Ovum Act 6 Option A Early Jastorf culture, Altmark, North German Plain 500 BCE

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Copyright Source ©  OpenStreetMap contributors.

The map above highlights the area discussed in this post: Altmark, situated around the River Elbe on the North German Plain. In this post, I am exploring the journey of my matrilineage, defined by the mitochondrial DNA haplogroup H6a1a8 (specifically the private variant cluster F8693412).

This lineage could, of course, have arrived in East Anglia via several routes; I am presenting only two. In Option B, the lineage arrives via a Hallstatt bride reaching South East Britain during the Earlier Iron Age. Here, in Option A, I follow an Anglo-Saxon route. In this scenario, the lineage moved northwards from an Eastern Alpine origin and, by 500 BCE, existed within the early Jastorf culture along the River Elbe.

The Jastorf archaeological culture is often seen as connected to the emergence of later, Germanic peoples.

Did my ninety-times great-grandmother live among these people?

The Environment The landscape is a mosaic of sandy pine barrens, fertile loess soils ideal for agriculture, and the wide, unpredictable floodplains of the River Elbe. This low-lying, sandy plain is dissected by numerous tributaries, making settlement a matter of strategy. Communities cling to the ‘islands’ of higher, drier ground (Geest) to escape the seasonal flooding of the marshlands.

Climate The ‘Subatlantic’ climatic phase has taken hold; consequently, it is cooler and wetter than in previous centuries. This persistent dampness dictates every facet of life, from the construction of houses to the specific crops sown. For the Jastorf farmers, floods are a frequent and formidable seasonal hazard.

Jastorf and the Three-Aisled Longhouse

​The social unit is centered on the Three-Aisled Longhouse. These are impressive timber-frame structures with wattle-and-daub walls and thatched roofs. They are a shared space: Humans and livestock live under one roof. The cattle occupy one end, their body heat helping to warm the central living area where the hearth fire never truly goes out.

Subsistence: These are skilled farmers. They grow emmer wheat, barley, and millet, but there is an increasing reliance on flax (for linen) and gold-of-pleasure (for oil).

​Hardiness: Life is a constant negotiation with the soil. They supplement their diet with intensive foraging for acorns, hazelnuts, and wild berries.

This is a largely egalitarian, tribal society, but "big men" or local chieftains are again beginning to emerge. 

​The Cult of the Dead: Cremation is the standard. The ashes are placed in ceramic urns and are also buried in vast "urnfields." In the Altmark, these cemeteries are often reused for generations, creating a deep sense of ancestral continuity.

The Sacred Bog: The surrounding wetlands are seen as portals to the divine. It is common to deposit "votive offerings"—fine pottery, weapons, or even sacrificed animals—into the peat as gifts to deities that govern the rain and the harvest.

The Nienburg Group The Nienburg Group are seen as significant pioneers of the later Germanic cultures—the "bridge-builders" of European culture. In the centuries to follow, they will be in contact and trading with Belgic groups expanding from the Danube in the south to the western boundaries of the Nienburg Group. If my ninety-times great-grandmother is not already here in 500 BCE, perhaps it is then that her lineage will arrive?

Iron The Bronze Age was now fading. Europe was no longer dependent on the importation of bronze, copper, and tin, as iron had become commonplace. Our Jastorf ancestors were very likely to have harvested bog iron—mineral deposits that settled during repeated floods. They could collect these small pellets of raw iron and forge them into tools far sharper than those made of bronze.

Although it required the arduous labour of forging and hammering, the end product was inexpensive, locally sourced, and durable. Crucially, it could be repaired. Human relationships and their respective cultures shifted in response to these new implements. While bronze had been a symbol of elite status, iron became the practical, everyday tool of the Northern European farmers.

GO TO NEXT ACT OPTION A - Late Jastorf culture / proto-Lombards. Middle/Lower Elbe, North German Plain. 200 BCE


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Anglo-Saxon? Everyone wants to be a Celt!

