Five individuals from Osijek dated to 200–300 CE produced Y‑chromosome haplogroups J (1) and G (1), and mitochondrial haplogroups H5d, H79, K, H and H41. These results reflect a mix of lineages: haplogroup J often appears in Mediterranean and Near Eastern contexts during antiquity, while G has associations with Neolithic farmer ancestries and pockets of Eurasian distribution. Mitochondrial H subclades (H5d, H, H41) are common across Europe, and K is frequently linked to Neolithic maternal lineages.
Archaeological DNA from Late Roman towns across the Empire frequently shows heterogeneity, mirroring mobility, recruitment and immigration in imperial networks. The Osijek sample is consistent with a population that combined local European maternal heritage with paternal markers that may indicate broader Mediterranean and central‑Eurasian contacts. However, with only five individuals, statistical power is low: patterns observed here are preliminary and should not be taken as representative of the entire town or region.
Future sampling—larger numbers and comparative genomes from nearby Pannonian cemeteries and Danubian forts—will be essential to test whether these haplogroup frequencies reflect short‑term mobility, family histories, or longer‑term population structure. For now, the genetics paint an evocative, cautious portrait of a mixed Late Imperial community on the Danube’s edge.