Ashkenazi Jewish Ancestry: Autosomal Evidence from Italkim Jews
Italkim Jews as an Autosomal Falsification Test
Italkim Jews of southern Italy provide a robust autosomal falsification test for claims that Ashkenazim cluster with southern Italians due to maternal European ancestry. Unlike Ashkenazim, Italkim have never migrated to the Rhineland, Central Europe, or Slavic regions. They have continuously lived in southern Italy since the era of Magna Graecia and Roman times. These communities were established during Greek colonization and survived through successive Roman, Byzantine, and later medieval administrations, preserving their unique genetic heritage. Their autosomal DNA, inherited from both parents, confirms that both maternal and paternal contributions are fully represented, allowing for a reliable falsification test against claims of artifact-driven clustering. Southern Italian PCA and FST clustering is not an artifact, and principal component analysis (PCA) and FST measurements provide independent lines of evidence that capture overall genetic similarity, reinforcing that Ashkenazi clustering with southern Italians is historically grounded rather than a statistical anomaly.
PCA Plot: Southern Italian and Magna Graecia Greek Affinities

The PCA plot demonstrates autosomal continuity from Magna Graecia Greeks and ancient Romans to Italkim Jews and southern Italian populations. This directly contradicts forum claims that Ashkenazim cluster with southern Italians solely due to maternal European ancestry.
G25 Similarity Map: Autosomal Clustering Patterns

The G25 similarity map shows that Italkim Jews cluster most closely with Sicilians, mainland Italians, Maltese, and Aegean Greek populations, reflecting their ancestry from Magna Graecia Greeks and ancient Romans. These populations settled southern Italy during the Greek colonization period and persisted through Roman rule, creating a continuous genetic record that is directly relevant to Ashkenazi ancestry. The clustering in the G25 map demonstrates that the observed genetic affinities are not artifacts caused by maternal European admixture, as some forum discussions claim, but rather reflect real historical connections.
The G25 findings align with the PCA results, confirming that autosomal data consistently place Italkim Jews and Ashkenazim within the southern Italian and Aegean Greek genetic space. By including reference populations from southern Italy, Sicily, Malta, and the Aegean, these analyses avoid distortions that arise when using Northern Italian, Tuscan, or Sardinian proxies. The results provide strong evidence that Ashkenazi clustering with these populations reflects genuine historical ancestry, captures both maternal and paternal contributions over millennia, and highlights the continuity of Greco-Roman genetic influence in Ashkenazi Jews. All of the tools I have used, from FST to PCA, can be found on ExploreYourDNA, and these results are documented in my study available at Preprints.org.
FST Analysis: Genetic Proximity of Italkim Jews
The following FST table shows the 30 populations closest to Italkim Jews. These data further confirm their genetic affinity with southern Italian and Greek populations.
| # | Population | Distance |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Maltese | 0.0239 |
| 2 | Italian Calabria | 0.0242 |
| 3 | Sicilian Central | 0.0264 |
| 4 | Italian Campania | 0.0273 |
| 5 | Italian Campania Naples (Campanian) | 0.0277 |
| 6 | Greek Dodecanese | 0.0289 |
| 7 | Sicilian East | 0.0290 |
| 8 | Sicilian Syracuse | 0.0291 |
| 9 | Sicilian | 0.0295 |
| 10 | Greek Crete Lasithi | 0.0303 |
| 11 | Greek Crete | 0.0305 |
| 12 | Sicilian Trapani | 0.0309 |
| 13 | Greek Dodecanese Kos | 0.0310 |
| 14 | Greek Kos | 0.0310 |
| 15 | Italian Calabria (Cosentian) | 0.0310 |
| 16 | Greek Cyprus | 0.0322 |
| 17 | Cypriot | 0.0326 |
| 18 | Italian Basilicata | 0.0326 |
| 19 | Italian Basilicata (Lucanian) | 0.0328 |
| 20 | Greek Crete Rethymno | 0.0331 |
| 21 | Italian Apulia | 0.0341 |
| 22 | Turkish Cyprus | 0.0342 |
| 23 | Greek Cyclades Amorgos | 0.0350 |
| 24 | Sicilian West | 0.0357 |
| 25 | Greek Euboea Central | 0.0365 |
| 26 | Italian Apulia (Apulian) | 0.0368 |
| 27 | Greek Crete Heraklion | 0.0381 |
| 28 | Greek Crete Chania | 0.0385 |
| 29 | Italian Campania Benevento (Campanian) | 0.0389 |
| 30 | Italian Campania Salerno (Campanian) | 0.0391 |
Conclusion
The perception in genetic studies that Ashkenazi clustering with southern Italians is an artifact arises from repeatedly defining “Italy” as Tuscany, Northern Italy, or Sardinia and ignoring the only continuously present Italian Jewish ethnoreligious group—the Italkim Jews of southern Italy. Autosomal evidence from Italkim Jews demonstrates that Ashkenazi clustering is real, robust, and historically grounded. Their autosomal DNA, reflecting over 2,400 years of continuous residence in southern Italy and deep ancestral ties to Magna Graecia Greeks and ancient Romans, directly contradicts forum claims dismissing PCA and FST placement as an artifact. These data further show that northern or central European ancestry does not account for this clustering pattern and that Ashkenazi ancestry is firmly rooted in southern Italian and Greco-Roman populations overall, confirming historical continuity and genetic authenticity.

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