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Germany.
The Germans generally called themselves Germanic peoples, Germanic chariots. Germanic people are an Indo-European people or people who originated in Northern Europe, and genetically Germanic people mostly have Nordic ancestry, but not all. In southern Germany, for example, ethnically it may be closer to northern Italy.
In addition, non-Indo-European Norse peoples such as Finland may also be genetically close to Germanic peoples.
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Germanic peoples (Latin: germani; German: German: German), who, along with the Celts and Slavs, were known by the Romans as the three barbarian tribes of Europe during the Roman Empire, and are also one of the representative peoples of today's Europeans.
Today's Norwegians, Danes, Swedes, Icelanders, Germans, Austrians, Swiss, English (Anglo-Saxons), Dutch, Flemish, and Luxembourgers are all Germanic.
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The Germanic people were mainly part of the Germans.
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Today's Norwegians, Danes, Swedes, Icelanders, Germans, Austrians, Swiss, English (Anglo-Saxons), Dutch, Flemish, and Luxembourgs are all Germanic peoples, of which Germans, Austrians, and Swissmen speak German;
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Germany.
The Germans generally called themselves Germanic peoples, Germanic chariots. The Germanic people are an Indo-European people or people who originated from the north and called Bhou, and genetically speaking, most of the Germanic people have the Nordic early sail blood, but not all. In southern Germany, for example, ethnically it may be closer to northern Italy.
Non-Indo-European Norse peoples, such as the Hailstones of the Land Chain Hail, and Finland, may also be genetically close to the Germanic peoples.
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The Germanic people were an ancient European people, mainly distributed in today's Germany, England, the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and other places. Their origins can be traced back to the Nordic region around the 1st millennium BC. Today's Germany is the main ancestral home of the Germanic peoples, but there are also Germanic descendants in England, the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and other countries.
It is worth mentioning that the Germanic peoples are also one of the main origins of modern English, German and other languages.
No, the Vikings don't speak Germanic languages, and the Vikings have a lot of indigenous European ancestry, and the Anglo-Saxons belong to the Indo-European race, so there is a big difference between the two Of course, later the Vikings and the British Isles were mixed, especially in the north of England and Scotland, and there was a lot of Viking ancestry.
It's good, but not as good as the Nazis say.
This kind of excellence is the result of a national inheritance, and has nothing to do with what kind of pure-blooded blood. >>>More
Aryans, translated as Aryans, were originally an ancient people in the steppes of the southern Ural Mountains of Russia, one of the three ancient nomadic peoples in the world, and their typical traits were: black hair and brown eyes. During World War II, the Nazis distorted the concept of Aryans and defined the blond, blue-eyed Germanic people of northern Europe and Scandinavia as archetypal Aryans, when in fact the two had nothing to do with each other. >>>More
During the era of independent Gaul, the Gauls had a complex ethnic composition, but they were mostly Alpine, and the Germanic people were of the northern Nordic type. >>>More
1. Jews like to grow beards and rarely shave, especially Jewish priests, which is the most prominent physical feature. Germanic peoples, on the other hand, generally do not have large beards; >>>More