Beneath the rolling fields of Greater Poland, the Dziekanowice site preserves layers of human activity. The material culture in the region is linked archaeologically to the long-lived Dziekanowice tradition of the Iron Age, but the seven radiocarbon-dated individuals from Dziekanowice-22 fall much later, between 986 and 1200 CE. This temporal gap suggests the site was reused or continued as a ritual and burial place well into the medieval period.
Archaeological data indicates continuity of landscape use: settlement traces, burial pits, and artifact types recovered nearby echo earlier occupation patterns. Limited evidence suggests that local communities maintained funerary traditions even as political and social landscapes shifted in the early medieval centuries around Gniezno and Łubowo. The small number of samples here (n = 7) means interpretations of population continuity or replacement remain provisional; further sampling would be required to test hypotheses about long-term local descent or incoming groups.