The genetic dataset from Kecskemét‑Mindszenti‑dűlő comprises eight individuals dated to 400–500 CE. Y‑chromosome lineages are dominated by haplogroup I (4 out of 8), with at least one sample assigned to the northern subclade I1a. Maternal lineages show diversity: mtDNA K appears twice, and other haplotypes include H5, U, H, and H7. This combination signals a mosaic of deep European paternal and maternal ancestries characteristic of the Carpathian Basin.
Interpretation: Haplogroup I is long‑established in Europe, often associated with Mesolithic and later regional male lineages, while I1a today is frequent in northern Europe—its presence here could reflect north‑to‑central European connections or retained older diversity within local populations. MtDNA K and H variants are commonly linked to Neolithic farmer expansions and subsequent regional continuity; U lineages can trace to earlier forager ancestries. Together, the profile is consistent with a population formed by long‑term European substrate with later layers of mobility.
Caveats: with only eight samples, statistical power is limited. Patterns observed are informative but preliminary; further sampling across nearby sites and periods is required to robustly resolve migration events, sex‑biased admixture, and continuity versus replacement dynamics.
Genetics and archaeology combined suggest a locally rooted populace touched by wider Late Antique movements, not a wholesale demographic replacement.