Daily Life & Society
The modern life reflected by Kaunas around 2000 CE is urban, layered, and resonant with older rural traditions. Archaeological traces from market strata, household refuse, and construction cuttings reveal everyday items—ceramic sherds, metal fragments, and structural timbers—that mirror a population balancing local craft, regional trade, and modern mobility. Ethnographic continuities—seasonal foods, textile motifs, and burial memories—persist alongside global influences.
In the archaeological record, continuity is often visible in craft traditions and settlement patterns rather than in single dramatic artifacts. Urban excavations in Kaunas document repairs, rebuilding episodes, and repurposed foundations, each telling of generations who inhabited the same streets. These material rhythms correspond to genetic rhythms: migration, marriage networks, and demographic shifts that leave subtle signatures in genomes.
However, the modern snapshot captured by the Kaunas sample set (n=10) is limited. While archaeology provides context for how communities organized labor, ritual, and kinship, a small genetic sample cannot reconstruct the full tapestry of social life. Integrating more extensive archaeological and genetic sampling remains essential to move from evocative fragments to robust reconstructions.