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Ancient DNA connects large-scale migration with the spread of Slavs

Joscha Gretzinger, Felix Biermann, Hellen Mager et al.

40903570 PubMed ID
42 Authors
2025-09-03 Published
2,349 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

JG
Joscha Gretzinger
FB
Felix Biermann
HM
Hellen Mager
BK
Benedict King
DZ
Denisa Zlámalová
LT
Luca Traverso
GA
Guido A. Gnecchi Ruscone
SP
Sanni Peltola
ES
Elina Salmela
GU
Gunnar U. Neumann
RR
Rita Radzeviciute
PI
Pavlína Ingrová
RL
Radosław Liwoch
IW
Iwona Wronka
RJ
Radomir Jurić
AH
Anna Hyrchała
BN
Barbara Niezabitowska-Wiśniewska
BB
Bartłomiej Bartecki
BB
Beata Borowska
TD
Tomasz Dzieńkowski
MW
Marcin Wołoszyn
MW
Michał Wojenka
JW
Jarosław Wilczyński
MK
Małgorzata Kot
EM
Eric Müller
JO
Jörg Orschiedt
GZ
Gunita Zariņa
PO
Päivi Onkamo
FD
Falko Daim
AM
Arnold Muhl
RS
Ralf Schwarz
MM
Marek Majer
MM
Michael McCormick
JK
Jan Květina
TV
Tivadar Vida
PJ
Patrick J. Geary
JM
Jiří Macháček
Mario Šlaus
HM
Harald Meller
WP
Walter Pohl
ZH
Zuzana Hofmanová
JK
Johannes Krause
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Abstract The second half of the first millennium ce in Central and Eastern Europe was accompanied by fundamental cultural and political transformations. This period of change is commonly associated with the appearance of the Slavs, which is supported by textual evidence1,2 and coincides with the emergence of similar archaeological horizons3–6. However, so far there has been no consensus on whether this archaeological horizon spread by migration, Slavicisation or a combination of both. Genetic data remain sparse, especially owing to the widespread practice of cremation in the early phase of the Slavic settlement. Here we present genome-wide data from 555 ancient individuals, including 359 samples from Slavic contexts from as early as the seventh century ce. Our data demonstrate large-scale population movement from Eastern Europe during the sixth to eighth centuries, replacing more than 80% of the local gene pool in Eastern Germany, Poland and Croatia. Yet, we also show substantial regional heterogeneity as well as a lack of sex-biased admixture, indicating varying degrees of cultural assimilation of the autochthonous populations. Comparing archaeological and genetic evidence, we find that the change in ancestry in Eastern Germany coincided with a change in social organization, characterized by an intensification of inter- and intra-site genetic relatedness and patrilocality. On the European scale, it appears plausible that the changes in material culture and language between the sixth and eighth centuries were connected to these large-scale population movements.

Chapter III

AI-Generated Summary

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