The Canaanites mentioned in the bible lived in the southern Levant, what is now Israel, the Palestinian Authority, Jordan and Lebanon, between 3,500 and 1,150 BC.
They lived in various townships but are all referred to as ‘Canaanites’ in the Christian holy book, and it has long been thought they had their own unique culture.
However, their genetic make-up and ancestry is not well understood.
Now, two studies have found they were indeed a distinct group of people, rarely breeding with outsiders.
They were descended from two main lineages: Neolithic inhabitants of the Levant and populations related to Copper Age Iranians, specifically the region of the Zagros Mountains, and Bronze Age people from Caucasus.
However, despite the lack of external genes injected into the gene pool, the Canaanite populations did not remain static.
Instead, they migrated slowly, over hundreds of years, from the Ancient Near East, what is now modern Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan, into the Southern Levant.
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The Canaanite populations did not remain static over time. Instead, they migrated slowly, over hundreds of years, from the Ancient Near East, what is now modern Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan, into the Southern Levant (pictured)
Two studies have found Canaanites were a secular people, rarely breeding with outsiders, and were descended from two main lineages: Neolithic inhabitants of the Levant and populations related to Bronze Age Iranians and people from Caucasus.pictured, one of the study sites in Israel
A host of researchers from all around the world analysed the remains of 93 individuals who lived over 1,500 years, at nine different sites in the Levant.
It revealed that the Canaanites do represent a clear group and, despite being from various locations, are closely related.
‘The Canaanites, albeit living in different city-states, were culturally and genetically similar,’ says Liran Carmel of The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
The findings reveal that most Canaanite genetics was descended from a mixture of local Neolithic populations and people from copper-age Iran and the Bronze Age Caucasus — modern-day Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Russia.
Dr Carmel adds: ‘In addition, this region has witnessed many later population movements, with people coming from the northeast, from the south, and from the northwest.
‘Individuals from all sites are highly genetically similar, albeit with subtle differences, showing that the archaeologically and historically defined ‘Canaanites’ corresponds to a demographically coherent group.’
This, they say, is proof that the Southern Levant saw a gradual and continuous stream of migration from the Near East.
Canaanites migrated slowly, over hundreds of years, from the Ancient Near East, what is now modern Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan, into the Southern Levant. Pictured, one of the study sites
‘The strength of the migration from the northeast of the Ancient Near East, and the fact that this migration continued for many centuries, may help to explain why rulers of city-states in Canaan in the Late Bronze Age carry non-Semitic, Hurrian names,’ says Shai Carmi of The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
‘There were strong and active connections between these regions through movements of people that help to understand the shared elements of culture.’
When compared to modern inhabitants of the region, the scientists 50 per cent of the ancestry of Canaanites comes from the Caucasus and the Zagros Mountains.
An unknown proportion comes from the local Neolithic inhabitants of the Southern Levant and a smaller, but also unknown proportion from both Europe and Africa.
It is unknown when African and European genes first made it into the genomes of modern-day inhabitants of the Levant.
The Near East has been a tumultuous region over the last 4,000 years, with innumerable conflicts and invasions.
However, 19 of the 93 skeletons used in the aforementioned research were also studied by a separate team of scientists.
They found that, despite a range of almost 4,000 years, the ancestry of the skeletons was largely the same.
In fact, the researchers say that only three events had a significant impact on the gene pool of modern-day Lebanese people.
These were the beginning of the Iron Age (1,000BC), the arrival of Alexander the Great (from 330BC), and the domination of the Ottoman Empire (1516AD).
The Levant has been ruled by Egyptians, Babylonians, Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Crusaders, Arabs, and Ottomans in its extensive history, but the genes of modern-day residents of Beirut were 90 per cent similar to ancestors who lived around 4,000 years ago.
Even one the most recent invaders, the Crusaders, have left barely a mark on the genetics of the Levant.
Dr Marc Haber, first author from the University of Birmingham and previously from the Wellcome Sanger Institute, said: ‘We revealed a genetic history of the area across 4,000 years, with a time-point approximately every 500 years.
‘This showed us that despite the huge cultural changes that were occurring during this period, there were only a few times that the genetics of the general population changed enough to affect the ordinary people.’
The first study was published in Cell Press and the second study is today available in the American Journal of Human Genetics.