Originally posted by Pabmusic
View Post
Who Do You Think You Are?
Collapse
X
-
Richard Tarleton
-
Ockeghem's Razor
Originally posted by vinteuil View PostLord Palmerston said "Only three people have ever really understood the Schleswig-Holstein business—the Prince Consort, who is dead—a German professor, who has gone mad—and I, who have forgotten all about it."
Is our Ockeghem going to be a fourth?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post...But for this apparently they need (they say) DNA descended through the direct male line - and the family connection is through the direct male line is only as far as my father's father's mother. Does this sound plausible to you, Pabs?...
Mitochondrial DNA is useful since it is passed through the female line. This is because the one exception to the 'rule' in my last paragraph - every cell contains mitochondria - is that of sperm cells (we're talking here about creatures that reproduce sexually). Sperm cells don't contain mitochondria. Your mitochondrial DNA contains an unbroken record through one female line starting with your mother, her mother, her mother and so on - and it's passed only through the egg, uncontaminated by all those generations of males. Very useful since we can read DNA. This provides 23 chromosomes in humans.
There's an equivalent in males - Y-chromosome DNA. Again, where the organism reproduces sexually (plenty don't - aphids for instance, who are all clones of a mother) the sperm provides the other 23 chromosomes, to make 46 in all. But these 23 have come all from the father. Again, this represents an unbroken line from just one male line, and they're not from a 'squatter' like mitochondria.
Investigating along either the direct male line or the direct female line can be very interesting.Last edited by Pabmusic; 22-08-14, 07:56.
Comment
-
-
Well, it's quite amazing where you can find out from doing some family research, with the aid of various internet sites, like my wife had, and seeing what was you family many hundreds of years ago, I find interesting, as it all leads up to yourselfDon’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostYes, that's true. If any of those unions had not occurred, or had even occurred sooner or later (by even a small fraction) you would not exist. Amazing!
Georg Christoph Lichtenberg [1742-1799]
Comment
-
-
Anybody been watching the current series of WDYTYA? I thought With that actress(what's her name who starred in Eastenders?), and her grandfather was interned in Isle of Man. Quite interesting aspect, that we havn't heard much about?Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostAnybody been watching the current series of WDYTYA? I thought With that actress(what's her name who starred in Eastenders?), and her grandfather was interned in Isle of Man. Quite interesting aspect, that we havn't heard much about?
Comment
-
-
Richard Tarleton
I've found this programme less and less satisfactory with successive series, partly because the pace is so slow, and partly because it never seems to go back all that far (unlike BBM's and my researches ). And that's if I'm interested in the subject. And as for the timing with other programmes for symbiotic interest (Tamzin Outhwaite is in a new series of "New Tricks")....
But two cases in my own family demonstrate just how important a knowledge of your antecedents can be for people who are adopted or separated in childhood from their parents and family, and lack this knowledge. One of these cases is a cousin who was adopted and who decided to find out who her birth mother was. The other, involving two boys who were shipped from Kenya to England and thence to Australia as Barnardo Boys in the early 1920s, is much stranger than anything I've heard on WDYTYA. It had a happy, well two happy, endings, which it might well not have done. In researching it I've managed to rehabilitate a family member, debunk a family myth.....
Comment
-
Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by mercia View Postoh dear, I knew I shouldn't have started delving ........ turns out [my surname] great-grandfather's widowed mother was not married to his father ......... saves me looking any further back though
PS said g-grandfather had a very distinguished artistic career, this episode simply added to the interestLast edited by Guest; 24-08-14, 17:19.
Comment
-
My brother is the family genealogist and tracked down birth certificates etc. Our dad's dad was born way back in 1866 (!) and turns out great-granddad didn't marry great grandma till 6 months later, so some doubt.... but we have photos of great-granddad taken circa 1900 and the facial similarities are there so we have convinced ourselves that we are family. Also found out great-great-granddad was English and moved a few miles from Longtown to Eaglesfield (Dumfriesshire) north of the border with his blacksmith's business in the 1830s. We're all Scottish since then, eh well until I moved south of the border, so my children and grand-children are English :)- - -
John W
Comment
-
-
Family history methods can have wider uses too. I was once attracted at an auction sale to a small hand-written journal which contained the birthday and age of the (anonymous) writer and the baptismal names and date of baptism of his son. As he appeared to be a journalist (and poet?) born in 1795 I thought it would be interesting to find out more - just as a pastime.
The journal cost me £3 but gave me a huge amount of fun (which cost a bit more!) and I eventually donated it to the British Library, together with an edition of the published poem that was being written at the same time as the journal - and which the BL did not have in its collection. It was published under a pseudonym but it was possible to track it down and identify the author. Not anyone who became famous however. Chiz!It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
Comment