Daily life in La Tène Austria unfolded between river valleys, fortified hilltops, and fertile lowlands. Settlement archaeology in Lower Austria documents small farmsteads, enclosed oppida, and specialized craft zones where ironworking, weaving and pottery production structured local economies. In Pottenbrunn, burial contexts and associated grave goods hint at social differentiation: some individuals received personal ornaments and metal items while others were interred more simply.
Archaeological indicators — hearths, loom weights, agricultural tools — suggest mixed farming economies supplemented by craft specialization. Seasonal mobility for grazing and trade journeys along the Danube would have connected Pottenbrunn residents to wider markets for salt, metal, and finished goods. Iconography and weaponry in La Tène graves also speak to warrior identities alongside agricultural lifeways, with feasting and ritual acting as important social glue.
Material culture preserves the rhythm of everyday acts: cooking, repairing tools, and weaving kinship ties. But osteological and genetic analyses have the potential to reveal subtler patterns — childhood mobility, dietary shifts, and kinship networks — that everyday artifacts alone cannot. For Pottenbrunn, such bioarchaeological integration remains in its infancy.