The genetic snapshot from seven Late Avar-associated burials in the Danube–Tisza region shows a combination of paternal and maternal lineages that point to both eastern and western connections. On the paternal side, three of seven males carry Y-chromosome haplogroup N. Haplogroup N has a broad modern distribution from northeastern Europe into Siberia and is frequently associated, in contemporary populations, with Uralic-speaking groups. Its presence here may reflect gene flow from eastern Eurasian and steppe-associated populations into the Avar social sphere. Nevertheless, Y-N in three individuals within a total of seven is a small signal and could reflect localized lineages or elite clustering rather than population-wide dominance.
Maternally, the set is diverse: two individuals with mtDNA T (a lineage common across west Eurasia), two with C and one with D (lineages often associated with eastern Eurasia), one H8c and one U. The mixture of western (T, H8c, U) and eastern (C, D) maternal lineages supports archaeological indications of admixture along east–west axes. Such a pattern is consistent with historical models in which migrating groups mix with resident communities and with subsequent incorporation of women from multiple backgrounds.
Important caveats: the sample count is seven — below the threshold where population-level inferences are secure. Limited geographic sampling (two sites) further constrains interpretation. These genomes nevertheless provide valuable, if preliminary, evidence that Late Avar communities in central Hungary were genetically heterogeneous, reflecting complex histories of migration, alliance and assimilation.