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England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon England (East Anglia, Yorkshire, Dorset, Sussex, Cornwall)

Anglo‑Saxon England: Bones, Burials, Blood

Archaeology and DNA from Cambridgeshire to Cornwall illuminate migration, continuity, and community.

700 BCE - 1154 CE
75 Ancient Samples
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Chapter I

The Story

Understanding the Anglo‑Saxon England: Bones, Burials, Blood culture

A synthesis of 129 ancient genomes (700 BCE–1154 CE) from England—sites in Cambridgeshire, Yorkshire, Dorset, Sussex and Cornwall—linking burial archaeology with maternal and paternal lineages to trace Early Medieval Saxon-era population dynamics.

Time Period

700 BCE – 1154 CE

Region

England (East Anglia, Yorkshire, Dorset, Sussex, Cornwall)

Common Y-DNA

I (3), I1 (1), K2b (1), R (1) — limited calling

Common mtDNA

H (32), U (18), T (18), K (14), J (9)

Chapter II

Timeline

Key moments in the history of this culture

700 BCE

Earliest sampled individuals

The dataset includes individuals dated as early as 700 BCE, offering a long baseline for later comparisons.

410 CE

Roman withdrawal from Britain

Political change after the Roman withdrawal creates new social dynamics in which later migrations occur.

450 CE

Early Anglo‑Saxon migrations

Archaeology records arrival of Germanic material culture and cemetery traditions in eastern England.

878 CE

Battle of Edington (approx.)

A pivotal military and political moment shaping late 9th‑century English polities and settlement patterns.

1066 CE

Norman Conquest

A major demographic and cultural turning point that reshaped aristocratic and administrative structures.

1154 CE

Dataset end point

Samples extend to 1154 CE, framing the long arc from Iron Age to High Medieval England.

Chapter III

Origins & Emergence

Across river valleys and chalk downs from Hinxton and Oakington in Cambridgeshire to West Heslerton in North Yorkshire, the archaeological record yields a tense, cinematic transition: late Iron Age communities living within a Romanizing world, then a patchwork of early medieval settlements and cemeteries that archaeologists identify with Anglo‑Saxon and related Germanic cultures. The 129 genomic samples in this dataset span a wide interval (700 BCE–1154 CE) but concentrate on the Early Medieval Saxon era. Material culture—longhouses, inhumation cemeteries with furnished burials, and imported metalwork—documents new social formations and long‑distance ties to continental northwest Europe.

Archaeological data indicates both continuity and change: continuity in local settlement locations and agricultural regimes, and change in burial rites, grave goods, and occasional new building traditions. Limited evidence suggests that some of this cultural change arrived with people from across the North Sea, while other aspects reflect the adoption of new practices by local populations. Where genetics are available, they can distinguish movement of people from movement of ideas, but preservation, sampling bias, and regional variability require cautious interpretation.

  • Samples from Hinxton, Oakington, Linton, West Heslerton, Worth Matravers, Norton, Bishopstone, Slonk Hill, Hollow Banks, Widemouth Bay
  • Archaeological signal: furnished inhumations, settlement continuity and cemetery expansions
  • Evidence points to both migration and cultural transmission; interpretations remain regionally specific
Chapter IV

Daily Life & Society

In the soft light of marshes and coastal plains, day‑to‑day life revolved around mixed agriculture, animal husbandry, and craft. Pollen and zooarchaeological analyses from settlement layers at Oakington and Linton suggest cereals, sheep, and cattle formed the dietary backbone. Small craft industries—ironworking, bone and antler work, and textile production—appear in domestic contexts; glass and metal finds show trade networks reaching the North Sea and the Continent.

Cemeteries such as West Heslerton and Worth Matravers reveal social differentiation: some graves contain weapons or richly decorated jewelry, others simple shrouded inhumations. Child burials and cluster patterns point to family plots and inherited status, while isotope studies at certain sites indicate mobility—children and adults with non‑local strontium signatures—highlighting travel, fosterage, or incoming migrants. Burial customs varied by region and time, reflecting a mosaic of identities rather than a single uniform culture.

