Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Romania_in_Antiquity> ?p ?o }
- Romania_in_Antiquity abstract "The Antiquity in Romania spans the period between the foundation of Greek colonies in present-day Dobruja and the withdrawal of the Romans from "Dacia Trajana" province. The earliest records of the history of the regions which now form Romania were made after the establishment of three Greek towns—Histria, Tomis, and Callatis—on the Black Sea coast in the 7th and 6th centuries BC. They developed into important centers of commerce and had a close relationship with the natives. The latter were first described by Herodotus, who made mention of the Getae of the Lower Danube region, the Agathyrsi of Transylvania and the Sygannae of Crişana.Archaeological research prove that Celts dominated Transylvania between the middle of the 5th century and the end of the 3rd century BC. The Bastarnae—a warlike Germanic tribe—settled in the regions to the east of the Carpathian Mountains around 200 BC. Confrontations between the natives and the Roman Empire began in the late 1st century BC. Among the former, the Dacians—who were closely connected to the Getae—rose to eminence under King Burebista (c. 80–44 BC). He unified the tribes dwelling between the Middle Danube, the Northern Carpathians, the Dniester and the Balkan Mountains into a powerful, but ephemeral empire. It disintegrated into at least four parts after his death. Large territories to the north of the Lower Danube—the lands between the Tisa, the Northern Carpathians, the Dniester and the Lower Danube—were again unified for less than two decades by King Decebalus of the Dacians (87–106 AD).Modern Dobruja—the territory between the Lower Danube and the Black Sea—was the first historical region of Romania to have been incorporated in the Roman Empire. The region was attached to the Roman province of Moesia between 46 and 79 AD. The Romans also occupied Banat, Oltenia and Transylvania after the fall of Decebalus and the disintegration of his kingdom in 106. The three regions together formed the new province of Dacia. The new province was surrounded by "barbarian" tribes, including the Costoboci, the Iazyges and the Roxolani. New Germanic tribes—the Buri and the Vandals—arrived and settled in the vicinity of Dacia province in the course of the Marcomannic Wars in the second half of the 2nd century.".
- Romania_in_Antiquity thumbnail 250px-Ganditor-Hamangia.jpg?width=300.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageID "41912831".
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageLength "52965".
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageOutDegree "269".
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageRevisionID "657133829".
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Agathyrsi.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Agighiol.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Aiud.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Alba_Iulia.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_the_Great.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Amber.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greece.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greeks.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Antler.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Antoninus_Pius.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Antonius_Pius.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Apa,_Satu_Mare.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Aristotle.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Arrian.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Athens.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Atlantic_Ocean.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Augustan_History.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Aurelia_(gens).
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Aurelius.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Balkan_Mountains.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Balkan_Peninsula.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Balkans.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Baltic_Sea.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Banat.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Barbarian.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Basarabi_culture.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Bastarnae.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Bit_(horse).
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Bixad,_Satu_Mare.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Black_Sea.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Blaj.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Boarta.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Boii.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Boineşti.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Bridle.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Bronze_Age.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Burebista.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Buri_tribe.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Callatis.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Capillati.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Carpathian_Mountains.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_history_of_Romania.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Celtic_languages.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Celts.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Celts_in_Transylvania.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Cernat,_Covasna.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Charnabon.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Chronicon_(Eusebius).
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Ciumbrud.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Ciumeşti.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Ciumești.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Client_king.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Client_state.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Colonies_in_antiquity.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Comati.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Constanța.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Copper.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Costoboci.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Coulter_(agriculture).
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Coțofeni_culture.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Coțofănești.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Crişana.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Crișana.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Cucuteni-Trypillian_culture.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dacia.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dacia_Apulensis.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dacia_Malvensis.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dacia_Porolissensis.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dacia_Trajana.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dacian_Fortresses_of_the_Orăștie_Mountains.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dacian_language.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dacians.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Danube.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Darius_I.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Darius_I_of_Persia.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Decebalus.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Deceneus.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Delian_League.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Democracy.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dicomes.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dio_Chrysostom.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Divisions_of_the_Carpathians.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dniester.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dobruja.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dorians.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Drobeta.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Dromichaetes.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Carpathians.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Eleusis.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Equestrian_order.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Equites.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Eusebius.
- Romania_in_Antiquity wikiPageWikiLink Eusebius_of_Caesarea.