(Jewish Group) German town built a granary atop its Jewish cemetery. Bones yielding insights to DNA
A German town built a granary atop its Jewish cemetery. Now the bones are yielding insights about Ashkenazi DNA.
The city of Erfurt in central Germany is home to an impeccably restored medieval synagogue made possible because local Jews had been expelled long before the Nazis began their campaign to destroy Jewish sites.
Now, Erfurts long-hidden Jewish past is again offering new insights this time about the genetic history of Ashkenazi Jews.
Human remains from a medieval Jewish cemetery in Erfurt have allowed what researchers say is the largest ancient Jewish DNA study to date. Conducted without disinterring any remains, in keeping with Jewish law, the study published Wednesday in the scientific journal Cell found that Erfurts medieval Jewish community was more genetically diverse than their modern-day cousins, and carried many of the same Jewish genetic diseases such as Tay Sachs and cystic fibrosis that affect Ashkenazi Jews today.
There have been many previous DNA studies, but not of Jews, said geneticist Shai Carmi, a professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, whose search for study material led him to an archaeological dig at the Jewish cemetery in Erfurt. He and his collaborators were able to analyze DNA of 33 individuals who died between 1270 and 1400, using teeth they found there.
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