- Rumpun bahasa Roman Timur
- Rumpun bahasa Roman Balkan
- Bahasa Megleno-Rumania
- Rumania
- Bahasa Dacia
- Giurtelecu Şimleului
- Trako-Romawi
- Dacia
- Catbalogan
- Daco-Roman
- Roman Dacia
- Origin of the Romanians
- Roman people
- Romanians
- Dacian Wars
- Gallo-Roman culture
- History of Transylvania
- Illyro-Roman
- Thraco-Roman
daco roman
Daco-Roman GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
The term Daco-Roman describes the Romanized culture of Dacia under the rule of the Roman Empire.
Etymology
The Daco-Roman mixing theory, as an origin for the Romanian people, was formulated by the earliest Romanian scholars, beginning with Dosoftei from Moldavia, in the 17th century, followed in the early 1700s in Transylvania, through the Romanian Uniate clergy and in Wallachia, by the historian Constantin Cantacuzino in his Istoria Țării Rumânești dintru început ("History of Wallachia from the beginning"), and continued to amplify during the 19th and 20th centuries.
Famous individuals
Regalianus was a Roman usurper and became himself emperor for a brief period of time.
Aureolus was a Roman military commander and would-be usurper against Gallienus.
Galerius, Roman emperor from 305 to 311, though half Thracian from his fathers part.
Ulpia Severina (fl. 3rd century), the wife of the Emperor Aurelian whose nomen Ulpius was widespread in all the provinces along the Danube may have been from Dacia.
Sponsianus, a possible usurping Roman emperor in Dacia known only through coin evidence.
See also
Culture of Ancient Rome
Dacian language
Eastern Romance substratum
Romanian language
Origin of the Romanians
Romance languages
Legacy of the Roman Empire
The Balkan linguistic union
History of Romania
Gallo-Roman
Thraco-Roman
Romano-British culture
Notes
References
Boia, Lucian (2001b). History and Myth in Romanian Consciousness. Central European University Press. ISBN 978-963-9116-97-9.
Cihac, Alexandru (1870). Dictionnaire d'étymologie daco-romane: éléments latins comparés avec les autres langues romanes (in French). Frankfurt: Ludolphe St-Goar. ISBN 978-0-559-38812-5.
Elton, Hugh (1996). Warfare in Roman Europe, AD 350-425. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-815241-5.
MacKendrick, Paul Lachlan (2000). The Dacian Stones Speak. The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4939-2.
Further reading
(in English) Kelley L. Ross The Vlach Connection and Further Reflections on Roman History