The Yamnaya Culture | Bronze Age Steppe Herders

The Yamnaya culture was a Copper Age to early Bronze Age archaeological culture of the Pontic steppe (north of the Black Sea) dating to 3300-2600 BC.
Its name derives from its characteristic burial tradition: yamnaya is a Russian adjective that means 'related to pits', and these people used to bury their dead in tumuli (the famous kurgans - which we call barrows or burial mounds in Britain) containing simple pit chambers beneath the mounds.
In life they practiced transhumance, a type of pastoralism or nomadism where they spent winters in wooded river valleys and summers out on the grasslands with their herds.
The Yamnaya culture is identified with the late Proto-Indo-Europeans, and is the strongest candidate for the original homeland of the Proto-Indo-European language (of which English is just one of many descendants).
They possibly invented the wheel, they were the first (or almost) to domesticate and ride horses, and they invented 4-wheeled, ox-drawn axeled wagons that enabled them to drive herds of cattle across the steppes and carry enough water and shelter with them to do so.
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-- People of the Bronze Age series --
People of the Bronze Age Playlist ➜ • The Yamnaya Culture | ...
Yamnaya ➜ • The Yamnaya Culture | ...
Corded Ware ➜ • The Corded Ware Cultur...
Funnelbeaker ➜ • The Funnelbeaker Cultu...
Pitted Ware ➜ • Europe's Last Hunter-G...
Cucuteni-Trypilla ➜ • Cucuteni-Trypillia Cul...
Maykop ➜ • Bronze Age Mountain Ki...

Пікірлер: 805

  • @DanDavisHistory
    @DanDavisHistory3 жыл бұрын

    Watch the whole People of the Bronze Age Playlist: kzread.info/dash/bejne/eZWgvK6ohMi7Z5c.html

  • @spurohit6976

    @spurohit6976

    2 жыл бұрын

    Aryan Invasion theory is a false and fake propaganda created by British colonizers to divide hindus. Watch Historian Abhijit Chawda to know reality.

  • @spurohit6976

    @spurohit6976

    2 жыл бұрын

    Aryan Invasion theory is a false and fake propaganda created by British colonizers to divide hindus. Watch Historian Abhijit Chawda to know reality.

  • @spurohit6976

    @spurohit6976

    2 жыл бұрын

    Aryan Invasion theory is a false and fake propaganda created by British colonizers to divide hindus. Watch Historian Abhijit Chawda to know reality.

  • @spurohit6976

    @spurohit6976

    2 жыл бұрын

    Aryan Invasion theory is a false and fake propaganda created by British colonizers to divide hindus. Watch Historian Abhijit Chawda to know reality.

  • @spurohit6976

    @spurohit6976

    2 жыл бұрын

    Aryan Invasion theory is a false and fake propaganda created by British colonizers to divide hindus. Watch Historian Abhijit Chawda to know reality.

  • @conornorris6815
    @conornorris68152 жыл бұрын

    the American west was briefly a parallel of the yamnaya culture with migratory wagon trains, small bands of horse warriors, surviving on the steppe off of hunting and cattle, and interacting with new and interesting people, the Cossacks were probably similar as well with their expansion into Siberia

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes I agree with you, absolutely.

  • @messianic_scam

    @messianic_scam

    2 жыл бұрын

    so they went to america?!

  • @baxswisher7661

    @baxswisher7661

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think that is an extremely over-simplified comparison.

  • @jacksonwebb6389

    @jacksonwebb6389

    2 жыл бұрын

    I've been thinking about this a lot lately. We accidentally created another version of the yamnaya with the Comanche and other horse tribes. Just as warlike and dominant on the plains.

  • @wanderluster9034

    @wanderluster9034

    2 жыл бұрын

    I doubt it

  • @AndreSonsOfSamael
    @AndreSonsOfSamael3 жыл бұрын

    This short video had more substance than the 51min long documentary I tried to watch made by NOVA before it. Thank you

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's great, thanks for watching Andre.

  • @randallgoulet1550

    @randallgoulet1550

    3 жыл бұрын

    Exactly. Concise and interesting. This channel is going to do well.

  • @nomanor7987

    @nomanor7987

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Poika you mean Indian genetics… according to Hindu nationalists and the believers of the Out of India Theory.

  • @nomanor7987

    @nomanor7987

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Poika they say the R1A haplogroup originated in India and spread from there.

  • @arhamnahata9523

    @arhamnahata9523

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Poika you can research Dr Frawley, Abhijit Chavda giving numerous evidences that the haplo groups consistent throughout the Europe and India came out of India. There are literary, linguistic evidences apart from the gene evidence which debunks the Aryan Invasion of India Theory and supports the Out Of India Aryan Theory

  • @Survivethejive
    @Survivethejive3 жыл бұрын

    Nice one Dan

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Cheers mate.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Secret Guy thank you, I appreciate it.

  • @XortiXz

    @XortiXz

    3 жыл бұрын

    Very Indo-European

  • @thejmoneyshow

    @thejmoneyshow

    3 жыл бұрын

    You two are beautiful men and need body guards.

  • @dawniebee946

    @dawniebee946

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@thejmoneyshow Seconded.

  • @JackAnna2024
    @JackAnna20242 жыл бұрын

    A salute to our Yamnaya forefathers.

  • @christinacolvin681
    @christinacolvin6813 жыл бұрын

    This was a great supplement to "The Horse, The Wheel, and Language" by David Anthony, thanks!

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    I love that book! There has been quite a bit of genetics work in the few years since it was published that generally supports his arguments. Thanks for watching.

  • @berserk9085

    @berserk9085

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Timothy Jones Why?

  • @Boric78
    @Boric783 жыл бұрын

    "They ate Horses, Sheep, Pigs and male Early Anatolian Farmers."

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    I believe there is evidence of ritual cannibalism amongst the Neolithic farmers probably to do with mortuary rituals and their complex processing of the dead - defleshing and reinternments and the like. But as far as I know there's no evidence of steppe herder cannibalism.

  • @Thekoryostribalpodcast

    @Thekoryostribalpodcast

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Owen Johnson I am norwegian, french, German, icelandic ánd Scottish Brown hair brown eyes, fáir skin. I have a high amount of Yamnaya DNA. Germany was also found to have 70% yamnaya DNA

  • @ajmerthethy6724

    @ajmerthethy6724

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Thekoryostribalpodcast nobody cares

  • @greaterbharat4175

    @greaterbharat4175

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistorylol he is saying because new research found out they replaced Neolithic farmer male heritage in just 2 decades , Europeans genetic research call it "stone age genocide in Europe" , according to new research their is 90 percent change they destroyed Neolithic farmers and force mixed with Neolithic woman

  • @greaterbharat4175

    @greaterbharat4175

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Thekoryostribalpodcast according to Ireland research ,fair skin have not origin in Europe but migrater from very east of middle East or very west of Indian subcontinent they origin and migrated around 7000bce , and around 4000bce whole Europe got mixed and became fair

  • @troybarham1660
    @troybarham16603 жыл бұрын

    I like the style of these videos, lots of information delivered in a small space of time. I found you through Survive the Jive whom I've learned a lot from over the past couple of years. It's nice to see these subjects getting explored in such a coherent way

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, I appreciate it! I've learned a lot from StJ too, especially the stuff on Paganism which I knew very little about originally.

  • @wanderluster9034

    @wanderluster9034

    2 жыл бұрын

    Survive the jive channel is a joke. I would‘t recommend it, its too biased.

  • @bannedfordays.5101

    @bannedfordays.5101

    Жыл бұрын

    You are clearly just as biased, so why should we listen to you?

  • @user-wr4yl7tx3w
    @user-wr4yl7tx3w Жыл бұрын

    it's amazing that we even know anything about over people 3,000 years ago. really interesting.

  • @Flat_Earth_Addy

    @Flat_Earth_Addy

    4 ай бұрын

    Mostly conjecture.

