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I'm American born to an immigrant Irish mother from Co Wexford. Her maiden name was Whitty. She has traced her family roots back over a thousand years. The name was Norse, DeWhitt angolsised in the time of Cromwell to Whitty. So I might suggest that a lot more Irish surnames were originally Norse to begin with.
I’m old now and from Ireland. When I was young I was blonde with blue eyes and I always felt a bit different in Ireland. Then when I traveled to ( historically ) Viking towns and areas I strangely felt at home with a lot of similar people.
My father's name was Ronald Lloyd Poplin and he was definitely Irish/Scottish/Norse/Norman and I should add the American Appalachian area as they were some of the first Scots/Irish settlers.
The Protestants that moved to the US were called “billies “ after William of orange because the Appalachian region is hilly or mountainous they became known as hillbillies.
My last name is Grimes. I was told by a close friend of mine that he worked with another Grimes and was told that this Grimes traced his family back to Norway. Watching this video proves to me that I have that same lineage! Thanks for the video!
Isn’t it funny how Vikings (who were colonists and slave owners) are treated with wonder, awe and admiration, whereas the Brits who did the same thing just a few hundred years later, are treated with disgust and hatred.
They didn’t do it to even close to the same scale as the English and even then, the viking were overall not as cruel as the English were. English carried out mass genocides and took control of 25% of all land or surface area on Earth. What viking did was undeniably terrible and have other things like Greenland, but the English wiped out countless cultures off the face of the Earth. To this day, England also exerts such control all over the entire world. The only thing vikings still really have that is even close would be Denmark’s continued control of Greenland and maybe certain past material wealth and continued political influences. Every place has done horrors in some way, but few were as bad as what England did.
@@SS-yj2le You need to read some balanced history.Before the Romans got here IRISH raiders were raping and pillaging our western shores and I’m sure they wouldn’t have been giving sedate tea parties.No-one did more damage to Ireland ( right up to the end of the 20thcentury) than the Catholic Church.I had to laugh at your comment that the Vikings were ‘not as cruel as the English’.’ Were you there?
@@Veronica705 The family name Ó Lochlainn, or McLoughlin, is best translated as “descendant of Vikings.” In the Gaelic language, Lochlann refers to the “land of Fjords,” denoting the Nordic realms and the Viking kingdom. P.S. Read ANY English-Irish Dictionary: Viking = Lochlannach.
I find this type of stuff super interesting because my last name is McLoughlin. I was always told it translates to “Son of the man from Norway” and that makes sense with your listing of “Loughlin” coming from Scandinavia. It’s super cool to see the intermingling of cultures that may be your ancestry that gets obscured by the time that passed.
Son of Norway is actually a modern translation of another translations so its not entirely correct, it mean land of the lakes (fjord land) unfortunately lochlainn was also the word used sometimes to describe Scotland, this has led to some confusion, although recent DNA results have prove there is at least a Norse branch of the name.
How are You Bro. I found out my last name translates to Son of Niall. Most of us, including you can trace our Heritage to High King Niall. They called him King Niall of the 9 Hostages. He was king around the 800’s. It is rumored that he Took St. Patrick hostage when St. Patrick was a kid.
@@williammcgrail9889 wise up you mug... im son of Egra Sligo who was the cousin to the king of cork thousand years ago or clan was split by the brits half stayed in sligo the other half forced to move to Co. Antrim Ulster, there is a reason my second name rhymes with Tara as in the hill of Tara where high kings of Ireland were crowned our clan were the protectors of Tara (Tara is still their, jobs done)... you talk bullshit there was 3 mean clans in Ulster yea o neill was the biggest but they didnt even control all of Ulster but yet everyone is some how descended of a bunch of pussies that did fa while england took Ireland, my clan was cut in half while the o neils hide in Ulster
My ancestors name is Melkorka, she was taken from Ireland an Irish princess, quite a fascinating story. In fact, while the males in my country have a predominantly Norse gene pool the women are predominantly of Irish genetics. She was very clever and is in fact a mother of great warriors and other intriguing persons in our history. I believe her clan was or became known as the O’Neil’s.
Hi, Might I suggest you find a straight-line female from Melkorka and have her tested for her Full Sequence mtDNA? Only do it when there is a Special on, like when it is Christmas and the prices are brought right down from normal. And if it proves to be the Norse gene perhaps try for the Warrior Gene. I hesitate about mentioning the Warrior gene as not many people get it. I have it but it simply is not a male gene, meaning I got mine from my mother. You mention a Norse gene and Irish genetics and so if you know which is which I would love to hear which of them is which. My Full Sequence MtDNA is U5b2b2 but to date I have only two or three people who are off mine, by one mutation. Of course I would love an exact match but all my girl 1st cousins are far and few left now. My Y-DNA is I1a3a1 haplogroup and each of us who have done their Big Y-700 are that, but are placed in groups according to their Terminal SNP of whatever they are in. i.e. I am BY151919. Got one match to date and he is an American guy. 😀
How are the men and women of your country from different gene pools? Are Norse women only giving birth to boys and Irish women only giving birth to girls? Can you explain this to me please?
@mokuraipower3835 , interesting information! My MtDNA Haplogroup is: U5b2a1. Genealogy and genetics really fascinates me. If it's not too much to ask, would you mind sharing what company/companies you did your dna tests through? I did mine first using 23andme. Then within a year of that I did one through Ancestry DNA. If you used more than 1 company did you notice any difference between one vs the other? For me I got different ethnicities results from each one.
My great great grandfather Daniel McCormick ( Catholic Irish) migrated to the west of Scotland from Ballycastle Co Antrim. I'm very interested in finding out more about where my paternal family came from and how they lived.
My dad was called Daniel McCormick.our family came from balleymena.my names joseph.the most important thing I learned from our history is fact" the rangers are shite!"
I love the history and lore surrounding Vikings and Celts. I have always felt an affinity to both. With a maiden name of Donnelly and a married name if McGeown and parents from both Dcotland and Ireland my genealogy is all over
My mother's maiden name was donnelly. You were hardly from Cork were you? There's an entire village of donnellys in glenthaune. 60% of the surnames on the tombes in the village's graveyard are donnelly.
Have always wondered about my Heritage.. I'm Irish and Naturally Blonde, which is really unusual for an Irish person. When I was on the States they maintained I had to be Scandinavian. 60 and still as Blonde as the Day I was born.
My paternal grandma said she was mostly Irish with a little English. She was a pale, freckled, redhead. Always thought red hair was common in Ireland. If not many blondes, did you see lots of gingers instead?
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@@Lily_of_the_Forest the McDermotts were fair haired.
My father is a Collins on both sides ( non related) . My grandmother maiden name was Collins and My grandfathers Surname was Collins as well . We knew of our maternal collins side at least they came from the O'Cullen Clan .
An infectious subject matter. I pass by the Dublin city council civic office regularly on Wood quay. It was one of if not the best Viking finds in Europa and the powers that be built a soulless concrete snot on it. If anyone can convince me this was not an act of architectural vandalism and cultural genocide the pints are on me. Liked and subscribed.👍
There is not alot i wouldn't do for free pints but in the famous words of Meat loaf "i won't do that", We are both in agreement the total disregard for historical Sites and Finds by the Governments North and South at the moment is heart breaking, Thank you very much for the support.
I have heard that the Vikings are where the red headed people of Ireland and Scotland came from. American Indians who lived near the Canadian border spoke of giants, over seven feet tall, who had red hair. The exploration of the Vikings was vast. Good video.
My mother's maiden name was Broden. It is name that I have been unable to find in any Irish surnames books, but according to a friend of mine from Karlskrona Sweden it is a common surname in Sweden.
My mother, and maternal ancestors, were named Diggin, from Cromane, in Co Kerry. My DNA is a mixture of Viking and Irish. I even have Dupuytren's contracture, the Viking genetic disease. Lucky me.
Me too, dupuytrens in both hands, had operations on both, my mother's side came from the Watetford, Wexford and New Ross area. My gran and mother lived in south London but had an awful time from there Jewish neighbour who hated paddies because the Irish had chased their Jews out. Mother's side were Dillon-Gillilan
@@Devonshireoldfart @Paddy1952 Cahill from Waterford and Tipperary on my mother’s side. How funny that you mentioned having Dupuytren's!! I’ve got it in both hands as well 🤔
Some of the language usage in irish with everyday use is of viking descent. Languages an cultures all over the world has a variation of cultures blended into that nation. This blend of cultures in countries across the world happened because of the people of that land who traveled for barter an trade with other countries but also nations that invaded a nation such as Ireland have even words an culture theme's that come from another countries. Countries all across the world are subjected to thus through conquest an trade
Vikings founded pretty much all our major cities and made them into what they are until they were drove out the country by Brian Boru and the Irish Kings tookover. So Dublin, COrk, Limerick, Waterford and much more
Then you have to prove me wrong. DUBLIN, CORK, LIMERICK....al established by the native Irish and recorded in many manuscripts long before the Vikings ever set foot in Ireland. Waterford, yes, probably a Viking established town. You really need to educate yourself instead of watching Vikings on tv....which are never accurate.@@WalterEKurtz-kp2jf
My maiden name is McLaughlin. I was crazy for horses as a little girl, so when I'd ask my dad what our last name means he'd tell me, "son of a horse thief".. it was just his dry sarcastic but very funny humor. He was a big wonderful man andy hero. Best dad a girl could want. I miss you so much dad. ❤❤❤
@cooldaddy2877 Are you sure about that. It reads as Mac (son of) Louglin (viking, na Lochlannaigh were the vikings). Lachlan could have been an individuals name too maybe he was named after the vikings as a joke or nickname and it stuck.
