Matching family tree profiles for James T Hawkins
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About James T Hawkins
https://www.familytreedna.com/public/HAWKINS?iframe=yresults
Family Group-13 KIT# 147883
T-FTB37466
T-Y63197BY109931 * BY91852 * Y151264+18 SNPsformed 12100 ybp, TMRCA 8300 ybp
id:YF14035ESP [ES-PM]
id:YF06964GRC
https://www.familytreedna.com/public/Y-Haplogroup-K2?iframe=yresults
Alpha-00 T-Y63197 (FTDNA T-BY91852) (confirmed/predicted) M70+ L162+ L208-
https://www.eupedia.com/europe/Haplogroup_T_Y-DNA.shtml
Ancient civilisations associated with Y-haplogroup T During the Copper and Bronze Ages haplogroup T would have been an important (though probably not dominant) lineage among ancient peoples such as Sumerians, the Babylonians and the Assyrians.
The higher than average frequencies of haplogroup T in places like Cyprus, Sicily, Tunisia, Ibiza, Andalusia and the northern tip of Morocco suggest that haplogroup T could also have been dispersed around the Mediterranean by the Phoenicians (1200-800 BCE), and that ancient Phoenicia seemingly had a higher incidence of T than Lebanon does today (5%).
Deep subclade testing revealed T-L454
Haak et al. who discovered several T1a1-CTS880 members in a 7000 years old settlement in Karsdorf, Germany.
The T1a1 skeletal remains from this settlement were also found to belong to the H mtdna haplogroup, this settlement has the highest frequency of this mtDNA haplogroup 30.4% (7/23) that have been found in any early Neolithic Europe population until now.T1a1 (T-L162/Page21; also known as T-L162(xL208) and T-L454), which emerged 17,400-14,600 BP, is the largest lineage downstream from T1a-M70.
An individual with T1a1 was first identified in a paper by Tomas et al. in 2006, among a sample of Ibizans (Eivissencs) from the Balearic Islands of Spain. T-L162(xL208) has also been reported in at least one male with a Pontic Greek background.
A subgroup of Ibizans – the Pityusans of the Pityusic Islands – have been found by three different studies to possess T1a1 at relatively high levels of 6.7–16.7%. Tomàs et al. (2006) found three cases amongst a sample of 45 (6.7%).
Zalloua et al. (2008) found nine examples that were L454+ (an SNP equivalent to L162/Page21) from a sample of 54 (i.e. a rate of 16.7%).
Rodriguez et al. (2009) found seven cases of L454+ in a sample of 96 (7.3%).
It is almost definite that the paternal progenitor of this line came to Britain with the Anglo-Saxons or Normans.
https://yhrd.org/tools/branch/T-M70
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Distribution_Haplogroup_T_Y-DNA_...
http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~hawkinsdnaproject/genealogy/tree_g-1...
Alpha-00 T-Y63197 (FTDNA T-BY91852) (confirmed/predicted) M70+ L162+ L208-
https://www.familytreedna.com/public/Y-Haplogroup-K2?iframe=yresults
Family Group 13
A storied and distinguished surname, the Hawkins family name can find its origins in a variety of Western European sources.
A patronymic from the Middle English personal name Hawkin, a diminutive of Hawk with the Anglo-Norman French hypocoristic suffix -in. English: in the case of one family , this is a variant of Hawkinge, a habitational name from a place in Kent, so called from Old English Hafocing ‘hawk place’.
In Irish sometimes used as an English equivalent of Gaelic Ó hEacháin.
In Scandinavia,we find the name Haakon,Hakon and Håkon.
Hawkins and a derivative, Howkins,are a sept of Clan Stewart of Lennox and of Clan Guthrie.
The name in Scotland is usually English, but could be Norse-Gael in origin.
James T Hawkins's Timeline
1772 |
1772
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North Carolina,British Colonial America
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1814 |
1814
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Russell, Virginia, United States
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1820 |
1820
Age 48
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Russell County, VA, United States
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