Across rivers and marshes of medieval Poland, the Viking Age unfolded as a palimpsest of trade, raiding, and settlement. Archaeological data indicates contacts between Scandinavian networks and Slavic polities along the Baltic and Vistula corridors; excavated cemeteries at Bodzia, Cedynia, Sandomierz, and Czersk provide the local contexts sampled here. The dates for the eight genetic samples span 892–1154 CE, placing them firmly within the later Viking Age and the early High Middle Ages in Central Europe.
Genetically, the assemblage hints at a mixed origin: a majority of male haplogroups fall under the broad R category (5/8 samples), with I1 present in one individual—an Y-lineage closely associated with Scandinavian populations in many ancient and modern datasets. Maternal lineages (H, H1c, J, X) are predominantly common European types, consistent with regional continuity of female ancestry but also compatible with long-distance connections across northern Europe. Limited evidence suggests the presence of individuals with ties to both local West Slavic groups and incoming Scandinavian networks.
Because the dataset is small (N = 8), interpretations must remain cautious. Archaeological context—grave orientation, goods, and burial treatment—can strengthen cultural assignments, but when sample counts are low, genetic signals are best understood as suggestive rather than definitive. Future sampling at these and nearby sites will clarify whether these patterns reflect individual mobility, small-scale Scandinavian settlement, or enduring genetic blending in frontier zones.