The two individuals dated between 773 and 989 CE come from distinct landscapes of what is now modern Albania: Shtikë on the Kolonja Plateau in the southeast and Kënetë in the Kukës District to the northeast. Archaeological data indicates burial contexts consistent with small rural communities connected to the wider currents of the medieval Balkans rather than large, urban Byzantine centers. Material traces at analogous sites in the region typically show continuity with late antique traditions even as new cultural influences arrive.
Limited evidence suggests these burials reflect local populations negotiating continuity and change amid shifting political frontiers: Byzantine administration, seasonal transhumance, and movements of Slavic and other groups across the interior Balkans. The samples sit squarely in the early medieval horizon when settlement patterns and mortuary practices were regionally diverse. Because only two samples are available, any reconstruction of a local ‘‘origin story’’ must be cautious: they provide valuable, but preliminary, snapshots of population makeup rather than comprehensive portraits of Medieval Albanian origins.