Lochlann/Lachlann is 100% an IRISH personal name. Yes, it means someone from the Scandinavian area...but thats it. You are named Micheal....are you a Jew? The McLoughlans DNA is 100% Irish. CAN WE PLEASE STOP THIS.@@michealbreathnach2928
I work with an Irish guy from Kilkenny and his surname is Martin. I looked its origins up and it is said to have arrived in Ireland from France brought over by the Normens. We both work in Norway and have noticed Martin is a Norwegian surname aswell. I said to my friend it looks like your back home were you began. 🙂
Covid what is really going on? ======================= Covid is the SARS-CoV-2 Virus But the SARS-CoV-2 Virus has not been purified AND isolated AND genome sequenced end-to-end anywhere in the world. Pointless having a Test Swab as there is nothing to compare the test result too. PCR Test cannot identify a Virus. PCR Test is testing for nucleic acid which we all have in us. PCR Test cycled 45 times amplifies the sampe more than 1 trillion times. PCR is a process, not a test. "PCR does not verify any disease." Kary Mullis inventor of PCR. All PCR test results are invalid. Lateral Flow Antigen Test cannot identify a Virus. All Lateral Flow Antigen Test results are invalid. The only way to identify an individual Virus is a Spectroscopy Test. However as the SARS-CoV-2 Virus has not been isolated anywhere in the world there is nothing to compare the Swab Test sample too. Thus pointless having a Spectroscopy Test. Conclusion -- There is no SARS-CoV-2 airborne Virus. Face Mask Contaminated? Toxic Ethanol Hand Gel - Graphene? Test Swab Contaminated? Injection Contaminated? Plandemic -- Project Fear World Economic Forum -- Great Reset "You will own nothing and be happy" Agenda 21 -- Depopulation --- Injection has a patent on it. Injection is a Protein Bioweapon? --- Face Mask -- Side Effects Respiratory Acidosis Hypoxia Hypercapnia Blood Clots Aorta Bacterial Staph Infections Pleurisy Emphysema Bronchitis The list goes on................. Bacterial Pneumonia is the outcome of wearing a Face Mask. Patients are being admitted to hospital with Pneumonia not Covid. Face Mask Contaminated with Graphene Oxide? Hand Gel Contaminated - Graphene? --- Bio-Safety Level 4 Hazmat Suit -- Positive Pressure This will stop an Airborne Virus Face Mask will not stop an Airborne Virus -- Consult Manufacturers Instructions. ----- Injection Side Effects Pathogenic Priming Anti-Body Dependent Enhancement Paradoxical Immune Enhancement Acquired Cellular Induration Syndrome Cytokine Storm --- Google Image Cows Nasal Vaccine Vaccinate cows with a Swab and/or a Nasal Spray Test Swab is covert Nasal Vaccination? ---- Pointless having a Test Swab for the SARS-CoV-2 Virus that has not been isolated anywhere in the world. Test Swab and Injection contain the Bio-agent. Bio-agent is a protein that will change the DNA of every person Test Swabbed and/or Injected. People must wake up to what the real agenda is with the airborne Virus that has not been isolated anywhere in the world! ===== ===== Transhumanism -- Neural Lace This will be the outcome of the Plandemic. Sheeple must open their eyes. World Economic Forum -- Great Reset "You will own nothing and be happy" Agenda 21 -- Depopulation ------- Face Mask Contaminated -- Graphene Hand Gel Contaminated - Graphene 5G signal can activate the Graphene and shred your lungs from within. Face Mask is filling peoples lungs with Graphene. 5G is a Dual Communication Network and Weapon System. 5G signal can be focused on a defined area called Beam Forming for example the brain and/or the lungs where the Graphene will accumulate within the body. Thus Graphene on the Test Swab and in the Injection and the Contaminated Face Mask enters the body either the brain and/or the lungs and can be activated by the 5G signal at any time. Tragically activating the Graphene left inside the body will kill the person. Is this all part of the Depopulation plan? ------- ------- Pathogenic Protein Bioweapon. Cannot provide the exact details of what it is or my comment will be auto-deleted. Primer and Catalyst. Pathogenic Protein Bioweapon on the Test Swab and in the Injection is the Primer. Spike Protein in the Common Cold Virus is the Catalyst threat will activate the Pathogenic Protein Bioweapon. Nasal Spray Contaminated With The Common Cold? The Common Cold is one of the group of approximately 55 Coronaviruses. When people catch the Common Cold over the autumn and winter 2021-2022 Cytokine Storm death within 28 days. People must understand how the mRNA escapes the protective lipid once in the body, for the mRNA to attach itself to the ribosomes. That's a rather important part. If mRNA gets chemically damaged in any way, it can possibly tell your body to make the wrong protein. We are in the calm before the storm. Prepare for the storm. ============== ============== Covid Rules Are An Exercise In Grammar Not Law All mandates are only legal if the person or persons being mandated against agree to it if not it is completely illegal. Mandates are only policies they are not laws, they cannot be enforced using law enforcement That's why when you get your vaccine they ask if you are there off your own free will Mandatory, Compulsory, Policy, Rule and Legislation are not Statutory Laws merely an exercise in grammar. Legislation is guidance not Statutory Law.... ===== All mandates are only legal if the person or persons being mandated against agree to it if not it is completely illegal... Mandates are only policies they are not laws, they cannot be enforced using law enforcement... That's why when you get your vaccine they ask if you are there off your own free will... ---------------------- IT IS NOT LAW!!! These are all acts and statutes which are not lawful and you do not have to comply to. There is a difference between legal and lawful and all of these Covid rules are not lawful. People need to read up on their common law rights which the government don’t want you to know about. ---------------------- Lockdowns / Mandates = Govt Rules / Requests / Guidelies - They are not LAWS. Just decline the Govt Requests - If you decline the Govt Request they do not apply to you. I've declined all in the past 2 years. I've not obeyed any to date, without any problems, I've never been stopped going where I want to and I've never been stopped entry to anywhere Mask Free 100% for 2 years. ---------------------- Contact what used to be PHE with a FOI request, they will tell you they have no information on it. It has already been stated by at least one therapy manufacturer ,Moderna, that they never received the full genome sequence of this virus and had to guess the full sequence from a data base on a computer. Just because there is a sequence for a virus does not prove that it causing illness in people. That is the ultimate point of isolating a virus correctly and has never been done. Plandemic -- Project Fear World Economic Forum -- Great Reset "You will own nothing and be happy" Operation Lockstep -- Event 201 --------------------- --------------------- PCR is a process, not a test. "PCR does not verify any disease." Kary Mullis inventor of PCR. PCR test for nucleic acid which we all have in us, is correct. But I think that you have forgotten that it also exists in viruses. The only difference is in humans it is called Dioxi-ribo-Nucleic Acid. Viruses contain Ribonucleic Acid. ---------------------- ---------------------- English speaking consumer economies are being hammered. Britain, Ireland, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa -------------- -------------- We are in the calm before the storm. Prepare for the storm. Operation Dark Winter ========= ========= 2022 --- The Great Hunger Begins The 1973 movie “Soylent Green”-starring Charleton Heston-takes place in the year 2022.. ========
Martin is Mars- God of War. Tin is symbology for Jupiter. Alchemical symbology rules the world. Once you C it; u cannot gnotsi it. Jupiter is also known as Ole’ Black Joe. Jupiter is a Gas ~ A Giant Gasser si!
Cool! I’m Dutch and I know where my surname comes from (Germany). But I live in Ireland and I’m definitely going to share this video with my friends of which some have the surnames you listed, like Doran. Great video, thank you for this!
I grew up with Per and Ib Schrader in Weymouth, Auckland New Zealand; and think I still have a mate whom I worked with back in 1985-89 with Community Based Corrections. I talked him into doing his Y-DNA and noted on the Danish Project they have a lot of his Y-DNA. Been checking for him as he has not replied lately. It's about now he would be turning 90. Oh....just dawned upon me you said Dutch, not Danish. Jack Martens used to tell me that one day part of Germany would become Danish and another year or so it would become German again....through the ages.
Wow, my great grandfather was McGill and great great a Gill from Longford. I also have grant great grand uncle Lonergan from Wexford. This was great to listen to and learn!
I was told by a great aunt that the Irish part of our ancestry were a Stott from Ireland who married a Stott from Liverpool, England. We lost touch with the Stotts from Liverpool during the second World War and have never been able to get back in touch. And we have never been in touch with any Stotts from Ireland. I still wonder if any of them are still around or if they all died in the war. It is sad to lose touch with family.
Delighted to see ‘Seaver’ on the list. The Seavers today are still mostly concentrated in North Dublin, around the plain that losers of the battle of Clontarf would have fled to.
My grandfather from Armagh and was a blonde and blue-eyed man named Mulholland. He died long before I was born, always wondered about his family history and have not had much success in tracing it .
Mulholland is certainly an anglocised Gaelic-Irish surname. It is neither Viking nor Norman. It is not a primary or secondary Gaelic sept, but nevertheless has its roots in Gaelic Ulster. It probably originates in Armagh. You should be most proud to have Gaelic and Armagh ancestry. The Gaels of Armagh never gave an inch to any foreigner. In modern times, they were the lynchpins of the IRA in Ulster and before that the Fenian movement. The English were always terrified of south Armagh. The British Army could only travel by air in south Armagh, and even then not without risk. Back in Tudor times, the English were most susceptible to assault in the area. Consider the Battle of Yellow Ford in 1598.
The Cork McAuliffes are native Irish and NOT Vikings. Yes, they take their name from a fashionable Viking personal name at the time but that's it. They are related to the equally Irish McCarthys of Cork.
Driving the Vikings out of Scotland did not mean that they cleared out people based on their race. What happened was that the Gaelic language community asserted itself and fought a campaign to force everyone to either use Gaelic and to follow Gaelic ways; or to leave and go to Iceland. At the end of the conflict those who wanted to speak Norse all went to Iceland to which they carried a lot of Gaelic DNA, but not the language. And in parallel, there were many who stayed who carried Norse DNA, and names as well. Those mixed people, speaking Gaelic and following Gaelic ways, but with swift ships of Viking style were the Gall-Gaidheil. They spawned a warlike cast of professional soldiers in both Scotland and Ireland and provided a bulwark against the English for hundreds of years.
You know your history! Most people think that Iceland was mainly settled from Norway... but, in fact, it was mainly settled by Norse Gaels from the British Isles. Though plenty came from Norway and the other Scandinavian countries as well.
My last name of *Hammond* (Anglicised once the Anglo-Normans arrived) was first brought to *Ireland* by the "Danes" (slang term given to *Scandinavians* ; likely Norwegians) as *Hámundr* in *Old Norse* ; being derived from a character from *Sturluson's Völsung Saga, Hámundr Sigmundsson* , who was *alleged to be descended from Odin* . *King Henry II* recognised a guy *living in Ireland before the arrival of the Anglo-Normans* named *Hamund* , a "Dane", *son of a guy named Torkill* , as a *relative of the Normans* & granted him land in Censale (today's Kinsale) & adjacent lands *held by him before the arrival of the English in Ireland* approximatley *1174AD* ; my DNA has *not a speck of English, French/Norman, or German/Angle* - but *PLENTY* o' *Irish DNA, Scottish, Welsh, & a trace of Norwegian* . Very proud of my last name. Oh! *The family motto* ? " *Fuck Off* "😁🇳🇴🔨⚡️🇮🇪☘️🍻
chungus_kahn The Normans were Frankish vikings, to whom it was second nature to invade and integrate into many countries and cultures. You probably have good knowledge of the Normans pushing on into Sicily too.
On my Mother's side, her name was Sugrue, which is on the list above as being Norse. My Father's name was McCarthy and we have traced our DNA back to the Iveragh peninsula in County Kerry which is also known as the Ring of Kerry. My paternal grandmother was actually born and raised in Ireland in County Roscommon in a tiny town called Scardaun and I actually found her original and abandoned home on a visit in the 1970's.
To add to the Sugrue name they were also predominant in County Cork also, from what If been told from my Elders the name means the Red Hawks, and they were associated with the Royal house of Denmark, not so much Norway. It's a remote possibility they were also Black Irish. Having fled the Inquisitions of Spain and Portugal. I'm not sure if that is from Sugrue or the Findlay's. As my Great Grandmother Johanna Sugrue. was brought to New Zealand with Her Aunty, And Her father went to San Francisco with his nephew. I'm sure there's some strange Irish logic there.
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE. Where does this rubbish come from? Sugrue is a NATIVE IRISH GAELIC clan from Cork. It has NO VIKING connections apart from the borrowed Norse personal name. Your "Elders" were bullsh*tting you. DNA research on the Sugrue name proves this. Finally, there is no such thing as "Black Irish". This was a derogatory name given to Irish working in the fields as they sometimes appeared to have darker skin due to the sun and work practices. They were NATIVE IRISH and not Spanish or some other made up origin.
My family, McManus, comes from County Sligo. A small number of my family left Ireland in the early 1850's to go to America. Interesting video! Thank you!
