A dynastic elite in monumental Neolithic society
Cassidy LM, Maoldúin RÓ, Kador T et al.
Publication Details
Comprehensive information about this research publication
Abstract
Summary of the research findings
The nature and distribution of political power in Europe during the Neolithic era remains poorly understood1. During this period, many societies began to invest heavily in building monuments, which suggests an increase in social organization. The scale and sophistication of megalithic architecture along the Atlantic seaboard, culminating in the great passage tomb complexes, is particularly impressive2. Although co-operative ideology has often been emphasised as a driver of megalith construction1, the human expenditure required to erect the largest monuments has led some researchers to emphasize hierarchy3-of which the most extreme case is a small elite marshalling the labour of the masses. Here we present evidence that a social stratum of this type was established during the Neolithic period in Ireland. We sampled 44 whole genomes, among which we identify the adult son of a first-degree incestuous union from remains that were discovered within the most elaborate recess of the Newgrange passage tomb. Socially sanctioned matings of this nature are very rare, and are documented almost exclusively among politico-religious elites4-specifically within polygynous and patrilineal royal families that are headed by god-kings5,6. We identify relatives of this individual within two other major complexes of passage tombs 150 km to the west of Newgrange, as well as dietary differences and fine-scale haplotypic structure (which is unprecedented in resolution for a prehistoric population) between passage tomb samples and the larger dataset, which together imply hierarchy. This elite emerged against a backdrop of rapid maritime colonization that displaced a unique Mesolithic isolate population, although we also detected rare Irish hunter-gatherer introgression within the Neolithic population.
Ancient DNA Samples
44 ancient DNA samples referenced in this publication
| Sample ID | Date/Era | Country | Locality | Sex | mtDNA | Y-DNA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PN04 | 3946 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | M | H1* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| PN05 | 3944 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | M | K1-a4* |
I2a1b1a1a1b |
| PN107 | 3932 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | M | U4a2f* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| PN10_PN113 | 3945 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | F | |
|
| PB357 | 3654 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | F | U8b1b |
|
| PN02 | 3706 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | M | U5b1c1a2* |
I2a1b1a1a1b |
| PN112 | 3704 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | M | U5b2b3* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| PN13 | 3708 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | M | V |
I2a1a2a1a2a |
| ASH3 | 3764 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Tipperary. Ashleypark | M | T2c1d1* |
I2a1a1b |
| CAK530 | 2884 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Sligo. Carrowkeel | F | W5b |
|
| CAK531 | 2883 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Sligo. Carrowkeel | M | H1 |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| CAK532 | 3013 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Sligo. Carrowkeel | M | J1c3* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| CAK533 | 3087 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Sligo. Carrowkeel | F | H |
|
| CAK68 | 2834 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Sligo. Carrowkeel | M | H* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| SRA62 | 4226 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Leitrim. Sramore | M | U5a2d |
I2a1b2 |
| KGH6 | 4797 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Limerick. Killuragh | M | U5b2a* |
I2a1a2 |
| BG72 | 3633 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Carlow. Baunogenasraid | M | K1a4a1* |
H |
| CH448 | 3646 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Cavan. Cohaw | M | H1* |
I2a1a2 |
| PB443 | 3634 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | M | K1b1a1* |
I2a1a2 |
| PB581 | 3625 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | M | T2b |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| PB672 | 3628 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | M | T2c1d-a* |
I2a1a1b |
| PB675 | 3362 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | M | H1 |
I2a1a1b |
| PB754 | 3523 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | F | U5b2a3 |
|
| PB768 | 3639 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | M | H4a1a1* |
I2a1a1b |
| PB1327 | 3626 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | M | T2b3 |
I2a1b1a1a1b |
| PB1794 | 3642 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | F | J1c6 |
|
| PB186 | 3516 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | M | X2b-a* |
I2a1a1b |
| PB2031 | 3628 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Parknabinnia | M | K1a2b |
I2a1a1b |
| PN03 | 3633 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | M | K1a1* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| PN06 | 3633 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | M | H* |
I2a1a1b |
| PN07 | 3623 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | M | U5b1c* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| PN16 | 3630 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | F | K1b1a1 |
|
| PN12 | 3523 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Clare. Poulnabrone | M | H* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| MB6 | 3494 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Down. Millin Bay. Keentagh Td. | M | J1c3* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| JP14 | 3702 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Kilkenny. Jerpoint West | M | T2c1d1* |
HIJK |
| ANN1 | 3637 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Limerick. Annagh | M | K1-a4* |
I2a1b1a1a1b |
| ANN2 | 3707 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Limerick. Annagh | M | H4a1a1 |
I2a1b1a1a |
| GNM1007 | 3513 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Mayo. Glennamong | M | K1-a4* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| GNM1076 | 3366 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Mayo. Glennamong | M | H1c* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| NG10 | 3339 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Meath. Newgrange. Main Chamber | M | U5b1-a1* |
I2a1b1a1a1 |
| NGZ1 | 3322 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Meath. Site Z. Newgrange | F | X2b-a |
|
| ARD2 | 3599 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Tipperary. Ardcrony | M | J2b1a* |
I2a1a2 |
| ASH1 | 3640 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Tipperary. Ashleypark | M | K2a9* |
I2a1b1a1a1b |
| CAK534 | 3100 BCE | Ireland | Ireland. Sligo. Carrowkeel | M | X2b4 |
I |
Analysis
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