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== Neidhart von Reuenthal ==
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], do you know anything about this source ? ] (]) 17:26, 28 April 2014 (UTC)
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:::No. As far as I remember Reuenthal writes of Walves (=Cumans). Armbruster (who is cited by Curta) tends to identify Romanians everywhere (e.g. he refers to Constantine Porphyrogenitus's remark of the
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inhabitants of the Dalmatian towns as a proof of the Roman conciousness of the Vlachs). ] (]) 01:37, 29 April 2014 (UTC)
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== Were romanians the latest nomadic ethnic group? ==

VLACHS (Romanians) WERE THE LATEST NOMADIC ETHNIC GROUP IN EUROPE. Vlachs were known as late - nomadic people in medieval chronicles. The first romanian vlach churches were built only around the turn of the 13th and 14th century. No known archiutecture existed before that period. The romanian literacy and chronicles appeared only in the 15th century.USE Google books! (The word's largest digitalized library, the largest collection of printed books) See the google book results (search the british american candian authors about medieval romanians Vlachs):


Carleton Stevens Coon: The races of Europe, Page 614
" Vlach colonists are nomads living in black tents like those of ... A greater variation is found in the cephalic index; on the plains of Moldavia and Wallachia, and in the Dobruja"


Robert William Seton-Watson: A history of the Roumanians: from Roman times to the completion of unity, page: 12
"The Roumanians undoubtedly preserved their nomadic habits to a very late date, as is proved by the existence of Vlach colonies in Moravia (the so-called "Little Wallachia" — long since completely Slavised)"


Mandell Creighton, Justin Winsor, Samuel Rawson Gardiner: The English Historical Review page:- 615.
"He shows that the Vlachs of the Balkan peninsula throughout the middle ages are nomads of the strictest type, ... that Vlachs began to move north of the Danube to Wallachia and Transylvania "


Joan E. Durrant, Anne B. Smith Global Pathways to Abolishing Physical Punishment: Realizing Children’s Rights ( PAGE 210)

"Between the 3rd century A.D. and the 14th century A.D., Dacia was invaded successively by nomadic peoples, including the ... Romanians "


Norman Berdichevsky: Nations, Language and Citizenship -page: 181.
"The “true Romanians” are held to be interlopers who were nomadic shepherds that migrated into Transylvania from the ... then transferred to “Wallachia,” the traditional core area of the Romanian state located east and south of Transylvania."


Other elements in the population of Greece are the Wallachians or Vlachs, the Turks, and the Jews, but they have never ... The Wallachians are a curious nomadic race


David Bruce Macdonald - 2002 Balkan Holocausts?: Serbian and Croatian Victim Centered ... page- 131

"These hinterland Romans evolved into highland herdsmen, who for centuries led a primitive nomadic life"


Lampe, John R, Jackson, Marvin R. Balkan Economic History, 1550 - 1950: From Imperial Borderlands to ... page - 612.
"Vlachs had first acquired their commercial connections in the course of moving their livestock seasonally back and forth between high and low ground. ... Alan J.B. Wace and M.S. Thompson, The Nomads of the Balkans (New York: Books for Libraries Press, 1971)"


Jane Perry Clark Carey, Andrew Galbraith Carey : The Web of Modern Greek Politics - page 73
"shepherds and nomadic herdsmen, wandering through the Balkans and the north of Greece. On their early migrations they gave the Vlach name to various districts, including the province of Wallachia in present-day Romania"


Chambers's Encyclopedia - Volume 14. page:- 339.
"The Vlachs are usually mentioned as following nomadic or semi-nomadic lives as shepherds etc. in wild mountain ... nth century was known as 'Great Wallachia' and seems to have contained a relatively dense and settled Vlach population."


Denys Hay: Europe in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries page: 220
"In the first half of the fourteenth century there also appeared there the two Romanian principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia. ... or whether the Hungarians are right in their thesis that these Vlachs were recently immigrated nomadic shepherds"


Frank Moore Colby, Talcott Williams, Herbert Treadwell Wade: The New International Encyclopaedia Voluma 20. Page: 219
"Owing to their nomadic and predatory dispositions these Vlachs, as they are called by the Greek writers, were a ... the autonomous Rumanian principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia, which grew rapidly towards south and east until the former"


Isaiah Bowman: The New World: Problems in Political Geography page - 282
"or Wallachians The Rumanians, or Wallachs (hence Wallachia), are of mixed race but of distinct speech, the Ruman, ... Home places of the nomadic Vlachs The Vlachs , Rumanian nomadism is seen in its purest form among the detached"


Norman Angell : Peace Theories And The Balkan War page: - 107.
"It had been founded by a conquering caste of non-Slavonic nomads from the trans-Danubian steppes, but these were completely ... This Bulgarian state included a large 'Vlach' element descended from those Latin-speaking provincials whom the Slavs had pushed ... had established itself in the mountains of Transylvania, and was just beginning to push down into the Wallachian and Moldavian plains"


Tibor Frank, Frank Hadler : Disputed territories and shared pasts: overlapping national histories in modern Europe, page: 251
"Reference to Romanians in their preunification (1859) history was linked to the regional designation of Wallachia (today Oltenia and Muntenia) to the south ... This designation relates to the nomadic existence of the Balkan Vlach population."


Paul Coles : The Ottoman Impact on Europe - page: 114
" nomadic pastoralism provided a new lease of life for the Rumanian-speaking Vlachs, migratory herdsmen whose native principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia had fallen under Ottoman dominion during the fifteenth century"


Wace, Alan J. B. and Maurice S. Thompson. .:
"The Nomads of the Balkans: An Account of Life and Custom Among the Vlachs of Northern Pindus." <small><span class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 18:21, 28 April 2014 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

_ _ _ _ Nice propaganda.... too bad you we're banned for it :))) ''USE Google Books'' he said.... Can a moderator delete this Hungarian's hateful and racist comment ] (]) 13:18, 1 August 2014 (UTC)

== Hungarian propaganda ==

Some hungarians, furious of their nomadic origin, see nomads in old Europe!!
] (]) 15:17, 4 August 2014 (UTC)

== Sayous ==


'''E. Sayous''', HISTOIRE GENERALE DES HONGROIS , Budapest & Paris, 1900,p.21
Sayous wrote: "Les Byzantins du onzième siècle, Anne Comnène entre autres, parlent des Daces, qui ne peuvent être que des Roumains" (OUVRAGE COURONNÉ PAR L'ACADÉMIE FRANÇAISE)
] (]) 16:05, 11 August 2014 (UTC)
:::Sayous's work was first published in the 19th century. Please try to use reliable source which represent the present status of research. Moreover, please add a reference page, because the standard English translation of Comnena's work does not contain the text you seemingly cited from that work. ] (]) 17:11, 11 August 2014 (UTC)


:::To Borsoka: Your opinion is subjective:

See Wiki pages with: Kingdom of Hungary; they contains Albert Apponyi work (born 1846 !)

In this case you are not a reliable observer. Clean first your home and then look to others!

:::::Thank you for drawing my attention to Apponyi's work. Although it is at least 50 year younger than the source you are attempting to use, you are right that it should not be referenced either. I have just put a proper template message in the article ] requiring a better source. ] (]) 15:22, 13 August 2014 (UTC)

About Komnene work: see pages: Alexiad to understand the references in this case. References contains only the book and paragraph.
] (]) 04:57, 12 August 2014 (UTC)

For better vizibility: It is E. Dawes translation from 1928, p. 385 ] (]) 05:11, 12 August 2014 (UTC)

:So there is no modern reliable source which states that the "Dacians" in Anna Comnena's work are identical with "Vlachs". Modern reliable sources (I refer to the standard English translation of the work cited in the article, and to Curta 2006) state that when writing of Dacians she referred to Hungarians. ] (]) 05:41, 12 August 2014 (UTC)
::This statement implies that Anna Comnena, “ardently devoted to philosophy, the queen of all sciences, and was educated in every field", could not made the difference between Hungarians and Dacians and/or Vlachs - which it is a bit bizarre. If your statement is true perhaps then the term "Hungarians" used by Anna Comnena could denote a mixture of ethnic groups among the Hungarian tribes like Dacians, Avars and Gepids. Could be this plausible? ] (]) 13:55, 12 August 2014 (UTC)
:::No, Anna Comnena almost always used Antique names when referring to the peoples in conflict with the Byzantine Empire. For instance, her Dacians were in fact Hungarians, her Scythians were actually Pechenegs, her Getae were Oghuzes, and her Celts were Germans or French. The context always clarifies it. For example, she wrote of "the ambassadors who came from the Dacians on behalf of the ''kral'', kinsman of the Basileus John's wife", when referring to the envoys sent by the king (=kral) of Hungary (]), who was the cousin of ], the wife of the future Emperor ]. For further details, I refer to the standard English translation of her work by E. R. A. Sewter, which is cited in the article. ] (]) 17:10, 12 August 2014 (UTC)
::::If the term "Hungarians" used by Anna Comnena do not denote a mixture of ethnic groups, what is the modern scientific motivation for the wrong terms used by Anna Comnena? ] (]) 19:12, 13 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::Sorry, I do not understand your above remark. Anna Comnena did not use the term "Hungarians", but used the term "Dacians" when referring to the inhabitants of the ]. ] (]) 19:17, 13 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::The statement "the Dacians on behalf of the kral" denotes a relationship between two different entities: one entity (Dacians) is entitled to represent the interests of another entity (king of Hungary, and subsequently the Hungarians). If we substitute, as you suggested, Dacians with Hungarians, it would lead to "the Hungarians on behalf of the king of Hungary" which is nonsense because both represent the same entity. This theory is invalid. There are three possibilities to make sense of this statement: either Dacians were a distinct entity, either the Hungarians were a loose mixture of ethnic groups, either both. ] (]) 19:58, 13 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::Your original thoughts are really interesting. However, the translator of the standard English version of her book and many other scholars (including Florin Curta) identify her "Dacians" as "Hungarians". Please also try to analyze the following sentence "the ambassadors who came from the Ottomans on behalf of the Sultan" - nobody would say that the Sultan is not the monarch of the Ottomans. ] (]) 20:27, 13 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::No, it is just logic. "Ottomans on behalf of the Ottoman Sultan" is a nonsense too. The point is the suggestion of different entities, as "Ottomans on behalf of the non-Ottoman Sultan" or "non-Ottomans on behalf of the Ottoman Sultan". As you said, if Florin Curta identified Anna Comnena's "Dacians" as "Hungarians" in this context, I would say his writings are doubtful and they should not be used as references. ] (]) 21:03, 13 August 2014 (UTC)

