Across a landscape carved by steep ridges and river valleys, the human story of late medieval and early modern Albania unfolds with a composed continuity. The five sampled individuals dated between 1400 and 1700 CE come from village cemeteries and burial contexts recorded at Bardhoc (Northeastern, Kukes District) and Pazhok (Central Albania). Archaeological data indicates continued local occupation during the Ottoman period, when material culture shows a mixture of longstanding Balkan traditions and external influences carried along trade and administrative routes.
Limited evidence suggests these communities were rooted in regional networks of upland and lowland households rather than newly established settler colonies. The skeletal and funerary contexts show no dramatic demographic rupture in the available assemblage; instead, the sites present a palimpsest of local burial practice across centuries. Because the sample size is small (n=5), we interpret emergence and continuity cautiously: these remains provide snapshots of maternal ancestry and local lifeways rather than a complete demographic portrait. Still, the archaeological backdrop—settlement continuity, cemetery use, and artifact seriation—frames these genomes as part of a longer, complex Balkan human tapestry rather than a transient population event.