Philippe Mius d’Entremont: Y-DNA Provides Amazing Information – 52 Ancestors #478

In 2012, Pauline d’Entremont and Clark Robbins founded the Mius-dEntremont DNA Project at FamilyTreeDNA. Denis Beauregard later adopted the project after Pauline retired and Clark passed away.

I want to thank all three administrators, but especially Pauline and Clark. Without their early recruitment efforts, we would not be able to view these results and compare the Y-DNA of the project participants who have granted permission for public display.

When the Mius-d’Entremont DNA project was first launched, the administrators documented the theories about the origins of Philippe Mius d’Entremont and his wife, Madeleine Helie, that they hoped to either prove or disprove. I’ve summarized them in the following section, but you can read them in detail, here and here.

With several theories about who Philippe Mius d’Entremont was, and his origins, Y-DNA results of his descendants are critically important. Thankfully, several of his direct male-to-male descendants, who carry his Y chromosome, have taken Y-DNA tests at FamilyTreeDNA.

The Mius-dEntremont DNA Project holds a wealth of information. We’ll review the genetic information and clues after the theories.

We enter this mystery with little information about Philippe prior to his arrival in Acadia.

Based on two original sources, we know Philippe and his wife were reported to be from Normandy. A 1762 legal document in France stated that the Mius d’Entremont family was “originally from Normandy,” and on December 3, 1707, the King’s Secretary wrote to the ministers in France that “Sieur Philippe d’Entremont, a native of Normandy, died seven years ago at the age of 99 years and some months.”

We know that Charles St. Etienne LaTour, governor of Acadia, brought Philippe from France in 1651 as his second-in-command, and awarded him a large grant of land in 1653 that includes today’s Pubnico Harbour and surrounding land on both sides.

I wrote about Philippe in the following articles, laying the groundwork for his DNA results.

The Theories

I have summarized the various theories, as I know many people will wonder if the DNA results support, or refute them. I’ve also incorporated information discovered after the original theory was proposed. Theories 1 and 2 were proposed and evaluated by Father Clarence d’Entremont (1909-1998) in his book, The Acdians and their Genealogy, published in 1975. Theory 3 is a combination of his work and the original administrators’ thoughts, and Theories 4 and 5 are derivatives of the other theories.

The only reason I mention these theories at all is because they remain in the public domain, and if we don’t address them, they are certain to be viewed as “undiscovered evidence” by future researchers. I have also documented what would be required to prove each theory.

Theory 1: Nicolaus Mousche/Mius, the Student – Lacks Evidence

From Father d’Entremont’s book, pages 803 to 813.

This theory, based on the work of Father Clarence Joseph d’Entremont, proposed that Philippe Mius d’Entremont may descend from a man named Nicolaus Mius, a 16th-century student at the University of Orléans and possibly the same person as “Nicolas Mousche,” an interpreter and loyal follower of Gaspard de Coligny. Both men were killed during the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre in 1572.

The theory suggests that, in recognition of Nicolaus’s loyalty and sacrifice, the family of Coligny’s widow, Jacqueline de Montbel d’Entremont, may have adopted one of his sons. This child could have taken on the combined name “Mius d’Entremont,” linking both biological and noble associations.

The theory explains the dual nature of the surname: “Mius” as a patronymic and “d’Entremont” as a noble territorial name. However, issues with this theory are:

  • No indication that Mousche is Mius
  • No connection between the student and Gaspare de Coligny
  • No evidence for this hypothesis
  • Philippe Mius d’Entremont cannot be the son adopted, because he was born between 1600 and 1609, based on various later documents

Despite these uncertainties, Clarence d’Entremont considered this the most plausible explanation among competing theories at that time.

Proof Standard:

What would be needed to prove this? Either documents connecting the parties, and/or Y-DNA results from someone proven to descend from Nicolaus Mius or Mousche that match the Mius d’Entremont testers. The same DNA tests could also disprove the theory. I would want to see a test from a descendant of both men.

Theory 2: Alias François Virgine d’Entremont – Disproven

Pages 791-792.

This second theory proposes that Philippe Mius d’Entremont was actually François Virgine d’Entremont, a member of a prominent Savoyard noble family and descendant of Gaspard de Coligny. According to this hypothesis, François Virgine may have changed his name and fled France around 1651 to escape political or religious persecution, eventually settling in Acadia under the name Philippe Mius d’Entremont. A perceived similarity between their wives’ names—Madeleine Hélie in Acadia and Madeleine Élie du Tillet in France—has also been cited as supporting this identification.

Substantial documentary and chronological evidence strongly contradicts this theory.

  • Archival records place François Virgine d’Entremont in France between approximately 1653 and 1670, actively managing or declaring feudal holdings, while Philippe Mius d’Entremont is independently documented in Acadia during that same period.
  • François Virgine appears to have died before 1671, while Philippe Mius d’Entremont lived until 1700 in Acadia.
  • A 1671 record confirms that Madeleine Élie du Tillet was in France at that time and already widowed, whereas Madeleine Hélie, wife of Philippe, was living in Acadia.
  • Madeleine Élie du Tillet is documented as having married in 1631 and died in 1692 in France, whereas Madeleine Hélie was born around 1626 and married Philippe around 1649, making it chronologically impossible for them to be the same person.

Taken together, these records demonstrate that the two men – and their wives – were living separate, overlapping lives in different locations, conclusively disproving this theory.

Theory 3: Theory 1 But Without Coligny – Lacks Evidence

Original Project Administrator’s supposition from pages 790-791, 792-797.

Theory 3 proposes that Philippe Mius d’Entremont and his immediate ancestors were simply part of a “Mius” family with no known connection to Gaspard de Coligny or the de Montbel d’Entremont lineage. In this scenario, Philippe may have been descended from Nicolaus Mius (as in Theory 1, but without any adoption into a noble family), loosely related to that Mius line, or even from an entirely separate Mius family of possible German or Dutch origin that later settled in Normandy or the Lorraine region.

The “d’Entremont” portion of his name is explained not through noble inheritance, but as a geographic or “nom de terre.” It may have come from a place name in Normandy, from “Landremont/Lendremont” in Lorraine (possibly reflected in early records), or even evolved from a similar surname like “d’Autremont.”

Landremont is far from Normandy, about 550 km from where known Mius family Y-DNA matches are found.

While this theory neatly accounts for both “Mius” and “d’Entremont,” it lacks any direct evidence.

Proof Standard:

Need documents connecting the parties, and/or Y-DNA results from someone proven to descend from Nicolaus Mius, the student, that matches the Mius d’Entremont testers.

Theory 4: Theory 3 But Philippe Was a Commoner – Entirely Speculative

Theory 4 builds on Theory 3 but suggests that Philippe Mius was not originally a nobleman at all, but rather a commoner who adopted “d’Entremont” as a kind of “fantasy” surname. This name may have reflected a place of origin in France (such as a village named Entremont) and could have been assumed either before or after his arrival in Acadia, even prior to receiving any formal title.

Under this view, the “d’Entremont” name was not inherited but self-selected, later becoming legitimized when Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour granted Philippe the barony of Pobomcoup (Pubnico) in 1653.

While this explanation accounts for how the name could arise without noble lineage and is a possibility, it remains speculative and lacks any supporting evidence.

Proof Standard:

Same issues as Theory 3. Need a matching male or males in France with derivatives of the Mius surname, or find evidence of Philippe in France.

Theory 5: Theories 1 & 2 Plus Adoption – Disproven

Another theory, proposed by Michael Talbot, combines elements of Theories 1 and 2. It suggests that a son of Nicolaus Mius (Philippe’s proposed father in this theory) was adopted not by the de Montbel d’Entremont family, but by the d’Albon de Montauban de Meuillon family—possibly at the request of Jacqueline de Montbel d’Entremont’s lineage. As an adult, this adopted son would then have married into the family of Gaspard de Coligny, producing descendants such as François Virgine d’Entremont. Through this chain of relationships, the theory attempts to explain both the “Mius” patronymic surname and the “d’Entremont” surnom de terre.

This theory is disproven for the same reasons that Theory 2 is disproven.

Comparative Evaluation of Theories

Theories 2 and 5 are entirely disproven, based on evidence that has become available since Father d’Entremont wrote his book, and Theories 1, 3, and 4 are speculative, with no evidence. At this point, we can effectively dismiss all of them by simply saying that we need either connecting records or Y-DNA tests, or both.

Y-DNA evidence, or previously undiscovered records, may shed light on the origin of Philippe Mius d’Entremont. Cousin Mark checked again recently for the possibility of new records having become available, with nothing new appearing for Philippe.

Does Y-DNA testing provide any insight?

Yes, as a matter of fact!

A French Mius Match

Quoting the original administrators of the Mius-d’Entremont DNA project:

Many years ago, the late Father Clarence d’Entremont, Acadian genealogist and historian, was in contact with the family of this matching French Mius during one of his visits to France for research. At that time, it was not possible to know if that family was related to the Acadian Mius d’Entremonts or not. Now, thanks to DNA testing, we know that they are, one way or the other.

The earliest known person in the confirmed (verified) portion of the paternal line of this family, named Robert Mius, was born prior to 1702, in Theuville aux Maillots, Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, which is at least 53 years before the fateful ‘Grand Dérangement’ of 1755.

We already established in the earlier articles that about 100 of Philippe’s descendants escaped the roundup by the British in 1758 by hiding in the woods.

In 1759, after barely surviving a brutal winter, they were tracked down, captured, and sent first to Georges Island in Halifax Harbor, then to England, and then in 1760 to Cherbourg, Normandy, France.

Being able to track the ancestors of the Mius DNA tester in France to around 1702 removes the possibility that he is a descendant of Philippe Mius d’Entremont’s family members who were exiled in the mid-1700s.

It also answers the question of whether Philippe’s heritable surname was Mius or d’Entremont. It was clearly Mius.

D’Entremont came from someplace else, possibly a place name or a description of some sort. In any event, the French ancestors of the Mius man whose Y-DNA matches that of the descendants of Philippe Mius d’Entremont do NOT carry the d’Entremont portion of the name.

Now that we have a location, let’s see what we can discover.

Theuville-aux-Maillots

The village of Theuville-aux-Maillots is a small rural village in the upper portion of Normandy, far from La Rochelle where ships for Acadia departed, and almost as far from Poitiers where many Acadian families originated.

Charles St. Etienne de LaTour, born in 1593, was from Champagne, which was 220 miles east, about 100 miles the other side of Paris. Not to mention that LaTour spent most of his life in Acadia from the time he was a teen, first arriving with his father in 1610, although he did travel back and forth. This casts doubt on the “rumor” that Philippe and Charles were childhood friends, given that Philippe, born sometime between 1600 and 1609, was younger than Charles, and Charles sailed for Nova Scotia in 1610 when Philippe was still a child.

Theuville-aux-Maillots, with a population of about 500 people, remains an agricultural community today. The village is mentioned in the 12th century, with aux Maillots added as a descriptor by 1336. Richard des Malloz was seigneur as early as 1210.

The village would have grown up around the castle and the St. Maclou Church. The chancel dates to the 1500s. The earliest residents after the church was built would have been buried here, probably including Robert Mius and his family.

This central tree, gone today but not in this 2019 image, was quite large, it’s trunk being supported at least a century earlier. The red brick home, at right, above, is seen below, at left, along with several others that probably date to the church and castle’s era.

The intersection, in front of the church, along the main street, would have been the center of the village. I can’t help but wonder how old this tree was, and if it stood when Robert Mius lived here.

Par Havang(nl) — Travail personnel, CC0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=84525701

The castle was built during the reign of King Louis XIV, between 1650 and 1715 by the d’Auber family, but only two towers remain today, just behind the church. There was clearly a manor house or castle prior to that time.

This Google Street View from 2010 shows the church, cemetery, castle turrets, and what’s left of the roof of the main building, along with the castle’s barns to the right.

Records from the mid-1700s spanning 30 years in this small village show that people practiced several trades and professions:

  • 29-34 people: farmers, day laborers, weavers
  • 9-17 people: linen weavers, carters, wheelwrights, spinners
  • 5-6 people: shepherds, carpenters, butchers, masons
  • 3-4 people: barn threshers, shoemakers, tailors
  • 2 people: surveyors, builders, coopers, thatchers, turners, and midwives
  • 1 person: merchant farmer, miller, haberdasher, baker, carpenter, gardener, spinning wheel maker, rose seller, priest’s clerk, cooper, blacksmith, clog maker, drying rack, horse dealer, carter, stonemason, and cook

I really hadn’t thought a lot about the wide variety of services needed for a village to be self-sufficient. There sure were a lot of weavers, but then again, everyone had to wear clothes – and winters were cold on the shores of the North Atlantic.

I do find it interesting that there’s a haberdasher, but no barber surgeon, who would be the person attending to “health care,” such as it was – in addition to cutting hair and beards. Perhaps tasks such as tooth-pulling, blood-letting, suturing wounds, setting bones and lancing boils were taken care of by the midwife, or maybe the villagers had to rely on traveling, itinerant “healers”, although clearly emergencies couldn’t wait.

Par Havang(nl) — Travail personnel, CC0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=84525701

Today, the castle’s dovecote remains. Only the wealthy were permitted to own doves through the 1700s.

The manor house or castle, which no longer exists, was apparently built in the same era as the castle at Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux. I’m unclear about copyright, so you can see a vintage postcard, here, as well as the church and castle turrets, here.

It’s interesting to note that red clay vases have been found that date from the Roman era, indicating Roman occupation and settlement some 2000 years ago, predating the Middle Ages when the Maillot family were the lords of the land.

By the 1700s, the families who farmed these fields had probably been farming them, or at least land nearby, for centuries. Peasants didn’t tend to move far. They were legally tied to the land and the seigneur for whom they worked. Generally, they worked within the manor’s radius of a town, maybe five miles in either direction. If granted permission, workers were occasionally allowed to leave for a nearby market or fair. Maybe once in a lifetime, if that, they took a pilgrimage, a privilege for which they had to both obtain permission and pay a fine to the seigneur, called a chevage. Robert Mius’s ancestral family had to have lived nearby.

The Mius match provided the information that his ancestor, Robert Mius, born before 1702 was married to Margueritte Patris. Because genealogists gotta do what genealogists gotta do, I attempted to track them back in time.

I found several trees on MyHeritage and in other locations, but without attached source information, such as church records.