  • @Yourbrother05

    @Yourbrother05

    Ай бұрын

    3000 BC not 3000 years, 3000 BC = 5000 yrs

  • @MrsMac3099
    @MrsMac30994 ай бұрын

    The steppe culture and Yamnaya fascinate me. My Mtdna seems to come from there, it has been found in the kurgan burials.

  • @liquidoxygen819

    @liquidoxygen819

    4 ай бұрын

    My mtDNA as well!

  • @phoenixj1299

    @phoenixj1299

    3 ай бұрын

    Most of the Europeans are descendants of these brown skinned Indian looking Yamnya people.

  • @liquidoxygen819

    @liquidoxygen819

    3 ай бұрын

    @@phoenixj1299 They looked nothing like Indians

  • @Daylon91
    @Daylon912 жыл бұрын

    I'd just like to let you to know I thoroughly enjoy what u do the fact that u have books based off history with a fictional twist to fill in space is brilliant. Seriously man. Good work

  • @yodhin79
    @yodhin79 Жыл бұрын

    I'm of Brahmin heritage and my GedMatch genetic breakdown for ancient K12 heritage showed I'm mostly a mix of native South Indian and Yamnaya people. Which makes a lot of sense because the Vedas were written by people who were a mix of Yamnaya and Indian. The title Brahmin simply meant the class of people who were keepers of the Vedic knowledge. Very cool stuff !

  • @pankajchoudhary6086

    @pankajchoudhary6086

    Жыл бұрын

    just a foolish thing , can you digest milk like old yamnaya people and you have body strcture like them , and what about your steppe dna and that halogroup which they have

  • @pankajchoudhary6086

    @pankajchoudhary6086

    Жыл бұрын

    yes you have some but not only brahmin

  • @pratikgore6536

    @pratikgore6536

    Жыл бұрын

    Brahman is a caste and is not related to genetics. Read DD Kosambi.

  • @yodhin79

    @yodhin79

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pratikgore6536 False - ethno religious groups absolutely have trace genetic markers. How else are they able to distinguish between Jews who are sephardic, ashkenazi, or mizrahi ?

  • @pratikgore6536

    @pratikgore6536

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yodhin79 I am talking explicitly about Castes. Brahman, Kshatriya, Vaishya, etc from a geographical region have the same genetic lineages. Caste is social division with a religious sanction.

  • @richardschafer7858
    @richardschafer78583 жыл бұрын

    One of my favorite channels, hands down.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! Appreciate that enormously.

  • @Mrcool12684
    @Mrcool126842 жыл бұрын

    I love the vids my man! Keep it up. Longer ones are the BEST! You keep kicking ass brother and thanks from Oregon US

  • @desdichado-007
    @desdichado-0073 жыл бұрын

    The Yamnaya were smaller than some of their immediate forebears, like the Dnieper-Donets people. Their large size was probably mostly genetic, from the EHG Dnieper-Donets ancestors moreso than anything else.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah the EHG were on average 10cm taller than the WHG. That goes for the men and the women, both averaged 10cm taller. This is likely inherited from the Mal'ta-Buret' and related peoples of the Upper Paleolithic.

  • @ezzovonachalm7534

    @ezzovonachalm7534

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory In the years after WWII young Europeans began to grow taller and taller. Not because their mother were fecondated by American GIs , but because they could eat more and better.

  • @lamebubblesflysohigh

    @lamebubblesflysohigh

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ezzovonachalm7534 also less and lighter work while growing, fewer illnesses etc. Height is really a combination of genes + nutrition + stress put on the body during growth.

  • @georgesakellaropoulos8162

    @georgesakellaropoulos8162

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ezzovonachalm7534It's estimated that my father was about 5 cm. Shorter than he should have been because of the war. The males in my family average about 174-177 cm. His height was, at best, 169.

  • @TheSolder777

    @TheSolder777

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lamebubblesflysohigh not work but injuries that come from work. doing squats isn't going to stunt your growth

  • @ScottLaneSabineParish
    @ScottLaneSabineParish2 жыл бұрын

    Really enjoy learning history, anthropology and archaeology. Just stumbled across your channel today and was intrigued enough to start reading the Immortal Knight chronicles. This is just a little kudos and thanks for sharing.

  • @mikiohirata9627
    @mikiohirata96272 жыл бұрын

    I'm very glad that YT recommended this channel. I love human history in general so always keep my eyes open for interesting videos. Your concise clear presentation is really appreciated here. I registered and look forward to view more of your presentations.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, welcome to the channel.

  • @Flat_Earth_Addy

    @Flat_Earth_Addy

    4 ай бұрын

    They had no writing.

  • @Christine_Hart_Journalist
    @Christine_Hart_Journalist2 жыл бұрын

    What a lovely voice you have. No ego. Perfect to listen to. Subbed!

  • @amymurch

    @amymurch

    4 ай бұрын

    You’d like North 02 as well.

  • @elihinze3161
    @elihinze31612 жыл бұрын

    This is my first time meeting another author who writes Bronze Age historical fantasy! So great to see. I know embarrassingly little about Bronze Age Europe, though. (I mostly focus on the ancient Near East, specifically Mesopotamia.) Definitely going to check your books out!

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Eli, I appreciate it.

  • @barbaralucas1220
    @barbaralucas12202 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic! Thank you so much . I absolutely love history and this is wonderful ☺️

  • @ariochiv
    @ariochiv3 жыл бұрын

    I'm fascinated by the cultures of this region, from the Yamnaya through the Scythians and beyond. I hadn't made the connection that the Yamnaya might be associated with the origin of proto-Indo-European language. That's an exciting thought.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah the Yamnaya culture is maybe a bit late for the proper PIE origin so it maybe was a bit earlier like the Sredny Stog but it was probably around this area and around this time.

  • @chibiromano5631

    @chibiromano5631

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wouldn't R1B just be a hyrbid of R1A(early Kurgan) , Yamnaya and I-Hap (Scan-Pre Sami)? PIE is definetlly more of a Caucasus mountains languages not really European. Uralic is more similar to the Germanic langauges.

  • @milanvitu3963

    @milanvitu3963

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@chibiromano5631 sorry but uralic language has no conection to germanic

  • @betelgeusestudio_1369

    @betelgeusestudio_1369

    3 жыл бұрын

    The Trypillya I2 and the Seredniy Stih R1b/R1a and following the Globular Amphor I2, the Battle Axe R1a and the Yamna R1b might be the very group of cultures where the first Indo-European appeared.

  • @iAMaSOUTHpARK

    @iAMaSOUTHpARK

    Жыл бұрын

    @@milanvitu3963 Uralic have some Nordic connection proto germano slavic mix indo european scityians central asia Eurasia

  • @oversipelio983
    @oversipelio983 Жыл бұрын

    beautiful, thank you

  • @bobmilaplace3816
    @bobmilaplace38163 жыл бұрын

    If I had to guess the Yamnaya provided horses and wagons. To the point they didn't conquer but united whole groups who for centuries could only walk to get information across. So their language became a diplomatic/commerce language.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Could be part of it. But the decline of certain male farmer lineages shows that the steppe herders took over too.

  • @bobmilaplace3816

    @bobmilaplace3816

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory Maybe the decline was caused by being cut off from the big trade networks?

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah that would likely be part of it. In some cases we see trade networks declining and being cut off before the steppe herders moved in. I believe there were disruptions in southern Europe that led to trade network collapsing and subsequent social changes in the Neolithic north. It may be that the decline in the Neolithic is part of what opened the way for the steppe herders to come in.

  • @bobmilaplace3816

    @bobmilaplace3816

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Poika I thought it was a "my mound is bigger than yours, harder and more robust" oneupmanship.

  • @bobmilaplace3816

    @bobmilaplace3816

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Poika Same reason as today, graves are not only for the dead but a beacon for the living. And keeping with the Jones. The bigger mound meant more prestige and vice versa. Prestige brings economic power and it goes into a positive feedback loop.

  • @anonrandom7765
    @anonrandom77653 жыл бұрын

    Got here through STJ. Very nice work, earned a sub.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, I appreciate it. Check out the other history videos here and there's more to come. Cheers.

