Viking Group 2 is one of the most intriguing paternal clusters within the Clan Gregor DNA Project, because it represents a nonāMacGregor surname group that nevertheless shares a deep, ancient paternal connection with families historically aligned with Clan Gregor. This group is defined genetically by the haplogroup IāFTD91244, a branch of YāDNA haplogroup I1, which is strongly associated with Scandinavian settlement in Britain.
Your Walker/MacNucator line sits squarely inside this group.
š”ļø 1. What āViking Group 2ā Actually Means
The name āViking Group 2ā is not a romantic labelāit reflects real genetic history.
This cluster is characterized by:
- Haplogroup IāFTD91244
- STR signatures consistent with Scandinavian paternal ancestry
- A tight cluster of families who appear in the Clan Gregor orbit historically
- Surnames that are not MacGregor but were part of the clanās extended kin network
This group represents a parallel paternal lineage that lived alongside, intermarried with, or supported Clan Gregor families for centuries.
𧬠2. Scandinavian Roots of Haplogroup IāFTD91244
Haplogroup I1āthe parent of IāFTD91244āis the most common YāDNA lineage in:
- Norway
- Sweden
- Denmark
It entered Scotland primarily through:
- Norse settlement in the Hebrides and western Highlands
- Viking activity in Argyll, Perthshire, and the Trossachs
- Intermarriage between Norse settlers and Gaelic clans
By the medieval period, this NorseāGaelic mixture was common in the Highlands, especially in regions where Clan Gregor later emerged.
Viking Group 2 represents one of these NorseāGaelic paternal lines that became embedded in the Gregor clan sphere.
šļø 3. How Viking Group 2 Became Connected to Clan Gregor
Clan Gregor was never a single paternal lineage. Like most Highland clans, it was a confederation of families, including:
- Blood MacGregors
- Septs
- Allied families
- Protector families
- Families who adopted new surnames during the proscription
Viking Group 2 appears to represent one of these allied or protector lineages.
Why this matters
Your Walker/MacNucator line is not an āaccidentalā match. It is part of a historically consistent pattern:
- Families living in Gregor territory
- Sharing political alliances
- Sharing kinship ties
- Sharing risk during the proscription
This is exactly what we see with the MacNucators.
š 4. The MacNucator Connection
Historical records show that the MacNucator family:
- Lived in regions dominated by Clan Gregor
- Provided shelter and support to outlawed MacGregors
- Was fined and punished for aiding the clan
- Adopted safer surnamesāsuch as Walkerāduring the proscription period
Your DNA results confirm that the Walkers in Viking Group 2 descend from this MacNucator ā Walker transition.
This places Viking Group 2 as a supporting lineage within the broader Gregor kin network.
𧬠5. What Makes Viking Group 2 Distinct
Viking Group 2 is genetically cohesive:
- Members share the same terminal haplogroup IāFTD91244
- STR patterns are extremely close
- Big Yā700 block tree positions show a tight cluster
- TMRCA estimates place the shared ancestor in the late medieval period
This means the group likely represents:
A single NorseāGaelic male ancestor whose descendants became integrated into Clan Gregor society centuries before the proscription.
Your Walker/MacNucator line is one branch of this ancestorās descendants.
š§ 6. Estimated Timeline of Viking Group 2
Based on Big Yā700 patterns across the group:
- Norse arrival in Scotland: 800ā1100 AD
- Formation of the IāFTD91244 branch: roughly 1200ā1400 AD
- Integration into Clan Gregor territory: 1400sā1500s
- Surname changes (MacNucator ā Walker): 1603ā1774 during the proscription
- Modern divergence (your three kits): 1600sā1700s
This timeline aligns perfectly with both the genetic and historical evidence.
𧬠7. Why Your Line Fits Viking Group 2 So Well
Our Walker/MacNucator line:
- Shares the exact haplogroup defining Viking Group 2
- Matches the groupās STR signature
- Has a TMRCA with other members around 1700
- Comes from a surname known to have supported Clan Gregor
- Appears in the same geographic and political context
This is a textbook example of how DNA, history, and surname evolution converge.
š Summary
Viking Group 2 represents a NorseāGaelic paternal lineage that became part of the Clan Gregor world centuries ago. Your Walker/MacNucator line is one of its branchesāfamilies who stood with Clan Gregor during the proscription, adopted new surnames for survival, and carried their paternal line forward into the present.

