DNA Analyses and Genetic Origins of the Ainu

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2023
  • In this video I talk about the Ainu, the indigenous people from the northern region of Japan, their culture, genetic profile, and ancestry. They are well known as the ethnic group that appears in manga series “Golden Kamuy.”
    Data Source: Wang, CC., Yeh, HY., Popov, A.N. et al. Genomic insights into the formation of human populations in East Asia. Nature 591, 413-419 (2021). doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03...
    Visit MyHeritage DNA: www.myheritage.com/dna

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,5 тис.

  • @andrewdunbar828
    @andrewdunbar828 7 місяців тому +321

    There is only one village in Japan that is majority Ainu. Nibutani in Biratori. There is an Ainu-run guesthouse called Yanto right next to a museum that hosts regular cultural gatherings open to anyone interested. I visited for a couple of days six months or so before the pandemic.

    • @ShowAnNDTeLL
      @ShowAnNDTeLL 7 місяців тому +14

      we dont really know the ainu are found in the mainstream they do not advertise they are ainu, because of the society of shame among nihons

    • @davidwong6
      @davidwong6 7 місяців тому +2

      😊G

    • @MarcoPolo-sk8nz
      @MarcoPolo-sk8nz 7 місяців тому +7

      They are ethnicaly Russians, they had totem animal bear, later they were expeled and assimilated by influx of Asiatic new commers. They had code of honour samu RA, also they had Vedic Solar symbolism in which solar symbol RA was represented as swastic symbol, also adopted as main icon in Japanese culture as country of raising sun with sun depicted on national flag. Swastic symbolism natively belongs to a ethnic group called Indo-Irano-Slavic-Arian. Swastic symbol Solar symbor representing Pease, Life and Eternal Growth, was stolen by Fascists and pereverted and comit atrocities. In this Indo Irano Slavic Arian ethnic group, the sun was the main diety, representing Creator on phycal plane of existance, just like the Sun God RA in Ancient Egypt. The Indo Irano Arian Ethnic group, speaks the languages derrived from Ancient Sanscrit, Just like ancient Vedic cultures in the recent past were Solar Worshipers or Fire Worshipers as representetion of the Sun. Ancient Sanscrit served as base of Latin and later tranformed into Germanic group, and later formed group of european laguages including French and English. So if you were to trace back the ancestry of all languages and cultures they would eventually come to one source of culture and language and it is - "Solar Vedism" originated from Indo Irano Slavic Arian ethnic group. Solar Vedism is native to ancient Russia it is originated there, and ancient Sanscrit linguistically is secondary to Russian language. Fluently speaking specialst Sancritologist, can understand "modern" Russian language, that is 2 languages with tens of thousands years apart!!!Hence Russian language remained unchanged for tens of thousands of tears, while other languages were created and formed on its bases. Do you understand significance of this?! This is a big hush-hush in the "main strim, poplar, populistic science".

    • @phillipbug958
      @phillipbug958 7 місяців тому +4

      *NOW*
      Continue statement. Yes, Japan has been overrun many times, as have all countries.
      Ainu are the same as any aboriginal once dominating & now only controlling a small portion

    • @MarcoPolo-sk8nz
      @MarcoPolo-sk8nz 7 місяців тому +7

      Aboriginal people of japan are Ainu!

  • @Figgy5119
    @Figgy5119 7 місяців тому +186

    Honestly, the Ainu language is pretty much gone. I was talking to a couple Ainu people in the Lake Akan Ainu village, and they said that there are basically no "native speakers" left, and although there are a few old people who can speak it to a degree and there are some linguists who learned it and try to pass on what they can, it's pretty much gone and even when the elders perform their kamuynomi ceremonies in Ainu, they are basically reciting a string of words they memorized but don't understand.

    • @opetaiaseni1955
      @opetaiaseni1955 7 місяців тому +25

      😢

    • @Lotusum2064
      @Lotusum2064 7 місяців тому +8

      İt sounds like turkish( not sure but just a guess) for example: akan ainu in turkish mean: flowing/spreading around/ glittering moonlight.. kamuynomi: kamu means society but no idea about ynomi😅.😅

    • @kekeke8988
      @kekeke8988 6 місяців тому +21

      @@Lotusum2064
      kamuy means god or spirit, cognate to Japanese kami.

    • @aysea271
      @aysea271 6 місяців тому

      ​@@Lotusum2064Türkmüsunüz?

    • @jamesmcinnis208
      @jamesmcinnis208 4 місяці тому +1

      "Honestly"

  • @dewif5331
    @dewif5331 6 місяців тому +84

    The Ainu called Japanese people Sisam.
    The bigger the tattoo around the women’s mouths, the more influential/important their husband is. The Ainu woman started getting mouth tattoo at around 12/13 yo, indicating that it has come their time to get married.
    The hand tattoos are different in each areas.
    The Ainu would look after orphan baby bears until they got bigger and then “send them to kamuy land” or basically kill them and they would take their pelts, meat, etc except their heads and hold a certain ceremony called Iomante.
    There are other facts about Ainu that I know after I watched and read Golden Kamuy. But I don’t want to write the longest essay I’ve ever written here 😅

