Excavated Avar-period cemeteries in the Danube–Tisza region typically preserve a range of burial practices: inhumations with variable orientation, grave goods ranging from utilitarian items to personal adornment, and occasional evidence for horse equipment. These patterns reflect a society in which pastoral mobility and settled farming coexisted.
Local communities would have engaged in mixed economies — tending livestock, cultivating crops on the rich plain, and participating in long-distance exchange networks that brought metalwork and prestige objects. Social differentiation is visible in graves with richer assemblages, but these signals do not map neatly onto single ethnic identities; rather, they indicate rank, gender, age, and connections to broader Avar and steppe traditions.
Given the fragmentary nature of cemetery sampling at the named sites, reconstructions of household economy and social hierarchy remain interpretive. Osteological and isotopic analyses at similar Avar sites often reveal dietary diversity and mobility, suggesting families and lineages with different life histories co-resided in the same landscape.