::::::::::You may not know, but our community had its own rules. For instance, books published by the Cambridge University Press are preferred to editors' own logic and interpretation. Please read ] and ]. ] (]) 21:33, 13 August 2014 (UTC)

:::::::::::Perhaps it is just a misinterpretation of reliable sources by "our community". Let's not bury this mess behind an abstract formalization, own rules. All books can contain fallacies. Who are those who proposed that bizarre theory? Can you provide citations? ] (]) 09:05, 14 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::Do you mean the Dacians' identification as Vlachs in her work? I think there is no reliable source stating this. She writes of the Vlachs separately, under the name "Vlach". ] (]) 09:08, 14 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::"Dacians were in fact Hungarians" - who are those who stated this? I hope not just you. Citations would be helpful if we want a better insight into this matter. ] (]) 09:23, 14 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::::Read note 23 on page 122 of the standard translation of her work (Anna Comnena: The Alexiad (Translated by E. R. A. Sewter) (1969). Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-044958-7.) And I also refer to Curta's interpretation of chapter 7.i of ''The Alexiad'' on page of his second cited work (Curta, Florin (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500-1250. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-89452-4.) They both identify the Dacians as Hungarians. Maybe their English is better than ours. ] (]) 09:34, 14 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::::::Good, Sewter and Curta stated that. I don’t' have the books and I'm not sure I could find them online. Can you provide the citations? About your argument "she wrote of the Vlachs as Vlachs, so her Dacians could not be Vlachs" is a masked man fallacy and your answer doesn’t and it cannot changed that. ] (]) 09:45, 14 August 2014 (UTC)
:::: (a) Note 23 on page 122 (which is connected to the text "the Dacians" on the same page) is the following: "The Hungarians." (b) Chapter 7.i. of ''The Alexiad'' (cited standard translation, page 217): "At the beginning of the spring Tzelgu, the supreme commander of the Scythian army, traversed the upper Danube valley at the head of a mixed force. He had about 80,000 men, Sarmatians, Scyths and a large contingent of Dacians led by one Solomon." Curta's interpretation (Curta 2006, page 300): "In 1087, the Pechenegs north of the Danube organized another invasion, this time in association with Cumans and Hungarians under the command of the former king of Hungary, Solomon.", he adds that "... the marauders were badly mauled and their chieftain, Tzelgu, killed...". ] (]) 10:05, 14 August 2014 (UTC)
:::: Victor Spinei also identifies Anna Comnena's Scythians, Sarmatians and Dacians as Pechenegs, Cumans and Hungarians, respectively: "Taking advantage of the political and military crisis in the Empire, the Cumans joined the Pechenegs led by Tzelgu and the Hungarians led by the former king Salomon, and they all plundered the Balkan provinces." (page 120 Spinei, Victor (2009). The Romanians and the Turkic Nomads North of the Danube Delta from the Tenth to the Mid-Thirteenth century. Koninklijke Brill NV. ISBN 978-90-04-17536-5.). ] (]) 03:29, 15 August 2014 (UTC)
::::: In the above citations there is no such statement "Dacians = Pechenegs + Cumans + Hungarians". In the context of Anna Comnena such statement is a cherry picking fallacy. Perhaps these parties are the leading one but this is not sufficient. Moreover, under umbrella term of a leading mono-ethnic group other ethnic groups can exist. ] (]) 13:48, 16 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::(1) Nobody has claimed that any of the reliable cited sources writes that "Dacians = Pechenegs + Cumans + Hungarians". However, they unanimously write that "Dacians = Hungarians, Scythians = Pechenegs, and Sarmatians=Cumans" in her work. (2) Yes, maybe, or maybe not. Please read ]. ] (]) 14:10, 16 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::(1) I misunderstood your sentence about Victor Spinei, sorry. But what are the scientific proofs for "Dacians = Hungarians"? Why not "Dacians = Slavs + Hungarians" for example? (2) Yes, this is what I want to emphasize. If the content of Hungarian population is not known exactly, then "Dacians = Hungarians" equation would lead to "Dacians = maybe, or maybe not Hungarians". Or do you have a clear evidence contesting this? ] (]) 22:25, 16 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::::"Historians believe the “Sarmatians” to be the Oghuz and the “Dacians” the Hungarians" The article should represent the mainstream historical narratives.... ] (]) 22:42, 16 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::::I tend to agree that Anna Comnena's "Dacians" were probably the inhabitants of the multiethnic "Kingdom of Hungary". However, we should use reliable sources when editing articles and not our own thoughts. ] (]) 02:38, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

::::::::: I think Borsoka made a huge mistake: Sayous and Anna talk about Dacians from the Northern slopes of Haemus; it is clear they are not Hungarians. Haemus are the Balkan mountains and they are placed South of Danube. There is a confusion. Please look at a map and see the difference.
About Curta, he cited what others wrote. Sayous made an original observation.
Also, a lot of Romanians wrote about Dacians/Vlachs identity in Alexiad.
] (]) 07:56, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::: (1) I could not make any mistake in this case, because I only referred to the view unanimously represented by specialists (Curta, Spinei, Sewter). If any mistake was made, these scholars made it, but we are not in the position to correct it based on our own original research. Please read ]. (2) Why do you think that Hungary is situated to the east, to the west or to the south of the Balkan Mountains? ] (]) 08:48, 17 August 2014 (UTC)


:: It is about Haemus '''slopes'''. So Borsoka made again a deliberate mistake. He does not know what means slopes !
This is why we need to keep the quote. To understand everybody that it is about the slopes of mountains and not about Panonia !
] (]) 09:40, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

::Please be more careful when reading: "on either '''side''' of its slopes...". Where did you read that Sayous died in the 20th century? ] (]) 10:29, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

Finally we talk about geography. Is Panonia on the slopes of Haemus ? Is this the geography or history you learnt in your country???
] (]) 10:46, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
::Is situated Hungary to the south, or to the east, or to the west of the slopes of the Balkan Mountains/Haemus? Would you provide a map proving this? ] (]) 10:49, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

Take my advise: start to learn geography. Panonia is at 1000 Km at North West from Haemus!!!!!!!
This is : Magyarization of geography !
] (]) 10:59, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

:::I see you do not have access to the relevant maps, and you think that Pannonia is identical with the medieval Kingdom of Hungary. For this reason, I copy a relevant map for you here. Please, look at it carefully and try to find where the Kingdom of Hungary is situated. If you succeeded in finding the kingdom, try to find the Haemus/Balkan Mountains. And finally, try to decide is the Kingdom of Hungary located to the north or to the south of the slops of the Haemus (top = north, bottom = south).

]


] (]) 11:07, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

:::If you use a compass, Hungary stll remains at NW of Haemus ! Search again!
] (]) 11:19, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

:::Yes, the Kingdom of Hungary used to be a large kingdom. It was also situated to the NW of the Haemus Mountains. However, you may not know where the Haemus is situated. Here is a map:

]

Please, try to concentrate to the two maps: everything will be clear, and we do not need to continue this OR. ] (]) 11:35, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

Slopes of Haemus = Panonia? Stop with these oditties. Wlachs or Dacians were on the Northen slopes of Haemus. For Hungarians as in this talk page, Ana used very clear Hungarians. Search her text with key words and find that she knew about Hungarians ] (]) 11:26, 17 August 2014 (UTC)


::Please read the above conversation again. Nobody has said that the Haemus is identical with Pannonia, and nobody has referred to Pannonia except of you. Please read her text: she writes of "either side (please repeat to memorize: side, side, side, side) of the slopes". Yes, she also made mention of Hungary (the country), but she always referred to its inhabitants as Dacians. ] (]) 11:35, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

* "Historians believe the “Sarmatians” to be the Oghuz and the “Dacians” the Hungarians" The article should represent the mainstream historical narratives.... ] (]) 22:42, 16 August 2014 (UTC)
:: I tend to agree that Anna Comnena's "Dacians" were probably the inhabitants of the multiethnic "Kingdom of Hungary". However, we should use reliable sources when editing articles and not our own thoughts. ] (]) 02:38, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
::# The statement <<Historians believe the “Sarmatians” to be the Oghuz and the “Dacians” the Hungarians.>> is NOT a scientific proof. It is just a belief. So I'm still waiting for the proofs. ] (]) 13:47, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
::# About "The article should represent the mainstream historical narratives", what authority said that? Then why such belief should become mainstream? ] (]) 13:47, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
::# As Eurocentral pointed out, the Northern slopes of Haemus would include Northern side of today's Bulgaria and probably ]. What are the evidences saying Hungarians lived exclusively in this space and they represent "Dacians" in Anna Comnena's text? ] (]) 13:46, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