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk 5 місяців тому +8

      Yeğ / Yüğ = upper, superior
      Yeğ-mek > Yemek (to eat)= to add on oneself, to take it in one's essence
      Yeğ-im> Yem= provender, fodder > Yemiş= fruit
      Yüğ-le-mek > yeğlemek = to keep it on top of others, make it relatively superior, ~to prefer
      Yüğ-ka-yer-u > yukarı =(which side is on top) = Up
      Yüğ-ce > yüce = superior in level /sublime
      Yüğ-ce-al-mek > yücelmek = to achieve superiority in level
      Yüğ-sü-ek > yüksek = high
      Yüğ-sel > yüksel = exponential , superlative
      Yüğ-sü-al-mek> yükselmek = to rise to a high level, to ascend
      Yüğ-sük > yüzük =(ring)= jewelry worn on the finger top
      Yüğ-sü-en-mek > yüksünmek= to feel slighted / take offended
      Yüğ-ük > yük =(load)> carried on top, undertaken
      Yüğ-ün > yün =(wool)> the feathers that on sheep
      Yüğ-üt > yiğit =(valiant)> superior in character
      Yüğ-en > yüğen /yeğen =(nephew)> which is kept superior, held in high esteem, valued, precious (yüen > yen 元)
      Yüğ-en-cük > yüğençüğ > yinçi (inci) =(precious little thing)> pearl , 珍珠
      Yüğengi >yengi> yeni =(new)> what's that coming on top , what's coming after
      Yüğenge > yenge =(brother's wife)> who's coming after, added to the family later (new bride)
      Yüğ-üne /Yeğ-ine > yine/ gene =again /over and over > yeniden = anew /once more
      Yüğ-en-mek> yenmek = to overcome, to cope with, to subdue
      Yüğ-en-el-mek > yenilmek= to be overcome, to be subdued, to show weakness
      Yüğengil > yengil =remains on top of, light, weak
      Şan= Glory, splendor 單于 > Şan-Yüğ =Exalted glorious
      Yormak=to tire= to arrive over someone (too many). (too much) to go onto
      (Yörmek)> Örmek=(to operate on something), to weave on top , to wrap around
      (Yörümek)> Yürümek= to go over something, to wander around
      (yöre=precincts) (yörük=nomad)
      Yürümek= to walk (yürü=go on)
      Yülümek=to go by slipping over something
      Yalamak= to lick >~to take swiping/ by scraping on something off
      Yolmak= to pluck=to pull by snatching off, tear off (~flatten the top)
      Yılmak=to throw down from the one's own top (~get bored), to hit the ground from above (yıldırım=lightning…yıldız=star)
      Yurmak= to pull onto, cover over (yur-ut>yurt=tabernacle) (yur-gan>yorgan=quilt)
      Yırmak=to bring it on top of, to take it off (yırışmak>yarışmak= to race> to overcome each other)
      (Yır-et-mak)>Yırtmak= to tear= to get it inside-out or bottom to top (by pulling from both sides) (~tide over, get rid of it)
      Yarmak= to split, to tear apart= go vertically from top to bottom, separate by cutting off
      Yermek=to pull down ,pull to the ground
      Germek=to tense= to pull it in all directions > Sermek= to spread it in all directions
      Yıkmak= to demolish= overthrow , take down from top to bottom, turn upside down
      Yığmak= to stack= put on top of each other, dump on top of each other (yığlamak=shed tears over and over, cry over)
      Yağmak=get rained on, get spilled on / to pour down from above
      Yakmak= to burn out=to purify matter by heating and removing mass , reduce its volume
      Yoğmak=make condensed=to tighten and purify, narrow by turning, get rid of own volume (~get dead)
      Yoğurmak= to knead=tighten and thicken , reduce volume, bring to consistency
      (Yogurt=thickened milk product)
      Yuğmak=to purify squeezing to clean (Yuğamak>yıkamak= to wash)
      Yiv = sharp, pointed (yivlemek= sharpen the tip)
      Yuvmak=to squeezing thin out, narrow (yuvka>yufka= thin dough) (yuvka>yuka=thin, shallow) (yuvuz>yavuz=thin, weak, delicate)
      Yuvarlamak=to round off=narrow by turning (yuva (smallest shelter)= nest) (yavru (smallest)= cub )
      Yummak=to shut by squeezing, close tightly (Yumurmak=make it closes inward) (yumruk=fist) (yumurta= egg)

    • @adrianciobanu5856
      @adrianciobanu5856 5 місяців тому +2

      ​@@Abeturk😂😂😂yug in Rusian mins South

    • @timeandplace4114
      @timeandplace4114 4 місяці тому +3

      Thank you for the additional information.

    • @AdiSchwarz
      @AdiSchwarz 3 місяці тому +3

      Oh yes Golden Kamuyyy!!! ❤❤❤
      When I was watching it, I remember the parts of Hokkaido I visited (Abashiri, Asahikawa, Sapporo, & Otaru) & how amazed I was whenever they mention "that place [in the past]" as "that place [now]."

    • @sycronice
      @sycronice 2 місяці тому +6

      The sequence of your facts made me think that "here must be a fellow fan of Golden Kamuy". Was not disappointed when you mentioned the manga in your final sentence.

  • @richardengelhardt582
    @richardengelhardt582 8 місяців тому +269

    The Ainu seem culturally very close to native populations of coastal southern Alaska and northern British Columbia, as well as geographically proximate. If Ainu Jomon ancestry is now accepted through DNA tracking, then it would certainly be a productive line of archaeological inquiry to investigate possible lines of migration from Japan northeast to the Alaskan islands, in perhaps the pre- or early Jomon era, during the late Pleistocene.

    • @edmundsveikutis1698
      @edmundsveikutis1698 8 місяців тому +31

      I agree, you only need to look at the artwork .

    • @land980
      @land980 8 місяців тому +24

      There is decades worth of archaeological research on this if you're interested in reading up on it:
      *A Circum-Pacific Perspective on the Origin of Stemmed Points in North America*
      Pratt et al. 2020, PaleoAmerica
      *Beringia and the peopling of the Western Hemisphere*
      Hoffecker et al. 2023, Proceedings of the Royal Society
      However, the genetic evidence does not support a direct migration from Japan. Archaeology associated with earliest Jōmon culture arrives shortly after 14,000 BC, whereas the projectile points that match ones found on Hokkaido have been discovered to be already in use at that time by Native Americans in Washington State:
      *Late Upper Paleolithic occupation at Cooper’s Ferry, Idaho USA ~16,000 years ago*
      Davis et al. 2019, Science

    • @plopdoo339
      @plopdoo339 8 місяців тому +13

      Yes they already know the native Americans and these people are related. They are among the first people to have migrated into the region. Related to the first native Americans and early European settlers.

    • @zoolghiest7454
      @zoolghiest7454 8 місяців тому +16

      Yes the artwork is crazy similar. Even old Jomon carvings look like nw totems.

    • @kaius3351
      @kaius3351 8 місяців тому +13

      @@plopdoo339 :I have seen a Japanese TV program that says the Ainu are more genetically connected to natives of South America such as Quechuas or Aymaras than the natives of North America.

  • @brainblox5629
    @brainblox5629 7 місяців тому +107

    Im not sure if memory serves me correctly, but I remember learning about Ainus traditionally not washing things in flowing water, which was also custom among Turkic and Mongol tribes during their times as Tengriists

    • @barguttobed
      @barguttobed 7 місяців тому +21

      Modern day Mongolian nomads still do not wash their clothes, utensil etc directly in the river.

    • @Star.Soul.
      @Star.Soul. 7 місяців тому +16

      Because that’s their drinking water. Chinggis Khan demanded the water source remaining clean or there’d be a punishment.

    • @aysea271
      @aysea271 6 місяців тому +13

      Evt ben bir Turk'um ve uzun soy bağlarının karismadigindan emin olduğum orta Asya kavimler göçü ile Anadoluya gelenlerin kültürüne sahibim..büyüklerimiz derdiki akan su kir tutmaz akarsudan su içebilirsiniz ama onu asla kirletmeyin.

    • @toxichuman208
      @toxichuman208 9 днів тому

      Meanwhile india :)

  • @j.b.4340
    @j.b.4340 7 місяців тому +61

    Very interesting. I’ve always been fascinated by them. Visually, they look like a Siberian/Indian(subcontinent) cross.

    • @em4703
      @em4703 Місяць тому +6

      The indian subcontinent percentages definitely explain the beautiful beards.

    • @Agapi-dg7th
      @Agapi-dg7th 4 дні тому

      Dont be silly, they are german1.000.000% for starters they are hairy like the german women, have you seen unshaved german woman? Ainus will cry if they saw a german unshaved woman 😢😢😅😅😂😂😂 ,wtf? I thought i was hairy, 😂😂😂😂

  • @zenshinacademy4096
    @zenshinacademy4096 7 місяців тому +28

    I was sitting in a waiting room a few weeks ago, started looking in the end tables and found an old encyclopedia. I found the Ainu people and began to read about them. Very interesting group of people.