  • Robert Mius, born before 1702 was reported as the son of Charles Mius, born in 1663 in Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux, but I have been unable to verify that connection.

The Acadian Museum in Pubnico has the genealogy records that Robert’s descendants provided, which would presumably include his children’s names, but I don’t have that information either.

FamilySearch records confirm that at least some parish records exist for Theuville-aux-Maillots from about 1603 through the mid-1700s. Unfortunately, these have not been digitized or transcribed using their full-text search feature. Hopefully soon.

Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux records are available intermittently from 1541, but many years appear to be missing, and they are not transcribed or indexed either.

Given the rarity of the surname, and the fact that these locations are around five miles apart, there is surely a connection, even if we can’t connect all of the dots yet today.

  • Charles Mius was reportedly born on January 9, 1663 in Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux, married Marie Raby, and died on June 27, 1706 in the same location.
  • His father, Charles Mius, was born on April 12, 1632 and died on October 25, 1711 in Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux. He married Florimonde Roussel.

On this Geneanet tree, Charles and his wife, Florimonde Roussel show several children with exact birth and death dates, including the day of week. This certainly suggests these records come directly from the parish register.

  • Charles Mius born in 1632 was the son of Marin Mius who was born around 1600 in Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux. In addition to Charles, Marin and his wife, Nicole, had daughter Suzanne Mius on Thursday, April 13, 1628.

There is nothing further listed, which I presume means one of three things:

  • The parish records ended
  • The parish records are incomplete
  • Marin was born, died or was baptized elsewhere. Unless either he or his wife died, it would be quite unusual to have only two children.

I reached out to Cousin Mark, who is much more adept at searching French records than I am. He reported that on Filae, there are several trees, but none produced by local Genealogy Societies with information extracted directly from the parish records, as is sometimes found elsewhere in France.

Short of literally sifting through all of the records written in archaic French script, one by one, there’s no way to make that connection yet today.

Let’s take a walk down the road to neighboring Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux.

Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux

Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux is an Atlantic village of about the same size as Theuville-aux-Maillots. Its sixteenth-century fortified castle, Chateau de Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux, is associated with the Toustain family. Also from the 16th century, a way-marker stone cross is located on the main road where it intersects with the road that leads directly to the Saint-Martin Church, behind which stands the castle.

This heavily fortified and walled castle may date from earlier, as it is reported to have been damaged during the Hundred Years’ War, which took place from 1337 to 1453 between France and Britain.

The castle’s walls and surrounding buildings, which date from the same era, still stand all along Rue du Chateau from Rte d’Auberville, past the castle, around the church, and halfway down Rte du Val, shown above. You can see where the wall turns away from the road, along with the building across the road that appears to be constructed of the same materials, and the church in the distance.

Once cart paths, these are all narrow, mostly-paved rural roads today, but with no center line.

Quaint is an understatement, although at one time, the castle was the center of commerce and justice for the fiefdom. Every resident worked for the manorial or seigneural family, one way or another.

The area is still heavily agricultural, with some forest. The castle is privately owned today.

The “main road,” Le Grand Rue, slightly wider but still with no center line, intersects with the cross that directs visitors to the church and castle. A medieval stone road sign in a neighborhood where most of the homes harken back to the days of peasants and manor houses.

Did our Mius ancestor sit here to rest on his journey, waving and calling “Bonjour!” as local farmers rode by with oxen pulling their wagons or carts?

Following the road from the cross leads directly, and I do mean directly, to the door of the church.

Approaching along the wall from Rte du Val, we see the north side of the cemetery, where Marin Mius and many other Mius family members were assuredly buried.

Viewing the churchyard from the other side, just outside the castle gate, reveals the rest of the cemetery.

Every inch of the graveyard is packed, and the ossuary at the rear indicates that the graves have since been reused.

Of course, this church would originally have been built by the manorial family, and their entrance would have been through the small gate, but this view is what the Mius family would have seen as they approached the castle beside the church.

Is this perhaps where they worked, or did they approach with trepidation because they were here seeking, or receiving, justice?

Did they perchance stop in the church to visit their ancestors and pray first?

Beyond the gate on Rue du Chateau, today you can easily see the castle over what’s left of the wall.

Did the Mius men or their ancestors help build this castle?

Then, as now, it probably required many people to maintain the building and grounds.

Looking slightly to the right, the barns and outbuildings still remain.

Was it here that the Mius men labored?

Moving slightly away from the main chateau entrance, we see buildings that were built into the original castle wall.

The large building in the field to the right is the back side, or maybe front side, of what looked to be a barn beside the castle.

It’s difficult to tell if this was a barn originally, and is now a home, perhaps the caretakers of the castle. Based on the structure of the building, it’s from the same time period as the rest of the castle’s outbuildings.

You can see the edge of the castle at left.

Continuing down Rue du Chateau, this building looks like it had windows at one point. I’ve seen some buildings with a single, lower arch that was the original oven where the baking for the chateau was done, but this building and the next have several evenly spaced higher arches that look to have been filled in.

I so wish we had a drawing of the original chateau and estate.

Marin Muis and other Mius family members would have approached the church from this perspective if they arrived from along Rue du Chateau instead of along the Rte de Val or the road leading from the cross.

I wonder if the castle was a visual representation of safety and security to the family, or if the sight evoked a sense of dread.

Did they think fondly of the seigneurial family, or were they viewed fearfully. Were they even-keeled and fair, or something else?

How were the peasants treated?

We don’t know how far away from the village the peasants who farmed the fields lived. Using the list of trades from Theuville-aux-Maillots, we know that the majority of residents were farmers or laborers of some sort.

I’m going to assume here that the land within the seigneury included the land reaching all the way to the coast. It’s not far, and it wouldn’t seem logical for that area to be included in a different manor.

However, it’s also unclear how close to the coast people would have lived, and whether they attempted to farm that land. Not only is the weather harsh, but if the area were to be invaded by England, it would be from the coast, with soldiers approaching through the valleys between the cliffs or up the rivers.

Either way, lookouts and fortifications would have been essential.

Looking at this aerial view, you can see that none of the roads or farms today extend to the coast, which in most places here are cliffs with sheer, vertical drops of about 200 feet. The edges are subject to collapse, and it wouldn’t take long for the first people living there to learn to keep livestock and people away from the precipice.

Archaeological surveys ahead of local infrastructure projects have documented Gallo-Roman remains, suggesting that “smaller” villas or farmsteads (aedificia) were present along the cliffs at Veullettes-sur-Mer, about 2.5 miles away.

The Norman coast was fortified by the Romans, with a fort at the mouth of the Durdent River at Veulettes-sur-Mer. This coastal area was part of a highly developed Gallo-Roman network of roads, with many smaller, secondary paths called vicinal roads that connected smaller locations like these to the main Roman roads.

Romans inhabited this area from about 2000 years ago, when Julius Caesar conquered Gaul, to about 300-400 CE, when Roman authority began to wane, and power passed to the Franks. However, the established Roman populations were not replaced and remained in their villages. The Franks led politically, but assimilated into the community and adopted much of the Roman culture, including Catholicism and Latin. Life continued, and the existing fabric of society was not destroyed when the Franks assumed power. Four hundred years later, that wasn’t the case when Viking raids devastated the region.

This coastline was inhabited much earlier, too. Neolithic sites have been discovered in caves along the cliffs, dating to around 7000 years ago.

The Cliffs Along the Coast

We’re going to take a drive to two destinations.

First, there’s a beautiful view from the end of the path indicated by the blue arrow on the map above, and along the blue road on the map above that, called Impasse des Gabions.

But there’s even something better – a surprise!!

As you turn down this tiny road, note that Earl Mius, crop grower, lives at this intersection.

A large agricultural farmer today, there’s a home on this property, located on the curve, that shares the type of Medieval construction in the houses and walled areas found in the church, castle and associated buildings, located just 3/4th of a mile away.

How long has this farm been in the Mius family?

How old are these buildings? They have obviously been here for hundreds of years – probably the closest farm to the actual coastline.

Is there any possibility that this is the original Mius land, or at least some of the land the Mius family farmed in Medieval times? And could this possibly be where Philippe’s ancestors were from too?

Have we accidentally found our way home?

We literally turn right after we pass this house, angling back towards the curve as we descend to the sea. For all the world, it looks like this is Earl’s farm. Mius land.

The intersection of this road with Rte du Val carries the warning “Descente a la Mer”, or descent to the sea.

This tiny road threads its way between the cliffs where sheep graze.

At the end of the road, we’re treated to a stunning view of the sea and distant horizon framed by the hillsides. You can see that water has been carving its way through those cliffs from time immemorial.

This aerial close-up shows the jagged cliff edges and the stone and pebble beaches directly below.

This satellite image shows the walking path from the church to the Mius farm beside the turn towards the sea, and the end of the road beside those stunning cliffs.

This literally makes me cry. How is it even possible to be this lucky?

Philippe, are you helping?

I need a minute…

Walk Along the Cliffs

We can’t walk along the top of the cliffs here, but just a mile away, as the seagul flies, we can.

There’s a “road”, of sorts, along the clifftop that I’m positive the Google vehicle was not supposed to travel. This vista provides us with a magical view of what the residents and shepherds would have seen when the Mius ancestors lived along this shoreline.

Our adventure begins with another descent to the sea via a slightly wider but still-winding road.

At the bottom of the road, looking to the right, in the distance, we can see the cliffs where we just came from – about a mile away.

Just stunningly beautiful, and knowing that we are viewing Mius land in the distance makes this ever so much more meaningful.

On the way, about half a mile above the beach, we passed the entrance to a cave system where Neolithic human activity has been documented.

Looking left, those cliffs in the distance are the ones we’re going to drive on top of, so let’s get started.

This tiny little street climbs pretty much straight up. Notice the difference in the elevation of the house from one end to the other.

We reached an overlook and turn in the road before continuing on the path beside the bench. What, you can’t see the path? It’s there, but you have to know where to look.

Did the Google car really drive here? Let’s go around the bench and see.

This is the road across the cliffs. Seriously, I’m not kidding. This is much more authentic to the Mius family experience than today’s roads.

Turned around, looking back at the parking area beside the beach below. The cliffs between the village and the Mius land are visible just across the way. Note the landslides near those jagged edges!

To give you some perspective, we’re nowhere near the top.

The fields on the other side of the fence, at left, explain the reason for this “road.”

There are muddy places and a couple of “wide spots”, but most of this path along the top of the cliffs looks just like this. I’m sure the fence is to keep livestock in and away from the cliffs, not people out. I would not want to be here in a storm.

The right side, above the cliffs, is overgrown with brambles and scrub the entire distance, often obscuring both the beauty and the danger of the view.

Then, the descent down the other side, begins, and cliffs on the other side of the next valley come into view.

The descent winds through the forest, in some places so dark that I could literally see nothing but blackness. If it wasn’t already clear before, this “drive” across the clifftops had to have been filmed by someone walking with the Google camera, which you could see in the shadows from time to time. It could not have been driven. Once again, so incredibly lucky to be able to “see” this view that our ancestors very probably saw too.

The descent ended here with this tiny path emerging from the bushes. We’re back from visiting the Roman defenses 2000 years ago, the peasants of the 1600s, and the Mius fields of today.

It’s here, along these stark limestone cliffs of Normandy, that our Mius family is found in Medieval times, and yet today.

It feels like we’ve come a long way, but we really haven’t. From end to end, through Saint Martin aux Bruneaux, the entire trip would only have taken the Mius family members an hour and a half to walk about 3.6 miles.

You can view incredibly stunning photos of the church, including the interior, cemetery, castle, soaring chalky white cliffs and stone beaches, here. Be still my heart!

If this is your family, I really, really encourage you to use Google maps and “drive” along the coastal roads near this village. Most buildings have been remodeled, but their ancient bones still show, and the original structures date from when Marin, Charles, Charles and Robert would have lived there. The countryside probably remains much the same, and the cliffs are forever, never changing.

Of course, we don’t know if our ancestor lived exactly here, but Philippe Mius was recorded, twice, as being from Normandy. Our DNA matches, our Mius cousins got here somehow, and it’s not exactly on the way to anyplace.

Surname Adoption in Normandy

Surnames in Normandy began to be adopted in the 11th and 12th centuries by the nobility and elites. Many were preceded by “de” meaning “of”, so Philippe of <place name>.

Given what we know about the original Philippe Mius d’Entremont and his descendants’ DNA matches, we’ve confirmed that Mius is his actual surname, and d’Entremont is a nom de terre, meaning a place name or something else.

General French surname adoption for most of the population began in the 13th century and was widespread in Normandy in the 14th century. People selected their own surname which often reflected a craft, occupation or even a nickname. Small rural, isolated, or seafarer communities sometimes adopted fixed names later, and that could have included these coastal areas in upper Normandy where the Mius family was found from about 1600 through the mid-1700s.

If they adopted the Mius surname in either the 1200s or 1300s, they were passing it down until Phippe Mius was born around 1600, 300 or 400 years and maybe a dozen generations later, the same time that the Mius men were living along this coastline.

In 1539, King Francis I issued orders requiring priests to record a surname in baptismal registers, so we know the Mius name was adopted either by or at that point.

Mius is believed to be a local Norman or Seine-Maritime regional variant of the word mieux meaning better, or superior. Alternatively, it has also been suggested that it could be an old Breton word for muis, meaning mouse.

Where Are We?

We’ve proven several things:

  • Mius is the genetic surname of Philippe Mius d’Entremont.
  • The French Mius tester’s descendants, tracked back to about 1702, lived in Normandy too early to be a descendant of Philippe Mius d’Entremont whose descendants were exiled to France around 1760 during the Explusion.
  • D’Entremont is not found in the early records of this Norman Mius family or in this part of France.
  • Y-DNA of Philippe’s descendants unquestionably matches with the Mius family found around 1700 in Theuville-aux-Maillots, with the same surname appearing earlier just 5 miles away in Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux.
  • Families with this surname are still found in both communities, today.