:::Please read ]. Three (3) reliable sources has been presented which agree that in her book Dacians are identical with Hungarians. Would you please refer to a reliable source which contradict to their consensus? If there is no such reliable source, we are not in the position to continue our original research in this Talk page. ] (]) 14:24, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
:::: Reliable sources are not using beliefs to make statements. Perhaps they are sources but not reliable if no proofs are given. Unreliable sources should be removed. ] (]) 17:52, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::Yes, I agree. The 19th-century source and the sentence based on it of the identification of her "Dacians" as Vlachs should be deleted. Sayous is not a reliable source. ] (]) 18:03, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::I'm not sure about that because I don't have Sayous' book but the text of Sayous is already marked as dubious. What about the sources based on beliefs? ] (]) 18:20, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::Sorry, I do not understand your above remarks. Sayous is not marked as dubious. Which are the sources based on beliefs? Is there a reference to her book in the Bible? I would be surprised. ] (]) 18:29, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::It was marked in a previous version. I don't understand your question, sorry. You already provided interpretations and beliefs of certain authors without having a proof. ] (]) 18:40, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::Yes, I referred to reliable sources (Curta, Spinei, Sewter). Actually, if you read her book, you will understand that the Dacians can only be identified as Hungarians based on the context. ] (]) 19:01, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::What scientific method to proof a fact is "I you read, you will understand"? This is more an encouragement for WP:NOR. It is a far way to reach the statement "Dacians=Hungarians" from interpretations and beliefs. In Curta's interpretation I did not found such statement "Dacians=Hungarians". We don't know that is the difference between the leaders who initiate the attack and the content of the attacking army. It is a fallacy believing there is no difference just because we don't have other proofs. ] (]) 19:33, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
:::Please read again my quotes from Curta's and Spinei's work. They both identified the Dacians in Anna Comnena's work as Hungarians. Have you read in that two quotations anything which suggest that they identified them as Cumans or Pechenegs? (There are these three peoples mentioned in the two reliable sources.) ] (]) 01:59, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
::::Yes, I read again:
:::# Curta: "In 1087, the Pechenegs north of the Danube organized another invasion, this time in association with Cumans and Hungarians under the command of the former king of Hungary, Solomon.", he adds that "... the marauders were badly mauled and their chieftain, Tzelgu, killed...". Where is "Dacians=Hugarians" statement? "Hungarians under the command of the former king of Hungary, Solomon" is not the same as "Dacians=Hungarians". The statement "Dacians=Hungarians" is result of a simple interpretation. Curta did not said "Dacians=Hugarians". ] (]) 04:38, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
:::# Spinei: "Taking advantage of the political and military crisis in the Empire, the Cumans joined the Pechenegs led by Tzelgu and the Hungarians led by the former king Salomon, and they all plundered the Balkan provinces."
"the Hungarians led by the former king Salomon" is not the same as "Dacians=Hungarians". This is an simple interpretation too, not a clear statement. ] (]) 04:38, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
::::This is like the sentence "In World Word II Germans under the command of Hitler attacked Russia on Eastern front" - true. Using a reduction fallacy, the interpretation would be "Romanians were not part of this", resulting "attackers=Germans" which is not true. Same fallacy was applied resulting "Dacians=Hungarians". ] (]) 04:38, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::In the footnote both Curta and Spinei explicitly refers to Anna Comnena's text cited above, and Curta also refers to the reliable translation (Sewter) which explicitly identifies the Dacians and Hungarians. I have presented three academic works which identify her Dacians as Hungarians. Could you refer to an academic work stating that the Dacians were not Hungarians in Anna Comnena's work? ] (]) 04:46, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::No, you have made interpretations using fallacies based on academic works. The interpretation of Sewter's translation "the ambassadors who came from the Dacians on behalf of the ''kral''" that "Dacians=Hungarians" is doubious too. "Dacians=Hungarians" in this context is not an indisputable fact. It is not necessary to refer an academic work stating that the Dacians were not Hungarians in Anna Comnena's work to suppress such fallacies. ] (]) 05:04, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::Please read again my quotes from Sewter, Curta, and Spinei (three academic source). Do they identify the Dacians as Cumans or Pechenegs, or they identify them as Hungarians? ] (]) 05:14, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::Please do not force me to repeat myself. Read again what I wrote from the beginning of the discussion. ] (]) 05:20, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

:::::::::{{ping|Saturnian}}, I do not force you to repeat yourself. I only ask you to answer my question with one word (yes, or no): did Sewter, Curta, and Spinei identified Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians? ] (]) 05:46, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::::{{ping|Borsoka}} Yes, it seems I have to repeat myself. Do you really have other citations where these authors wrote something like "Dacians are irrefutably solely identified as Hungarians based on these proofs:...."? I would love to read such proofs; chronicles for example. But even so "Hungarians" term is problematic term due the multi-ethnic mixture of this population. In the citations you provided, the answer is no. None of them stated "Dacians=Hungarians" in Anna Comnena's text: "Hungarians under the command of the former king of Hungary, Solomon" is not the same as "Dacians=Hungarians" and "the Hungarians led by the former king Salomon" is not the same as "Dacians=Hungarians". Only a fallacious interpretation would lead to "Dacians=Hungarians". We don't know that is the difference between the leaders who initiate the attack and the content of the attacking army (Or do you really have proofs?). It is a fallacy believing there is no difference just because we don't have other proofs. The multi-ethnic Hungarian population is another issue. Then these authors mention Hungarians under the command of the Solomon but no proof was provided backing this (Or do you really have such proofs?). Sorry, I'm still waiting for these proofs if you have them. Otherwise it is a ] supporting a fallacious interpretation. ] (]) 16:38, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

::::::::::::So if my understanding is correct, you say that the cited three academic sources identify her "Dacians" and Hungarians. Sorry, but I am not willing to carry out OR as I have several times mentioned during our conversation. This is WP, with well established rules, including ]. Of couse, if you provide an academic source which substantiates your above claim, I will be glad to continue our discussion. ] (]) 16:47, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::::::I cannot follow you, sorry. There is no proof to conclude Dacians are Hungarians in this context. If Anna Comnena mentioned Dacians under Solomon and these authors mention Hungarians under Solomon, it doesn't necessary mean Dacians are Hungarians unless the authors explicitly stated that (perhaps providing a hint about how they reached this conclusion). It is a fallacious interpretation, a ], to reach that statement. The established rules prohibit such interpretations. It seems I'm asking you in vain to bring something to support this statement :| ] (]) 16:15, 20 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::I do not understand your above concern. (1) Sewter explicitly identifies Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians (note 23 on page 122 of his work cited above and in the article). (3) Curta explicitly refers to both Anna Comnena's work and Sewter's translation when writing of Pechenegs, Cumans and Hungarians instead of Anna Comnena's Schythians, Sarmatians and Dacians (Curta 2006 page 300). (3) As I mentioned below, Spinei explicitly writes, "In the biography of Emperor Alexios I Comnenos written by his daughter Anna, it is said that the invasion was due to a numerous army under the command of the ''Scythian'' Tzelgu and made up of ''Sarmatians'', ''Scythians'' and ''Dacians'', the latter being headed by Salomon. The ethnonyms above designated the Cumans, the Pechenegs and the Hungarians." (Spinei (1986), pages 93-94). Consequently, all three scholars unanimously and without doubt identify Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians. The article states this, nothing more. ] (]) 16:29, 20 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::Until now the citations provided did not explicitly stated Dacians were Hungarians. Only this NEW citation of Spinei, "The ethnonyms above (''Sarmatians'', ''Scythians'' and ''Dacians'') designated the Cumans, the Pechenegs and the Hungarians.", explicitly stated that. I asked this for days. Then what is the underlying base for this statement? Are they indicating a primary source (Yes or no)? If yes, which ones? Are these authors use a chain of references - Curta refers Spinei, and Spinei others for example? Please don't tell me it's forbidden to know more about the source of this statement. 05:52, 21 August 2014 (UTC)

:::::::::Please read carefully my comments above, but if you want I will repeat them 1000 times.. (1) Sewter explicitly identifies her Dacians as Hungarians. (2) Curta and Spinei use the word "Hungarians" instead of "Dacians" when they write of Tzelgu's attack against the Byzantine Empire. They explicitly refer to Anna Comnena's text. Consequently, as I have informed you several times, (1) there is and never was any doubt that they identify her Dacians as Hungarians; (2) these scholars use Anna Comnena's text (=a primary source) when identifying her Dacians as Hungarians. Of course, anybody can challange any scholar's view, however, when editing WP we can only use scholarly works. Actually, the context of her references always proves that her Dacians are Hungarians. ] (]) 08:37, 23 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::::As I already told you using Hungarians word in that attack it doesn’t mean "Dacians=Hungarians". Indeed Hungarians were part of that attack but it doesn't necessary mean "Dacians=Hungarians". If there are is no proof supporting "Dacians=Hungarians" statement, their works are just stories. At least one of the authors should specify the source of this statement to be credible. Until now the books mentioned do not deserve the status of reliable source. ] (]) 20:06, 24 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::::::Please read what a ] means in our community. All three (four) sources are reliable sources for WP purposes. They all identify Anna Comnena's Dacians with Hungarians. ] (]) 00:28, 25 August 2014 (UTC)

:: As usually, Borsoka forged the history. His map is from another era.
The Kingdom of Hungary was very small in the XIth century
According to Țiplic, Trnsivania was occupied in some stages:

]
I.M.Țiplic, Considerații cu privire la liniile întarite de tipul prisacilor din transilvania, Acta terrae Septemcastrensis, I, pag. 147-164

I.M. Țiplic, Transylvania in the Early Middle Ages (7th -13th C.), Heidelberg-Alba Iulia, 2006, ISBN 3-929848-54-6

] (]) 05:33, 18 August 2014 (UTC)



Forging the maps Borsoka tried to put Hungarians closer to Haemus. But the discussion is about what Byzantines knew about Dacians.

