Bland County Historical Society
The Genealogical Corner
CORNER SHOT from Roanoke Times (5/21/13) by - Hilbert Campbell, a
reader in Christiansburg
Like a great many other people, I am interested in family genealogy.
I have not, as some people do, gone to the lengths of visiting
churchyards or town halls in England or Germany, but I have spent a good
deal of time with historical records, including Census records, in an
attempt to identify as many of my ancestors as possible, including at
least three who fought with Confederate regiments in the Civil War and
at least three who fought in the American Revolution.
When my granddaughter married a couple of years ago, my wedding present
to her was a framed family tree, with pictures, going back to her
great-great grandparents.
But I have also learned that what most of us can hope to do in
identifying our ancestors can amount to only a miniscule fraction of the
real numbers.
Consider this: A mere 10 generations back, any individual has, in that
10th generation alone, 1,024 direct ancestors. And when you include the
additional 1,022 individuals who are your direct ancestors in the more
recent first through ninth generations back, the total is 2,046 direct
ancestors just in the last 250 years or so alone.
This total might be reduced a little depending on whether some first or
second cousins married each other somewhere along your line; but the
total - and the thought - is still somewhat staggering. And go further
back to a mere 500 or 600 years ago, and the total number of your direct
ancestors begins to be counted in the millions.
Perhaps, then, before getting too worked up over our pedigrees, we ought
to reflect that, if we go back a few generations, they probably look a
lot like everybody else's.
Poem: Who Am I?
From ancestralfindings.com - Are We All Royalty?
It is nice to think that there may be some royalty in our family trees.
It makes for an interesting conversation topic with friends and family.
It also makes us feel special to know we have ancestors who were kings
and queens… carrying that DNA isn’t something just anyone can boast of.
Or, is it? While only a very small percentage of us may be able to prove
royal ancestry with paperwork (or, in even fewer cases, DNA testing),
mathematicians have produced a pretty good model that practically proves
we all have to be descended from royalty, whether we can prove it on
paper or not. Somewhere, in the deep depths of your family tree, are the
great and well-known leaders of the Medieval and/or ancient world.
How is this possible? It takes a little explaining, but once you
understand the basics of it, it does make sense. Scientists are now
saying virtually everyone with European ancestry is descended from the
great 800 AD-era ruler, Charlemagne. And, almost everyone with Asian
ancestry can claim descent from Genghis Khan. Go back even further, and
most people on the planet, except possibly Native Americans and
Aboriginal Australians, can claim descent from ancient Egyptian royalty
like Nefertiti or Rameses III.
You see, there is a paradox in genealogy, and mathematicians look at
this paradox as a puzzle to be solved. The paradox is one of numbers.
You start with you on a family tree chart; as you go back, each
generation doubles in numbers, from your two parents to your four
grandparents, eight great-grandparents, 16 great-great-grandparents, 32
great-great-great grandparents, and more. By the time you reach
Charlemagne, that famous guy who united the Frankish kingdoms into one
united France, you should have more than a trillion ancestors on your
family tree.
Only, that’s not possible. A trillion people is more than were living on
Earth at the time of Charlemagne. It’s more than are here now. If you
added up all the humans who have roamed the Earth since we came out of
caves about ten thousand years ago at the end of the last great Ice Age,
you still probably wouldn’t have a trillion people. So, even though you
SHOULD have more than a trillion ancestors on your family tree by the
time you reach Charlemagne’s time in the 800 A.D.’s, you DON’T. How is
this possible? Where did all the missing people go?
According to mathematics, they overlapped. You have probably come across
this on your family tree before if you have gone back more than a
century or two, and especially if those ancestors lived in the same
geographic area for a long time. You will find the same couple appearing
on your family tree as great-plus grandparent in the same generation, or
as 3rd, 4th, 5th, and more great-grandparents to you, via different
family lines. Quite a few of your family lines probably go back to the
same couple at different points (at which point, your family tree
software should allow you to merge the lines). The thing is, that
overlapping, where cousins marry cousins, giving you the same
great-whatever grandparents many times over, happens a lot more in
history than you may think. Your family tree is not a tree or a fan at
all; it is more like a web or a tapestry. It gives you a whole new way
of looking at your ancestry.
This web doesn’t even have to mean first cousins marrying first cousins
in every generation (or most generations); in fact, most of the time,
the cousin relationships in your genealogy will be far more distant than
that… though it was not uncommon until quite recently in human history
for first cousins to marry. A good example is my own Perkins family
line, which came directly to Massachusetts from England and stayed
there. I have a friend who also has a Perkins line, but from much more
recently in history than my own, and that is from upstate New York.
Since Perkins is a fairly common name, we never suspected any
connection. However, last year, while working on that line, I connected
both my line and my friend’s purely by accident. Both Perkins families
originate in the English colonies with the same Perkins couple.
As you go back farther in time, you find this crossing of family lines
happening far more often. And then, you get to a point where any one
person alive in the past who had any descendants, is the ancestor of
everyone of that ethnicity in the world today. Go back even farther, and
you will eventually find an ancient person whose identity is probably
lost to time, who had descendants, and who is the ancestor of every
person alive on Earth today, regardless of ethnicity.
Some interesting mathematical models show everyone of European descent
having a common ancestor who lived in about the year 1400 somewhere in
Europe. If you go back a bit farther, to Charlemagne’s time, the model
shows twenty percent of Europeans alive at Charlemagne’s time have no
descendants living today… they either did not have children, or their
children’s lines died out. The other eighty percent alive at
Charlemagne’s time in Europe DO have living descendants today.
Studies of DNA have proven this mathematical model to be true. Using
common DNA segments among Europeans to determine their most recent
common ancestor shows that everyone who was alive during Charlemagne’s
time who had any descendants has living descendants today. Since
Charlemagne was known to have had much progeny from a few different
wives, this means every European from Turkey to England alive today is a
descendant of the great, historically famous, and royal Charlemagne.
So, that royal ancestry you’ve been dreaming about and hoping to find?
You have it. You are royal. We all are. Go back far enough, and the
whole planet is descended from royalty in some part of the world or
other. The only question is… if you want to join a royal descendants
lineage society… can you prove it on paper?
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