The Körös horizon in eastern Hungary emerges at the dawn of the Neolithic, a landscape reworked by the first farming communities after 6000 BCE. Archaeological survey and excavation at sites such as Szentpéterszeg‑Körtvélyes‑2 (Hajdú‑Bihar County, near Berettyóújfalu) reveal small, often ephemeral settlements with characteristic early Neolithic pottery and evidence for domesticated plants and animals. The material culture links this region into the broader Starčevo–Körös–Criș interaction sphere that spread farming from the Balkans into the Carpathian Basin.
Cinematic in its transformation, the floodplain and loess fields would have been reshaped into fields and enclosures by communities whose lives centered on seasonal cycles. Archaeological data indicates pit features, hearths, and pottery assemblages, but preservation is variable and many interpretations remain tentative. Limited radiocarbon sequences bracket activity of the Körös horizon here roughly between 5800 and 5300 BCE, but settlement intensity and continuity likely varied across the region.
Genetically, the picture is still fragmentary: only four genome samples currently tie directly to the Szentpéterszeg‑Körtvélyes‑2 locality. These remains offer promising links between archaeological horizons and maternal lineages, but the small sample count requires caution. Limited evidence suggests this community participated in early Neolithic demographic expansions, yet many questions about origins, mobility, and interaction remain open.