Origins & History of Haplogroup I2 (Y-DNA)
Origins & History of Haplogroup I2 (Y-DNA)
Origins & History of Haplogroup I2 (Y-DNA)
Haplogroup I2 (Y-DNA)
Author: Maciamo.
Contents
1. Geographic distribution
2. Subclades
4. Famous I2 individuals
Geographic distribution
Haplogroup I2 is the most common paternal lineage in former Yugoslavia, Romania, Bulgaria and Sardinia, and a major lineage in
most Slavic countries. Its maximum frequencies are observed in Bosnia (55%, including 71% in Bosnian Croats), Sardinia (39.5%),
Croatia (38%), Serbia (33%), Montenegro (31%), Romania (28%), Moldova (24%), Macedonia (24%), Slovenia (22%), Bulgaria
(22%), Belarus (18.5%), Hungary (18%), Slovakia (17.5%), Ukraine (13.5%), and Albania (13.5%). It is found at a frequency of 5 to
10% in Germanic countries.
Subclades
The phylogenetic tree of I2 evolved a lot over the last 7 years and top-level subclades were renamed more often than for any other
haplogroup except R1b. To avoid all confusion it is recommended to double-check the defining mutations (SNP's) when reading
older studies or making references to a particular subclade.
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Origins & History
I2 (M438/P215/S31) is thought to have originated during the Late Paleolithic, around the time of the Last Glacial Maximum, some
22,000 years ago. Its region of origin is undetermined at present. It could have been one of the Last Glacial Maximum refugia or
somewhere in Anatolia or around the Caucasus. Three hypotheses are consequently possible.
1. The first scenario is that I2 originated in Europe. When the ice sheets started receding to the north from 20,000 to 12,000
years ago, the I2 hunter-gatherers re-expanded from their LGM refugium and colonised vast parts of western, central and
Eastern Europe. In this hypothesis I2 would be associated with mtDNA haplogroups H1, H3, U5 and V, among others.
2. In the second scenario I2 originated in West Asia, but also colonised Europe when the ice sheets receded. In this hypothesis
I2 would be mostly associated with mtDNA haplogroups J and T.
3. In the third and least likely scenario, I2 originated in West Asia but did not come to Europe until the Neolithic. There seems to
have been several independent migrations of Neolithic farmers and herders from the Middle East to Europe, bringing lineages
such as G2a, E1b1b, J and T. It is not yet clear at present whether each group brought only one or perhaps two haplogroups,
or whether most migrations already comported blends of many haplogroups. In this hypothesis I2 could be associated with
mtDNA haplogroups N1a, R, HV, H (various subclades), J, T, K and X. The recent identification (Lazaridis et al. 2013 ) of
Mesolithic Europeans from Sweden and Luxembourg to haplogroup I2a1b almost certainly disproves this third hypothesis.
In the two first cases I2 would have been absorbed by Neolithic farmers in Southeast Europe (M423), Central Europe (P214, L596),
and the western Mediterranean (M26). The relative success of specific branches of I2 seem to be linked to the diffusion of
agriculture. The south-western I2a1a (M26) branch was absorbed by Neolithic farmers of the Printed-Cardium Pottery culture
(5000-1500 BCE), whose descendants are found mostly in modern Sardinians and Basques. The eastern I2a1b (M423) is probably
linked to the Cucuteni-Trypillian culture (4800-3000 BCE), which was the most advanced Neolithic culture in Europe before the
Indo-European invasions in the Bronze Age. In contrast, central, northern and Western European I2 lineages (such as L38, M223,
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L1286, L1294 and L880) only survived at low frequencies. The reason could be that I2 hunter-gatherers adopted agriculture too late
and were not numerous when the wave of Indo-European took over central, northern and Western Europe (=> see R1b history).
I2a1a-M26 was probably one of the main paternal lineages of the Megalithic cultures of Western Europe during the Neolithic and
Chalcolithic periods.
Haplogroup I2a1b-L621
This branch is found overwhelmingly in Slavic countries. Its maximum frequencies are observed among the Dinaric Slavs
(Slovenes, Croats, Bosniaks, Serbs, Montenegrins and Macedonians) as well as in Bulgaria, Romania, Moldavia, western Ukraine
and Belarus. It is also common to a lower extent in Albania, Greece, Hungary, Slovakia, Poland, and south-western Russia. I2-L621
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(L147.2+) is also known as as I2a-Din (for Dinaric).
