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  2. Roman Dacia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Dacia

    With the Roman army ensuring the maintenance of the Pax Romana, Roman Dacia prospered until the Crisis of the Third Century. Dacia evolved from a simple rural society and economy to one of material advancement comparable to other Roman provinces. [157] There were more coins in circulation in Roman Dacia than in the adjacent provinces. [190]

  3. File:Roman province of Dacia (106 - 271 AD).svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Roman_province_of...

    English: Roman province of Dacia, part of modern day Romania and Serbia, from the conquest of Trajan in 106 AD to the evacuation of the province in 271 AD. Roman settlements and legion garrisons with Latin names are included in the map, as well as the Costoboci, Carpi and Free Dacians.

  4. Dacia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dacia

    With part of Dacia quelled as the Roman province Dacia Traiana. [54] Trajan subsequently invaded the Parthian empire to the east. His conquests brought the Roman Empire to its greatest extent. Rome's borders in the east were governed indirectly in this period, through a system of client states, which led to less direct campaigning than in the ...

  5. Dacian Limes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dacian_Limes

    Map of Dacia in 124 AD. Dacia became a Roman province after Trajan's Dacian Wars after 106 AD, but military occupation of Wallachia, the plain between the Carpathian foothills and the Danube, may already have occurred by the end of Trajan’s First Dacian War (101/102). The majority of forts in Dacia, however, were established after the final ...

  6. Free Dacians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Dacians

    Detail from Trajan's Column, Rome Map showing the eastern border of the Roman Dacia in the 2nd-3rd centuries, the Limes Transalutanus. There is substantial evidence that large numbers of ethnic Dacians continued to exist on the fringes of the Roman province of Dacia. During Trajan's Dacian Wars in AD 102 and AD 106, enormous numbers of Dacians ...

  7. History of Dacia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Dacia

    The Roman province of Dacia occupied present-day Transylvania, Banat, and Oltenia. The Romans built forts to protect themselves from attacks by Roxolani , Alans , Carpi and free Dacians (from parts of Banat and Wallachia ), as well as three new major military roads to join the main cities.

  8. Dacia Aureliana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dacia_Aureliana

    Dacia Aureliana was a province in the eastern half of the Roman Empire established by Roman Emperor Aurelian in the territory of former Moesia Superior after his evacuation of Dacia Traiana beyond the Danube in 271. Between 271/275 and 285, it occupied most of what is today northwestern Bulgaria and eastern Serbia.

  9. List of ancient cities in Thrace and Dacia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ancient_cities_in...

    Ptolemy's maps of northern Europe: a reconstruction of the prototypes. Copenhagen: H. Hagerup. Taylor, Timothy (2001). Northeastern European Iron Age. Springer Published in conjunction with the Human Relations Area Files. ISBN 978-0-306-46258-0. Velkov, Velizar Iv (1977). The cities in Thrace and Dacia in late antiquity: (studies and materials ...