(05-21-2024, 09:47 PM)szin Wrote:(05-21-2024, 05:29 PM)Rodoorn Wrote: Dear members may I have your opinion, its this a potential Sephardic result on distance!?
Probably infused about 7 (6-9) generations ago....
My fathers's admixtures on chromosome level, your dna portal:
Combined with E-V22, E-L1401:
FTDNA
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Yfull
It seems unusual for a fully Dutch person to have that much MENA-type admix even at chromosome level. Does he have a non-Dutch surname or a surname that sounds like it might have been changed at some point down the line?
Most notably, does he have fully Jewish DNA matches?
Thanks szin! Indeed like the amount of Iberian. So I guess it's likely more a trace Sephardim than Ashkenazim. And with regard to the names it stay enigmatic, the names that are involved are Jan, Haye and Fokke. Although Frisian Jews began to adopt Frisian names (and even costumes) nothing points explicit at Sephardim or conversos/ marrannos.
So there most have something else at stake: an illegitimate child or a child given up for adoption? Say it. The only thing we know with certainty is that it was a Frisian family that was Catholic. And in the 17th century that was a religion that was at most tolerated in Friesland. But especially that the Jews and the Roman Catholics shared a house of worship at that time! It probably wouldn't have been happy clappy, but people inevitably bumped into each other there....
PS ohw yeh the matches on myhertiage there are two small Israeli matches, but considering their background it's not due their Jewish but North Dutch background, about 7 generations ago delivers only small traces in nowadays autosomal DNA.