Someone was claiming to have a copy of the Gadabuursi chronicles, and he was writing a book as well, they we'ren't made available to English scholars in the 19th century due to elders not trusting them.We should steal it from that nga
Someone was claiming to have a copy of the Gadabuursi chronicles, and he was writing a book as well, they we'ren't made available to English scholars in the 19th century due to elders not trusting them.We should steal it from that nga
They have chronicles? When it was written?Someone was claiming to have a copy of the Gadabuursi chronicles, and he was writing a book as well, they we'ren't made available to English scholars in the 19th century due to elders not trusting them.
I wouldn't say almost since no one took dna samples from ppl in somaliayh i see it now almost every dir is a T somali
it says online so is t the og haplogroup of the people that did the migrations into the hornI wouldn't say almost since no one took dna samples from ppl in somalia
Nah, E haplogroup is probably older ig, I'm not an expert on this ask other friendsit says online so is t the og haplogroup of the people that did the migrations into the horn
70-80% will be T if there Dir, but about 20-30% are E-V32, I haven't seen a single non-T Gadabuursi or Cisse, but I have seen E-V32 within some Madaluug subs., so on the aji -> Dir-> Madaluug/Mahe etc...(third level).I wouldn't say almost since no one took dna samples from ppl in somalia
T arrived around 300 - 800 bce, E-M78 roughly the same time or earlier, the region was drying out and people switched from cattle to camels at the time.Nah, E haplogroup is probably older ig, I'm not an expert on this ask other friends
They have chronicles? When it was written?
Multiply this by 100 and you get 20th century somali historiography.Someone was claiming to have a copy of the Gadabuursi chronicles, and he was writing a book as well, they we'ren't made available to English scholars in the 19th century due to elders not trusting them.