Ancestry overview from 23andMe and what I know.
I got one of these cool kits from 23andme for the wife and myself for X-mas this year. For a little over $200 each, we both spit into a vile and dropped it into the mail, waited about a month, and last night we got our results.
No big surprises for me on the ancestry side (I'm as white as a ghost), but I thought I would show you an overview of what it showed and why it's still pretty cool.
First of all, I don't really know much about my ancestry. I got my last name(Renaud) from my father whom I've never met. He was French of some sort (I assumed French-Canadian). I've seen some pictures from the late 70's of him when I was a child. All I remember was that he had dark hair, glasses, and looked like a guy in the 70's. I did some digging on the name, and it seems it was a French pronunciation of the name Reinwald, meaning "ruler's advisor".
That's all I know from that side.
My Mother's side is more interesting I think. Her maiden name is Tollefson, and Americanized version of the Norwegian Tollefsen; from a patronymic from Tollef, a variant of Torleiv, from Old Norse þorleifr, formed with þórr, name of the Scandinavian god of thunder (see Thor) + leifr ‘heir’, ‘descendant’.
Descendant of Thor. Pretty dope.
Though, I don't think in today's climate, I'm allowed to be outwardly proud of it . :P
That said... here's a picture of me dressed as Viking from last Halloween.
Not sure what I'm looking at. And yes, that's a binder clip.. don't judge.
My Grandmother on my Mother's side was a McEwen. Pretty standard Gaelic name.
"Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Eoghain ‘son of Eoghan’, a widespread and ancient personal name, possibly derived from eo ‘yew’, meaning ‘born of yew’. It was Latinized as Eugenius (see Eugene), and was also regarded as a Gaelic form of John. This was the name of one of the two sons of Niall of the Nine Hostages; the other was Conall. Anglicized form of Mac Eathain ‘son of Eathan’, a Scottish Gaelic form of Latin Johannes (see John). John was taken into Irish as Eoin at first; Seán is a later form. In later Irish, as in the surnames, the personal names Eoghan and Eoin were often confused."
With all that in mind, my timeline of "pure" ancestors from given populations makes a lot of sense.
There's a more detailed breakdown when you dig into the reports. Though it's a lot of guess work on specific gene variants and locations. When I crank the sites built in confidence level (how confident they are that genetic markers are from any given area) up to 90%, I end up as just "Broadly northern/north western European".
Things get a lot more interesting when you dig down into information from maternal and paternal haplogroups and tracing ancient paths from Africa. Maybe that's a story for another post though (if the interest is there).
The genetic traits and health sections are also fun, but didn't really tell me anything I didn't know.
I've shared my profile publicly and am excited to learn more as 23andme completes more research and study, as well as myself entering new information as it becomes available.
Follow me @anticleric to find out more of the wacky stuff I'm up to including science, VR development, rants and brain-farts. You know.. the good stuff.
Name meanings Source: Dictionary of American Family Names ©2013, Oxford University Press.
Painting of Thor Leading the Wild Hunt for Asgard, “Åsgårdsreien” by Peter Nicolai Arbo, painting in oil on canvas, 1872.
In light of your recent discovery, I recommend you try "Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice"
It's inspired by Norse mythology. Though, it's also about a journey into psychosis. Cool stuff.
Ya, I should check it out. I was following the development because of the photogrammetry stuff, but heard bad things about the game itself.
It's worth playing for the facial animations alone. There's some seriously engaging, pleading, tormented looks that the main character gives the camera.
I'm not a fan of the gameplay (I've played maybe an hour), but the visuals are total splendor.
Unreal 4 engine is incredibly delightful to gawk at.
We've got many things in common. In particular, the viking like appearance. I'm glad I followed you following from @alexbeyman.
Here's me, dressed to impress as a viking, at the work christmas party last year.
Not pictured, my sprained wrist that ruined the evening.
Haha very nice (not the wrist part.. that's not nice). Thanks for the follow, glad I found you through Alex as well.
Were you celebrating Yule while the others celebrated Xmas?
I was celebrating pain, glory, and the exploration of life without function in a right hand at a cocktail party, whilst masquerading as a viking. The halls of Valhalla were not flung open for this warrior.