Ancient DNA from 38 individuals dated to 250–650 CE in Bavaria provides a genetic window onto the demographic dynamics of Early Medieval southern Germany. Among the Y-chromosome-positive individuals, haplogroups recorded include R (5 instances), I (3), J (1) and G (1). These Y-lineages point to a mixture of ancestries common in post-Bronze Age Europe: haplogroup R is widespread across northern and western Europe and often reflects Bronze Age-derived steppe ancestry, while haplogroup I is commonly associated with long-standing European lineages. The presence of J and G — less frequent in northern Europe — hints at Mediterranean or transalpine links consistent with Late Antique mobility and Roman-era connections.
Mitochondrial diversity in the dataset is dominated by haplogroups H (9), J (5), U (5), T2b (2) and T (2). These maternal lineages are typical of broader European populations and signal continuity of maternal ancestry across the Late Antique–Early Medieval transition. Together, the Y and mtDNA profiles indicate a community shaped by local continuity with measurable gene flow from surrounding regions.
Caveats: only a subset of the 38 individuals yielded Y- or mtDNA assignments, and sampling is geographically concentrated in Bavaria. Archaeological and genetic concordance is strong in some cases but variable in others; therefore, interpretations about migration versus assimilation should be considered provisional and sensitive to future data expansion.