My mother from Sligo her dad was a Gallagher they owned the funeral business back in the 1920 and my great uncle was mayor of Sligo in 1943 ish I have a photo of him in office
DH Allen, a scholar on Newmarket/Clanawley who did a bit of work on the McAuliffes made the suggestion that Amhlaiobh Álainn might have been named after St Olafr/Olaf/Olave whose "cult" was growing in Ireland around the time. You find the name a lot in Cork as a first name (O'Sullivans in particular). But the fostering idea I like as well! Growing up in Newmarket there was always local folklore about a Danish princess being his mother, but I'd say that was some 19th century invention.
@@petergibson2318 as in you find Amhlaoibh used as a first name amongst the Uí Shúilleabháin. The surname coming from Súil Amháin is one theory, but Woulfe in Sloinnte Gaedheal is Gall and MacLysaght in Surnames of Ireland suggests it comes from Súil-dubhán which is black-eye with the (generally) masculine suffix diminutive - án. Personally I find that makes a bit more sense from the compounding of Irish words. Although black-eyed in modern Irish is dúshúileach.
There were definitely MacAuleys/McAuliffes living in County Clare in the 1800's. Friends of mine in South Australia descend from MacAuleys/McAuliffes from the Kilmaley parish of County Clare (west of Ennis).
My grandmother was an O'Maille (O'Malley) from County Mayo. She was from Granualle O'Maille, the Irish pirate, grew up in the shadow of Croagh Patrick in Louisburgh on a farm near the Strand, where on that beach there is a Viking burial mound.
Grainne O Malley, Clare Island. They mostly only lived to 28 then. She survived being asked to London to visit Queen Elizabeth 1st. She survived that , many others weren't so lucky.
Oh Lordy we've a whole city of Malley's here in the Kiln (Mississippi) My own family came out of the Jesse Cameron clan. He came from Scotland to South Carolina to Mississippi & we're all buried here round abouts. Happy New Year
My Beloved Grand-Father & Father (but, esp., Grand-Dad, the Family historian!), had studied much of our heritages, from ALL-directions of our Familial-'Map', and I, following in his footsteps, have done same. Thank You Extremely-Much, for programs such as this, and, all your other offerings! (This is why, I don't mind You-Tube, sending me samplings of things unknown to me, otherwise, I often wouldn't come to know of programs such as yours, which I value immensely!)
very professional video! I am following from Southern California. I spent two weeks in Dublin with the Dublin city ramblers. My mother was olde english dating back to 1066, and some german. My father was Irish and French,
The Norman’s were a people who settled in Normandy (as in D DAY WW2), they were vikings that settled in France. These Norman’s invaded Ireland and UK aswell, so maybe your father has Norman DNA if he’s got Irish and french mix
I'm a MacAulay, live in Scotland, but I was always told my family name traced back to Olaf. Did my ancestry DNA and yep 22% Irish and 9% Norwegian, 49% Scottish and the remaining is English from my mother's side. I wish I knew more about it all, but I'm here and I've subscribed to both channels!
@mhc1 Great bit of information, thanks! History isn't my strongest subject, particularly because Scottish/British history is so rich and goes way back to (almost) the beginning of time. I just checked the details of my ancestry again and here's the full details, 30% Irish, 49% Scottish, Argyll and Bute, Outer Hebredies - Uist (we used to visit my uncle there - and Rum, then the 12% English and North Western Europe, 9% Norwegian. I'll check that History of a Nation that you mentioned, too!
Interesting fact, Scottish/British history isn’t any more rich than any other history!.. You’re just more interested in it because of vanity. We have no way of confirming a lot of history either, and from spending a few years in British education, you guys do love to ‘ministry of truth’ your history lessons. British and American history classes are more propaganda than truth and I’m not trying to offend you in saying that
@@burn1898 I don't think anyone is saying their history is more rich than any other. But it is theirs/ ours . It's natural to be interested in your own roots. For some one who thinks it's just vanity I do wonder why you stopped by.
There were definitely MacAuleys living in County Clare in the 1800's. Friends of mine in South Australia descend from MacAuleys from the Kilmaley parish of County Clare (west of Ennis).
@Clans_Dynasties great thanks. So the 'name' is English in origin, but it doesn't imply that the person's origins are? That being the case and given the constant mixing of people on the British Isles you would have to really know your family history to have any certainty as to where your name is from.
Correct the names would be of English Origin, DNA is shedding more light on the history of many surnames, there are ways in which you can narrow down the possibilities of your families origins such as looking at your earliest known ancestors Location in relation to known points if interest for Irish and English lines, Religion and Wealth (i.e. whether they held land or were tenants), this obviously is based on probability.
There were strangers, Gall, a lot closer than Norse lands. Gall- Welsh, Kern Weahlas- Cornish. The surname of my ‘father’, Hannaford, came from Cornwall, to Ireland, and then back again with his grandfather.
O'Haire and O'Tool were mentioned in the Bible, when Adam and Eve were in the garden of Eden and realised they were naked, Adam pointed at Eve's private part and said O'Hair and Eve pointed at Adams anatomy and said O'Toole !!!!
"Hayes"my lot are called, my Great Grandfather (born in Cork 1893) moved to the South Wales Valleys (where we still live) over a century after he moved here for work as a Railwayman.
Oh wow haven’t heard that name in a long long time, my great grandfather x5 was from England last name Haynes…. A book was written here in Newfoundland Canada called the legacy of William Hayes and I always wished to learn of his history from that side… hopefully one day
I have Scott Irish ancestry and my madden name is Alverson (Norse Viking) from the Alver clan Translation means Elf 😊 I was born in America but wish my ancestors had remained "over seas". I wish I knew why they ever left their beautiful homeland. Thank you for this wonderful video
@@Texas1836…..I’m of Irish and Russian heritage. I am so happy I am American. So happy I live in Texas. My ancestors on my dads side, fled the famine and revolution. On my mothers side, fled the pogroms the czars encouraged. Glad we landed here, so to speak. The US is a great place but bashing it seems fashionable these days.
@@Clans_Dynasties Thanks. Just wondering, have you ever looked into which parts of ireland (the mainland) had the least external influence on DNA over the last 2 millennium?
@@cooldaddy2877 Ah, thanks for the info. She definitely had the Irish temper worthy of Maureen O'Hara "Mary Danaher (sic)" in the Quiet Man😆 She is from Queens NYC and had that thick accent from that part of city
Despite the predations of the Norsemen, it was Ireland that kept alive the candle that was Christianity in the west of Europe and the British Isles in particular during what we now call the dark ages. It was also Ireland that sent the likes of Columba to spread the word to a largely pagan mainland in what we now call England, Scotland and Wales, although those countries didn't exist then.
Of my Irish mother's Irish ancestors numbering 23 surnames that I have thus far discovered, none are mentioned in this video despite my mother's claims that she had Viking ancestors. I guess I need to research more.
Waring between English kings and Irish kings was also going on at this time. My present surname is Morris and has an Irish connection to the McMorris people of west coast Ireland but the name itself derives from North Africa. I was glad to have discovered this because the pathway, if you trace it back, is a truly amazing pathway. West up through Spain and the Iberian Peninsula into France then on into Britain. Or east up through Sicily, Italy, France, and then into Britain. Perhaps a little more romantic a pathway than simply coming here directly from Northern France. Good and interesting topic. The sound recording needs to be a bit stronger. It fails the ear at normal output level.
Your Morris migration line is very interesting and makes sense ie Moors. Apart from a bit of Irish, Scandinavian, Welsh, English and Chinese I have a smidge of Nth African. I'm sure that would be from ancient migration or possibly a drop picked up from the Moors as the Celts moved up to Ireland from Spain. It is fascinating stuff and really makes you appreciate the fact that through all the hurly-burly humans have been through over millennia Our families are Still here!
If your people are from the west coast they are either Mac Muiris of Mayo. They were Normans with NO CONNECTION to Africa. If they are from Sligo they are Ó Muiris, a variant of Irish Morrissy and NATIVE IRISH...NO CONNECTION to Africa. Where do people get such rubbish from.
@@cooldaddy2877 I think you have to go a little further back than the Iberian peninsula to discover the origin. The migrations happened from far farther south far earlier in time. There is great possibility that the name moved north through more eastern lands; southern Italy then up into France. Great subject, from a dark and swarthy perspective anyway.
We are Mastersons who were in Cavan way before the Ulster Plantation. There was another family of Mastersons from England, not related to us. Masterson is definitely a Viking pattern name.
@@Clans_Dynasties class mate! im over the otherside of the lough you can see from portaferry!! i think the vikings used the dorneill island as a trading spot (or maybe tax collections lol) with locals in the lough
My last name, Crosby, is Norse. It means by the cross. I got a report from a website, House of Names, that gave the history of surnames. Mine was adapted by the Scotts. It goes back to the tribe of Juda, the house of David. The zodiac sign of the name is Leo, the birth stone, was ruby. The family emblem, is a lion.
Only people of low esteem dwell on the past. Striving to find an identity. I am Scottish with Irish ancestry and feel quite happy about the fact that I may have Norse blood in my veins. ( KELLY)
Definitely going to start wearing glasses as I was most disappointed to realise that this wasn't a video about Viking submarines in Ireland. To be fair I was quite surprised that Vikings had submarines.....
@@stephencasey7712 I live in second biggest city in Austria and I am SO FRUSTRATED that it's soo inconvinient to get to second biggest city of Ireland! It's on my list for so long, but it's like there is no way to get there without going first to Vienna, Amsterdam, Paris or Frankfurt 🙈🙈
My fathers name was an English translation of the original in Irish. When my grand father came from Cork county during the famine his parents changed the name ‘O Kiarda to Carey.
The surname 'Bligh' as in Captain Bligh is Cornish, not English. Captain Bligh (of th infamous mutiny) himself was Cornish, not English. It is from Cornish 'bleydh', meaning wolf. Anglicised to 'Bligh'. The surname is still found in Cornwall.
Most people don't know that the Cornish were a seperate Kingdom of Celts, similar to Wales. Buried in Norman conquest, forgotten by "emits" and an Anglicised youth.
@@centuriontwofivezeroone2794 We still have our identity, hanging on for grim death in places like my home town of Bodmin! My car has a Cornish flag, so I still fly our St Piran's flag! Kernow bys vyken!
@@kernowforester811 Sadly, like my Irish roots, it's all being ignored, hidden and rewritten by an uncaring generation. Stories and music are what made any with Gaelic/Celt blood special, both the music and the really old tales created magic, a sense of awe and belonging, now everything just seems so empty, tasteless and temporary. Cornwall's biggest enemy was the big spenders moving there from London and then trying to change everything. Plus the fact that it's some of the most beautiful country in all of Britain. Everyone wants a part of it... Some just took too much. Let us hope it does last forever my friend, best wishes and Happy New Year.
My last name is Hayes I live in California and this always amazes me, my great grandfather came from Ireland. Hayes derived from aed - “Ohaodha”god of fire, and fell under the banner McNamara clan, lion facing left in red, you see it early in the video @3:33 you see the Hayes crest- snake around the sword, in south west of cork where Vikings were as well. Pretty cool video
Very interesting ... the Hiberno-Norse(Irish-Norse) also settled big scale in parts of the Wirral and south west Lancashire in present day Northern England. Also they ruled mostly under the Uí Ímair's the twin kingdom of Dublin and York (Northumbria) under Amlaíb Cuarán, Sitric Cáech,Gofraid ua Ímair et al., ..and of course Erik BloodAxe
My maiden name was McGorrighan and I would love to discover more about the name. A lot of my ancestors were from Co Cork, a small village called Inchigeelagh.
