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===Occupations=== [[File:2007 Dacian Engineering Tools.jpg|thumb|right|Dacian tools: compasses, chisels, knives, etc.]] The chief occupations of the Dacians were [[agriculture]], [[apiculture]], [[viticulture]], [[livestock]], [[ceramics (art)|ceramics]] and [[metalworking]]. They also worked the gold and silver mines of Transylvania. At Pecica, [[Arad, Romania|Arad]], a Dacian workshop was discovered, along with equipment for minting coins and evidence of bronze, silver, and iron-working that suggests a broad spectrum of smithing.{{sfn | Taylor | 2001 | pp=214β215 }} Evidence for the mass production of iron is found on many Dacian sites, indicating guild-like specialization.{{sfn | Taylor | 2001 | pp=214β215 }} Dacian ceramic manufacturing traditions continue from the pre-Roman to the Roman period, both in provincial and unoccupied Dacia, and well into the fourth and even early fifth centuries.{{sfn | Ellis | 1998| p=229}} They engaged in considerable external trade, as is shown by the number of foreign coins found in the country (see also [[Decebalus Treasure]]). On the northernmost frontier of "free Dacia", coin circulation steadily grew in the first and second centuries, with a decline in the third and a rise again in the fourth century; the same pattern as observed for the Banat region to the southwest. What is remarkable is the extent and increase in coin circulation after Roman withdrawal from Dacia, and as far north as Transcarpathia.{{sfn | Ellis | 1998| p=232}}
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