Ancient DNA from Swahili coast shows shows massive influence from Persia

We report genome-wide ancient DNA from 80 individuals in five medieval and early modern (1300-1800 CE) coastal towns, as well as people from an inland town postdating 1650 CE. Over half of the ancestry of most coastal individuals came from African ancestors; these African ancestors were primarily female. A slightly smaller proportion of ancestry was from Asia. This Asian component was approximately eighty to ninety percent from Near Eastern males and ten to twenty per cent from Indian females. Peoples of African and Asian origins began to mix by around 1000 CE, a time when archaeological evidence documents change on the coast that is often interpreted as marking the large-scale adoption of Islam. Before roughly 1500 CE, the Near Eastern ancestry detected in the individuals was mainly Persian-related, consistent with the narrative of the Kilwa Chronicle, the oldest history told by the Swahili themselves. After this time, the sources of Near Eastern ancestry became increasingly Arabian, consistent with the archaeological and historical evidence of growing interactions between the Swahili coast and parts of southern Arabia.


 
Speaking of African DNA, I wonder why these geneticists haven’t sampled the Kiffians, Tenerians, and Mechta-Afalou?
Those results would indeed be interesting.
 
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