Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of Haynes House of Haynes The House of Haynes belongs to the long-standing English pattern of family houses rooted not in princely rank but in place, parish, memory, and service. The Haynes name emerged within the broader English surname tradition, where identity was shaped by landholding, local reputation, work, and continuity across By Jamie L • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The Noble House of De Vere The Noble House of De Vere Who the de Veres were The de Vere family was one of the great Norman noble houses of England, best known as the Earls of Oxford, and remembered for the long, durable sort of power that shaped medieval England from court to battlefield. Their By Sven • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The House of Darbie The House of Darbie Origins, family character, and haplogroup The House of Darbie belongs to that very English pattern of family history in which status grew not from crowns or princely titles, but from rootedness. Darbie is best understood as a regional family house shaped by landholding, local standing, public By Sven • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines The Noble House of Burgh The Noble House of Burgh The House of Burgh was one of the great Norman-Irish noble families, a dynasty of conquest, castles, lordship, and political muscle whose story is deeply tied to medieval Ireland. The family came originally from the wider Anglo-Norman world shaped by the expansion that followed the By Jamie L • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan McBurney Clan McBurney Clan McBurney belongs to that broad Scottish and Irish family world in which surnames carried memory almost as much as they marked identity. In family tradition, the McBurneys are associated with Gaelic roots, regional belonging, and the long continuity of a name preserved across generations. Their story fits By Jamie L • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan MacNeil Clan MacNeil and Haplogroup R1b1a1b1a1a2a1b2 Clan MacNeil was one of the notable Gaelic clans of the western Highlands and islands, most famously associated with Barra in the Outer Hebrides and with the seafaring world of the Hebridean sea-lanes. Their story belongs to that deeply maritime Scottish past in which kinship, By Jamie L • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Ewing Clan Ewing Clan Ewing is part of the broad Scottish surname-clan tradition: a family identity shaped by kinship, western Scottish roots, movement, service, and the stubborn continuity of name across centuries. The Ewing name has been connected with both Gaelic and Lowland worlds, which is very Scottish indeed, because real By Jamie L • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Eustace Clan Eustace Origins and family background Clan Eustace was an Anglo-Norman family that put down deep roots in Ireland, especially in the world of the Pale and eastern lordship. Their story begins with the movement of Norman families into Ireland after the twelfth-century invasions, when land grants, military service, and By Sara V • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Edmondson Clan Edmondson Clan Edmondson belongs to that deeply British and Scottish tradition in which a family name preserves the memory of an ancestor. The surname means son of Edmond or Edmund, a patronymic form rooted in the personal-name culture of medieval Britain and shaped by older Christian naming traditions. In By Sven • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Dwyer Clan Dwyer Gaelic Munster roots and haplogroup link Clan Dwyer was a Gaelic Irish family of Munster, most closely associated with County Tipperary and the older territorial society of southern Ireland, where kinship, land, military service, and inherited identity all mattered enormously. The surname is generally linked to the O By Sven • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Durie Clan Durie Clan Durie was a Lowland Scottish family tradition rooted above all in Fife, shaped by landholding, local authority, and the long memory of place. The name is territorial in character, coming from Durie in Fife, and that matters, because in Scotland this was often how identity worked: not By Caterina • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Dundas Clan Dundas Clan Dundas was a Scottish noble and landed family of the Lowlands, rooted in West Lothian and shaped by the world of estate identity, royal service, and public responsibility. Their name comes from the lands of Dundas near South Queensferry, a territorial origin that tells you a great By Sven • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Dunbar Clan Dunbar Clan Dunbar was one of the great noble families of medieval and later southern Scotland, rooted above all in Lothian and the eastern Borders, and remembered for earldom rank, royal service, military weight, and a very strong sense of territorial identity. In broad heritage terms, the Dunbars fit By Sara V • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Douglas Clan Douglas Clan Douglas was one of the great magnate families of medieval and early modern Scotland: a house of warlords, landholders, royal allies, political rivals, and memory-makers whose name became inseparable from the Borders and from the story of the Scottish kingdom itself. Their traditional homeland lay in Douglasdale By Jamie L • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Dillon Clan Dillon Clan Dillon was one of the great Norman-Irish families: aristocratic, landholding, martial, and durable across centuries of upheaval. The family came into Ireland out of the Anglo-Norman world that spread into the island in the wake of the 12th-century invasions, and in time became strongly associated with Meath By Sara V • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Crowley Clan Crowley Clan Crowley was a Gaelic Irish family of Munster, rooted in the older world of kinship, local loyalties, and inherited identity that shaped so much of southern Ireland. The surname Crowley is generally linked to the Gaelic O Cruadhlaoich tradition, and it belongs to that enduring pattern of By Sara V • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Crichton Clan Crichton Who the Crichtons were Clan Crichton was one of the notable noble families of Lowland Scotland, rooted above all in Midlothian and shaped by the world of castle lordship, royal service, and aristocratic politics. Their name came from the lands of Crichton, and from that local base they By Sara V • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Creel Clan Creel Clan Creel belongs to the older Scottish and British world of family names shaped not by glittering royal legend, but by something more durable: place, service, memory, and continuity. The Creel name sits within that long tradition of British Isles surnames that grew out of local communities, practical By Sara V • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Craig Clan Craig Who the family was Clan Craig is one of those very Scottish families whose story begins not with a single conquering founder, but with the land itself. The name comes from the Scots and Gaelic world of crag, craig, or rock, so this is a surname rooted in By Jamie L • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Cotter Clan Cotter Clan Cotter was an Irish family of Munster, rooted in the social and historical world of southern Ireland, where kinship, local service, seafaring links, landholding, and reputation in the community all helped shape a surname across generations. In broad heritage terms, the Cotters belong to that very recognisable By Caterina • 2 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Costello Clan Costello Clan Costello was one of those great Irish families whose story neatly captures a central drama of medieval Ireland: how newcomers from the Norman world became, over generations, thoroughly part of the Irish landscape. The Costellos were of Norman origin, usually linked to the de Angulo or Nangle By Jamie L • 3 min read
Haplogroups and Noble Lines Clan Connor Clan Connor Who the family was Clan Connor, more often found in historical Irish form as O Conor or O Connor, was one of the great Gaelic families of Ireland: a kin-group shaped by descent, lordship, remembered ancestry, and the stubborn durability of name. Their deepest historical associations lie in By Sven • 3 min read
Papers Diet-Driven Natural Selection in Ancient Britain Diet-Driven Natural Selection in Ancient Britain: 6,000 Years of Food and Evolution Diet-Driven Natural Selection in Ancient Britain: 6,000 Years of Food and Evolution Introduction This comprehensive study tackles one of history's most intriguing questions: did changing food habits actually help shape human evolution in Britain? By Sven • 8 min read
Papers Archaeological Bone Microbiomes and Bioerosion Microbial Decay and Preservation in Medieval Norwegian Burials Microbial Decay and Preservation in Medieval Norwegian Burials: A Comprehensive Archaeological Investigation This comprehensive study examines one of archaeology's most compelling hidden narratives: the dramatic transformations that occur to human bone after burial, when the dead lie for centuries beneath By Sven • 5 min read