The Early Bronze Age in present-day Bulgaria (c. 3400–2000 BCE) unfolds across river valleys and plateau tells where long-lived communities adapted to new metallurgical and social landscapes. Archaeological sites represented in this dataset — Tell Ezero (South Central), Tell Kran near Kazanlak, Merichleri (Kairyaka necropolis), Dzhulyunitsa, Smyadovo and Nova Zagora — preserve funerary contexts, settlement debris and metalwork that mark a transition from late Chalcolithic lifeways to Bronze Age complexity.
Material evidence indicates intensified long-distance exchange: copper and bronze objects begin to appear alongside traditional pottery forms, and cemetery organization shows increasing differentiation in grave goods. Limited evidence suggests some continuity of local Balkan traditions (architecture, ceramic styles) even as external contacts introduce new technologies and potentially new social roles. The genetic record from 19 individuals provides a modest but concrete anchor: Y-chromosome lineages dominated by haplogroup I and mitochondrial haplogroups U imply substantial local ancestry and maternal continuity. At the same time, presence of lineages such as G and H hints at gene flow from surrounding regions.
Archaeological data indicates a mosaic process — not a single migration — where local populations reconfigure under the influence of trade, metallurgy and shifting social networks. Because sample numbers remain limited, these patterns should be viewed as preliminary and geographically specific rather than fully representative of all Early Bronze Age Bulgaria.