My dad’s ancestors came from Limerick Ireland area and always considered themselves Irish, but the surname Carscallen turns out to have been a place name in Scotland registered in 1680. Anyone have any idea about its true etymology?
I intend to cover every clan/family of scotland and Ireland plus all the migrations and events of both from the early medieval period till the plantations. Welsh and English families as well in the future as there is plenty of overlap.
Hello there....my grandmothers maiden name was coleman. Her parents came from ireland to argentina i guess before 1900. She was born in argentina was catholic and never spoke of her roots or family a real pitty. I love your irish accent... god bless u.
Hi, our surname is from a Viking origin, via Orkney. Norse. We are literally the last in the line with the surname FEA, in the UK. In a viking context I read once it translates as Foe, but if you have any knowledge resources or signposts for Scotland, I would love to know. I love your channel, thanks
"Fea" in Spanish (parent language of Goidellic/Gaelic language family) means "ugly girl/ugly lady/ugly woman" (whereas "Feo" means ugly dude/ugly guy/ugly man [DeFeo - Amityville horror - "Of the ugly guy"]
Hi Carolyn, Well we know the Vikings went into the Orkneys eh. Became neighbours of the little Scottish people there .... known as the Picts, and they both lived in harmony with one another.
My father's last name Wilson with Scottish ancestry and his mother's mother maiden name was Boland and born in County Clare Ireland and emigrated to the United States during the Famine. 🇮🇪🏴
I've wondered about my surname Mac Connoran. All I know is that my paternal grandfather's side was from Dublin. I've never found anyone else with my surname anywhere in the world, other than relatives.
@@conorfields2660 didn't French Normans invade first? Where do you think the French surnames and castles came from? And there was no live and let live then or now for that matter. The Gaelic settlers wiped out the Druids and committed genocide on the Ulaidh and massacred them all, among others. The O'Neills of Ulster waged war for centuries against other provinces and took slaves from Wales (St Patrick) and Scotland. Jesus and don't get me started on those treachorous bastards the McDonnell's!!
The island was only ever "centralised" or geographically united under British rule and then only for a relatively short period. I say "geographically united" because it never has been united in any full sense of the word and I don't believe it ever can be. Republicans have colonial ambitions to see the island ruled by one parliament in Dublin but that "nation" would be united in name only and would be subjected to a lengthy and costly period of internal violence
@@rock07879 The Ulaidh were gaelic and lasted till 1177 as a kingdom ,there are still ulaid surnames like McNulty still here .Stop with your revisionist pseudohistory
My partner was convinced she had Irish or Welsh ancestry and was able to trace her family history to the mid 16th century without either appearing. Turned out that the first time the name Price was recorded was in the late 13th century and it was In England but can't remember where. In fact many names you associate with Ireland or Wales first appear in England hundreds of years before those anglicized names first appear in Ireland or Wales in the 16th century. Her ma's name is jones so bound to be Welsh she thought, but nope it turns out J isn't even in the Welsh alphabet and first appeared in England with matilda Jones in the 13th century also. My own name is a complicated one also as when I look it up I see it to be Welsh, Irish but very rarely see it referred as English even though it is first recorded in England with Thomas Hughes of Somerset in 1327. Now I'm pretty sure my name is the anglicized version of ó hAodha as my Dad is very much Irish and born in Kilkenny. Many people have no idea of the true origins of these names as there are so many inaccuracies on these websites. Wiki says the Region of origin of Hughes is Wales, Ireland, France and Scotland without mentioning England? Is this a deliberate deletion do you think?
Interesting! Could you please specify who the 'English' were exactly? I am predominately Irish, but on my mother's side came over to England with the Normans, who are the 'Norse Men'!
I was wondering why I had Norwegian DNA lol doesn’t seem my surname was on your list though. From what I know my paternal ancestors came to US in the late 1840’s to flee the famine in Donegal but don’t know from which town. Great video, very informative
Do you descend from any of these names? Comment below
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@@jerryholland5934what about mcnamara translates as hound of the sea in English I remember reading somewhere they could be related to vikings
Thank you Sir. Do you know where the last name Lowe comes from? Respectfully
Very interesting but hard to understand. A little more volume would be helpful
@@KimonSheriit’s German 👍🏻
I'm American born to an immigrant Irish mother from Co Wexford. Her maiden name was Whitty. She has traced her family roots back over a thousand years. The name was Norse, DeWhitt angolsised in the time of Cromwell to Whitty. So I might suggest that a lot more Irish surnames were originally Norse to begin with.
I’m old now and from Ireland. When I was young I was blonde with blue eyes and I always felt a bit different in Ireland. Then when I traveled to ( historically ) Viking towns and areas I strangely felt at home with a lot of similar people.
This name is also common in Scotland.
No they became norse after.
And how she done that ? A thousand years my arse .
DeWhitt looks more Norman than anything. They were, of course, descended from Vikings.
My father's name was Ronald Lloyd Poplin and he was definitely Irish/Scottish/Norse/Norman and I should add the American Appalachian area as they were some of the first Scots/Irish settlers.
That would be my maternal ancestors. Wild and crazy Scots-Irish. 😂
Not Irish. They were Protestant Irish-hating Brits who colonised Ireland and then set up the clan in America
The Protestants that moved to the US were called “billies “ after William of orange because the Appalachian region is hilly or mountainous they became known as hillbillies.
And makers of fine whiskey in those mountains
I am McCarthy/ Costello..Arrived in Ellis Island in late 1800's...☘☘☘🍀
My last name is Grimes. I was told by a close friend of mine that he worked with another Grimes and was told that this Grimes traced his family back to Norway. Watching this video proves to me that I have that same lineage! Thanks for the video!
Isn’t it funny how Vikings (who were colonists and slave owners) are treated with wonder, awe and admiration, whereas the Brits who did the same thing just a few hundred years later, are treated with disgust and hatred.
They didn’t do it to even close to the same scale as the English and even then, the viking were overall not as cruel as the English were. English carried out mass genocides and took control of 25% of all land or surface area on Earth. What viking did was undeniably terrible and have other things like Greenland, but the English wiped out countless cultures off the face of the Earth. To this day, England also exerts such control all over the entire world. The only thing vikings still really have that is even close would be Denmark’s continued control of Greenland and maybe certain past material wealth and continued political influences. Every place has done horrors in some way, but few were as bad as what England did.
In our own time almost every geopolitical catastrophe on the globe is the result of British colonial rapacity, brutality and arrogance.
@@insertnamehere7947yeah it's such shame the British got involved in other countries business. Should of just kept to themselves.
@@SS-yj2leThe biggest slave market in Europe was the one in Dublin in its day .
@@SS-yj2le You need to read some balanced history.Before the Romans got here IRISH raiders were raping and pillaging our western shores and I’m sure they wouldn’t have been giving sedate tea parties.No-one did more damage to Ireland ( right up to the end of the 20thcentury) than the Catholic Church.I had to laugh at your comment that the Vikings were ‘not as cruel as the English’.’ Were you there?
I think he misses the most obvious Viking derived name of all….McLoughlin.
“Mac Loughlin” means “Son of a Viking” in Gaelic.
No it doesn't. It means" son of a foreigner" in Irish.
Close enough ! ! Ha Ha !@Veronica705
@@Veronica705
The family name Ó Lochlainn, or McLoughlin, is best translated as “descendant of Vikings.” In the Gaelic language, Lochlann refers to the “land of Fjords,” denoting the Nordic realms and the Viking kingdom.
P.S. Read ANY English-Irish Dictionary: Viking = Lochlannach.
My favorite Irish surname is MacBetch, which means son of a b*tch.
@@Veronica705 Mac = son, Lochlainn = Viking.
I find this type of stuff super interesting because my last name is McLoughlin. I was always told it translates to “Son of the man from Norway” and that makes sense with your listing of “Loughlin” coming from Scandinavia. It’s super cool to see the intermingling of cultures that may be your ancestry that gets obscured by the time that passed.
Son of Norway is actually a modern translation of another translations so its not entirely correct, it mean land of the lakes (fjord land) unfortunately lochlainn was also the word used sometimes to describe Scotland, this has led to some confusion, although recent DNA results have prove there is at least a Norse branch of the name.
How are
You
Bro. I found out my last name translates to Son of Niall. Most of us, including you can trace our
Heritage to High King Niall. They called him King Niall of the
9
Hostages. He was king around the 800’s. It is rumored that he
Took St. Patrick hostage when St. Patrick was a kid.
@@williammcgrail9889 wise up you mug... im son of Egra Sligo who was the cousin to the king of cork thousand years ago or clan was split by the brits half stayed in sligo the other half forced to move to Co. Antrim Ulster, there is a reason my second name rhymes with Tara as in the hill of Tara where high kings of Ireland were crowned our clan were the protectors of Tara (Tara is still their, jobs done)... you talk bullshit there was 3 mean clans in Ulster yea o neill was the biggest but they didnt even control all of Ulster but yet everyone is some how descended of a bunch of pussies that did fa while england took Ireland, my clan was cut in half while the o neils hide in Ulster
@@relentless1989 You talk bullshit about England. They took Ireland because Irish landlords invited them to.
You wont be a coloured one tho will ye......not from the past but soon to be...it will all be gone ..
My ancestors name is Melkorka, she was taken from Ireland an Irish princess, quite a fascinating story. In fact, while the males in my country have a predominantly Norse gene pool the women are predominantly of Irish genetics. She was very clever and is in fact a mother of great warriors and other intriguing persons in our history. I believe her clan was or became known as the O’Neil’s.
Hi, Might I suggest you find a straight-line female from Melkorka and have her tested for her Full Sequence mtDNA? Only do it when there is a Special on, like when it is Christmas and the prices are brought right down from normal. And if it proves to be the Norse gene perhaps try for the Warrior Gene. I hesitate about mentioning the Warrior gene as not many people get it. I have it but it simply is not a male gene, meaning I got mine from my mother. You mention a Norse gene and Irish genetics and so if you know which is which I would love to hear which of them is which. My Full Sequence MtDNA is U5b2b2 but to date I have only two or three people who are off mine, by one mutation. Of course I would love an exact match but all my girl 1st cousins are far and few left now. My Y-DNA is I1a3a1 haplogroup and each of us who have done their Big Y-700 are that, but are placed in groups according to their Terminal SNP of whatever they are in. i.e. I am BY151919. Got one match to date and he is an American guy. 😀
How are the men and women of your country from different gene pools? Are Norse women only giving birth to boys and Irish women only giving birth to girls? Can you explain this to me please?
The oneils were a strong clan so the oneils were of strong heart.
@mokuraipower3835 , interesting information! My MtDNA Haplogroup is: U5b2a1. Genealogy and genetics really fascinates me. If it's not too much to ask, would you mind sharing what company/companies you did your dna tests through? I did mine first using 23andme. Then within a year of that I did one through Ancestry DNA. If you used more than 1 company did you notice any difference between one vs the other? For me I got different ethnicities results from each one.
K9@@mokuraipower3835
My great great grandfather Daniel McCormick ( Catholic Irish) migrated to the west of Scotland from Ballycastle Co Antrim. I'm very interested in finding out more about where my paternal family came from and how they lived.
You should have your Y DNA done, might give some more insight to your paternal line.
My dad was called Daniel McCormick.our family came from balleymena.my names joseph.the most important thing I learned from our history is fact" the rangers are shite!"
