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Research Publication

Urbanization and genetic homogenization in the medieval Low Countries revealed through a ten-century paleogenomic study of the city of Sint-Truiden.

Beneker Owyn, O Molinaro, Ludovica L et al.

40390081 PubMed ID
45 Authors
2025-05-20 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

BO
Beneker Owyn
OM
O Molinaro
LL
Ludovica L
GM
Guellil Meriam
MS
M Sasso
SS
Stefania S
KH
Kabral Helja
HB
H Bonucci
BB
Biancamaria B
GN
Gaens Noah
ND
N D'Atanasio
EE
Eugenia E
MM
Mezzavilla Massimo
MD
M Delbrassine
HH
Hélios H
BL
Braet Linde
LL
L Lambert
BB
Bart B
DP
Deckers Pieterjan
PB
P Biagini
SA
Simone Andrea SA
HR
Hui Ruoyun
RB
R Becelaere
SS
Sara S
GJ
Geypen Jan
JH
J Hoebreckx
MM
Maxim M
BB
Berk Birgit
BD
B Driesen
PP
Petra P
PA
Pijpelink April
AV
A van Damme
PP
Philip P
VS
Vanhoutte Sofie
SD
S De Winter
NN
Natasja N
SL
Saag Lehti
LP
L Pagani
LL
Luca L
TK
Tambets Kristiina
KS
K Scheib
CL
Christiana L CL
LM
Larmuseau Maarten H D
MK
MHD Kivisild
TT
Toomas T
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Processes shaping the formation of the present-day population structure in highly urbanized Northern Europe are still poorly understood. Gaps remain in our understanding of when and how currently observable regional differences emerged and what impact city growth, migration, and disease pandemics during and after the Middle Ages had on these processes.We perform low-coverage sequencing of the genomes of 338 individuals spanning the eighth to the eighteenth centuries in the city of Sint-Truiden in Flanders, in the northern part of Belgium. The early/high medieval Sint-Truiden population was more heterogeneous, having received migrants from Scotland or Ireland, and displayed less genetic relatedness than observed today between individuals in present-day Flanders. We find differences in gene variants associated with high vitamin D blood levels between individuals with Gaulish or Germanic ancestry. Although we find evidence of a Yersinia pestis infection in 5 of the 58 late medieval burials, we were unable to detect a major population-scale impact of the second plague pandemic on genetic diversity or on the elevated differentiation of immunity genes.This study reveals that the genetic homogenization process in a medieval city population in the Low Countries was protracted for centuries. Over time, the Sint-Truiden population became more similar to the current population of the surrounding Limburg province, likely as a result of reduced long-distance migration after the high medieval period, and the continuous process of local admixture of Germanic and Gaulish ancestries which formed the genetic cline observable today in the Low Countries.

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