Archaeological evidence from the wider Shirak region paints a picture of agrarian households, seasonal herding, and small-scale craft specialization during the Early Iron Age. At sites contemporary with Beniamin, excavations reveal modest domestic compounds, storage pits, and ceramics reflecting both local traditions and wider stylistic influences.
Inhabitants likely balanced dryland farming—barley, wheat—and sheep-goat pastoralism with opportunistic trade across valleys. Metalworking traces in nearby settlements indicate practical iron tools and small personal ornaments rather than monumental metallurgy, suggesting household-level craft rather than state-sponsored industry. Funerary contexts, including the burial at Beniamin, are often modest; grave goods are sparse or utilitarian, pointing to a society where social distinctions existed but were not always expressed in elaborate tombs.
Material culture and landscape use imply resilient communities adapting to climatic and political shifts at the end of the Bronze Age. Archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological datasets from comparable sites show diets relying on cereals and pastoral products, while lithic and ceramic styles retain local continuity with incremental innovations. For Beniamin itself, the single burial offers a human face—age, sex, health indicators from osteology, and isotopic signatures when available can reveal diet and mobility, but such inferences are conditional on expanding the sample.