The human story at Dunum is one of rhythms: planting, harvest, animal care, craft, and kinship obligations. Archaeological remains associated with early medieval rural settlements in Lower Saxony — such as house platforms, animal bone assemblages, and domestic metalwork — imply mixed farming economies and households that combined subsistence tasks with specialized skills. Burial variation at Dunum, reflected in the presence or absence of personal objects, hints at social differentiation: some graves carrying small items that may mark age, gender, or status.
Skeletal remains themselves are records of embodied life. While specific pathology or isotopic studies for Dunum are limited, comparable Saxon contexts show wear patterns consistent with heavy manual labor, childhood stress episodes, and diets based on cereals, livestock, and seasonal resources. Communal ties likely centered on extended families and neighbourhood networks, with local leaders mediating between households and wider political authorities during a turbulent century.
Archaeological evidence therefore paints a picture of everyday resilience: local traditions of farming and craft persisted even as trade and conflict sometimes reached these fields. When paired with genetic data, these material traces help reconstruct not just objects and houses, but the living people who inhabited them.