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E-V13 - Theories on its Origin and New Data
#41
It should be noted that nowhere a big Roman push took place, on the contrary, at the end of the Roman rule in Dacia, most of the Daco-Romans moved South of the Danube, while most of the former province was settled by incoming Dacian tribals, primarily from the Carpi in the wider sense:
Quote:Cassius, Sabianus, the governor of Dacia in 180 A.D., "has also subdued 12,000 Dacians living in the vicinity [of Dacia], who have been driven away from their ancient homeland, and was ready to help the others, promising them land in our Dacia." [144] Although this record suggests a colonization of free Dacians, it offers no proof of it, since it is not known whether Sabianus kept his promise. It must be pointed out that the immigration of free Dacians from the areas northwest and west of the territory of the former province after the Roman withdrawal is well established and unquestioned. Archaeological remains show that free Dacians settled after 275 A.D. at Cipău (Maroscsapó, Mureş County), at Archiud, and most probably also at Soporu de Cîmpie.
Quote:Černjachov culture. The single-rowed combs with a special worked middle handle appear in the Černjachov culture but not among the remains of the Dacians or the Carps. Because of the many elements from the Sîntana de Mureş culture, these 22 settlements in the southeast have been thought to belong to that culture. They show, however, a pronounced Dacian influence; and their funeral rite was cremation, while the Sîntana de Mureş people predominantly used inhumation. [211] Whether the differences really are decisive is difficult to tell.

Therefore up to the Chernyakov culture, the majority of the locals did cremate. If, therefore, we find E-V13 in Chernyakov, its just the tip of the iceberg!


Quote:Free (non-Romanized.) Dacians from the west settled in the former province. The earthenware in three tombs of the cremation type at Cipău (Maroscsapó, Mureş County) reveals Sarmatian influences; and only the funeral rite of cremation indicates that it was left by Dacians, because the Sarmatians used only inhumation.

We can therefore multiply the Sarmatian era samples of E-V13 in the Tisza region.

http://www.promacedonia.org/en/ei/ei_2.htm#1_5

The very idea of E-V13  spreading with "Romans" just falls apart if looking at the facts. On the contrary, the Romans soaked up a lot of Dacians and redistributed them in the Roman Balkan and beyond, like up to Britain, e.g. in Birdoswald.

There are other Dacian remains in Britain as well.
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RE: E-V13 - Theories on its Origin and New Data - by Riverman - 10-03-2023, 05:24 PM

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