The Late Hellenistic period in the Armenian Highlands is a landscape of layered empires and shifting horizons. From the vantage of Aghitu, dated securely between 72 BCE and 60 CE, the archaeological record captures a borderland where Hellenistic artistic motifs, local traditions, and Parthian influences converge. Architectural fragments, pottery styles, and funerary customs at Aghitu hint at communities negotiating identity under regional powers rather than a single hegemonic culture.
Archaeological data indicates continuity with earlier Iron Age traditions alongside novel imports — glazed wares, imported amphora fragments, and stylistic hybridization in small finds. This mirrors historical accounts of Armenia as a crossroads: not simply conquered, but reshaped through trade, diplomacy, and migrations. Limited evidence suggests that some households at Aghitu practiced mixed subsistence strategies—agriculture supplemented by pastoral mobility—consistent with other Armenian Highlands settlements.
Genetic and material traces together suggest a population formed by local descent with episodic influxes of people and ideas. Yet, with only three genetic samples from Aghitu, any model of origins is preliminary. The archaeological record provides the stage; ancient DNA begins to illuminate the actors and the routes that brought them.