Life in these Bronze Age communities combined local subsistence, specialized craft, and long-distance ties. Settlement traces and house plans vary from small farmsteads to nucleated villages; archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological remains show mixed farming — cereals, pulses, cattle, sheep and pigs — supplemented by hunting and freshwater resources. The cinematic image of itinerant metalworkers is grounded in kiln pits, slag, and molds recovered at workshop sites: bronze production and specialized smithing underpinned social status and trade.
Burial practices provide direct glimpses into identity and social display. Graves range from crouched inhumations to extended supine burials, sometimes accompanied by weapons, decorated pins, and copper-alloy tools. Sites such as Rothenschirmbach and the Bohemian cemeteries show ornate metalwork in some burials, suggesting hierarchy or ritual roles. Ceramic styles, funerary placement, and artifact assortments emphasize both local traditions and long-distance fashions imported from the Alps, the Carpathians, and western Europe.
Networks mattered: exchange of metals, prestige goods and possibly marriages created webs of connection that linked the Lech Valley, Grand Est (Alsace), the Berici Hills of Italy, and further west to France and the Iberian Peninsula. Yet living patterns were not solely cosmopolitan: many communities appear conservative in diet, craft repertoire, and household composition, balancing innovation with rooted local lifeways.