The aDNA dataset from these sites comprises four medieval individuals (1100–1300 CE). Genetic results show one Y-chromosome haplogroup I and mitochondrial diversity represented by haplogroups N, T, K, and U (one each). Haplogroup I is common across northern and southeastern Europe and, in the medieval Balkans, can represent continuity of long-standing paternal lineages or local drift. The mitochondrial diversity—spanning well-known European clades—indicates mixed maternal ancestries, consistent with regional networks of marriage and mobility.
Importantly, the sample count is very low (<10), so population-level inferences are preliminary. Limited sampling can exaggerate the apparent frequency of certain haplogroups and mask rarer lineages. Archaeogenetic interpretation should therefore be couched in probability: these four genomes suggest local heterogeneity rather than a single homogenous group, but they do not define the full genetic landscape of medieval Braničevo.
Future targeted sampling across cemetery contexts and comparative analysis with contemporaneous Balkan aDNA will clarify signals of continuity versus influx (e.g., movements linked to medieval political shifts, trade, or pilgrimage). For now, the genetic snapshot complements archaeological impressions of a population rooted in the Viminacium landscape while connected to wider European maternal and paternal lineages.