These three maps depict the distribution of paternal lineages (Y-DNA Haplogroups) in Europe, associated with Germanic, Slavic, and Italo-Celtic populations, respectively. Paternal lineages associated with the diffusion of Germanic peoples from the Iron Age onwards, include Y-DNA Haplogroups I1, I2a2a-L801, R1a-L664, R1a-Z284, R1b-U106, and R1b-L238. Paternal lineages associated with the diffusion of Slavic peoples from the Iron Age onwards, include Y-DNA Haplogroups I2a1b-CTS10228, R1a-CTS1211, R1a-Z92 and some branches of R1a-M458. Paternal lineages associated with the spread of Proto-Italo-Celtic people (ancestral to both the Italic peoples, including the Romans, and the Celtic peoples, including the Gaels, Britons, Gauls, and Celtiberians) from Central to Western Europe in the Bronze Age, starting circa 4,500 years ago during the Bell Beaker Culture, belong exclusively to Haplogroup R1b-S116 (aka P312), in other words most of the European R1b minus the Greco-Etruscan R1b-L23, and the Germanic R1b-U106 and R1b-L238. Notice that the distribution of these Germanic, Slavic, and Italo-Celtic Paternal lineages matches very closely to the modern distribution of Germanic, Slavic, Romance, and Celtic Ethnolinguistic groups (the last two are both descended from the Proto-Italo-Celtic people of the Bell Beaker Culture 4,500 years ago) shown in the Video of the changing Ethnic Map of Europe over the past 2000 years that I posted at
>>24368 (OP) , ✊😜🧬!