Fine-scale sampling uncovers the complexity of migrations in 5th-6th century Pannonia

Authors

VYAS Deven N KONCZ Istvan MODI Alessandra MENDE Balazs Gusztav TIAN Yijie FRANCALACCI Paolo LARI Martina VAI Stefania STRAUB Peter GALLINA Zsolt SZENICZEY Tamas HAJDU Tamas BARICCO Luisella Pejrani GIOSTRA Caterina RADZEVICIUTE Rita HOFMANOVÁ Zuzana EVINGER Sandor BERNERT Zsolt POHL Walter CARAMELLI David VIDA Tivadar GEARY Patrick J VEERAMAH Krishna R

Year of publication 2023
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Current Biology
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Web https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982223010357?via%3Dihub
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.07.063
Keywords paleogenomics; kinship; burial archaeology; community formation; early Medieval Europe; Late Antiquity; migration
Description As the collapse of the Western Roman Empire accelerated during the 4th and 5th centuries, arriving "barbarian"groups began to establish new communities in the border provinces of the declining (and eventually former) empire. This was a time of significant cultural and political change throughout not only these border regions but Europe as a whole.1,2 To better understand post-Roman community formation in one of these key frontier zones after the collapse of the Hunnic movement, we generated new paleogenomic data for a set of 38 burials from a time series of three 5th century cemeteries3-5 at Lake Balaton, Hungary. We utilized a comprehensive sampling approach to characterize these cemeteries along with data from 38 additional burials from a previously published mid-6th century site6 and analyzed them alongside data from over 550 penecontemporaneous individuals.7-19 The range of genetic diversity in all four of these local burial communities is extensive and wider ranging than penecontemporaneous Europeans sequenced to date. Despite many commonalities in burial customs and demography, we find that there were substantial differences in genetic ancestry between the sites. We detect evidence of northern European gene flow into the Lake Balaton region. Additionally, we observe a statistically significant association between dress artifacts and genetic ancestry among 5th century genetically female burials. Our analysis shows that the formation of early Medieval communities was a multifarious process even at a local level, consisting of genetically heterogeneous groups.
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