The '''philologist''' and '''historian''' Sayous clearly wrote in HISTOIRE GENERALE DES HONGROIS , Budapest & Paris, 1900,p.21

"Les Byzantins du onzième siècle, Anne Comnène entre autres, parlent des Daces, qui ne peuvent être que des Roumains"

For this History, Sayous received the Prix of French Academy (OUVRAGE COURONNÉ PAR L'ACADÉMIE FRANÇAISE)

Mr. Borsoka, why do you come with your "original" interpretation ? You make us to loose time with your aberations.
] (]) 05:41, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

:::{{ping|Eurocentral}}, please try to concentrate on the borders presented on "your" map. Where is situated the easternmost border of the Kingdom of Hungary (even according to this map)? Yes, you are right: to the north of the slopes of the Haemus Mountains. Please also try to read the quotes from modern academic works (Sewter, Curta, Spinei) above. How they translate Anna Comnena's Dacians? Yes, you are right: they translate it as Hungarians. ] (]) 05:46, 18 August 2014 (UTC)


The word Slopes shows where lived the Dacians and Thraces (near mountains). In that times, majority of Hungarians lived under tents and they preffered plains.
The word Slopes shows very clear that your have an "original" interpretation. Curta and Spinei only agreed, but in connection with other topics, not with Haemus
By the way, Anna and Sayous opinions was the same as the Kekaumenos data.

Please stop your "original" interpretations. Give us quotes and not your ideas. Your ideas are from another movie.

] (]) 06:11, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
] (]) 06:11, 18 August 2014 (UTC)


A huge stupidity is the association of Thraces with Hungarians !!! Let's find Thraces in Hungary!
] (]) 06:29, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

: Borsoka sustained: Hungarians and Thraces lived on the Northern Slopes!!! Huge stupidity !
:: Yes, it would have been a huge stupidity. However, I have never stated this. ] (]) 13:27, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

::Incredible! Do anybody identify Anna Comnene's "Thraces" as Hungarians? Who? I am sure there is no academic work suggesting this. On the other hand, the identification of her "Dacians" as Hungarians is a well-established scholarly consensus. You must have been really tired in the morning that you were unable to remember the quotes from academic sources that I provided above. I repeat them just for you: :::: (1) Note 23 on page 122 (which is connected to the text "the Dacians" on the same page) is the following: "The Hungarians." (2) Chapter 7.i. of ''The Alexiad'' (cited standard translation, page 217): "At the beginning of the spring Tzelgu, the supreme commander of the Scythian army, traversed the upper Danube valley at the head of a mixed force. He had about 80,000 men, Sarmatians, Scyths and a large contingent of Dacians led by one Solomon." Curta's interpretation (Curta 2006, page 300): "In 1087, the Pechenegs north of the Danube organized another invasion, this time in association with Cumans and Hungarians under the command of the former king of Hungary, Solomon.", he adds that "... the marauders were badly mauled and their chieftain, Tzelgu, killed...". Curta explicitly refers to Anna Comnena's work and its standard translation by Sewter, when identifies Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians. (3) Victor Spinei also identifies Anna Comnena's Scythians, Sarmatians and Dacians as Pechenegs, Cumans and Hungarians, respectively: "Taking advantage of the political and military crisis in the Empire, the Cumans joined the Pechenegs led by Tzelgu and the Hungarians led by the former king Salomon, and they all plundered the Balkan provinces." (page 120 Spinei, Victor (2009). The Romanians and the Turkic Nomads North of the Danube Delta from the Tenth to the Mid-Thirteenth century. Koninklijke Brill NV. ISBN 978-90-04-17536-5.). ] (]) 12:47, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
:::{{ping|Eurocentral}} Why you are repeating this? As I mentioned before, these remarks are not sufficient to prove "Dacians=Hungarians" in this context. ] (]) 16:38, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

:::::The above quotes prove that three scholars identify Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians. We do not need any further prove for WP purposes, because the article states this, not any more. ] (]) 06:21, 20 August 2014 (UTC)

***************************************************************************************
Note
] (]) 13:36, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
About: Chapter 7.i. of The Alexiad (cited standard translation, page 217): "At the beginning of the spring Tzelgu, the supreme commander of the Scythian army, traversed the upper Danube valley at the head of a mixed force. He had about 80,000 men, Sarmatians, Scyths and a large contingent of Dacians led by one Solomon...

But Solomon in that times just retired from the civil war. He battled against the King of Hungary at Oradea Mica and was beaten. He was supported by only Romanians and Cumans (or Pechenegs) and Ruthens. After battle he came back to Romanians for shelter (Cumans lived under tends). So in his expedition to
Balkans he was supported by Romanians and not by Hungarians who were his enemies.

Read:
Русскій хронографъ, 2, Хронографъ Западно-Русской редакціи, în PSRL, XXII, 2, Petrograd, 1914, p.241
(In this Chronicle shows that Solomon asked help from Romanians and Ruthens)

V. Spinei, The Romanians and the Turkic Nomads North of the Danube Delta from the Tenth to Mid-Thirteen Century, Brill, 2009, p.118 (Here Spinei wrote about Russian Chronicle)

And so, the other observations have same reply. You make a big confusion.
] (]) 13:08, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
::This is an interesting point: What was the relationship between the king of Hungary and this former king, Solomon? Have they cooperate together? ] (]) 16:38, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

:Spinei's text: "During the second half of the eleventh century, hordes of Pechenegs continued to inhabit the left bank of the Danube. In '''1068''', led by '''Osul''', they launched a great attack '''against Transylvania and Hungary''' through the mountain passes across the Carpathian range. .... On their way back, '''they were ambushed and defeated by King Salomon''' ... A west-Russian chronograph misdated the raid to 1059, but blamed it on Cumans and Romanias. ..." If you try to concentrate, you can realize that while Anna Comnena writes of a raid by the Pechenegs (and Cumans and Hungarians) against '''the Byzantine Empire''', Spinei here writes of a plundering raid against '''Hungary'''. You understand that Spinei writes that '''King Salomon was defeated''', but in Spinei's text '''it is King Salomon who defeated''' the enemy. Please try to concentrate or have a cofee. ] (]) 13:23, 18 August 2014 (UTC)


::::::::::::::::Poor Borsoka. He never understand. Please put your glases and read again. It is about the battle of Oradea Mica (kisvarda). The Russian chronicle (the same page as about Chirales) tells more if you put your glasses. Only 3-4 lines after the explanations about Chirales battle.
'''Only if you know Russian'''. Spinei only introduced and commented this chonicle in his works.
] (]) 13:44, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::{{ping|Eurocentral}} Please change this tone. It is not useful. ] (]) 16:38, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

:::I alway read with my glasses on, that is why I could realize that you were unable to differentiate two events: a king (Solomon) defeats the enemy in Hungary in 1068, the same person (already an ex-king) is defeated in the Byzantine Empire in 1089. Otherwise, Ya chut'-chut' govoryu po-russki. ] (]) 13:51, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

::::::Here I explain again: There was 3 battles of Solomon in connection with Romanians:
1 Battle of Chirales in 1068 when Solomon was king (battled against Pechenegs and Romanians)
2 Battle of Oradea Mica, in 1085 (kisvarda) where Solomon (dethroned) battled against Hungarians led by Ludovic I (Laios); he was helped by Romanians, Ruthens and Cumans (Kutesk)
3 Battle in Balkans in 1087, where Solomon (dethroned) was again helped by Romanians (Dacians) and not by Hungarians who were his enemies (Solomon was hunted by Hungarians after Oradea Mica).

Very difficult to understand. Read and read again. Especially the chonicle. As usual, the history is a surprise for you if you read only Hungarian sources. All these explain why Dacians were Romanians and not Hungarians in 1087.
] (]) 14:42, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

:::Would you provide an academic source in order to substantiate your above claim. Do you really think that "]" (who reigned between 1342 and 1382) owned a time machine to be able to defeat Solomon in 1085? ] (]) 15:11, 18 August 2014 (UTC)


:::::{{ping|Eurocentral}} Indeed there is a time frame difference between King Solomon and King Ludovic I. Perhaps it was ] instead of ]. Can you provide the sources? ] (]) 16:38, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

:: EXPLANATIONS:

1 Battle of Chirales in 1068 when Solomon was king (Solomon battled against Pechenegs and Romanians)

2 Battle of Oradea Mica, in 1085 (kisvarda) where Solomon (dethroned) battled against Hungarians led by Vladislav I (in Transilvania they call him '''Laios''' but when translated is Ludovic); he was helped by Romanians, Ruthens and Cumans (Kutesk). Solomon promised to Kutesk all Transilvania if Vladislav will be killed. Kutesk asked Solomon to merry his daughter if Solomon wants military help.Vladislav won the battle.


3 Raid and Battle in Balkans in 1087, where Solomon (dethroned) was again helped by Romanians (Dacians) and Comans and not by Hungarians who were his enemies (Solomon was hunted by Hungarians after Oradea Mica). Tzelgu (the Coman leader of expedition) and Solomon were killed in battle.

References:

For 1: Spinei & Russian chronicle: Русскій хронографъ, 2, Хронографъ Западно-Русской редакціи, în PSRL, XXII, 2, Petrograd, 1914, p.241

For 2: Русскій хронографъ, 2, Хронографъ Западно-Русской редакціи, în PSRL, XXII, 2, Petrograd, 1914, p.241 It States that Solomon asked help from Ruthenians and Romanians. Spinei (Moldova in Sec. XI-XIV) showed that the expedition was through Coman/Romanian lands and Ruthenia and through the Ruthenia-Hungary mountain pass. This is why battle took place in NE of Hungary.