Remaining questions include:

  • Where did d’Entremont come from? Did Philippe or his ancestors adopt that name in France, or did he adopt that additional name when he was awarded the Barony of Pobomcoup?
  • Why did he select d’Entremont?
  • Where in Normandy was Philippe Mius born between 1600 and 1609?
  • Where was he married to Madeleine Helie about 1649, based on the birth year of their first known child? It’s possible, and I’d suggest probable, that Philippe was married more than once if his first child was born about 1650. He was between 40 and 50 by then.
  • Who were his parents?
  • Was Philippe of minor nobility or of the upper bourgeois class, meaning merchants, professionals and townspeople who were well-to-do and respected, but lacked land privileges?
  • Given that Philippe was appointed the King’s Attorney in 1670, he clearly knew how to read and write well, and was trusted by the King.
  • How was Philippe known to the king? Did the king appoint him, or did someone else? If so, who, and why?
  • Where did Philippe meet and how was he acquainted with Charles St. Etienne de LaTour whose family was from Champagne, and why did LaTour select him as his Lieutenant Governor?
  • Where did Philippe Mius’s family come from before Normandy?

Big Y-700 DNA Results

I’m incredibly grateful for the Mius d’Entremont gentleman who agreed to upgrade his Y-DNA results to the Big Y-700 test. Thank you immensely!

Those results, and matches to other men who descend through all males from Philippe Mius d’Entremont, or other men from that genetic lineage by different surnames, are incredibly important

There are two very important aspects of these results.

  1. Matching, at any level, to other men.
  2. Information we can learn about Philippe and his lineage from the results of the Big Y-700 test.

The Mius d’Entremont DNA Project groups testers who descend from Philippe together.

Several Meuse/Mius/d’Entremont men who carry the same surname by various spellings match as expected, but unfortunately, most have only taken the introductory 12-marker test.

Historically, men could order tests that tested a specific number of STR (Short Tandem Repeat) markers:

  • 12
  • 25
  • 37
  • 67
  • 111

Today, only the 37 and 111 marker tests are available, and all testers can upgrade to higher-level tests if there’s enough DNA left from their original swabs. Of course, they can always swab again for the upgrade, but sometimes early testers have passed away or are unreachable.

Several years ago, FamilyTreeDNA introduced a much more sophisticated test called the Big Y-700 that tests all of those locations plus scans roughly 22 million locations of the Y chromosome for mutations called SNPs that define branches in the Y-DNA phylogenetic tree. Not only does this test detect mutations that define known branches, but it scans the Y chromosome for novel or new mutations that were previously unknown and uniquely define family lines. These types of mutations are estimated to occur roughly every 80 years or so, but can vary substantially.

All higher-level tests include the lower-level tests.

A man who descends from Jean-Baptiste Mius, born around 1800, probably in Tusket, Nova Scotia, has taken the Big Y-700 test, which provides significantly more information than the earlier STR tests. I’m extremely grateful to him for upgrading.

His haplogroup, E-Y260948, is our key to understanding the Mius family past. This haplogroup originated in a man born about 2700 years ago.

To be very clear, if additional Mius/Meuse/d’Entrement men would upgrade to the Big Y-700 test, we would assuredly receive a much more refined, granular, and closer haplogroup, probably originating in the sons of Philippe Mius d’Entremont. If you’re a Mius male, please consider upgrading!

Our Mius male has mutations known as private variants just waiting for another man with those mutations to take the Big Y-700 test and match. When they match, a new haplogroup is named and added to the tree. If all Mius men tested, we would probably be able to assign at least high-level lineages by haplogroup.

Testers receive lots of information on their dashboard, including matches to other testers at each level, plus more than a dozen different reports through Discover.

Every Y-DNA tester receives Discover as one of the options on their dashboard. Clicking on Discover opens another menu with lots of options – each one revealing something new about your DNA results. Thank of these as chapters in your book.

Discover can only report on the level of data provided with the test taken. Big Y-700 testers receive MUCH more information than men who take only the 12-111 marker tests.

Let’s review some of the most enlightening information for our Mius line!

Using the Discover Timetree to review haplogroup E-Y260948, we discover that there are two men who have a descendant haplogroup from our Mius haplogroup.

Haplogroup E-FTE73963 split from E-Y260948 sometime between 2700 years ago when our Mius haplogroup was born, and about 1200 CE when the descendant haplogroup E-FTE73963 originated. Today, the ancestors of the two men who have tested and belong to the descendant haplogroup originated in Macedonia.

This means that our Mius ancestor, and the two men with Macedonian ancestors shared an ancestor someplace around 2700 years ago.

This is getting very interesting.

Macedonia is a Balkan country and borders Greece, Bulgaria, Serbia, Albania and Kosovo.

The Discover Migration Map shows the path out of Africa for haplogroup E-V13, a parent haplogroup of our Mius haplogroup, E-Y260948. Those men migrated through Turkey, probably crossing from Asia to Europe at Istanbul, then moving across the Balkans. This map shows the general migration path for haplogroup E-V13. The circle indicates where E-V13 was located about 5200 years ago when that mutation first emerged.

The map reflects the genetically constructed haplotree which is informed by EKA (earliest known ancestor) locations of testers, Ancient Connections of sufficient quality, along with the least cost migration path from point to point. “Least cost” means that migrating people would select a protected valley with a water source over crossing dangerous high mountains.

The little brown trowels mark the locations of Ancient Connections which are archaeological excavations of burials. We’ll get to those in a minute.

Another tool, Globetrekker, provides more granular pathways for ancestors more recently than E-V13 but prior to migration to the Americas.

The Mius lineage split 10 times between when E-V13 emerged in the Balkans, 5200 years ago, and 2700 years ago when E-Y260948 is found in or near the southern border of Germany.

But the Mius line was from France – you might ask what are they doing in Germany. Good question. The software can only work with the information it has.

Remember that today there are only three men who have taken the Big Y-700 test and carry the mutation for E-Y260948, and two of them are in a downstream haplogroup found in Macedonia. The third, our Mius family representative, shows his earliest known Ancestor in Canada – so the only locations that Globetrekker has to work with for E-Y260948 with are the locations of its parent haplogroup E-Y3183, and Macedonia. France doesn’t even enter into the picture, although it clearly should. If multiple Mius men took the Big Y-700 test and entered France as their EKA location, that would modify the location of E-Y260948 in Globetrekker. Not to mention that we would likely receive a closer Mius-specific haplogroup.

According to Globetrekker, our Mius ancestor, two haplogroups earlier, crossed over the mountainous border between Italy, Austria and Germany sometime around 3500 years ago. As you can see, those three haplogroups are closely clustered in that region.

This is an important intersection, because as we will see, not everyone went in the same direction. Some clearly went on to France, some to eastern Europe, some to Macedonia, and some turned left and found themselves in Italy.

Between 2700 years ago, maybe in southern Germany, and 425 years ago in Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux, the Mius family line made their way from the border region between Italy, Austria, and Germany to the cliffs of Normandy.

Is there anything in Discover’s Ancient Connections that might be enlightening?

Ancient Connections

Ancient Connections, which displays the results of burials from archaeological excavations, is one of my favorite features of Discover. I wrote about using Ancient Connections for genealogy in the article, Ancient Connections: Where Archaeology Meets Your Ancestors.

We may not know where our ancestors were at a specific point in time, but we absolutely know when and where these people died and were buried.

There’s always an untold story just waiting for us – before surnames were adopted and written records became available. The record we are reading now is genetic.

With the free version of Discover or if you have not taken the Big-Y test, you can view about 10 Ancient Connections for the haplogroup you enter.

When clicking through from Big Y-700 results to Discover, you’ll see the closest 30 or so Ancient Connection matches, with the closest being shown first, plus the most ancient match in the database shown last

I encourage everyone to read each of the academic papers listed under “Reference” for each Ancient Connections sample to learn more about the culture and grave goods of each excavation.

As you receive closer matches, your more distant matches roll off your Ancient Connections match list.

I created a table few weeks ago, but several new matches have since been added, while an equal number of more distant matches fell off the end. Note that the samples styled as I###### are from the massive Ikbar paper that includes just under 16,000 ancient genomes from West Eurasia, Europe, and the Middle East, and stands to double the number of Ancient Connections. FamilyTreeDNA is processing this information as rapidly as possible. Some of the information about the burials is still embargoed by the authors.

One of the reasons I maintain a table is so that I don’t lose track of the information as new samples are added.

Location Their Haplogroup Age/Culture Shared Haplogroup Haplogroup Age/ Birth Location
Rathewitz, Burgenlandkreis, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany E-A7136 500 CE – Thurnigan culture E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
I465561 (no further information yet) E-Y3183 E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
Altheim 157, Altheim, Biberach, Baden-Württemberg, Germany E-BY152516 400-800 CE, Medieval German culture E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
Rákóczifalva–Bagi, Szolnok, Hungary E-BY152516 650 CE – Avar culture E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
Hajdúnánás, Hajdú-Bihar County, Hungary E-A7136 725 CE – Avar E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
Csokorgasse 79. Wien-Csokorgasse, Vienna, Austria E-BY5293 600-900 CE Avar E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
Rákóczifalva–Bagi, Szolnok, Hungary E-BY40534 800 CE – Avar E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
I37963 (no further information yet) E-Y3183 c 850 CE E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
I37965 (no further information yet) E-Y3183 c 850 CE E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
I38363 (no further information yet) E-Y3183 c 1000 CE E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
Śródka, Poznań, Greater Poland, Poland E-Y3183 1100 CE – Slavic E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
Tjærby, Randers, Denmark E-Y3183 1200 CE – Medieval Danish E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
Korolówka, Ternopil Oblast, Ukraine E-A7136 1250 CE – Old Ruthenian culture E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
Coimbra 23241, Castelo de Montemor o Velho, Coimbra, Portugal E-Y3183 1550 CE – Historical Portuguese E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
I41604 (no further information yet) E-BY116895 1750 CE E-Y3183 3450 years ago. Probably in Germany
I43570 (no further information yet) E-Z16659 c150 CE E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Gerulata 21935, Gerulata, Bratislava, Slovakia E-BY5499 230 CE – Roman Age Slovakian E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
I42272 (no further information yet) E-Z16659 c 300 CD E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
I42273 (no further information yet) E-Z16659 c 300 CD E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Masłomęcz, Polesia, Poland E-Z16659 300 CE – Wielbark Culture E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Béndekpuszta, Hács, Hungary E-FT109005 475 CE – Gothic E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Crypta Balbi, Rome, Italy E-Z38770 500 CE – Roman E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Kettőshatár I, Kiskundorozsma, Hungary (3 samples) E-B Y193951 675 CE – Middle Avar E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Wien-Csokorgasse, Vienna, Austria E-L241 750 CE – Avar E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Rákóczifalva–Bagi, Szolnok, Hungary E-MF657677 750 CE – Avar E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Székkutas 70, Kápolnadűlő, Székkutas, Hungary E-BY5617 775 CE – Late Avar E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Líbivá, Břeclav district, Southern Moravian region, Czech Republic E-MF657677 725 CE – Medieval Moravian E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Cifer-Pac, Trnava, Slovakia (2 samples) E-BY199965 875 CE – Slav Avars E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Końskie, Świętokrzyskie voivodship, Poland 1100 CE – Slavic E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria
Groenmarkt-2, Sint-Truiden, Limburg, Belgium (Flanders) 1325 CE – Flemish cultural group – died from Black Death E-Z16659 3500 years ago, Probably in Austria

To help organize this information meaningfully and understand what these samples and haplogroups mean to our research, I created a descendancy spreadsheet using the Ancestral Path and Ancient Connections.

The Ancestral Path in Discover shows the genetic path from the tester’s haplogroup directly up the tree.

Many of the Ancient Connections belong to branches off of our upstream haplogroups, not terminating with those haplogroups themselves. That’s fine, but it’s an important distinction because those individuals found on branches cannot be our ancestors.

Haplogroup E-Y260948, our Mius haplogroup, formed about 700 BCE, or about 2700 years ago and the next upstream haplogroup, E-BY174450 was formed about 3300 years ago.

Before that, E-Y3183 was formed about 3450 years ago, and so forth.

I started with Philippe Mius at the bottom of the spreadsheet, and built my way “up”, meaning back in time. The apricot column is the trunk of the tree, from which branches can form.

The first thing I wanted to know was whether our Mius line could potentially be descended from any of these burials. I wrote about this more broadly in the article, Ancient Connections: Where Archaeology Meets Your Ancestors.

There are always four things to consider:

  1. When the haplogroups were formed
  2. When the people lived, as compared to haplogroup ages. If the burial lived 200 years ago, but my ancestor lived 300 years ago, my ancestor is clearly not descended from the burial.
  3. Location
  4. History

In our spreadsheet, the branched lines with their haplogroups are in blue, so they are our haplo-cousins, and our Mius line cannot descend from them. We can only potentially descend from someone whose haplogroup is found in the apricot trunk column.

The samples in the apricot column have the same haplogroup as our Mius ancestor. However, a new mutation, E-BY174450 formed in the Mius line, so unless these men who are members of E-Y3183, lived BEFORE E-BY174450 was formed about 3300 years ago, then we cannot be directly descended from them either. None of these burials date between 3432 years ago when E-Y3183 was formed, and 3300 years ago when E-BY174450 was formed, so we cannot descend from any of these burials

However, and his is a BIG HOWEVER, that does not mean that all is lost, because the cumulative information in these ancient burials carries a story, especially when viewed together.

History is our friend.

History

Let’s look at the history of the region and the burials.

Rome conquered Gaul, which was comprised mostly of Celtic tribes at that time, about 2000 years ago, establishing their capital at Rouen in what is now France. The Romans killed one third of the population and enslaved another third, leaving only about one third of the families in their homes and not displaced. The enslaved people served individual Roman soldiers and worked on the Roman villas and estates, providing essential services, sometimes alongside free peasants and tenants. Roman villas and fortifications were found in upper Normandy, along the coast, where trade once occurred with England.

Late in the fourth century, Roman power waned. In 486, the Franks consolidated power after battling throughout what would become Normandy with Saxons and Germanic tribes. The Franks adopted Roman customs and controlled the land until the Vikings invaded in the 9th century. The Vikings also converted to Christianity, adopting the Frankish language, laws, and many customs, and became Normans.

In 1066, William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy, invaded England, launching a period of Norman rule that began when William was crowned King of England. English monarchs ruled both England and Normandy until 1204, when Normandy was recaptured from English rule. Normandy was controlled once again by France until the Hundred Years War when hostilities erupted between England and France.

You can see from this history that France, and Normandy in particular, became quite the melting pot.