The high concentration of I2a1b-L621 in north-east Romania, Moldova and central Ukraine reminds of the maximum spread of the
Cucuteni-Trypillian culture (4800-3000 BCE) before it was swallowed by the Indo-European Corded Ware culture . This could
mean that the Cucuteni-Tripolye culture was a native European group of hunter-gatherers who adopted farming after coming in
contact (with perhaps some intermarriages) with the Middle Eastern farmers who settled in the Balkans (haplogroups E1b1b, G2a,
J2b and T). After being Indo-Europeanized, I2a-L621 would have become the dominant paternal lineage among southern Slavs,
while R1a remained dominant among northern Slavs.
The presence of I2a-L621 in Romania and Bulgaria could be attributed to the migration of the ancient Dacians and Thracians ,
who emerged as a mixture of of indigenous peoples and Indo-Europeans (in this case, essentially R1a-Z280) sometime between
3300 and 1500 BCE. The Illyrians , who conquered the territory of former Yugoslavia circa 1200-1000 BCE, might have been an
offshoot from the Dacians or the Thracians, or a closely related tribe from the Carpathian basin.
The second great expansion of I2a-Din took place with the Slavic migration in the Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages. I2a-Din had
started to mix with Proto-Indo-Euroepan R1a around Moldova, Ukraine, Belarus and Poland during the Corded Ware period (2900-
2400 BCE), then disseminated more uniformly across Proto-Slavic tribes during the Bronze and Iron Ages. After Germanic tribes
living in eastern Germany and Poland, like the Goths, the Vandals and the Burgundians, invaded the Roman Empire, the Slavs from
further east filled the vacuum. Following the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in 476, the Slavs moved in the Dinaric Alps and
the Balkans. By the 9th century the Slavs occupied all modern Slavic-speaking territories, apart from the eastern Balkans under the
control of the Turkic-speaking Bulgars.
Nowadays northern Slavic countries have between 9% (Poland, Czech republic) and 21% (Ukraine) of I2a-L621, while southern
Slavs have between 20% (Bulgaria) and 50% (Bosnia). The higher percentage of I2a-Din in the south owes to the cumulative effect
of Bronze Age and Early Iron Age migrations (Dacians, Thracians, Illyrians) and the medieval Slavic migrations. The relatively high
percentage of of I2a-L621 in non-Slavic people like the Hungarians (15% ), Albanians (12%) and Greeks (9%) dates from the Bronze
Age and population movement inside the Roman Empire which redistributed I2a beyond the original Daco-Thracian and Illyrian
territories. Based on these frequencies, and the distribution of R1a subclades, it can be assessed that the Daco-Thracians and
Illyrians carried approximately two to three times more I2a-Din than R1a, while the Early Slavs must have had roughly twice more
R1a than I2a-Din. The higher proportion of R1a in many northern Slavic countries today is due to earlier migrations of R1a during
Bronze Age (such as L260 among West Slavs and Z92 and Z93 among Russians and Belarussians).
Haplogroup I2a1b-L161.1
Commonly known in genetic genealogy circles as "I2-M423-Isles", L161.1 is found at highest frequencies in western Ireland (5-10%)
and the Scottish Highlands (1-5%), but is also found at low frequencies (> 1%) throughout Central and Western Europe, from
Latvia, Lithuania and Belarus to the British Isles, and from Scandinavia to north-western Spain. It has also been found in Albania,
northern Greece, Bulgaria and Romania.
Overall the distribution of I2a-L161.1 is somewhat reminiscent of the extent of Germanic migrations. Its close phylogenetic relation
to I2a-L621 branch means that L161.1 was probably absorbed early by the Indo-European migrations too. Its higher concentration in
western Poland and northern Germany hint at an absorption by the western sweep of the Corded Ware culture. Around 2400 BCE
the Corded Ware culture in Germany, Bohemia and western Poland was overrun by the Unetice culture , which represents the
advance of R1b branch of Proto-Indo-Europeans from Southeast Europe. From then on, I2a-L161.1 would have been able to spread
to Western Europe with the Proto-Celts (most probably the R1b-L21 branch) and to Scandinavia with the Proto-Germanics (chiefly
R1b-S21). That would explain why I2a-L621 seem to correlate with the distribution of R1b-L21 (like in Ireland, Scotland and Brittany)
on the one hand, but also with all regions settled by Germanic people.
