Only four ancient individuals from Beniamin (Shirak Province) dated to 419–545 CE have been reported, so genetic conclusions must be framed as preliminary. These limited samples allow cautious observations rather than definitive population histories. Reported genomic analyses do not yet present consistent, high-resolution Y-chromosome or mitochondrial haplogroup patterns for this site — Y-DNA and mtDNA are not reported or remain unresolved in the current dataset.
Autosomal results, when available, are typically compared against broader regional reference panels. For Sasanian-era Armenian sites such comparisons often reveal predominant Caucasus and Anatolian highland ancestry with varying contributions from the Iranian plateau and the wider Near East. If Beniamin follows this pattern, the inhabitants likely represented continuity of local highland gene pools with possible low-level admixture from neighboring Persianate or Steppe-influenced populations. However, with n = 4, any signal of admixture, kinship, or population structure may reflect family clustering or sampling bias rather than population-level processes.
Future sampling from additional graves and neighboring settlements will be required to robustly test hypotheses of local continuity, mobility, and Sasanian-era genetic influence. Presently, the genetic story of Beniamin is an evocative first stanza that needs many more voices.