Viewing the Ancient Connections of the Mius line, in combination with haplogroup E-Y260948, which is of African origin, it becomes clear that our Mius ancestors weren’t Vikings, very probably weren’t Celts, probably not Angles, Saxons, or Danes either.

That leaves the Franks and the Romans.

Working backwards in time by haplogroups:

  • E-BY4877, born about 4400 years ago has two testers from Italy,
  • Moving further back in time to about 5200 years ago with E-V13, we find testers and burials in Italy, Greece, Turkey, Serbia, Croatia, along with the Slavic and eastern European countries, as well as Germany, Austria, and Ukraine.
  • By 9500 years ago, we have a present-day tester from Egypt, with ancient burials in the same locations as before, but by 13,000 years ago, with haplogroup E-Z1919, we begin to see Ancient Connections in Jordan and Sudan.

The further back in time, the fewer burials that are contemporaneous. Most are much more recent.

The majority of the burials the Mius line is related to are Avar, although we do see some identified as Roman, Goths who raided Roman territory, the Weilbark culture associated with the Goths, Slavs who intermixed with the Avars, the Thuringians who were Slavs and overtaken by the Franks, and the Old Ruthenian culture which was Slavic and Baltic.

Based on the history of our haplogroup, and the history of the settlement of the northern-most portion of Normandy, it looks like our ancestor probably either arrived with the Romans who conquered the Gauls, or with the Franks who conquered the Avars and Slavs and took control of future-Normandy from the Romans.

There seem to be four potential ways our ancestors arrived in Normandy. The first two seem more likely than the bottom two:

  1. As Avar slaves to the Franks who displaced the Romans
  2. As a Roman soldier
  3. As conquered Gaulic slaves to the Romans, which is unlikely given that the Gauls were a Celtic tribe
  4. As slaves to the Romans, brought with them from Italy. While the Romans did travel with slaves, some of whom were conscripted into battle, in the case of the Gauls, they simply enslaved them instread of bringing their slaves from Rome.

There seems to be a lot of Avar history in our Ancient Connections, so let’s pull on that thread for a minute.

Avars

Wikipedia tells me that there are two groups of Avars. One group is a mountainous ethnic group that currently resides in the North Caucasus, between the Black and Caspian seas.

That doesn’t seem to fit, so let’s look at the other Avar group.

The historic Pannonian Avars are defined as an alliance of several groups of Eurasian nomads of various origins, spanning the Pannonian Basin and parts of Central and Eastern Europe. Yep, that’s the right group.

The Avars are first found on the Pontic-Caspian Steppe as a group of people who were trying to escape the rule of the Göktürks and greatly influenced the Slavic migrations to the Balkans.

By Wario2 – Own workOmeljan Pritsak The Slavs and the Avars. The victorious refugees established themselves in the Northern Caucasus, near the Byzantine holdings in the Crimea. In 558, through the good services of the Alan ruler, they established relations with the Byzantines and soon were granted the status of foederati on Byzantine territory in Scythia Minor, that is, Dobrudja, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=124091844

The Avars were a nomadic Central Asian Turkic Steppe tribe of warrior horsemen who controlled the Danube and Carpathian Basin, primarily in modern-day Bavaria, Hungary and Austria.

In both the maps above and below, please note the proximity of the regions where our haplogroups were found, near the border of Italy, Austria and Germany.

By Ramsey Muir – Muir’s Historical Atlas–Mediaeval and Modern ( London, 1911), Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17019845

The Franks appeared in Central Europe during the 3rd to 5th centuries. They joined ranks with the Romans to defeat Atilla the Hun in 451, then settled in Normandy after the Romans had abdicated power in 486. The Franks then conquered the Avars between 788 and 803 CE. The Avars converted to Christianity and were assimilated into the Frankish kingdom as vassals, generally in the Southeast part of France where the Avars lived when it was their territory.

The Romans

It’s worth considering that our ancestor may have arrived with the Romans, either as a soldier or as a slave, although arriving as a slave is probably less likely. Romans simply enslaved the Gauls, who had not assimilated the Avars or Slavs, as they had not yet moved that far east.

A more likely possibility is that our ancestor was a Roman soldier. In the early history of the journey of the Slavs, and with them some branches of haplogroup E, across Asia, Eurasia, and Europe, it’s clear that some Avars and Slavs settled in Italy. At that time, Rome was the largest urban center of the ancient world and controlled territory on three continents spanning the Mediterranean shores – including Italy and Istanbul, which was then Constantinople. Rome traded extensively with North Africa, so finding haplogroup E is not uncommon among Italians.

There is one burial found in a crypt in the center of ancient Rome, dating from 500 CE, which is after Rome conquered Gaul. This burial could have been from a descendant someone brought back to Rome from what would eventually be Normandy. Or it could have been a descendant of a man who turned left and went to Italy when his cousins turned right and continued on into Europe.

Hopefully future burials and testers will clarify the migration path of our Mius ancestors.

Whether Roman or Avar, it appears that our ancestors were probably in bondage one way or another in Medieval France, if not before.

Regardless of how they arrived, they stayed. In Medieval France, control of peasants was baked into the land, and when we find the Mius men in 1702 in Theuviille-aux-Maillots, they were not bourgeois or lesser nobility.

The Roman and Frankish system of slavery gradually transitioned into serfdom, then into feudal estates. The serf was literally owned with the land and could do nothing, including marry, without their owner’s permission. They were sold with the land.

Serfdom was abolished in 1315, but feudal society continued.

In the somewhat less restrictive feudal society, choices and movements were still controlled by the landowner, but not to the same degree. Labor was exchanged for protection. The seigneur of the manor still controlled the peasants and workers who lived on their land, dispensed justice, and ruled over their mini-kingdom, small though it may have been.

The Avar history is tightly interwoven with Eastern European peoples, but it is impossible without additional information to sort this out further. As more burials are discovered, and more men test, we’ll be able to refine our knowledge.

The Mius Line

Our Philippe Mius unquestionably arrived in Acadia from France, and two contemporaneous sources tell us that he was from Normandy. This information combined with Y-DNA test results and Norman history tells us a lot about how and when his ancestor likely arrived in France. It also eliminates several possibilities.

  • He’s not Jewish.
  • He’s not Anglo or Saxon.
  • He’s not Viking.

He’s most likely:

  1. A Roman soldier, or a slave brought with a Roman soldier from Italy
  2. Frankish via the conquered Avars

A lesser possibility is that he was a Roman slave taken in Gaul, but that’s significantly less likely because the Gauls were Celtic, not Slavic. 

Thanks to our Big Y-700 tester and the anonymous French Mius man who tested all those years ago, we know that Philippe Mius and the men who lived in Theuville-aux-Maillots and Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux on the Norman coast shared ancestors sometime since the adoption of surnames, which probably occurred in the 1300s or 1400s, during the time of feudalism.

The Norman tester’s ancestors didn’t move far, only from field to field, about 5 miles in hundreds of years – and their descendants continue to farm the same fields just above the cliffs.

Philippe Mius boarded a ship and sailed for Acadia in 1651. It would take another 360+ years to reunite the two lines of the Mius family, thanks to Y-DNA testing.

In the greatest of ironies, in far distant Acadia, in 1653, Philippe Mius d’Entremont became a seigneur himself, owning and controlling the land of the people who farmed and lived in and around Pobomcoup, today’s Pubnico. In 1671, the census shows us that there was no one living there except his wife and children, but by the mid-1750s, when the Acadians were expelled by the English, his seigneury had expanded to include about 300 people, most of whom were his descendants.

Beautiful Normandy

Cousin Mark did a deep dive at Filae for us, slogging through myriad unsourced trees and other information, first focused on Theuville-aux-Maillots and Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux. He then expanded to other regions along the Norman coast, then expanded again to anything within 200 km. After slogging through more than 660 trees looking for actual sources, he was able to confirm that there were Mius families along the Norman coast in the Seine-Maritime department in the early and later 1700s. One 1745 burial was from as far north as Steenwerck in French Flanders.

He was not able to reassemble families, and of course, we don’t know if all of those people were part of the same Mius family. Some unsourced trees did reach back into the mid-1600s.

Mark mentioned that Filae includes very few original records from the 1600s, depending instead on local genealogical societies to transcribe parish records and post them in large, reassembled trees. Unfortunately, that has not happened with the Norman records we need, but hope springs eternal.

Thanks to Philippe Mius’s descendants’ Y-DNA matches, we know that our Mius family lived in Theuville-aux-Maillots in the early 1700s and very probably neighboring Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux in the early 1600s. We also know that moving from place to place was difficult, if not impossible, and that our shared ancestor lived sometime after surnames were adopted in Normandy. This narrows that timeframe to 1300-1400 CE, 200 or 300 years prior to the early 1600s when Philippe was born.

We also know that the Mius family still resides just above the Norman coastline, farming those ancient fields, within easy walking distance of Saint-Martin-aux-Buneaux.

There’s no question that we belong here, in beautiful Normandy!

As fate would have it, Mark traveled in that region a few years ago and was kind enough to share his stunning photos of the cliffs along the Norman coast. I’d like to thank Mark for his research and photos.

Please let these photos transport you back in time as you think about the lives of our ancestors as they established their homes here.

Courtesy of Cousin Mark

Saint-Valery, Varengeville-sur-Mer

Courtesy of Cousin Mark

Veules-les-Roses

Courtesy of Cousin Mark

Varengeville sur-Mer

Courtesy of Cousin Mark

Pourville sur-Mer

_____________________________________________________________

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Tribute Reels from MyHeritage

Mother’s Day was Sunday, and my family was close in heart, but not actually here that day. After I had a nice visit with them, I settled in for a quiet day of writing and quilting. The evening before, I had published, Mom’s Quilt, an article honoring my mother.

Of course, I checked my email and social media from time to time during the day, so imagine my surprise when I saw a video of my mother, MY MOTHER, in someone else’s social media feed on Mother’s Day.

Huh???

Wait!

What?

There’s no mistaking her.

You know there’s a great backstory, right?!.

RootsTech 2026

Every year I’m always front row, center at Gilad Japhet’s keynote session at Rootstech – except when RootsTech schedules our two sessions at the same time. That’s exactly what happened in 2026.

I love to hear first-hand what’s being announced and coming next from MyHeritage. Gilad founded MyHeritage in 2003 as a small startup focused on genealogy research. MyHeritage grew by leaps and bounds, and in 2016 they added DNA testing as a resource. The rest, as they say, is history.

I missed his keynote this year, so imagine my surprise when my friend, Peggy, walked up to me a little later and said, “Oh my gosh, Roberta, I was crying in the session…your mother.”

I paused for a moment, because I had not mentioned my mother in my presentation earlier – which is what I assumed she must be talking about.

I must have looked very confused because Peggy continued, “Half the room was in tears.”

“What?”

“In Gilad’s presentation – you and your mother.”

Suddenly, everything fell into place and made sense. I had given Gilad permission to include pilot videos at RootsTech of something he had been working on if he thought it was appropriate, and if MyHeritage decided to go forward with the project.

Something else suddenly made sense, too. The look of disappointment when I was asked by a MyHeritage team member if I was going to be in Gilad’s session, and I explained that my session had been moved to a slot at the same exact time. “That’s too bad – we saved you a seat right up front.” At the time, I thought, “Well, that’s very nice,” but later, I understood.

Obviously, Gilad had made the decision to show the videos – but which version? There were two – equally as compelling in different ways.

The Backstory

A few weeks earlier, I had received an email from Gilad, asking what I thought about a potential new feature. He included a “demo” version – not even an alpha version because MyHeritage was only considering the possibility of implementing something like this for their customers.

Gilad asked for feedback. Did I like it? How did I think other people would feel if something like this was built for their own family?

Let’s just say that I was not at all prepared for what I saw when I clicked on the attachment. He should have given me a “do not watch in the presence of other people” warning.

I sobbed. I ugly cried so hard I got the hiccups.

My poor husband asked what was wrong.

“Who died?”

Imagine his shock when I slobbered out, “My mother.”

He clearly knew that my mother had died 20 years ago – but I wasn’t answering the question he actually asked. I was trying to explain why I was crying.

I couldn’t talk, so I took him into my office and just played the video – at which point, I wasn’t the only one crying. He claimed he had something in his eye😊- both eyes apparently.

I’m not going to try to explain, because there truly are no words.

At that point, what is now named “Tribute Reels” was being called “Life Tribute,” as you can see in the original video in Gilad’s RootsTech talk, here. There was also a surprise for me that I didn’t know about until I watched the video after RootsTech. This part of the video begins at the 30.25-minute mark and the rest is interspersed over the next 12 minutes.

When I was talking to Peggy at RootsTech, I had not attended Gilad’s session, and the video wasn’t available yet, so I didn’t know exactly what was there, and what might have changed.

I’ll show you how to create your own Tribute Reel in a minute, but first, I’d like to share my experience.

Tribute Reels

Tribute Reels is a series of photos sorted in your preferred order, then combined into a reel using AI animation. When AI photo animation first became available, I was not a fan because it was a technology in its infancy and the results were so unnatural that they were almost frightening. However, the technology has matured very quickly, allowing viewers to focus on the subject and not the underpinnings, and MyHeritage is using cutting-edge technology for Tribute Reels.

This is truly a special gift. Seeing Mom in motion long before I was born reminds me of viewing a decades-old home movie that might have been found in an old trunk discovered in the attic.

Gilad selected these photos at random from those I had uploaded to Mom’s profile at MyHeritage, so there was no “special prep” or me selecting especially relevant photos for the proof-of-concept video.

Here’s my reply to Gilad after viewing the Tribute Reel for my mother contained in his email.

Wow Gilad!

First, before I share my techy evaluation and commentary, let me share my experience.

My habit, when I wake up, is to review my e-mail and social media. Social media to see what has happened overnight, and my e-mail to delete spam and such, and to see if there is anything interesting.

Your email was obviously interesting, so I read it and watched the attached video.

Suffice it to say that I started my day with a good cry. I sat outside with my coffee and thought fondly of Mom. I still miss her incredibly.

Now my thoughts about this new video in a less emotional vein.

One of the things I really like is that each of the brought-to-life photos includes the person smiling. They are happy, even if their life wasn’t entirely happy. That’s the human condition, I guess.

In any case, the photos with the children also include touches of affection.

