Archaeological evidence from the Armenian Highland during the first centuries BCE and CE paints a picture of resilient, versatile communities. Farming terraces and irrigation features found elsewhere in the region indicate a mixed subsistence of cereals, horticulture and animal husbandry; pastoralism remained an important adaptive strategy on upland slopes. Portable finds recorded at contemporaneous sites—pottery, metal tools, and personal ornaments—signal local craft traditions that responded to regional demand and stylistic influences from neighboring lands.
Cave contexts such as Yerevan 2 preserve mortuary deposits that can reveal social choices about death and memory. While cave interments are not the sole burial practice, their survival in the archaeological record gives us a window into community organization, ritual behavior, and possibly family groupings. Trade and mobility shaped everyday life: amphorae, imported bronzes, and exotic goods recorded regionally attest to active exchange along corridors that connected the Armenian Highland to Anatolia, the Iranian plateau, and territories to the north.
Interpreting social hierarchy, craft specialization, and household composition at Vardbakh specifically is constrained by the limited number of well-documented burials and the two genetic samples. Nevertheless, when genetic data are combined with stratigraphy, artifact assemblages, and landscape archaeology, a richer, more human portrait of life in antiquity begins to emerge—one characterized by local resilience and long-distance connections.