For 2: Here we find that Solomon remained without own men:

Marek Meško,, Pecheneg Groups in the Balkans (ca. 1053-1091) according to the Byzantine Sources. In: The Steppe Lands and the World Beyond Them.Editors Florin Curta & Bogdan Maleon, 2013.p.195
Mesko showed: ...only Kutesk, Salomon and a few other nomads were able to escape alive. In this case results no Hungarians will be with Solomon in next raids.


For 3: Here sources missing. Hungarian historians profited (Moravcsik,G. Byzantinoturcica II, p.116) and wrote that Dacians were Hungarians. But Solomon was the enemy of Hungarians (a renegade) after the battle against Vladislav at Oradea Mica; He married a Coman women and lived between Romanians and Comans. From Comans (under Tzelgu) and Romanians, Solomon started in 1087 the campaign in Balkans. This is why Anna told Solomon and Dacians. Hungarians were enemies of Solomon (who maybe left Christianity after his marriage) at that time, considering the invasion of 1085. Also, Hungarians were attacked frequently by Comans.

I found some sources stating Romanian (Vlach) participation with Comans in Balkan raids but a final conclusion will be ready soon.

Little by little we can demonstrate that Dacians were Romanians (Vlachs) in Ana Comnena work.
] (]) 05:26, 19 August 2014 (UTC)
::: (1) In this debate, there is no reference to scholarly works written by Hungarian historians. Two Romanian historians (Florin Curta and Victor Spinei) and a British scholar (E. R. A. Sewter) have so far been mentioned, who unanimously identify Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians. (2) In his work cited above (Moldova in Sec. XI-XIV), Spinei explicitly identifies Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians. He writes: "In the biography of Emperor Alexios I Comnenos written by his daughter Anna, it is said that the invasion was due to a numerous army under the command of the ''Scythian'' Tzelgu and made up of ''Sarmatians'', ''Scythians'' and ''Dacians'', the latter being headed by Salomon. The ethnonyms above designated the Cumans, the Pechenegs and the Hungarians." (Spinei, Victor (1986). Moldavia in the 11th-14th Centuries.Editura Academiei Republicii Socialiste Româna, pages 93-94). Please do not abuse his name. (3) {{U|Eurocentral}}, please add references to academmic works (author, title, publisher, page) when stating anything, because this is a basic principle of our community. (4) For the time being, in order to help you to avoid misunderstanding and to refrain you from abusing well-known scholars' name, I suggest you the following introductory text for all your communication: "Romanian historians have identified Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians, but, according to my own original research, they are wrong because ....". ] (]) 12:41, 19 August 2014 (UTC)

:::The opinions about the real name of Daces belong to '''Sayous''' and other Romanian historians (there are a lot from the XIXth and the XXth century) not to me. The Russian Chronicle I added may help you to understand that the Romanians were the Daces of Solomon in 1087.

By the way, you said: " Dawes translated the "Cral" as the "Prince of Bulgaria", but his view was not accepted by modern historians", because at that time Bulgaria did not exist, and there was no Prince of Bulgaria whose kinswomen was the wife of ].

Borsoka confusions:

The relatives were from the part of former cral/king; even after death, the relatives claims they belong to cral/king family.
At that time (1106) of the Oath, Alexius was emperor and his wife was Irene, daughter of Andronikos Doukas and Maria of Bulgaria (family of former cral/king).
John II Komnenos started as emperor after Alexios death in 1118. His wife was Hungarian and received (after passing to Roman empire) the same name as Irene, the wife of Alexius . This is your confusion.

A lot of documents from Misplaced Pages are based on Dawes translation. So where is your majority?
] (]) 14:39, 19 August 2014 (UTC)

::Eurocentral, at least three scholars - Curta, Spinei, Sewter - have been named who identify Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians (as it has been proven by several quotes from their works). The present text of the article represent all relevant POVs, including the claim from the 1870s that these Dacians should be identified as Vlachs. ] (]) 14:54, 19 August 2014 (UTC)
::::I think user:Eurocentral thinks that modern Romanian scholars are not qualified enough. They are misled by evil Hungarian historians. Sorry, but this debate does not make any sense. ] (]) 14:54, 19 August 2014 (UTC)



At least three scholars (secondary sources) identified Daces as Romanians:

1)E. Sayous, HISTOIRE GENERALE DES HONGROIS , Budapest & Paris, 1900,p.21

2)Ion Grumeza, The Roots of Balkanization: Eastern Europe C.E. 500-1500, University Press of America, 2010, p.58

3)Gh. Sincai, Opere, Hronica romanilor, tom 1, Bucuresti,1967, p.325-326

These works show there is a controverse in this question. This does not imply others historians are not qualified. It is a simply scientific controverse in wich 2 Hungarians (Borsoka and Fakirbakir) refuse to
observe it.
] (]) 05:02, 20 August 2014 (UTC)

::(1) Sayous wrote his book in 1876 and ] in 1811 (!!!!). Grumeza is not a historian, his work is not a reliable source according to WP's standards. (2) Late 20th-century and 21th-century scholars (Sewter, Curta, Spinei) identify Anna Comnene's Dacians as Hungarians. (3) Both theories are presented in the article. There is no point in continuing this debate. Maybe the reference to the identification of her Dacians as Vlachs should be deleted (in lack of reference to modern academic works), but I do not insist. ] (]) 05:20, 20 August 2014 (UTC)
:::Grumeza : ''"He holds a Bachelors Degree in '''Education''' and a Masters Degree in '''Education''' from the University of Bucharest, Romania. He completed courses in Humanistic Education at the University of Bridgeport, Connecticut, and courses in Research in Education at Hunter College, New York. He has a '''Ph.D. in Metaphysical Sciences''' from the University of Metaphysical Sciences."'' ] (]) 18:49, 20 August 2014 (UTC)

== The Origin of the confusions between Daces and Hungarians in Alexiad ==

The sentence that was used by nationalist historians from Hungary in order to make confusion is extracted from Alexiad: "...envoys from the Dacia from the Cral" (book XIII, Alexiad)
But there are a lot of books that showed the term is for a slavonic (maybe Bulgarian) prince:

1. TS Hughes, Travels in Sicilly, Greece and Albania, University of Michigan Library, page 6.
wrote: '''The title of Cral is a Sclavonic word''' signifying king.

2 Dawes, who translated Alexiad wrote at page 357: "...envoys from the Dacia from the Cral" and added a note: "Prince of Bulgaria".
Dawes simply explained what means Cral: '''a slavonic word'''

Some nationalist Hungarians, including Moravcsic, wrote some works which influenced Curta and other readers claiming Cral = Kirally. Sayous as philologist understood the meaning of Cral. It was easy to see it was a slavonic prince.

The word exist in different forms in all Eastern and Central Europe. Even in Romania there is a town named Craiova.
] (]) 12:51, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

::Why do you think that E. R. A. Sewter, Florin Curta and Victor Spinei - three experts identifying Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians - are Hungarian nationalist historians? Yes, Dawes in 1928 translated the "Cral" as the "Prince of Bulgaria", but his view was not accepted by modern historians, because at that time Bulgaria did not exist, and there was no Prince of Bulgaria whose kinswomen was the wife of ]. Yes, the Hungarian world for the king is of Slavic origin. However, we do not need to continue our original research. There are three 21th-century (Romanian) historians who identify Anna Comnena's Dacians as Hungarians. Therefore this statement is based on academic sources and it is not represented as the only POV, because about 150 years ago there was a French historian, who identified them as Vlachs. ] (]) 13:37, 18 August 2014 (UTC)



::::::::::''':About forgery in History''': The episode with the Cral was in 1109 when Alexius was emperor. His wife was Irene, born in 1066, daughter of Andronikos Doukas and Maria of Bulgaria, granddaughter of Ivan Vladislav of Bulgaria.

::::::::::::'''About absent-mindedness:''' Anna Comnena writes: "the ambassadors who came from the Dacians on behalf of the kral, kinsman of the Basileus ''']'s''' ]..." (page 434, Anna Comnena: The Alexiad (Translated by E. R. A. Sewter) (1969). Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-044958-7.). You may not know, but "Alexius" and "John" are two differents names. Therefore the wife of '''Alexius''' is not relevant, because Anna Comnena wrote of the wife of '''John'''.

::::::::::: '''About pale-mindedness:''' We talked until now about Elisabeth Dawes translation:'''the envoys who had come from Dacia from the Cral , the Queen's relation, Zupanus Peres and Simon and the envoys of Riscardus Siniscardus, the Nobilissimus Basilius, a eunuch, and the notary Constantine."