  • @johnarmlovesguam
    @johnarmlovesguam3 жыл бұрын

    I love your bronze age stories. Videos too. Write more.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, I will do.

  • @duboisdvoleur
    @duboisdvoleur6 ай бұрын

    Thanks so much for this. I have been researching the history of the Black sea region in an attempt to discover the historical roots of the current conflict and this is useful background information

  • @madmedic7840

    @madmedic7840

    4 күн бұрын

    Its good you're going this far back, but there are no answers here. The current war is simply a US proxy war to expand their empire and extract others resources

  • @andersaxmark5871
    @andersaxmark58713 жыл бұрын

    Concise and well done

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @theslayer1652
    @theslayer16523 жыл бұрын

    You've become my new favorite youtuber

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wow thanks so much

  • @dionisiodussart5629
    @dionisiodussart56298 ай бұрын

    Very interesting. The Maikop Culture (where was born thst habit of funeral pits, and where started the bronze age) is mentioned, as well as some of their advantages.... Milk consumption, bronze weapons, use of horses, mobility (wheels) ...

  • @theknave4415
    @theknave44153 жыл бұрын

    A great video for introducing the Yamnaya to 'newbies'. :) Nicely done.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Yes these videos are primarily for my fans so they can better understand the world of this novel series.

  • @theknave4415

    @theknave4415

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory Quality work. You could make a pretty good living on KZread from these types of vids. :) (I know! Writing is a monkey on your back and you can't let it go. :D BTDT.)

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think maybe 5 years ago you could but I believe all but the biggest KZreadrs make peanuts from the channel. But I do enjoy making them and hopefully it will keep growing and who knows? Thank you for your support, I very much appreciate it.

  • @messianic_scam

    @messianic_scam

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory why did they called them yamn very semitic very Arabic

  • @Seth-gd4mz
    @Seth-gd4mz Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting video!

  • @Philly_Jump_Over_The_Fence
    @Philly_Jump_Over_The_Fence2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent.

  • @Concreteowl
    @Concreteowl2 жыл бұрын

    Great keyboards and motor cycles.

  • @jonathanturek5846
    @jonathanturek58462 жыл бұрын

    We all have 4 grandparents... Each one born with an individual last name. If you collect all 4 you can figure out your general heritage. Especially if you take 1 step further and do same for each grandparent then you have a set of 16* ... My four are Hurtgen Graur Turek Schindler... Well I'm obviously German.. But have sprinkle of polish & Irish blood in my fam tree ... I also am very good at discerning where a last name comes from.. A hobby I developed and practiced for decades now.. So I love discussing this and teaching my friends where they come from

  • @HistoryBro
    @HistoryBro3 жыл бұрын

    How many of the original Yamnaya do you reckon there were, roughly?

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    I don't know if anyone has estimated their population at a specific moment in time. We're giving the name Yamnaya to a series of interrelated groups across an enormous area - at least 1000km wide - over hundreds of years. Within this there's already regional variations between north and south and at the edges. But the technology of Neolithic farming - mainly cattle and sheep/goats and some planting and pigs in some places - filtered into the valleys from Eastern Europe and through the Caucasus and the ancestors of the Yamnaya like the Sredny Stog. They adopted this, invented wagons and wheels and this enabled them to utilise the vast resources of the steppe. They could now convert millions of acres of grass into meat and milk and it's likely the population expansion was one of the mechanisms for driving the migrations.

  • @ajithsidhu7183

    @ajithsidhu7183

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory done one on jatt north indi

  • @lamebubblesflysohigh

    @lamebubblesflysohigh

    2 жыл бұрын

    Surprisingly not that many (and that goes for every group). You could have only as many people as you could feed (and remember there was no refrigeration and no way of preserving perishable foods). So pretty much arable land + winter were your bottlenecks.

  • @lamebubblesflysohigh

    @lamebubblesflysohigh

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mr.purple1779 and if you look on population of herders around the world, it is always small

  • @mr.purple1779

    @mr.purple1779

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lamebubblesflysohigh Well, as a small one, these regions were controlled by nomads throughout history from the beginning of times to the 17th-18th centuries. It's more like a disappeared civilization. For example, chroniclers accompanying the Central Asian Aksak Timur report that after the fall of Bulgaria, 4 million sheep, 40000 thousand cattle, 500000 horses were stolen. Maybe the numbers are exaggerated, but the scale is still clear. 20 cities and 2,000 settlements have completely disappeared. And this is the beginning of the 14th century. If not for the dramatic historical events, there were many more people than the 6-10 million people of the minor ethnic group today.

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs2713 жыл бұрын

    North west Asian cultures were highly influential to the rest of the world.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    They were indeed.

  • @blyat5352

    @blyat5352

    2 жыл бұрын

    Pontic Steppe is part of Europe. Not Àssia

  • @ajmerthethy6724

    @ajmerthethy6724

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@blyat5352 cope

  • @thelivingdead1728

    @thelivingdead1728

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ajmerthethy6724 East of the Urals is Europe, Pontic Steppe is east of that. It's Europe.

  • @ajmerthethy6724

    @ajmerthethy6724

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Lukas Muller Yamnaya: ~ 50% EHG -> ANE + WHG -> brown skinned, black haired and robust. ~ 50% CHG -> black haired brown skinned Hunter gatherers likely of Iranian origins. Now tell me who is really mixed race.

  • @ArchYeomans
    @ArchYeomans3 жыл бұрын

    It would be interesting to see your series go far back to Mal'ta Boy and his father, perhaps uncles, going back around 27,000 years ago near Lake Baikal. We are extremely fortunate to have a basal R* meaning this the deepest ancestry any male in haplogroup R can reach back to. Another interesting fact is how many Native Americans have their deep ancestry connection to Mal'ta Boy in South and North America. Just recently, the earliest haplogroup Q male found is on the near opposite side of Lake Baikal to Mal'ta Boy up the Angara River. Haplogroups R and Q are sibling clades under haplogroup P. There is entirely a possibility that people in Western Europe with haplogroup R are related to people who crossed over Beringia albeit very remotely as the move to North America from Siberia begins around circa 15,000 years ago, possibly earlier as there have been earlier findings of remains in various regions of the Americas before the rise of the Clovis Culture.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah I will do that and in fact I have a video planned to talk about this link between west eurasians and native Americans. I'll do it after my next video. And it relates to my novel series Gods of Bronze because the "gods" in it are actually immortals who evolved in the Mal'ta Buret type cultures in the upper paleolithic.

  • @fredperry9235

    @fredperry9235

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks I'm a Jewish haplogroup Q so will look into it.

