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Thread: Southeast England was 80% replaced by Anglo-Saxons in the Early Middle Ages

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    Do we have any good medieval Norman samples?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Creoda View Post
    Study on cranial bases from this month with similar conclusions:

    https://journals.plos.org/plosone/ar...l.pone.0252477

    Abstract
    The settlement of Great Britain by Germanic-speaking people from continental northwest Europe in the Early Medieval period (early 5th to mid 11th centuries CE) has long been recognised as an important event, but uncertainty remains about the number of settlers and the nature of their relationship with the preexisting inhabitants of the island. In the study reported here, we sought to shed light on these issues by using 3D shape analysis techniques to compare the cranial bases of Anglo-Saxon skeletons to those of skeletons from Great Britain that pre-date the Early Medieval period and skeletons from Denmark that date to the Iron Age. Analyses that focused on Early Anglo-Saxon skeletons indicated that between two-thirds and three-quarters of Anglo-Saxon individuals were of continental northwest Europe ancestry, while between a quarter and one-third were of local ancestry. In contrast, analyses that focused on Middle Anglo-Saxon skeletons suggested that 50–70% were of local ancestry, while 30–50% were of continental northwest Europe ancestry. Our study suggests, therefore, that ancestry in Early Medieval Britain was similar to what it is today—mixed and mutable.
    The early Anglo-Saxon period is identified as 410-660 AD, while the Middle Anglo-Saxon period is identified as 660-889 AD. The Middle Anglo-Saxon English ancestry is similar to today, so that's a more precise idea of when the ethnogenesis occurred. The English of Alfred, Alcuin, Bede, Offa etc were practically modern English genetically (although not necessarily those individuals).
    NO3423, Anglo-Saxon from Northumbria dated to 650-910 AD (so already Middle AS period) is still not similar to modern English, but much more Germanic:

    Code:
    England_Saxon:NO3423,0.129758,0.13405,0.068259,0.062339,0.0397,0.017012,0.004465,0.002077,0.001227,-0.007107,-0.007795,0.001499,-0.010852,-0.010459,0.027823,0.005569,-0.014212,0.004561,-0.000126,0.005002,0.009982,0.002473,0.002465,0.015183,0.001916
    ^^^ G25 scaled coordinates.

    Maybe there was a large spread in the Northumbrian society at that time with some people still being almost 100% autosomally Briton (even if culturally already Anglo-Saxon), while some others being like NO3423. And everything in-between.
    Last edited by Peterski; 02-01-2022 at 10:16 AM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Piotraschke View Post
    NO3423, Anglo-Saxon from Northumbria dated to 650-910 AD (so already Middle AS period) is still not similar to modern English, but much more Germanic:

    Code:
    England_Saxon:NO3423,0.129758,0.13405,0.068259,0.062339,0.0397,0.017012,0.004465,0.002077,0.001227,-0.007107,-0.007795,0.001499,-0.010852,-0.010459,0.027823,0.005569,-0.014212,0.004561,-0.000126,0.005002,0.009982,0.002473,0.002465,0.015183,0.001916
    ^^^ G25 scaled coordinates.

    Maybe there was a large spread in the Northumbrian society at that time with some people still being almost 100% autosomally Briton (even if culturally already Anglo-Saxon), while some others being like NO3423. And everything in-between.
    Cranial studies of the oldies show that the Anglo-Saxons were still largely "Anglo-Saxon" as late as the 9th century AD, so I'm inclined to believe that the Vikings still encountered very Germanic individuals in their early raids. Could the Viking invasions have stimulated the union of Saxons and natives? Dunno, but it is possible.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Token View Post
    Cranial studies of the oldies show that the Anglo-Saxons were still largely "Anglo-Saxon" as late as the 9th century AD, so I'm inclined to believe that the Vikings still encountered very Germanic individuals in their early raids. Could the Viking invasions have stimulated the union of Saxons and natives? Dunno, but it is possible.
    Yes it is possible. BTW I'm surprised that the Welsh did not unite with the Vikings in order to reconquer at least some of formerly Briton lands from the Anglo-Saxons.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Piotraschke View Post
    Yes it is possible. BTW I'm surprised that the Welsh did not unite with the Vikings in order to reconquer at least some of formerly Briton lands from the Anglo-Saxons.
    The Britons seem to have lost their impetus after tasting the niceties of Roman civilization, like all other Roman provincials. No wonder western Europe turned into a Germanic battlefield in the early Middle Ages, with the rest being not much more than onlookers and food producers for their successive Germanic lords.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Piotraschke View Post
    NO3423, Anglo-Saxon from Northumbria dated to 650-910 AD (so already Middle AS period) is still not similar to modern English, but much more Germanic:

