> Skip to content
  • Published: 28 February 2011
  • ISBN: 9781446438800
  • Imprint: Transworld Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 384
Categories:

Blood of the Isles




How our genetic roots rewrite our history

Bryan Sykes, the world's first genetic archaeologist, takes us on a journey around the family tree of Britain and Ireland, to reveal how our tribal history still colours the country today.

In 54BC Julius Caesar launched the first Roman invasion of Britain. His was the first detailed account of the Celtic tribes that inhabited the Isles. But where had they come from and how long had they been there? When the Romans eventually left five hundred years later, they were succeeded by invasions of Anglo-Saxons, Vikings and Normans. Did these successive invasions obliterate the genetic legacy of the Celts, or have very little effect?

After two decades tracing the genetic origins of peoples from all over the world, Bryan Sykes has now turned the spotlight on his own back yard. In a major research programme, the first of its kind, he set out to test the DNA of over 10,000 volunteers from across Britain and Ireland with the specific aim of answering this very question: what is our modern genetic make-up and what does it tell us of our tribal past? Are the modern people of the Isles a delicious genetic cocktail? Or did the invaders keep mostly to themselves forming separate genetic layers within the Isles?

As his findings came in, Bryan Sykes discovered that the genetic evidence revealed often very different stories to the conventional accounts coming from history and archaeology. Blood of the Isles reveals the nature of our genetic make-up as never before and what this says about our attitudes to ourselves, each other, and to our past. It is a gripping story that will fascinate and surprise with its conclusions.

  • Published: 28 February 2011
  • ISBN: 9781446438800
  • Imprint: Transworld Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 384
Categories:

About the author

Bryan Sykes

Bryan Sykes is Professor of Human Genetics at the University of Oxford and has had a remarkable scientific career in genetics. After undertaking medical research into the causes of inherited bone disease, he set out to discover if DNA, the genetic material, could possibly survive in ancient bones. It did and he was the first to report on the recovery of ancient DNA from archaeological bone in the journal "Nature" in 1989. Since then Professor Sykes has been called in as the leading international authority to examine several high profile cases, such as the Ice Man, Cheddar Man and the many individuals claiming to be surviving members of the Russian Royal Family. He is the author of The Seven Daughters of Eve, Adam's Curse and Blood of the Isles.

Also by Bryan Sykes

See all

Praise for Blood of the Isles

A fascinating overview of genealogical patterns and tribal heritage... [with] a stong narrative drive, pushed on by Sykes's energetic search for answers

Telegraph Review

Fascinating reading. This book has all the tension of a good detective story but is actually science at its most accessible

Sunday Express

Professor Sykes has an admirably free and easy style for an academic

Daily Mail

Syke's scientific presentation is chatty and readable

The Sunday Times

The science is explained with an infectious zest. His book is so revealing that the new... as well as the old should read it

Boyd Tonkin, Independent