“GENETICISTS are peeling back almost a thousand years of Scottish history to trace the men alive today whose DNA marks sturatsthem out as belonging to the royal Stuart bloodline.”

Are you related to the royal Stuart bloodline?

I found this new article that just came out this past week in the Herald of Scotland interesting given the fact I talk a lot about DNA here on the Gnostic Warrior. As I have stated many times before, I not only consider it as the footprint of God, but that it is also our own human computer program storehouses in which we receive our ancesteral Gnosis.

Here is what the Herald of Scotland had written:

“Around half of men with the Stuart or Stewart surname – regardless of the spelling – are believed to carry a unique marker in their Y chromosome which identifies them as the direct descendants of a 13th Century nobleman who fought alongside William Wallace and whose subsequent lineage includes the Stuart monarch, James VI of Scotland.

Researchers are now keen to recruit as many men as possible to build an accurate picture of the Stuarts’ genetic dynasty in modern Scotland.

In the run up to Father’s Day on June 21, Scotland’s DNA is offering cut price genetic testing to encourage as many men as possible to have their ancestry unlocked.

The offer is only open to men as women do not carry the all-important Y chromosome where the S781 royal marker is found.

This is the first time ever that we’ve been able to link a genetic marker to a named historical person,” said Dr Jim Wilson, chief scientist at Scotland’s DNA. “Scientists in Oxford and Cambridge have identified a Y marker that they think marks the lineage of Genghis Khan but that’s based on circumstantial evidence.”

This link between the Stuarts to Genghis Kahn many people may not be aware of. The House of Stuart (also spelled Stewart) is a European royal house founded by Robert II who first became monarchs of the Kingdom of Scotland during the late 14th century before inheriting the kingdoms of England (including Wales) and Kingdom of Ireland in the 17th century. The dynasty’s patrilineal Breton ancestors had held the office of High Steward of Scotland since the 12th century, after arriving by way of Norman England.

The Stuarts isn’t their original name, but a given one from a position of office similar to a governor, known as a steward. It was originally adopted as the family surname by Walter Stewart, 3rd High Steward of Scotland, who was the third member of the family to hold the position.

A steward is an official who is appointed by the legal ruling monarch to represent them in a country, and may have a mandate to govern it in their name; in the latter case, it roughly corresponds with the position of viceroy (for Romance languages), governor, or deputy (the Roman rector, praefectus or vicarius). It was also a term used to refer to the chief servant of a landed estate. In medieval times, the steward was initially a servant who supervised both the lord’s estate and his household. However over the course of the next century, other household posts arose and involved more responsibilities.

Here is some more from the Herald:

“It implies that there were these patriarchs, these powerful men, who had the opportunity to have a lot of children,” said Dr Wilson. “Why are there are lot of Stuarts in Scotland today? – it’s because a lot of the early bearers of the surname Stuart were noblemen who, because they were powerful, had access to many women in order to have many children and, in particular, many sons.

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