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Haplogroup I2a2 (P214)
I2a2 (S33/M436/P214, P216/S30, P217/S23, P218/S32, L35/S150, L37/S153, L181) was known as I1c until 2005 and I2b until 2010.
It is associated with the pre-Celto-Germanic people of north-Western Europe, such as the megaliths builders (5000-1200 BCE).
The wide variety of STR markers within I2a2 could make it as much as 13,000 years old.
I2a2 is found in all Western Europe, but apparently survived better the Indo-European invasions (=> see R1b) in northern Germany,
and was reintroduced by both the La Tène Celtic expansion (5th to 1st century BCE) and the Germanic invasions (3rd to 6th century
CE). Nowadays, I2a2 peaks in central and northern Germany (10-20%), the Benelux (10-15%) as well as in northern Sweden. It is
also found in 3 to 10% of the inhabitants of Denmark, eastern England, and northern France. It is rarer in Norway, except in the
south, where the Danish influence was the strongest historically.
There are two major subclades of I2a2 : I2a2a and I2a2b, the former further subdivided in four subclades:
I2a2a1 (M284+) occurs almost exclusively in Britain, where it seemingly developed about 3,000 years ago.
I2a2a2 (L701+) has a very wide distribution. It is found in all Central Europe from Germany and the former Austrian Empire to
Poland, Romania and Ukraine, but also in lower frequencies in Greece, Italy, France, Spain, England, Ireland, and Armenia. It could
have been disseminated in part by the Goths. It is conspicuously absent from Scandinavia and Scotland. L701+ matches the I2
Continental 3 clade at Family Tree DNA.
I2a2a3 (Z161+) is commonly known as the I2 Continental clade (except Continental 3). It is the largest of the four subclades of
I2a2a and is found predominantly in Germanic countries, with a particularly high concentration in Denmark, Germany, the
Netherlands, England and in Northwest Sicily (Norman settlement). It is also found at lower densities throughout the rest of Europe,
from Portugal to Russia. I2-Z161 is thought to have been propagated around Europe by the Danish Vikings (Britain, Normandy, Sicily),
the Swedish Vikings (Baltic, Russia, Ukraine), the Goths (Moldova, Balkans, Italy, south-west France, Spain), the Suebi (Portugal and
Galicia), the Lombards (attested by a hotspot in Campobasso, Molise), and the Franks (Rhineland, Belgium).
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I2a2a4 (L1229+) is typical of England, Normandy (and other parts of France) as well as central and northern Germany. It is also
found among English surnames in Ireland, although not Norman ones (but rather Anglo-Saxon ones). Its much higher density in
Germany and England than in Denmark or France, and its absence from Sicily, indicate that it is probably an Anglo-Saxon lineage
rather than Norman/Viking.
Four out of the six samples from the 3000-year old Lichtenstein Cave in central Germany belonged to L38+. The cave was part of
the Bronze Age Urnfield Culture. Based on the STR dating, it is believed that this lineage spread from Germany to England via
Belgium in the Late Iron Age with the Celtic people of the La Tène Culture. I2a2b is therefore essentially a Alpine Celtic
haplogroup.
The distribution of I2-L38 matches fairly well that of haplogroup R1b-U152 north of the Alps. Both haplogroups are also found at low
frequency in Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and central Turkey, probably reflecting the migration of La Tène Celts in the third century
BCE (see map). R1b-U152 is associated with both the Central European Celts (Unetice, Urnfield, Hallstatt, La Tène) and the Italic
people. I2-L38 being limited to the Alpine region in Italy, mostly the north-west where Gaulish tribes settled, it is likely that I2-L38 was
brought to Italy by Celtic migrations many centuries after the arrival of Italic tribes from the Alpine Danube region. I2-L38 people
would therefore have been autochthonous to the region between the Alps, Central Germany and the Low Countries and were
assimilated into the Celtic society during the Hallstatt or La Tène period.
Haplogroup I2b
I2b (L416, L417, L418) is a very minor subclade so far observed in a few samples from Italy, Germany, Scotland and Iran.
