Along the low, marshy plains drained by tributaries of the Tisza River a network of villages took shape during the late sixth to mid‑fifth millennia BCE. Archaeological excavations at Gorzsa Cukormajor (Hódmezővásárhely, Csongrád‑Csanád County) place local occupation within the broader Tisza cultural horizon, a strand of the Central European Neolithic known for painted pottery, longhouse settlements and intensive mixed farming. Radiocarbon dates associated with the seven analyzed individuals span roughly 5209–4539 BCE, framing a dynamic era of settlement expansion and cultural exchange.
Material culture — ceramics with complex painted motifs, hearths, and pit features — signals continuity with eastward Neolithic traditions that trace back toward Anatolia and the Balkans, while regional innovations hint at local adaptation to floodplain environments. Archaeological data indicates that the Tisza communities were settled and landscape‑oriented, but mobility and interregional contacts are also evident in exotic raw materials and stylistic parallels.
Genetic evidence from these seven burials offers a complementary strand of inquiry: mitochondrial lineages associated with Neolithic farmers appear alongside maternal haplogroups often linked to European hunter‑gatherers. On the paternal side, a small mix of haplogroups is observed. Because only seven genomes are available, interpretations about origins must remain cautious — these samples provide an evocative snapshot rather than a definitive portrait of population history.