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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!

 

The Dacians are the descendants of the first humans to inhabit these lands; they didn't appear inside this territory as a result of a migration, instead they were born and their culture evolved here. The age of the dacian civilization is proven by a long series of archaeological discoveries, of which the most recent are also the most spectacular. The oldest bronze furnaces in Europe have been discovered in today's Romania, and their age is over 8000 years. The bronze objects found together with these furnaces show good skill from their makers, which suggests that the civilization that produced them had some time to develop this skill, and thus it is much older than the objects.


Other "firsts" were discovered in Romania, once the territory of the ancient Dacians: the oldest house built above the ground, as well as the first writing in the world. In 1961, the archaeologists have unburied a few clay tablets near Tartaria, in Transylvania. These tablets contain abstract drawings - not representation of images from the nature - which have been interpreted as a written message. Having been dated to around 4800 - 4500 BC, these tablets are about 2000 years older than the sumerian writings, which have long been considered the oldest writings in the world. Neither the Tartaria tablets, nor the sumerian symbols have been deciphered, but they are considered "writing" by the same principle of abstraction.
The spiritual and scientific preocupations of this ancient culture can be seen in the calendars they left us, which are made up by structures simmilar to those found in the Britannic peninsula. The most well known calendar of this kind is that in the Sarmizegetusa city ,the capital of the Dacian kingdom, where researchers have uncovered a solar sanctuary with a complex structure, apparently used for measuring time and keeping track of astronomical phenomena.


Even the puzzle of Dacians versus Gets was solved almost 2000 years ago by Dio Casius in Epitome of Book LXVII: “I call the people Dacians, the names used by the natives themselves as well as by the Romans, though I am not ignorant that some Greek writers refer to them as Getae“. Romanian historian, Nicolae Densusianu, proved that Dacians spoke Latin before the Romans even existed. His book "The Preistoric Dacia" was first published in Romania in 1913, but its contents remain as revolutionary, visionary, and controversial as they were almost 100 years ago.

Sinaia tablets

The plates were written in the Dacian alphabet, the connection with the Dacian civilization being quite obvious from the names of Dacian kings and placenames.

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Last Updated on Saturday, 04 September 2010 21:12  

 

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