Haplogroups and Noble Lines The Ducal House of Crispo The Ducal House of Crispo Who the Crispis were The House of Crispo was a Venetian-Aegean ducal family that emerged in the island world of the eastern Mediterranean, above all in the Duchy of the Archipelago centered on Naxos. Their story belongs to the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade, when By Sara V • 4 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The Princely House of Bathory The Princely House of Bathory Who they were, where they came from, and their linked haplogroup The Bathory family was one of the great noble and princely houses of Central and Eastern Europe, rooted in the medieval Kingdom of Hungary and deeply tied to Transylvania and, later, Poland. In historical By Sven • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan MacCabe Clan MacCabe Who they were, where they came from, and their linked haplogroup Clan MacCabe was a Gaelic family of martial reputation, remembered in Irish and Scottish tradition as a kin-group shaped by service, movement, and stubborn continuity. Their story belongs to that wider Gaelic world in which the sea By Caterina • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of Dunn The House of Dunn The House of Dunn is best understood not as a royal dynasty but as one of the long-enduring family houses of Britain and Ireland: a surname-rooted lineage shaped by local belonging, service, migration, and memory. The Dunn name has deep associations across Ireland and Britain, where By Sara V • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of Croft The House of Croft The House of Croft was one of those deeply rooted Herefordshire families whose identity grew out of land, local authority, heraldic memory, and long service to county and crown. In the classic pattern of the English landed house, the Crofts were not simply a surname but By Caterina • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The Noble House von Weltzien The Noble House von Weltzien The von Weltzien family was a German noble house rooted in the world of regional aristocratic service, landed identity, and heraldic memory, most closely associated with northern Germany and especially Mecklenburg. As with many old German noble families, the name points not to kingship or By Caterina • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of Gladstone House of Gladstone The House of Gladstone was a Scottish and British family identified less with crowns and princely rank than with something very British indeed: public service, commerce, politics, religion, education, and the stern idea that influence ought to be tied to duty. Their roots lay in Scotland, though By Sara V • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of de Coleby The House of de Coleby The House of de Coleby was an English landed family rooted in place, service, and the long medieval habit of taking identity from the land itself. As the name suggests, the family came from Coleby in Lincolnshire, and belongs to that very recognisable English world By Sven • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The Imperial House of Aisin Gioro The Imperial House of Aisin Gioro Origins, empire, and haplogroup The Aisin Gioro family was the imperial Manchu house that founded and ruled the Qing Empire, the last imperial dynasty of China. They emerged from the Manchu world of northeast Asia, in the forest-steppe and frontier zones around what is By Sven • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Tuite Clan Tuite The Tuite family was one of those classic Norman-Irish houses that tells us a great deal about how medieval Ireland actually worked on the ground. Of Anglo-Norman origin, the family came into Ireland in the wake of the Norman expansion, establishing itself through feudal service, land grants, military By Caterina • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Taaffe Clan Taaffe The Taaffe family was one of the great historic noble houses of Ireland: an Anglo-Norman line that put down deep roots in the Irish landscape while also looking outward to the courts, armies, and political worlds of continental Europe. In broad historical terms, House Taaffe belongs to a By Caterina • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Marjoribanks Clan Marjoribanks Clan Marjoribanks was not a Highland clan in the cinematic sense of tartan hills and marching war bands, but a Lowland Scottish family tradition shaped by landholding, law, civic duty, heraldry, and the steady importance of surname continuity. Their roots lie in the Scottish Lowlands, in a world By Sven • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan MacNaughten Clan MacNaughten Who they were, where they came from, and their linked haplogroup Clan MacNaughten was a Highland family of Argyll, rooted above all in the country around Loch Awe in western Scotland, and remembered as part of the older Gaelic world of kinship, lordship, landholding, and military obligation. Their By Sven • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of Cavendish The House of Cavendish Who the Cavendishes were The House of Cavendish was one of the great noble families of England: a dynasty of landowners, courtiers, politicians, patrons, and dukes whose name became inseparable from aristocratic power and continuity. Their primary linked Y-DNA haplogroup here is R1b1a1b1a1a1c1, a lineage found By Jamie L • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The Royal House of Basarab The Royal House of Basarab Who they were, where they came from, and their linked haplogroup The House of Basarab was one of the great ruling dynasties of medieval Eastern Europe: a royal and princely house tied above all to Wallachia, the lands between the southern Carpathians and the Danube. By Sven • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of Fane House of Fane The House of Fane was one of those recognisably English noble families whose story was built out of land, office, marriage, and memory. Emerging into prominence through the world of county society and the aristocratic order, the Fanes became associated with estate culture, parliamentary life, royal service, By Caterina • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of de Soucy House of de Soucy The House of de Soucy was a French noble family of the provincial aristocratic world, rooted in land, local lordship, and the long memory of lineage. Their name points to a place-based origin, exactly the sort of foundation on which many medieval French houses were built: By Sven • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of Broughton House of Broughton The House of Broughton stands in the familiar English landed tradition: a family rooted in place, identified with estate life, county standing, and a long memory of service. The very name is territorial, tying family identity to landscape and local authority in the old English way. In By Sara V • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The Royal House of Balliol The Royal House of Balliol Who the Balliols were The Balliol family was a royal and noble house tied to medieval Scotland, northern England, and the hard-edged politics of succession. Their name is most famously linked with John de Balliol (1249-1314), King of Scots, whose disputed kingship helped trigger the By Sven • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of Agar The House of Agar The House of Agar was one of those notable Irish and English landed families whose story sits squarely in the long history of estates, office, marriage, and social standing across the British Isles. Emerging through the world of property holding and public duty, the Agars became By Sara V • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Mac Murchada Clan Mac Murchada Clann Mac Murchada was one of the notable Gaelic Irish dynastic families of Leinster, rooted in the old political order of medieval Ireland, where kingship, lordship, kinship, and inherited status all mattered enormously. In plain terms, this was a royal-clan family, remembered not just because it held By Sara V • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Weir Clan Weir Who the Weirs were Clan Weir is a Scottish Lowland family tradition rooted above all in places such as Lanarkshire, with a history shaped less by a vast Highland territory than by local belonging, service, landholding, heraldry, and the stubborn continuity of surname identity across generations. In that By Jamie L • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Riddell Clan Riddell Clan Riddell was one of the old landed families of the Scottish Borders, rooted above all in Roxburghshire and in lands that carried the family name. This was not a Highland clan in the later tartan-and-chief sense, but a Border and Lowland kind of kin-group, where identity grew By Sara V • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Pringle Clan Pringle Clan Pringle was a Scottish Border family of the Tweed valley, rooted in the Lowland society of southern Scotland and remembered through landholding, local service, heraldry, and a remarkably durable surname tradition. Their primary DNA tag here is R1b1a1b1a1a1c2f, a haplogroup linked to a wide spread of ancient By Sven • 3 min read