    Code:
    England_Saxon:NO3423,0.129758,0.13405,0.068259,0.062339,0.0397,0.017012,0.004465,0.002077,0.001227,-0.007107,-0.007795,0.001499,-0.010852,-0.010459,0.027823,0.005569,-0.014212,0.004561,-0.000126,0.005002,0.009982,0.002473,0.002465,0.015183,0.001916
    ^^^ G25 scaled coordinates.

    Maybe there was a large spread in the Northumbrian society at that time with some people still being almost 100% autosomally Briton (even if culturally already Anglo-Saxon), while some others being like NO3423. And everything in-between.
    Yes, I'd expect there to be more ancestral variance until later in the Middle Ages.

    Eastern English are seemingly not much more Brittonic drifted than those Anglo-Saxon era samples, just more Southern.
    The homogenisation of British population structure through admixture
    In contrast to the gentle gradient of ancient Irish variation, British and continental individuals show a
    more punctuated distribution along PC2 (Fig. 4.6B-C), forming two clear clusters at both ends of modern
    British variation. Anglo-Saxons fall with southeastern English variation in this and all other PCs
    considered, alongside a Nordic Iron Age sample, reflecting the large genetic contribution of Germanic
    migrations to this part of the island (Leslie et al. 2015; Schiffels et al. 2016). Iron Age Britons comprise
    another tight grouping at the opposite end of British variation, emphasising the admixed nature of the
    modern population (Leslie et al. 2015; Martiniano et al. 2016; Schiffels et al. 2016). Early snapshots of
    continental introgression events may be represented by two samples that fall midway between the two
    groups, one from an Anglo-Saxon context (O3), which was reported as admixed in the original study
    (Schiffels et al. 2016), and the second from a Roman British population (6DT23), another member of
    which was demonstrated to be of likely Middle Eastern origin (Martiniano et al. 2016). Notably, no Irish
    Iron Age samples are seen to fall into this region of the PC space

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    Quote Originally Posted by Piotraschke View Post
    Yes it is possible. BTW I'm surprised that the Welsh did not unite with the Vikings in order to reconquer at least some of formerly Briton lands from the Anglo-Saxons.
    They did at Brunanburh (modern Cheshire), but they failed, and the Kingdom of England was solidified.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Brunanburh

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    Quote Originally Posted by Creoda View Post
    They did at Brunanburh (modern Cheshire), but they failed, and the Kingdom of England was solidified.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Brunanburh
    Thanks for the info, but Strathclyde was not located in present-day Wales.

    It seems that kingdoms from present-day Wales did not participate.

    Edit:

    Actually maybe the Kingdom of Gwent participated too.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Piotraschke View Post
    Thanks for the info, but Strathclyde was not located in present-day Wales.

    It seems that kingdoms from present-day Wales did not participate.
    They were Welsh though, those distinctions didn't exist yet, not to the English anyway. The King of Strathclyde was Owain ap Dyfnwal, couldn't get any more Welsh than that. Wales is simply the Brythonic lands that weren't conquered (until later).

    The main reason the Welsh in Wales didn't bother the English much was because of Offa's Dyke, built in the 8th century, separating Wales from Mercia.
    Last edited by J. Ketch; 02-01-2022 at 12:48 PM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Token View Post
    The Britons seem to have lost their impetus after tasting the niceties of Roman civilization, like all other Roman provincials. No wonder western Europe turned into a Germanic battlefield in the early Middle Ages, with the rest being not much more than onlookers and food producers for their successive Germanic lords.
    I'm not sure how Romanised/'Civilised' most of the Britons were though, it surprised me before how small a percentage of the population of Roman Britain was urban, and they would have been demographically hardest hit by Roman withdrawal. Actually it's remarkable how un-Romanised the known sub-Roman Britons were and what little legacy there was from 300+ years of colonisation, almost as remarkable as how un-Celtic the early English were.

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