Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ItaliansItalians - Wikipedia

    Italians ( Italian: italiani, Italian: [itaˈljaːni]) are a nation and ethnic group native to the Italian geographical region. [47] Italians share a common core of culture, history, ancestry, and often the usage of Italian language or regional Italian languages .

  2. Gian Maria Volonté (1933–1994), actor. Known outside of Italy for his roles in A Fistful of Dollars (1964) and For a Few Dollars More (1965) Luca Zingaretti (born 1961), actor and film director, known for playing Salvo Montalbano in the Inspector Montalbano series. Marta Abba (1900–1988) actress.

    • Overview
    • Historical Populations of Italy
    • Y-DNA Genetic Diversity
    • Y-DNA Introduced by Historical Immigration
    • Genetic Composition of Italian mtDNA
    • Autosomal
    • See Also
    • Further Reading

    Latin samples from Latium in the Iron Age and early Roman Republican period were generally found to genetically cluster closest to modern Northern and Central Italians (four out of six were closest to Northern and Central Italians, while the other two were closest to Southern Italians). DNA analysis demonstrates that ancient Greek colonization had ...

    Modern humans appeared during the Upper Paleolithic. Specimens of Aurignacian age were discovered in the cave of Fumane and date back about 34,000 years. During the Magdalenian period, the first humans from the Pyrenees populated Sardinia. During the Neolithic period, farming was introduced by people from the east and the first villages were built....

    Many Italians, especially in Northern Italy and Central Italy, belong to Haplogroup R1b, common in Western and Central Europe. The highest frequency of R1b is found in Garfagnana (76.2%) in Tuscany and in the Bergamo Valleys (80.8%) in Lombardy. This percentage lowers in the south of Italy in Calabria (33.2%). On the other hand 39% of the Sardinian...

    In two villages in Lazio and Abruzzo (Cappadocia and Vallepietra), I1 is the most common Y-DNA, recorded at levels 35% and 28%. In Sicily, further migrations from the Vandals and Saracens have only slightly affected the ethnic composition of the Sicilian people. However, specifically Greekgenetic legacy is estimated at 37% in Sicily. The Norman con...

    In Italy as elsewhere in Europe the majority of mtDNA lineages belong to the haplogroup H. Several independent studies conclude that haplogroup H probably evolved in West Asia c. 25,000 years ago. It was carried to Europe by migrations c. 20–25,000 years ago, and spread with population of the southwest of the continent. Its arrival was roughly cont...

    Wade et al. (2008) determined that Italy is one of the last two remaining genetic islands in Europe, the other being Finland. This is due in part to the presence of the Alpine mountain chain which, over the centuries, has prevented large migration flows. Recent genome-wide studies have been able to detect and quantify admixture like never before. L...

    Saupe, Tina et al. "Ancient genomes reveal structural shifts after the arrival of Steppe-related ancestry in the Italian Peninsula". In: Current Biology Volume 31, Issue 12, 21 June 2021, Pages 257...

  3. Ethnic groups. ancient Italic peoples. Distribution of peoples of ancient Italy c. 500 bce. Italians cannot be typified by any one physical characteristic, a fact that may be explained by the past domination of parts of the peninsula by different peoples.

  4. Italians (Italian: italiani Italian pronunciation: [itaˈljaːni]) are a Romance ethnic group native to the Italian peninsula. Italians have a common culture , history , ancestry and language . [6] [7]

  5. This category has the following 47 subcategories, out of 47 total. People by organization in Italy ‎ (7 C) Italian people by ethnic or national origin ‎ (41 C) Italian people by legal status ‎ (4 C) Italian people by location ‎ (10 C) Italian people by occupation ‎ (72 C) Italian people by period ‎ (11 C)

  6. The Italic peoples were an ethnolinguistic group identified by their use of Italic languages, a branch of the Indo-European language family. The Italic peoples are descended from the Urnfield and Tumulus culture, Indo-European speaking peoples who inhabited Italy from at least the second millennium BC onwards. [1]