Dacians
The Dacians were an Indo-European people, the ancient inhabitants of Dacia (located in the area in and around the Carpathian mountains and east of there to the Black Sea), present-day Romania and Moldova, parts of Sarmatia and Scythia Minor in southeastern Europe.
Dacians Media
Dacian of the type from Trajan's Forum; bigio antico marble (head), Marmo Greco scritto (bust); 120-130 AD (head), XVIII century (bust); height: 75 cm, width: 49 cm, base/bottom: 30 cm; Madrid, Prado Museum (Inv. E000387).[2] Photograph taken at the National Archaeological Museum of Madrid during the exhibition Archaeological Treasures of Romania (
Two of the eight marble statues of Dacian warriors surmounting the Arch of Constantine in Rome.[1]
Dacian cast in Pushkin Museum, after original in Lateran Museum. Early second century AD.
Roman monument commemorating the Battle of Adamclisi clearly shows two giant Dacian warriors wielding a two-handed falx
Diachronic distribution of Celtic peoples: * core Hallstatt territory, by the 6th century BC* maximal Celtic expansion, by 275 BC
Map showing the Dacian-speaking Carpi place in invading Roman Dacia in AD 250–1, under the Gothic leader Kniva
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- ↑ Westropp 2003, p. 104.