Reference:
Anna Comnena, The Alexiad of the Princess Anna Comnena, Translated by Elizabeth A. S. Dawes
Publisher K. Paul, 1928

It is obvious, Sewter added words from his imagination. Dawes never talked about John II. You may not know, but "Alexius" was emperor and "John" was only a caesar (son of Emperor) at the time of episode.
I sugest you to read the original document of Anna.
] (]) 15:53, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

::Why do you think that Sewter added words, instead of Dawes failed to translate words? ] (]) 16:11, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

:::I chequed the Hungarian translation: there is no reference to "Basileus John" either. Nevertheless, there was no "Prince of Bulgaria" in 1108 and no ruler of Bulgaria was styled "Kral". Consequently, the only ruler related to the basileus and styled "kral" was the king of Hungary at that time. ] (]) 16:29, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

In this case, the relatives of Cral Irene were Maria of Bulgaria, granddaughter of former king Ivan Vladislav.
It is obvious that the envoys from the Dacia from the Cral were a Bulgarians (as Dawes stated) and not Hungarians.
Counting years became difficult for Hungarians.
] (]) 15:12, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

:::There are different opinions and they need to be known and not censored. The French book is from 1900 and not from 150 years ago (another forgery of you)] (]) 13:50, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
:::I fully agree with you: there is no place for censorship in WP. Here you can read that it was first published in 1876 (138 years ago) . It was published for the second time in 1900. ] (]) 13:57, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
********************************************************************************************
About rules:

In general, the most reliable sources are:
peer-reviewed journals

books published by university presses

university-level textbooks

magazines, journals, and books published by respected publishing houses

mainstream newspapers

The rules do not mention the negation of the XIXth century works.
] (]) 16:05, 28 August 2014 (UTC)

Budapest, "Athenaeum" was a respected publishing house

] (]) 16:15, 28 August 2014 (UTC)
*********************************************************************************************
::::It is a big mess here. In the citation "the envoys who had come from Dacia from the Cral , the Queen's relation, Zupanus Peres and Simon and the envoys of Riscardus Siniscardus, the Nobilissimus Basilius, a eunuch, and the notary Constantine." (http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/basis/AnnaComnena-Alexiad13.asp), if Cral/Kral would be Hungarian, then Zupanus Peres and Simon would be Hungarians too? Or they do not appear in the Hungarian translation of Comnena's text? ] (]) 06:23, 21 August 2014 (UTC)

:::] (=Zupan) Peres and Simon are also mentioned in the Hungarian translation. ] (]) 08:39, 23 August 2014 (UTC)
::::I'm repeating my question, so Zupanus Peres and Simon were Hungarians too? The notary Constantine was Hungarian too? ] (]) 20:10, 24 August 2014 (UTC)
::::Yes, they were. No, he was not. Please read the text more carefully. ] (]) 00:29, 25 August 2014 (UTC)

== Sections ==

The "Historiography: origin of the theories" section of the article clearly describes the pro-continuity historians' POV of the origin of the opposite - immigrationist - theory. Is there any WP which prescribes that one statement should be repeated in an article? ] (]) 09:09, 20 September 2014 (UTC)

== Dear Eurocentral ==

You have been reverting edits without adding any explanation. Please stop ]. ] (]) 19:01, 22 September 2014 (UTC)

To Borsoka: your edits are subjective. I took a phrase that you added in these pages, and I putted it on the pages about "Hungarian conquest of Carpathian..." but you erased it. That means you are a double dealer. You have "double" policy. That means you practice a dishonest activity.
] (]) 14:29, 1 October 2014 (UTC)

::Would you be more specific? ] (]) 17:50, 1 October 2014 (UTC)

== Vandalism ==

The following sentence about the root of the debates over the Romanians' ethnogenesis, which is based on a Romanian scholar's work, was deleted: "There is "a certain disaccord between the effective process of Roman expansion and ] and the present ethnic configuration of Southeastern Europe": the territories to the south of the Danube were subject to the Romanization process for about 800 years, while Dacia province to the north of the Danube was only for 165 years under Roman rule." I would like to understand the reason why this sentence was deleted. ] (]) 07:46, 28 September 2014 (UTC)

== RfC: What would be a neutral first sentence? ==

{{rfc|hist|lang|rfcid=5CE468B}}
The first sentence of the lead only presents one of the two or three theories about the Romanians' ethnogenesis. Could anybody suggest a neutral wording? ] (]) 08:00, 28 September 2014 (UTC)

All we have to do is to read other similar pages. Starting with irredentist opinions is not a Wiki policy.
The main introduction have to contain neutral points of view.
] (]) 15:03, 29 September 2014 (UTC)

I would agree that the lead at present is not neutral and assumes the correctness of one point of view among several. It would be better to open with something like: "There are several theories about the origin of the Romanians." Then give a brief summary of each. I am definitely not an expert on this myself, but I don't think the origin in the Dacians is such a firmly-established consensus view as the lead asserts. ] (]) 19:32, 29 September 2014 (UTC)

:: Starting with "There are several theories... " is not a elegant introduction. Comparing with other similar pages, starting with such introduction is a negativist comment emphasizing personal views (POV) and not an academic interface with history.
] (]) 14:21, 1 October 2014 (UTC)

I concur with Wallace, and add that the entire lead has POV problems. The third (or other) view(s) are not described, only mentioned as vaguely existing, and described as being intermediate between the two that people have been fighting over, and that may not be accurate. One problem I'm going to fix right now is describing holders of the one view as "scholars" but holders of the opposing position as "followers". I don't have suggested wording for the bulk of the lead. Judging from comments above, it would probably be useful to have proposals from Borsoka and others about how to increase the neutrality. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — ] ] ] ≽<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>≼ </span> 05:05, 1 October 2014 (UTC)

There is no neutrality in Borsoka edits. Let's see his pages "Hungarian conquest of Carpathian..." where he showed his true face. He erased a lot of phrases including references and phrases identically with phrases from "Origins of Romanians" See Schramm reference and phrase.
] (]) 14:35, 1 October 2014 (UTC)

:::Would you be more specific? ] (]) 17:49, 1 October 2014 (UTC)
'''Political and ideological considerations, including the dispute between Hungary and Romania over Transylvania, have also colored these scholarly discussions.'''
This sentence was censored in the pages "The conquest of Carpathian basin"
] (]) 05:27, 2 October 2014 (UTC)
::::::The sentence was deleted from the article ] because it was not connected to that article. Schramm did not write of the Hungarian Conquest, but of the Romanians' ethnogenesis, and did not refer to Anonymus. I am more and more convinced that you do not understand the basic principles of WP. ] (]) 04:29, 6 October 2014 (UTC)

I agree with Wallace as well. The lead is not at all neutral and assumes a POV; alternative theories should also be presented. "The origin of the Romanians lies in the Danube-Carpathian area in the Dacian and Roman provinces and starts in ancient times," would leave a reader wondering where the modern ] of north-central Greece came from, people whose recorded presence in Greece is at least as old as the record of their linguistic siblings (see ]) in modern Romania. I believe the problem is that Romanians are taught that their language roots go back in Romania to ancient times. Similarly, Vlachs are taught in Greece that their ancestors were Greeks, who mixed with local Roman legions. Those two theories work well in their own countries as part of national myths that the nations' citizens have always lived within the nations' boundaries, but these politically convenient stories have problems explaining why the two groups (Vlachs and Romanians) would share a common (post-Latin) linguistic ancestor (namely ]). Theories that suggest a common romanized ancestor living in-between Greece and Romania (see the article's ) are also considered possible. This isn't to dismiss the Dacian theory, which has scholarly support as well, but it certainly isn't the only scholarly supported one, even if it has state support in Romania for political reasons. ] (]) 18:09, 1 October 2014 (UTC)

:::::to ] If you know geography you will understand that Roman provinces cover Vlachs of Greece. This is why "The origin of the Romanians lies in the Danube-Carpathian area in the Dacian and Roman provinces... is convenient for all theories. All Vlachs of Greece, Albania, Bulgaria and Macedonia were in the Roman provinces.
] (]) 10:39, 3 October 2014 (UTC)

:::::Why do you think that Greece is included in the "Carpatho-Danubian" region? Could we also write that Egypt, Israel and Spain are also included in this region because they were Roman provinces? Or could we write that Britain was a Dacian province because it was a Roman province? The more I read your comments the more I am convinced that your purpose is not the building of an encyclopedia but destroying it. ] (]) 04:29, 6 October 2014 (UTC)

::: Starting with there are several theories means to put as the same level the theories of majority of researchers with theories based on political reasons or on irredentist opinions.
] (]) 05:16, 2 October 2014 (UTC)
::::Perhaps in Romania there is only one truth, but your approach would be biased in the international scientific community. What sort of "majority" ?? The western scholars desperately try to avoid this subject.... You know well that Romanian historians, archaeologists etc between 1960 and 1990 were under the influence of ]. Ergo your "majority" is dubious...] (]) 13:28, 2 October 2014 (UTC)
:::::All the Romanian historians whose works are referred (and are written in English) refer to both theories. We should follow the example set by academic works. ] (]) 03:52, 3 October 2014 (UTC)

:::::::{{U|Piledhighandeep}}, thank you for your suggestion for the lead. It is much more neutral than any former version. I made two changes: the second sentence (which was only a duplication of the continuity theory) was deleted, and the last sentence was modified in order to more properly present the immigrationist view. Please write if you think any of my edits are problematic. ] (]) 03:52, 3 October 2014 (UTC)
::::::::Thank you for cleaning up the duplication in the old material. I think the 14th century is too late, the ] article gives the 13th century as a terminal date, but I think picking another terminal date may be divisive, so why include one? It's a shame this is all seen as having implications in the 'who was there first' Hungarian-Romanian dispute. ] (]) 09:57, 3 October 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::Actually, the Romanians' migrations lasted till the 14th century as it is demonstrated by the migration of a large group of Romanians who had settled some decades earlier in Maramures (according to the earliest Romanian chronicles) from this province to Moldavia around 1350. All the same, I think the date could be changed because the first nomadic or semi-nomadic Vlach groups settled in the lands to the north of the Lower Danube in the 12th century. ] (]) 04:15, 5 October 2014 (UTC)
:::::: All nations have different theories about origins. There is no nation with a single theory.
] (]) 09:50, 3 October 2014 (UTC)
:::::::Exactly. However, there is no main theory. The "one truth ideology" ended in Romania about 24 years ago. ] (]) 14:51, 3 October 2014 (UTC)

:Main theory is not equal to one truth. Also a single book may not be equal to several books. You bring confusion to readers.
Your text is full with POV. Limit your ideas to only one sentence. The proposed geographic space includes all theories.
] (]) 05:37, 4 October 2014 (UTC)
] (]) 05:37, 4 October 2014 (UTC)

:I've red the whole article and I've to say that Piledhighandeep's lead is kinda good in wording and definitely neutral, though the smaller or less-known theories might deserve few sentences. Also, a short introduction/summary before the the theories' description might make sense.. something like "The origin of Romanians refers to the process during which a group of people living in Southern and Eastern Europe have adopted a common identity, the Romanian" – then it could continue as the current: "There are several well-supported theories about this process..".