I think the one that touched me the most in my video was the photo of Mom and me together in our matching dresses that we made. I’m sure I was a lot of “help,” but then again, it introduced the love of sewing which I still do today, albeit mixed with art. I very vaguely remember the day that picture was taken. I was maybe 4 or 5, and my father took the photo. I remember how much fun we had making and wearing those dresses. In the picture, we were holding hands, and in the video, that portion was animated in such a touching way. Until the age of digital recording, we would never have been able to see ourselves in videos or “moving pictures” from this timeframe, so it’s like revisiting the past in such a pleasant manner

I noticed this same aspect in other portions of the video as well. The affection and closeness.

Towards the end, there’s a photo of Mom and my stepfather, whom I called Dad. In that animation, he reaches up and touches his tie, but to me, it seemed like a “touch my heart” message. Yes, I know it’s an animation, and that’s not actually possible, but that’s how it made me feel. A silent but well-understood message from the other side.

In the picture on the farm with Dad, Mom, and her aunt, with Spot, the family dog on Dad’s lap – that was just so quintessentially “home.” Of course, we can’t go back in time to a place that no longer exists, with people and fur-family members who have all passed on – but this image served to do that for me. Time travel in the best of ways.

The original photo is blurry – and I while I know it could be digitally “sharpened,” I actually like that it’s blurry because it suggests a misty memory.

And the laughs. Laughing while crying, actually. That picture with Mom holding the huge chocolate bar. She was so happy, and it was her last holiday season with us. She passed on five months later. I’m so incredibly glad I found that mega-sized Hershey’s bar for her. It was supposed to be a joke. Jim gave her a chisel and a hammer to use on it. She ate every bite!

So, speaking of Jim, I asked him to come into my office, and I just played the video for him with no up-front discussion. I turned around and looked at him, standing behind me, having a sudden allergy attack making his eyes water😊 He said, “How could one NOT cry? She’s not even my mother, but I sure miss her. She was such a card.” Then, for a few minutes, we talked about our shared memories of Mom. Jim only knew her for about a decade before she passed on, but they got along very well.

Mom died just before Mother’s Day in 2006. I cleaned out her apartment that Mother’s Day Sunday. So, given that this Mother’s Day marked the 20th anniversary of Mom’s departure from this plane, it was difficult, to say the least, and I so appreciated this very unexpected gift from MyHeritage.

Kind of like a wink and a nod from Mom. I still feel her with me.

Making Your Own Tribute Reel

The MyHeritage blog article explains more about Tribute Reels and provides additional information, here. You’ll also notice a shortened, color-enhanced version of Mom’s Tribute Reel.

To create your own Tribute Reel, sign in to your MyHeritage account, and select Photos, then Tribute Reel.

Click on “Create Tribute Reel”.

MyHeritage suggests people in your tree for whom there are photos available, showing you how many photos you can choose from for each person. Or you can enter someone’s name.

I’m selecting my father this time.

Click on the photos to select at least 5 but as many as 15 for Tribute Reels to use. I uploaded a few more from my computer.

On the next screen, just drag your selected photos to arrange in your preferred order.

I rearranged these, with his favorite hobby as the cover photo, and me visiting his grave to close. You can also add both cover and closing text.

Next, customize your Reel by selecting music, or no sound.

And last, consent to process.

MyHeritage emails you when your Tribute Reel is ready. Mine only took about 15 minutes, but I’m sure it varies widely based on the server load. If the email doesn’t arrive in a timely manner, check your spam filter.

Here’s my father’s reel, so take a look.

Well, here I am, crying again. The baby between my father’s knees is me. It’s the only photo I have of us together. Remember what I said about the looks of affection?

Create a Tribute Reel for someone you love.

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Mom’s Quilt – 52 Ancestors #477

I wasn’t going to write anything for Mother’s Day this year, because Mother’s Day is bittersweet for so many of us. Such powerful and sometimes overwhelming emotions braided together – love, longing, gratitude, and loss. But then, while changing the sheets, I opened the chifforobe and saw her quilts.

I reached out and touched them, closed my eyes for just a second, and saw a scene from long ago.

I began quilting with Mom and the “church ladies” in the church basement, years before I was even old enough to drive. We sat around the frame together, making quilts for the missionaries to take to Africa. It never occurred to me that in Africa, probably the last thing anyone needed was a quilt.

Nevertheless, we believed we were doing something altruistic, useful, and charitable together.

Sewing, in the high school yearbook.

When I learned to sew, I really enjoyed it and began to use the scraps from the clothes I made for both me and Mom to make quilts.

I stopped making quilts after I married, and children arrived. I simply didn’t have time for everything. In addition to taking care of my family, I worked and was slogging my way through college.

For a long time, the best I could do were quilts for family. This quilt for my daughter was one of the first quilts I made when I began quilting again.

Plus, one for her dolls, of course.

Occasionally, I’d make a quilt for a family or someone in need due to a catastrophe of some sort, but my time was still quite constrained.

Because I already had no time, I became a volunteer for the local Humane Society, working with injured fur-persons as a foster-Mom. Not only did it help the animals in need, but I felt it would be a wonderful way to teach my children important values.

The Humane Society was having a fundraiser auction, and I thought it would be a great idea to make a quilt.

Not only did I make that quilt, but I also bid on it and won my own quilt. One of my children liked it so much and had been incredibly disappointed when I told them it was a donation quilt. It would have been much less expensive to make a second quilt, but that child had fallen in love with “that one”!

My time was still limited, but next on the list of quilt recipients was Mom. Over the years, I made Mom a few quilts, and I’m so glad that I did.

The Handbell Sampler Quilt

I visited a local quilt shop where I signed up for a sampler class in which we learned useful techniques while making a variety of blocks.

Mom mentioned how much she liked the colors and individual blocks, so I decided it should be her quilt.

This Sampler Quilt was the first quilt I made for Mom and it included a handbell design that I drew and quilted in each corner. Mom played in the handbell choir at church.

This is also the only full-size quilt I ever entirely hand quilted. Hand quilting alone was very different than quilting as part of a group, with camaraderie and many hands, which meant the quilt was finished relatively quickly. I discovered that I loved the design part and piecing the colorful tops, but not the actual quilting itself.

I was excited to give this quilt to Mom for Christmas. Unfortunately, this is a horrible picture, but it’s the only one of Mom with the quilt. I’m at left, Mom is in the middle and my daughter stands on the right. Some of the fabrics from my daughter’s quilt are in Mom’s quilt, because that’s how quilts work. Love, shared and passed on.

Ironically, I found a leftover scrap of the corner fabric with the bells just last week. Now, that fabric will go into a quilt and become part of extending our three-generation legacy of love.

If there’s a lesson to be learned from this, it’s take lots of pictures. With cell phones, that’s not an issue today – and neither is waiting to get them developed and printed, only to discover too late that the photo is awful.

Mom loved this quilt so much that she hung it over a quilt rack where she could see it, but it was always being saved “for good.” I can still see it in my mind, standing in a place of honor in the corner of her bedroom. To this day, I have no idea when quilts saved “for good” were to be used, but it seems the answer is that they are much loved, but not a part of daily life.

Know where that quilt lives today? In that chifforobe, folded neatly on a shelf. Never used, never gotten dirty, never washed – loved, but never sharing in life. That wasn’t what I had in mind, especially since I had designed the block with the bells just for her. But she loved it, and that’s really all that mattered.

Ironically, now I don’t want to use it because it was Mom’s, it’s hand-quilted, and I don’t want to ruin it somehow.

I commit right now to putting it on the bed in the guest room!!

The time to use the “Good Quilt” has finally come, and it will be waiting for my daughter next time she visits.

The Scrap Kaleidoscope Spiderweb Quilt

Several years later, I made Mom a scrap spiderweb quilt, also called a kaleidoscope quilt. I figured she would actually use this one – as in sleep under it on her bed. I made it using scraps from the other quilts I had been making. There were scraps from her sampler quilt, my daughter’s quilt, quilts I made for Dad before he passed, quilts for other family members, care quilts, and so many more. Just looking at this quilt is a trip down memory lane.

We even used this quilt as a backdrop for family photos.

Mom slept under this quilt from the Mother’s Day she received it until she passed, five years or so later.

In her final days, when Mom was in the hospital, I slept in her bed at her apartment, and this quilt comforted me too. Now, sometimes I use this quilt on my bed, or put it over the back of the couch and smile as I walk past.

Stars Over Broadway

The third quilt I made Mom was actually a wall hanging meant to honor her. Mom was a professional tap and ballet dancer in her younger years. By the time I arrived, she had retired as a dancer, was working in an office, and had taken up crocheting as a hobby.

Mom created stunningly beautiful crocheted items, like tops, vests, coats, purses, and, of course, traditional afghans.

Her pièces de résistance, though, were lacy items – shawls, like the one above, tops and even a bedspread.

Each female in the family, and others she loved, received a beautiful shawl meant for dressy affairs. When she passed, this shawl was left and went to her great-niece, which would have pleased Mom immensely.

Mom entered her creations into fairs and other competitions, often bringing home blue ribbons and Best of Show rosettes. First locally, then across the country.

I even adapted one of her Best of Show rosettes as a Christmas tree topper.

We began taking our things to competitions together. Me – cross stitch, counted thread and quilts – and Mom – all manner of crocheting. Often, my daughter joined us. She won her first National award when she was about 11 for an original art piece. We were so proud of her!

As much as was possible in that day and time, Mom’s life had been rooted in creativity. When she retired from dancing, her creative outlet took other forms.

I never realized it then, but by example while I was growing up, Mom had been fostering that same creative spirit in me as we worked on varied crafts together.

When patterns were too expensive or not exactly what we wanted, we made our own and utilized every scrap of everything.

Our kitchen table was often a creative mess, with an old sewing machine, supplies, scissors and other materials scattered all over, but did we ever have fun!!

So, the third quilt I made Mom was titled “Stars Over Broadway,” a nod to both fields in which she excelled. I utilized just a few of the ribbons she had won over many years, plus one of mine and my daughter’s too. The three of us together.

By this time in my life, I was designing and making art quilts, so the style had changed a lot, and I was no longer using patterns.

There’s a lot of symbolism in this quilt. The ribbons dance in a circle, holding hands – echoing the bond between the women in our family over generations. Light to dark reflects the passage of time. My daughter is the “Seventh Generation of Hoosier Needlewomen” in our family, the name of an exhibit the three of us hung together at the Allen County Public Library a few years earlier.

This quilt is also affectionately nicknamed, “Never Again,” because I discovered that there is absolutely no “give” or flexibility in those ribbons so the cutting and sewing had to be absolutely precise! Hence, never again!

At a 1988 awards banquet in Louisville, KY, Mom wears a beautiful, crocheted top that she created.

Mom would often accompany me to shows and venues where my work was being exhibited, along with awards banquets. She amused me. Never mind my academic degrees and profession – it was my artistic endeavors she was the proudest of. Perhaps because she could see, feel, and understand those.

But it was the fourth quilt, the fourth quilt that I made Mom that was different.

Before I share that quilt with you, I need to explain something about quilts.

What is a Quilt?

This isn’t a technical answer – but an answer from my heart.

A quilt is whatever you need it to be in the moment. Quilts are created and given for a multitude of reasons – but how they are used, when, and for what purpose, is entirely up to the recipient. Quilts have a life journey and purpose of their own. Sometimes the same quilt is different things at different times, and even to different people.

A quilt can serve as an art piece, or a room decoration, something to sleep under, or a picnic quilt.

Quilts are their own language of love, given as an expression of love, caring, and hope. Every minute we work on a quilt, every stitch is made while lifting the recipient into the light. Prayer quilts, care quilts, comfort quilts – a quilt by any name you wish to call it.

Sometimes we make memory quilts. Using Mom’s clothes, I made memory quilts for all her children and grandchildren. They selected the clothing that they wanted in their quilt. This was difficult for me, but it was also a way that I could say farewell, at least on this plane, and process my grief.

Plus, I got to relive such wonderful memories and give each of them one final gift from her.

This is my quilt. There are enough stories here to last for days, many funny or heartwarming. Some of these squares are from sweatshirts that I cross-stitched for her, and the blue stripe in the left-hand bottom corner is the tie that my Dad (step-father) wore when he walked me down the aisle.

Mom always bought linen calendar towels for each family member for Christmas every year – no matter how much we hinted that we already had enough. None of us liked them, but after she was gone, we cherished them because they were uniquely from her. Now they are all in our individual quilts – with years selected to mean something to the recipient – and of course the associated stories that those memories evoke. I laugh every time I see mine! I also get teary-eyed.

I’ll be getting this out on Mother’s Day, along with a box of Kleenex.

My daughter’s quilt. Everything here is symbolic, including the rose fabric. Mom loved roses. A college t-shirt that my daughter bought my mother as a gift, a piece of Mom’s blue bathrobe that she wore for years, along with part of the cute pig towel from the kitchen on the farm where Mom and Dad raised hogs.

Memory quilts aren’t meant to be beautiful. They are meant to be meaningful and comforting, even joyful.

Quilt makers want their quilts to be used in whatever way the recipient needs.

Larger quilts typically serve as traditional bedcoverings. If someone doesn’t feel well, a quilt comforts. Smaller, personal size quilts are often more easily portable. I have at least one in the car at all times.

If you’re cold, grab a quilt. It will keep you warm.

If you’re sleepy and need a nap, grab your quilt. It will refresh you.

If you feel ill, grab your quilt. It will help heal you.

If you need a hug from one or maybe all of your ancestors, by all means, grab your quilt. Let them hug you. It will comfort and encourage you.

If you need a hug from someone who is not there, wrap your quilt around yourself in a big hug.

Mom’s Quilt

The fourth and final quilt that I made Mom is simply called Mom’s Quilt.

I went to a class in Northern Michigan with a friend to learn some new quilting techniques. We were excited because, among other things, it was a girls’ road trip.

In that class, with the aurora borealis dancing overhead at night, I made a smaller, personal-size quilt. I didn’t know how it would turn out, so I wasn’t making it specifically “for” anyone, but it just happened to be in some of Mom’s favorite colors, and made from some of the fabrics I had used in other family quilts.

After Dad passed away in 1994, Mom moved to town. She never really recovered from his death and slowly declined over the following decade. As she aged, she was always cold, and I didn’t want to encourage her to bring her bed quilt into the living room to use in her recliner. I was afraid her feet would become tangled, and she would fall.