  • @willlittleton8311
    @willlittleton8311 8 місяців тому +90

    Thanks for this, always thought these people were fascinating , and I think it's important to spread awareness of their cultural idiosyncrasies, it's so unique

    • @Agapi-dg7th
      @Agapi-dg7th 4 дні тому

      You believe him that the ainu are germans Seriously?

    • @willlittleton8311
      @willlittleton8311 4 дні тому

      Nah, I don't even recall him saying that. I remember him mentioning the siberian & possibly north-west coast indigenous genetic link. That seems awfully plausible.

  • @alfredkowsky7374
    @alfredkowsky7374 7 місяців тому +9

    Wonderful video presentation 🙂! I especially enjoyed the old photos.

  • @b_ks
    @b_ks 8 місяців тому +9

    Fascinating vid about a fascinating subject. I appreciate the delivery of good, accurate info in a short form. Much respect.

  • @kerrybock766
    @kerrybock766 8 місяців тому +153

    Interesting how close Ainu sounds to Innu or Innuit which the Eskimos call themselves, meaning: The People. The same as Ainu

    • @slewone4905
      @slewone4905 8 місяців тому +9

      despite most of the language is unrelated, doesn't mean they won't borrow words from their neighbors.

    • @robfritz841
      @robfritz841 7 місяців тому +27

      Lenape means The People.
      Siuox means the People.
      Cree means the People.
      All tribes think they are The People. It’s what united us

    • @BenjiSun
      @BenjiSun 7 місяців тому +12

      i think there needs to be more language and religion migration studies between the Inuit, the Tungusic, the Yakut, the Ainu, and the Mongols, and a lot of the similarities will show up very clearly. Especially between the Ainu and the Haida-Gwai. there's a lot of overlapping symbology.

    • @j.b.4340
      @j.b.4340 7 місяців тому +8

      Generally, American Indians are nearly hairless(not head hair), while the Ainu are not.

    • @j.b.4340
      @j.b.4340 7 місяців тому +17

      @@robfritz841Sioux is a pejorative which means, “snakes”. They call themselves by their tribe, Dakota, Nakota, Lakota, and so on.

  • @79klkw
    @79klkw 7 місяців тому +38

    I am so glad for these language isolates! It truly does make a person think...those isolates are so interesting, even though we could quite possibly never figure out that part of the equation, here. It may be why it makes us so excited to hear about such unique humans!
    And I never knew the Ainu language still existed

  • @maggiejacobson7718
    @maggiejacobson7718 7 місяців тому +38

    I hope someone preserves the linguistic beauty of the tribe before it’s too late

  • @beatpirate8
    @beatpirate8 7 місяців тому +11

    i love their music! so much energy. thank you for this! i learned so much!

  • @omomo202
    @omomo202 5 місяців тому +77

    My husband is Japanese and he has a very thick beard. His family is from the south West Island of Shikoku so I’m wondering if he’s showing his Jomon ancestry.
    Really fascinating stuff!

    • @Celtic-Texan
      @Celtic-Texan 4 місяці тому +21

      My wife is from Kyushu, there's plenty of men on that island that have beards. This notion that Japanese men can't grow beards is silly, just look at Hayao Miyazaki of Studio Ghibli fame. Obviously that Yayoi DNA is dominant in Japan, but I believe there's plenty of Jomon DNA spread throughout Japanese society.

    • @DustinHawke
      @DustinHawke 3 місяці тому +4

      @@Celtic-Texan They generally can't grow full, thick beards. That's why there's that notion.

    • @omomo202
      @omomo202 3 місяці тому +3

      @@imprisonedone8054 my husband says that the people of Okinawa have a different look than mainland Japanese. This makes sense.

    • @user-oi5jh1vf5d
      @user-oi5jh1vf5d 3 місяці тому +3

      ​@@Celtic-Texan
      ひげを生やしてはいけないなんて聞いたことないwww

    • @AIIIAKS-vn4co
      @AIIIAKS-vn4co 3 місяці тому +3

      Kansai area has the lowest percentage of Jomon people.
      That's why when you look at Kansai people, some of them resemble Koreans.

  • @The_hidden-Life
    @The_hidden-Life 3 місяці тому +11

    You can tell there straight up related to the Natives of Alaska and manitoba etc like the Art styles, aswell as Haida Gwaii, Haida stands out to me the most I used to get the Ainu and the Haida confused.

  • @HugoHernandez-Saldana
    @HugoHernandez-Saldana 3 місяці тому +2

    I love fluctuations!! Variety is the salt of the earth. Thanks Sabine.

  • @kennethmiller2333
    @kennethmiller2333 8 місяців тому +319

    For some reason, my mind always draws a line between them and the Sami people of Finland.

    • @scorpionfiresome3834
      @scorpionfiresome3834 8 місяців тому +148

      Probably due to both being on the northern region of a country, the Sami look asian-ish surrounded by Europeans and the Ainu are European-ish looking surrounded by asians.

    • @blacksquirrel4008
      @blacksquirrel4008 8 місяців тому +43

      They’ve always reminded me of PNW native Americans with facial hair.

    • @waynesmith3767
      @waynesmith3767 8 місяців тому +53

      My Grandmother, born in Northern Ostrobothnia (Finland) resembled a picture of an Ainu woman in National Geographic that I clipped it and showed it to people who thought it was a photograph of her; I’ve never done an ancestry search but have always thought my family had a lot of Asian DNA or some Sami background.

    • @woodspirit98
      @woodspirit98 8 місяців тому +10

      It's probably because of their blonde hair and blue eyes.

    • @LB-uo7xy
      @LB-uo7xy 8 місяців тому +21

      They also look a bit similar with some Natice American tribes.

  • @joangordoneieio
    @joangordoneieio 8 місяців тому +3

    TY so much! This is fascinating.

  • @maliha3305
    @maliha3305 6 місяців тому +1

    You finally answered i gave up months ago until I came back to find that you finally did it

  • @barguttobed
    @barguttobed 8 місяців тому +74

    After a lot of requests thanks for finally making out an Ainu DNA analyse video. This Ainu sample belongs to northern Ainu from Sakhalin island and aquires more Okhotsk ancestry compared to the Ainus from Hokkaido. The "south asian" component is confused Basal East Eurasian ancestry contained among Jomon population and inherited by Ainu, it's also popping out on Tibetan results as any of those Basal East Eurasian lineageses in genetic calculators got represented as South Asian ancestry although there are no any real AASI ancestry in Ainus, Jomon or Tibetans.

    • @weifan9533
      @weifan9533 8 місяців тому +10

      Agreed. I'm sorry I misread what you wrote earlier. After all we share the same opinion. IUP East Eurasians likely had a very wide distribution in Northern Eurasia once upon a time and it's only after the expansion of UP West Eurasians that they were forced to migrate further to the east and to the south.

