Author:
Olalde Iñigo,Carrión Pablo,Mikić Ilija,Rohland Nadin,Mallick Shop,Lazaridis Iosif,Korać Miomir,Golubović Snežana,Petković Sofija,Miladinović-Radmilović Nataša,Vulović Dragana,Stewardson Kristin,Lawson Ann Marie,Zalzala Fatma,Callan Kim,Tomanović Željko,Keckarević Dušan,Grbić Miodrag,Lalueza-Fox Carles,Reich David
Abstract
AbstractThe Roman Empire expanded through the Mediterranean shores and brought human mobility and cosmopolitanism across this inland sea to an unprecedented scale. However, if this was also common at the Empire frontiers remains undetermined. The Balkans and Danube River were of strategic importance for the Romans acting as an East-West connection and as a defense line against “barbarian” tribes. We generated genome-wide data from 70 ancient individuals from present-day Serbia dated to the first millennium CE; including Viminacium, capital of Moesia Superior province. Our analyses reveal large scale-movements from Anatolia during Imperial rule, similar to the pattern observed in Rome, and cases of individual mobility from as far as East Africa. Between ∼250-500 CE, we detect gene-flow from Central/Northern Europe harboring admixtures of Iron Age steppe groups. Tenth-century CE individuals harbored North-Eastern European-related ancestry likely associated to Slavic-speakers, which contributed >20% of the ancestry of today’s Balkan people.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
7 articles.
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