The human stories preserved at Vardbakh (Yerevan 2 Cave) unfold against a landscape of folds and ridges that has been a crossroads for millennia. Archaeological data indicates occupation or use of the Armenian Highlands throughout the Late Hellenistic and early Roman eras; the two ancient genomes from Vardbakh are dated to roughly 100 BCE–300 CE, a period contemporary with the Artaxiad and early Arsacid courts in Armenia. Material traces across the region—fortified settlements, rural homesteads, caravan routes—attest to a mixed economy of agriculture, pastoralism, and long-distance exchange.
Limited evidence suggests that communities here were not isolated islands but participants in networks stretching across the Near East and into Anatolia and Iran. The placement of Vardbakh within the Yerevan basin situates its inhabitants along routes that channeled goods, ideas, and people during a time of intensified political interaction. While these genomes provide a snapshot of biological ancestry, the archaeological context—site stratigraphy, pottery types, and landscape use—frames those genomes within a living, mobile society.
Because only two samples are available, any model of origin must be cautious: they can hint at broader patterns but cannot by themselves reconstruct migration events or demographic shifts. Instead, they act like cinematic close-ups that invite wider fieldwork and additional genetic sampling across Ancient Armenia and neighboring regions.