    • @barguttobed
      @barguttobed 8 місяців тому +8

      @@weifan9533 Yeah meanwhile those West Eurasians in a nutshell all spread from Middle East ahahaha

    • @weifan9533
      @weifan9533 8 місяців тому +6

      @@barguttobed Yes, West Eurasians likely originated from or stayed longer in the Middle East than East Eurasians. Their physical features sort of resemble the Australian Aborigines or the Papuans, which are populations living in a rather hot climate. On the other hand, East Eurasians, with their thicker subcutaneous fat and the signature eye shape developed on some of them, likely evolved in a colder climate.

    • @user-ph8xc6yc9v
      @user-ph8xc6yc9v 8 місяців тому +1

      They're really a far distant relation with Mongolians like you.
      Haplogroup C and D brothers and sisters.

    • @weifan9533
      @weifan9533 8 місяців тому +6

      @@user-ph8xc6yc9v We're talking about autosomal DNA and not Y-haplogroups. And plus haplogroup C is the brother clade of haplogroup F whereas haplogroup D is the brother clade of haplogroup E.

  • @IndianimmigrantinIndia
    @IndianimmigrantinIndia 8 місяців тому +22

    Thank you for a well researched and unbiased video. 😊

  • @glitterytrinket6246
    @glitterytrinket6246 4 місяці тому +1

    Great show.... subscribed!

  • @happysolitudetv
    @happysolitudetv 8 місяців тому +1

    The result we've been waiting for!

  • @terezasantana8178
    @terezasantana8178 6 місяців тому +3

    ❤ grata pelas informações. Muito bom.

  • @drivenmad7676
    @drivenmad7676 8 місяців тому +6

    I've always found the Ainu fascinating.

  • @r8chlletters
    @r8chlletters 7 місяців тому +18

    Kami in Shinto is the spirit or life force of all things, interestingly similar to Ainu tradition.

  • @rocketta.chique5761
    @rocketta.chique5761 15 днів тому +1

    5:31 the music is so beautiful!

  • @guiladlevy3152
    @guiladlevy3152 7 місяців тому +4

    For those who enjoyed that amazing video and enjoy mangas : read : Golden Kamui .
    You will most likely enjoy it .

  • @kckaz4453
    @kckaz4453 7 місяців тому +1

    well done, m8. Thank you.

  • @ceo_cheese
    @ceo_cheese 5 місяців тому +2

    5:49 what a beautiful sound

  • @amitysfangs9307
    @amitysfangs9307 7 місяців тому +23

    My moms family is from tokyo for all I know and my dad is 99% anglo but my whole life I've thought no one has this weird impossibly thick, dark wavy hair like mine but then I see the Ainu and I don't feel alone anymore. Also the bear cult is thought to have been a holdover from paleolithic times and thought to be connected to similar rituals practiced by native siberians.

    • @lorrieborder
      @lorrieborder 7 місяців тому +3

      You should complete a DNA analysis to see if you are Ainu. If you are male, you'll be able to identify your male haplogroup; and if you're female, again, you'll know you female haplogroup. Your male/female haplogroup will tell you about your familial migration. It would certainly be interesting.

    • @takineko
      @takineko 3 місяці тому

      What kind of Anglo is your dad? Could be Sicilian from Italy?

  • @fillfinish7302
    @fillfinish7302 8 місяців тому +6

    Beautiful songs

  • @troygaspard6732
    @troygaspard6732 3 місяці тому +12

    I have to thank the manga Golden Kamu for introducing me to this ancient Japanese culture; especially the cuisine.

  • @Shadovvwithoutbody
    @Shadovvwithoutbody 7 місяців тому +11

    As an uralic speaker I find both ainu and japanese very fascinating and close to me. At least compared those who has been surrinding my people in the last few millenia.

  • @WhiteFyre
    @WhiteFyre 7 місяців тому +25

    Looking at them, some of them look like Australian Aborigines, others look like they are partially Caucasian! Their history must be very interesting I reckon.

    • @fermanrekica4766
      @fermanrekica4766 7 місяців тому +2

      Where is the Australian aborigine look? I don't see it. Go read wikipedia on genetics of Ainu and Jomon. The South Asian and Papuan that shows up was confused for other components in the Sakhalin Ainu. If they were South Asian, Papuan you think their skin color would be super dark brown, not lighter than even Japanese (many East Asian can be super dark by tan too). Ainu were described as white-skinned until they labour in the sea. Anyway they are genetically East Eurasian but with some ANE ancestry.

    • @jalbu8330
      @jalbu8330 6 місяців тому +3

      I agree, I can see many of my Aboriginal uncles in the men. I visited Hokkaido and we connected as indigenous people and we met some young men who believe they are connected to us in Australia, with similar beliefs, very interesting.

    • @fermanrekica4766
      @fermanrekica4766 6 місяців тому

      @@jalbu8330 It's amazing how people can lie. Let's see here. Ainu = look white skinned Mostly Straight/wavy hair, few curly hair. Some are brown skinned because they labour under the sea and others have curly hair but you can find that in many Middle eastern caucasian and Jewish people. Their face look like Caucasian. And I'm not claiming them to be Caucasian. I rather you say they look like Sri Lanka veddas only difference is their dark skin and some features. Now with Australia aborigines = black skin, super wide nose, super thick lips. A skull that looks partly caucasian (like the jaw, forehead) but look black people overall. How can you see a resemblance is beyond my understanding.

    • @frostflower5555
      @frostflower5555 6 місяців тому +1

      to me they look like Eskimos

  • @cestwhat1317
    @cestwhat1317 3 місяці тому +15

    I would’ve guessed a strong Mongolian influence, along with some genetic adaptations to the cold and other influences. Fascinating. Thank you.

    • @hangten1904
      @hangten1904 11 днів тому +4

      They look related to Siberians

    • @GoldieDawn
      @GoldieDawn 7 днів тому +1

      High frequency of B blood group, like us Roma Gypsies - Eurasian Nomads. x

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 2 дні тому

      I see a lot of European/Caucasian visual
      Influence.

    • @GoldieDawn
      @GoldieDawn 2 дні тому

      @@b_uppy They're far older than Europeans gadgie. x

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 2 дні тому

      @@GoldieDawn
      Think you are ignoring the admixture bit..

  • @megs4193
    @megs4193 2 місяці тому +1

    Excellent 😊👍.

  • @StephanieDeAyalaLarragoiti
    @StephanieDeAyalaLarragoiti 4 місяці тому +2

    The topic of genetics is very interesting.

  • @user-vw8it9oo8h
    @user-vw8it9oo8h 8 місяців тому +27

    I have heard that the tribe of the main character in Hayao Miyazaki's Princess Mononoke is modeled after the Ainu people.

    • @zoolghiest7454
      @zoolghiest7454 8 місяців тому +7

      It totally is.

    • @mitonaarea5856
      @mitonaarea5856 8 місяців тому +8

      I think they are modeled on the Emishi

    • @ayumis5452
      @ayumis5452 7 місяців тому +2

      @@mitonaarea5856Emishi is just how central government at that time described the indigenous people living in the northern part of Honshu, meaning barbarians. there are not many information left because the tribe has basically gone extinct, but many believes that they were in the same or similar group as Ainu, but living in Honshu.

