The Early Iron Age horizon in southern Bulgaria unfolds across a landscape of low mountains and river corridors where older Bronze Age communities gave way to new social configurations between roughly 1100 and 500 BCE. Archaeological data indicates settlement reorganization and changing funerary practices at sites such as Kapitan Andreevo (South), Stambolovo (Eastern Rhodopes), Diamandovo (Kardzhali) and Svilengrad (Haskovo). Material culture — pottery styles, metalwork and burial architecture — shows both local continuity with Late Bronze Age traditions and new elements that reflect wider contacts across the Balkans.
Limited evidence suggests interaction with neighboring Thracian groups to the east and with communities along the Aegean and Danubian corridors. This period is cinematic: fortified positions, vibrant artisanry and shifting trade networks that moved metals, crafted goods and ideas. Genetically, Early Iron Age communities in the Balkans are best viewed as palimpsests—layers of Neolithic farmer ancestry, Mesolithic hunter‑gatherer remnants, and mobility from steppe‑derived groups—although the precise balance varies by site and individual. Archaeological context and ancient DNA together provide a multidimensional portrait, but coverage remains regionally focused and interpretive caution is required.