Casal Bertone sits within the living, breathing metropolis of Imperial Rome. Archaeological excavations at the Casal Bertone area, close to the eastern approaches of Rome, have exposed funerary contexts and traces of urban life dated broadly to the Roman Imperial period (1–300 CE). These deposits reflect a city that was by turns cosmopolitan, centrifugal, and constantly replenished by people, goods and ideas drawn from across the Mediterranean and beyond.
Archaeological data indicates that Casal Bertone functioned within the dense urban landscape of Rome: tombs, funerary paraphernalia, and associated features speak to a population engaged in diverse crafts, trade, and ritual practices. The small assemblage of four ancient DNA samples provides a tantalizing, but limited, genetic snapshot of this environment. Limited evidence suggests maternal lineages at Casal Bertone included haplogroups X2n and variants of H, lineages known from both local Italian contexts and the wider Mediterranean.
Because the sample count is very small, any narrative about origins must remain cautious. These remains nevertheless echo a well-attested archaeological pattern: Imperial Rome was a nexus of movement. Genetic signals from places like Casal Bertone are best read as individual threads within a vast, interwoven fabric of people who inhabited the capital and its environs.