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Nadine Knobloch
01-04-2004, 16:00
Czech, French and German blood are running through my veins.

hawk_knight
01-04-2004, 16:05
Pure Dutch Blood :D :cool:

timurlenk
01-04-2004, 17:14
i dont know if there is anybody in austria, who can tell what "blood" she / he is. its a big mishmash.

maybe:
helvetian
bavarian
celtic
slowenian
czech
langobardic
roman
gothic
jewish / hebrew
vandal
magyarian
and many more...


besides i believe, all over the world there are only 4 different kinds of blood:
a
b
ab
0
:cheers:


@ blooduk
what the matter with "french blood". its a great country - well, except from their strange language ;)

Kuno of Gersenau
01-04-2004, 17:23
100% Swiss Blood...

And this has the group 0+...

Bagpipe
01-04-2004, 22:02
My is Lithuanian at 100%

To sort by regions: 1/2 Samogitian and 1/2 Upper Lithuanian:D

LadyH
01-04-2004, 22:43
i don't know for sure
because
fathers site is pure german
mothers mother is german too
but my mother is result of a war-violation
i don't know for sure, but he was not german

Finellach
02-04-2004, 00:50
From my fathers side I am pure and 100% Croat, my ancestors came from Bosnia somewhere around 1500, maybe few years before, and lived at the military border of Habsburg Monarchy in Slavonia (todays border north border of Bosnia with Croatian) protecting the the border from the Turks.

From my mothers side I am Bohemian(Czech nationality). My great granfather was actually a noble, but he got married with my great grandmother who was Hungarian and not of noble blood and so they disinherited him and he moved to Osijek where they lived. My other great grandfather(my grandma's father) was Italian, they were also of noble blood. They had great estates in Sirmium(todays Vojvodina-Serbia) which was taken away from them after WW2 by communists, my great grandmother was German(Swaben, Scwaben) and this family was also of great esteem. They were esteemed traders and merchants.

So that summs it up, I am 1/2 Croat and 1/8 Bohemian(Czech), German, Italian and Hungarian...the worst mix of all. :p :D

Krum The Terrible
02-04-2004, 13:08
101% Bulgarian blood.

Angryminer
02-04-2004, 14:31
In first and second generation 100% german. Beyond that it depends on the time you look at it. The roots of my family are estimated to be somewhere in eastern Prussia (Danzig, Poznan), but that's not absolutely secure.
So in a nutshell:
100% German.

Angryminer

greywulf
03-04-2004, 21:10
My mom's blood is 100% Irish.

My dad's blood is a mix. It began Norse, then spread out to Normandy where our family were among the areas nobility. They followed William the Conqueror and fought at the battle of Hastings, being rewarded with manors in Cheshire and Wiltshire, UK. In the last few hundred years they spread out to Canada, the US, and Australia.

Henrik
03-04-2004, 21:59
i'm not quite sure what bloodline i have, coz i think that my greatgrandfarther was from Sweden, so my blood must be 1/16 swedish ! - but i'll guess that before the start of this topic it should have been clearly defined how long back in time we should go.

Havoc
03-04-2004, 22:51
pure Ukrainian Blood
100%cosack
nothing but the good stuff:D

Haegemon
04-04-2004, 05:27
I should say pure Spanish blood, but I'm 100% pure Catalonian blood from some generations.






PD:Sorry LadyH, soviets entered savagely in Germany indeed.

LadyH
04-04-2004, 12:59
Originally posted by Haegemon
PD:Sorry LadyH, soviets entered savagely in Germany indeed.
thx Haegemon
but also it could be an american, english or french man ;)
however
:cheers:

andi
04-04-2004, 18:17
3/4 german
1/4 polish

group A, but i think the bloodgroups are only in germany called a, b, ab and 0, aren´t they?

Platina
04-04-2004, 19:13
Originally posted by timurlenk

besides i believe, all over the world there are only 4 different kinds of blood:
a
b
ab
0
:cheers:



No there are more types of blood, you have like B Negative and **** like that ;) And besides it is bloodgroup O not 0

Btw, im for 1/16 part German and for 15/16 Dutch. And im heterozygoot for my bloodgroup just like the most of you...

Platina
04-04-2004, 19:18
Originally posted by LadyH
i don't know for sure
because
fathers site is pure german
mothers mother is german too
but my mother is result of a war-violation
i don't know for sure, but he was not german


Well thats easy, let me calculate it for you.

Your father is 100% German, 100 divided by 2 is 50, so your already for 50% German. Your grandmother is 100% german too. But your mother is for 50% German. Your granddad was English or American or something else?
In any case, 50 (your mother) divided by 2 equals 25.
25 + 50 (Percentage you inherited from your father) = 72 + 25(from your grandfather) = 100
So you are 3/4 German and 1/4 something else :P


ps. sorry for the double post.

