The Davydovskoye Antiquity assemblage sits within the broader Davydovskoye archaeological tradition documented across central European Russia. Excavations and surveys at Bolshoye‑Davydovskoye‑2 (Gavrilovo‑Posadsky District, Ivanovo Oblast) yield material and burial evidence dated by associated contexts and radiocarbon to ca. 130–420 CE. Archaeological data indicates continuity of settlement and mortuary practices that link this locality to regional networks of the Late Antique period.
Limited evidence suggests that the Davydovskoye community here was neither an isolated frontier outpost nor the seat of a large urban center, but rather a modest rural settlement integrated into local economic and social circuits. Pottery styles, settlement layout elements, and burial orientations show parallels with neighbouring Davydovskoye sites, though detailed comparisons remain preliminary. The temporal placement in the 2nd–5th centuries CE situates these people amid shifting political landscapes across the Pontic‑East European zone, when mobility and cultural contact increased.
Because the dataset is small (n=9), interpretations about origins should be cautious. Archaeology points to local continuities with regional Davydovskoye cultural patterns, while ancient DNA begins to provide maternal lineage signals that can be compared with coeval populations across the forest‑steppe interface.