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Mennonite

  • 908 members

About us

This project group was formed on 3 Jul '04. It is now resticted to those who have Low-German Mennonite ancestry. See the family name list for typical Low-German surnames. However, this is not a surname project. You must demonstrate your Low-German Mennonite ancestry in order to join this project.

The Low-German Mennonites are descended from those Anabaptists/Mennonites who settled in northern Poland from the early 1500s to the late 1600s. The majority of these people were from the Netherlands, with significant proportions coming from Switzerland and Germany.

In 1772 a large part of Poland was partitioned, with the region where the majority of Mennonites lived going to Prussia. A second partition put nearly all of the Mennonites in Prussian territory. Most of these Mennonites lived in the province of West Prussia.

The Prussian government was highly militaristic which clashed with the pacifism of the Mennonites. Eventually the Prussian government tied land acquisition to military service. Since the Mennonites could no longer acquire new property without giving up their pacifism many chose to leave Prussian territory. Between 1788 and 1820 about a third of the Prussian Mennonites moved to southern Russia (at that time known in German as Sud Russland; now known as Ukraine). After a few generations there were also problems in Russia. Aside from a shortage of land the Mennonites were under pressure by the Russian government to assimilate into Russian society (which included joining the military). As a result large numbers of Mennonites began leaving Russia in 1874. Over the next decade nearly a third of the Russian Mennonites had moved to North America. Because the majority of Low-German Mennonites in North America are descended from those who once lived in Russia, they are often, incorrectly, referred to as the Russian Mennonites. This group is known as the Low-German Mennonites because during their 200-plus years in Poland/Prussia they developed their own Germanic dialect, known as Plaut Dietsch, also known as Platt Deutsch in German, or Low-German in English.

DNA results for those who participate in the Mennonite DNA project are displayed, without personal identification, at www.mennonitedna.com . If you do not want to share your results, do not join this project.



Note that you MUST order a DNA test before joining theProject. Once you have ordered a test and have an account and password followthese instructions:


If you have done a DNA test you need to use your user ID andpassword to go into your account. Click on "Join  Projects".If Mennonite is not found at the top of the page under "MatchingProjects" then go down and click on "DUAL (Y-DNA andmtDNA) GEOGRAPHICAL PROJECTS", click on "M" and then click on"Mennonite". From there you should be able to do a "JoinRequest". You will need to provide genealogical information such as thenames of parents and grandparents who were of Mennonite descent. If you or yourparents are in the GRANDMA database all I need is your number, or those of yourparents, in that database.

Those who do not submit a sample for DNA analysis within1 year of joining the project will be removed.


For further information on the Mennonite DNA Project go to www.mennonitedna.com