  • @SMunro

    @SMunro

    3 жыл бұрын

    Which language root clusters are you looking for? A group Sex % Development Chain Algonquin M 100% (A; E, O, N, S; T, W) Sioux M 100% (A; N; T, K; H) Sioux F 100% (A; W; I; N; E) Luo F 100% (A; O; N, I; E, G, Y) Polish F 99% (A; L, I; N; E) Russian F 98% (A; I; N; L; R; E) Basque F 96% (A; N, I; E; L; S) Arabic F 95% (A; H; I; R; S) Scot. High F 95% (A; I; R; L; O, N) Celt F 94% (A; I; N; C; E) Portugese F 94% (A; I; E; R; N, L) Delaware M 94% (A; N; E; O; M, K, H) Shona F 93% (A; I; M, E; U) Sanskrit F 93% (A; I; H, R; M, T) Hold Portal 93% (A; T; R; P; O, L) Indian F 92% (A; I; R; N; H; S) Delaware F 92% (A; W, H; Y; K) Cherokee F 92% (A; H; I, E; K) Detect Magic 91% (A; I; M; E; T; G) Sanskrit M 91% (A; I; R; N, H) Thai M&F 91% (A; N, I; O; S, R, P, H) Hittite M&F 91% (A; I, U; T, N) Arabic M 91% (A; I; R; H; M) Hebrew F 91% (A; H; E; R; I) Maori F 90% (A; I; N; H; E) Choctaw F 90% (A; O; L; H, N) Navajo F 90% (A; B, N; H) SE. Ab. F 90% (A; R; N; I, L) Other Am. M 89% (A; H; E; O; K) Scot. High M 89% (A; I; H; O; L; N) Hawaiian M 88% (A; I, L; H; O) Algonquin F 88% (A; O; N, M; H, E, W) Indian M 87% (A; R; N; H; I) Inca M 86% (A; U; C; I; P) Hungarian F 86% (A; I; N; R; L) Gaelic M 85% (A; N; C; E; I) Tahitian F 85% (A; T; E; I; R) Tongan M 85% (A; T; L; E; U, I) Kisii M 85% (A; O; I, M) Kisii F 85% (A; O, R; N; M, E) Other Am. F 84% (A; E; H; S; N; O) Yoruba M 84% (A; O; E; N; I, D) Chippewa F 83% (+N) (A, N; H, I; S, W) Assyrian M&F? 83% (A; H, I; S; U, R) Inuit M 83% (A; K; N, Q, L, S, O) Berber F 83% (A; T; I; E; N) S.E. Ab. M 83% (A; R; N; I; M) Navajo M 82% (A; I; H; S, T) To Observe 82% (A; E; R, I; S, N) Fante F 81% (A; I; B) Volcano 81% (A; N; L; U; I) Saturn 81% (+S) (A, S; N; R, T) Charm Person 80% (A; N; S, E; O) Icelandic F 80% (A; L; R, H; T) Nyakyusa M 80% (A; I; N, E; S) Shona M 80% (A; N, I; R, D) Apache M 80% (A; N; H; K, I; L) Tahitian M 80% (A; T; I; U; E) Yao F 80% (A; I; L; E; S) African/Oth. F 80% (A; N; I; M) Ngoni F 80% (+I) (A, I; N; T, E) Mask 80% (A; M; K; S; U) Plateau 80% (A; T; L; I, P)= Middle Earth 79% (A; E, I; M) Taboo 79% (A; T; U; B; I; M; O) Yoruba F 78% (A; O; E; I; L) Swahili F 78% (A; I; M; N; U) Canoe 78% (A; N; K; O) Maori M 77% (A; I; R; T; U) Chippewa M 77% (A; E, O; W; S, B, H, N) Armenian F 77% (A; I; R; N; O; E) Dragon 77% (A; R; D; N; K) Efe F 76% (A; T; E; I, O) Cherokee M 76% (A; E; H; T; N; U) Inuit F 75% (A; K; L; I; T, O, S) Armenian M 75% (A; R; N; S, H) Crow 74% (A; K; R; O; G) African/Oth. M 73% (A; I; N; O; M) Ibo M 72% (A; I, O; E; N) Witch 72% (A; I; R; E; O) Scot. Low F 71% (A; E; I; N; R, L) Scot. high fam. 71% (A; M, C; E; N; I, R) Swamp 71% (A; O; M; I; T, P, L) Sumerian M&F 70% (A; I; N; H; S) Balinise M&F? 70% (A; E; K, N) Ewe F 70% (A; I, O; M; U) Berber M 70% (A; E; I; U; M) Treasure 70% (A; N; R, S; T) Gaelic F 69% (A; I; E; N; H) Finnish F 69% (A; I; L; R; N; E) Samoan M 69% (A; L; U, I; E, F, S) NW Ab. M 69% (A; U; M; N, I) Zulu M 68% (A; I, N; M, E) Papuan F 68% (A; M; E, I; R, N) Etruscans M&F 68% (A; E; T; L; U) Curse 68% (A; L; K; O, N) Swim 68% (A; N; I; U; E) Dungeon 68% (A; N; I; E; O) Phoenician M 66% (A; R; I; S, H) Hebrew M 66% (A; E; I; H; N) Swahili M 66% (A; I; M; U; K, N) Ngoni M 66% (A; M; L; E, I, O, K, N) Xhosa M 66% (A; O, L; E, I) Zulu F 66% (+N) (A, N; H; E, I, O, L, T) Samoan F 65% (A; L; U, I; E, T) Cave 65% (A; O, G; U; H) Slave 65% (A; L; S; E; O) Plough 65% (A; L; U; G; O; H) Darkness 65% (A; I; N; R; T, E) Ewe M 64% (A; O, E; M; U) Ibo F 64% (+E) (A, E; I, N; O, U) A. Egyptian M 63% (A; E; N; H; U) Walls 63% (A; R; I; E; T, O) Papuan M 62% (A; O; N; I; E; K) Polish M 62% (A; N, E; R; I) Scot. Low M 62% (A; R; E; I; N, L) Mountain 61% (A; T, N; M; U) To Weave 61% (A; E; T; N; U) Tree 60% (A; R; O; E; T) Coast 60% (A; I; T; K, R; E) Hungarian M 58% (A; R; O; L; E) Road 57% (A; R; E; T; D) Island 57% (A; I; S; L; O) Eagle 57% (A; R; I; L; G) Finnish M 56% (A; O; I; E; R; T) Copper 55% (A; R; E; M) Oar 54% (A; E; O; R; I; S; U) Efe M 53% (A; B; I, O, U, M) Ring 53% (A; N; I; R; E; G) Honey 52% (A; M; I; N; E) Wheel 51% (A; R; O; L; K) Tibetan M&F? 50% (A; N; U; I; E) Spear 50% (A; I; N; O; T, H) Reed 48% (A; I; R; D; N) Mayan M&F? 46% (A; C; U; L, H) Fire! 46% (A; O; I; N, U; G, E) River 46% (A; I; E; N; R; O) Fante M 45% (+U) (A, U; E, O, F, K) Germanic M 43% (A; R; D; N; I; L) Germanic F 42% (A; R; D; I; L; N)

  • @saanjanibaar8085

    @saanjanibaar8085

    9 ай бұрын

    P is an East Asian haplogroup, even though it's decentdent haplogroup R found among present day indo-european speakers.

  • @robertmastnak581
    @robertmastnak581 Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting fakts. Thx

  • @betelgeusestudio_1369
    @betelgeusestudio_13693 жыл бұрын

    Great video ) Hyper_Borea is the forge of peoples! The Yamna culture looks like that forge.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @donrumata2274
    @donrumata22743 жыл бұрын

    In this land, the Donbass is located, where people have been melting metal for more than three thousand years. There are a lot of mounds, and ancient stone stelae. The black earth lands there are more than one meter thick. And a lot of coal, which lies almost on the surface. I think the archaeologists will be interested there. But there is a war as usual.

  • @Sol_Invictus777
    @Sol_Invictus7772 жыл бұрын

    I wonder what haplogroup I-Z58 was or did also it seems like over time the haplogroup changes? The number sequence changes

  • @amberlynnyates1295
    @amberlynnyates12952 жыл бұрын

    Good stuff.

  • @raccoonresident5760
    @raccoonresident57603 жыл бұрын

    Dan? In the beginning there was a photo of a bead and tooth necklace, and some tools? Are they needles and a hole punch for leather work?

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Could be.

  • @paulbourdon1236
    @paulbourdon12362 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant videos! Interesting (and horrifying) that the Eurasian steppe still being fought over.

  • @xxx041189xxx
    @xxx041189xxx2 жыл бұрын

    Is the H13 mtDNA also connected to the Yamnaya? I have that type far in the north-east (Estonia) and have a hard time connecting the possible dots in history here.

  • @ArchYeomans
    @ArchYeomans3 жыл бұрын

    The Yamnaya are derived from the Khvalynsk Culture and earlier Samara Cultures along the Volga River to the lower Ural Mountains. Horse scepters are found in the Khvalynsk Culture as well as rich horse burials. Although the Khvalynsk Culture did not domesticate the horse, it is likely the horse was revered as scepters, or staffs are signs of power. Horses have always been expensive and only the elite could afford to maintain them as well be trained to use them in warfare. Samara Culture has horse burials as well. Obviously, this would be a sign of respect or reverence for the animal versus just using it as a meat source. R1b is typical of Samara, Dneiper-Donets, Late Repin, or Khvalynsk Cultures. Interestingly, R1b is found in proto-Tocharian cultures farther to the east. R1a is predominantly found in Corded Ware Culture as well the back migration of Corded Ware to Arkaim-Sintashta Culture. I find it interesting that Nordic Mythology has a lot of similarities with Rig Veda or Hindu mythologies as well as R1a being more common in India and Iran than in Wales, Ireland, Scotland, Spain, France, and northern Italy. R1b is mostly found today with Bashkirs (near the homeland of R1b between the Volga and Ural Rivers) and Western Europe.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes indeed, comparative mythology has informed much of the series, as has the migrations of the steppe peoples. In book two we explore the Corded Ware people and at the end of the series a thousand years later we will go to the Sintashta, along with many other places. While my series has been based on the work of David Anthony - the Horse the Wheel and Language and the Samara Project - and others regarding the early date of horse riding, I recently read a book by Robert Drews called Militarism and the Indoeuropeanising of Europe where he interprets the same evidence as Anthony and Brown but comes to different conclusions. One of the main ones is he argues horse riding was not common until after the chariot was invented. It's all so radically different to everything else but it's interesting nonetheless. I've stuck with my warrior elites riding horses in 3000BC however.

  • @Steppe0371

    @Steppe0371

    3 жыл бұрын

    Aside from some Q1, I2, and R1a, all of the Khvalynsk results I've seen are some sort of R1b (xM269). That means, not M269 and certainly not Z2103 or L51. Then Yamnaya moves into the area and almost all of the males are Z2103. So Khvalynsk was wiped off by Yamnaya

  • @wanderluster9034

    @wanderluster9034

    2 жыл бұрын

    These people were a minority, who migrated or merged into the larger turkic groups who are the originator of horse back culture and warrior amazons.

  • @sadikahsan2492

    @sadikahsan2492

    Жыл бұрын

    Nordic mythology and hindu mythology are pretty much same if we see vedas but when the other hindu scriptures mentions the god they are pretty different. The hindu people ancestors actually came to india through migration. Their ancestor divide into two sect. One went iran and one into india. They were aryans. Aryans are also a part of yamnaya people.

  • @messianic_scam

    @messianic_scam

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sadikahsan2492 where did they got their name yamn from?! it's very hebrew very semitic very Arabic ben_yamn Benjamin

  • @BenSHammonds
    @BenSHammonds9 ай бұрын

    Dan what are your thoughts on the Cimmerian people, some of which went into Anatolia etc. but what is your thought of some of these folk, in their migrations westward coming into contact with and comingling with the Halstatt culture, or proto-Celt, perhaps the mixing of these cultures developed into what we commonly think of as Celt, with chariot and horse use. The research into Y haplogroups is a fascinating thing, my own is G2a, EEF or Anatolian farmer not unlike Otzi, my paternal line "Hamman" came from upper Rhine region to the colonies here in America in 1740s, so that westward migration was still apparent, and is a fascinating study in and of itself.

  • @chickenassasintk
    @chickenassasintk2 жыл бұрын

    OUR GREAT ANCESTORS. I love them

  • @thearyamehrrf6886
    @thearyamehrrf6886 Жыл бұрын

    Dan, this video proves you’re not a whacko. THANK GOD. This channel is PRECIOUS! LOVE YOUR CONTENT! KEEP UP THE GOOD FIGHT FOR OUR HUMAN FAMILY!

  • @chickenmaster66
    @chickenmaster66 Жыл бұрын

    1:06 thank you I heard about them before. But it was killing me where I heard about them. They were Proto Indo-European or may have been. It’s also amazing to think about a group of people before indo Europeans.

  • @dcuano3074
    @dcuano3074 Жыл бұрын

    You had mentioned that yamnaya introduced chariots and carts to India and further east. But both bullock carts( possibly non horse driven chariot) were already part of Harappan culture.

  • @Tenisinspector8341

    @Tenisinspector8341

    Жыл бұрын

    @@descendedofrigvedicclans2216 why will KZread delete your comment? Go ahead post your link, I would really love to read it. The only evidence of a chariot was found in Sinauli in UP, but it wasn’t a spoked wheel one.

  • @Sonieta03.
    @Sonieta03.Ай бұрын

    This is very interesting

  • @briananderson2219
    @briananderson22192 жыл бұрын

    Dammit, I have watched to many of your videos and now to go buy your books. If your videos are any representation of your style of delivery in your literature, they are going to kick ass. Thanx

  • @maxmatthews2463
    @maxmatthews24633 жыл бұрын

    So many comments confusing linguistics and archeology. Cool vid.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @ThursonJames
    @ThursonJames2 жыл бұрын

    4:24 does anyone know why #4 says “‘Yamnaya’ Beakers reach Iberia” while pointing to Calais?

  • @TheAIishere
    @TheAIishere3 жыл бұрын

    You mention the kurgans, corded ware people, or battle axe people... Are they related? As for whether they came as raiders is more than the absence of artifacts of locals after their arrival, it is the sudden construction of hill forts across europe at the same time that their artifacts become present. That would indicate to me that they were much more war like than the local europeans at that time.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    The Yamnaya are possibly ancestral to the Corded Ware. Or the Sredny Stog people are ancestral to both, it's not completely clear yet. And the Corded Ware have local variants like the Single Grave culture and the Battle Axe culture. The timescales of the fortifications don't always line up with the probable dates of expansion in all areas. Personally I think it's likely the steppe herders did impose themselves on the settled peoples through raids - watch my vid on the Koryos where I talk about the process. But archeologist Robert Drews thinks the military dominance only emerged later, and the steppe dominated through economic competition only. Drews studies military prehistory so he's not a shrinking violet type. I think there were a range of interactions but mostly it was through raiding activities.

  • @jackbroughton1431
    @jackbroughton14313 жыл бұрын

    Very nice video, maybe you could do one on Steppe Maykop and Vonyuchka/Progress, or perhaps Fatyanovo-Balanovo, and their replacement of the Volosovo and Lyalovo cultures, located in present day European Russia? One of the Volosovo samples (BER001) had Y-DNA haplogroup Q1b-L54>pre-L804. This probably explains why Q1 is widespread throughout Europe (though at very low levels), it was originally an EHG lineage spread by the Indo-Europeans, like R1b-M269, R1b-V1636, R1a-M198, J1a-Y136727, and I2a-L701. Q1a-M25/Q1a-M25>YP1669 and Q1a-F746* were discovered in males from Eneolithic Khvalynsk, while Q1b-Y2700* was found in a Mesolithic male from present day Latvia. And lastly, Q1b-Z5902>FT380500 appeared in three Afanasievo males and one early Bohemia Corded Ware male.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, I appreciate it. Sounds like you know more about this than I do but actually I will make a video about the Maykop because my story the Wolf God takes place when men of the steppe go south into the Caucasus in about 3000 BC. It's a fantasy story but that's when it's set. I might also make a video on the Sredny Stog and the possible early migrations into Europe that start forming the Corded Ware. And yeah for sure I will be making videos on the Fatyanovo and the later migrations east across the steppe because that's where the book series will end up. But that won't be for quite a while yet.

  • @jackbroughton1431

    @jackbroughton1431

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory Very cool, I wish you all the best with your work, this is the stuff books, movies, and video games should be made about. This is how strong societies raise their young people, with the adventurous tales of their ancestors. We need more 21st century Byrons, Kiplings, and Robert E. Howards, authors such as yourself.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's very kind of you, thank you.

  • @rodburket4582

    @rodburket4582

    Жыл бұрын

    I am R1b-M269. I would be interested in other information you have on this group.

