Front cover image for Blood of the Isles : exploring the genetic routes of our tribal history

Blood of the Isles : exploring the genetic routes of our tribal history

"In 54 B.C. Julius Caesar launched the Roman invasion of Britain. His was the first detailed account of the Celtic tribes that inhabited the Isles. But where had they come from and how long had they been there? When the Romans eventually left five hundred years later, they were succeeded by Anglo-Saxons, Vikings and Normans. Did these successive invasions obliterate the genetic legacy of the Celts, or did they have very little effect? After two decades tracing the genetic origins of peoples from all over the world, Bryan Sykes has now turned the spotlight on his own back yard. In a major research programme, the first of its kind, he and his team at Oxford University set out to test the DNA of over ten thousand volunteers from across Britain and Ireland with the specific aim of answering this very question: what is our modern genetic make-up and what does it tell us of our tribal past? Where are today's Celtic genes? Did Vikings only rape and pillage, or did they settle with their families? And what of the genetic legacy of the Saxons and the Normans? Are the modern people of the Isles a delicious genetic cocktail? Or did the invaders keep mostly to themselves, forming separate genetic layers within the Isles? And where do you fit in?"--BOOK JACKET
Print Book, English, 2006
Bantam Press, London [England], 2006
Genealogy
306 pages, [16] pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps ; 25 cm.
9780593056530, 9780593056523, 0593056531, 0593056523
1057581503
Includes index
Published in New York as: Saxons, Vikings, and Celts : the genetic roots of Britain and Ireland, W.W. Norton, 2006