Six ancient genomes from Trogir-Dragulin (1–200 CE) yield a tentative genetic portrait of a small Roman-era Dalmatian community. Maternal lineages are dominated by H-related haplogroups (H+ in two samples, and H in one), along with T and T2b — mtDNA types common across Europe and the Near East and frequently connected to long-standing post-Neolithic populations in the Balkans. These maternal signatures align with archaeological evidence for local continuity in the population.
Paternal data are sparse: a single Y-chromosome assigned to haplogroup E was observed. Haplogroup E has a wide geographic distribution in the Mediterranean and parts of the Balkans; in this context it may represent either local male continuity or the arrival of individuals linked to broader Mediterranean mobility (merchants, sailors, military personnel). One mtDNA sample was assigned to C1, a lineage that is rare in ancient European datasets and more typically associated with northern/central Eurasian and Native American branches. The presence of C1 in a single individual is striking but must be approached cautiously: possibilities include rare long-range ancestry, post-mortem contamination, or misassignment due to limited coverage.
Because the dataset contains fewer than 10 samples, all genetic interpretations are preliminary. Archaeology and aDNA together suggest a community shaped primarily by regional Balkan ancestry, punctuated by instances of wider Mediterranean or Eurasian contact. Expanded sampling across time and sites is required to clarify patterns of continuity, mobility, and social structure.