In the late 4th century, a powerful nomadic force emerged in Europe, upending the region's political and social order. The ...
A group of warriors called the Huns began infiltrating the borders of the Roman Empire in the late 4th century. […] ...
When the Roman Empire began collapsing, Christianity prevailed and the Roman Catholic Church kept its territories together.
A link between the Huns and Xiongnu was long suspected and now scientists say DNA evidence links the two empires across the ...
Extensive genetic connections existed between the Mongolian steppe and Central Europe during the rule of the Huns. The Huns ...
Ancient DNA traces the Huns' journey from Mongolia to Europe. But this wasn't straightforward.
New genetic research reveals direct links between European Huns and elite figures from the Asian Hun Empire, shedding light ...
The European Union unveiled a plan that preserves its ambitious climate goals while trying to improve industrial ...
24 analyzed ancient DNA from 370 skeletons dating back to the fourth through sixth centuries ... One particularly intriguing find was the skeleton of a Hun woman, aged 35 to 50, buried in ...
Specifically, the study included 35 recently sequenced genomes from archaeological sites dating to the 3rd and 4th centuries in Kazakhstan and contexts from ... retained significant East Asian ...