In the waning centuries of the second millennium BCE, Didnauri (also recorded as Samreklo) sits at a crossroads—where the green terraces of the Kura River meet the routes that climb toward the Greater Caucasus. Archaeological data indicates that the local Didnauri cultural horizon belongs to a broader mosaic of Late Bronze Age communities in eastern Georgia. Material traces from the region—ceramic styles, mortuary practices, and settlement patterns—suggest continuity with earlier Bronze Age traditions while also showing adaptation to changing economic and social pressures across the South Caucasus.
The three dated samples from Didnauri range from 1260 to 839 BCE, a span that captures late regional transformations: intensification of herding, local metallurgy, and shifting exchange networks. Limited evidence suggests these communities maintained strong local identities even as long-distance contacts—by trade or movement of people—introduced new objects and possibly new genes. Because the sample set is very small, archaeological interpretations must remain cautious: observed patterns may reflect local variability rather than broad population replacement.
Seen against the cinematic backdrop of mountain ridgelines and river fog, Didnauri emerges as a place of both persistence and encounter—a Late Bronze Age node where long-standing Caucasian lifeways met broader currents in the ancient Near East and steppe margins.