@@monstermastic7678 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👍
@@saulpaulsaul3378 "and the Ross county are no bad"😉
Neil McCormick, my gr gr grandfather Robert McCormick emigrated from the Castle Douglas area in 1842 to Canada. Any connection?
I love the history and lore surrounding Vikings and Celts. I have always felt an affinity to both. With a maiden name of Donnelly and a married name if McGeown and parents from both Dcotland and Ireland my genealogy is all over
Some good surnames there i hope to cover those in the future.
My mother's maiden name was donnelly. You were hardly from Cork were you? There's an entire village of donnellys in glenthaune. 60% of the surnames on the tombes in the village's graveyard are donnelly.
Do Nolan please I’d love to here something about my name.
@@NegativeAccelerate no sorry we were from round the lough
@gingersirelandoverlanding8478 I mean that's a 20 min drive away from glenthaune, so it might be possible that an ancestor was from glenthaune.
Have always wondered about my Heritage.. I'm Irish and Naturally Blonde, which is really unusual for an Irish person. When I was on the States they maintained I had to be Scandinavian. 60 and still as Blonde as the Day I was born.
My father and 5 sisters are also blonde Irish/Canadian. But we have a small percentage of DNA that is Norway and also Sweden.
My paternal grandma said she was mostly Irish with a little English. She was a pale, freckled, redhead. Always thought red hair was common in Ireland. If not many blondes, did you see lots of gingers instead?
@@Lily_of_the_Forest the McDermotts were fair haired.
Are you actually Irish? Blonde hair is much more common than yanks typically assume...
I saw a lot of blonde haired people in Ireland when I visited. Just saying ...
My father is a Collins on both sides ( non related) . My grandmother maiden name was Collins and My grandfathers Surname was Collins as well . We knew of our maternal collins side at least they came from the O'Cullen Clan .
I have a Collins ancestor.
My mother was a Higgins which means Viking in Gaelic.
An infectious subject matter.
I pass by the Dublin city council civic office regularly on Wood quay.
It was one of if not the best Viking finds in Europa and the powers that be built a soulless concrete snot on it. If anyone can convince me this was not an act of architectural vandalism and cultural genocide the pints are on me. Liked and subscribed.👍
There is not alot i wouldn't do for free pints but in the famous words of Meat loaf "i won't do that", We are both in agreement the total disregard for historical Sites and Finds by the Governments North and South at the moment is heart breaking, Thank you very much for the support.
It's the usual wipe the history away as it doesn't suit the agenda of what is 'Irish'
@@irismac2442 Yes true indeed. The new Oirish is about authentic as a Samuri Eskimo in a kilt.
@@Clans_Dynasties Sad that you mentioned Meatloaf, without knowing he was about to pass. Maybe you're psychic.
People with no history have no future. Can you imagine people in the famous NWO having thoughts about Viking ancestors.
I have heard that the Vikings are where the red headed people of Ireland and Scotland came from. American Indians who lived near the Canadian border spoke of giants, over seven feet tall, who had red hair. The exploration of the Vikings was vast. Good video.
I am a 6ft Irish redhead with Viking ancestors. The true Irish complexion is dark hair, pale skin, and blue eyes.
My mother's maiden name was Broden. It is name that I have been unable to find in any Irish surnames books, but according to a friend of mine from Karlskrona Sweden it is a common surname in Sweden.
It’s pronounced as Broden but in Sweden I think it’s more usual to write it like Brodin
My ex husbands family name is Breeden. I wonder if it is related to Broden. We have seen Breeden, Breeden, and Breeding
BREEDON
Broden is a variant of Bradden/Breadon of Co Leitrim. 100% IRISH.
The name Brodeen in the upper midwest is numerous..
My mother, and maternal ancestors, were named Diggin, from Cromane, in Co Kerry. My DNA is a mixture of Viking and Irish. I even have Dupuytren's contracture, the Viking genetic disease. Lucky me.
Duggan here
Me too, dupuytrens in both hands, had operations on both, my mother's side came from the Watetford, Wexford and New Ross area. My gran and mother lived in south London but had an awful time from there Jewish neighbour who hated paddies because the Irish had chased their Jews out. Mother's side were Dillon-Gillilan
@@Devonshireoldfart @Paddy1952 Cahill from Waterford and Tipperary on my mother’s side. How funny that you mentioned having Dupuytren's!! I’ve got it in both hands as well 🤔
Fascinating. Never knew the Norse had such an impact on Ireland.
Some of the language usage in irish with everyday use is of viking descent. Languages an cultures all over the world has a variation of cultures blended into that nation. This blend of cultures in countries across the world happened because of the people of that land who traveled for barter an trade with other countries but also nations that invaded a nation such as Ireland have even words an culture theme's that come from another countries. Countries all across the world are subjected to thus through conquest an trade
Vikings founded pretty much all our major cities and made them into what they are until they were drove out the country by Brian Boru and the Irish Kings tookover. So Dublin, COrk, Limerick, Waterford and much more
NO THEY DID NOT. this video is full of errors.
@@cooldaddy2877Lol, you have no idea what you're talking about
Then you have to prove me wrong. DUBLIN, CORK, LIMERICK....al established by the native Irish and recorded in many manuscripts long before the Vikings ever set foot in Ireland. Waterford, yes, probably a Viking established town. You really need to educate yourself instead of watching Vikings on tv....which are never accurate.@@WalterEKurtz-kp2jf
My maiden name is McLaughlin. I was crazy for horses as a little girl, so when I'd ask my dad what our last name means he'd tell me, "son of a horse thief".. it was just his dry sarcastic but very funny humor.
He was a big wonderful man andy hero. Best dad a girl could want. I miss you so much dad. ❤❤❤
McLaughlin is a NATIVE IRISH surname from DONEGAL. NOT, NEVER VIKING.
@cooldaddy2877 Are you sure about that. It reads as Mac (son of) Louglin (viking, na Lochlannaigh were the vikings). Lachlan could have been an individuals name too maybe he was named after the vikings as a joke or nickname and it stuck.
Lochlann/Lachlann is 100% an IRISH personal name. Yes, it means someone from the Scandinavian area...but thats it. You are named Micheal....are you a Jew? The McLoughlans DNA is 100% Irish. CAN WE PLEASE STOP THIS.@@michealbreathnach2928
@@michealbreathnach2928NO. Mac, for son of, is GAELIC.
My Dad too ! A wonderful man of Irish descent.
I miss him so much.
His birthday was 2 days ago, Dec. 6.
I am blessed.
I work with an Irish guy from Kilkenny and his surname is Martin. I looked its origins up and it is said to have arrived in Ireland from France brought over by the Normens. We both work in Norway and have noticed Martin is a Norwegian surname aswell. I said to my friend it looks like your back home were you began. 🙂
Covid what is really going on?
=======================
Covid is the SARS-CoV-2 Virus
But the SARS-CoV-2 Virus has not been purified AND isolated AND genome sequenced end-to-end anywhere in the world.
Pointless having a Test Swab as there is nothing to compare the test result too.
PCR Test cannot identify a Virus.
PCR Test is testing for nucleic acid which we all have in us.
PCR Test cycled 45 times amplifies the sampe more than 1 trillion times.
PCR is a process, not a test. "PCR does not verify any disease." Kary Mullis inventor of PCR.
All PCR test results are invalid.
Lateral Flow Antigen Test cannot identify a Virus.
All Lateral Flow Antigen Test results are invalid.
The only way to identify an individual Virus is a Spectroscopy Test.
However as the SARS-CoV-2 Virus has not been isolated anywhere in the world there is nothing to compare the Swab Test sample too.
Thus pointless having a Spectroscopy Test.
Conclusion -- There is no SARS-CoV-2 airborne Virus.
Face Mask Contaminated?
Toxic Ethanol Hand Gel - Graphene?
Test Swab Contaminated?
Injection Contaminated?
Plandemic -- Project Fear
World Economic Forum -- Great Reset
"You will own nothing and be happy"
Agenda 21 -- Depopulation
---
Injection has a patent on it.
Injection is a Protein Bioweapon?
---
Face Mask -- Side Effects
Respiratory Acidosis
Hypoxia
Hypercapnia
Blood Clots
Aorta Bacterial Staph Infections
Pleurisy
Emphysema
Bronchitis
The list goes on.................
Bacterial Pneumonia is the outcome of wearing a Face Mask.
Patients are being admitted to hospital with Pneumonia not Covid.
Face Mask Contaminated with Graphene Oxide?
Hand Gel Contaminated - Graphene?
---
Bio-Safety Level 4 Hazmat Suit -- Positive Pressure
This will stop an Airborne Virus
Face Mask will not stop an Airborne Virus -- Consult Manufacturers Instructions.
-----
Injection Side Effects
Pathogenic Priming
Anti-Body Dependent Enhancement
Paradoxical Immune Enhancement
Acquired Cellular Induration Syndrome
Cytokine Storm
---
Google Image Cows Nasal Vaccine
Vaccinate cows with a Swab and/or a Nasal Spray
Test Swab is covert Nasal Vaccination?
----
Pointless having a Test Swab for the SARS-CoV-2 Virus that has not been isolated anywhere in the world.
Test Swab and Injection contain the Bio-agent.
Bio-agent is a protein that will change the DNA of every person Test Swabbed and/or Injected.
People must wake up to what the real agenda is with the airborne Virus that has not been isolated anywhere in the world!
=====
=====
Transhumanism -- Neural Lace
This will be the outcome of the Plandemic.
Sheeple must open their eyes.
World Economic Forum -- Great Reset
"You will own nothing and be happy"
Agenda 21 -- Depopulation
-------
Face Mask Contaminated -- Graphene
Hand Gel Contaminated - Graphene
5G signal can activate the Graphene and shred your lungs from within.
Face Mask is filling peoples lungs with Graphene.
5G is a Dual Communication Network and Weapon System.
5G signal can be focused on a defined area called Beam Forming for example the brain and/or the lungs where the Graphene will accumulate within the body.
Thus Graphene on the Test Swab and in the Injection and the Contaminated Face Mask enters the body either the brain and/or the lungs and can be activated by the 5G signal at any time.
Tragically activating the Graphene left inside the body will kill the person.
Is this all part of the Depopulation plan?
-------
-------
Pathogenic Protein Bioweapon.
Cannot provide the exact details of what it is or my comment will be auto-deleted.
Primer and Catalyst.
Pathogenic Protein Bioweapon on the Test Swab and in the Injection is the Primer.
Spike Protein in the Common Cold Virus is the Catalyst threat will activate the Pathogenic Protein Bioweapon.
Nasal Spray Contaminated With The Common Cold?
The Common Cold is one of the group of approximately 55 Coronaviruses.
When people catch the Common Cold over the autumn and winter 2021-2022 Cytokine Storm death within 28 days.
People must understand how the mRNA escapes the protective lipid once in the body, for the mRNA to attach itself to the ribosomes.
That's a rather important part.
If mRNA gets chemically damaged in any way, it can possibly tell your body to make the wrong protein.
We are in the calm before the storm.
Prepare for the storm.
==============
==============
Covid Rules Are An Exercise In Grammar Not Law
All mandates are only legal if the person or persons being mandated against agree to it if not it is completely illegal.
Mandates are only policies they are not laws, they cannot be enforced using law enforcement
That's why when you get your vaccine they ask if you are there off your own free will
Mandatory, Compulsory, Policy, Rule and Legislation are not Statutory Laws merely an exercise in grammar.