By Edgar "Bill" Wilson Nye (1850–1896) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

It's true, I'll swear it.  You go on any online genetics, ancestry, or history forum, every other American, Canadian, or Australian of mainly European heritage, wants to have Irish ancestors.  Failing Irish, Scottish or maybe "Welch" will do.  People just don't want to be of English ancestry.  If a DNA test suggests British & Irish ancestry, then they pray that it's Irish or Scottish.  If it turns out to be English, well....  Let's keep that one locked in the wardrobe shall we?

We are just so out of favour, so misunderstood.  No wonder the English have a long running identity crisis.  I blame Hollywood for it, particularly that nameless Australian (now American) film maker with a chip on his shoulder about us.  Always portraying the English either as cruel, arrogant, evil upper class tyrants, or as bumbling, stupid peasants.  It's not completely true you know.  well, not about the latter.

The English are watered down Celts

Recent genetic studies suggest we are actually pretty admixed, and may actually have more "Celtic" British ancestry than we have Anglo-Saxon.  Sort of watered down Celts.  The POBI (Peopling of the British Isles) Study 2015, using quantitative sampling, suggested that the present day ethnic English have only 10% to 40% Anglo-Saxon ancestry, with the majority of our ancient heritage being in the British Isles much longer.  The Haak etal Study 2016 using qualitative evidence from ancient cemeteries in the Cambridge area, suggested that there indeed was admixture, and that the present day English are only around 38% Anglo Saxon in their ancestry.  A correlation.

A reconstructed Anglo Saxon

Don't take this one serious, but my DNA tests for ancestry are always atypical for a Brit, even an extreme for an Englishman.  I usually get only around 34% British on autosome tests.  Yet my genealogy is all South East English, and heavily rural local in East Anglia.  My DNA flavour is heavily Continental in it's flavour, with pulls towards Northern France, Germany, Scandinavia, and for some reason, Southern Europe.  I swear, I really am English!  My DNA confounds these tests.  The most logical answer is that it is population background, heavily localised in East Anglia.  Here is my mother's recorded ancestry:

Disgustingly local.  The last admixture was probably when the Danes beached at nearby Flegg.  On top of that, a fluke of genetic recombination.  Phasing suggests that I inherited from my mother, almost all of her DNA that 23andMe identifies as like French & German.  On top of that, a heap from my late father.  I might be sort of an accidental biologically reconstructed Anglo Saxon, with an embarrassingly low percentage of British Celtic ancestry!  I don't think that I'd make a good Anglo Saxon.  Crap at woodwork and farming.  Maybe I should grow back my beard?

Nah!  I look more like I'm homeless than a sword swinging warrior.

Anyway, it has put me into an Anglo-Saxon sort of mood of recent, and I feel like defending my humble immigrant ancestors.  As I've said before, I'm quite a fan of the perspective, that the Anglo Saxons were a real and significant migration event to Southern and Eastern Britain, but rather than the traditionalist view that they were a murderous army of invasion and genocide, that they were as often as not, simply farmers from around the North Sea, that were looking for opportunity.  They wanted land to farm.  They wanted to be free of their fealties on the Continent.  The collapse of Roman administration in Britain, gave them the opportunity.  The British elites were in disarray, and running in all sorts of directions.  British society was in crisis, a free fall.

I'm not saying that there was no violent conflict!  At times it would have been like this:

By Anon. [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

But alternatively, there could have been much more to their success.  They appear to have been incredibly successful farmers, with a culture that had adapted outside of the Roman Empire, in a very rural, illiterate, and non-monetary economy.  With the collapse of the state, they could have been incredibly successful in South East Britain.  Not because they had bigger swords to wave (something that I didn't inherit), but because they could sustain themselves well and prosper.

These guys could grow food, and pay their rent.  They knew how to work.  They provided the basis to Early English Culture and identity.

Now some photos that I took several years ago at the West Stow Anglo-Saxon Village in nearby Suffolk: