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===Early history=== [[File:Herodotus world map-en.svg|thumb|Getae on the World Map according to Herodotus]] In the absence of historical records written by the Dacians (and Thracians) themselves, analysis of their origins depends largely on the remains of material culture. On the whole, the Bronze Age witnessed the evolution of the ethnic groups which emerged during the [[Eneolithic]] period, and eventually the syncretism of both autochthonous and Indo-European elements from the steppes and the Pontic regions.{{sfn|Dumitrescu|Boardman|Hammond|Sollberger |1982|p=166}} Various groups of Thracians had not separated out by 1200 BC,{{sfn|Dumitrescu|Boardman|Hammond|Sollberger |1982|p=166}} but there are strong similarities between the ceramic types found at Troy and the ceramic types from the Carpathian area.{{sfn|Dumitrescu|Boardman|Hammond|Sollberger |1982|p=166}} About the year 1000 BC, the Carpatho-Danubian countries were inhabited by a northern branch of the Thracians.{{sfn|Parvan|1928|p=35}} At the time of the arrival of the Scythians (c. 700 BC), the Carpatho-Danubian Thracians were developing rapidly towards the Iron Age civilization of the West. Moreover, the whole of the fourth period of the Carpathian Bronze Age had already been profoundly influenced by the first Iron Age as it developed in Italy and the Alpine lands. The Scythians, arriving with their own type of Iron Age civilization, put a stop to these relations with the West.{{sfn | Parvan | Vulpe|Vulpe | 2002 | p=49 }} From roughly 500 BC (the second Iron Age), the Dacians developed a distinct civilization, which was capable of supporting large centralised kingdoms by the 1st century BC and the 1st century AD.{{sfn | Koch | 2005 | p=549 }} Since the very first detailed account by Herodotus, Getae are acknowledged as belonging to the Thracians.{{sfn|Herodotus|440 BC|loc=4.93β4.97}} Still, they are distinguished from the other Thracians by particularities of religion and custom.{{sfn|Oltean|2007|p=45}} The first written mention of the name "Dacians" is in Roman sources, but classical authors are unanimous in considering them a branch of the Getae, a Thracian people known from Greek writings. [[Strabo]] specified that the Daci are the Getae who lived in the area towards the [[Pannonian plain]] ([[Transylvania]]), while the Getae proper gravitated towards the Black Sea coast ([[Scythia Minor (Dobruja)|Scythia Minor]]).
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