The genomic portrait of the Roman world is one of layered continuity and repeated injections of ancestry from outside the Italian core. Among 252 analyzed individuals, Y-chromosome haplogroups are dominated by J (25), R (16), G (15), with smaller counts of T (7) and E (4). These distributions reflect the empire's Mediterranean orientation: haplogroup J is frequent in Near Eastern and eastern Mediterranean contexts, while R lineages are common in continental Europe. G lineages, often associated with Anatolian and Caucasus-related ancestry, appear in several Anatolian and Adriatic samples.
Mitochondrial haplogroups show strong European matrilineal continuity: H (33), T (23), U (21), K (14) and HV (9) are the most common. This pattern suggests that many female lineages in sampled urban centers had deep European roots, while male-line diversity reflects a higher contribution from immigrant males in some contexts — a pattern consistent with historical records of soldier and mercantile mobility.
Spatially, eastern sites (Boğazköy, Iznik, Apollonia) display higher frequencies of J and G, while western sites (Alghero, Empúries, Pompeii) show stronger H and U maternal lineages and a mix of R paternal lineages. Formal tests and admixture modeling indicate significant heterogeneity: some communities are genetically close to pre-Roman local populations, whereas port cities show greater eastern Mediterranean affinity.
Because sample numbers vary by site and period, and temporal span extends into the medieval era, conclusions about province-wide demography should be treated as probabilistic rather than definitive.