The Scotsman

Not all Vikings were from Scandinavi­a and 6% of UK population have their DNA

● Six-year project debunks Vikings’ modern image

- By NINA MASSEY newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Not all Vikings were from Scandinavi­a, not all of them were blonde and up to 6 per cent of the UK population may have their DNA, a new study suggests.

Researcher­s say the results of a six-year project debunk the modern image of Vikings as brutal predators who travelled by sea from Scandinavi­a to pillage and raid their way across Europe and beyond.

DNA sequencing of more than 400 Viking skeletons from archaeolog­ical sites scattered across Europe and Greenland has shed new light on what we know about them.

Professor Eske Willerslev, a Fellow of St John’s College, University of Cambridge-and director of The Lundbeck Foundation Geogenetic­s Centre, University of Copenhagen, led the study.

He said: “We have this image of well-connected Vikings mixing with each other, trading and going on raiding par ties to fight Kings across Europe because this is what we see on television and read in books - but geneticall­y we have shown for the first time that it wasn’t that kind of world.

“This study changes the perception of who a Viking actually was - no one could have predicted these significan­t gene flows into Scandinavi­a from Southern Europe and Asia happened before and during the Viking Age.”

Researcher­s sequenced the whole genomes of 442 mostly Viking Age men, women, children and babies from their teeth and petrous bones found in Viking cemeteries.

They analysed the DNA from the remains from a boat burial in Estonia and discovered four Viking brothers died the same day.

According to the research published in Nature, male skeletons from a Viking burial site in Orkney were not actually geneticall­y Vikings despite being buried with swords and other Viking memorabili­a.

While there was not a word for Scandinavi­a during the Viking Age, the study shows that the Vikings from what is now Nor way travelled to Scotland, Ireland, Iceland and Greenland.

The Vikings from what is now Denmark travelled to England. And Vikings from what is now Sweden went to the Baltic countries on their all male raiding parties, the scientists suggest.

Professor Mar tin Sikora, a lead author of the paper and an Associate Professor at the Centre for Geogenetic­s, University of Copenhagen, said :“We found that Vikings weren’t just Scandinavi­an sin their genetic ancestry, as we analysed genetic influence sin their DNA from Southern Europe and Asia which has never been contemplat­ed before.

“Many Vikings have high levels of non-Scandinavi­an ancestry, both within and outside Scandinavi­a, which suggest ongoing gene flow across Europe.”

There search team also found that geneticall­y Pictish people became Vikings without geneticall­y mixing with Scandinavi­ans.

The Celtic-speaking Picts lived in what is today eastern and northern Scotland during the Late British Iron Age and Early Medieval periods. The study also suggests that the genetic legacy of the Viking Age lives on today, with 6 per cent of people in the UK population predicted to have Viking DNA in their genes, compared to 10 percent in Sweden.

The Viking Age generally refers to the period from 800 AD, a few years after the earliest recorded raid, until the 1050s, a few years before the Norman Conquest of England in 1066.

“Many Vikings have high levels of non-Scandinavi­an ancestry, both within and outside Scandinavi­a, which suggest ongoing gene flow across Europe”

PROFESSOR MARTIN SIKORA

 ??  ?? 0 Study suggests the genetic legacy of the Viking Age lives on, with 6 per cent of people in the UK population predicted to have Viking DNA in their genes, compared to 10 per cent in Sweden
0 Study suggests the genetic legacy of the Viking Age lives on, with 6 per cent of people in the UK population predicted to have Viking DNA in their genes, compared to 10 per cent in Sweden

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