Æthelred "the Unready", King of the English - 23&me "Historical matches"

Started by Cynthia Curtis, A183502, US7875087 on yesterday
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I just got these:
St. Brice’s Day Massacre Victim VK150
880 CE to 1002 CE
United Kingdom
Male
0.08% DNA shared
(1 segment)
New

St. Brice’s Day Massacre Victim VK256
900 CE to 1100 CE
United Kingdom
Male
0.07% DNA shared
(1 segment)
New

St. Brice’s Day Massacre Victim VK166
880 CE to 1002 CE
United Kingdom
Male
0.06% DNA shared
(1 segment)

23&me:
St. Brice’s Day Massacre Victim VK150

Genetic Sex
Male
Time Period
880 CE to 1002 CE
Burial Location
St John's College, Oxford
United Kingdom
About St. Brice’s Day Massacre Victim VK150
In the late 10th and early 11th centuries CE, the newly established Kingdom of England was under constant threat from raids by Danish Vikings. Fearing that the Danes were plotting to overthrow him, King Æthelred II of England (also known as “Æthelred the Unready”) ordered the mass execution of all Danish settlers in his kingdom. The event has since come to be known as the St. Brice’s Day Massacre, as the killings were carried out on November 13th, 1002 CE, the feast day of Saint Brice of Tours, a 5th century Frankish Bishop.

Among those killed was Gunnhild, the sister of Denmark’s King Sweyn Forkbeard, along with her husband. Enraged by the murder of his sister and brother-in-law, Sweyn launched a campaign of intensified raids that ultimately led him to seize the English throne in 1013 CE, sending Æthelred into exile. Yet, Sweyn’s rule of England was short-lived; he died just five weeks later due to unknown causes (some sources say that he fell from a horse while others say that he was killed).

While the St. Brice’s Day Massacre undoubtedly resulted in significant bloodshed, historical records provide little insight into the exact number of Danish lives lost. But several archaeological finds have helped researchers understand the enormity of the event.

In 2008, excavations on the grounds of St. John’s College at Oxford University led to the discovery of a mass grave that contained the remains of 35 individuals, including VK150. After careful study of the grave and the skeletal remains of the individuals buried within it, archaeologists concluded that they were likely among the victims of the St. Brice’s Day Massacre.

The first hint that this was the grave of massacre victims was the style of the grave itself, which was actually a ditch that was originally dug thousands of years earlier as part of a Neolithic henge. The skeletal remains were positioned in the grave in a disorganized manner, suggesting that they were quickly and haphazardly piled into the grave—sometimes with as many as four bodies stacked on top of one another. Both of these factors suggest that the individuals were buried as quickly as possible with little respect paid towards the deceased.

Through analysis of their skeletal remains and DNA, researchers determined that all of the massacre victims were male. Two were teenagers, while the rest were identified as tall and robust adult males. Further, they all died violent deaths, exhibiting what researchers described as “extensive and excessive” wounds that were caused by sharp-force trauma. Many of the wounds were inflicted from behind and very few individuals had defensive wounds (including healed defensive wounds, which you might expect to observe among warriors). These findings indicate that most of the victims were unarmed and that many may have been trying to flee. Some of the remains also show signs of charring, consistent with historical reports of the executions carried out during the St. Brice’s Day Massacre.

Researchers attempted to use radiocarbon dating to confirm their hypothesis that these were victims of the St. Brice’s Day Massacre, but the results were inconclusive. The initial testing that was performed appeared to perfectly align with a death date of 1002 CE, however subsequent testing carried out by a second laboratory returned much earlier dates. It is possible that these radiocarbon dates were impacted by the marine reservoir effect, which causes radiocarbon dates to appear earlier for individuals who had a diet rich in seafood (since the ocean contains much older carbon molecules than those found on land).

While we may never know for sure whether these individuals died during the St. Brice’s Day Massacre, it is clear that VK150 and the others he was buried with all died during a single, extremely violent event and that they were buried in a way that showed little respect for the dead.

The Viking Age
The name Vikings refers to seafaring people originally from Scandinavia (present-day Denmark, Sweden, and Norway) who lived during the late 8th to late 11th centuries. Renowned for their sailing skills and distinctive longships, the Vikings’ presence in Scandinavia, the North Atlantic, and Baltic Sea areas was so profound that the period roughly between 800–1050 CE in these regions is commonly referred to as the Viking Age.

During this time, the Vikings raided, settled in, and traded with others from these and even more distant regions (including the Mediterranean, North Africa, the Middle East and even reaching North America). During their travels, the Vikings not only impacted the culture of many regions, but also left a genetic legacy.

googlesearch result (AI):
St. Brice's Day is a Christian feast day on November 13 that commemorates the life of St. Brice, the Bishop of Tours in the fifth century. It is also associated with the St. Brice's Day massacre, which took place on November 13, 1002:
The massacre
King Æthelred II ordered the execution of all Danes in England after learning of a Danish assassination plot against him. The massacre was marked by brutal violence, including decapitation, stabbing, and blunt force trauma.
Aftermath
The massacre led to the Danish invasion of England in 1003, though some say that the massacre was not the sole reason for the invasion. England eventually accepted Sweyn as king in 1013 after years of warfare and heavy tributes.
Site
In 2008, a mass burial site of at least 35 men and boys was discovered under St John's College, Oxford, during construction. Archaeologists believe that the men were killed in the St. Brice's Day massacre.

Æthelred "the Unready", King of the English is your 30th great grandfather.

Æthelred "the Unready", King of the English is your 30th great grandfather

Do you also have this:

North Central England, Very Close:

You are connected through shared ancestors to people from north central England and parts of the West Midlands, a region which includes parts of Staffordshire, Leicestershire, West Midlands, Cheshire, and Derbyshire. Much of this region was part of the medieval Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Mercia until the unification of England in the 10th century.

I also match several of those young St Brice's Day victims, but I have Scandinavian ancestry as well. so it is not surprising to me that I would have them pop up as ancient matches. Not sure if you also do?

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