The Early Medieval period in Sardinia unfolds at the edge of islands and empires. Archaeological data from burial contexts at Bonnanaro (SAS Corona Moltana / Zarau) and the coastal cave of Grotta Colombi (Sant'Elia Capo) place human activity firmly in the 8th–10th centuries CE. These sites sit on top of a long palimpsest of Nuragic and later Roman-Byzantine occupation layers, suggesting continuity of place even as political horizons shifted.
Limited evidence suggests communities retained local lifeways—agropastoral economies and coastal exploitation—while also participating in Mediterranean exchange networks. Material culture from stratified deposits includes pottery forms and metalwork that show both local traditions and styles that could reflect connections to mainland Italy or broader maritime routes. Radiocarbon and stratigraphic sequences provide the primary chronological anchors; however, preservation and sparse sampling make fine-grained change hard to resolve.
From a cinematic vantage, imagine fishermen tending boats against limestone cliffs where generations had anchored; DNA recovered from a small number of burials preserves traces of these encounters. But with only three sampled individuals, any narrative about migration or demographic turnover must remain tentative. Archaeology indicates continuity and contact; ancient DNA offers hints of who these people were, but broader sampling is required to convert suggestion into robust history.