Detailed Information on Publication Record
2022
Zooming in: Archaeogenetic investigation of Early Middle Age cemeteries in Moravia to study formation of Early Mediaeval societies
ZLÁMALOVÁ, Denisa and Zuzana HOFMANOVÁBasic information
Original name
Zooming in: Archaeogenetic investigation of Early Middle Age cemeteries in Moravia to study formation of Early Mediaeval societies
Name in Czech
Přiblížení: Archeogenetický průzkum raně středověkých pohřebišť na Moravě pro studium formování raně středověkých společností
Authors
Edition
Postgraduate and early career conference in medieval archaeology (Prague, May 2022), 2022
Other information
Type of outcome
Prezentace na konferencích
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Organization unit
Faculty of Arts
Keywords (in Czech)
Velká Morava;migrace;Slované;archeogenetika;ranný středověk;Pohansko;biologická příbuznost;aDNA
Keywords in English
Great Moravia;migration;Slavs;archaeogenetics;Early Middle Ages;Pohansko;biological relatedness;aDNA
Tags
International impact
Změněno: 5/1/2023 14:47, Mgr. Denisa Zlámalová
Abstract
V originále
Absence of historical documents in East Central Europe and limited archaeological finds are cited among the main reasons why many of long asked questions regarding migration and mobility in Early Middle Ages are still debated. One of such questions is the impact of migrations in the period predating the formation of the first Slavic states in the region. Traditionally accepted consensus is that Slavs migrated from their homeland into the rest of Europe in 5th or 6th century AD. There are however voices that question this narrative and suggest that the Slavic languages arrived in the region without a large migratory event. Even in the presence of a demographic shift in the population, the process itself is unknown and the social structure of the presumed incomers might have played a strong role (e.g. elite migration versus slow impact distributed over generations). An additional source of information about these events can be considered today. Archaeogenetics is still a relatively novel field of molecular biology and genetics that holds a lot of promise to shed light on these questions when thoroughly integrated into an interdisciplinary discourse. That is especially true when demographic events are concerned. In our research we are using these tools to study biological kinship in Early Slavic cemeteries and gene flow between so-called Early Slavs and other Early Medieval populations. The obtained archaeogenetic information will help describe the social changes that took place in Moravian territory, determine the importance of biological kinship and will provide an insight into connection of health and social status.
Links
GX21-17092X, research and development project |
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