I finished that aurora borealis quilt for Mom, feeling as if it had been specially blessed by Dad, watching over us from the Heavens. We could even hear the aurora those two nights, crackling and popping in the glorious sky as we looked up. I was spellbound, wide-eyed and speechless. I had never seen the aurora borealis before and felt like a child who thinks they unexpectedly caught a glimpse of Santa. I wish it hadn’t been before the days of photos on cell phones. When I finally fell back to sleep, I experienced extremely vivid dreams that included Dad and lingered long after morning.

Mom loved that quilt. She fell asleep in her chair, drawing it close and snuggling under it daily, with her cat firmly planted on her lap. Now I desperately wish I had taken a picture of her with her quilt in her chair. That’s how I remember her often.

Why do we only think to take pictures on “special occasions” and not of normal, everyday life?

When I gave Mom the quilt, it was “just a quilt,” until I realized she used it every single day. As her health deteriorated, and after she fell and broke her pelvis, she used it even more. It was no longer “just a quilt.” It had a much more important job.

I managed to extract it from her long enough to wash it once or twice, but for the most part, it was glued to her during her last few years. Although she eventually recovered enough to go about her life, delivering Avon to her friends and customers, she and that quilt were inseparable when she was home. It was like a favorite bathrobe or pair of comfy jeans. It became burned into my memory – Mom sitting in her chair, wrapped up in her quilt.

Mom’s quilt.

Mom passed on April 30, 2006 and it was on Mother’s Day that year that I had the utterly miserable task of packing up everything in her apartment and loading it into a U-Haul to bring it all home. That was the saddest Mother’s Day of my life.

On the morning of her stroke, Mom’s quilt rested in her chair from the evening before when she used it for the final time. I could tell she had fallen asleep there and had simply gotten up and gone to bed. It was still shaped like her body, with her crossword puzzle book and pencil lying with it.

I took her quilt to her in the hospital where she initially touched it, clutching the edge with her one good hand, but her condition worsened, and she was no longer even slightly conscious. After hospice entered the picture, and her care became “messier,” the staff said we should take the quilt home so it didn’t get lost, stolen or thrown away. We could always bring it back if she recovered consciousness, but we knew that wasn’t going to happen.

I took the quilt back to Mom’s apartment where my daughter and I were staying to be close to the hospital, just two blocks away. I returned it to her chair, even knowing that she would never sit there again. That’s where it seemed to belong, holding space.

That Mother’s Day, I gently folded it up, put it on the seat beside me after everything was loaded, and brought it home.

I probably should have washed it, but I just couldn’t. The places that showed a bit of wear that might have needed a bath were “her,” and I wanted all of her I could preserve.

I put Mom’s Quilt away. Every time I saw it, I saw her, jolting me back to the reality that she was gone. I just wasn’t ready for that yet. Losing Mom was losing my last anchor, and I felt adrift, unmoored in an ugly and painful sea.

Grief is love with nowhere to go – but after some of the initial shock and pain subsided, I had such fond memories of our time together, and I began to smile again.

It didn’t take too long for me to get the quilt back out, because it reminded me of her.

Mom’s quilt migrated around the house, sometimes on the back of the loveseat, sometimes on the back of “her chair,” which I brought home and put in my bedroom, sometimes on the quilt rack where I could see it, and from time-to-time, in my office.

When I saw Mom’s Quilt, I would smile. Sometimes there were still tears, but less often.

You never stop needing your mom.

Life happened.

Over time, other tragedies occurred, ushering in overwhelming, crushing loss. I needed to feel close to Mom, so I retrieved her quilt from wherever it was living at the moment and wrapped myself in it. I always felt better knowing it had brought her comfort too.

Life brought celebrations too.

The Labyrinth

About 25 years ago, I designed and installed a labyrinth in my yard as a place of quiet reflection and introspection, a spiritual walk designed to allow us as travelers upon the earth to move a few steps closer to the Creator.

On one especially momentous day, I wanted to feel close to Mom, to share joy with her, so I draped her quilt around my shoulders and walked to the labyrinth.

Mom and I walked together, wrapped in love.

Hope buoyed us.

Well, actually, we sort of flew, with the wind beneath our wings.

Jim slipped quietly out behind me and took pictures. Thank goodness he did.

The labyrinth is designed for the journey seeker to arrive in the center after a freeing, contemplative walk all the way around each of the labyrinth’s intersecting circles. The labyrinth itself is representative of the “Center,” a place of quiet contemplation. A place to free one’s mind and reflect.

A labyrinth is the polar opposite of a maze which is filled with dead ends and frustration.

In a labyrinth, there is only one path, with no distracting decisions to make, and the walker arrives effortlessly in the center.

For the center of my labyrinth, I selected a stone shaped like a “seat” to facilitate reflection while overlooking a field, pond and woods. Nature at its finest. Quietly healing and nurturing.

Sometimes, though, we turn and look backward, reflecting, before looking ahead again.

Life was changing. The tide was turning.

I am no longer the steward of the labyrinth, and life has changed dramatically in the past few years, but when I need or want to feel close to Mom, I still reach for her quilt. It’s timeless.

One day, my daughter will do the same.

Ancient Connections: Where Archaeology Meets Your Ancestors

Ancient Connections, a report found on FamilyTreeDNA’s Discover platform for both Y-DNA and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), can be used in multiple ways to enhance your genealogy and unlock secrets.

It’s exciting to examine ancient burials linked to our ancestors and understand how we connect to them. Ancient Connections offer a wealth of information, providing clues that can help unravel long-standing mysteries.

Today, there are more than 12,960 Y-DNA Ancient Connections in Discover, along with more than 25,310 mitochondrial Ancient Connections, and that number increases weekly.

Why the disparity, you ask? Remember, everyone has mitochondrial DNA, but only males have Y-DNA.

In addition to matches, your DNA results hold something even more powerful – evidence of where your ancestors and their cousins lived in the distant past, when they lived, and the cultural context surrounding them. These essential insights are unavailable through any other means. Ancient Connections help us answer the age-old question, “Where did I come from?”

Could These People Be My Ancestors?

I’ll show you how to answer another question, too. Which of these Ancient Connections could potentially be your ancestors, and which ones are your “haplo-cousins”?

Regardless, they all help us understand our ancestors’ past, and that of their descendants.

Discover is for Everyone

FamilyTreeDNA provides a free version of Discover that everyone can use. There’s also an enriched version with additional information for their customers who have purchased Y-DNA and mitochondrial DNA tests.

Discover has something to offer for everyone.

Mitochondrial DNA is passed from mothers to all of their children of both sexes – unmixed with the DNA of the father.

Everyone has their mother’s mitochondrial DNA, which is passed intact, except for an occasional mutation, directly down through generations of mothers. It’s not admixed like autosomal DNA, so we don’t lose some portion in each generation. This is exactly why we can track mitochondrial DNA infinitely far back in time and why it’s so crucial for understanding the origins of your mother’s specific line.

Y-DNA is passed from fathers only to their sons, which is what makes males male. Like mitochondrial DNA, Y-DNA is not admixed with any DNA from the mother, so we get a laser line-of-sight view of the direct patrilineal line back in time. The Y-DNA direct paternal line is the male’s surname line in cultures where males carry their father’s surname.

If you’ve tested at or upgraded to either the Big Y-700 level or the mtFull, full mitochondrial sequence test, you will receive the most granular haplogroup possible, meaning the closest in time and most informative. You’ll also match with other testers who have taken the less-refined lower-level tests.

The most informative and precise results occur when both people have taken the premium tests. As more people test and science advances, you may receive a new haplogroup from time to time when you and another tester share a rare mutation – so these tests are evergreen.

Both Y-DNA and mitochondrial DNA testers at any level have access to Discover on their dashboard for those products, although the results of lower-level tests provide less information.

The Free Version of Discover Compared to the Premium Version for Testers

Here’s a comparison of lower-level Y-DNA tests and the Big Y-700.

Click any image to enlarge

Y-DNA testers who have only taken the 12-111 STR panel tests receive a predicted haplogroup, and when clicking through to Discover, receive up to 10 Ancient Connections.

For example, If your Y-DNA haplogroup is predicted as R-M269, the most common male lineage in Europe that arose some 6450 years ago, your Ancient Connections begin with the closest genetic match to R-M269. Viewing Ancient Connections that are 6500 years ago will certainly be interesting, so please do look, but probably not terribly useful for genealogy.

However, if that same person were to upgrade to the Big Y-700, they would receive a much more recent haplogroup, and along with it, up to 30 Ancient Connections within their major haplogroup lineage, R in this case, plus the oldest sample in the database. For some haplogroups, there may not yet be 30 Ancient Connections, although new ancient samples are added weekly for both Y-DNA and mitochondrial DNA.

All Ancient Connections begin with the matches who are genetically closest to the haplogroup requested.

The same scenario holds true for mitochondrial DNA testers who previously tested at the HVR1/HVR2 level, but not at the full sequence level, which is the only test available today.

This article focuses on testers at the higher levels, meaning the Big Y-700 and the mtFull tests, and how to utilize their 30 closest Ancient Connections. We’ll walk through step-by-step examples using both.

However, before we begin evaluating our Ancient Connections, we need to cover two fundamental concepts.

BCE, CE and Converting to “Years Ago”

It’s helpful to understand date structures and how they are used.

It’s easy to get confused when seeing the dates of CE, current era, and BCE, before current era, which means we misinterpret the information.

For example, the year 100 CE is the year 100 that occurred roughly 1900 years ago. We round 2026 to 2000 for these types of calculations. The year 100 BCE, before current era, occurred approximately 2100 years ago. I often prefer to work in “years ago”, because it equalizes the numbers, meaning you’re less likely to get confused about how long ago someone lived or something happened.

To do the calculations from BCE dates to “years ago,” add 2000, so 2250 BCE equals 4250 years ago.

For CE dates, subtract from 2000. The date 500 CE occurred 1500 years ago.

This can be especially confusing when you’re dealing with the same number on either side of the current era, which began in the year 1. There is no year zero. For example, we need to be vigilant not to confuse 500 BCE, which was 2500 years ago, and 500 CE, which was 1500 years ago.

Now, on to our second concept.

Haplogroup Age and Burial Age Are Not the Same

When viewing Ancient Connections, the genetic age of the haplogroup, meaning when it was formed, and age of the burial are two different things.

Haplogroup R-ZP18 is about 4250 years old, and this Late Iron Age, pre-Roman burial which is also R-ZP18, occurred about between 2337 and 2043 years ago.

Haplogroup ages and the date they emerged, which show on the Timeline, sometimes mature and are refined with additional testers and branching.

Burials are dated using various techniques, and sometimes the ages provided in the academic papers are earlier than the genetic age of the haplogroup, shown on the Timeline at the bottom of the Connections page.

Discover makes no attempt to “fix” this situation, because it’s unclear which age should be changed. It’s not unusual to be unable to fully analyze ancient remains. For example, let’s say a sample is determined to have the SNP for R-ZP18, but simultaneously lacks downstream SNPs and some upstream SNPs, and the burial was dated from surrounding soil or artifacts. In that case, it would be impossible to know what is precisely “accurate”, but the sample is accurate enough to be included in Ancient Connections. This is also why some samples aren’t included in Globetrekker calculations. Some low-quality samples are excluded entirely.

Every ancient sample is individually analyzed by R&D team members before being included in the phylogenetic tree and Ancient Connections. Sometimes, the scientists at FamilyTreeDNA can assign a more specific haplogroup than was available to the paper authors at the time of publication because the tree has since branched.

As you receive new Ancient Connections, your older ones, except your final or oldest connection, will roll off of your list.

That’s one reason I devised a process for analyzing and recording my Ancient Connections, and for determining which ones might be actual ancestors – or at least aren’t precluded from it.

First Peek at Ancient Connections

Sign in to your FamilyTreeDNA account and click on the Discover link on the dashboard for the type of test you wish to view.

In the Y-DNA example, I’m using my male Estes cousins. As a female, I can’t test for the Estes Y chromosome, so I recruited others to represent my line. You can see the results in the Estes DNA project.

After signing in, click on Discover, then on Ancient Connections.

Y-DNA Ancient Connections 

It’s a bonanza!

Your Ancient Connections are displayed at the top of the page, ordered from genetically closest to most distant. These are archaeological samples whose data has been extracted from academic papers and analyzed before being include in Discover.

You’ll see a description of the first sample, or any sample you click on. The Timeline for that sample, along with your haplogroup and your common ancestor’s haplogroup, is displayed at the bottom of the page.

The first, meaning closest, Ancient Connection is highlighted, so let’s take a look.

  • “You” are shown in the dark purple frame (with purple arrows) at right, with your haplogroup, in this case R-ZS3700, which is placed on the Timeline at the bottom of the page in the appropriate location.
  • The Ancient Connection named “North Berwick 16499”, whose name was taken from the academic paper in which it was found, is shown in a red frame and placed on the timeline based on information provided in the paper.

“North Berwick” has been assigned to haplogroup R-ZP18, either in the paper, or by the FamilyTreeDNA R&D team if a more refined haplogroup can be determined, and is this tester’s closest Ancient Connection based on its position on the list.

Note that you may have other Ancient Connections who are genetically equivalent in age, meaning they too would be R-ZP18. In our case, only one sample is assigned to that haplogroup.

  • Your Shared Ancestor, in the green frame, is the first man who carried R-ZP18, which emerged about 2250 BCE, or 4250 years ago.

Notice that I said, “the first man.” That man’s sons, grandsons and so forth were also haplogroup R-ZP18. Some went on to develop new downstream haplogroups, but apparently, North Berwick, by the time he lived, had not. Either that, or a downstream haplogroup cannot yet be determined due to a lack of other testers in that lineage.

Men with downstream SNPs (mutations), meaning downstream haplogroups, also descended from R-ZP18. Those SNP mutations become downstream haplogroups when two or more men who carry the same SNP mutation match each other. For example, our Estes ancestor who carries haplogroup R-ZS3700 descends from R-ZP18 through a distinct series of downstream SNPs (mutations). While we carry R-ZP18 in our lineage, it’s not our most refined haplogroup.

However, for North Berwick, haplogroup R-ZP18 is his most refined haplogroup.

