The cemeteries at Cancarro and San Lorenzo, on the agricultural plains of Foggia in southeastern Italy, yield a quiet archaeological record of medieval lives dated between 1000 and 1300 CE. Archaeological data indicates burials and material culture consistent with rural medieval Italy: simple inhumations, everyday ceramics, and regional funerary practices. These sites sit within a landscape long crossed by coastal trade routes and inland pastoral circuits, where local traditions mingled with the movements of merchants, soldiers, and pilgrims.
Genetic sampling from five individuals provides a glimpse into this tapestry. Limited evidence suggests maternal lineages (mtDNA) are dominated by haplogroups common in Europe and the Mediterranean (H, H1, V, T), consistent with long-standing maternal continuity in the region. Paternal markers show two individuals with haplogroup R — a broad European lineage — and one with haplogroup L, which is rarer in Europe and often more frequent in South Asia and parts of the Near East. The presence of L in a medieval Italian context is intriguing but must be treated as provisional: with only three male Y-chromosome calls and five genomes total, multiple scenarios remain plausible, including long-distance movement, maritime contacts, or isolated rare lineages that persisted locally.
Archaeological context, regional history, and these preliminary genetic signals together suggest a population rooted in medieval Apulia yet touched by wider Mediterranean connections. Further sampling is necessary to test whether these patterns reflect broader demographic processes or local idiosyncrasies.