On the wind-swept atoll of Manda, archaeological layers preserve a long, luminous chapter of the Swahili coast. From roughly 800 CE, Manda Island in the Lamu Archipelago became a node in the Indian Ocean’s web of exchange. Excavations at shoreline settlements and inland mounds have revealed coral-built houses, mosques, burial grounds, and a scatter of imported ceramics — Chinese porcelain, Persian sgraffito, and Indian red-slip wares — testifying to early and persistent maritime connections.
Archaeological data indicates the settlement grew through the medieval period (ca. 1000–1500 CE), when trade in ivory, gold, and slaves linked East Africa to Arabia, Persia, India, and beyond. By the 16th–17th centuries, changes in material culture reflect shifts in global trade patterns after Portuguese and later Omani involvement. Limited evidence suggests continuity of local craft and burial practice alongside imported goods, pointing to a social landscape shaped by both local African traditions and sustained foreign contact.
The genetic samples from Manda (n = 8) span this long arc. While archaeological artifacts provide the texture of exchange—beads, ceramics, architecture—the ancient DNA offers a complementary, biological window into who lived, moved, and mixed on this island. Because sample numbers are small, interpretations must remain provisional and integrated with archaeological context.