Disease areas:
  • infections
Last updated:
Author(s):
Ruoyun Hui, Christiana L Scheib, Eugenia D'Atanasio, Sarah A Inskip, Craig Cessford, Simone A Biagini, Anthony W Wohns, Muhammad Q A Ali, Samuel J Griffith, Anu Solnik, Helja Niinemäe, Xiangyu Jack Ge, Alice K Rose, Owyn Beneker, Tamsin C O'Connell, John E Robb, Toomas Kivisild
Publish date:
17 January 2024
Journal:
Science Advances
PubMed ID:
38232165

Abstract

The extent of the devastation of the Black Death pandemic (1346-1353) on European populations is known from documentary sources and its bacterial source illuminated by studies of ancient pathogen DNA. What has remained less understood is the effect of the pandemic on human mobility and genetic diversity at the local scale. Here, we report 275 ancient genomes, including 109 with coverage >0.1×, from later medieval and postmedieval Cambridgeshire of individuals buried before and after the Black Death. Consistent with the function of the institutions, we found a lack of close relatives among the friars and the inmates of the hospital in contrast to their abundance in general urban and rural parish communities. While we detect long-term shifts in local genetic ancestry in Cambridgeshire, we find no evidence of major changes in genetic ancestry nor higher differentiation of immune loci between cohorts living before and after the Black Death.

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This project studies the historical effects of disease epidemics and social stratification on the population of Cambridge through time. Using evidence from ancient and modern…

Institution:
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium

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