Medieval Brits were only 24% English

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Archaeologists excavate a complicated triple burial while working at Oakington Cambridgeshire. Credit: Springer Nature / Gretzinger et al.
Archaeologists excavate a complicated triple burial while working at Oakington Cambridgeshire. Credit: Springer Nature / Gretzinger et al.

Mass migration into Britain from Germany, The Netherlands and Denmark during the Anglo-Saxon period may have increased European ancestry up to 76% there, according to international researchers, including Australians. They say their findings suggest these migrants influenced the formation of early medieval British society. The team studied archaeological data and ancient DNA from 460 medieval people - dated between 200 and 1300 CE - across northwestern Europe, including 278 from England. They noted an increase in continental northern European DNA in the people from early medieval England, closely related to the early medieval and current DNA of Germans and Danish people. The DNA showed eastern 'English' people were just 24% English, and 76% continental European, at the time. Even today, a substantial northern continental ancestry remains, the scientists say, although it has been watered down by subsequent migrations from other parts of Europe, such as France.

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From: Springer Nature

Investigating British ancestry 

Mass migration into Britain across the North Sea from Germany, The Netherlands and Denmark during the Anglo-Saxon period may have increased European ancestry up to 76% in Britain, reports a Nature paper. The findings suggest that migrations from continental Europe influenced the formation of early medieval British society.

The history of the British Isles and Ireland is characterized by periods of major cultural change — such as after the Roman era — that led to shifts in, for example, language, settlement patterns, manufacture, architecture and agriculture. However, understanding the extent to which human migration from continental Europe mediated these cultural transitions remains challenging. Previous genome-wide studies have focussed on present-day British people to assess ancestry, but these may not be representative of ancient groups with unknown genetic makeup.

To examine contemporary British population dynamics, Stephan Schiffels, Duncan Sayer and colleagues studied archaeological data and genome-wide ancient DNA from 460 medieval individuals — dated between 200 and 1300 CE — across northwestern Europe, including 278 individuals from England. They identified an increase in continental northern European ancestry in early medieval England, which was closely related to the early medieval and current inhabitants of Germany and Denmark. The individuals analysed from eastern England were found to derive up to 76% of their ancestry from the continental North Sea zone. Subsequent demographic events were found to reduce the proportion of continental northern European ancestry and to introduce new components such as southwestern European ancestry, similar to that found in Iron Age France. Additionally, they found that women with immigrant ancestry were more likely to be buried with grave goods, such as brooches, than women with local ancestry. Whereas men with weapons were just as likely to be native or of immigrant ancestry.

The authors suggest that in present-day Britain, a substantial northern continental ancestry remains, albeit at a lower level than during the early medieval period, indicating a lasting demographic impact of the ‘Anglo-Saxon’ migrations.

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Organisation/s: The University of Melbourne, South Australian Museum, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Germany, University of Central Lancashire, UK
Funder: We thank the Royal Pavilion & Museums Trust, Brighton & Hove and A. Maxted; the Stiftung Archäologie im rheinischen Braunkohlerevier; the Max Planck Society; N. Adamski and A. Claxton; and the Velux Foundations. This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement number 851511). P.J. and K.D. were supported by a Leverhulme Doctoral Scholarship awarded to M.B.R. and M.P. C.J.E. acknowledges support from The Leverhulme Trust via research project grant RPG-388. I.B., T.B., M.G.T. and S.B. were supported by a Wellcome Trust Investigator Award (project number 100713/Z/12/Z). S.Beckett and M.V.T. thank R. Baldry and North West Norfolk History Society for funding of radiocarbon dating analyses. Sampling and DNA extraction of the samples from Groningen was funded by the European Funds for Regional Development and the Province of Groningen. We are grateful to the Museum für Archäologie in der Stiftung Schleswig-Holsteinische Landesmuseen Schloss Gottorf for providing samples from Schleswig Rathausmarkt. The ancient DNA laboratory work at Harvard University was supported by the US National Institutes of Health grant GM100233, by John Templeton Foundation grant 61220, by a gift from J.-F. Clin, by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and by the Allen Discovery Center program, a Paul G. Allen Frontiers Group advised program of the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation.
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