Well I am fairly certain that I am mostly AngloSaxon blood, with the late addition of Irish and probably much earlier, Viking. I have a weird mix of colours in my hair, mostly blonde, but also red, and light brown. My facial hair is mostly blonde, but everyone says there is red in there, which is a bit annoying.
I am fairly certain that Denmark was colonized by the Jutes, hence, Jutland, the mainland part of Denmark. British, I read somewhere, is derived from a Greek word, not sure of the meaning, but it is certainly of Greek provenance, passed through Latin. The Latin word for Britain was, of course, Britannia, hence, Mare Britannicus, the English Channel.
And Caucasian means someone who is not negroid, mongoloid, etc. The Indo-European tribes, who make up the vast majority of people in Europe and Western Asia, come from the Caucasus mountains, and they spread across the land innumerable years ago, certainly before any Israelites would have come along, or anyone else from that region. Most European and Indian languages are, naturally, Indo-European, apart from, in Europe, Finnish, Hungarian, and Maltese, which are, respectively, Ural-Altaic (both Finnish and Hungarian) and Semitic, and in India, the Dravidian language family, whose members include the language of Kannada. The Indo-europeans were what we would deem mostly caucasian today, and so that is why most white or west Asian peoples are called Caucasians.
Quote:.....German, Welsh, British....
when you say Welsh and British, do you mean Welsh and English? Most Americans class English people (erroneously) as just simply British, when in fact the term can include anyone who is a citizen of part of the UK.