Rising from the loamy plains and river terraces of present‑day Moldova, the Multi Cordoned Ware horizon appears between roughly 2200 and 1700 BCE. Archaeological data indicates communities at Crihana Veche and Tantareni produced beakers decorated with multiple raised cordons — a ceramic vocabulary that links them to the broader Corded Ware phenomenon across Eastern Europe. These cordons are not merely decoration; they are a cultural signature that likely signified group identity, craft tradition, and perhaps social ties that stretched across the Pontic–Caspian fringe.
Material culture places these settlements in a sequence of late Copper to early Bronze Age transformations: metallurgy becomes more visible, pastoralism intensifies, and burial practices display regional variability. Limited evidence suggests local adoption and adaptation of Corded Ware elements rather than wholesale population replacement. With only three genetic samples, however, archaeologists must treat models of migration and cultural transmission here as provisional. Further excavation and sampling at Crihana Veche, Tantareni, and neighboring sites are essential to illuminate how these corded motifs map onto population history.