Noble Hun-period burial from Budapest, in the shadow of a Late Roman fortress: Bioarchaeological data for the early phase of the Hun occupation of the Carpathian Basin
Boglárka Mészáros, Attila Türk, Balázs Gusztáv Mende et al.
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Abstract
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The paper discusses two Early Migration Period burials discovered in the foreground of the southern wall of the Roman fort by the Rákos Stream, opposite the military camp of Aquincum, in the summer of 2020. The graves were found in the zone between the southern fort wall and the moat surrounding it, dug one into another in the fill of an earlier Roman pit, filled halfway back at the time. The upper grave, of an adult man, was northwest-southeast oriented and unfurnished; the lower one, the north-south oriented burial of a warrior, comprised several elements linking it with the Hun burials in the Carpathian Basin and the steppe region. Besides stratigraphic observations, radiocarbon dating has proven that the two burials belong to the same period. The warrior was likely a member of the elite of the first Hun generation that arrived in the Carpathian Basin from Eastern Europe; however, some elements indicate the practising of provincial funerary customs, which may hint at foederati, a group connected to the Romans. His genome indicates close connections with peoples in the Caucasus, raising the question of whether he was a descendant of Alans or some of their genetic neighbours.
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