  • @anishtiwari6197
    @anishtiwari61973 жыл бұрын

    This is brilliant. Thanks for this. If you could recommend some readings on the yamnaya people. I am particularly interested in their influence of Vedic culture in India.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. I would recommend The Horse the Wheel and Language by David Anthony, I believe the link is in the description. But how much direct influence the Yamnaya had on the Vedic culture is debatable, there's a long time between the two and it may have been a closely related so-called sister group that was directly ancestral to the Vedic culture. But certainly the complex milieu of the steppe cultures in the Bronze Age led to a series of eastern migrations and the Vedic culture.

  • @betelgeusestudio_1369

    @betelgeusestudio_1369

    3 жыл бұрын

    The Yamna people-R1b is the personified Vritra. The Battle Axe people-R1a is Indra. The Indra people pushed R1b people mostly westwards. It's the Rigvedic context of the case, I think

  • @MaureenLycaon

    @MaureenLycaon

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'd also recommend David Reich's "Who We Are and How We Got Here", to check out the paleogenomics of the spread of Yamnaya genes.

  • @greaterbharat4175

    @greaterbharat4175

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@betelgeusestudio_1369 yep people don't understand that their was great war between them , and vedic culture never influenced from yamanaya , from rigveda era term asur and danav is used for Anti devta ( vedic gods ) , asur is aesir and danav belong to danu ( Danube/ don river )

  • @greaterbharat4175

    @greaterbharat4175

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@betelgeusestudio_1369 as winners written history , we are the only people recorded this history , even the term srbinda ( srbenda/Srija) mean deafeater in rigveda ( but term proudly used by Serbians ) it is more likely vedic people influenced the north asia and European culture not yamanaya

  • @BronzeAgeSwords
    @BronzeAgeSwords3 жыл бұрын

    i enjoyed that thank you

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching.

  • @wrestlingnewzealand6850
    @wrestlingnewzealand68503 жыл бұрын

    yep it is reality some people hate to admit

  • @nagihangot6133

    @nagihangot6133

    2 жыл бұрын

    Actually Europeans claim it as their own a whole lot more than native americans claim being conquistadors.

  • @SithStudy

    @SithStudy

    11 ай бұрын

    @@nagihangot6133 The Yamnaya themselves descend from eastern European hunter gather stock... so yeah, they were also Europeans much like the people west of them whom they invaded.

  • @annamosier1950
    @annamosier1950 Жыл бұрын

    wow good

  • @padraigmcgrath3876
    @padraigmcgrath38762 жыл бұрын

    I remember seeing something before which maintained that, while the Yamnaya bred and ate horses, and definitely used wagons, they didn't fully domesticate large numbers of horses, as in the Yamnaya culture, horses were used more for food than for transport, and that the use of horses in warfare was only in its embryonic stage. Is this correct? Apparently, all the words related to wagons and wheels in other neighbouring Eurasian languages are cognates after the Yamnaya period, which is the strongest evidence that the Yamnaya are the originators of the PIE language.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    2 жыл бұрын

    Have you seen the horse domestication video on this channel? kzread.info/dash/bejne/c4F809JpfZO6ZLQ.html There is another argument that it was the Maykop who developed wagons and who originated the PIE language. I don't think it's right but it might be.

  • @padraigmcgrath3876

    @padraigmcgrath3876

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory Thanks for the link, Dan. Will watch....

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo574 ай бұрын

    Would love to see how they lived.

  • @Dalmenco
    @Dalmenco3 жыл бұрын

    Do a video of the Proto Semites?

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'm interested in the topic but I don't know anything about it I'm afraid. I will learn eventually so maybe one day.

  • @messianic_scam

    @messianic_scam

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory yamnya were semitic I have the prove by the semitc were white race didn't these people came from ukraine and Russia?! then why the ancient towns there have semitic names?! oman in ukraine?! teman?! also there is ancient town in russia tyman = teman ironically there is river there called torah!! ancient semitic existence in Russia is uncanny

  • @larrywave
    @larrywave2 жыл бұрын

    What Amaranth was cultivated ?

  • @raccoonresident5760
    @raccoonresident57603 жыл бұрын

    Ok ! Evenin Britain! Everyone Mosh Yamna! Rock out!

  • @CD-vg4hl
    @CD-vg4hl2 жыл бұрын

    Where the does the haplogroup R2 come from?

  • @jonathanhensley6141
    @jonathanhensley6141 Жыл бұрын

    Dna testing shows the yamnaya and Iranian nomads traveled to Southern India and eventually mixed with the South East Asians. They traveled far and wide. I also read how they came Into Europe removing the Neolithic farmers and taking the women as wives which gave way each new culture that followed them.

  • @jackholloway1
    @jackholloway13 жыл бұрын

    Heavy dairy diet + lack of lactase persistence, can't have been a pleasant combination lol

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ha yeah, well you're okay to eat butter and cheese and you can drink milk anyway even if you can't digest the sugars, there's still protein and fat available for nutrients and calories. Not all lactose intolerance is to the same degree. You can be lactose intolerant and yet not have any symptoms or you can be someone who gets terrible guts after a glass of milk. It seems as though milk was important to them culturally so it's likely they could still drink it without getting unwell. The main reason I bring it up here is because I've seen theories that the Yamnaya developed lactase persistence and that's one reason they were successful and that's why European people have it today. But newer research shows that it wasn't that common this early and it developed later, maybe in the Corded Ware culture or even later than that.

  • @Thulesmann

    @Thulesmann

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory Also you can drink kefir if you're lactose intolerant.

  • @seaxofbeleg8082

    @seaxofbeleg8082

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory 23andMe predicts that both my mother and I test for lactose intolerance with a high degree of probability. And we are both okay with consuming dairy products.

  • @XortiXz

    @XortiXz

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@seaxofbeleg8082 yeah but those tests are not always accurate either

  • @paulohagan3309

    @paulohagan3309

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@ben morton Can modern immune systems handle raw milk? Party time for brucellosis maybe ...

  • @sun27g
    @sun27g2 жыл бұрын

    Hi …Can you shed some light on Yaghnobi people and their culture…thanks 🙏🏼

  • @manh9105
    @manh9105 Жыл бұрын

    how did you make this inference of "Bronze Age archaeological culture of the Pontic steppe" when researchers are yet to arrive at any conclusion.

  • @jessikamoore5033
    @jessikamoore50333 жыл бұрын

    Just found out I have Yamnaya dna!

  • @MarcosElMalo2
    @MarcosElMalo22 жыл бұрын

    I’ve been loving your channel and your sharing of your research into the Bronze Age. Thank you so much! I do have an off topic question for you before I sign up for your email list. What do you do with the email addresses you collect? I’ve given out my email address in the past, only to find that my address is getting sold. I unsubscribe from all the unwanted spam, and I get even more from companies I’ve never heard of. Thanks!

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, glad you're enjoying the channel. I'd never sell anyone's email address. I email about new book releases, new editions, and sometimes sales and discounts. Usually it's less than one email per month but rarely schedules coincide so it's perhaps up to two in a month.

  • @thefisherking78
    @thefisherking783 жыл бұрын

    That antelope face though 😳

  • @crypticreality8484
    @crypticreality8484 Жыл бұрын

    48% Farmer, 40% Hunter Gatherer, 12% Metal Age Invader Y DNA: R1b P312 MTDNA: K1a1b

  • @user-pt3ur9uh4c
    @user-pt3ur9uh4c2 жыл бұрын

    u should have put recent facial reconstruction of yamana people

  • @josephmalenab7866
    @josephmalenab78663 жыл бұрын

    hi in the usa where can I get your books ?

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hi Joseph. Here is a link to Godborn on Amazon: www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08BJD2CGQ/

  • @dreddykrugernew
    @dreddykrugernew2 жыл бұрын

    Can you do a video on the Cro Magnons and The Book of Enoch and the Nephilim and how the Cro Magnons had no Neanderthal DNA despite living in Europe for at least 30,000 years and is the story of the Nephilim talking about the interactions between these 2 very different people at the end of the Pleistocene. We dont know where they came from, how they evolved into who they where and very little is published about them, they seem to be glossed over with no one really doing a deep dive into what these people where about and ultimately what happened to them. Also are they being talked about by Plato when describing Atlantis as the story of the Nephilim and the people of Atlantis seem to be very similar, they where looked upon as gods who fornicated with man which ultimately led to their demise, how is it possible for them to have no interaction for 30,000 years with people with Neanderthal DNA id love to hear a theory of how this can be explained...

