Originally posted by Heresson
Nah, Romanians are NOT remains of Romans from this area. They are immigrants from the southern bank of the Danube,.
Nah, Romanians are NOT remains of Romans from this area. They are immigrants from the southern bank of the Danube,.
However, the "south of Danube" theory contains the best explanation I've seen for the presence in the romanian language of latin words that evolved in the Empire centuries after the roman administration retreated from Dacia: romanians got them while living south of the river. It also satisfactorily explains why there are so few dacian words in the modern romanian dictionary. On the other hand, this theory fails to explain what drove some of my ancestors (i'm "only" 7/8 romanian) to leave the relative safety of the Roman Empire and settle in what was essentially a barbarian playing ground. That requires the kind of courage that I fail to recognize in modern romanians. There's also the problem of moving across a river thought to be unpassable in those times enough people to populate a territory that more or less coincides with modern Romania: other migratory tribes that passed through here moved their entire nation at once and could only occupy a small fraction of this territory. Even if romanians moved north in waves, it still was an impressive feat.
The "north of Danube" theory, the one that is now taught in romanian schools, states that romanians evolved in the territory of modern Romania and used to hide in the hills/mountains when there was trouble. This seems more in line with the general attitude of modern romanians and is based on later records of the usual method of fighting the turks: run to the hills, leaving nothing but scorched earth behind. The rest of the procedure is for another topic.
The latter theory also fails to explain the lack of dacian words in romanian, which seems to be explained by the former. However, both theories are in uncharted waters here: as far as I know, no one has any idea how exactly is the dacian language sounds, as there are no inscriptions in a dacian language or aphabet - few inscriptions have survived from the times of the dacian king, and they are all in latin. The few romanian words presumed to be dacian are marked in my dictionary as: "unknown origin, presumed dacian".
There is another theory for this, but it's rather stretched: aparently, Herodotus states somewhere in his works that thracians spoke the same language, with minor variations in local dialects. I couldn't find this quote, but I only had a translation someone posted on the internet years ago, and I didn't have the time to read it all. Then, apparently, Homer stated somewhere in the Illiad that the people of Troy where thracians (I doubt that, too - maybe a someone can enlighten me on the subject) and that a band of refugees from Troy went on and founded Rome. The theory then postulates that latin evolved from the language of the trojans, who were thracians. Dacians were also thracians, so their language must have been extremely close to latin, hence we can't find "pure" dacian words in romanian because we can't distinguish them from latin words. The person who came up with this theory says he found evidence in a diary kept by emperor Trajan's phisician during the dacian campaigns. He says he also found evidence of a book similar to Julius Caesar's "comments" on the gauls, but it remains undiscovered yet.
I gave this lenghty explanation because I found the theory rather interesting (and it goes well with the "north of Danube" one), even if I take it with a grain of salt: the person who came upo with this went on and joined an ultra-nationalistic movement hell bent on denying that romanians had any ties with the Roman Empire.
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