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A Transient Pulse of Genetic Admixture from the Crusaders in the Near East Identified from Ancient Genome Sequences

Haber M, Doumet-Serhal C, Scheib CL et al.

31006515 PubMed ID
10 Authors
05/02/2019 Published
26 Samples
392 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HM
Haber M
DC
Doumet-Serhal C
SC
Scheib CL
XY
Xue Y
MR
Mikulski R
MR
Martiniano R
FB
Fischer-Genz B
SH
Schutkowski H
KT
Kivisild T
TC
Tyler-Smith C
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

During the medieval period, hundreds of thousands of Europeans migrated to the Near East to take part in the Crusades, and many of them settled in the newly established Christian states along the Eastern Mediterranean coast. Here, we present a genetic snapshot of these events and their aftermath by sequencing the whole genomes of 13 individuals who lived in what is today known as Lebanon between the 3rd and 13th centuries CE. These include nine individuals from the "Crusaders' pit" in Sidon, a mass burial in South Lebanon identified from the archaeology as the grave of Crusaders killed during a battle in the 13th century CE. We show that all of the Crusaders' pit individuals were males; some were Western Europeans from diverse origins, some were locals (genetically indistinguishable from present-day Lebanese), and two individuals were a mixture of European and Near Eastern ancestries, providing direct evidence that the Crusaders admixed with the local population. However, these mixtures appear to have had limited genetic consequences since signals of admixture with Europeans are not significant in any Lebanese group today-in particular, Lebanese Christians are today genetically similar to local people who lived during the Roman period which preceded the Crusades by more than four centuries.

Chapter III

Ancient DNA Samples

26 ancient DNA samples referenced in this publication

26 Samples
Sample ID Date/Era Country Locality Sex mtDNA Y-DNA
QED-12 200 CE Lebanon Qornet ed-Deir F H2a5
QED-2 250 CE Lebanon Qornet ed-Deir M T1a-a* T-CTS9882
QED-4 433 CE Lebanon Qornet ed-Deir F U3b
QED-7 246 CE Lebanon Qornet ed-Deir F HV1b
SI-38 1000 CE Lebanon Sidon M J1b4a1 E-L1250
SI-39 1212 CE Lebanon Sidon M H5'36 R-P312
SI-40 1000 CE Lebanon Sidon M U5a1g R-P310
SI-41 1184 CE Lebanon Sidon M V40a* R-BY169037
SI-42 1159 CE Lebanon Sidon M J1b1a1 T-M70
SI-44 1000 CE Lebanon Sidon M HV1b J-M67
SI-45 1222 CE Lebanon Sidon M J1d1a1d1 Q-Y6850
SI-47 1000 CE Lebanon Sidon M H2a5 R-P310
SI-53 1030 CE Lebanon Sidon M T2w R-DF63
SI-41 1184 CE Lebanon Sidon M V40a* R-BY169037
SI-39 1212 CE Lebanon Sidon M H5'36 R-P312
SI-47 1000 CE Lebanon Sidon M H2a5 R-P310
SI-44 1000 CE Lebanon Sidon M HV1b J-M67
SI-53 1030 CE Lebanon Sidon M T2w R-DF63
SI-40 1000 CE Lebanon Sidon M U5a1g R-P310
SI-45 1222 CE Lebanon Sidon M J1d1a1d1 Q-Y6850
SI-42 1159 CE Lebanon Sidon M J1b1a1 T-M70
SI-38 1000 CE Lebanon Sidon M J1b4a1 E-L1250
QED-7 246 CE Lebanon Qornet ed-Deir F HV1b
QED-2 250 CE Lebanon Qornet ed-Deir M T1a-a* T-CTS9882
QED-4 433 CE Lebanon Qornet ed-Deir F U3b
QED-12 200 CE Lebanon Qornet ed-Deir F H2a5
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

AI-generated by DNAGENICS

Independent AI summary of ancestry and genetic findings from the published study

Important: This summary is AI-generated by DNAGENICS for informational purposes only. It was not created by, affiliated with, or endorsed by the researchers behind the original publication, and is based solely on that published research. It may contain errors or omissions. DNAGENICS disclaims all liability for any inaccuracies or consequences arising from use of this information. Verify all information against the original publication. This is not professional scientific review or medical advice.

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