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====Carpi==== {{Main|Carpi (people)}} The Carpi were a sizeable group of tribes, who lived beyond the north-eastern boundary of Roman Dacia. The majority view among modern scholars is that the Carpi were a North Thracian tribe and a subgroup of the Dacians.<ref>{{harvnb|Goffart|2006|page=205}}, {{harvnb|Bunson |1995|page=74}}, {{harvnb|MacKendrick| 2000|page=117}}, {{harvnb|Parvan| Florescu| 1982|page=136}}, {{harvnb|Burns |1991|pages=26 and 27}}, {{harvnb|Odahl |2004|page=19}}, {{harvnb|Waldman|Mason|2006|p=19}}, {{harvnb|Millar|1981}}</ref> However, some historians classify them as Slavs.{{sfn | Waldman | Mason| 2006 |page=129}} According to Heather (2010), the Carpi were Dacians from the eastern foothills of the Carpathian range – modern Moldavia and Wallachia – who had not been brought under direct Roman rule at the time of Trajan's conquest of Transylvania Dacia. After they generated a new degree of political unity among themselves in the course of the third century, these Dacian groups came to be known collectively as the Carpi.{{sfn | Heather | 2010 |page=114}} [[File:Captive dacian pushkin.JPG|thumb|upright|Dacian cast in [[Pushkin Museum]], after original in [[Lateran Museum]]. Early second century AD.]] The ancient sources about the Carpi, before 104 AD, located them on a territory situated between the western side of Eastern European Galicia and the mouth of the Danube.{{sfn|Pârvan|1926|p=239}} The name of the tribe is homonymous with the Carpathian mountains.{{sfn | Schütte | 1917 |page=100}} Carpi and Carpathian are Dacian words derived from the root ''(s)ker''- "cut" cf. Albanian ''karp'' "stone" and Sanskrit ''kar''- "cut".{{sfn | Russu | 1969 |pages=114–115}}{{sfn | Tomaschek | 1883|page=403}} A quote from the 6th-century Byzantine chronicler [[Zosimus (historian)|Zosimus]] referring to the [[Carpo-Dacians]] (Greek: Καρποδάκαι, Latin: ''Carpo-Dacae''), who attacked the Romans in the late 4th century, is seen as evidence of their Dacian ethnicity. In fact, Carpi/Carpodaces is the term used for Dacians outside of Dacia proper.{{sfn | Goffart | 2006|page=205}} However, that the Carpi were Dacians is shown not so much by the form Καρποδάκαι in [[Zosimus (historian)|Zosimus]] as by their characteristic place-names in –''dava'', given by Ptolemy in their country.{{sfn | Minns | 2011 |page=124}} The origin and ethnic affiliations of the Carpi have been debated over the years; in modern times they are closely associated with the Carpathian Mountains, and a good case has been made for attributing to the Carpi a distinct material culture, "a developed form of the Geto-Dacian La Tene culture", often known as the Poienesti culture, which is characteristic of this area.{{sfn| Nixon| Saylor Rodgers|1995|p=116}}
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