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Spain (Andalusia, Catalonia)

Roman Spain: Granada to Empúries

Archaeology and DNA tracing lives across Hispania from 44 BCE to 676 CE

44 BCE - 676 CE
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Chapter I

The Story

Understanding the Roman Spain: Granada to Empúries culture

Ancient DNA from 19 individuals across Andalusia and Catalonia illuminates population dynamics in Roman-period Spain. Archaeological contexts from Granada, Tarragona and Empúries combine with Y and mtDNA signals to reveal local continuity alongside Mediterranean and Atlantic connections.

Time Period

44 BCE – 676 CE

Region

Spain (Andalusia, Catalonia)

Common Y-DNA

R (4), J (3), E (1), L (1), T (1)

Common mtDNA

H (4), K (4), T (3), U (3), HV (2)

Chapter II

Timeline

Key moments in the history of this culture

44 BCE

Earliest sampled burials

The oldest directly dated individuals in this set fall around 44 BCE, a period of Roman expansion and local cultural continuity in Hispania.

476 CE

Late Roman transition

The fall of the Western Roman Empire marks political change; genetic and archaeological records show continuity amid shifting institutions.

676 CE

Latest sampled individuals

The most recent samples date to 676 CE, a time of regional transformations preceding later medieval reorganizations in Iberia.

Chapter III

Origins & Emergence

The human story captured at Roman-period sites in Spain unfolds at the meeting point of local Iberian traditions and wide-ranging Mediterranean currents. Archaeological excavation at Paseíllos universitarios–Fuentenueva and Plaza Einstein (Granada), Mas Gassol–Alcover (Tarragona) and the necropolis at Empúries (Girona) provides funerary contexts dated between 44 BCE and 676 CE. These dates bracket the late Republic, the Imperial zenith, and the turbulent early medieval centuries. Material culture—grave goods, ceramics, and urban stratigraphy—shows layers of continuity from pre-Roman Iberian lifeways into an era of Roman institutions and trade.

Genetically, the assemblage of 19 samples suggests a complex origin story. The presence of Y-chromosome haplogroup R in multiple individuals is consistent with broader Western European lineages that were frequent in post-Bronze Age populations; haplogroup J appears in a minority, often linked elsewhere with eastern Mediterranean and Near Eastern ancestries. Small counts of E, L and T hint at additional Mediterranean and long-distance connections, but must be interpreted cautiously. Archaeological data indicates active ports at Empúries and integrated road networks that would have facilitated movement of people and genes across the Mediterranean.

Limited evidence suggests that the population profile of Roman Spain was not monolithic: local continuity combined with episodic influxes of people—soldiers, merchants, and migrants—left a patchwork of cultural and biological signals. Ongoing sampling and better temporal resolution are needed to resolve timing and directionality of those movements.

  • Sites span Granada (Andalusia) and Catalonia (Tarragona, Girona).
  • 19 samples dated 44 BCE–676 CE capture late Roman and early medieval transitions.
  • Material culture and DNA together suggest local continuity with Mediterranean contacts.
Chapter IV

Daily Life & Society

The people represented in these burials lived in a world shaped by Roman cities, coastal exchange, and enduring local practices. Excavations in Empúries reveal a layered townscape: Greek and Roman quarters, workshops, and necropoleis that served a multicultural population. In Granada, funerary deposits at Plaza Einstein and Fuentenueva reflect urban and peri-urban communities where burial rites sometimes mix Iberian and Roman elements. At Mas Gassol–Alcover near Tarragona, regional funerary practices attest to rural life tied to agricultural estates and Roman villas.

Everyday objects—pottery, oil lamps, coins, and personal adornments—speak of trade networks and economic integration. Epigraphic and architectural evidence from Tarragona underscores the presence of Roman administrative structures, military veterans, and merchant households. Bioarchaeological indicators (where available) suggest diets reliant on Mediterranean staples: cereals, olives, and maritime fish in coastal towns; animal husbandry inland. Health markers—dental wear, healed fractures—tell of labor, mobility, and intermittent hardship.

Cinematic scenes emerge from the data: a bustling port at Empúries at dawn, merchants unloading amphorae; a family in Granada tending a courtyard garden; seasonal labor moving through the Tarragona countryside. These reconstructions remain grounded in artifact assemblages and isotopic or osteological indicators when present, but the human texture is enriched by genetics that trace ancestral threads across these social landscapes.

  • Empúries functioned as a Mediterranean hub with layered Greek-Roman occupation.
  • Urban and rural sites show mixed local and Romanized burial practices.
Chapter V

Genetic Profile

Ancient DNA from 19 newly reported individuals provides a snapshot of genetic variation in Roman-period Spain. Y-chromosome data show diversity: haplogroup R appears in four males, J in three, and single occurrences of E, L and T. Mitochondrial lineages are dominated by western Mediterranean-associated haplogroups H (4), K (4), T (3), U (3) and HV (2). These mitochondrial profiles align with continuity of maternal lineages common across Europe and the Mediterranean.

Interpreting Y-chromosome signals requires caution. Haplogroup R encompasses multiple subclades; in Western Europe R-derived lineages were widespread after the Bronze Age, suggesting continuity or assimilation of groups long present in Iberia. Haplogroup J's presence in three individuals can reflect gene flow from the eastern Mediterranean or Near East, consistent with documented maritime connections and veteran movements during the Empire. Single occurrences of E, L and T—each uncommon locally—point toward episodic long-distance mobility, such as sailors, merchants, or migrants, but their low counts (1 each) make such inferences preliminary.

Overall, the genetic picture is one of layered ancestry: a strong baseline of western Mediterranean maternal lineages with paternal diversity that records both local continuity and Mediterranean connectivity. With 19 samples, population-level claims are provisional; expanding the dataset and combining genome-wide analyses, isotopes, and precise archaeological provenience will clarify migration timing, sex-biased mobility, and social dynamics.

  • mtDNA dominated by H, K, T, U, HV—consistent with western Mediterranean continuity.
  • Y-DNA diversity (R, J, E, L, T) suggests both local ancestry and episodic long-distance connections.
Chapter VI

Legacy & Modern Connections

The genetic traces from Roman-period Spain resonate in modern Iberian genomes, but the relationship is neither simple nor direct. Continuities in maternal lineages (H, K, T, U, HV) indicate that many present-day mitochondrial variants have deep roots in the peninsula. Paternal diversity documented in the Roman-era record echoes subsequent layers of migration—Visigothic, Byzantine, Islamic, and later medieval movements—that continued to reshape Iberian ancestry.

Archaeologically, sites like Empúries remain emblematic: a door through which ideas, goods and people circulated. Genetically, our 19-sample snapshot suggests that Roman Spain was a mosaic—local communities shaped by imperial structures and Mediterranean mobility. Modern populations inherit this mosaic, but subsequent centuries of demographic change mean ancient and modern genomes are connected through a long chain of admixture events. Continued ancient DNA sampling across time, combined with archaeological nuance, will strengthen links between the lives recorded in these graves and the genetic landscape of contemporary Spain.

  • Maternal continuity suggests deep Iberian roots that persist into the present.
  • Paternal diversity reflects Mediterranean connectivity; later migrations further reshaped ancestry.
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