Archaeological contexts give texture to medieval lifeways. In Tuscany (Siena, Chiusi) excavations reveal layered occupations: farmhouse remains, artisan debris, and parish burials that speak of agrarian households tied to local manors and episcopal frameworks. Foggia’s San Lorenzo and Cancarro cemeteries contain urban and semi-urban interments with diverse grave goods—textile fragments, metalwork, and indicators of trade—suggesting economic links across the Adriatic.
At Székesfehérvár, the royal basilica and surrounding burial grounds indicate high-status funerary practice alongside more modest community graves. Osteological analysis from these sites often indicates mixed diets, with isotopic data (where available) reflecting a Mediterranean base augmented by inland cereals and occasional marine or freshwater protein.
In the northern sites (Tartu region, Tudulinna), the archaeological record is marked by a blend of local mortuary forms and imported objects tied to Hanseatic and Baltic trade networks. Everyday life here could be intensely local yet connected through seasonal mobility, trade, and religious pilgrimage.
Archaeology indicates stratified societies—local elites tied to churches and wider networks of craftsmen and merchants—while also revealing the ordinary texture of medieval life: childhood, artisanal production, and parish ritual. When paired with DNA, these material traces help differentiate rooted lineages from migrants and transient residents.