The legacy of the Modern United Kingdom is both tangible and genetic. Archaeologically visible infrastructures—ports, churches, mines, and urban centres—tell a story of trade, conquest, and daily resilience. Genetically, modern inhabitants carry the record of these interactions in their genomes: echoes of ancient farmers and hunter-gatherers, the imprint of historical migrations (Roman, Anglo-Saxon, Viking, Norman), and the continuous reshaping of ancestry through mobility and globalization.
For museums and public history, combining DNA results with archaeological narratives offers powerful, humanising stories: the skeleton in a churchyard can be contextualised by isotopes and DNA; a modern resident’s ancestry report can be enriched by the archaeology of their home region. Ethical interpretation is essential—genetic data should not be used to assert exclusivity of identity. Instead, archaeology and genomics together illuminate how identities were built over time: as palimpsests, as dialogues between newcomers and long-standing communities, and as the ongoing creation of place.
Looking forward, continued collaboration between archaeologists, geneticists, and local communities will refine our understanding of the UK’s recent past while respecting the living descendants whose genomes and stories connect us to that history.