Haegemon
05-04-2004, 06:53
Originally posted by LadyH
thx Haegemon
but also it could be an american, english or french man ;)
however
:cheers:


I don't know your grandmother case. But historical facts points to russians. However the good thing is you are alive today.

From book "Berlin-The Downfall 1945 " (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/675688/posts):
"Like their opponents, Josef Stalin’s men were subjected to an intense and unending barrage of indoctrination and hate propaganda. In the Red Army the Communist Party carried the ideological effort right to the front lines. Political officers agitated the front-line troops, with speeches, banners and propaganda leaflets whipping up their fury. Behind the lines, security and secret police formations viciously punished anyone deemed to be either militarily or politically unreliable. Tens of thousands perished at their hands. The idea was more practical than they realized. Every Russian soldier advancing westward had been an eyewitness to the destruction of his country. By the time the Soviets stormed the Vistula River, those sights had generated a consuming hatred for Germany and the Germans among many Russian soldiers.

Soviet soldiers, under such brutally tight political and military control, were ready to explode. Germany, having sown the wind, was about to reap the whirlwind and provide an outlet for Russian soldiers to vent their rage and frustrations.

Fired by hatred and driven mercilessly by their commanders, Soviet soldiers unleashed horrors unseen in Berlin and eastern Germany since the Thirty Years’ War. Thefts were as simple as soldiers waylaying civilians and stealing their watches, or as complex as the total plunder of great estates. Ammunition wagons and trucks were emptied and reloaded with plunder. What could not be moved was wrecked. The damage was so extensive that the Communist Party began to warn against destroying factories and resources that could be usefully transported back to the Soviet Union.

Emboldened by drink, or visceral hatred of the Germans, or by the sense that they were simply taking the prize due to them as the victors, the Soviet soldiers raped countless eastern German girls and women from girls under 18 to 80. The soldiers even raped German Communist women and Russian girls brought to Germany as forced laborers. This was a crime against women so vast and unprecedented that there is still no single word to adequately describe it. Even Cornelius Ryan’s jolting descriptions in The Last Battle pale in comparison to Beevor’s accounts of the scope, savagery and horror of these crimes. His unflinching report is an indictment not just of the men who committed the acts, and of the leaders whose brutality helped trigger these excesses, but also of mankind itself.

Usually, the victims were raped not once but several times, day after day. Playwright Zakhar Agranenko’s diary is quoted: “Red Army soldiers don’t believe in ‘individual liaisons’ with German women. Nine, ten, twelve men at a time-they rape them on a collective basis.”

Beevor quotes an NKVD report of a typical case from East Prussia: “They interrogated…Emma Korn. ‘On 3 February,’ she told them, ‘Front line troops of the Red Army entered the town. In the yard twelve soldiers in turn raped me. Other soldiers did the same to my two neighbors. The following night six drunken soldiers broke into our cellar and raped us in front of the children.”

As the days wore on, the tide of rape continued without ebb. German women either gave in to despair and committed suicide, or attached themselves to Russian officers or noncoms.

Soviet rape was not unique to Germany. Following the conquest of Budapest, which was a bloody siege costing the Russians many lives, the Soviet soldiers went on a brutal rampage. According to one account, Hungarian girls were locked in Soviet quarters where they were repeatedly raped then sometimes killed. Polish women also suffered. So did young Russian, Belorussian and Ukrainian women who had been sent back to Germany by the Wehrmacht for slave labour.However, the behaviour of Russian troops in Bulgaria was very different for here they received an open welcome. There existed similarities in language and culture and this explains the relative absence of rape and pillage.

Estimates of rape victims from the Berlin's two main hospitals ranged from 95,000 to 130,000. One doctor deduced that out of approximately 100,000 women raped in the city, some 10,000 died as a result, mostly from suicide. The death rate was thought to have been much higher among the 1.4 million estimated victims in East Prussia, Pomerania and Silesia.

The ethical questions all this raises are tough, given the war guilt of the Germans for the Holocaust. True, the rape of Berlin would not have happened had Germany’s own crimes against humanity not gone on for so long. Mass rape, however, can never be excused as an appropriate retribution. Justice for a mass atrocity is not another mass atrocity.

The Soviet Union paid a stiff price for the hatred Stalin and the Communist Party whipped up among its troops. The conduct of the Red Army was not only a frightful conclusion to the war, but also a catastrophe for the future of communism. "

Always in a war every side is guilty of their own crimes. :sad:

fallen_saint
05-04-2004, 07:56
im mexican american about 3 or 4th generation American, beyond that i dunno, maybe somewhere down the line (way back probably 16th or17th century) some aztec and spanish:cheers:

timurlenk
05-04-2004, 13:01
Originally posted by Platina
And besides it is bloodgroup O not 0

are you sure? did you study medicin? and it is called O in english or in german?

i never heard blood group O ("oh") but always 0 ("zero") :confused: