In listening to podcasts about disease affecting history,
and writing that up a bit myself, I wondered about the rapid turnover of population in the British Isles near the beginning of the 3rdMillennium BC. 90% genetic turnover in a few centuries is a lot. To get the time
frame into your imagination, the peoples that started building Stonehenge in
3000 BC were not closely related to those who put the final touches on it in
2000 BC. It is the crossover from Neolithic to Bronze Age.
Anthropological debates can get oversimplified into Pots, not People –
or its reverse. Sometimes the same studies will be used to back up either point
of view. Did the ideas and techniques
spread from one tribe to another, or did tribes move into new areas, taking
over land once held by others? As we can extract DNA from more and more
remains, we are now awash in new information.
Most anthropologists lean toward one interpretation or the other, but
few to exclusivity. There are instances
where clear imitations, but inferior ones, of one type of pottery shows up at
the other end of an empire suddenly, which is excellent evidence that it was
the idea that moved, not the people. At
other sites we can find mass graves of people with evidence of damage from
weapons, with DNA quite distinct from those who we know came after, clearly
suggesting one population group flat-out replaced another. But other evidence can be ambiguous. If the y-chromosome lines largely changed but
the mtDNA remains the same we suspect the men were killed and the women taken
as mates, with unknown level of cooperation about that. Yet without a timeline it may
at least partly be that the men were outcompeted for mates in a few generations
because the new arrivals had horses, or cattle, or other wealth.
Whether a percentage was sold into slavery, or whether a conquering
people were only an elite group that ruled and extracted resources without
leaving much genetic mark is difficult to discern.
I’m looking around for any discussion of the possibility
that the new population entering the British Isles were invaders bearing
diseases as much as swords. (Those work
hand in hand, though. A population cut
in half is ripe for conquest, with perhaps even more diseases coming in tow, as
happened to the native populations of the Americas. The Four Horsemen of the
Apocalypse often ride together.) I can’t find any mention of it. I will likely go looking for a place to throw
that into a comment section of someone smarter than me. 90% turnover in a few
centuries seems to me an at least plausible result of diseases coming in,
followed by conquest. As armies on the
move scoop up the food and other resources from the countryside, this could
also bring in famine, further weakening defenses against disease. If you know anything, fill me in.
1 comment:
It might be disease in part, but it has to be coupled with a large movement of people too. The high estimate of Native Americans in North America before Columbus is 18 million; the current population of people of at least mixed heritage is 5.5 million in the US, a million in Canada, and 25+ million in Mexico.
So there are more Native Americans now than when Columbus landed, even given the plague that wiped out perhaps 90% of the population at one time. Natural increase recovers in time. To get to 90% replacement, you also need a massive invasion of foreigners (as happened here, and must have happened in Britain as well). This should be no surprise, though, because the earliest Irish history is called "The Book of Invasions." There's no reason to think that Britain should have fared otherwise.
Post a Comment