Legislation is guidance not Statutory Law....
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All mandates are only legal if the person or persons being mandated against agree to it if not it is completely illegal...
Mandates are only policies they are not laws, they cannot be enforced using law enforcement...
That's why when you get your vaccine they ask if you are there off your own free will...
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IT IS NOT LAW!!!
These are all acts and statutes which are not lawful and you do not have to comply to.
There is a difference between legal and lawful and all of these Covid rules are not lawful.
People need to read up on their common law rights which the government don’t want you to know about.
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Lockdowns / Mandates = Govt Rules / Requests / Guidelies - They are not LAWS.
Just decline the Govt Requests - If you decline the Govt Request they do not apply to you.
I've declined all in the past 2 years. I've not obeyed any to date, without any problems, I've never been stopped going where I want to and I've never been stopped entry to anywhere Mask Free 100% for 2 years.
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Contact what used to be PHE with a FOI request, they will tell you they have no information on it.
It has already been stated by at least one therapy manufacturer ,Moderna, that they never received the full genome sequence of this virus and had to guess the full sequence from a data base on a computer.
Just because there is a sequence for a virus does not prove that it causing illness in people.
That is the ultimate point of isolating a virus correctly and has never been done.
Plandemic -- Project Fear
World Economic Forum -- Great Reset
"You will own nothing and be happy"
Operation Lockstep -- Event 201
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PCR is a process, not a test. "PCR does not verify any disease." Kary Mullis inventor of PCR.
PCR test for nucleic acid which we all have in us, is correct.
But I think that you have forgotten that it also exists in viruses.
The only difference is in humans it is called Dioxi-ribo-Nucleic Acid.
Viruses contain Ribonucleic Acid.
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English speaking consumer economies are being hammered.
Britain, Ireland, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa
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We are in the calm before the storm.
Prepare for the storm.
Operation Dark Winter
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2022 --- The Great Hunger Begins
The 1973 movie “Soylent Green”-starring Charleton Heston-takes place in the year 2022..
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@@CENTRIX4 rubbish go brainwash somebody else. I live in the real world not in your paranoid one.
Martin is Mars- God of War.
Tin is symbology for Jupiter.
Alchemical symbology rules the world. Once you C it; u cannot gnotsi it.
Jupiter is also known as Ole’ Black Joe. Jupiter is a Gas ~ A Giant Gasser si!
@@davidmcgregor9024 Can you prove he is wrong .
@@joeoreilly1479 can you prove he's right.
Praise also, to Clans & Dynasties, for being here!
I’m a MCAULIFFE in America. Descendant of Michael who emigrated from Ireland 🇮🇪 in 1835.
Cool! I’m Dutch and I know where my surname comes from (Germany). But I live in Ireland and I’m definitely going to share this video with my friends of which some have the surnames you listed, like Doran.
Great video, thank you for this!
I grew up with Per and Ib Schrader in Weymouth, Auckland New Zealand; and think I still have a mate whom I worked with back in 1985-89 with Community Based Corrections. I talked him into doing his Y-DNA and noted on the Danish Project they have a lot of his Y-DNA. Been checking for him as he has not replied lately. It's about now he would be turning 90. Oh....just dawned upon me you said Dutch, not Danish. Jack Martens used to tell me that one day part of Germany would become Danish and another year or so it would become German again....through the ages.
Wow, my great grandfather was McGill and great great a Gill from Longford. I also have grant great grand uncle Lonergan from Wexford. This was great to listen to and learn!
Thank you so very much!! Hopefully those names will appear in the future with thier own videos.
my dad was a mc gill...dont no were they orignated from even though i know the name is scot.
Any place name that ends in ‘ford’ is viking
Wexford, Waterford, Ashford etc etc
Same with ‘ow’
Wicklow, arklow, Carlow etc
@@lindawoods8326 The name irish.
@@johnpatrick5307 no it’s scotch 👍
I was told by a great aunt that the Irish part of our ancestry were a Stott from Ireland who married a Stott from Liverpool, England. We lost touch with the Stotts from Liverpool during the second World War and have never been able to get back in touch. And we have never been in touch with any Stotts from Ireland. I still wonder if any of them are still around or if they all died in the war. It is sad to lose touch with family.
Delighted to see ‘Seaver’ on the list. The Seavers today are still mostly concentrated in North Dublin, around the plain that losers of the battle of Clontarf would have fled to.
Seaver is English and means "sea farer". It is NOT Viking.
Hi, surname is Burke with ancestors from western Ireland in Galway. I am Roman Catholic and can't wait to take my family to visit!
My grandfather from Armagh and was a blonde and blue-eyed man named Mulholland. He died long before I was born, always wondered about his family history and have not had much success in tracing it .
Mulholland is certainly an anglocised Gaelic-Irish surname. It is neither Viking nor Norman. It is not a primary or secondary Gaelic sept, but nevertheless has its roots in Gaelic Ulster. It probably originates in Armagh. You should be most proud to have Gaelic and Armagh ancestry. The Gaels of Armagh never gave an inch to any foreigner. In modern times, they were the lynchpins of the IRA in Ulster and before that the Fenian movement. The English were always terrified of south Armagh. The British Army could only travel by air in south Armagh, and even then not without risk. Back in Tudor times, the English were most susceptible to assault in the area. Consider the Battle of Yellow Ford in 1598.
This was fascinating. I'm so glad I came across this ❤
Thank you very much!!
Same here loving all d comments 😊
Why? What piece of info interested you? Is it accurate?
My great grandmother from Northern county Cork’s maiden name was McAuliffe, which I was always told came from “Olaf”.
Not true - its a clan from Cork!
The Cork McAuliffes are native Irish and NOT Vikings. Yes, they take their name from a fashionable Viking personal name at the time but that's it. They are related to the equally Irish McCarthys of Cork.
My family are also McAuliffes but we are from Kerry.
AND 100% PERCENT IRISH.@@jessicamcauliffe2036
Driving the Vikings out of Scotland did not mean that they cleared out people based on their race. What happened was that the Gaelic language community asserted itself and fought a campaign to force everyone to either use Gaelic and to follow Gaelic ways; or to leave and go to Iceland. At the end of the conflict those who wanted to speak Norse all went to Iceland to which they carried a lot of Gaelic DNA, but not the language. And in parallel, there were many who stayed who carried Norse DNA, and names as well. Those mixed people, speaking Gaelic and following Gaelic ways, but with swift ships of Viking style were the Gall-Gaidheil. They spawned a warlike cast of professional soldiers in both Scotland and Ireland and provided a bulwark against the English for hundreds of years.
You know your history! Most people think that Iceland was mainly settled from Norway... but, in fact, it was mainly settled by Norse Gaels from the British Isles. Though plenty came from Norway and the other Scandinavian countries as well.
Do you know why they didn't return to Sweden?
My last name of *Hammond* (Anglicised once the Anglo-Normans arrived) was first brought to *Ireland* by the "Danes" (slang term given to *Scandinavians* ; likely Norwegians) as *Hámundr* in *Old Norse* ; being derived from a character from *Sturluson's Völsung Saga, Hámundr Sigmundsson* , who was *alleged to be descended from Odin* . *King Henry II* recognised a guy *living in Ireland before the arrival of the Anglo-Normans* named *Hamund* , a "Dane", *son of a guy named Torkill* , as a *relative of the Normans* & granted him land in Censale (today's Kinsale) & adjacent lands *held by him before the arrival of the English in Ireland* approximatley *1174AD* ; my DNA has *not a speck of English, French/Norman, or German/Angle* - but *PLENTY* o' *Irish DNA, Scottish, Welsh, & a trace of Norwegian* . Very proud of my last name. Oh! *The family motto* ? " *Fuck Off* "😁🇳🇴🔨⚡️🇮🇪☘️🍻
chungus_kahn
The Normans were Frankish vikings, to whom it was second nature to invade and integrate into many countries and cultures.
You probably have good knowledge of the Normans pushing on into Sicily too.
Danes are usually Danish from Denmark.
On my Mother's side, her name was Sugrue, which is on the list above as being Norse. My Father's name was McCarthy and we have traced our DNA back to the Iveragh peninsula in County Kerry which is also known as the Ring of Kerry. My paternal grandmother was actually born and raised in Ireland in County Roscommon in a tiny town called Scardaun and I actually found her original and abandoned home on a visit in the 1970's.
My great grammas is Highland Scot MacHardy
To add to the Sugrue name they were also predominant in County Cork also, from what If been told from my Elders the name means the Red Hawks, and they were associated with the Royal house of Denmark, not so much Norway. It's a remote possibility they were also Black Irish. Having fled the Inquisitions of Spain and Portugal. I'm not sure if that is from Sugrue or the Findlay's. As my Great Grandmother Johanna Sugrue. was brought to New Zealand with Her Aunty, And Her father went to San Francisco with his nephew. I'm sure there's some strange Irish logic there.
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE. Where does this rubbish come from? Sugrue is a NATIVE IRISH GAELIC clan from Cork. It has NO VIKING connections apart from the borrowed Norse personal name. Your "Elders" were bullsh*tting you. DNA research on the Sugrue name proves this. Finally, there is no such thing as "Black Irish". This was a derogatory name given to Irish working in the fields as they sometimes appeared to have darker skin due to the sun and work practices. They were NATIVE IRISH and not Spanish or some other made up origin.
Sugrue is 1000% IRISH NOT VIKING.
@@cooldaddy2877 I am sure my grandfather would agree with you
Our people are from Ulster to the north, the McCanns who are related to the ONeills. Proud of that.
O’Neill heritage here.
My Dad: Hugh Robert McGreevy. Ulster.
My family, McManus, comes from County Sligo. A small number of my family left Ireland in the early 1850's to go to America. Interesting video! Thank you!
I am descended from this group i believe. Hello cousin!
My mother from Sligo her dad was a Gallagher they owned the funeral business back in the 1920 and my great uncle was mayor of Sligo in 1943 ish I have a photo of him in office
DH Allen, a scholar on Newmarket/Clanawley who did a bit of work on the McAuliffes made the suggestion that Amhlaiobh Álainn might have been named after St Olafr/Olaf/Olave whose "cult" was growing in Ireland around the time. You find the name a lot in Cork as a first name (O'Sullivans in particular). But the fostering idea I like as well! Growing up in Newmarket there was always local folklore about a Danish princess being his mother, but I'd say that was some 19th century invention.
Newmarket is also a town here in Ontario, Canada ...
“Sullivan” is “Suil Amhain” in Gaelic. That means “one-eyed”.
I fail to see a connection with Olaf.
@@petergibson2318 as in you find Amhlaoibh used as a first name amongst the Uí Shúilleabháin. The surname coming from Súil Amháin is one theory, but Woulfe in Sloinnte Gaedheal is Gall and MacLysaght in Surnames of Ireland suggests it comes from Súil-dubhán which is black-eye with the (generally) masculine suffix diminutive - án. Personally I find that makes a bit more sense from the compounding of Irish words. Although black-eyed in modern Irish is dúshúileach.
There were definitely MacAuleys/McAuliffes living in County Clare in the 1800's. Friends of mine in South Australia descend from MacAuleys/McAuliffes from the Kilmaley parish of County Clare (west of Ennis).
My ancestors were in Ireland, Scotland and England. All in areas where the Vikings landed. My DNA shows this.