    • @Mjanja
      @Mjanja 7 місяців тому +4

      @@ayumis5452
      researchers don't think Emishi are necessarily the same as Ainu (historically called Ezo)
      Among the recorded Emishi people names are many that can be explained in Japanese more than those that can be explained in Ainu
      The Emishi would have been people who spoke an extinct dialect of Eastern Japan(it’s called Jodai Togoku go), or the Honshu Ainu language, or their creole language

    • @Mjanja
      @Mjanja 7 місяців тому +3

      @@ayumis5452
      In addition, Emishi is a loanword from the Honshu Ainu language that means human, and it may have been used in a relatively positive manner until the conflict between the imperial court and emishi intensified

  • @lba6859
    @lba6859 8 місяців тому +5

    Thanks for this video. In the table of the closeness to modern populations I was also expecting to see also Nivkhs. Theoretically their languages are close.

  • @tilmannwinter3296
    @tilmannwinter3296 5 місяців тому +1

    Men great video. But it would be really great to see the andronovo beeing tested!

  • @ramasarrow2845
    @ramasarrow2845 7 місяців тому +1

    Their songs are so melodious.

  • @jimmy_rizo
    @jimmy_rizo 5 місяців тому +13

    Samurai Champloo, a manga series showcased the Ainu tragedy very profoundly.
    The whole series is such a masterclass.

  • @TXMEDRGR
    @TXMEDRGR 8 місяців тому +15

    Much respect for the righteous beards, well done.

  • @darrelllancaster9554
    @darrelllancaster9554 7 місяців тому +2

    Very educational. 👍👍

  • @rosmarieniesler3442
    @rosmarieniesler3442 День тому

    so interesting!!

  • @iama2427
    @iama2427 8 місяців тому +4

    This is one of the things golden kamuy manga taught me. We need more anime manga series like it.

  • @weifan9533
    @weifan9533 8 місяців тому +27

    According to Vallini et al. 2022, the first group of East Eurasians to split off from the rest were Ust-Ishim and Bacho Kiro / Oase, followed by Aeta, Papuans, Australian Aborigines, and AASI. All these events likely happened around 45,000 ybp. And then around 40,000 ybp Tianyuan and Hoabinhians / Andamanese split off from the rest. And then around 30,000 ybp Jomon and Longlin split off from the rest, and finally around 23,000 to 26,000 ybp Northern East Asians and Southern East Asians diverged.

    • @mcbrians.8508
      @mcbrians.8508 8 місяців тому +1

      I have a feeling that these groups despite their ethnic differences (white, black, brown, or red) speaks one language. That one language was Babylonian!!! I have these persistent feeling that after the confusion of tongues, all these groups eventually separated from one another.
      If you take a look in Chinese alphabets for a while, you'll notice that some of them look like drawings of houses, birds, etc. Could it be that after their sudden language confusion, they resorted to drawings to communicate. This is just a theory.

    • @weifan9533
      @weifan9533 8 місяців тому +14

      @@mcbrians.8508 I believe in genetics and scientific evidence I don't believe in random hypotheses or rumors. You replied to the wrong person.

    • @mcbrians.8508
      @mcbrians.8508 8 місяців тому

      @@weifan9533 even scientific evidences and genetics are still human rumors and human childish suggestions . Your obsolete Chinese thinking is woefully out of touch. Improve!

    • @weifan9533
      @weifan9533 8 місяців тому +9

      @@Icneumone7 Well, I need to clear up a few points.
      First of all, I never said that Ainu and Australian aborigines have the same haplogroups okay? Don't put words into my mouth. Just for your information they don't have the same haplogroups. Ainu mostly belong to D1a2a-M55 with some C2-M217, whereas Australian aborigines belong to K2-M526 and C1b2b-M347. And their haplogroups aren't close either. DE and CF diverged nearly 70,000 ybp, C and F (K2 is a descendant of F) diverged around 60,000 ybp, and C1 and C2 diverged around 50,000 ybp.
      Secondly I did not make any claim. What I said at the beginning has already been proved by the Vallini et al. 2022 paper. And nope this does not concern haplogroups but rather autosomal DNA. East Eurasian isn't a haplogroup it's an autosomal category.

    • @manh9105
      @manh9105 7 місяців тому +1

      @@mcbrians.8508 lol!

  • @jeanfrancois125
    @jeanfrancois125 10 днів тому +1

    Very interesting

  • @user-pm9pn6rb9f
    @user-pm9pn6rb9f 3 місяці тому +16

    アイヌは縄文人の子孫、弥生人と縄文人の混血の現在の日本人とアイヌは共通の祖先を有している

  • @amabiko
    @amabiko 7 місяців тому +30

    Fun fact, historical Japanese emperors belonged to Y-DNA Haplogroup D1a2a, which is a Jomon haplogroup.

    • @user-qwertyuiopasdfghj
      @user-qwertyuiopasdfghj 12 днів тому

      Source?

    • @Agapi-dg7th
      @Agapi-dg7th 4 дні тому

      ​@@user-qwertyuiopasdfghj source? Do you think he is able to give you a source? Germans 1300 years ago went to morth japan ,how with lufthansa?😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😅😅

  • @marcomolinero5877
    @marcomolinero5877 7 місяців тому +35

    One thing I find about these Ainu videos is they don't mention that they make totem poles and some of their traditional patterns on their clothing is similar to the North West natives of USA and Canada like the Haida. I think it's possible they could have had some connection at one point maybe through trading? There's also some similarities between the Maori and the Northwest native tribes. The Polynesians traveled far and wide. They also use totem poles.

    • @lunagrace2872
      @lunagrace2872 7 місяців тому +2

      And the idea of no written system is also similar to many Native American tribes. They seems to have a possibility of having connections a long time ago.

    • @montananerd8244
      @montananerd8244 7 місяців тому +7

      Chances are better that they all have a common ancestor from Central Asia, from whence certain artistic patterns & storytelling & spirituality came, which is the story that the global DNA map tells as well.

    • @senecavermeulen8110
      @senecavermeulen8110 7 місяців тому +3

      @@lunagrace2872i can’t tell if this is a joke lol

    • @xv2660
      @xv2660 7 місяців тому +10

      ​@@lunagrace2872not a dig at you but you're misinformed on this topic many Indigenous people in the Americas pre contact had writing systems a few that come to mind are Aztecs, Ojibwe Navajo, Hopi, Lakota, and Zapotec

    • @senecavermeulen8110
      @senecavermeulen8110 7 місяців тому

      @@xv2660 these groups, other than the nahua and zapotecs, did not have writing systems. they had agreed-upon symbols that represented certain concepts. they could not form true sentences in their symbol systems. look up mi’kmaq ‘hieroglyphs’ for a better explanation
      the real problem in her logic is saying that a lack of a writing system is a shared cultural trait, rather than a lack of a shared cultural trait. that’s why i assumed she was trolling

  • @user-hm6bn6kw6k
    @user-hm6bn6kw6k 17 днів тому +1

    Fascinating, though it could have been longer. . . .

