The genetic portrait of Kideksha is currently a sketch rather than a painting. Three individuals sampled from church‑associated graves dated between 1526 and 1936 CE yield limited but informative data: one mitochondrial lineage identified as haplogroup I, and no published, consistent Y‑chromosome results across the small set. Because only three genomes are available, any population-level inference is highly provisional.
Haplogroup I is present in Europe at low to moderate frequencies and can occur in Slavic and neighboring groups; its detection in a single Kideksha individual aligns with what archaeogenetic surveys identify as part of the broader north‑east European mitochondrial landscape. Without replicates or broader autosomal data from the site, it is impossible to resolve whether this reflects long‑term local maternal continuity, recent gene flow, or drift in a small community.
Contextualizing these findings with regional genetic studies suggests several plausible scenarios: (1) continuity with earlier Slavic and Finno‑Ugric substrates in the Vladimir region, (2) admixture events across centuries including contacts with Tatar and other steppe groups during and after the medieval period, and (3) local endogamy inflating haplogroup signals. Each scenario remains speculative here. Archaeological and archival continuity supports the idea of a locally rooted population, but only expanded sampling (more individuals, autosomal data, and Y‑chromosome haplotypes) will permit robust demographic modeling.
Given the sample count (<10), emphasize preliminary nature: these results are pointers for future work rather than definitive statements about Kideksha's genetic history.