Imagine mist over river meadows as people tend emmer and einkorn, the clink of stone sickles and the hush of crafted pottery drying in the sun. Starčevo-period settlements in southwestern Hungary present traces of domestic life: post-built houses, hearths, storage pits, and a toolkit geared to farming and household production. Archaeobotanical remains at related Starčevo sites indicate wheat, barley, pulses, and the beginnings of landscape management. Animal bones show herding of sheep, goats, and cattle alongside hunting.
Social life likely revolved around kin-based households and small villages connected by exchange networks. Pottery—with comb impressions and painted motifs—served both everyday storage and social signaling. Burials in Starčevo contexts vary: some interments are simple, others accompanied by grave goods, suggesting differences in status, age, or ritual practice. Skeletal evidence, although sparse for this Hungary_EN_Starcevo_1 sample set, can hint at mobility, diet, and workload when combined with isotopic and genetic data.
Archaeological evidence indicates a society transforming landscapes and lifeways, but many details remain tentative. Limited sample sizes and uneven preservation mean reconstructions of seasonal movement, community size, and social hierarchy are provisional and must be refined with further excavation and biomolecular study.