  • @Connor6569

    @Connor6569

    9 ай бұрын

    They didn't like manlets

  • @copperhead3703
    @copperhead37032 жыл бұрын

    When your raiding on horseback and they hit you with that dollar store defense

  • @human8454
    @human84542 жыл бұрын

    The collision of these two populations was not a friendly one, not an equal one, but one where the males from outside were displacing local males and did so almost completely,” Reich told New Scientist Live in September. This supports Kristiansen’s view of the Yamnaya and their descendants as an almost unimaginably violent people. Indeed, he is about to publish a paper in which he argues that they were responsible for the genocide of Neolithic Europe’s men. “It’s the only way to explain that no male Neolithic lines survived,”

  • @antinoofromgreece6560
    @antinoofromgreece65603 жыл бұрын

    Interesting. It is a very useful video, the most complete and summarized that I've found. So, Yamnaya people probably assimilated the pre Indo European people but I'm trying to answer a question. Were the pre Indo European people assimilated into some lower class? Because some researchers claims that they formed the elite power in Europe during many centuries, but as I know most of them were male that migrated into Europe and intermingled, so they didn't exclude the ancient farmers, it was completely the opposite.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah it's a great question. They had children with the local women and inheritance was patrilineal. This society also had slaves and was hierarchical. But to what extent was it an ethnic distinction between the ruling class and everyone else? I don't know if it has been studied in the genetics. What is seen in later times is that farmstead grave sites feature a continuous line of father to son descent over generations, women coming from elsewhere every generation to be their wives, and separate burials of lower status non-family members - the servant and slave class. I would love to see genetic analyses of these on ethnic grounds, I don't know if it's been done. I would guess the entire society was of mixed ancestry, though I don't know.

  • @Yourbrother05
    @Yourbrother05Ай бұрын

    Are there any skeleton found in that region to verify such people existed or is this just hypothetical culture?

  • @kweejibodali7009
    @kweejibodali70093 жыл бұрын

    dear Dan, thank you for the concise informative documentary delivered in a pleasant voice.. I am coming across the Yamnaya in a lot of historical docs, in different videos, one featuring ancestors of indo europeans and one searching for basque ancestors, which is confusing to me as the basque were not supposed to be indo european, maybe different off shoots of yamnaya ancestors ? at any rate, since, there not a lot of seafarers quite that early, it makes sense that european ancestors moved quickly by horseback. at any rate, i will look out for more of your vids, that was great.

  • @xen4886

    @xen4886

    2 жыл бұрын

    I don't think they have the Basque puzzle figured out yet. It might be the last surviving original Iberian language...but then again, where did that original language come from. There are topographical indicators that seems to show some sort of movement from the south because there are some toponyms that resemble Basque. Interestingly, to indicate you are from somewhere in Basque, you add the suffix -ko to the place: Donostiarrako...from San Sebastian. Apparently, the same occurs in the Georgian language from the Caucasus. Too specific to be a coincidence. Think of the late Soviet leader ChernenKO...its semantics might have been altered a bit, but the idea is the same: To be from or of something. Food for thought.

  • @MaureenLycaon

    @MaureenLycaon

    2 жыл бұрын

    The Basques are an interesting case. Their language is not Indo-European, of course. So paleogenomists fully expected that their genetics would be entirely European First Farmers, with no Yamnaya admixture. They were wrong. We now know that -- like everybody else in Europe -- the Basques have quite a bit of Yamnayan ancestry. Their best guess is that Basques somehow preserved their language even as they lost their distinct genetics. Part of the reason might be that Basque culture is partly matriarchal -- property (and maybe language?) is inherited through the mother, not the father. There's a research paper, "Evolution: On the origin of Basques", that tells about this discovery.

  • @sharonhoerr6523
    @sharonhoerr65232 жыл бұрын

    Can we appreciate the irony of the nonliterate Yamnaya spreading their Indo-European language nearly 5,000 to 6,000 miles from west to east just because they had horses and wheels? Even the Uighurs in northwestern china are related as are all Europeans. They tended to wipeout the Neolithic male DNA wherever they went.

  • @azizyigido

    @azizyigido

    Жыл бұрын

    R and Q is Siberian Altaic Turkic dna😂R1A and R1B is not pure european s blood,Altaic mixed 🤣Uyghur Turkic are Q haplogoup,like Native american amazonian people,tocharian are Turkic(Uyghur)mixed🔊

  • @hakimus
    @hakimus2 жыл бұрын

    Dear Dan, Do you believe the celts from Galitza in Ukraine (Halych), who migrated to modern day Turquia and Iberic peninsula )where there are also regions named Galicia), were direct descendans from Yammnaya?

  • @cherifaitaddi9371
    @cherifaitaddi93713 жыл бұрын

    Que signifie Yamnaya en leur langue ?.. Quels sont leurs rapports avec les Scythes Sarmates , massagétes ? transmissions .. de nombreuses questions

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yamnaya doesn't mean anything in their language, it's the name given to the archeological culture by Russian archeologists. We don't know for sure what they called themselves. As for the later cultures of the Iron Age, it's pretty complicated! The culture and ethnicity of these later groups changed over time as they continued to interact with the peoples beyond the steppe in complex ways.

  • @cherifaitaddi9371

    @cherifaitaddi9371

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory les habits , les chars de parades et de transports correspondent à ceux des bérbères du nord Ouest de l'Afrique ainsi qu'une certaine morphologie leur départ d'Afrique du Nord , puis leur retour par l' IBérie , et la mer rouge est propable ... chronologie ( ? )

  • @pandoraeeris7860
    @pandoraeeris78606 ай бұрын

    I've decided when people ask me where I'm from, I'm going to answer, "Yamnaya".

  • @user-p6-3561
    @user-p6-356110 ай бұрын

    2:58 insane skull. they did something right

  • @oneshot2028
    @oneshot20282 жыл бұрын

    Yamnaya looked more European according to Survive the Jive.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    2 жыл бұрын

    More European than what?

  • @nagihangot6133

    @nagihangot6133

    2 жыл бұрын

    His racialist ilk claim everything in history as "European". Don't believe the hype or the neo-nazis.

  • @oneshot2028

    @oneshot2028

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory Like more European looking than say Turkic looking.

  • @greaterbharat4175

    @greaterbharat4175

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@oneshot2028 well morden day research ( happened in 2019 ) says that yamanaya may had being wiped out Neolithic male population and they mix wiyh Neolithic woman and man were yamanaya

  • @greaterbharat4175

    @greaterbharat4175

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@oneshot2028 so morden day European facial features is mix of those two Ethnicity , yamanaya did not looked like morden European ( atleast pure yamanaya )

  • @franzreiche5433
    @franzreiche54332 жыл бұрын

    I-1 also comes from the Yamnaya expansion in case anyone was fretting haha

  • @alicelund147
    @alicelund1473 жыл бұрын

    I don't think they where the first to live on the plains, but the first to have herds of horses and other domestic animals that needed to travel to new grazing areas all the time. Because of that they need wagons and horses, hunter gatherers could live there without that.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah I'm just repeating what David Anthony says. As I understand it, there's no water sources on the plains for people to live there and the wagons allowed them to carry water out of the valleys in pots and skins in enough quantity to make it viable.

  • @alicelund147

    @alicelund147

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory Thanks for the answer. Southern Ukraine/Southern Russian is not like that, it has water everywhere. And the Yamnaya are basically "Eastern Hunter Gatherers" (Genetically) from the Ice Age that where always there before they had horses and wagons. They always lived there they just learned how to domesticate horses and build wagons ("Just", of course it was revolutionary at the time). That is why they had a robust built; they where almost Cro Magnon-people.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    You can watch my video on the Pitted Ware where I talk about some of this. The EHG were a Mesolithic population descended largely from the Ancient North Eurasians of the Upper Paleolithic. The EHG were on average 10cm taller than Western Hunter Gatherers but they were slightly built. The EHG of the Mesolithic lived in the valleys utilising the dense resources there

  • @ZuMi_WaLt

    @ZuMi_WaLt

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@alicelund147 Yamnaya people only 45-50% (maximum 60%) consisted of EHG. Almost half of their genome was of CHG origin...

  • @reuvenpolonskiy2544
    @reuvenpolonskiy25446 ай бұрын

    Nation of gigachads

  • @eddycoronado8381
    @eddycoronado83812 жыл бұрын

    👍

  • @14HristoYavuzov88
    @14HristoYavuzov882 жыл бұрын

    Our Forebears...

  • @nagihangot6133

    @nagihangot6133

    2 жыл бұрын

    Your ancestor's reiy-pist and slave-master 😂😂😂😂 Proud of that?

  • @dekenlst

    @dekenlst

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nagihangot6133 Yes. Very proud 💪 😊

  • @raa4975

    @raa4975

    Жыл бұрын

    ​​@@nagihangot6133 you're ancestors were losers and victims are you proud of that? 😂😂😂😂

  • @marcopony1897
    @marcopony18972 жыл бұрын

    So what way was ist exactly? I've read ancient north eurasians (ANE) splitt off from WHG 22'000 years ago. At some point, ANE moved westward from siberia, thereby absorbing WHG's. And this intermixing between ANE and WHG created EHG, right? But another study suggested that WHG are a mix of EHG and the upper paleolithic people of europe. So how can WHG be partially ancestral to EHG, while the other study is saying EHG is partially ancestral to WHG? And how are the caucasus hunter & gatherers (CHG) related to ANE, WHG and EHG? I've read they were close to the iranic / armenian-like branch of farmers or hunter & gatherers, which were genetically distinct from the anatolian and levantine group, to whom the early european farmers belonged to.

  • @memyselfi0120

    @memyselfi0120

    2 жыл бұрын

    If you read into the less publicized details of Kurgan Hypothesis, you'll find on Google a paper by Russian geneticists showing explicitly that the Yamnaya (who bleloneg to hg R1b1a2a2) and could not actually be ancestral to the Corded-Ware (who belonged to R1a1 and i2a), yet this was very premise from which the theory was initially derived. Essentially it's been proven wrong. The paper also states that the Yamnaya were up to %50 Caucasian hunter-gatherer descent (hg J), a genetic signature that shows up nowhere in modern Europeans, yet it should. Beyond that, hg R1b1a2a2 branched from hg r1b1a some 8-10 thousand years ago, much to early, and is its descendent. It implies that the "Yamnaya " descended, partially that is, from an eastward migration of Mesolithic foragers.

  • @marcopony1897

    @marcopony1897

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@memyselfi0120 interesting. So what's your theory?

  • @memyselfi0120

    @memyselfi0120

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@marcopony1897 My theory is that supporters of Kurgan Hypothesis have a racially motivated agenda they're trying to push. Theory aside however, i think the real evidence clearly shows that the Indo-European language family originated in the northern reaches of the Near East. But contrary to "Anatolian hypothesis", in reality there was probably multiple pulses of emigration and cultural diffusion from the region

  • @kactus_3008
    @kactus_30083 жыл бұрын

    In my country was a more complex situation. First of all, Yamnaia people met probably the most advanced eneolithic and chalcolithic civilization in Europe ever. They mixed with the locals, nevertheless, but, curiously enough, they seemed to prefere the high tops of the plains and hills where they practice, till the present days, transhumance...

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Check out my video on the Cucuteni-Trypillia culture. I will make another focusing on just the interactions between these groups around the end of that period as it's very interesting.

  • @kactus_3008

    @kactus_3008

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory I will, keep up this tedious work!👏👍

  • @theisheep2676

    @theisheep2676

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lol. Yamnaya were not a civilisation, they were a tribal culture

  • @kactus_3008

    @kactus_3008

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@theisheep2676 "Yamnaya Horizon, Yamna culture, Pit Grave culture or Ochre Grave culture, ..."

  • @azzking9305
    @azzking93053 жыл бұрын

    Sounds a whole lot like how the nomads of Mongolia live today

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah once the "riddle of the steppe" was solved that basic technological and cultural solution continued in all subsequent peoples. There is a direct cultural and technological continuity between the Yamnaya and the Mongols even though there isn't much of a genetic one.

  • @azzking9305

    @azzking9305

    3 жыл бұрын

    Dan Davis Author That must explain why despite the consumption of dairy products in Mongolia being extraordinarily high, over 95 percent of Mongolians are lactose intolerant.

  • @s66s46

    @s66s46

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory but they arent connected right? They were fighting in Asia. The mongols made the scythians for example (indo europeans) extinct.

  • @polatism1

    @polatism1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@s66s46 The Mongols destroyed it lol. The Turks destroyed the Sogdians and other Iranian peoples.

  • @johanisnotagamer
    @johanisnotagamer Жыл бұрын

    This narrator sounds exactly like me. Not even kidding.

  • @williamliamsmith4923
    @williamliamsmith49233 жыл бұрын

    Have they actually found any bronze artifacts in Yamnaya period? Would love references if anyone has come across it. Thanks.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    "At times the [Yamnaya] body was accompanied by a few gifts: a ceramic pot with a round bottom, or a sherd of such a pot; bone Y-shaped objects symbolizing the head of a bull; copper or *bronze* daggers or awls; flint flake tools; and occasional small ornaments of shell, silver, or copper " www.academia.edu/3836804/An_Indo_Iranian_Symbol_of_Power_in_the_Earliest_Steppe_Kurgans

  • @williamliamsmith4923

    @williamliamsmith4923

    3 жыл бұрын

    Dan Davis Author, Thanks. The paper you reference does not actually say the “vajra” or staff was made out of bronze. Another paper mentions many objects in table 1 and all are almost pure copper (not enough tin or arsenic to count as bronze) www.researchgate.net/publication/327205775_Yamnaya_Culture_Hoard_of_Metal_Objects_Ivanivka_Lower_Murafa_Autogenesis_of_'Dniester_CopperBronze_Metallurgy' So, although everyone says Yamnaya hare Bronze Age people, I wonder if there is any proof that they had access to Bronze. My questions are “is there actual bronze artifact in any grave?” And if so “what is it dates to - based on carbon date of organic matter in that particular grave”

  • @williamliamsmith4923

    @williamliamsmith4923

    3 жыл бұрын

    Dan Davis Author, I guess I am looking for a more definitive assertion such as “a dagger found in grave z was made of bronze (preferably with details such as) with x% tin or arsenic and y% copper” ... “the grave was from 3200 +/- 60 BCE” etc

  • @williamliamsmith4923

    @williamliamsmith4923

    3 жыл бұрын

    Dan Davis Author, In this paper we see specific mention of bronze artifacts and c14 derived dates, but the artifacts are from around 1500 BCE (much later than initial Yamnaya spread) citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.883.9486&rep=rep1&type=pdf

  • @williamliamsmith4923

    @williamliamsmith4923

    3 жыл бұрын

    Dan Davis Author, I found this on encyclopedia.org but no references: Huge kurgans were built over stonelined grave chambers containing fabulous gifts. Among the items were huge cauldrons (up to 70 liters) made of arsenical bronze, vases of sheet gold and silver decorated with scenes of animal processions and a goat mounting a tree of life, silver rods with cast silver and gold bull figurines, arsenical bronze axes and daggers, and hundreds of ornaments of gold, turquoise, and carnelian. www.encyclopedia.com/humanities/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/bronze-age-herders-eurasian-steppes

  • @lusolad
    @lusolad8 ай бұрын

    So modern Portuguese are descendants of these guys?