What makes this problem
interesting is that the population was both dispersed but mobile and this
allowed any single unit to avoid outright absorption and assimilation. Intermarriage took place often enough but it
was a single individual every few years and they would always move on severing
any local ties. Thus the population
remained internally more homogenous than would be expected.
They also arrived in Europe at
much the same time as the Jews entered Europe from the Mediterranean .
Both interacted throughout Europe and it will be instructive to compare the resultant
genetic legacy of the two peoples. Both operated
strategies that served to preserve their way of life and their success and
failure can be compared to some profit.
It is a reminder that peoples do
tend to survive even if their name changes to confuse historians. It has been popular to assume actual
extinctions as a common occurrence. Not
so of course. Even conquered peoples
would see their people enslaved but integrated all leading to inter marriage at
worse. Even driven out of a homeland then
saw them absorbed next door by a tribe eager to increase their strength to face
the conqueror. There are exceptions but
not as common as claimed.
What is true here is that the
folk history and other clues all hang together.
European Romani exodus began 1,500 years ago
Posted by TANN
Despite their modern-day diversity of language, lifestyle, and
religion, Europe 's widespread Romani
population shares a common, if complex, past. It all began in northwestern India
about 1,500 years ago, according to a study
reported on December 6th in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, that
offers the first genome-wide perspective on Romani origins and demographic
history.
The Romani represent the
largest minority group in Europe , consisting
of approximately 11 million people. That means the size of the Romani
population rivals that of several European countries, including Greece , Portugal ,
and Belgium .
"We were interested in exploring the population history of European Romani because they constitute an important fraction of the European population, but their marginalized situation in many countries also seems to have affected their visibility in scientific studies," said David Comas of the Institut de Biologia Evolutiva at Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Spain.
The Romani people lack written historical records on their origins and dispersal. To fill in the gaps in the new study, Comas and Manfred Kayser from
The genome-wide evidence specified the geographic origin toward the
north or northwestern parts of India and provided a date of origin
of about 1,500 years ago. While the Middle East and Caucasus
regions are known to have had an important influence on Romani language, the
researchers saw limited evidence for shared genetic ancestry between the
European Romani and those who live in those regions of the world today. Once in
Europe, Romani people began settling in various locations, likely spreading
across Europe via the Balkan region about 900
years ago.
"From a genome-wide perspective, Romani people share a common and unique history that consists of two elements: the roots in northwestern
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