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Genetic study Genomic history and selection in Roman and early medieval Britain

Tautalus

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This paper analyses more than a thousand ancient genomes from Britain to understand how migration, social structure, and natural selection shaped the population between the Iron Age and the medieval period. It finds that during Roman rule there were major cultural and political changes, but relatively little genetic impact on the overall population, with most individuals maintaining continuity from the Iron Age and only a minority, mainly in urban or military settings, showing ancestry from outside Britain. After the end of Roman rule, however, there was a major transformation, especially in southern and eastern Britain, driven by large-scale migration from continental Europe, often associated with early Anglo-Saxon movements, with initially limited mixing with local populations. Over time, additional ancestries from Central and Southern Europe appeared, suggesting either multiple migration waves or ongoing connections with the continent, while northern and western regions remained much more genetically continuous and less affected by these changes. The Viking Age left a detectable but comparatively small genetic impact.

The study relies heavily on whole-genome analysis rather than simpler lineage markers, using methods such as Multidimensional Scaling to visualise genetic similarity between individuals and track how populations cluster and shift over time. Haplogroups, particularly mitochondrial DNA, are used in a limited way to infer social patterns, such as matrilineal burial practices and local kinship structures, rather than to trace large-scale migrations. Overall, the results show that Britain’s genetic history was shaped most strongly by post-Roman migrations and ongoing mobility, alongside evidence of natural selection acting on immune-related genes, likely driven by increased population density, urbanisation, and the spread of infectious diseases.​

Abstract

Leading biomedical resources rely on genome variation in Britain (1-3), but the historical processes that shaped present-day fine-scale diversity remain debated (4-13). Here we sequenced 1039 ancient shotgun genomes from Britain (median 1.4-fold coverage), primarily dating to the first millennium CE. We imputed ~660 million variants in the UK Biobank (14-16) and employed genealogy-based ancestry reconstruction. We found an association between Iron Age consanguinity and matrilineal burial practices (17), later disrupted following the Roman Conquest. Despite this societal impact, only 20% of Roman-period individuals carried detectable ancestry from outside Britain. In contrast, from the 6th century CE we detect widespread influx of ancestry in over 70% of individuals in southern 'Anglo-Saxon' Britain, with limited local admixture. We find previously underappreciated heterogeneity, with ancestries associated with Central and Southern Europe rising in prevalence from the 7th century CE. We demonstrate distinct Scandinavian-related ancestry in many Viking-associated contexts, but show that the population-level impact of the Viking Age in Britain was limited. Finally, we detect pre-medieval selection on variants linked with key immunity genes TLR10-TLR1 and IRF8. These results identify population-level and selective processes that shape variation and disease risk in Britain today.

Ancestry changes in Britain in the 1st millennium CE.
a) Temporal distribution of newly-sequenced samples, with average coverage and simplified timeline of main historical events in Britain during the 1st millennium CE.
b) MDS (Multidimensional Scaling) based on Twigstats-boosted pairwise outgroup-f3s focussed on the Roman period.
c) MDS based on Twigstats-boosted pairwise outgroup-f3s focussed on the early medieval period.838
Polygons represent individuals from continental Europe from Roman and early medieval periods.
d) Twigstats-boosted qpAdm models for individuals from Britain dating to the 1st millennium CE. Both newly sequenced and previously published individuals are included and are plotted according to their average date

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The findings from the paper are expected, what's most unusual is the arrival, during the early medieval period, of individuals with ancestry from Southern and Central Europe.

One of their explanations is that “Alternatively, this signal could represent the fusion of ancestries during the 4th-6th centuries CE elsewhere in continental Europe.
If so, this can be interpreted as a legacy of the Roman Empire era mobility. Even after Roman rule ended, its population structure didn’t just disappear. The empire had already redistributed people (soldiers, slaves, administrators) and connected distant regions. These fusion processes likely continued after the end of Roman rule. These ancestries may therefore derive from former Roman provinces and frontier zones, and could have been carried into Britain by later migrations of already heterogeneous groups.
Maciamo just posted a paper about some of those communities : Demography and life histories across the Roman frontier in Germany 400–700.

Also unusual is the limited impact of the Vikings despite the scale of the Danelaw and the political dominance of Scandinavian elites. But there are many other cases where political dominance doesn’t translate into large demographic replacement. The Scandinavian settlers groups must have been relatively small. Also they were absorb into an already similar gene pool. Scandinavian and earlier North Sea populations were genetically close, which makes the Viking contribution harder to detect and easy to dilute.​
 
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