My grandmother was an O'Maille (O'Malley) from County Mayo. She was from Granualle O'Maille, the Irish pirate, grew up in the shadow of Croagh Patrick in Louisburgh on a farm near the Strand, where on that beach there is a Viking burial mound.
@@StPetePurgeSurvivor 🤣 🏴☠️ argh!
Grainne O Malley, Clare Island. They mostly only lived to 28 then. She survived being asked to London to visit Queen Elizabeth 1st. She survived that , many others weren't so lucky.
Oh Lordy we've a whole city of Malley's here in the Kiln (Mississippi)
My own family came out of the Jesse Cameron clan. He came from Scotland to South Carolina to Mississippi & we're all buried here round abouts.
Happy New Year
My Beloved Grand-Father & Father (but, esp., Grand-Dad, the Family historian!), had studied much of our heritages, from ALL-directions of our Familial-'Map', and I, following in his footsteps, have done same. Thank You Extremely-Much, for programs such as this, and, all your other offerings! (This is why, I don't mind You-Tube, sending me samplings of things unknown to me, otherwise, I often wouldn't come to know of programs such as yours, which I value immensely!)
Thank you so very much for your kind words, i hope i can continue to produce content that you enjoy in the future.
Thank You Friend! Much Success To You!!
very professional video! I am following from Southern California. I spent two weeks in Dublin with the Dublin city ramblers. My mother was olde english dating back to 1066, and some german. My father was Irish and French,
The Norman’s were a people who settled in Normandy (as in D DAY WW2), they were vikings that settled in France. These Norman’s invaded Ireland and UK aswell, so maybe your father has Norman DNA if he’s got Irish and french mix
I'm a MacAulay, live in Scotland, but I was always told my family name traced back to Olaf. Did my ancestry DNA and yep 22% Irish and 9% Norwegian, 49% Scottish and the remaining is English from my mother's side. I wish I knew more about it all, but I'm here and I've subscribed to both channels!
@mhc1 Great bit of information, thanks! History isn't my strongest subject, particularly because Scottish/British history is so rich and goes way back to (almost) the beginning of time. I just checked the details of my ancestry again and here's the full details, 30% Irish, 49% Scottish, Argyll and Bute, Outer Hebredies - Uist (we used to visit my uncle there - and Rum, then the 12% English and North Western Europe, 9% Norwegian. I'll check that History of a Nation that you mentioned, too!
Interesting fact, Scottish/British history isn’t any more rich than any other history!..
You’re just more interested in it because of vanity. We have no way of confirming a lot of history either, and from spending a few years in British education, you guys do love to ‘ministry of truth’ your history lessons. British and American history classes are more propaganda than truth and I’m not trying to offend you in saying that
I wouldn't hold it against your mother for having English roots.
@@burn1898 I don't think anyone is saying their history is more rich than any other. But it is theirs/ ours . It's natural to be interested in your own roots. For some one who thinks it's just vanity I do wonder why you stopped by.
There were definitely MacAuleys living in County Clare in the 1800's. Friends of mine in South Australia descend from MacAuleys from the Kilmaley parish of County Clare (west of Ennis).
Fascinating stuff. I have Smith (Smythe) from Ireland and Thompson & Butler from Scotland in my heritage. Thank you for an informative video!
Those are all English names surely!
Check out the why an English surname may be Irish video it explains why this may not be the case
@Clans_Dynasties great thanks. So the 'name' is English in origin, but it doesn't imply that the person's origins are? That being the case and given the constant mixing of people on the British Isles you would have to really know your family history to have any certainty as to where your name is from.
Correct the names would be of English Origin, DNA is shedding more light on the history of many surnames, there are ways in which you can narrow down the possibilities of your families origins such as looking at your earliest known ancestors Location in relation to known points if interest for Irish and English lines, Religion and Wealth (i.e. whether they held land or were tenants), this obviously is based on probability.
@@nickcalnephone
Smythe could have come from Irish Gowan. Butler was an Irish/Norman name.
There were strangers, Gall, a lot closer than Norse lands. Gall- Welsh, Kern Weahlas- Cornish. The surname of my ‘father’, Hannaford, came from Cornwall, to Ireland, and then back again with his grandfather.
Gall means any stranger. It could mean someone from 50 miles away.
I'm American but my dad's family hails from Limerick; we easily traced our original ancestor back to Viking days.
Great video's that'll I'll have to add in to are Irish-Viking playlist 😍
Mine is O’Toole. My family clan was in control of Ireland for 4 centuries. I’m proud to be Irish ☘️
O'Haire and O'Tool were mentioned in the Bible, when Adam and Eve were in the garden of Eden and realised they were naked, Adam pointed at Eve's private part and said O'Hair and Eve pointed at Adams anatomy and said O'Toole !!!!
@@jimjones8208
Hahaha , all men and Eve herself can just be pleased she didn’t say oh , “little , or small”.
@@jimjones8208 she recognises a biggen when she sees one. Good old eve 😂
Hadn't known the O'Tooles controlled Ireland for 4 centuries! What book told you that?
So you should be proud ....fight for yr lands cos there will no O'Tooles in the future !
"Hayes"my lot are called, my Great Grandfather (born in Cork 1893) moved to the South Wales Valleys (where we still live) over a century after he moved here for work as a Railwayman.
Oh wow haven’t heard that name in a long long time, my great grandfather x5 was from England last name Haynes…. A book was written here in Newfoundland Canada called the legacy of William Hayes and I always wished to learn of his history from that side… hopefully one day
@@anndubose8615 I'm originally from the Chicago area and the Hayes name isn't all that uncommon. I have a buddy with that name
I have Scott Irish ancestry and my madden name is Alverson (Norse Viking)
from the Alver clan
Translation means Elf 😊
I was born in America but wish my ancestors had remained "over seas". I wish I knew why they ever left their beautiful homeland. Thank you for this wonderful video
Starvation and poverty moved a lot of people ❣️☘️❣️
Our America is a beautiful country. Thankful I am American. I believe we should live wherever we feel is home.
Yes yes yes!! I always say oh how I wish my ancestors stayed there as well 😢 It’s almost like a true utopia compared to here !
One thing about America, we let people leave! Not all countries do that.
@@Texas1836…..I’m of Irish and Russian heritage. I am so happy I am American. So happy I live in Texas. My ancestors on my dads side, fled the famine and revolution. On my mothers side, fled the pogroms the czars encouraged. Glad we landed here, so to speak.
The US is a great place but bashing it seems fashionable these days.
I'm a newfoundlander and we found the oldest viking settlement in Lance aux meadows, Vikings lived all around Newfoundland
As a Norse Geal of the doyle clan thank you for this video Erin Go Bragh 🇮🇪
A bit short but very informative, clearly a lot of research went into that, well done.
Thanks for the showing the Bolands!
You are welcome, i thought you may like to see them there.
4:14 hope that works i never know how to get it to link
@@Clans_Dynasties Thanks. Just wondering, have you ever looked into which parts of ireland (the mainland) had the least external influence on DNA over the last 2 millennium?
I have seen things here and there but my main area of study is 500 - 1608 in Irish history and too 1746 in scottish history
I worked with a Woman whose last is Bergin. She has family in Dublin, and is of mixed Norse and Gaelic ancestry
Bergin is 100% Irish. Ó h-Aimheirgin in Irish and means descendant of Aimhirgin...a native Irish personal name meaning "wonderous birth"
@@cooldaddy2877 Ah, thanks for the info. She definitely had the Irish temper worthy of Maureen O'Hara "Mary Danaher (sic)" in the Quiet Man😆 She is from Queens NYC and had that thick accent from that part of city
Great video Michael - very interesting topic
Thanks you my friend, Next videos the Scottish ones, so i'l try to do you proud.
@@Clans_Dynasties Sounds great, I can't wait
Very nice video. Could you please slow down the scrolling names, it's not easy to follow them as they race down the screen.
Yep, I had to re-watch it in slow motion.
Just pause it. Even take a screen shot.
Great stuff here....thanks my man.
As far as I know, my surname is Irish and means "Hounds of the Sea ".
It was my old man's great grandfather that came to England from Ireland.
McNamara is Irish.
I'm a McNamara: family from County Mayo, Achill Island, Village Keel.
Glad I came across your video tonight! I'm not only a Grimes with Norse ties but Ulster Scot on my mother's side of the family! What a heritage!
My grandfather was a Higgins and his boat was usually in the water.
My mum's family name was Blute,similar to Germanic Blood.She was from Dungarvan Co.Waterford
Despite the predations of the Norsemen, it was Ireland that kept alive the candle that was Christianity in the west of Europe and the British Isles in particular during what we now call the dark ages. It was also Ireland that sent the likes of Columba to spread the word to a largely pagan mainland in what we now call England, Scotland and Wales, although those countries didn't exist then.
Do you mean west of Europe as in the British isles? What about the Welsh?
Just a heads up but using British isles when referring to Ireland is wrong. Have a good day pal
@@Ponsonby
He knows that.
@@Ponsonby not wrong, 100% correct.
@@Ponsonby Hi Lyndon, sharing your knowledge or an opinion is fair enough but why the antagonistic second sentence? Pointless and unneccesary.
Amazing work as always!!
Thanks mate 😁
My family is from Cork i believe , id love to go to Ireland and find out more, thank you for such an interesting video
Of my Irish mother's Irish ancestors numbering 23 surnames that I have thus far discovered, none are mentioned in this video despite my mother's claims that she had Viking ancestors. I guess I need to research more.
Cheers for that mate.Good to see my lot in there
I thought you may be happy to see them, i had plenty of names to choose from but i knew you appreciate the mention.
@@Clans_Dynasties Thanks man i loved it.Put on the McAuliffe gathering site they`ll love it
Thank you so very much as always i really appreciate it
Waring between English kings and Irish kings was also going on at this time.
My present surname is Morris and has an Irish connection to the McMorris people of west coast Ireland but the name itself derives from North Africa. I was glad to have discovered this because the pathway, if you trace it back, is a truly amazing pathway. West up through Spain and the Iberian Peninsula into France then on into Britain. Or east up through Sicily, Italy, France, and then into Britain.
Perhaps a little more romantic a pathway than simply coming here directly from Northern France.
Good and interesting topic. The sound recording needs to be a bit stronger. It fails the ear at normal output level.
Your Morris migration line is very interesting and makes sense ie Moors. Apart from a bit of Irish, Scandinavian, Welsh, English and Chinese I have a smidge of Nth African. I'm sure that would be from ancient migration or possibly a drop picked up from the Moors as the Celts moved up to Ireland from Spain.
It is fascinating stuff and really makes you appreciate the fact that through all the hurly-burly humans have been through over millennia Our families are Still here!
Basically one big family
If your people are from the west coast they are either Mac Muiris of Mayo. They were Normans with NO CONNECTION to Africa. If they are from Sligo they are Ó Muiris, a variant of Irish Morrissy and NATIVE IRISH...NO CONNECTION to Africa. Where do people get such rubbish from.
@@cooldaddy2877 I think you have to go a little further back than the Iberian peninsula to discover the origin. The migrations happened from far farther south far earlier in time. There is great possibility that the name moved north through more eastern lands; southern Italy then up into France. Great subject, from a dark and swarthy perspective anyway.
My points stand. The dark and swarthy label has already been explained...and is NATIVE IRISH.@@L.M1792
I found that fascinating. I've subscribed and look forward to watching more .
Good stuff C&D. Very well presented and very informative. Best wishes from the Belfast Castlereagh hills.
