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Portrait reconstruction of A1817
Ancient Individual

A man buried in Hungary in the Late Antiquity era

A1817
630 CE - 670 CE
Male
Early Avar Period Danube-Tisza, Hungary
Hungary
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Chapter I

Identity

The biological and cultural markers that define this ancient individual

Sample ID

A1817

Date Range

630 CE - 670 CE

Biological Sex

Male

mtDNA Haplogroup

H8a1

Y-DNA Haplogroup

N1a1a1a1a3a

Cultural Period

Early Avar Period Danube-Tisza, Hungary

Chapter II

Place

Where this individual was discovered

Country Hungary
Locality Danube-Tisza Interfluve. Kunpeszér - Felsőpeszéri út
Coordinates 47.0775, 19.2426
Chapter III

Time

When this individual lived in the broader context of human history

A1817 630 CE - 670 CE
Chapter IV

Context

Other ancient individuals connected to this sample

Sources

References

Scientific publications and genetic data

Scientific Publication

Ancient genomes reveal origin and rapid trans-Eurasian migration of 7th century Avar elites

Authors Gnecchi-Ruscone GA, Szécsényi-Nagy A, Koncz I
Abstract

The Avars settled the Carpathian Basin in 567/68 CE, establishing an empire lasting over 200 years. Who they were and where they came from is highly debated. Contemporaries have disagreed about whether they were, as they claimed, the direct successors of the Mongolian Steppe Rouran empire that was destroyed by the Turks in ∼550 CE. Here, we analyze new genome-wide data from 66 pre-Avar and Avar-period Carpathian Basin individuals, including the 8 richest Avar-period burials and further elite sites from Avar's empire core region. Our results provide support for a rapid long-distance trans-Eurasian migration of Avar-period elites. These individuals carried Northeast Asian ancestry matching the profile of preceding Mongolian Steppe populations, particularly a genome available from the Rouran period. Some of the later elite individuals carried an additional non-local ancestry component broadly matching the steppe, which could point to a later migration or reflect greater genetic diversity within the initial migrant population.

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