:@Eurocentral: You might not realized, but your edits are clearly against ] and appears to be a POV push. You also might not understood, but the two theories are on the same level – there's no main view and other views, and shall be present accordingly. It is not the editors' work to decide whether a theory is more likely, "better" or whatever – theories must be present neutrally and it's up to the reader how s/he interprets it. Do not give undue weight to one theory over all others. Also, if you have objections, please raise them on the talk page rather than blindly reverting the widely accepted, consensus based version. In accordance with this, I have to note that you are close to edit-warring – if you continue your disruptive behaviour and go against the consensus instead of participating in the improvement of the article on the talk page I won't be shy to make the necessary steps needed in these cases. Please consider it as an official warning. ] (]) 11:05, 4 October 2014 (UTC)

: The general geographic space according to all theories is: The '''origin of the Romanians''' lies in the Danube-Carpathian area in the Dacian and ]s and starts in ancient times. There is no other opinion so it is goog to be published.] (]) 12:57, 5 October 2014 (UTC).
] (]) 12:53, 5 October 2014 (UTC)

::No, there are other views about the Romanians' ethnogenesis. ] (]) 13:05, 5 October 2014 (UTC)

:::The proposed sentence is about geography. I proposed Dacia and Roman provinces. Do you want to add other territories?
] (]) 09:36, 6 October 2014 (UTC)

If no other comments, the geographic area will remain Roman provinces.(Is not the case of theories here)
] (]) 07:16, 8 October 2014 (UTC)

:::Eurocentral, please try to seek a compromise instead of making declarations: Dacia is only included in the space of the Romanians' ethnogenesis according to the theory of Daco-Romanian continuity. ] (]) 14:39, 8 October 2014 (UTC)


::::: Unbalanced introduction: 1 line for continuity and 4 lines against continuity ! Propaganda of Hungarian commentators?
] (]) 09:42, 10 October 2014 (UTC)

::::::Both scholarly supported theories need to be introduced equally. The Daco-Romanian view is already introduced first. What more would you like? It is important to maintain an accurate and neutral portrayal of both views. I don't see the implications for Hungarians. They are known to be immigrants to the region (perhaps later ones), as well. (See, ].) ] (]) 20:36, 10 October 2014 (UTC)

== Vekony about early Romanian chronicles ==

Unfortunately I had to remove the following text added by ]

{{quote|text=Followers of the immigrationist theory say that the Romanians' earliest chronicles from the 16th and 17th centuries unanimously refer to their ancestors' northward migration under one "King Vladislav" of Hungary and only 18th-century Romanian scholars started emphasizing the Romanians' continuous presence in Transylvania in connection with their fights for the Romanians' political emancipation.}}

The same idea is already present in another section of the article:

{{quote|text=A ], preserved in the ''Moldo-Russian Chronicle'' from around 1505, narrates that one "King Vladislav of Hungary" invited their ancestors to his kingdom and settled them "in Maramureş between the ''Moreş'' and Tisa at a place called ''Crij''"}}

Also, Fakirbakir's paragraph is quite unclear. Which are "Romanians' earliest chronicles from the 16th and 17th centuries"? There are not plenty of Romanian chronicles in that age (you can count on the fingers of one hand) and as far as I know this idea is present only in the Moldo-Russian Chronicle. Correct me if I am wrong. ] (]) 21:26, 29 September 2014 (UTC)

== Migration during King Vladislaus ==


== "General view" ==
The only source I found is the Moldo-Russian chronicle, which refers to King Vladislav, not to the King Vladislaus. ] if you insist that this info exists in the book, please copy-paste here the relevant quotes. Thanks in advance! <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 21:42, 1 October 2014 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


'''The general view''' is that the territory where the language formed was a large one, consisting of both the north and the south of the Danube (encompassing the regions of ], ], and possibly ]), more precisely to the north of the ]
:Please read the well sourced section "'Dismounting' by Dragoș" ]. ] (]) 01:02, 2 October 2014 (UTC)


I have some reasons, ], why this shouldn't be in the lead:
] you did not answer to the request of IP 158.58.175.101, namely to present the exact quotes from the provided source (Vekony 2000) that support the statement "The earliest Romanian chronicles wrote of the migration of the Romanians' ancestors in the reign of one "King Vladislaus"
] (]) 10:51, 3 October 2014 (UTC)
:Why don't you look for Vekony's book if you are interested? Here is the pdf version of the book:] (])


# It replaces the '''admigration theory''', which is notable.
:: I already checked the source and I was not able to find the alleged information. If you remove the Failed verification again witout providing the requested quote(s) from Vekony's book I will feel obliged to report you.
# The "general view" is the '''Daco-Roman theory'''. It's held by the majority of scholars.
] (]) 05:26, 4 October 2014 (UTC)
# The cited sources (Sala, Dindelegan, Pop), AFAIK descend the Romanians mainly from the Daco-Romans. They believe that Romanized elements from south of the Danube can also be found in their people, just as probably 99% of supporters of the '''Daco-Roman theory'''. "''The theory of Daco-Roman continuity argues that the Romanians are '''mainly''' descended from the Daco-Romans, a people developing through the cohabitation of the native Dacians and the Roman colonists in the province of Dacia Traiana (primarily in present-day Romania) north of the river Danube.''" If they bind the survival of the Daco-Roman population to the south to north migration, than they are supporters of the '''admigration theory''', but they certainly didn't develop a fourth theory.


What do you think? ] (]) 09:12, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
:::: No, you did not check, because if you had checked it, you could have found it easily. Try it again (in the references, the abbreviation "pp" stands for "pages": you can find the information on pages 11-14. ] (]) 11:31, 4 October 2014 (UTC)
:::And the "general view" contradicts the view presented in international literature that emphasizes that the venue of the Romanian ethnogenesis is uncertain. Furthermore, the present lead does not represent the main body of the article, so the previous text is to be restored. ] (]) 09:28, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
:That is not the case: The 3 theories refer to the second and third stages of Romanian language, when Common Romanian (5th or 6th century up to 11th or 12th) and then Common Daco-Romanian (12th or 13th century up to 16th) was used. The first stage is the '''local Vulgar Latin'''. Vulgar Latin in its particular variant, called Danubian Latin, that gave way to Common Romanian, was spoken exactly as the phrasing says. That is when the language formed, roughly in the first half of the first millennium. The article, and in general the topic of Romanian language, is deficitary in understanding and presenting this distinctions. The admigration theory can be presented separately, I didn't consider it notable because as @] said somewhere "if the theory includes the territory north of the Danube it is part of continuity theory" - again, and I can't stress this enough, '''the 3 theories speak of later stages of the language, when it was already formed''' ie when we can speak of it as a separate, individual language. By the way, as it stands, Pană Dindelegan is the foremost authority in the study of Romanian language at the moment, and to answer Borsoka as well, her "view" and the views of other Romanian linguists such as Sala are not some local nationalist opinions opposed to "International literature", '''they are the current International literature''' on the subject, '''published in Cambridge and Oxford''' guides to the language's nature and history. If the article opposes this, it is the article that needs to change - wiki editors should not take the liberty of compiling texts form disparate sources in order to promote their own opinion. ] (]) 10:12, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
::1. You unilaterally changed a stable version of the lead without discussing it. 2. You ignored that there are three editors who oppose your edit. Please stop edit warring and read ] carefully because edit warring may have serious consequences. 3. The stable version summarizes the text of the main body, your preferred version introduces a text that is not mentioned in the main text. 4. Your text presents a scholarly PoV as a fact: no, it is not a general view that the venue of the Romanians' ethnogenesis included lands both to the north and to the south of the Danube. There are several scholars cited in the article who do not accept this vies. ] (]) 11:08, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
:::It is not "a scholarly POV", and it is not "Romanian ethnogenesis", it is language attestation. I think you fail to make the distinction, which I explained earlier. The version stands, you guys need to familiarize yourselves with the subject and stop changing it to your POV. Please do not threaten me with "serious consequences", it is a serious enough as it is that 3 users suddenly and simultaneously decide something should be changed. ] (]) 11:15, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
::Because the article is about the origin of the Romanian people and not the language, therefore it's not the 1/3 of the lead's purpose to talk about that, instead of presenting the three theories on that.
::I don't see how what you wrote presents the three stages of development of the Daco-Romanian language anyways. ] (]) 11:20, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
::::Editors of two international encyclopedias of the Romance languages do not accept Dindelegan's and Sala's PoV as a fact. I did not say that the two Romanian linguists are nationalists. I only referred to the fact that they are representatives of one of the well-known scholarly theories about the Romanians' ethnogenesis - the continuity theory. I did not threaten you, I draw your attention to the consequences of edit warring, fully in accordance with the relevant policy. I think unilateral changes of stable texts and edit wars can be described as a strange behaviour. ] (]) 12:12, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
:::::Which are the other 2 international encyclopedias?
:::::Did they declare themselves as supporters of a theory? Is Schramm or Schutz a supporter of one side or international literature?
:::::Edit war? Did I change your edits or did you change mine? ] (]) 14:46, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
:::::::1. Cambridge/Oxford cited in the article and the lead. 2. They are representatives of a theory: they are convinced that Romanian descended of a variant of Latin that was spoken in many provinces, including Dacia Traiana, and Dacia Traiana was part of the territory where Common Romanian developed. 3. Schramm and Schutz are representatives of an opposite theory. They are convinced that Romanian developed from a variant spoken in the middle of the Balkan Peninsula, and the first Romanian speakers did not move to lands to the north of the Lower Danube before the 12th century. 4. You rewrote the lead without discussing your changes, deleted a reference to a third theory (although it is verified in the main text of the article) and introduced an allegedly "general view" referring to books written by representatives of one of the theories. ] (]) 15:44, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
::::::::1. Cambridge/Oxford have also published the sources I cited. Why would one be cited and the other not?
::::::::2. No, that's completely inaccurate. Everybody, including Schramm, is convinced Romanian descended from the Latin spoken in those provinces, the issue is where it was spoken after Latin seized to be a living language.
::::::::3. Agreed. As such their views should not be presented as "main literature".
::::::::4. As I said, I have no problem adding the admigration theory, I simply followed your reasoning that it is either north or south. Admigration theory though speaks of the second stage of language, when it was already formed. ] (]) 16:32, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
:1. Nobody said that any of the sources cannot be cited. However, a PoV cannot be presented as a general view. 2. No, Schramm, Schütz, etc do not say that Dacia Traiana or Upper Pannonia played any role in the formation of the Romanian language. For instance from the Latin variant spoken in Hispania at least 3 Romance languaged developed. 3. Their views are presented as PoVs. 4. Perhaps we should present the theories as they are presented in RSs. ] (]) 16:54, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
::1.Then why are we not citing them?
::2. Schramm says '''Common Romanian or Wurzelstock''' in his phrasing developed south of the Danube after 600 CE (page 20 in my Romanian language copy) from the popular Latin, he does not contest popular Latin being spoken in all those provinces (he does say Dacians did not contribute to it which is not the same thing). No serious researcher contests this popular Latin was spoken in those provinces. I don't have Schutz at hand but I doubt he makes a different claim.
::3. Then why object if I double their views by opposing view? (see river names origin)
::4. RSs? ] (]) 17:25, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
1. We can, and the article does cite them, but we cannot present their PoV as a "general view". 2. Popular Latin was also spoken in what is today Algeria, Tunesia, etc. 3. I do not object. That the large river's name are of pre-Roman origin are mentioned in the article. 4. Reliable sources. ] (]) 18:34, 10 November 2022 (UTC)


