Ajeje Brazorf
12-13-2022, 01:05 PM
Highlights
• Iron Age inhabitants of Suzdal were genetically unique but close to Uralic speakers
• A shift in the local gene pool coincided with Slavic migrations and a language shift
• Genetic changes mirror the insights from historical linguistics and written records
• Outliers suggest far-reaching contacts during the medieval times
Summary
The Volga-Oka interfluve in northwestern Russia has an intriguing history of population influx and language shift during the Common Era. Today, most inhabitants of the region speak Russian, but until medieval times, northwestern Russia was inhabited by Uralic-speaking peoples. A gradual shift to Slavic languages started in the second half of the first millennium with the expansion of Slavic tribes, which led to the foundation of the Kievan Rus’ state in the late 9th century CE. The medieval Rus’ was multicultural and multilingual—historical records suggest that its northern regions comprised Slavic and Uralic peoples ruled by Scandinavian settlers. In the 10th–11th centuries, the introduction of Christianity and Cyrillic literature raised the prestige status of Slavic, driving a language shift from Uralic to Slavic. This eventually led to the disappearance of the Uralic languages from northwestern Russia. Here, we study a 1,500-year time transect of 30 ancient genomes and stable isotope values from the Suzdal region in the Volga-Oka interfluve. We describe a previously unsampled local Iron Age population and a gradual genetic turnover in the following centuries. Our time transect captures the population shift associated with the spread of Slavic languages and illustrates the ethnically mixed state of medieval Suzdal principality, eventually leading to the formation of the admixed but fully Slavic-speaking population that inhabits the area today. We also observe genetic outliers that highlight the importance of the Suzdal region in medieval times as a hub of long-reaching contacts via trade and warfare.
https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(22)01826-7
<colgroup><col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:2084;width:43pt" width="57"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:1280;width:26pt" width="35"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:3620;width:74pt" width="99"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:2194;width:45pt" width="60"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:2377;width:49pt" width="65"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:3437;width:71pt" width="94"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:16384;width:336pt" width="448"> </colgroup><tbody>
Sample
Year
Cluster
Coverage
mtDNA
Y-DNA
Location
BOL002
188
VolgaOka_IA
76,12%
U4c1
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL006
192
*
70,04%
T2g
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL005
219
VolgaOka_IA
49,59%
V7a1
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL004
263
*
58,65%
U4c1
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL008
289
VolgaOka_IA
79,74%
H13a2b2a
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL003
292
VolgaOka_IA
9,86%
H5a1a
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL001
294
VolgaOka_IA
39,51%
H11a2
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL009
295
VolgaOka_IA
76,14%
H28a
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL007
373
VolgaOka_IA
77,58%
H5
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
SHE003
841
VolgaOka_MA1
65,34%
U5a2a1b
G2a2b1a
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
GOR001
859
VolgaOka_MA1
55,44%
K1c1h
R1a1a1b1a1b1
Sovetskaya Ulitsa, 5, Gorokhovets, Vladimirskaya oblast', Russia, 601480
SHE001
930
VolgaOka_MA2
8,51%
U5a1d1
E1b1b1a1b1
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE004
936
VolgaOka_MA1
74,09%
H6a1a4
*
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE002
1010
*
5,35%
NA
*
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE006
1012
VolgaOka_MA1
54,22%
K1a30a
*
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE005
1046
VolgaOka_MA2
12,84%
HV10
R1a1a
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
GOS003
1090
VolgaOka_MA2
13,28%
I1a1
K
Sovetskaya Ulitsa, 5, Gorokhovets, Vladimirskaya oblast', Russia, 601480
GOS002
1111
VolgaOka_MA2
34,67%
U3a3
R1a1a1b1a2a
Sovetskaya Ulitsa, 5, Gorokhovets, Vladimirskaya oblast', Russia, 601480
SHE007
1125
VolgaOka_MA2
18,63%
H49
I2a2
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
GOS001
1157
VolgaOka_MA2
49,33%
I1a1a
I2a1b2a1
Sovetskaya Ulitsa, 5, Gorokhovets, Vladimirskaya oblast', Russia, 601480
SHK002
1179
SHK
28,02%
Z3c
N1
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHK001
1207
SHK
48,50%
M9a1a
J2a
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE009
1346
*
55,64%
U2e1b1
R1a1a1b1a1
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE008
1348
*
26,15%
H3
*
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
KED004
1414
*
68,70%
F2e
*
Kideksha, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 601293
KRS001
1429
*
81,91%
T1a
*
Krasnogvardeiskii, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 601263
KED003
1634
VolgaOka_H
80,19%
I1a1a3a
*
Kideksha, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 601293
KBL003
1728
*
26,18%
U5b1b1a
*
Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia
KED001
1747
VolgaOka_H
75,13%
H24a
*
Kideksha, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 601293
KBL001
1756
*
NA
NA
*
Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia
KED002
1772
VolgaOka_H
52,77%
H50
*
Kideksha, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 601293
KBL002
1787
VolgaOka_H
81,75%
J1c3
*
Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia
</tbody>
• Iron Age inhabitants of Suzdal were genetically unique but close to Uralic speakers
• A shift in the local gene pool coincided with Slavic migrations and a language shift
• Genetic changes mirror the insights from historical linguistics and written records
• Outliers suggest far-reaching contacts during the medieval times
Summary
The Volga-Oka interfluve in northwestern Russia has an intriguing history of population influx and language shift during the Common Era. Today, most inhabitants of the region speak Russian, but until medieval times, northwestern Russia was inhabited by Uralic-speaking peoples. A gradual shift to Slavic languages started in the second half of the first millennium with the expansion of Slavic tribes, which led to the foundation of the Kievan Rus’ state in the late 9th century CE. The medieval Rus’ was multicultural and multilingual—historical records suggest that its northern regions comprised Slavic and Uralic peoples ruled by Scandinavian settlers. In the 10th–11th centuries, the introduction of Christianity and Cyrillic literature raised the prestige status of Slavic, driving a language shift from Uralic to Slavic. This eventually led to the disappearance of the Uralic languages from northwestern Russia. Here, we study a 1,500-year time transect of 30 ancient genomes and stable isotope values from the Suzdal region in the Volga-Oka interfluve. We describe a previously unsampled local Iron Age population and a gradual genetic turnover in the following centuries. Our time transect captures the population shift associated with the spread of Slavic languages and illustrates the ethnically mixed state of medieval Suzdal principality, eventually leading to the formation of the admixed but fully Slavic-speaking population that inhabits the area today. We also observe genetic outliers that highlight the importance of the Suzdal region in medieval times as a hub of long-reaching contacts via trade and warfare.
https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(22)01826-7
<colgroup><col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:2084;width:43pt" width="57"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:1280;width:26pt" width="35"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:3620;width:74pt" width="99"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:2194;width:45pt" width="60"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:2377;width:49pt" width="65"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:3437;width:71pt" width="94"> <col style="mso-width-source:userset;mso-width-alt:16384;width:336pt" width="448"> </colgroup><tbody>
Sample
Year
Cluster
Coverage
mtDNA
Y-DNA
Location
BOL002
188
VolgaOka_IA
76,12%
U4c1
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL006
192
*
70,04%
T2g
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL005
219
VolgaOka_IA
49,59%
V7a1
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL004
263
*
58,65%
U4c1
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL008
289
VolgaOka_IA
79,74%
H13a2b2a
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL003
292
VolgaOka_IA
9,86%
H5a1a
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL001
294
VolgaOka_IA
39,51%
H11a2
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL009
295
VolgaOka_IA
76,14%
H28a
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
BOL007
373
VolgaOka_IA
77,58%
H5
*
Davydovskoe Bol'shoe, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia, 155007
SHE003
841
VolgaOka_MA1
65,34%
U5a2a1b
G2a2b1a
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
GOR001
859
VolgaOka_MA1
55,44%
K1c1h
R1a1a1b1a1b1
Sovetskaya Ulitsa, 5, Gorokhovets, Vladimirskaya oblast', Russia, 601480
SHE001
930
VolgaOka_MA2
8,51%
U5a1d1
E1b1b1a1b1
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE004
936
VolgaOka_MA1
74,09%
H6a1a4
*
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE002
1010
*
5,35%
NA
*
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE006
1012
VolgaOka_MA1
54,22%
K1a30a
*
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE005
1046
VolgaOka_MA2
12,84%
HV10
R1a1a
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
GOS003
1090
VolgaOka_MA2
13,28%
I1a1
K
Sovetskaya Ulitsa, 5, Gorokhovets, Vladimirskaya oblast', Russia, 601480
GOS002
1111
VolgaOka_MA2
34,67%
U3a3
R1a1a1b1a2a
Sovetskaya Ulitsa, 5, Gorokhovets, Vladimirskaya oblast', Russia, 601480
SHE007
1125
VolgaOka_MA2
18,63%
H49
I2a2
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
GOS001
1157
VolgaOka_MA2
49,33%
I1a1a
I2a1b2a1
Sovetskaya Ulitsa, 5, Gorokhovets, Vladimirskaya oblast', Russia, 601480
SHK002
1179
SHK
28,02%
Z3c
N1
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHK001
1207
SHK
48,50%
M9a1a
J2a
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE009
1346
*
55,64%
U2e1b1
R1a1a1b1a1
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
SHE008
1348
*
26,15%
H3
*
Gavrilovo-Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast, Russia
KED004
1414
*
68,70%
F2e
*
Kideksha, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 601293
KRS001
1429
*
81,91%
T1a
*
Krasnogvardeiskii, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 601263
KED003
1634
VolgaOka_H
80,19%
I1a1a3a
*
Kideksha, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 601293
KBL003
1728
*
26,18%
U5b1b1a
*
Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia
KED001
1747
VolgaOka_H
75,13%
H24a
*
Kideksha, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 601293
KBL001
1756
*
NA
NA
*
Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia
KED002
1772
VolgaOka_H
52,77%
H50
*
Kideksha, Vladimir Oblast, Russia, 601293
KBL002
1787
VolgaOka_H
81,75%
J1c3
*
Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia
</tbody>