Because of this, we know for sure that North Berwick and the Estes men both descend from the original R-ZP18 man who lived about 4250 years ago, but we can’t tell when they shared a common ancestor between 4250 years ago and 3750 years ago when the next downstream haplogroup R-BY342, was formed in the Estes lineage.

Because North Berwick does not belong to a different downstream haplogroup, it’s genetically possible that the Estes men could descend from him during that 500-year timeframe. There’s nothing to exclude that possibility based on his haplogroup alone, but looking at when North Berwick lived is another matter.

North Berwrock lived between 2337 and 2043 years ago, which is 1400 years LATER than when the first downstream haplogroup, R-BY342 was formed, about 3750 year ago, in the Estes lineage. This precludes North Berwick from being our direct ancestor. Instead, he’s our “haplocousin.” We share a common upstream ancestor.

What we we absolutely CAN confirm, though, is that between 500 and 1300 years earlier than North Berwick lived, between when haplogroups R-BY342 and R-ZP18 were formed, both North Berwick and our Estes ancestor descended from the same man.

This kind of information is like waving a red flag in a genealogist’s face. We immediately need to know more.

This is just the beginning, and we have so many questions!

Revealing More Information

Did our common ancestor live in or near North Berwick, or someplace else? What do we know about the history of North Berwick?

What can we discern about North Berwick?

  • When did this man live, and where?
  • What do we know about him?
  • Who was he?
  • Did he live close to where my earliest known ancestor in this line is found?
  • What can I tell about his culture?
  • Were there grave goods that provide at least a peek into his life?

So many questions!

Discover tells us that he lived between 337 and 43 BCE, so between 2337 and 2043 years ago, during the Late Iron Age, and is associated with the Iron Age Britain cultural group.

The Ancient Connections “Reference” provides information about the paper where the North Berwick sample was found. No links are provided because sometimes the paper is behind a paywall, and you can’t access it without paying, and sometimes it’s a preprint and will appear later elsewhere. Sometimes one paper actually uses data from an earlier paper, and it gets complicated.

The first thing I do is Google the paper – Patterson et al. 2022. Google provides two links – one that’s free, and one that isn’t. Many times, the sample data is found in the supplementary material, which may also be behind a paywall, even if the paper isn’t.

I know you’re going to think it’s a pain, but I strongly encourage you to read every paper, though sometimes they can be challenging to understand, so read them when you’re fresh, not tired, and can concentrate. If nothing else, at least read the abstract. There’s so much great information buried in academic papers, including nice maps and discussions of the burial site. You can also learn more sometimes by Googling the burial site itself.

Let me give you an example from this paper’s abstract. I’ve added the brackets [ ] for clarity, from the body of the paper:

Between 1000 and 875 BC[E], EEF [Early European Farmer] ancestry increased in southern Britain [England and Wales] but not northern Britain [Scotland] due to incorporation of migrants who arrived at this time and over previous centuries, and who were genetically most similar to ancient individuals from France. These migrants contributed about half the ancestry of people of England and Wales from the Iron Age, thereby creating a plausible vector for the spread of early Celtic languages into Britain.

How does this information align with our North Berwick man? He lived between 2337 and 2043 years ago, and the EEF ancestry increased in southern Britain between 3000 and 2875 years ago. The authors do add “over previous centuries” which probably accounts for the 500-year gap and gets closer to when R-ZP18 lived. North Berwick is found in Scotland, not England or Wales, so not part of the group of people most closely aligned with the ancient French migrants from this timeframe. Maps in the paper confirm this as well.

Googling the paper and sample name provided additional sourced information. This paper incorporates samples from earlier papers and performed a different type of analysis.

Ironically, I wrote about this in detail in 2022, here, before Discover was introduced, so I had absolutely no idea that North Berwick 16499, discovered on Law Road in North Berwick, was related to my ancestors, and therefore, to me.

In that article, I researched and mapped the samples. North Berwick 16499 is located on the coast, along the harbour, not far from Edinburgh.

The burial was excavated in the cemetery of the original St. Andrew’s Church in North Berwick, originally built in the 1100s, but now in ruins.

This paper’s supplementary material explains that:

Excavation of a substantial square cist at Law Road, North Berwick, uncovered the remains of four inhumations of Late Iron Age date (Richardson et al. 2005). Two adult males 3603 (Skeletons C46 and C51) and a female around 16–18 years of age at death (Skeleton C50) appeared to have been displaced for the burial of an adult female (Skeleton C47), wearing an iron brooch. One of the males (C46) had been buried with a bone-handled iron knife.

What I wouldn’t give to see that iron brooch and bone-handled knife.

C51 is North Berwick 16499, “our” skeleton. A cist grave is a small, stone-lined burial box, and this one was preserved beneath medieval deposits.

That reference gave the even more precise location of Law Road and St. Andrews Street and informs us that the remains are held by National Museums Scotland. Checking their collections confirms that they hold these items, plus the bones. However, there are no photos shown. Contacting them for images might yield results.

What the paper did not say is that little was known prior to these excavations about early North Berwick.

By Stefan Schäfer, Lich – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=19450589

North Berwick was known to exist as a ferry landing from the 7th century, but an archaeological survey of Berwick Law, a hill that overlooks the town, revealed much earlier information:

The earliest features on North Berwick Law comprise a pair of newly discovered cup-marked rocks and the scanty remains of a prehistoric hilltop fort discovered by RCAHMS (1957, xv), whose outworks appear to be more limited than suggested by previous authorities (Feachem 1963, 119; OS 1975). The lower SW flank of the Law is dotted with the remains of a prehistoric settlement comprising at least 12 hut circles or house platforms and fragments of an associated field system of small cairns and banks.

Unfortunately, the perimeters of Berwick Law have been settled and farmed since, and the hilltop has served recently in the same capacity as it probably served initially – as a lookout across the firth. The residents would have been watching from this highest point for invaders arriving by sea.

It’s about half a mile from the foot of the hill to the burial cist.

The survey also mentioned that they found “stray bronze age finds” that had likely been disrupted by subsequent settlement. The bronze age in Northern Scotland began about 4200 years ago, about the time that R-ZP18 lived, until about 2800 years ago. Whoever North Berwick 16499 was, the man who was buried here some 2400 years ago, he was probably associated with this hilltop fort, perhaps farming at the base, probably living in one of those huts or nearby. His body wouldn’t have been taken far for burial.

We are left to wonder how long his family had lived here, and how they had arrived. Was his cist burial a sign of status? Was he sent to commend the fort, or had his family settled here centuries earlier? Did our ancestor descend from this location, too?

After our analysis, we know that our ancestor did not descend from North Berwick 16499 himself, but North Berwick definitely descended from our ancestor.

If you’re thinking this is a rabbit hole, it definitely is – but what a rabbit hole! There is so much to be gleaned from these Connections.

The Evaluation Process

I needed a process to keep track of these Ancient Connections, my findings, and how they relate to my Estes ancestors. Who begat, or might have begat whom, and where?

I created a spreadsheet as I read and analyzed each Ancient Connection relative to my ancestral line. I include what I know about it, and what I THINK I know about it. Those can be two vastly different things. I follow this same process for every ancestral line where I can find a representative Y-DNA or mitochondrial DNA tester.

For example, there’s a persistent rumor that the Estes family line descends from the d’Este family of Italy. That rumor was spun up long before we had genetic proof that our line was found in Kent, England, in records dating back to about 1495. Fortunately, church records, for the most part, and some civil records still exist.

The first known record is the will of our Nycholas Ewstas written on January 1, 1533/1534 in Deal, Kent, England. We confirmed that this is our Estes line by testing the Y-DNA of his descendant who still lives a few miles up the road, compared with the descendants of Abraham Estes (1647-1720), the man who immigrated to Virginia in 1673. We believed that Abraham Estes, who married in 1672, then immigrated 14 months later, was one and the same person.

Based on the details of the d’Este rumor, the Estes line was supposed to descend from one Francesco d’Este (Esteuse), an illegitimate royal son, exiled to France about 1471 after the death of his father, Azzo VI of Este, by a jealous half-brother, complete with a royal allowance. There are mentions of him in the Dutch and French courts, then nothing. Silence.

Apparently, various Estes lines in England liked the idea that he crossed the English Channel and settled in the fishing village of Deal, with his descendants carrying the surname Estes, a derivative of d’Este. King James apparently believed there was a connection and made that suggestion himself in one instance, although it’s unclear if that Estes man was from our Estes line.

It’s difficult to prove a negative, so we need to rely on the evidence we do have, much of which has been discovered and accumulated in more recent years, since the genesis of that rumor which was widely believed.

To begin with, it makes no sense that between 1471 and 1495, the family suddenly went from being a wealthy exiled royal circulating at court in France and the Netherlands, to peasant fishermen on the coast across the channel.

There is a legitimate royal lineage that does descend from the d’Este family in Italy, but until and unless someone who is a descendant of the direct male line of the House of Hanover, which reaches back to the Azzo line of Ferrara, takes the Y-DNA test, there’s no proof positive. Either their Y-DNA would match the Estes line, or not. I’d wager that it does not, but I’d love to find out for sure.

I’m hopeful that some nugget in Ancient Connections might add weight to either side of the argument.

Creating a Spreadsheet

First, I’ll show you the Ancient Connections spreadsheet built for the Estes line, then I’ll demonstrate how to build it.

Here’s the finished spreadsheet. Every haplogroup’s spreadsheet will be different.

I placed the four confirmed Estes haplogroups at the bottom because that’s the base from which the Ancient Connections are built, beginning with the closest Connection first.

“My” haplogroup, meaning for my ancestor’s Estes male line, is R-ZS3700, but there’s one additional downstream haplogroup, which I’ve included for completeness.

Let me alert you now that you WILL receive new Ancient Connections, which means that for every new Connection you receive, one more distant Connection rolls off the end because it’s outside of your 30 genetically closest Connections threshold. I’ve received new Ancient Connections in the past three months, between the time I originally began gathering this information and when I published this article.

The underlying message, in addition to maintaining your spreadsheet, is to set a calendar alert to check your Ancient Connections regularly. One rolled off that was more distant genetically, but was located only 10 miles away from where my Estes ancestors originated in Deal, England.

We’ll build the spreadsheet so you can easily expand it as new Connections are added.

Also, note that you may receive multiple matches from the same archaeological excavation site, which, of course, is highly suggestive of a family. If the multiple burials are in the same exact location and from roughly the same timeframe, I only record them on the spreadsheet once to reduce clutter, but I add a note that there are multiples.

The Build Process

Referencing the image above, haplogroups in the column directly above the originating haplogroup, R-BY154784, then R-ZS3700, colored apricot, are parent haplogroups – meaning that these haplogroups descend from the haplogroups above them. Look at R-ZP18, North Berwick, above R-BY482 as an example. This means two things.

  1. It’s possible that my ancestors could descend from these individuals in this column. However, all things considered, it’s more likely that they are a “cousin” of my ancestor who lived at that time and carried that haplogroup before a new mutation happened and branched into a new downstream haplogroup. That’s exactly what we proved about North Berwick based on when he lived and our downstream haplogroup formation date.
  2. Every man who shares that haplogroup, R-ZP18, absolutely DOES descend from the original man who carried that haplogroup-defining mutation that arose about 2250 BCE or about 4250 years ago. That one man in whom R-ZP18 occurred is noted above North Berwick, in red, indicating that both North Berwick and the Estes men descend from the man whose name is now R-ZP18.

On my spreadsheet, I’ve colored the cells of the haplogroups that I do descend from, and the burials I might descend from, apricot. The common haplogroups that burials and contemporary testers downstream descend from are in bold red text (R-ZP18 and R-DF49).

Burials who carry a different branching haplogroup, meaning they aren’t R-ZP18, but branch FROM from R-ZP18, are shown with their branches in blue. My ancestors cannot descend from blue haplogroups because we are on different branches of R-ZP18. Our branch is apricot.

Let’s add the next Ancient Connection.

Here’s the Time Tree Timeline of the second Ancient Connection, named Mount Pleasant 746, found at All Saints, Cambridgeshire, England, who lived between 940 and 1365 CE.

This shows two things.

  • My R-ZS3700 ancestor cannot descend from the Mount Pleasant burial, since R-ZS3700 doesn’t carry the mutation for R-BY173525, found in the Mount Pleasant burial.
  • However, since R-BY173525 branched from R-ZP18, we DO SHARE a common ancestor who lived about 4250 years ago. This means that between 4250 years ago and 940-1385 CE, the man found in Cambridgeshire, and my ancestor found in Kent around 1495 CE, both migrated in different directions from where their common ancestor, R-ZP18, lived, wherever that was.

The next closest Ancient Connection is Vor Frue Kirkegård 336, buried in the yard of a former monastic church in Vor Frue Kirkegård, Aalborg, Denmark, which dates from the 12th century. This man lived between 1536 and 1806 CE.

Again, my Estes ancestor who carries R-ZS3700 can’t descend directly from this man. Three things preclude Vor Frue Kirkegård 336 from being our ancestor:

  • The fact that Vor Frue Kirkegard 336 carries R-BY203953, but the Estes line does not.
  • Vor Frue Kirkegard 336 does not carry, R-BY342, the next downstream SNP for the Estes line.
  • Vor Frue Kirkegard 336 lived between 1536 and 1806 CE, which is contemporary with or after the earliest documented Estes ancestor was living in Kent, England circa 1495.

In this case, the locations are not in close proximity, over 500 miles apart by a combination of land and water. This distance would be less compelling as an elimination factor if the men were further separated by time.

In this case, any one of the first three pieces of evidence, alone, would preclude Vor Frue Kirkegard from being our ancestor.

Once again, R-ZS3700 shares the common ancestor of R-ZP18 with Vor Frue Kirkegård 336, along with Mount Pleasant 746 and North Berwick 16499. All of those men shared one common ancestor 4250 years ago.

Now, we have the bottom portion of our tree built out – meaning everyone who either carries haplogroup R-ZP18 as their primary haplogroup, or descends from that man.

Moving up the tree in the apricot column, you’ll notice that I’ve left spaces that leave room for the branching haplogroups in blue on the right. You won’t know how many spaces you need or the configuration until you start building the tree in your spreadsheet.

I listed both “5 haplogroups” and “3 haplogroups,” in the apricot column. You can spell those haplogroups out if you wish, but for my Ancient Connections, they didn’t matter. They may matter in the future, though, if you have an Ancient Connection who descends from or branches from one of them.