  • @sarcasmunlimited1570
    @sarcasmunlimited1570 7 місяців тому +5

    It would make sense that most of them came through Sakhalin, after having traveled from somewhere in Central Asia.
    The rest must have come in small order groups from everywhere else by boats, as various populations spread out over Asia and Oceania.

  • @pamrussell5120
    @pamrussell5120 2 місяці тому +4

    Amazing how many lands had indigenous peoples

    • @killgoretrout9000
      @killgoretrout9000 Місяць тому

      even more amazing how many different indigenous people at different times some lands had

  • @ALIMUSLIYAR1921
    @ALIMUSLIYAR1921 8 місяців тому +19

    Great people and culture Respect from
    A south indian ( Meluhian) to ainu people❤❤

  • @iyaibeji4120
    @iyaibeji4120 7 місяців тому +1

    Beautiful culture,Hope they keep it

  • @cydkriletich6538
    @cydkriletich6538 7 місяців тому +39

    Many years ago I was told by someone that there were tall, blonde Japanese on one of the Northern islands. I don’t see blonde or necessarily tall people in these photos, but I’ll bet this is what they were referencing. The people in these photos appear to be an interesting mix of Asian and Caucasian. Itks good to hear the Japanese government is finally recognizing them. I think when we look deeply at the DNA of different populations on this planet, we will finally have to admit that there is no such thing as “purely one” ethnicity in anyone. We are likely all somehow related at some level. Somehow I find that comforting. Perhaps in many years to come, this knowledge will ease the profound “us v them” mentality with which mankind has plagued itself for eons.

    • @kumarc7091
      @kumarc7091 7 місяців тому +2

      There you are!

    • @dejantodorovski5222
      @dejantodorovski5222 7 місяців тому +3

      👍

    • @howgood88
      @howgood88 7 місяців тому +10

      Until a few generations ago, most Japanese were a lot shorter than they are now, with the Ainu being as tall as they are now. I visited Kyoto in 1990. I'm 5'5", and was born in 1953. I noticed guys my age were about my height, guys older than I was were all shorter, and most teenagers, including a lot of the girls, were taller than I am, and close to the American average. Not too long ago, I read a little about an outfit of Ainu in the Japanese Army during WWII. They were so much taller than most Japanese that our soldiers wondered if they were Germans.

    • @dejantodorovski5222
      @dejantodorovski5222 7 місяців тому +1

      @@howgood88 In every nation in the world no matter it belongs to the Western Civilization or not, which is under influence of "western" products and way of living, it's future generations are a bit taller than the previous one. My grandfather was taller than my father, I'm taller than my father and I suppose most probably my child will be taller than me.

    • @howgood88
      @howgood88 7 місяців тому +10

      @@dejantodorovski5222 It's called reaching the genetic potential for height. Postwar Japanese have been getting a lot more protein in their diet. My mother was born and raised in Brooklyn. In her younger days, European immigrants were distinctly shorter than Americans, on average. Their children would become larger, and the grandchildren would be typical American height.

  • @maciekszymanski8340
    @maciekszymanski8340 8 місяців тому +55

    The first scientist to describe the Ainu people was Bronislaw Pilsudski. He wrote down their language, myths and beliefs.

    • @valeriewedel2775
      @valeriewedel2775 7 місяців тому +11

      I think you mean the first Western European scientist. The Ainu certainly know who they are.

    • @DerEchteBold
      @DerEchteBold 7 місяців тому +19

      @@valeriewedel2775
      What a pethetic remark, trying to hurl unnecessary blame on a completely innocent statement.

    • @spark5012
      @spark5012 7 місяців тому +23

      @valeriewedel
      "The first SCIENTIST to describe the Ainu people was Bronislaw Pilsudski."
      I'm sure the Ainu know who they are, but he said "scientist," Blondie.

    • @alexandrahenderson4368
      @alexandrahenderson4368 7 місяців тому +8

      ​@@spark5012imagine thinking that only wyt folk with cars could be scientist lmao. The person you replied to was insinuating they had their own scientists

    • @peterkilbridge6523
      @peterkilbridge6523 7 місяців тому +2

      ​@@valeriewedel2775Thanks for the non-clarification, Exalted Woke Person. There's always one like you in the class to interrupt Herr Professor in the middle of his lecture.

  • @rachmondhoward2125
    @rachmondhoward2125 5 місяців тому +5

    Ainu cognates with Anu, a major Mesopotamian deity! Are there any genetic studies which investigate a link between the Ainu and Middle Eastern populations closely linked to ancient Mesopotamia?

  • @matiasguillermoweckmann5195
    @matiasguillermoweckmann5195 6 місяців тому +2

    Amazing! Can you do ancient germanic?

  • @rusantmandewaowaranay1261
    @rusantmandewaowaranay1261 5 місяців тому +12

    As a Japanese, I'm proud of one descendant of 縄文人(Johmon people) even with 10% of Johmon DNA, who are said that they had no battle between them in 12,000 years, who built a splendid culture, and who had the courage and adventurous spirit to travel to the Americas.

    • @Arthur-ot7id
      @Arthur-ot7id 4 місяці тому +1

      I'm from the Brazilian Amazon and some of us look kinda like Jomon. It's not a direct link, but our ancestors were related for sure. When I was younger ppl thought I had Japanese ancestry.

    • @rusantmandewaowaranay1261
      @rusantmandewaowaranay1261 4 місяці тому +1

      @@Arthur-ot7id As far as I know, recent studies seem to have reached the Americas in two ways.
      In the north, from Japan, the Kuril Islands, the Kamchatka Peninsula, the Aleutian Islands, and then on to Alaska.
      The southern part goes to South America via the islands of Taiwan, the Philippines, New Guinea, Micronesia, Polynesia, and Melanesia. Pottery that looks exactly like Johmon pottery has been excavated from Ecuador.
      Nowadays, if you look at a map, you might be able to travel across the islands, but it is so much amazing that they made it to the American continent at a time when there was nothing like that. What made it happen? They're brave? They're adventurous? I'd like to know their motives, if possible.
      Perhaps you are also a descendant of the Johmon people.

  • @arandomguywhowannahavesome8694
    @arandomguywhowannahavesome8694 7 місяців тому +49

    I saw Ainu in an anime.
    I thought this is just a fiction. Great to know the history of these people.
    It's called Golden Kamuy.
    I highly recommend it.

    • @mostfunnestchannel
      @mostfunnestchannel 6 місяців тому +4

      Golden Kamuy is a great story. Historical anime is awesome, like the first season of Vinland Saga, the story of Cnut the great the viking king that became king of England, Denmark and Norway.

    • @arandomguywhowannahavesome8694
      @arandomguywhowannahavesome8694 6 місяців тому +2

      Golden kamuy is really underated.