We are Mastersons who were in Cavan way before the Ulster Plantation. There was another family of Mastersons from England, not related to us. Masterson is definitely a Viking pattern name.
im from strangford lough (strong fjord) they looted nedrum monastry and stole the gold bell, its in dublin museum now
I'm literally 8 mile from Portaferry, i go to Nendrum most days with good weather looking to do a video there soon.
@@Clans_Dynasties class mate! im over the otherside of the lough you can see from portaferry!! i think the vikings used the dorneill island as a trading spot (or maybe tax collections lol) with locals in the lough
Probably both knowing them ha, id love to get on to some of the islands on the lough though i know many are privately owned.
My last name, Crosby, is Norse. It means by the cross. I got a report from a website, House of Names, that gave the history of surnames. Mine was adapted by the Scotts. It goes back to the tribe of Juda, the house of David. The zodiac sign of the name is Leo, the birth stone, was ruby. The family emblem, is a lion.
The word “BY”,means town in Norwegian or village in Swedish.
So “CROSSBY”,means either “VILLAGE OF THE CROSS or “TOWN OF THE CROSS “.
@@ozzyolof9209 well, thank you. Part of my Dad's ancestry was a lo g line of viki gs who came from Norway & Sweaden. In the 4th century AD
Ummm ... I'm really sorry about those *Viking Raids* my Ancestors pulled off 1,300 years ago. My bad. 💔
We're over it ,wish everyone else was.
Only people of low esteem dwell on the past. Striving to find an identity.
I am Scottish with Irish ancestry and feel quite happy about the fact that I may have Norse blood in my veins. ( KELLY)
As a Foley, I’m glad to get the information in the edit. Thank you!
Foley is 100% Irish and has no Viking links.
Great video !
Well done. Keep on at it.
Thank you very much!!
My great-grandfather was from Waterford Ireland. The Skelton name is from Yorkshire northern England. Created from the Viking raids .
Skelton is a north of England topographical surname first noted in the 14th century. NO VIKING connection. Have you been watching too much tv?
Definitely going to start wearing glasses as I was most disappointed to realise that this wasn't a video about Viking submarines in Ireland. To be fair I was quite surprised that Vikings had submarines.....
😁😁😁😁
Submarines where invented bye a man from sligo in ireland he was a school principal in cork the school is famous in cork its call tbe north mon
😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@stephencasey7712 I live in second biggest city in Austria and I am SO FRUSTRATED that it's soo inconvinient to get to second biggest city of Ireland!
It's on my list for so long, but it's like there is no way to get there without going first to Vienna, Amsterdam, Paris or Frankfurt 🙈🙈
Omg!! 🤣😂🤣
It's great videos like these that remind me Ubisoft should have employed you and Phillip to write the Assassin's Creed Ireland dlc
To bad for them we have plans for our own game 😉
I find this very fascinating. My ancestors come from the Mongus clan. I'm surprised you didn't mention it in your video. We're huge!
My fathers name was an English translation of the original in Irish. When my grand father came from Cork county during the famine his parents changed the name ‘O Kiarda to Carey.
The surname 'Bligh' as in Captain Bligh is Cornish, not English. Captain Bligh (of th infamous mutiny) himself was Cornish, not English. It is from Cornish 'bleydh', meaning wolf. Anglicised to 'Bligh'. The surname is still found in Cornwall.
The video is to show which migration group the name came to ireland with not the origins of the names.
Most people don't know that the Cornish were a seperate Kingdom of Celts, similar to Wales. Buried in Norman conquest, forgotten by "emits" and an Anglicised youth.
@@centuriontwofivezeroone2794 We still have our identity, hanging on for grim death in places like my home town of Bodmin! My car has a Cornish flag, so I still fly our St Piran's flag! Kernow bys vyken!
@@kernowforester811 Sadly, like my Irish roots, it's all being ignored, hidden and rewritten by an uncaring generation.
Stories and music are what made any with Gaelic/Celt blood special, both the music and the really old tales created magic, a sense of awe and belonging, now everything just seems so empty, tasteless and temporary.
Cornwall's biggest enemy was the big spenders moving there from London and then trying to change everything. Plus the fact that it's some of the most beautiful country in all of Britain. Everyone wants a part of it... Some just took too much.
Let us hope it does last forever my friend, best wishes and Happy New Year.
@@centuriontwofivezeroone2794 Meur ras, ha blydhen nowydh da! Thanks, and happy new year!
Nice one brother( McDowell) we have chatted about this before .love your work as always .
Thank you as always for your continued support i really appreciate it, always happy when the McDowells and the Byrnes appear in my research.
My last name is Hayes I live in California and this always amazes me, my great grandfather came from Ireland. Hayes derived from aed - “Ohaodha”god of fire, and fell under the banner McNamara clan, lion facing left in red, you see it early in the video @3:33 you see the Hayes crest- snake around the sword, in south west of cork where Vikings were as well. Pretty cool video
Hayes has multiple origins like every name I hope to do one on all the branches soon, Thank you.
My great-grandmother was a Hayes.
My great-grandmother was a Hayes.
Wrong. Where do you get this "God of fire" rubbish. Stop watching Viking films and wake up.
@@cooldaddy2877 hah loser
good video lad,cheers for the upload.
I'm a Coppinger so it was pretty cool to see my name as Norse origin.
Very interesting ... the Hiberno-Norse(Irish-Norse) also settled big scale in parts of the Wirral and south west Lancashire in present day Northern England.
Also they ruled mostly under the Uí Ímair's the twin kingdom of Dublin and York (Northumbria) under
Amlaíb Cuarán, Sitric Cáech,Gofraid ua Ímair et al., ..and of course Erik BloodAxe
NorseGael I believe, not Hiberno-Norse, but correct me if I’m wrong. Never heard your term but have seen norsegael many times.
@@burn1898 it's not my term use Google ye troll cant
My maiden name was McGorrighan and I would love to discover more about the name. A lot of my ancestors were from Co Cork, a small village called Inchigeelagh.
MY Gg grandmother's surname was Gaughran. She was from Co. Cork. I wonder if it's related.
O ' Callaghan../ county of Cork, history lost to time...Live in the moment, Unconditional Love.
My dad’s ancestors came from Limerick Ireland area and always considered themselves Irish, but the surname Carscallen turns out to have been a place name in Scotland registered in 1680.
Anyone have any idea about its true etymology?
My maiden name was Courtney apparently Norman...My grandmas Devoy ??? Any help would be appreciated in finding the origin of her name
Are you thinking about maybe doing a video on Scottish names in Ireland at some point in the future???
I intend to cover every clan/family of scotland and Ireland plus all the migrations and events of both from the early medieval period till the plantations. Welsh and English families as well in the future as there is plenty of overlap.
@@Clans_Dynasties that's an ambitious plan. Good on you, great channel.
Thank you very much!!
I'm a Lamb by maiden name from Tralee. Also Ryan, Murphy, Elam, Morrison and Monahan and Hanrahan
Hello there....my grandmothers maiden name was coleman. Her parents came from ireland to argentina i guess before 1900. She was born in argentina was catholic and never spoke of her roots or family a real pitty. I love your irish accent... god bless u.
Irish Lives Matter
Especially in Ireland
Who said they don’t , the English ?
My wife is a Doyle
= Dark Stranger
Mine in Dugan (O' Dungeon or a myriad variations)
= Dark Stranger.
There are no coincidences
Doyle is 100% IRISH and so is Dugan. Both have no Viking links.
Hi, our surname is from a Viking origin, via Orkney. Norse. We are literally the last in the line with the surname FEA, in the UK. In a viking context I read once it translates as Foe, but if you have any knowledge resources or signposts for Scotland, I would love to know. I love your channel, thanks
Start breeding fast.
"Fea" in Spanish (parent language of Goidellic/Gaelic language family) means "ugly girl/ugly lady/ugly woman" (whereas "Feo" means ugly dude/ugly guy/ugly man [DeFeo - Amityville horror - "Of the ugly guy"]
Ireland is not a part of the UK
Do you actual evidence via a paper trail that you came from Orkney?
Hi Carolyn, Well we know the Vikings went into the Orkneys eh. Became neighbours of the little Scottish people there .... known as the Picts, and they both lived in harmony with one another.
My father's last name Wilson with Scottish ancestry and his mother's mother maiden name was Boland and born in County Clare Ireland and emigrated to the United States during the Famine. 🇮🇪🏴
I've wondered about my surname Mac Connoran. All I know is that my paternal grandfather's side was from Dublin. I've never found anyone else with my surname anywhere in the world, other than relatives.
Very interesting. Sadly Ireland didn't stay centralized even to the extent it was after the battle of Dublin.
@@conorfields2660 didn't French Normans invade first? Where do you think the French surnames and castles came from? And there was no live and let live then or now for that matter. The Gaelic settlers wiped out the Druids and committed genocide on the Ulaidh and massacred them all, among others. The O'Neills of Ulster waged war for centuries against other provinces and took slaves from Wales (St Patrick) and Scotland. Jesus and don't get me started on those treachorous bastards the McDonnell's!!
The island was only ever "centralised" or geographically united under British rule and then only for a relatively short period. I say "geographically united" because it never has been united in any full sense of the word and I don't believe it ever can be. Republicans have colonial ambitions to see the island ruled by one parliament in Dublin but that "nation" would be united in name only and would be subjected to a lengthy and costly period of internal violence
@@rock07879 ahem ahem (brehon law) ahem
@@rock07879 The Ulaidh were gaelic and lasted till 1177 as a kingdom ,there are still ulaid surnames like McNulty still here .Stop with your revisionist pseudohistory
My partner was convinced she had Irish or Welsh ancestry and was able to trace her family history to the mid 16th century without either appearing.
Turned out that the first time the name Price was recorded was in the late 13th century and it was In England but can't remember where.
In fact many names you associate with Ireland or Wales first appear in England hundreds of years before those anglicized names first appear in Ireland or Wales in the 16th century. Her ma's name is jones so bound to be Welsh she thought, but nope it turns out J isn't even in the Welsh alphabet and first appeared in England with matilda Jones in the 13th century also.
My own name is a complicated one also as when I look it up I see it to be Welsh, Irish but very rarely see it referred as English even though it is first recorded in England with Thomas Hughes of Somerset in 1327.
Now I'm pretty sure my name is the anglicized version of ó hAodha as my Dad is very much Irish and born in Kilkenny.
Many people have no idea of the true origins of these names as there are so many inaccuracies on these websites.
Wiki says the Region of origin of Hughes is Wales, Ireland, France and Scotland without mentioning England?
Is this a deliberate deletion do you think?
You went to Wiki? Oh dear. You must remember that England were great record keepers while at the same time destroying records in other countries.
Interesting! Could you please specify who the 'English' were exactly? I am predominately Irish, but on my mother's side came over to England with the Normans, who are the 'Norse Men'!
I was wondering why I had Norwegian DNA lol doesn’t seem my surname was on your list though. From what I know my paternal ancestors came to US in the late 1840’s to flee the famine in Donegal but don’t know from which town. Great video, very informative
Keep in mind that DNA tests regarding geographical origins are far from 100% accurate. :)
@@daniellamcgee4251 It depends on the confidence range. But yeah 10-15 years these test were pretty bad
Trying to trace where in Ireland my grandfather was from. Gilmore was his sur name. Very interesting video!
Lots of Gilmore's around Galway city and county