| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
| Contents | ||
| Part of the series History of Romania | |
|---|---|
| Dacia | |
| The Middle Ages | |
| National awakening | |
| Kingdom of Romania | |
| World War II | |
| Communist Romania | |
| Romania since 1989 | |
Dacia, in ancient geography the land of the Daci or Getae, was a large district of Central Europe, bounded on the north by the Carpathians, on the south by the Danube, on the west by the Tisa ( Tisza river, in Hungary), on the east by the Tyras ( Dniester or Nistru, now in eastern Moldova). It thus corresponds in the main to modern Romania and Moldova.
Towards the west it may originally have extended as far as the Danube where it runs from north to south at Waitzen (Vacz). Julius Caesar in his De Bello Gallico (book 6) speaks of Hercynia forest extending along the Danube to the teritories of the Dacians. Ptolemy puts its eastern boundary as far back as the Hierasus ( Siret river, in modern Romania).
The inhabitants of this district are considered as belonging to the Thracian stock. The Dacians were known as Getae in Greek writings, and as Dacorum, Dagae and Getarum (Getae) in Roman documents — see the late Roman map Tabula Peutingeriana .
The Dacians had attained a considerable degree of civilization by the time they first became known to the Romans.
According to HerodotusHerodotus of Halicarnassus (modern Bodrum in Turkey) was an ancient Greek historian who lived in the 5th century BC ( 484 BC? c. 430 BC/ 420 BC?). Overview Herodotus wrote a history of the Persian invasion of Greece in the early fifth century B. known sim History (book 4) account of the story of ZalmoxisZalmoxis (or Zamolxis Zalmoxe Salmoxis was a semi-mythical social and religious reformer, regarded as the only true God by the Thracian Dacians (known in the Greek records as Getae). According to Herodotus, the Getae, who believed in the immortality of th (or Zamolxis), the Getae (speaking the same language as the Dacians - StraboStrabo ("squinty") was a term employed by the Romans for anyone whose eyes were distorted or deformed. The father of Pompey was called " Pompeius Strabo. A native of Sicily so clear sighted that he could see things at great distance as if they were nearby) believed in the immortality of the soul, and regarded death as merely a change of country. Their chief priest held a prominent position as the representative of the supreme deity, Zamolxis. The chief priest was also the king's chief adviser. The GothThis article is about the contemporary goth subculture. For the Germanic peoples, see the Goths. Goth is a modern subculture that gained visibility during the early 1980s within the gothic rock scene, a sub-genre of post punk, and continues to this day. JordanesJordanes (also Jordanis or even Iornandes 'bold as a boar') was a 6th century historian in Moesia (modern Bulgaria), who provides most of the literary evidence concerning the early history of the Goths, by giving a very criticized condensation of a lost h in his Getica ( The origin and deeds of the Goths), gives account of Dicineus ( Deceneus ), the highest priest of Buruista ( Burebista).
Besides Zamolxis, the Dacians believed in other deities such as Gebeleizis and Bendis.