Haplogroup I2c
I2c (L596, L597) probably originated around the Rhine region during the Mesolithic period. I2c* can be divided in four groups: A, AB,
B and C.
Group A is geographically limited to Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, Poland, Britain and Ireland.
Group AB has been found in north-west Iran, around the Caucasus (Armenia and Georgia), in Turkey and in France.
Group B is found at low frequencies in West Asia (Turkey, Georgia, North Ossetia, Armenia, Azerbaijian and north-west Iran),
in Southeast Europe (Moldova, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Crete), in Balto-Slavic countries (Russia, Ukraine, Belarus,
Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, Czech Republic), as well as in Germany, Austria, Italy, Spain and Britain.
Group C has a similar distribution to group A but has also been found in France, Italy and Norway.
Groups A and C seem to have expanded respectively during the Celtic Bronze and Iron ages, alongside R1b-S116/P312.
Additionally, the subclade I2c1 (L1251) has recently been identified. It is found mostly in Germany and England and in their periphery
(Ireland, Norway, France, Italy, Poland). This subclade is thought to be approximately 6000 years old, which places it in the Late
Neolithic period. It may be associated with hunter-gatherers from Germany who adopted agriculture after coming into contact with
Near-Eastern farmers from the Linear Pottery (LBK) culture .
Famous individuals
All the Dukes of Hamilton since William Douglas-Hamilton (1634-1694) belonged to haplogroup I2-M223-
Isles-E L1193+ based on the data from the Hamilton Surname DNA Project . The dukedom is the highest
ranking title in the Peerage of Scotland. Famous dukes have included the art collector Alexander Hamilton and
the pioneering aviator Douglas Douglas-Hamilton (1903-1973), the chief pilot of the first flight over Mount
Everest.
A direct descendant of Sir Henry Clinton (1730-1795) tested as I2-M223, predicted with moderate
confidence to be I2-Isles-E L1193+, or I2a2a1 in current ISOGG nomenclature. Sir Henry Clinton was the British
Commander-in-Chief in North America during the American War of Independence. His notable patrilineal
relatives included the Earls of Lincoln and most of the Dukes of Newcastle , all presumably belonging to the
same haplogroup.
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The I2* Haplogroup Project (new ISOGG I2b and I2c) was able to determine that the haplotype of the Georgian
house of Tsitsishvili was I2c-B (L596+). The most famous member Pavel Tsitsianov (1754-1806), an
Imperial Russian military commander and infantry general who also served as head of the Russian troops in
Georgia and Viceroy of the Caucasus.
Professor Lucotte tested the Y-DNA of Napoleon I, Napoleon III and their descendants, and was able to confirm
that Napoleon III was not the biological nephew of the first Emperor of the French. While Napoleon I belonged
to haplogroup E-M34, Napoleon III, the presumed son of Louis Bonaparte and Hortense de Beauharnais ,
belonged to haplogroup I2 (apparently to the M223 subclade). It has been hypothetised that Napoleon III was the
son of Count Charles de Flahaut , who was Hortense's lover and had an illegitimate son (the Duke of Morny )
with her three years after Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte's birth. In that case, Napoleon III would be the grandson of
Prince Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord . Another possibility is that Napoleon III was fathered by Carel
Hendrik Verhuell .
Andrew Johnson (1808-1875), the 17th President and 16th Vice President of the United States was identified
as a member of haplogroup I2a2a (former I2b1) based on the results from the I-M223 Project .
Miklós Horthy (1868-1957), was Regent of of the Kingdom of Hungary from 1920 to 1944. Prior to this,
Admiral Horthy served as commander-in-chief of the Austro-Hungarian Navy in the last year of the First World
War. In 1919, he ousted the communists of Béla Kun from Hungary and banned the Hungarian Communist
Party. The following year was declared Regent and Head of State. Cousins of Horthy posted their Y-DNA results
at MolGen , and all belonged to I2a-Din-N (or I2a1b3a in current ISOGG nomenclature).
The American magazine publisher Henry Luce (1898-1967) belonged to haplogroup I2-M223-Isles-E L1193+,
(a.k.a. I2a2a1 in current ISOGG nomenclature) according to the Luce Surname Project . He launched the
magazines Time, Life, Fortune, and Sports Illustrated and was called "the most influential private citizen in the
America of his day".
Other notable I2 individuals in the forum thread Searching for famous I2 carriers.
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