The 22 samples from Ląd provide a modest but informative genetic snapshot. On the maternal side, mtDNA haplogroups are dominated by H (8) and U (7), with smaller counts of T (2), K (1), and R (1). This distribution is consistent with broad European maternal ancestry common across medieval Central Europe and suggests continuity with earlier regional maternal lineages documented in Iron Age and later populations.
The Y-chromosome picture is more complex. Reported Y labels include L (4), R (3), M (3), S (2), and CTS (2). Some of these labels (L, M, S) are uncommon in medieval Europe and may reflect deep-rooted rare lineages, incomplete haplogroup assignment, reference-database mismatches, or post-excavation labeling conventions. Archaeogenetic interpretation therefore emphasizes caution: the presence of R-types aligns with expected West Eurasian paternal ancestry, while the atypical labels prompt reanalysis and comparison with wider genomic data. Because the dataset is concentrated at one site, population-level claims should be provisional. Further genomic sequencing, higher-resolution Y-SNP hierarchies, and comparison with regional medieval and Iron Age samples are needed to resolve whether these patterns reflect local admixture, long-distance migration, or analytical artifacts.