Menu
Currency
Research Publication

Y-chromosome haplogroups from Hun, Avar and conquering Hungarian period nomadic people of the Carpathian Basin.

Neparáczki Endre, E Maróti, Zoltán Z et al.

31719606 PubMed ID
27 Authors
2019-11-12 Published
942 Views
Scroll to explore
Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

NE
Neparáczki Endre
EM
E Maróti
ZZ
Zoltán Z
KT
Kalmár Tibor
TM
T Maár
KK
Kitti K
NI
Nagy István
IL
I Latinovics
DD
Dóra D
Kustár Ágnes
ÁP
Á Pálfi
GG
György G
ME
Molnár Erika
EM
E Marcsik
AA
Antónia A
BC
Balogh Csilla
CL
C Lőrinczy
GG
Gábor G
GS
Gál Szilárd Sándor
ST
SS Tomka
PP
Péter P
KB
Kovacsóczy Bernadett
BK
B Kovács
LL
László L
RI
Raskó István
IT
I Török
TT
Tibor T
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Hun, Avar and conquering Hungarian nomadic groups arrived to the Carpathian Basin from the Eurasian Steppes and significantly influenced its political and ethnical landscape, however their origin remains largely unknown. In order to shed light on the genetic affinity of above groups we have determined Y chromosomal haplogroups and autosomal loci, suitable to predict biogeographic ancestry, from 49 individuals, supposed to represent the power/military elit. Haplogroups from the Hun-age are consistent with Xiongnu ancestry of European Huns. Most of the Avar-age individuals carry east Eurasian Y haplogroups typical for modern north-eastern Siberian and Buryat populations and their autosomal loci indicate mostly un-admixed Asian characteristics. In contrast the conquering Hungarians seem to be a recently assembled population incorporating un-admixed European, Asian as well as admixed components. Their heterogeneous paternal and maternal lineages indicate similar supposed phylogeographic origin of males and females, derived from Central-Inner Asian and European Pontic Steppe sources.

Chapter III

AI-Generated Summary

AI-generated by DNAGENICS

Independent AI summary of ancestry and genetic findings from the published study

Important: This summary is AI-generated by DNAGENICS for informational purposes only. It was not created by, affiliated with, or endorsed by the researchers behind the original publication, and is based solely on that published research. It may contain errors or omissions. DNAGENICS disclaims all liability for any inaccuracies or consequences arising from use of this information. Verify all information against the original publication. This is not professional scientific review or medical advice.

Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context