http://www.forebears.io qui vous permet de rentrer un patronyme dans yune base de données et d’analyse la répartition d’un nom de famille ( Et de ses variantes, trèèèèèèèèèèèès important les variantes !) autour du globe ! Sympa, non ?
Mois : novembre 2016
Le top des noms de famille 2016 de Belgique est sorti !
And the winners are….
» Parmi les différentes données se trouvent les noms de famille les plus fréquents

Happy Thanksgiving!
On my reading shelves!
I really love to read but it' »s not always easy with heavy schedule and work, it must have been be the first time I did this but I’ve read a lot this summer when I don’t usually take the needed time to do so or as much as I’d like to anyway. Being a vivid fan of the legend of the angels of Mons, I got to meet Jerred Metz on a day especially organised around this theme in the brand new Mons War Museum . We had an all-english conversation table and then heard Jerred presented his work.
It was then than I discovered Jerred’s book and avidly read it as soon as I was on my train back home.
We follow the group of soldiers in all their adventures and sad fate. What I particulary liked about it was the relationship between the men, their different characters and the relationship with the superiors during those difficult times. Band Of Brothers, during WWI and only better. From Belgium to France, we are up to the head in the mud with the courageous boys and are confronted not only with BEF retreat but also with the intervention of the surreal and fantastic. Not to spoil but there’s also some glimpse of Conan Doyle in this book which makes it even more enjoyable. It’s important to note that Jerred is American but has perfectly pictured the story right and how I hate when « history » stories are mismatching reality!
Do not search for any in-depth analysis of the case of the Angels of Mons, this is not the point of this work and, I’d say, it would miss his entertaining goal had the author taken that path. A must read for me!
Taking a DNA test : The big adventure!
Yes, it’s a commercial company so yes, its main purpose is to gain benefits from its sales. Yes, there’s handling of biological material so it’s totally normal to ask questions and claim answers about how your personal data and biological material is going to be handle, the safety procedure and what’s there to do about it, but still.this is a way to have informations on your biological history.
It took a long time thinking about it, I guess maybe this is linked to ideas we may have, but I told myself « Hey! You only live once! Why don’t you try it? » so I went for it and the least I can say is that I was quite surprised by the results! Now, how did it all happened?
I first ordered a Family Tracer kit , this doesn’t trace biological ancestors on, say, a vertical line but analyze your common genomes with people up to five generations both male and female on an horizontal line.
This allows you to find close relatives, lost cousins or persons you suspected to be family members but who were separated from you with life events. Once the order is set, you have to wait a little and after several days, a nice little testing pack comes in your mailbox. Just make sure you exactly follow the instructions provided, take your time in a nice and quiet settings ( after the kids have gone to bed for instance) to swab the small sticks in your inner cheeks several time ( no pain at all! )and just insert it the right way into the small tube that comes with the pack and instructions. I advise you to copy your order number as it will be very useful to log onsite afterwards 🙂
also for the sending back where if sent from Europe, sending as a parcel is highly recommanded!
Then you have to wait, several weeks in my case but if you’re in the US I guess it goes quicker
The results came in my mailbox pretty handily but the big question was how to interpret them ? This can be a bit puzzling when you don’t have a so-called hard sciences background. However, I could make out the results and consult the database to connect with biological cousins which was great to do!
I then ordered a MtDNA test which would give me informations on my maternal line , MtDNA my mother’s mother’s mother’s mother female ancestors and hundreds, if not thousands of before them. The ritual was exactly the same as with the first order, only the analysis, only the results, would be different.
When they arrived, I had the surprise to discover that my MtDNA haplogroup was J ! J,is a group that came to Europe via the middle east and developed in western europe over the time 20.000 years ago. Not the first group, it’s not ultra rare either. With maternal lines in England ,that was surprising to learn about mediterranean roots, even if we all come from Africa at some point, but very interesting too. If that anglo-saxon bit was of course known until the point of not having documented sources at some point, I didn »t know I had a small percentage of presence of the group in Turkey.
I also have access to a migration map which shows the direction taken by the group which was interesting to see and the level of presence of each group on each continent. Now, what I really liked but for mylevel of knowledge found a bit puzzling was the possibility to check which chromosoms you share with who. Knowing that I share a segment of A to B chromosom with say, John Smith is a quite interesting but mysterious information at the time and I’m longin to discover more about that as my DNA knowledge broadens.
I have also the possibilty to join projects who gathers FamilyTreeDNA members around an haplogroup, a theme, a surname, a region. I find those exchanges really interesting especially when you are looking for common branches and this brings me to what I love best is finding new « cousins » ! Yes, it’s a bit puzzling at first, we know we are biologically related at some point, and the range goes from 3 generations (where you can still identify in sources even roughly sometimes where people came from to « distant relative » . I have found « cousins »in the US and they too don’t know where we are related which adds to « family » mysteries but is great great fun!
The degree of connection is also shown in the database which enables you to focus on certain surnames, period, centuries and try to narrow the link as much as possible.
I wish I could do it for my paternal line as well but since my dear father passed away years ago I have to convince an uncle or wait for my son to be older to proceed if he wants to!
Regularly, I’ve got updates and a message coming into my mailbox telling me about a new match for me! It’s everytime great fun to discover who that person is, to send a little message to say « hi » and exchange families stories.
Now, is it worth it ? Yes!
Is it great fun ? Yes!
Is it interesting ? Yes!
but it’s also a totally different thing to what we family historians are used to and yes of course it’s important to keep the privacy/commercial question in mind when proceeding. But it doesn’t mean that you have to give up the idea of doing the tests! Read about it, talk to fellow tested persons, share your thoughts and feelings and then make yourself an idea of what is good for you to do! I’d do DNA tests again if I have the opportunity as I find it a nice way to find more about my past, in a way that is not (or not really) possible on documented-sources evidences.
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