    • @dewif5331
      @dewif5331 6 місяців тому +4

      Hinna hinna

    • @moonyaan
      @moonyaan 5 місяців тому +1

      me tooo

    • @dewaeryadi7776
      @dewaeryadi7776 5 місяців тому +2

      First time i learn about ainu is from doraemon manga i read as a kid, its memorable because how different they look from traditional japanese history aesthetic like samurai

  • @kennethpon9498
    @kennethpon9498 7 місяців тому +34

    Maybe this will contribute a piece of the puzzle to unraveling the origins of the Ainu (or maybe not :-) ). As a young Okinawan girl just before WWII, my mother overheard older men discussing the origins of the rulers of the Ryukyuan kingdom-- the Sho dynasty. The men said that an Ainu woman traveled with her young son to Okinawa from somewhere in Japan. It wasn't clear if she had a husband or if he were with her. From these two, the Sho dynasty started which ruled for a number of centuries. This could explain your table which demonstrates that Ryukyuans are more closely related to the Ainu than other populations.

    • @yo2trader539
      @yo2trader539 5 місяців тому +1

      Ainu is a culture that emerges with the fusion of Jomon and Okhotsk people in Karafuto, Chishima, and Hokkaido. All modern people of Japan have varying degree of Jomon ancestry. In fact 40% of modern Japanese carry Y-DNA Haplogroup D. But it's true that the JOMON admixture in Okinawa, Amami, and Southern Kyushu is higher than national average, which is why they have strong alcohol tolerance. The regions with higher rice-farming YAYOI DNA (Y-DNA Haplogroup O1b2) is in the Kansai and SETOUCHI region.

    • @KevinWarburton-tv2iy
      @KevinWarburton-tv2iy 4 місяці тому +1

      Could be just folkore to explain connection when in reality Ainu of Far North & Far South were just the remnants of indigene Ainu once extant across whole of Japan until invasion by Japanese Ancestors. The Ainu survived the longest on the edges ...just like Celts/Celtic Speakers remained longest in edges of UK & Ireland.

  • @senecaknowsbest8380
    @senecaknowsbest8380 7 місяців тому +1

    Time to record and catalog it

  • @akhya20
    @akhya20 6 днів тому +1

    I saw the very first picture and immediately thought they look Indian. The men especially. The people in the northern states of my country look like that. Then the pie charts started showing up..wonderful

  • @edanridge3023
    @edanridge3023 7 місяців тому +53

    Interested fact when the Australians ran up against Ainu soldiers in ww2 they were shocked by their physiques and fighting prowess one soldier was quoted saying,
    During that day's fighting [30 August 1942] we saw many Japanese of large physique, powerfully built men of six feet and over. These tough assault troops came from Hokkaidō, a northern Japanese island of freezing winters, where the bears roamed freely. They were known in their own country as "Dosanko", a name for horses from Hokkaidō, and they withstood splendidly the harsh climate of the Owen Stanley Range. A 2/14th Battalion officer said to me: "I couldn't believe it when I saw these big bastards bearing down on us. I thought they must be Germans in disguise

    • @user-is3js9qp5e
      @user-is3js9qp5e 7 місяців тому +3

      Ainu people are not tall. It was about the same as the Japanese.

    • @edanridge3023
      @edanridge3023 7 місяців тому

      @@user-is3js9qp5e his words not mine

    • @clubeyxander5132
      @clubeyxander5132 7 місяців тому +6

      In a paper written in 1955 by Sakuzaemon Kodama, the most prominent anthropologist on Ainu studies of the time, states that the average height of male Ainu people was around 159cm whereas it was around 162-163 for male non-Ainu Japanese. His estimation was made through intensive surveying of living Ainu and Japanese people as well as through excavations of burial sites, which of course led to massive criticism in later years.
      At the time, as there still is now, there was a common belief among Westerners that the Ainu were Caucasians, and that they shared physical similarities with Westerners. This belief was instigated by the missionary John Batchelor in order to lure the Ainu into Christianity and separate them from the Japanese.
      Because Batchelor wrote intensely about the Ainu when information about these people were scarce, his writings has had great influence on the understanding of the people, especially among Westerners (and even in Japan) .
      Though he has left behind a great legacy in Ainu studies, it must be noted that much of his works cannot be considered impartial or academic from modern day standards. All his works stems form his conviction that Japanese need to be made better by being Christianized, and all the arguments he made were done so to serve that purpose.
      The fact he never learned to properly write in Japanese after 64 years in Japan shows where he stood as a Westerner in Japan (even his studies of the Ainu language have been proven to be inaccurate) .
      It's sad that, still to this day, many Western writers reporting about the Ainu rely heavily on the works of Batchelor or by people or theories which were or are heavily influenced by Batchelor.
      Of course, the theory that the Ainu are Caucasians has been since debunked from anthropology, comparative linguistics, and most recently from genetics.
      I am very curious about the Australian story though. Could you point me to the source of the story? I'm genuinely interested.

    • @alliefee8596
      @alliefee8596 7 місяців тому +2

      You’d have to factor in general privation from WWII and not compare how tall Ainu are currently. If they were allowed unrestricted cultural practices, especially related to food, before the war, it’s quite possible soldiers in the war were taller than those born after the war.

    • @clubeyxander5132
      @clubeyxander5132 7 місяців тому +1

      @@alliefee8596 No, absolutely incorrect. The post-war generation is much taller than the pre-war generation.

  • @LycanWolf-qu8dz
    @LycanWolf-qu8dz 7 місяців тому +4

    5:31 does anyone know the name of this song? it has such a beautiful tone to it

  • @ryanblystone5153
    @ryanblystone5153 7 місяців тому +1

    Thank you

  • @marcopolitical7571
    @marcopolitical7571 7 місяців тому +1

    I didn’t knew.
    Interesting

  • @Ersen_abiniz
    @Ersen_abiniz 8 місяців тому +3

    Perfecto

  • @MC-gt6yp
    @MC-gt6yp 7 місяців тому +6

    Real indigenous Philippines peoples also look different from current populations. They had curly hair, dark skin, broad nose and oriental eyes. If people of the world actually trace back their genealogy and acknowledge or accept the truth; there would be less fighting.

  • @davidanelson1
    @davidanelson1 3 місяці тому +1

    Fascinating people, history, and culture. And the music SWINGS! How about that?

  • @attilatasciko4817
    @attilatasciko4817 7 місяців тому +1

    Thanks .

  • @Mokuzai-Onna.
    @Mokuzai-Onna. 8 місяців тому +26

    Uchinanchu women tattooed the back of their hands to discourage Japanese pirates from taking them when they raided Uchinanchu trading ships. Japanese thought tattoos on women as damaged goods.

    • @spark5012
      @spark5012 7 місяців тому +4

      That makes more sense than the explanation here.

    • @user-jd4qz3ky5f
      @user-jd4qz3ky5f 7 місяців тому +8

      Tatto culture was seen all over the Japanese archipelago. It's just one of Jomon and Yayoi traditions and that's all.

