Along the highland edges of Roman Africa, Sitifis (modern Sétif) glowed as a provincial city where indigenous Berber traditions braided with Roman institutions. Archaeological data indicates occupation layers and funerary use of the Necropole Orientale between roughly 40 BCE and 210 CE, a period archaeologists often label the Numido‑Roman Berber Era. Material culture — local coarse ware, imported amphorae, and funerary stelae with Punic or Latin inscriptions — paints a picture of communities negotiating identity under imperial structures.
Limited evidence suggests continuity with earlier Numidian settlements in the region; cemeteries at Sitifis show burial orientations and grave goods that echo pre‑Roman Maghrebi practices even as Roman dress and grave types appear. The cinematic contrast — stone sarcophagi beside simple inhumations, Latin graffiti scratched into dressed rock — captures a society both anchored in local landscapes and reoriented by Mediterranean exchange.
Caution: only three ancient genomes are available from the Necropole Orientale. Archaeological inferences about population movement and cultural origins remain provisional until larger sample sets and stratified radiocarbon sequences are recovered.