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Corroborating written history with ancient DNA: the case of the Well-man described in an Old Norse saga

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posted on 2025-01-10, 17:39 authored by Martin R. Ellegaard, S. Sunna Ebenesersdóttir, Kristjan H.S. Moore, Anna Petersén, Åshild J. Vågene, Vanessa C. Bieker, Sean D. Denham, Gianpiero CavalleriGianpiero Cavalleri, Edmund GilbertEdmund Gilbert, Thomas Werge, Thomas F. Hansen, Ingrid Kockum, Lars Alfredsson, Tomas Olsson, Eivind Hovig, M. Thomas P. Gilbert, Kári Stefánsson, Hans K. Stenøien, Agnar Helgason, Michael D. Martin

The potential of ancient DNA analyses to provide independent sources of information about events in the historical record remains to be demonstrated. Here we apply palaeogenomic analysis to human remains excavated from a medieval well at the ruins of Sverresborg castle in central Norway. In Sverris Saga, the Old Norse saga of King Sverre Sigurdsson, one passage details a 1197-CE raid on the castle and mentions a dead man thrown into the well. Radiocarbon dating supports that these are that individual's remains. We sequenced the Well-man's nuclear genome to 3.4× and compared it to Scandinavian populations, revealing he was closely related to inhabitants of southern Norway. This was surprising because King Sverre's defeated army was assumed to be recruited from parts of central Norway, whereas the raiders were from the south. The findings also indicate that the unique genetic drift seen in present-day southern Norwegians already existed 800 years ago.

Funding

NTNU Onsager Fellowship funding

Norwegian Research Council grant 287327

Carlsbergfondet Semper Ardens grant CF18-1109

Norwegian Institute of Cultural Research

Medieval urban health: From individual to public responsibility AD 1000-1600

The Research Council of Norway

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History

Data Availability Statement

• Raw sequencing data (FASTQ files) for the ancient Norwegian genomes used as reference material are also available on the European Nucleotide Archive, and new sequence data generated for this study have also been deposited there. • A custom list of microbial taxa used in the pathogen screening analysis is available on GitHub. • The human reference genome is available on the NCBI website. The 1000G phased genotypes and annotated human-genome regions of low accessibility are available from the 1000 Genomes Consortium. The human Y-DNA haplotype tree is available from the ISOGG website. The human mitochondrial genome phylogeny is available from the PhyloTree website.

Comments

The original article is available at https://www.sciencedirect.com/

Published Citation

Ellegaard MR, et al. Corroborating written history with ancient DNA: the case of the Well-man described in an Old Norse saga. iScience. 2024;27(11):111076.

Publication Date

25 October 2024

PubMed ID

39620136

Department/Unit

  • School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences
  • FutureNeuro Centre

Research Area

  • Neurological and Psychiatric Disorders

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)