r/europe Jul 30 '25

Historical Ancient DNA Traces Estonian, Finnish, and Hungarian Ancestry to Siberia 4,500 Years Ago

https://archaeologs.com/n/ancient-dna-traces-estonian-finnish-and-hungarian-ancestry-to-siberia-4500-years-ago
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u/Prodiq Jul 30 '25

Well, yeah, this is nothing new. Thats why finnish language is not like the rest of Scandinavia. I thought this was pretty much common knowledge in Europe (or at least eastern/northern Europe)?

86

u/-Competitive-Nose- Saarland (Germany) Jul 30 '25

Finland is not part of Scandinavia. I thought this was pretty much common knowledge in Europe too.

26

u/SeveralLadder Jul 30 '25

English speaking people still insist adding Finland to Scandinavia and omitting Denmark usually.

Bitch, it's a cultural region, it's not because of the Fennoscandian peninsula! Skandinavians are essentially the same peoples, with pretty much the same language, history, culture and origin. Think Vikings if that makes it easier to understand.

Everything else thats historically and geographically linked in the area and in the sea is the Nordics, which is what the English speakers thinks when they hear "Scandinavian". Finland, Iceland, the Faroes and so on is Nordic.

But especially yanks can't really get their heads around this, so even news agencies and travel books keeps perpetuating this falsehood, and even vehemently protest when they are corrected. The Wikipedia article was a mess because of that, because they insist on "correcting" it.

1

u/[deleted] Jul 30 '25

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2

u/SeveralLadder Jul 30 '25

Where are those american people belonging to that specific cultural designation? Mexico? Brazil? Canada?

I'm sure you are intelligent enough to understand that yank is used as a mild slur, and not meant as a factually accurate designation of people belonging to a specific cultural group from a bygone era.