What happened after the fall of Rome? Ancient genomes offer new clues

April 29, 2026

2 minutes of reading

Add us on GoogleAdd science

A genomic analysis of people buried on the frontier of the ancient Roman Empire shows how distinct groups combined after the empire’s fall.

By Emma Gomez edited by Claire Cameron

A human skull half buried in the ground.

The skull of a woman from the early Middle Ages, still resting in her tomb and adorned with a pearl necklace.

© District Archeology Landshut/Richter

Join our community of science lovers!

When the Western Roman Empire fell in the fifth century CE, Europe was thrown into chaos as Germanic barbarian forces advanced south – or so the story goes. But a new study shows that some communities on the continent have actually coalesced, becoming more cosmopolitan and more diverse.

“Traditionally, all of history … was seen as a clash of civilizations between the Germanic hordes to the north and the Roman Empire to the south,” explains Joachim Burger, an anthropologist and population geneticist at the Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany. But Burger and his colleagues showed the opposite: in a new study published today in Naturethey found that “it’s actually more of a story of peaceful integration,” he says.

Researchers analyzed human remains at various burial sites in Germany and determined that two genetically distinct groups of people – a settlement of ancient Roman soldiers and a neighboring group of people of northern European descent – ​​intermarried and developed a common culture, including a common method of burial, after the fall of Rome in 476 CE.


On supporting science journalism

If you enjoy this article, please consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribe. By purchasing a subscription, you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.


Researchers analyzed 258 ancient genomes collected from tombs on the border of the Roman Empire in what is now southern Germany and dating from between 400 and 660 CE. They compared them to a reference set of other ancient and modern genomes and revealed that ancient Roman soldiers, who carried with them a mixture of DNA from Italy, southeastern Europe and the Balkans, traveled to villages on the empire’s frontier where people with DNA from areas including what is now northern Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands lived. The oldest genomes from the burial sites suggest that these two groups did not mix much before the fall of Rome. But after that time they did, with the mixed families being buried together.

Anthropological examination of skeletons from the State Anthropological Collection in Munich (SAM).

© SAM/Harbeck

These later burials are called row grave cemeteries because the graves were perfectly parallel to each other. This practice began among communities of Norse ancestry, but became the norm after the two communities came together. Burial sites also include features that suggest a strong emphasis on monogamy and the nuclear family. And researchers say these practices, like parents being buried together, likely came from Roman culture.

“At the time, this was a completely unique and new model, developed in late Roman society and even codified in laws,” says Burger. “But now we see it… in an early medieval, presumably Germanic, society. So Late Antiquity is not really over; it is simply transforming into a new society, less urban and more agricultural.”

“It was really a very restricted kinship group,” says Toomas Kivisild, professor of human evolutionary genetics at the Catholic University of Louvain (KU Leuven) in Belgium, who was not involved in the study. Other post-Roman communities in Europe, such as England, do not show such closeness between families, he says. “The intensity of kinship in these cemeteries is much less intense than in [these new findings].”

It’s time to defend science

If you enjoyed this article, I would like to ask for your support. Scientific American has been defending science and industry for 180 years, and we are currently experiencing perhaps the most critical moment in these two centuries of history.

I was a Scientific American subscriber since the age of 12, and it helped shape the way I see the world. SciAm always educates and delights me, and inspires a sense of respect for our vast and beautiful universe. I hope this is the case for you too.

If you subscribe to Scientific Americanyou help ensure our coverage centers on meaningful research and discoveries; that we have the resources to account for decisions that threaten laboratories across the United States; and that we support budding and working scientists at a time when the value of science itself too often goes unrecognized.

In exchange, you receive essential information, captivating podcastsbrilliant infographics, newsletters not to be missedunmissable videos, stimulating gamesand the best writings and reports from the scientific world. You can even give someone a subscription.

There has never been a more important time for us to stand up and show why science matters. I hope you will support us in this mission.

Exit mobile version