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Research Publication

Mitogenomic data indicate admixture components of Central-Inner Asian and Srubnaya origin in the conquering Hungarians.

Neparáczki Endre, E Maróti, Zoltán Z et al.

30335830 PubMed ID
21 Authors
2018-10-18 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

NE
Neparáczki Endre
EM
E Maróti
ZZ
Zoltán Z
KT
Kalmár Tibor
TK
T Kocsy
KK
Klaudia K
MK
Maár Kitti
KB
K Bihari
PP
Péter P
NI
Nagy István
IF
I Fóthi
EE
Erzsébet E
PI
Pap Ildikó
IK
I Kustár
ÁÁ
Ágnes Á
PG
Pálfi György
GR
G Raskó
II
István I
ZA
Zink Albert
AT
A Török
TT
Tibor T
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

It has been widely accepted that the Finno-Ugric Hungarian language, originated from proto Uralic people, was brought into the Carpathian Basin by the conquering Hungarians. From the middle of the 19th century this view prevailed against the deep-rooted Hungarian Hun tradition, maintained in folk memory as well as in Hungarian and foreign written medieval sources, which claimed that Hungarians were kinsfolk of the Huns. In order to shed light on the genetic origin of the Conquerors we sequenced 102 mitogenomes from early Conqueror cemeteries and compared them to sequences of all available databases. We applied novel population genetic algorithms, named Shared Haplogroup Distance and MITOMIX, to reveal past admixture of maternal lineages. Our results show that the Conquerors assembled from various nomadic groups of the Eurasian steppe. Population genetic results indicate that they had closest connection to the Onogur-Bulgar ancestors of Volga Tatars. Phylogenetic results reveal that more than one third of the Conqueror maternal lineages were derived from Central-Inner Asia and their most probable ultimate sources were the Asian Scythians and Asian Huns, giving support to the Hungarian Hun tradition. The rest of the lineages most likely originated from the Bronze Age Potapovka-Poltavka-Srubnaya cultures of the Pontic-Caspian steppe. Available data imply that the Conquerors did not have a major contribution to the gene pool of the Carpathian Basin.

Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment