Ancient DNA challenges family assumptions in medieval Scandinavian graves

Unusual to share a grave with close relatives in the Middle Ages
Oscar Nilsson collecting information from Lady 56 for the forensic facial reconstruction. Credit: Anders Götherström/ tockholm University, 2026.

When archaeologists find adults and children buried together in medieval graves, it is often assumed that they were members of the same family. A new study from Stockholm University in Science Advances suggests otherwise.

Researchers at Stockholm University analyzed DNA from 142 individuals dating from the late Viking Age and Middle Ages, including more than 60 children and adolescents buried in multiple graves at sites in Sigtuna, close to Stockholm, Västerhus in Jämtland, and Fjälkinge in Skåne.

The results show that close biological relatives were surprisingly rare among people buried in the same grave, even at cemeteries where high levels of kinship could be detected.

"We often assume that adults and children sharing a grave were parents and children or other close family members. In most cases, that was not what we found," says Maja Krzewińska, Center for Paleogenetics, Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies, Stockholm University, lead author of the study.

Instead, the researchers' findings suggest that factors other than close family ties often influenced who was buried together.

Unusual to share a grave with close relatives in the Middle Ages
One of the pilgrim shells found at the Västerhus cemetery—a site investigated in the study. Credit: Christer Åhlin/Historiska museet, 2012

Children followed adult burial rules

"Archaeologists have debated the relationships between people buried together in this type of grave for a long time. Ancient DNA has finally given us the tool we have been waiting for to test these interpretations directly," says Anna Kjellström, researcher at the Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies, Stockholm University.

The study also sheds light on the lives of children in early Christian Scandinavia. By using ancient DNA, the researchers could determine the biological sex of children who were too young to be identified osteologically.

Boys and girls were often buried according to the same cemetery rules as adults. For example, at Västerhus, where men and women were generally buried on different sides of the churchyard, boys and girls followed the same pattern. This suggests that gender identity was recognized early in life.

"The children were not treated as a separate category. In death, they appear to have been treated according to the same social and religious principles as adult men and women," says Anders Götherström, professor of molecular archaeology, Center for Paleogenetics, Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies, Stockholm University.

The study also identified a remarkable family from the medieval cemetery at Västerhus. One woman, known to researchers as Lady 56, could be linked through DNA to several relatives buried in the churchyard, including her parents, her brother and two daughters. Yet her story extends far beyond Jämtland.

Lady 56's long journey

Buried with her was a scallop shell, a rare object in a medieval Scandinavian grave and a well-known symbol of pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in northwestern Spain.

The find suggests that she completed one of medieval Europe's most famous pilgrimages, traveling thousands of kilometers across the continent to the far edge of Christian Europe before returning home. Lady 56 died before age 30. Her parents, brother and daughters were also buried in a different part of the same cemetery in Jämtland.

Unusual to share a grave with close relatives in the Middle Ages
Anders Götherström, Center for Paleogenetics, Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies, Stockholm University. Credit: Rickard Kilström/Stockholm University

The study demonstrates how archaeogenetics can advance our understanding of medieval society, revealing not only biological relationships but also the social worlds in which people lived, organized their communities, worshiped and were ultimately laid to rest.

Publication details

Maja Krzewińska, Equal in death: Ancient genomic analysis of children's early Christian burials, Science Advances (2026). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aeb8588. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.aeb8588

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Citation: Ancient DNA challenges family assumptions in medieval Scandinavian graves (2026, July 10) retrieved 11 July 2026 from https://phys.org/news/2026-07-ancient-dna-family-assumptions-medieval.html

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