Genetic admixture and language shift in the medieval Volga-Oka interfluve
Peltola S, Majander K, Makarov N et al.
Publication Details
Comprehensive information about this research publication
Abstract
Summary of the research findings
The Volga-Oka interfluve in northwestern Russia has an intriguing history of population influx and language shift during the Common Era. Today, most inhabitants of the region speak Russian, but until medieval times, northwestern Russia was inhabited by Uralic-speaking peoples.1,2,3 A gradual shift to Slavic languages started in the second half of the first millennium with the expansion of Slavic tribes, which led to the foundation of the Kievan Rus' state in the late 9th century CE. The medieval Rus' was multicultural and multilingual-historical records suggest that its northern regions comprised Slavic and Uralic peoples ruled by Scandinavian settlers.4,5,6 In the 10th-11th centuries, the introduction of Christianity and Cyrillic literature raised the prestige status of Slavic, driving a language shift from Uralic to Slavic.3 This eventually led to the disappearance of the Uralic languages from northwestern Russia. Here, we study a 1,500-year time transect of 30 ancient genomes and stable isotope values from the Suzdal region in the Volga-Oka interfluve. We describe a previously unsampled local Iron Age population and a gradual genetic turnover in the following centuries. Our time transect captures the population shift associated with the spread of Slavic languages and illustrates the ethnically mixed state of medieval Suzdal principality, eventually leading to the formation of the admixed but fully Slavic-speaking population that inhabits the area today. We also observe genetic outliers that highlight the importance of the Suzdal region in medieval times as a hub of long-reaching contacts via trade and warfare.
Ancient DNA Samples
31 ancient DNA samples referenced in this publication
| Sample ID | Date/Era | Country | Locality | Sex | mtDNA | Y-DNA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BOL001_antiquity1240k | 239 CE | Russia | Bolshoye-Davydovskoye-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Bolshoye Davydovskoye Village) | F | |
|
| BOL002_antiquity1240k | 130 CE | Russia | Bolshoye-Davydovskoye-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Bolshoye Davydovskoye Village) | F | U4c1 |
|
| BOL003_antiquity1240k | 237 CE | Russia | Bolshoye-Davydovskoye-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Bolshoye Davydovskoye Village) | F | |
|
| BOL004 | 212 CE | Russia | Bolshoye-Davydovskoye-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Bolshoye Davydovskoye Village) | F | |
|
| BOL005 | 130 CE | Russia | Bolshoye-Davydovskoye-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Bolshoye Davydovskoye Village) | F | |
|
| BOL006 | 130 CE | Russia | Bolshoye-Davydovskoye-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Bolshoye Davydovskoye Village) | F | T2g |
|
| BOL007 | 261 CE | Russia | Bolshoye-Davydovskoye-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Bolshoye Davydovskoye Village) | F | H5 |
|
| BOL008 | 235 CE | Russia | Bolshoye-Davydovskoye-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Bolshoye Davydovskoye Village) | F | H13a2b2a |
|
| BOL009 | 240 CE | Russia | Bolshoye-Davydovskoye-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Bolshoye Davydovskoye Village) | F | H28a |
|
| SHE001 | 881 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-9 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | M | |
E-L618 |
| SHE002 | 993 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-9 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | F | |
|
| SHE003 | 772 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-9 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | M | |
G-FGC5185 |
| SHE004 | 888 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-9 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | F | H6a1a4 |
|
| GOR001 | 771 CE | Russia | Puzhalova-gora (Vladimir Oblast, Gorokhovets municipality) | M | |
R-L1029 |
| GOS001 | 1047 CE | Russia | Sretensky-monastery (Vladimir Oblast, Gorokhovetsky District) | M | |
I-Y3120 |
| GOS002 | 1039 CE | Russia | Sretensky-monastery (Vladimir Oblast, Gorokhovetsky District) | M | |
R-Z92 |
| GOS003 | 1021 CE | Russia | Sretensky-monastery (Vladimir Oblast, Gorokhovetsky District) | M | |
N-Y46313 |
| KRS001 | 1412 CE | Russia | Krasnoe-3 (Vladimir Oblast, Suzdalsky District) | F | T1a |
|
| KED004 | 1400 CE | Russia | Kideksha (Vladimir Oblast, Suzdalsky District) | F | |
|
| SHK001 | 1166 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | M | |
J-PH1795 |
| SHK002 | 1053 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-2 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | M | |
N-VL73 |
| SHE005 | 992 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-9 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | M | |
R-YP5716 |
| SHE006 | 986 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-9 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | F | |
|
| SHE007 | 1044 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-9 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | M | |
I-P78 |
| SHE008 | 1303 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-9 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | F | |
|
| SHE009 | 1299 CE | Russia | Shekshovo-9 (Ivanovo Oblast, Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Sheksnovo Village) | M | |
R-YP509 |
| KBL002 | 1665 CE | Russia | Kibol-3 (Vladimir Oblast, Suzdalsky District) | F | J1c3 |
|
| KBL003 | 1645 CE | Russia | Kibol-3 (Vladimir Oblast, Suzdalsky District) | F | |
|
| KED001 | 1648 CE | Russia | Kideksha (Vladimir Oblast, Suzdalsky District) | F | |
|
| KED002 | 1661 CE | Russia | Kideksha (Vladimir Oblast, Suzdalsky District) | F | |
|
| KED003 | 1526 CE | Russia | Kideksha (Vladimir Oblast, Suzdalsky District) | F | I1a1a3a |
|
Analysis
Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings
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