    • @Mjanja
      @Mjanja 7 місяців тому +3

      You are completely wrong
      “Hajichi” is an based on the idea that tattoos are the only decoration that can be carried into the afterlife

    • @Mokuzai-Onna.
      @Mokuzai-Onna. 7 місяців тому +5

      @Mjanja why are you so arrogant?? To just come at me like that?? Hajichi is many things. Yes, your one statement is partially true. There's more. It means woman, beauty, rites of passage, and marital status. My Oba or Grandmother died over 20 years ago. Today, she would be about 107 years old. I have seen her Hajichi in real life. A story was told to me on Okinawa about how the Japanese would raid Ryukyu ships and take the goods and the women. After a while, the ships that were raided, they noticed the Japanese would not take the women who had tattoos. This was before Hajichi, my guess. So the women started to tattoo the back of their hands so the Japanese pirates would not take them. So the expression, damaged goods. Designs were different through out the Ryukyu islands.

    • @kanshimajiri5341
      @kanshimajiri5341 3 місяці тому

      @@Mokuzai-Onna.
      キミ沖縄の共産主義活動家やろ。
      外国人相手に大嘘ひろめんなよ!
      プリムヌが!

  • @michelleboyle6497
    @michelleboyle6497 7 місяців тому +5

    The famous Yul Brynner was from Sakhalin Island (still contested between Russia and Japan), but he is often claimed by Roma/Gypsies

  • @ataguala
    @ataguala День тому

    Small correction: Ainu used to also live on the main island of Japan (Honshu) and several words still being used and describing landscape features of Honshu island are of Ainu origin. With northward migration and spread of modern Japanese, the Ainu's last 'home' became Hokkaido and the Kuril islands further north and parts of Sakhalin. Originally, however, and we should not ignore that, their distribution included areas of Honshu as well. Ainu language is written in Katakana with additional few characters only forfor Ainu sounds.

  • @sheckyfeinstein
    @sheckyfeinstein 8 місяців тому +1

    I like people that smile a lot.

  • @annepoitrineau5650
    @annepoitrineau5650 8 місяців тому +19

    Beautiful traditional pictural motives. I hope the culture can survive.

  • @susanschaffner4422
    @susanschaffner4422 7 місяців тому +7

    Their animism is ancient and unique in the modern world.

  • @nellysonic
    @nellysonic 3 місяці тому +1

    Do you happen to have the ainu sample gedmatch kit number or do you have it in 23andme format by chance?

  • @yadgar1969
    @yadgar1969 2 місяці тому +2

    Awesome beards... as a Central European wannabe Afghan, I'm really envious - mine grows not longer than 25 cms!

  • @peetiegonzalez1845
    @peetiegonzalez1845 8 місяців тому +16

    The biggest mystery to me is why the Ainu language shares so much with the Basque language of Europe.

    • @Spillers72
      @Spillers72 8 місяців тому

      They probably trace back to Atlanntis

    • @slewone4905
      @slewone4905 8 місяців тому +3

      another language that don't belong there. there is a ridiculous belief of indiginous. Japanese were invaders to Japan and displaced the Ainu. Most Europeans allegedly came from the Caucus at some point.

    • @peetiegonzalez1845
      @peetiegonzalez1845 7 місяців тому +1

      @@slewone4905 So why is the language there?

    • @user-vd7uo8js6s
      @user-vd7uo8js6s 7 місяців тому +1

      ⁠​⁠@@slewone4905u don't know anything😮‍💨
      ainu come Japan just 1000 years
      japanese 2000 years
      ainu is invader😂

    • @user-vd7uo8js6s
      @user-vd7uo8js6s 7 місяців тому +1

      @@slewone4905ainu is illegal immigration
      ainu&you average caucasian invader👍

  • @bahattincevik3168
    @bahattincevik3168 3 місяці тому +1

    Yeni programlarınız gelmiyor ne oldu bittimi birdaha yeni programlar yapmayacakmısınız acaba 🤔

  • @Chyoonz
    @Chyoonz 12 днів тому +1

    You can feel glimpses of source from where current day Japanese expression was drawn from.

  • @Apxioul
    @Apxioul 8 місяців тому +3

    Cool

  • @dinkydi172
    @dinkydi172 3 місяці тому +3

    They share DNA with the aboriginals who lived along the Murray River, who were known as the Murrayians.

  • @vahanara
    @vahanara 9 днів тому +1

    Bronisław Piłsudski, Polish (or Lithuanian) Ainu researcher- _Three years later, Piłsudski was given a grant by the Imperial Russian Academy of Sciences to study the Ainu. That year he settled in an Ainu village, fell in love with an Ainu woman, Chufsanma, officially married her and had a son and daughter, Sukezo and Kiyo, with her._

  • @yodaz101
    @yodaz101 8 місяців тому +1

    Ok...That's a first...Digging the groovy tunes...man....🐰👍

  • @mzkeekos
    @mzkeekos 3 місяці тому +5

    You haven't uploaded in awhile. Hope you're ok

  • @nealgrey6485
    @nealgrey6485 7 місяців тому +3

    My eskimo grandma had three vertical lines running down from her lower lip
    to the bottom of her chin. These were scars so they were cut. She called them her ‘beauty marks’. I could not get anything else from her.

    • @lba6859
      @lba6859 7 місяців тому +1

      Ainu had a tradition of marks around lips for young women. Initiation for motherhood. Very old tradition that traces its roots from Africa

  • @pratiksingh1714
    @pratiksingh1714 Місяць тому +1

    Pls don’t stop posting

  • @scottlund4562
    @scottlund4562 8 місяців тому +2

    Pacific NW symbolism somewhat in their dress...cool video. 🤙

  • @prisonersforprofit
    @prisonersforprofit 7 місяців тому +13

    indigenous peoples and their habitats around the world need to be protected.

    • @CC-xu2yz
      @CC-xu2yz 5 місяців тому +1

      By whom?

    • @dejantodorovski5222
      @dejantodorovski5222 5 місяців тому +2

      @@CC-xu2yz It's by humanity.

    • @Nutsferatu
      @Nutsferatu 3 місяці тому

      Even European peoples?

    • @dejantodorovski5222
      @dejantodorovski5222 2 місяці тому

      @@Nutsferatu Even Europeans, everyone on this planet are human besides skin colour, wealth, race and phisycal appearance and they all deserve to be protected.

  • @crazyprohor368
    @crazyprohor368 8 місяців тому +3

    unique

  • @goombah226
    @goombah226 6 місяців тому +1

    Them Ainu are badass!

  • @kasturipillay6626
    @kasturipillay6626 2 місяці тому +2

    Wow amazing people,,they should be protected. ❤

  • @brandonschecker
    @brandonschecker 8 місяців тому +3

    Can you do more viking dna results plz thank you

  • @CPlusPlusOpenGLMan
    @CPlusPlusOpenGLMan 5 місяців тому +4

    RIP Decimali.

    • @Daniel-rs6wk
      @Daniel-rs6wk 5 місяців тому +2

      He have another new channel ?

    • @land980
      @land980 5 місяців тому +1

      @@Daniel-rs6wk He moved to Japan to live with the Ainu people🗾🎣👍