Jordan at the turn of the third millennium CE is a palimpsest: layers of past civilizations—Bronze Age towns, Nabataean trade routes, Roman cities, Islamic caliphates, Ottoman administration—underpin the modern nation-state. Archaeological sites such as Petra, Jerash (Roman Gerasa), and Tall al-Umayri document long-lived settlement, urbanism, and regional connectivity across millennia. These material traces set the stage for modern identities even as the social landscape is continually reshaped by migration, trade, and politics.
In the modern era, the Emirate of Transjordan (established 1921) and independence in 1946 created new political boundaries on ancient ground; by 2000 CE Jordan had become a focal point for regional mobility and refuge. Migrant labor and diaspora networks extend Jordanian presence into Gulf states such as Kuwait—reflected in this dataset, which includes migrants sampled in Kuwait and residents sampled in Jordan. Archaeological data indicate persistent occupation in many valleys and plateaus, but modern demographic processes—urban growth in Amman, waves of 20th-century displacement, and labor migration—introduce recent layers that are more dynamic than most archaeological horizons.
Limited historical and archaeological continuity can often be observed in cultural practices, material culture, and settlement patterns, but genetic continuity is not guaranteed. Material continuity provides context for interpreting modern genomes: long-term habitation increases the probability of regional ancestry signals, while historical mobility introduces multiple, sometimes competing, genetic inputs. The archaeological record grounds any genetic narrative in place and time, reminding us that modern identity is both ancient and newly formed.