The Middle–Late Avar period (c. 650–804 CE) is an era of transformation across the Hungarian plain. Archaeological strata and rich cemetery assemblages at sites such as Kunszállás-Fülöpjakab (Bács-Kiskun County), Kunpeszér-Felsőpeszéri út and Rákóczifalva-Bagi-földek (Szolnok region) reveal a people shaped by steppe mobility, local European traditions and long-distance connections.
Material culture — horse trappings, iron weaponry, belt sets and distinct grave orientations — signals continuity with earlier Avar elite practices while also showing regional variability typical of a confederation of groups. Archaeological data indicates funerary customs shifted over time, reflecting changing social hierarchies and contacts with neighboring polities (Byzantine, Slavic and Bulgar groups).
Genetic evidence from 48 analyzed individuals provides a biological window onto these processes. The mixture of paternal haplogroups (notably a predominance of J but also R and N) and diverse maternal lineages suggests layered origins: some lineages trace to steppe and Inner Asian sources, others to the broader West Eurasian and local European gene pool. Limited evidence suggests that migration into the Carpathian Basin during the 6th–7th centuries brought a diversity of peoples whose descendants formed the heterogeneous Avar communities we observe archaeologically.
Because archaeological and genetic datasets each have biases (preservation, burial selection, sampling), interpretations remain provisional and benefit from continued excavation and analysis.