Ancient sources , 3rd century BC
Strabo stated in his
Geographica ( 7BC – 20AD) wrote that the term "Dacian" was used by some people to refer to the western part of the Getae who lived north of the Danube "towards
Germania and the sources of the Danube", and the other Getae lived in the eastern parts, towards the
Black Sea, both south and north of the Danube. According to him, the Dacians and Getae spoke the same language, after stating the same about Getae and Thracians. In his time, Strabo believed that the lands of these western Getae stretched north of the Danube to the boundary of
Germania, embracing a part of the mountains of the
Hercynian Forest where the
Suevi lived. From here their lands stretched very far to east of the
Carpathians, to the lands of the
Tyragetae, who lived near the
Dniester, although he cautioned that the precise boundaries were not known to him.
Pliny the Elder, in his
Naturalis Historia (Natural History), c.77–79AD, refers to "the
Getae, by the Romans called
Daci".
Appian, who began writing his
Roman History under
Antoninus Pius, Roman Emperor from 138 to 161, noted: "[B]ut going beyond these rivers in places they rule some of the
Celts over the
Rhine and the Getae over the
Danube, whom they call Dacians".
Justin, the 3rd century AD Latin historian, wrote in his
Epitome of Pompeius Trogus that Dacians are spoken of as descendants of the Getae:
"Daci quoque suboles Getarum sunt" (The Dacians as well are a
scion of the Getae). In his
Roman History (c.200AD),
Cassius Dio added: "I call the people Dacians, the name 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, whether that is the right term or not...". the exact relation is a matter of controversy.
Same people or deva'' ending considered to be characteristic of the
Dacian language. They are mostly found throughout
Dacia and northern
Thrace, some also in eastern
Illyria. Strabo, as well as other ancient sources, led some modern historians to consider that, if the Thracian ethnic group should be divided, one of this divisions should be the "
Daco-Getae". The
linguist Ivan Duridanov also identified a "
Dacian linguistic area" in
Dacia,
Scythia Minor,
Lower Moesia, and
Upper Moesia.
Romanian scholars generally went further with the identification, historian
Constantin C. Giurescu claiming the two were identical. The
archaeologist Mircea Babeș spoke of a "veritable ethno-cultural unity" between the Getae and the Dacians. According to
Glanville Price, the account of the Greek geographer
Strabo shows that the Getae and the Dacians were one and the same people. however, he is one of the few Romanian archaeologists to make a clear distinction between the Getae and Dacians, arguing against the traditional position of the Romanian historiography that considered the two people the same. Nevertheless, he chose to use the term "Geto-Dacians" as a conventional concept for the Thracian tribes inhabiting the future territory of Romania, not necessarily meaning an "absolute ethnic, linguistic or historical unity".
Paul Lachlan MacKendrick considered the two as "branches" of the same tribe, speaking two dialects of a common language. The Romanian
historian of ideas and
historiographer Lucian Boia stated: "At a certain point, the phrase Geto-Dacian was coined in the Romanian historiography to suggest a unity of Getae and Dacians". Lucian Boia took a sceptical position, arguing the ancient writers distinguished among the two people, treating them as two distinct groups of the Thracian ethnos. Boia contended that it would be naive to assume Strabo knew the
Thracian dialects so well, There is no reason to disregard Strabo's belief that the Daci and the Getae spoke the same language. In his opinion, Alexandru Vulpe saw ancient people as modern nations, leading the latter to interpret the common language as a sign of a common people, despite Strabo making a distinction between the two. == History ==