Thracian Community

The True History of Europe

The Dacian Tablets

We can not accept the fact that, till the year 106 AD, the Daco-Rumanians did not exist only because that is thought in the Rumanian schools and universities. We cannot accept the fact that the Roman legions penetrated Dacia, conquered 14% of its territory for a negligible historical period of time, 165 years and, over night, its entire population, occupied or not, started speaking a different language, the Roman one (without 86% of Dacia’s territory ever being stepped on by the Roman soldiers’ foot). We cannot accept that some Roman Empire’s mercenaries arriving from all over the corners of the ancient world: Africa, Palestine, Germany, speaking their native language, which, by far wasn’t Latin, rushed battling into Dacia, to interbreed! Ironically, according to some historians, they managed to do that not only in the 14% of the occupied territory, but even on the rest of the 86% never seen by them!

Today, the official historians try to convince us that the Roman soldiers, were not only very virile (after a military service of 25-30 years), but also very cultured, succeeding to teach the Latin not only to the Dacian women, their spouses and parents, but even to the new born ones… Big patience and culture had these Roman mercenaries, and all that in a period of one hundred years!

Last Updated on Saturday, 04 September 2010 21:12 Read more...
 

Romulus and Remus and they Dacian origins

According to the legend, described by the Roman historian Titus Livius, Rhea Sylvia, beloved sole daughter of the so called "Denominator" King of Alba Longa and, simultaneously, a vestal virgin within God Mars' Temple, is said to have suddenly become pregnant "out of the blue Moon" with Mars, the wolf-god, and eventually delivers twin boys. Her powerful uncle Amelia, apparently not "buying" her explanation, orders his servants to throw the bastards into the Tiber River. However, designated executioners would prove to have a heart and decide to better abandon both babies into a floating basket, going down the wild river's stream only to be, subsequently, found by a "She-wolf", meaning a woman from a neighboring wolf-named tribe, probably the Samanite tribe of the Lucani.

Last Updated on Saturday, 04 September 2010 21:13 Read more...
 

Galerius and The Dacian Empire

Galerius Maximianus (c. 250 - 5 May, 311), formally Gaius Galerius Valerius Maximianus, Roman emperor from 305 to 311, was born on a small farm estate, on the site where he later built his palace, Felix Romuliana. His father was a Thracian and his mother Romula was a Dacian woman. He originally followed his father's occupation, that of a herdsman, where he got his surname of Armentarius (Lat. armentum, herd). He served with distinction as a soldier under Aurelian and Probus, and in 293 at the establishment of the Tetrarchy, was designated Caesar along with Constantius Chlorus, receiving in marriage Diocletian's daughter Valeria (later known as Galeria Valeria), and at the same time being entrusted with the care of the Illyrian provinces.

In 296, at the beginning of the Persian War, he was removed from the Danube to the Euphrates; his first campaign ended in a crushing defeat, near Callinicum, which lost Mesopotamia to Rome. However, in 297, advancing through the mountains of Armenia, he gained a decisive victory over Narses, with an enormous amount of booty that included Narses' harem. Following up his advantage, he took the city of Ctesiphon and in 298 Narses sued for peace. Mesopotamia was returned to Roman rule and even some territory east of the Tigris, which marks the greatest extension of the Roman Empire in the east.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 29 June 2010 18:21 Read more...
 


Page 2 of 4