Life in La Tène-era Lower Austria unfolded along river valleys and fertile plains where iron tools reshaped agriculture and craft. Archaeological remains from the broader region suggest a society organized around small farms, craft workshops, and seasonal marketplaces that connected hinterlands to major routes. At Pottenbrunn, funerary data and surface finds imply communities with social differentiation visible in grave goods: personal adornment, imported items, and tools.
Artisans worked iron, bronze and occasionally gold, producing weapons and ornaments with the characteristic La Tène curvilinear style. Such objects were not merely functional; they were social signals. Trade in salt, metals and finished goods tied Lower Austria to networks stretching into present-day France, Switzerland and the upper Danube. Ritual and belief are glimpsed in burial orientations and offerings, but archaeological interpretations vary by site and are often contested.
Because the available DNA sample set from Pottenbrunn is small, we cannot confidently link specific material-status markers to particular ancestries. Still, the archaeological assemblage paints a cinematic picture: river mists lifting over fields, the ring of a smith’s hammer, and the glitter of inlaid decoration on a warrior’s belt.