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Research Publication

Ancient genomes reveal trans-Eurasian connections between the European Huns and the Xiongnu Empire.

Gnecchi-Ruscone Guido Alberto, GA Rácz, Zsófia Z et al.

39993190 PubMed ID
42 Authors
2025-03-04 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GG
Gnecchi-Ruscone Guido Alberto
GR
GA Rácz
ZZ
Zsófia Z
LS
Liccardo Salvatore
SL
S Lee
JJ
Juhyeon J
HY
Huang Yilei
YT
Y Traverso
LL
Luca L
RR
Radzevičiūtė Rita
RH
R Hajnal
ZZ
Zsuzsanna Z
SA
Szécsényi-Nagy Anna
AG
A Gyuris
BB
Balázs B
MO
Mateovics-László Orsolya
OB
O Bernert
ZZ
Zsolt Z
ST
Szeniczey Tamás
TH
T Hajdu
TT
Tamás T
MB
Mészáros Boglárka
BB
B Bálint
MM
Marianna M
MB
Mende Balázs Gusztáv
BM
BG Miller
BB
Bryan B
SZ
Samashev Zainolla
ZC
Z Childebayeva
AA
Ainash A
DL
Djansugurova Leyla
LG
L Geary
PP
Patrick P
RH
Ringbauer Harald
HV
H Vida
TT
Tivadar T
JC
Jeong Choongwon
CP
C Pohl
WW
Walter W
KJ
Krause Johannes
JH
J Hofmanová
ZZ
Zuzana Z
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The Huns appeared in Europe in the 370s, establishing an Empire that reshaped West Eurasian history. Yet until today their origins remain a matter of extensive debate. Traditional theories link them to the Xiongnu, the founders of the first nomadic empire of the Mongolian steppe. The Xiongnu empire dissolved, however, ~300 y before the Huns appeared in Europe, and there is little archaeological and historical evidence of Huns in the steppe during this time gap. Furthermore, despite the rich 5th to 6th centuries current era (CE) archaeological record of the Carpathian Basin, the cultural elements of connections with the steppe are limited to few findings and even fewer solitary eastern-type burials. In this study, we coanalyze archaeological evidence with 35 newly sequenced and published genomic data for a total of 370 individuals-from 5th to 6th century CE contexts in the Carpathian Basin including 10 Hun-period eastern-type burials, 2nd to 5th century sites across Central Asia and 2nd c. before current era (BCE) to 1st c. CE Xiongnu period sites across the Mongolian steppe. We find no evidence for the presence of a large eastern/steppe descent community among the Hun- and post-Hun-period Carpathian Basin population. We also observe a high genetic diversity among the eastern-type burials that recapitulates the variability observed across the Eurasian Steppe. This suggests a mixed origin of the incoming steppe conquerors. Nevertheless, long-shared genomic tracts provide compelling evidence of genetic lineages directly connecting some individuals of the highest Xiongnu-period elite with 5th to 6th century CE Carpathian Basin individuals, showing that some European Huns descended from them.

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