Stone and metal finds from Łęgowo paint an evocative portrait of lives shaped by agronomy, craft, and regional exchange. Archaeological features—shallow graves, iron knives, fragments of pottery, and traces of wooden structures—are consistent with small rural communities in medieval Greater Poland. Skeletal wear patterns indicate habitual activities: robust lower limbs consistent with walking and field labor, and joint changes that suggest repetitive manual tasks such as grinding or weaving. The burial treatment shows modest grave goods and orientations in line with Christianizing trends of the era, though some burial practices retain local variants that hint at lingering pre-Christian habits or regional ritual diversity.
Archaeobotanical remains from nearby contexts (charred cereal grains, nutshells) indicate mixed farming—rye, barley, and pulses—while faunal bone fragments reflect a mixed economy of cattle, pig, and sheep. Settlement layout and material culture align with a community integrated into local husbandry and craft networks rather than elite political centers. Social organization was likely household-based, with extended family units forming the core economic group. As always with small cemeteries, social and status variability can be hard to gauge: limited samples mean that the visible burials may not represent the full social spectrum of the community.