The period from roughly 200 to 650 CE in what is now Lebanon unfolds against the backdrop of Roman provincial administration transitioning into Byzantine rule and, later, early Islamic governance. Archaeological data from Qornet ed-Deir situate human activity within this long arc: settlement layers, funerary deposits, and small finds indicate local communities embedded in wider Mediterranean networks. Material traces suggest continuity of Levantine lifeways—agriculture on terraced hillsides, seasonal movement between upland and coastal zones, and participation in trade that threaded through Syrian-Palestinian ports.
At Qornet ed-Deir the stratigraphy and associated artifacts record a landscape shaped by both local traditions and imperial currents. Stone-built features and ceramic assemblages show adaptations to Roman economic and administrative structures without erasing indigenous practices. Limited evidence suggests that population mobility increased during this era: soldiers, merchants, and officials traveling along maritime and inland routes brought people and ideas, creating a culturally layered provincial world.
Because direct genetic sampling from this site is small, the archaeological record remains essential for interpreting how these communities lived and moved. Together, the material culture and the emerging genetic signal allow us to glimpse how a Levantine population negotiated continuity and change under the Roman and Byzantine spheres.