Department of Ecology and Evolution, Stony Brook University, 650 Life Sciences Building, Stony Brook, NY 11794, USA.
Institute of Archaeological Sciences, ELTE - Eötvös Loránd University, Múzeum krt. 4/B, 1088 Budapest, Hungary.
Curr Biol. 2023 Sep 25;33(18):3951-3961.e11. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.07.063. Epub 2023 Aug 25.
As the collapse of the Western Roman Empire accelerated during the 4th and 5th centuries, arriving "barbarian" groups began to establish new communities in the border provinces of the declining (and eventually former) empire. This was a time of significant cultural and political change throughout not only these border regions but Europe as a whole. To better understand post-Roman community formation in one of these key frontier zones after the collapse of the Hunnic movement, we generated new paleogenomic data for a set of 38 burials from a time series of three 5 century cemeteries at Lake Balaton, Hungary. We utilized a comprehensive sampling approach to characterize these cemeteries along with data from 38 additional burials from a previously published mid-6th century site and analyzed them alongside data from over 550 penecontemporaneous individuals. The range of genetic diversity in all four of these local burial communities is extensive and wider ranging than penecontemporaneous Europeans sequenced to date. Despite many commonalities in burial customs and demography, we find that there were substantial differences in genetic ancestry between the sites. We detect evidence of northern European gene flow into the Lake Balaton region. Additionally, we observe a statistically significant association between dress artifacts and genetic ancestry among 5 century genetically female burials. Our analysis shows that the formation of early Medieval communities was a multifarious process even at a local level, consisting of genetically heterogeneous groups.
随着西罗马帝国在 4 至 5 世纪的迅速衰落,大批“蛮族”群体开始在不断衰落(最终沦为前帝国)的边境省份建立新的社区。这是一个文化和政治变革的重要时期,不仅在这些边境地区,而且在整个欧洲都是如此。为了更好地了解匈奴运动崩溃后这些关键前沿地区之一的后罗马社区的形成,我们针对匈牙利巴拉顿湖三个 5 世纪墓地的一系列时间序列中的 38 个埋葬地点生成了新的古基因组数据。我们利用了全面的采样方法对这些墓地进行了描述,并结合了之前发表的 6 世纪中期一个地点的 38 个额外埋葬点的数据进行了分析,并将其与超过 550 个同期个体的数据进行了对比。这四个当地埋葬社区的遗传多样性范围很广,比迄今为止测序的同期欧洲人范围更广。尽管在埋葬习俗和人口统计学方面有许多共同之处,但我们发现这些地点之间的遗传祖先存在很大差异。我们在巴拉顿湖地区发现了北欧基因流入的证据。此外,我们观察到 5 世纪具有遗传女性特征的埋葬地点的服装文物与遗传祖先之间存在统计学上的显著关联。我们的分析表明,即使在地方层面上,早期中世纪社区的形成也是一个多元化的过程,由遗传上异质的群体组成。