Rising from the lowlands of the Tisza and Maros river valleys, the Mokrin Maros communities crystallized in the early Bronze Age landscape of North Banat (c. 2100–1800 BCE). The Mokrin Necropolis, near modern Kikinda, provides the clearest archaeological window: a clustered cemetery with varied grave inventories, bronze objects, and regional ceramic styles that link local traditions to broader Maros cultural expressions.
Archaeological data indicates continuity with earlier Neolithic and Chalcolithic practices alongside new burial forms and metalworking traditions typical of the Early Bronze Age Balkans. This cultural layering suggests a period of social reorganization rather than abrupt population replacement. Material culture—ornamented pottery, bronze tools and occasional prestige items—points to interaction networks that stretched along river corridors and into neighboring plains.
Genetic sampling from Mokrin (n = 31) offers an allied line of evidence. The mix of paternal and maternal haplogroups recovered is consistent with a community shaped by both enduring local lineages and incoming influences. While the sample size is moderate and regional comparisons are still developing, combined archaeological and genomic data portray Mokrin as a locus where long-standing local traditions and wider Early Bronze Age currents converged.
- Emerged c. 2100 BCE in North Banat (Mokrin, Kikinda)
- Cemetery evidence shows social differentiation and regional ties
- Cultural continuity blended with new Early Bronze Age elements