Maggie, the born queen of the desert
Maurice Chittenden
Carol is a quarter Arab
WE have become an Arab. A secret that has lain dormant in Margaret Thatcher’s family for generations has been unrobed: the Thatchers have roots hidden deep in the deserts of the Middle East.
A laboratory test on a mouth swab taken from Carol Thatcher, daughter of the former prime minister, shows that 24% of her DNA is Middle Eastern.
She is now searching family trees and old photo albums to see if there is a long-lost uncle in bedouin clothes.
Middle Eastern is defined as coming from an area that includes modern-day Saudi Arabia, Iraq, parts of Iran, Syria and Jordan and the Arab countries of north Africa.
The disclosure may shed light on why her twin brother Mark has an apparent affinity with the Arab world. He was drawn to the souks of Saudi Arabia in his business dealings, and the deserts of north Africa, where he famously got lost in 1982 during the Paris-Dakar rally.
Mark has been dogged by allegations that he received secret commissions from the Al-Yamamah arms deal to sell jet fighters to Saudi Arabia in the 1980s. There were new claims this weekend that the price of the Tornado jets was inflated by £600m.
The family’s blood ties to the Middle East will be revealed next month in a Channel 4 programme, 100% English, which explores the DNA of eight people who considered themselves completely Anglo-Saxon.
The results of the £210 test on Carol Thatcher show that her ancestry is 76% north European and 24% Middle Eastern. The quotient is much higher than for most Britons. It adds piquancy to the “Margaret of Arabia” photograph of Thatcher in a white Arab headdress.
The Arabian bloodline may stretch back thousands of years when the Thatcher ancestors were farmers on the fertile plains of ancient Mesopotamia.
Scientists have been unable to determine whether Carol Thatcher inherited the DNA traces from her mother or from Denis Thatcher, her late father.
If it comes from the maternal line it throws up the intriguing possibility that Britain’s first woman prime minister, once dubbed Thatchertollah by Neil Kinnock, might be remotely related to the Queen of Sheba.
Thatcher struck a rapport with the monarchies of the Gulf and once related how she had to have clothes specially made for a visit to the Gulf states “because it was important to conform to the customs of these conservative Muslim societies”.
Lord Tebbit, the former Tory party chairman and critic of a multicultural Britain, was also tested for the same programme and was deemed to have a “boring” DNA profile which showed that he was 100% European.
The Thatchers might have expected a similar result. The surname Thatcher is as medieval as straw roofs and the family traces its lineage through funeral plaques in St Mary’s Church, Uffington, in Wiltshire. The oldest is of a farmer born in 1712.
Likewise, Margaret Thatcher’s father Alfred Roberts, a grocer in Grantham, Lincolnshire, was one of seven children of a shoemaker, Ebenezer, himself the son and grandson of cobblers.
Maurice Chittenden
Carol is a quarter Arab
WE have become an Arab. A secret that has lain dormant in Margaret Thatcher’s family for generations has been unrobed: the Thatchers have roots hidden deep in the deserts of the Middle East.
A laboratory test on a mouth swab taken from Carol Thatcher, daughter of the former prime minister, shows that 24% of her DNA is Middle Eastern.
She is now searching family trees and old photo albums to see if there is a long-lost uncle in bedouin clothes.
Middle Eastern is defined as coming from an area that includes modern-day Saudi Arabia, Iraq, parts of Iran, Syria and Jordan and the Arab countries of north Africa.
The disclosure may shed light on why her twin brother Mark has an apparent affinity with the Arab world. He was drawn to the souks of Saudi Arabia in his business dealings, and the deserts of north Africa, where he famously got lost in 1982 during the Paris-Dakar rally.
Mark has been dogged by allegations that he received secret commissions from the Al-Yamamah arms deal to sell jet fighters to Saudi Arabia in the 1980s. There were new claims this weekend that the price of the Tornado jets was inflated by £600m.
The family’s blood ties to the Middle East will be revealed next month in a Channel 4 programme, 100% English, which explores the DNA of eight people who considered themselves completely Anglo-Saxon.
The results of the £210 test on Carol Thatcher show that her ancestry is 76% north European and 24% Middle Eastern. The quotient is much higher than for most Britons. It adds piquancy to the “Margaret of Arabia” photograph of Thatcher in a white Arab headdress.
The Arabian bloodline may stretch back thousands of years when the Thatcher ancestors were farmers on the fertile plains of ancient Mesopotamia.
Scientists have been unable to determine whether Carol Thatcher inherited the DNA traces from her mother or from Denis Thatcher, her late father.
If it comes from the maternal line it throws up the intriguing possibility that Britain’s first woman prime minister, once dubbed Thatchertollah by Neil Kinnock, might be remotely related to the Queen of Sheba.
Thatcher struck a rapport with the monarchies of the Gulf and once related how she had to have clothes specially made for a visit to the Gulf states “because it was important to conform to the customs of these conservative Muslim societies”.
Lord Tebbit, the former Tory party chairman and critic of a multicultural Britain, was also tested for the same programme and was deemed to have a “boring” DNA profile which showed that he was 100% European.
The Thatchers might have expected a similar result. The surname Thatcher is as medieval as straw roofs and the family traces its lineage through funeral plaques in St Mary’s Church, Uffington, in Wiltshire. The oldest is of a farmer born in 1712.
Likewise, Margaret Thatcher’s father Alfred Roberts, a grocer in Grantham, Lincolnshire, was one of seven children of a shoemaker, Ebenezer, himself the son and grandson of cobblers.
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