If you need an easy way to determine your ancestral lineage, the Ancestral Path is just the thing for you adn will help build your spreadsheet.

Your Ancestral Path

It’s easy to view which haplogroups are in your direct ancestral line. Just click on the “Ancestral Path” link in Discover’s sidebar.

Your haplogroup is shown at the top, with the parent haplogroups in order beneath. I’ve boxed the “5 haplogroups” between R-BY482 and R-ZP18 here, and then the “3 haplogroups” between R-ZP18 and R-DF49, which is where we find the next closest Ancient Connections.

One bonus of the Ancestral Path display is that you can see how many Ancient Connections are in the database for each haplogroup, at far right.

As I continue to build out my spreadsheet, the next four burials are all R-DF49, a haplogroup that was formed about 4400 years ago. Three of those burials are in England, and the fourth is in the Orkney Islands. They are all apricot, meaning:

  • They don’t carry any downstream haplogroups
  • They all descend from R-DF49
  • Based on haplogroups alone, nothing precludes the Estes line from descending from any of those men

Evaluating each Ancient Connection in the same way we did for North Berwick, when they lived, as compared to our Estes men, and where, may eliminate some of these burials as possible direct ancestors.

The balance of the Ancient Connections descend from R-DF49 through different branches and are colored blue, removing them as possible ancestors of R-ZS3700.

Regardless, we all share an ancestor, R-DF49, about 4400 years ago, just shortly before R-ZP18 lived some 4250 years ago. It would make sense that R-DF49 and R-ZP18 lived in relatively close proximity, given that they only lived about 200 years apart.

What else can we learn about these Ancient Connections?

Migration Map

To view all of your Ancient Connections on a map, just click on “Migration Map” in Discover’s sidebar.

The haplogroup whose path you are viewing, in this case, R-DF13, is the red dot on the bar at the top and is shown on the map with a red circle, but is mostly obscured here by the blue and red circles with numbers in the British Isles.

That haplogroup’s migration map, and your Ancient Connections, are displayed together. Individual burials not in close proximity to others are shown with individual trowels, and multiple burials are shown with blue and red circles, with the number indicating how many burials are found at that location.

Expanding the map shows more detail. I placed a red star to indicate the Estes lineage in Deal, at the bottom right.

Many of the blue and red circles have expanded, too.

By clicking on the blue circle, you can see which samples are found there. In this case, these 7 matching samples were all found in the same archaeological dig.

By clicking on any sample, you’ll see additional information.

One of my original questions was whether or not there was any indication whatsoever, even a smidgen of possibility that the d’Este rumor might be true. Some Estes researchers are not convinced by other arguments.

Given that our closest Ancient Connection lived about 2000 years ago in the British Isles, as do most, but not all, of the other Ancient Connections, it’s exceptionally unlikely that the progenitor of the Estes lineage was living in Italy in the 1400s, just a generation before our Estes ancestors are found in the records in Deal, and some 2000 years after the parent haplogroups of R-ZS3700 were already well-established in the British Isles.

There’s another place to check for additional information.

Notable Connections

Sometimes Notable Connections includes people who are either “ancient” themselves, and whose haplogroups have been identified through their descendants, or are from burials, or a combination of both. The difference is that their identity is not entirely a mystery.

When evaluating Notable Connections for genealogy, focus on:

  • Their haplogroup
  • Your shared haplogroup
  • When and where they lived
  • Any precluding factors like we found when analyzing North Berwick

Notable Connections are all interesting, but only a few may be relevant to your genealogy or your ancestors’ journey to where you first found them.

Speaking of their journey, Globetrekker shows you the most likely path of your ancestor’s haplogroup over time.

Globetrekker

Globetrekker is currently only available for Y-DNA, and only for those who have taken the Big Y test.

Clicking on Globetrekker through my cousin’s account shows the path of his haplogroup, through Europe, in this case, into England and, if I enable them, includes relevant Ancient Connections. One Ancient Connection, Mount Pleasant 746, at Cambridgeshire, is found on the estimated genetic haplogroup path.

We’ve already determined that the Estes line cannot descend from Mount Pleasant 746, but the locations of the descendants of our common ancestor, R-ZP18 can still provide substantial clues about where our common ancestor might have lived, and his culture.

I’ve also enabled Globetrekker’s “Sibling Lines” which indicate haplogroup siblings with the thinner lines. These display options are easy to toggle on and off.

Note that this is an estimated genetic path. In other words, it’s not exact. Especially, paths of the newer haplogroups can and will change over time as more testers test, and earliest known ancestors (EKAs) are added. I wrote about how to add EKAs in the article, “Earliest Known Ancestors” at FamilyTreeDNA in 3 Easy Steps. Please add yours, along with their location.

Sometimes the most refined haplogroup did not emerge in England, R-ZS3700 in this case, but in America. However, since the descendants have noted their EKA correctly as originating in England, that’s where the most refined haplogroup is also shown.

Furthermore, other than for Native Americans who are indigenous to the Americas, Globetrekker and the Migration Map both stop at the originating land mass for both Y-DNA and mitochondrial DNA.

You can read more about Globetrekker, here.

What About the d’Este Family Story?

Now, about that d’Este family story.

Globetrekker utilizes the “least cost” migration methodology, which means the easiest, least risky, route of passage from place to place for our ancestors. The Strait of Dover is the closest link to the European mainland, and was shallower at that time as well.

There’s absolutely no genetic evidence that points to Italy or anyplace south for the Estes ancestral line. In fact, haplogroup R-S552 emerged about 4650 years ago, and appeared about the time that this lineage crossed from continental Europe into what is today England. There’s no evidence that this line back-migrated to the continent, to then remigrate back to the British Isles after 1471.

Ancient Connections show us that there’s evidence of the Estes ancestral haplogroups in many locations across the British Isles, long before Frencesco d’Este was being exiled from Italy. Multiple Estes family members appear in the earliest records in the Deal area, so it’s certain that they were well established and probably fishing on those same shores hundreds, if not thousands, of years earlier, based on Ancient Connections these various migration maps.

These provide one more very large nail in the coffin of that much-loved but extremely unlikely family story.

The final piece of evidence would be if a proven male descendant of the d’Este line tested and did or didn’t match. I’m not holding my breath.

Mitochondrial DNA

The methodology for building your Ancient Connections spreadsheet is exactly the same for mitochondrial DNA, with one exception.

You immediately know that you cannot descend from any male burial, because men don’t pass their mitochondrial DNA on to their children of either sex. You could, however, potentially be descended from his mother, or sister, or cousin, etc. Otherwise, the guidelines are the same.

Sometimes, Ancient Connections can resolve long-standing conflicts.

The Conflict Surrounding Radegonde Lambert

For a very long time, it was believed that Radegonde Lambert, an early Acadian woman born around 1621, was Native American because there were no known people, other than her, with that surname in Acadia. Based on the birth years of her children, she married Jean Blanchard, a French man, around 1642.

It doesn’t help any that French soldiers arrived in 1632, family settlement began about 1636, but there are virtually no records until the 1671 census, nearly 40 years later. Lots of people perished during that 40 year window.

Radegonde could have married before her arrival in Acadia, and Lambert may not be spelled accurately. We are fortunate that French women are referenced by their birth surnames, not their married surnames, so she is listed as Radegonde Lambert, the wife of Jean Blanchard on the 1671, 1678 and 1686 censuses.

Based on the conflict swirling around her presumed Native American ancestry, plus early mitochondrial DNA HVR1/HVR2 results that pointed to haplogroup “X”, which has both Native American and European branches, Radegonde began to be reported as “DNA confirmed Native”. However, that was incorrect, and she was NOT DNA confirmed as Native. Haplogroup X2a and subclades are Native American, while other haplogroup X AND X2 subclades are European, as can be viewed in the Acadian AmerIndian DNA Project.

By the time full mitochondrial sequence testing became available, that incorrect “confirmation” was firmly entrenched in family trees and among researchers, leading me to pen the article, Haplogroup X2b4 is European, Not Native American.

While ho-hum with a yawn today, it was radical at the time and greeted with quite the kerfluffle. After all, Radegonde was proven Native and HOW DARE ME! 😊

Prior to Mitotree, Radegonde’s haplogroup was X2b4, but now it’s been extended to X2b4t2, which arose about the year 500, or around 1500 years ago.

X2b4 and subclades are quite rare, with only 353 descendants today, including subclades.

X2b4t2 only has 65 members.

Clicking on the “Other Countries” link takes you to the Country Frequency report.

Click on “Table View.”

Note that the 36 “Other Countries” includes people who have listed “Unknown Origin,” who are counted individually. People listing United States often mean they are brick walled here. Some people interpret this as Native American, but there is a separate United States Native American category. Not everyone selects the correct category.

These locations are user-reported in the Earliest Known Ancestor (EKA) information, which is critical for Discover reports. I wrote about how to complete that information in 3 easy steps, here. Please add yours, including location!

One person has reported that Radegonde Lambert is “United States Native American.” She’s not Native, and she never lived in the United States either. During her lifetime, Acadians lived in Nova Scotia, where three censuses accurately reflect her residence.  Perhaps that incorrect information was entered by someone years ago, and never changed. Most people don’t think to update their EKA information.

Unfortunately, when misinformation is provided, or not corrected after we learn more, new testers view that as nuggets of evidence, and the misinformation cycle continues.

One of the benefits of Ancient Connections is that they are NOT based on trees, historical records, or genealogy of any sort. Ancient Connections are based on archaeological digs, and the location of the excavation is not subject to question.

So, let’s take a quick look at Radegonde Lambert’s Ancient Connections and see what we find.

A Quick Sneak Preview

Because I’m interested primarily in a quick view of locations, I’m skipping right to the Migration Map where all of the Ancient Connections are shown.

Radegonde’s Ancient Connections are scattered all over Europe, but there’s absolutely nothing in the Americas.

Given that Native burial excavations are culturally frowned upon in many locations, we might not see any in the US, but we also wouldn’t see any recent burials in Europe, given that the Native people have been in the Americas for well over 10,000 years.

Generally, even when Ancient Connections are missing in the US, we still find some contemporary testers with proven genealogy who carry that haplogroup, and at least a few ancient burials in Canada, Mexico, Central and South America.

The first seven Ancient Connection matches carry haplogroup X2b4, and the rest are European subgroups of X2b4. There are no closer matches as of today, but that doesn’t mean there won’t be eventually.

X2b4 emerged sometime before 5200 years ago, clearly someplace in Europe, possibly central Europe.

Radegonde’s X2b4 match locations are:

  • Malá Ohrada site in Prague – the individual lived 5800-5400 years ago
  • Hetty Peglers Tump, Gloucestershire, England – lived 5639-5383 years ago
  • Sorsum, Hildesheim, Lower Saxony, Germany – lived 5350-5100 years ago
  • Passage Tomb, Carrowkeel, Cairn K, Sligo, Ireland – lived 5100-4600 years ago
  • Kolín I-7b, Bohemia, Czech Republic – lived 4835-4485 years ago
  • De Tuithoorn, Oostwoud, Netherlands – lived 4579-4421 years ago

It’s unquestionable that X2b4 was found across Europe, not in the Americas, 5000 years ago.

This image is NOT from Radegonde Lambert’s Ancient Connections. I’ve included it to illustrate a Native American branch of haplogroup X2.

The descendants of Native American haplogroup X2a, shown above, match Kennewick Man, who is also X2a, as their closest Ancient Connection. He lived between 9250 and 8390 years ago along the river in present-day Kennewick, Washington. Their second-closest Ancient Connection is with an X2a1 burial found in Windsor, Ontario, who lived between 1223 and 1384 CE.

Neither of these unquestionably Native burials are found in the Ancient Connections of Radegonde Lambert’s descendants.

It’s worth noting here that when evaluating rare haplogroups, their Ancient Connections may reach far back in time. For example, if a Native American haplogroup only has a few Ancient Connections within the Americas, the rest of their Ancient Connections, if any, will be found on another continent. Failing to read the results thoroughly and thoughtfully could lead to an inappropriate and incorrect conclusion.

For example, haplogroup X is found in Eurasia prior to the migrated of people across Beringia, the now-submerged landmass connecting Asia with Alaska, to become the indigenous people of the Americas. Therefore, if there are less than 30 closer X2a Ancient Connections, one would expect to find Ancient Connections reflecting that continental Asian, or even Eurasian, heritage far back in time.

Notable Connections

One final tip for both Y-DNA and mitochondrial DNA is to check Notable Connections and selectively add them to your spreadsheet, if appropriate. Sometimes you’ll find people there that are both Notable and Ancient.

Not that we need more evidence about whether Radegonde Lambert’s matrilineal ancestors were Native or European, but Notable Connections provides us with one more corroborating piece of evidence.

Cangrande della Scala was an Italian nobleman who lived around 1300. He and Radegonde share a haplogroup X2b1″79 ancestor in Europe around 9000 years ago, which was after the Native people had crossed Siberia and Beringia to begin settling Canada and the Americas.

If there was any question left about Radegonde Lambert’s origins, Ancient Connections resolved it, with a backup volley from Notable Connections.

Radegonde Lambert was my ancestor, so I’m going to build her Ancient Connections spreadsheet and savor every discovery, but if I were simply seeking confirmation of or the answer to the question of whether Radegonde Lambert was Native American or European, I need look no further.

Mitochondrial DNA Case Study

In the article, Mitochondrial DNA A-Z: A Step-by-Step Guide to Matches, Mitotree and mtDNA Discover, I wrote in detail about utilizing mitochondrial DNA to break through genealogy brick walls.

My goal was to detremine if Catherine LeJeune, Edmee LeJeune and Jeanne LeJeune dit Briard were sisters or at least matrilineal relatives. Fortunately, we had several testers.

As it turned out, Catherine and Edmee were European sisters, but Jeanne did not share a matrilineal ancestor with Catherine and Edmee. Jeanne was Native American.

Next, we wanted to discover as much information about the LeJeune sisters as possible.

I created an Ancient Connections spreadsheet for the LeJeune sisters and included those results in my analysis, so please take a look. Their Ancient Connections were unexpected and simply astounding.

You literally never know who is waiting for you, nor the message they hold, just waiting to be delivered.

Ancient Connections are clues from your ancestors.

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