The people buried around İznik and Orhangazi inhabited a world of continuity and change whose biological echoes persist in the genetic tapestry of modern Anatolia. The maternal lineages recorded—H, T, J, U—are still part of present-day diversity in Turkey and neighboring regions, suggesting a degree of genetic continuity across more than a millennium. Archaeological continuity of settlements and sacred spaces reinforces this picture: churches and urban cores were repurposed, populations adapted, and cultural identities evolved rather than abruptly replaced.
However, the dataset is limited and should be read as an early window into a complex past. Broader sampling and integration of uniparental, autosomal and isotopic data will be necessary to trace migration events, marriage networks and kinship. Even now, combining the tangible archaeology of basilicas and cemeteries with genetic signals yields a vivid, humanized glimpse of West Byzantine Anatolia—communities anchored to place yet threaded into wider Mediterranean currents.