebrides blows that out of the water. mtDNA:H28a, Sample:VK505 / Estonia_Salme_I-2 They also share one unique marker (26514336 G>C). Location:Oland, Sweden Assuming all relevant pedigrees are correct, this includes all female-line descendants of his female line ancestor Barbara of Celje (13901451), wife of Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor. Click to reveal Y-DNA:R-BY33037 mtDNA:T2b, Sample:VK453 / Gotland_Kopparsvik-134 Y-DNA:T-BY215080 mtDNA:K1a4, Sample:VK317 / Denmark_Kaargarden Grav BF99 mtDNA:T2b24, Sample:VK333 / Oland_1028 Location:Varnhem, Skara, Sweden Age:Early modern 16-17th centuries CE mtDNA:U5a1b-T16362C, Sample:VK174 / UK_Oxford_#18 The split between T1 and T2 probably occurred 21,000 years ago. This phylogenetic tree of haplogroup I subclades is based on the paper (van Oven 2008) harv error: no target: CITEREFvan_Oven2008 (help) and subsequent published research (Behar 2012b).