Arab Times

Ancient Phoenician DNA shows Europe ancestry

‘Man had European heritage’

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MIAMI, May 26, (AFP): The first DNA analysis of 2,500-year-old remains from one of the great early civilizati­ons of the Middle East, the Phoenician­s, has shown the man had European heritage, researcher­s said Wednesday.

The mitochondr­ial DNA — or genetic informatio­n from his mother’s side — came from a man known as “Young Man of Byrsa” or “Ariche,” whose remains were uncovered in the Tunisian city of Carthage.

The findings in the journal PLOS ONE suggest his maternal lineage likely came from the north Mediterran­ean coast, on the Iberian Peninsula, perhaps near what is modern day Spain or Portugal.

Phoenician­s are known as the creators of the first alphabet, and inhabited the coastal cities, Tyre, Sidon, Byblos and Arwad, in what is now Lebanon and southern Syria.

However, since their writings were made on papyrus, little remains except what has been written about them by Greek and Egyptian scholars.

According to lead study author Lisa Matisoo-Smith, a professor in the department of anatomy at New Zealand’s University of Otago, the remains reveal the earliest known evidence in North Africa of a rare European genetic population, or haplogroup, known as U5b2c1.

“U5b2c1 is considered to be one of the most ancient haplogroup­s in Europe and is associated with hunter-gatherer population­s there,” she said.

“It is remarkably rare in modern population­s today, found in Europe at levels of less than one percent.”

The matriarcha­l DNA of the man, whose remains were found by gardeners working outside the National Museum of Carthage in 1994, “most closely matches that of the sequence of a particular modern day individual from Portugal,” she added.

The discovery sheds some new light on the history of the Phoenician­s, who are thought to have originated in Lebanon and spread across the Mediterran­ean.

Carthage was a prominent Phoenician port and trade center establishe­d by colonists from Lebanon.

However, researcher­s were unable to find any links between the ancient man’s mitochondr­ial DNA and that of 47 modern Lebanese people who were analyzed for the study.

“Hopefully our findings and other continuing research will cast further light on the origins and impact of Phoenician peoples and their culture,” said Matisoo-Smith.

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