Life in and around Beniamin during the Hellenistic era likely revolved around mixed farming, pastoralism, and household craft. Archaeological indicators from comparable Shirak sites point to stone-built houses, clay ceramics for cooking and storage, and small-scale specialized production (textiles, metalworking) embedded within family units. Seasonal transhumance of sheep and goats across the Armenian Highlands would have shaped diets, mobility, and social rhythms.
Markets and routes connecting the highlands to valleys and to larger Hellenistic centers would have brought occasional exotic items—coins, glass beads, or imported pottery—while most everyday objects remained local. Funerary behavior reflects both practical and symbolic choices: burial position, grave goods, and construction suggest care for ancestors and a community’s social ties. At Beniamin, the single documented burial should be read as a fragmentary window onto these practices rather than a comprehensive portrait of society.