TY - UNPB
T1 - Steppe Ancestry in western Eurasia and the spread of the Germanic Languages
AU - McColl, Hugh
AU - Kroonen, Guus
AU - Moreno-Mayar, J. Victor
AU - Valeur Seersholm, Frederik
AU - Scorrano, Gabriele
AU - Pinotti, Thomaz
AU - Vimala, Tharsika
AU - Sindbæk, Søren M.
AU - Ethelberg, Per
AU - Fyfe, Ralph
AU - Gaillard, Marie-José
AU - Larsen, Hanne M. Ellegr ard
AU - Mortensen, Morten Fischer
AU - Demeter, Fabrice
AU - Jørkov, Marie Louise S.
AU - Bergerbrant, Sophie
AU - Damgaard, Peter de Barros
AU - Allentoft, Morten E.
AU - Vinner, Lasse
AU - Gaunitz, Charleen
AU - Ramsøe, Abigail
AU - Altinkaya, Isin
AU - Amund Henriksen, Rasmus
AU - Irving-Pease, Evan K.
AU - Sabatini, Serena
AU - Fischer, Anders
AU - Barrie, William
AU - Ingason, Andrés
AU - Rosengren, Anders
AU - Vaughn, Andrew
AU - Cao, Jialu
AU - Staring, Jacqueline
AU - Stenderup, Jesper
AU - Yediay, Fulya Eylem
AU - Ahlström, Torbjörn
AU - Albris, Sofie Laurine
AU - Atabiev, Biyaslan
AU - Bangsgaard, Pernille
AU - Belcastro, Maria Giovanna
AU - Card, Nick
AU - Charlier, Philippe
AU - Chernykh, Elizaveta
AU - Christiansen, Torben Trier
AU - Coppa, Alfredo
AU - De Coster, Maura
AU - Denham, Sean Dexter
AU - Desenne, Sophie
AU - Downes, Jane
AU - Frei, Karin Margarita
AU - Gábor, Olivér
AU - Gr ardsvoll, Johan Zakarias
AU - Glørstad, Zanette Tsigaridas
AU - Hansen, Jesper
AU - Heeren, Stijn
AU - Henriksen, Merete
AU - Heyd, Volker
AU - Høj, Mette
AU - Holst, Mads Kähler
AU - Jankauskas, Rimantas
AU - Janson, Henrik
AU - Jessen, Mads Dengsø
AU - Johannsen, Jens Winther
AU - Johansen, Torkel
AU - Kastholm, Ole Thirup
AU - Kern, Anton
AU - Khaskhanov, Ruslan
AU - Kjær, Katrine
AU - Kolosov, Vladimir
AU - Kootker, Lisette M.
AU - Larsen, Anne Christine
AU - Lejars, Thierry
AU - Løvschal, Mette
AU - Lynnerup, Niels
AU - Magnusson, Yvonne
AU - Mannermaa, Kristiina
AU - Masyakin, Vyacheslav
AU - Melheim, Anne Lene
AU - Merkyte, Inga
AU - Moiseyev, Vyacheslav
AU - Møller, Stig Bergmann
AU - Molnár, Erika
AU - Mortensen, Nadja
AU - Murphy, Eileen
AU - Nielsen, Bjarne Henning
AU - Pany-Kucera, Doris
AU - Paulsson, Bettina Schulz
AU - Ponce de León, Marcia S
AU - Reiersen, Hr akon
AU - Reinhard, Walter
AU - Sajantila, Antti
AU - Skar, Birgitte
AU - Slavchev, Vladimir
AU - Smrčka, Václav
AU - Sørensen, Lasse
AU - Tiefengraber, Georg
AU - Uldum, Otto Christian
AU - Vega, Jorge
AU - Vitali, Daniele
AU - Voloshinov, Alexey
AU - Wr ahlin, Sidsel
AU - Wendling, Holger
AU - Wessman, Anna
AU - Wilhelmson, Helene
AU - Wiltschke, Karin
AU - Zilhao, João
AU - Zollikofer, Christoph PE
AU - Sand Korneliussen, Thorfinn
AU - Chaume, Bruno
AU - Demoule, Jean-Paul
AU - Werge, Thomas
AU - Nielsen, Rasmus
AU - Hedeager, Lotte
AU - Kristiansen, Kristian
AU - Sikora, Martin
AU - Willerslev, Eske
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Today, Germanic languages, including German, English, Frisian, Dutch and the Nordic languages, are widely spoken in northwest Europe. However, key aspects of the assumed arrival and diversification of this linguistic group remain contentious1–3. By adding 712 new ancient human genomes we find an archaeologically elusive population entering Sweden from the Baltic region by around 4000 BP. This population became widespread throughout Scandinavia by 3500 BP, matching the contemporaneous distribution of Palaeo-Germanic, the Bronze Age predecessor of Proto-Germanic4–6. These Baltic immigrants thus offer a new potential vector for the first Germanic speakers to arrive in Scandinavia, some 800 years later than traditionally assumed7–12. Following the disintegration of Proto-Germanic13–16, we find by 1650 BP a southward push from Southern Scandinavia into presumed Celtic-speaking areas, including Germany, Poland and the Netherlands. During the Migration Period (1575–1375 BP), we see this ancestry representing West Germanic Anglo-Saxons in Britain, and Langobards in southern Europe. We find a related large-scale northward migration into Denmark and South Sweden corresponding with historically attested Danes and the expansion of Old Norse. These movements have direct implications for multiple linguistic hypotheses. Our findings show the power of combining genomics with historical linguistics and archaeology in creating a unified, integrated model for the emergence, spread and diversification of a linguistic group.
AB - Today, Germanic languages, including German, English, Frisian, Dutch and the Nordic languages, are widely spoken in northwest Europe. However, key aspects of the assumed arrival and diversification of this linguistic group remain contentious1–3. By adding 712 new ancient human genomes we find an archaeologically elusive population entering Sweden from the Baltic region by around 4000 BP. This population became widespread throughout Scandinavia by 3500 BP, matching the contemporaneous distribution of Palaeo-Germanic, the Bronze Age predecessor of Proto-Germanic4–6. These Baltic immigrants thus offer a new potential vector for the first Germanic speakers to arrive in Scandinavia, some 800 years later than traditionally assumed7–12. Following the disintegration of Proto-Germanic13–16, we find by 1650 BP a southward push from Southern Scandinavia into presumed Celtic-speaking areas, including Germany, Poland and the Netherlands. During the Migration Period (1575–1375 BP), we see this ancestry representing West Germanic Anglo-Saxons in Britain, and Langobards in southern Europe. We find a related large-scale northward migration into Denmark and South Sweden corresponding with historically attested Danes and the expansion of Old Norse. These movements have direct implications for multiple linguistic hypotheses. Our findings show the power of combining genomics with historical linguistics and archaeology in creating a unified, integrated model for the emergence, spread and diversification of a linguistic group.
U2 - 10.1101/2024.03.13.584607
DO - 10.1101/2024.03.13.584607
M3 - Working paper
T3 - bioRxiv
BT - Steppe Ancestry in western Eurasia and the spread of the Germanic Languages
ER -