  • Economy: mixed cereal agriculture, sheep and cattle herding, local crafts
  • Burial variability indicates social differentiation and regional cultural mosaic
Chapter V

Genetic Profile

The 129 genomes provide a substantial window into maternal and paternal ancestry across eastern and southern England. Maternal lineages are dominated by haplogroup H (32 samples), with sizable counts of U (18), T (18), K (14) and J (9). These mtDNA haplogroups are broadly characteristic of northwestern Europe and indicate diverse maternal origins persisting through the Early Medieval period.

Y‑chromosome calls in this dataset are sparse: counts include I (3), I1 (1), K2b (1), and R (1). Because Y‑lineage calls are few relative to the total number of individuals, paternal‑lineage conclusions are preliminary; differential preservation, sampling choices, and coverage affect Y detection. Where high‑quality genomes exist, population modelling typically shows mixtures of local British Neolithic/Beaker‑derived ancestry with incoming northern continental components consistent with Germanic‑associated migrations. Spatial patterns matter: eastern sites (East Anglia, Cambridgeshire) often show stronger continental affinity than some western samples, supporting archaeological models of concentrated North Sea contacts. However, admixture occurred quickly and locally, creating genetically heterogeneous communities rather than wholesale population replacement.

  • mtDNA dominated by H, U, T, K, J—consistent with northwestern European maternal ancestry
  • Y‑DNA sample counts are low; paternal patterns are provisional and influenced by preservation
Chapter VI

Legacy & Modern Connections

The echoes of these communities persist in place‑names, material culture, and threads of ancestry in modern Britain. Genetic legacies are complex: many modern English populations carry mtDNA lineages seen in the ancient dataset, but modern genomes are the product of millennia of admixture, later migrations (Vikings, Normans), and internal mobility. Archaeology and DNA together show a tapestry where migration, local continuity, and social change each play roles.

Scientific caution is essential: genetics can reveal proportions of ancestry and kin relationships, but it does not map directly onto language or identity. Still, the combined archaeological and genomic evidence highlights eastern England as a focal zone of continental contact during the Early Medieval period, contributing substantially to the later genetic and cultural landscape of England.

  • Modern English populations partially inherit maternal lineages present in these ancient samples
  • Caution: ancestry percentages do not equate to cultural or linguistic identity
Chapter VII

Sample Catalog

75 ancient DNA samples associated with the Anglo‑Saxon England: Bones, Burials, Blood culture

Ancient DNA samples from this era, providing genetic insights into the people who lived during this period.

75 / 75 samples
Portrait Sample Country Era Date Culture Sex Y-DNA mtDNA
Portrait of ancient individual I0774 from United Kingdom, dated 416 CE
I0774
United Kingdom England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon 416 CE Anglo-Saxon/Germanic F - T2a1a
Portrait of ancient individual I20652 from United Kingdom, dated 400 CE
I20652
United Kingdom England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon 400 CE Anglo-Saxon/Germanic M - K2a7
Portrait of ancient individual I0777 from United Kingdom, dated 419 CE
I0777
United Kingdom England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon 419 CE Anglo-Saxon/Germanic F - H1at1
Portrait of ancient individual I20654 from United Kingdom, dated 400 CE
I20654
United Kingdom England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon 400 CE Anglo-Saxon/Germanic M - T1a3a
Portrait of ancient individual I20677 from United Kingdom, dated 400 CE
I20677
United Kingdom England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon 400 CE Anglo-Saxon/Germanic M - H1
Portrait of ancient individual I0157 from United Kingdom, dated 665 CE
I0157
United Kingdom England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon 665 CE Anglo-Saxon/Germanic F - H2a2b1
Portrait of ancient individual I20644 from United Kingdom, dated 400 CE
I20644
United Kingdom England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon 400 CE Anglo-Saxon/Germanic M - H1
Portrait of ancient individual I20661 from United Kingdom, dated 400 CE
I20661
United Kingdom England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon 400 CE Anglo-Saxon/Germanic M - T2b4a
Portrait of ancient individual I20640 from United Kingdom, dated 400 CE
I20640
United Kingdom England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon 400 CE Anglo-Saxon/Germanic M - U5a1a1d
Portrait of ancient individual I0159 from United Kingdom, dated 643 CE
I0159
United Kingdom England_EarlyMedieval_Saxon 643 CE Anglo-Saxon/Germanic F - K1a4a1a2b
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