The Italy_Imperial dataset emerges from the shadow of the Republic into the monumental sweep of the Principate (27 BCE onward). Burials sampled at urban and suburban necropoleis — including Via Paisiello and Viale Rossini at Necropoli Salaria, Isola Sacra (Ostia), Palestrina Antina, Monterotondo, and Mazzano Romano — offer a patchwork of lives framed by imperial administration, trade, and migration. Archaeological data indicates continuing local Italic funerary traditions alongside imported goods and Mediterranean burial practices, suggesting cultural continuity interlaced with mobility.
Genetic data from 48 individuals spans an era of intense connectivity: seaborne commerce, legionary movement, and the influx of people across the Mediterranean and into Italy. Limited evidence suggests that many residents retained genetic continuity with earlier central Italian populations, while a subset carries lineages more commonly associated with eastern Mediterranean and Near Eastern source regions. That pattern aligns with archaeological indicators of long-distance trade and the presence of heterogeneous communities in port towns like Isola Sacra. Where sample sizes for particular sites or haplogroups are small, conclusions must be tentative; the combined archaeological and genetic record best supports a model of local foundations altered by episodic, detectable admixture from wider imperial networks.