:1. They literary say general view. How should we then phrase it? Hal of our sources say the general view is clear and another half say the general view is unclear?
::::I want to ask ], who checked the book, which are "the earliest Romanian chronicles" that refer to "King Vladislav". OK, we have the "legend came down to us from the annals of the Russian church in Voskresen" (one single chronicle). But which are the other early Romanian chronicles (because plural is used in Borsoka's phrase from the article)
:2. why is this so difficult ? The Vulgar Latin spoken developed before 5th or 6th century in a particular way which became Common Romanian. The Popular Latin spoken in North Africa was the same to begin with and gradually changed during the same period into North African Romance.
] (]) 09:33, 6 October 2014 (UTC)
:4. Being which ones exactly? For me RS especially includes Romanian Academy sources. ] (]) 19:22, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
::I see the discussion has frozen. Can you (]) give a reason why should the formation of the Romanian language be explained as explicitly as the theories on the ethnogenesis which the article is about (see short desc.) and the lead should summarize? Why should that be written so far from the second sentence that already gives enough specification (I again emphasize) in the introduction of the article about another subject? Please also take it into consideration that citations should be avoided in the begginning. ] (]) 18:10, 11 November 2022 (UTC)
:::It is simply because the discussion begins with the language exposition. I don't know how many times I have to repeat this, Romanian language formed from Vulgar Latin spoken on both sides of the Danube, that is an uncontestable fact. If we follow a short description of language with ethnogenesis theories it implies the opposite, that the language formed sometime after the 5th or 6th century. We are being amateurish in this case, since the ethnogenesis theories talk about the part after the Danubian Limes seized to function, when Common Romanian was already an independent - '''formed''' - language. ] (]) 00:37, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
::No, it is not an uncontestable fact. Could we say Spanish developed from a variant of Latin spoken in Hispania, North Africa and Gaul? Migrations between the provinces were nor unusual. What is incontestable that we do not know from which variant of Latin Romanian developed. We do not know because the substratum has not been identified. ] (]) 02:24, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
:::"This is the stage we have reached in the modern English-speaking and Spanish-speaking world; it is, for example, quite common to hear the noun phrases ‘Australian English’ or ‘español venezolano’, but it is still thought of as a bit exaggerated to use the noun phrases ‘Australian’ or ‘venezolano’, as if the speech of those areas no longer qualified to fit within English or Spanish."
:::"The question of periodization is thus not so much that of how and when a language changes, for change is continuous (‘seamless’, in Penny’s description, who is there comparing diachronic stages with the seamlessness of the synchronic dialect continuum), as of why a language should change its name."
:::"The Thraco-Dacians, a people of Indo-European origin, occupied in the pre-Christian era a vast territory from the Carpathians to the Aegean Islands. Contact between the Romans and the Thraco-Dacians occurred both to the north and to the south of the Danube."
:::"There is a long list of languages which have been invoked as substrates acting in various ways on the lexical and structural development of Romance languages. For many of these (e.g., Ligurian, ‘Alpine’, Sicanian, ‘Palaeo-Sardinian’, ‘Illyrian’, ‘Messapic’, ‘Venetic’), the evidence is frankly so tenuous, or dubious, that there is little point in dwelling on them."
:::A few quotes from Cambridge History of the Romance Languages, a book with multiple authors published in 2016, to hopefully help you understand where I'm coming from.
:::We know which variant of Latin Romanian evolved from because we use "umbrella terms", phrases that cover extensive areas and periods, for multiple features. A single or a couple of features do not individualize a language from the main group. Therefore we can say Iberian Latin, Danubian Latin, or North African Latin without tedious repetition of the fact this are all geographical adjectives. They were a single language. When we step over the threshold of 5th and 6th century in our case of interest, Danubian Latin is called Common Romanian. We need to reinforce here it was not a clear cut change, as in it suddenly stopped being Latin in a particular year, it is the same language that we, the modern researchers, label differently for convenience. To someone in the 6th century the language he/she spoke was essentially the same with what their grandparents spoke a century earlier. So variant does not mean a different Latin language. It was the same Latin all over the Romanized territories and we call it Danubian Latin or say, Balkan Latin maybe, because that is where it was geographically attested in regards to later development, not because it was a different language from Iberian Latin.
:::As for substrate, as the quotes above say, the large and inclusive phrase Thraco-Dacian is used, meaning the language spoken in the eastern half of the Balkans. If this touches a sensitive cord of the adherent to one of the other Origin of Romanians supporters, I need to make it very clear to everyone Thraco-Dacian does not mean the language features come from Sarmisegetusa or any individual spot on the map, words are not people to live and belong to an exact location, they are used wherever the language is used, in our case a territory far larger than modern Romania, therefore it neither confirms or deny the continuity theory, for example. It is further understood from this phrasing Dacian was a Thracian language or dialect, not a different language altogether. So yes, we know what the substratum is, it's just not the answer some hoped for, that is: it does not reduce the language evolution to a small region and particular ancient state or tribe.
:::The insistence on having the substratum named in a different way is a moribund idea that, as Gyalu22 and I were discussing, has had only a couple of supporters in recent decades and is no longer repeated in specialized literature. Furthermore, we must not exaggerate the influence of the substrate in language formation. Substrate added features that contribute but do not define Romance language evolution. If the substrate was definitory we would not speak of Spanish as a Romance language but perhaps as an Iberian language, likewise French would a Celtic language. The accent here is on the geographical area more than on the type of substrate which is there mostly ho help us label stages of a continuous process. ] (]) 12:04, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
::::The "general view" text doesn't say anything about the substratum so I don't know why are you discussing that. The territory of the formation of Romanian is disputed, so/and it doesn't have to be explained thoroughly in this lead for said reasons. Just because the place where the language originates from is briefly and loosely defined it doesn't mean it has to be exactly defined. ] (]) 13:25, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
:::::Just to complete Aristeus01's quotes:
:::::*ad 3.: "The Thraco-Dacians, a people of Indo-European origin, occupied in the pre-Christian era a vast territory from the Carpathians to the Aegean Islands. Contact between the Romans and the Thraco-Dacians occurred both to the north and to the south of the Danube''', but initially to the south, where the Romans had conquered all the Balkan Peninsula up to the Danube in the first century BC.'''"
:::::*ad 4. "There is a long list of languages which have been invoked as substrates acting in various ways on the lexical and structural development of Romance languages. For many of these (e.g., Ligurian, ‘Alpine’, Sicanian, ‘Palaeo-Sardinian’, ‘Illyrian’, ‘Messapic’, ‘Venetic’), the evidence is frankly so tenuous, or dubious, that there is little point in dwelling on them. '''Very often one has a list of vocabulary items (often toponyms, geomorphic terms or plant names) of no obvious etymology but distributed geographically in an area which corresponds, more or less, to the territory in which the assumed substrate was spoken, so that a substrate explanation seems appealing but cannot be proved.'''"
:::::*What does Sala say about Thraco-Dacian? a.) "The Thraco-Dacians, a people of Indo-European origin, occupied in the pre-Christian era a vast territory from the Carpathians. '''(Whether Thracian and Geto-Dacian are different languages is debated, but the general view is that they are the same.)'''" b.) "'''There is very little direct information about Thraco-Dacian:''' a few glosses (fifty-seven 'Dacian' plant names mentioned in two treatises on medical botany ...), personal names, tribes, deities, human settlements, hydronyms and names of mountains preserved in ancient authors, in Greek or Latin inscriptions, or on coins..." c. "To identify Thraco-Dacian words, two major methods are used: (a) comparison of Romanian and Albanian ... the latter being considered the direct descendant of Thracian. '''(There is no way of knowing, however, whether a term is inherited from the substrate, or borrowed from Albanian.)'''" . Based on the quotes we can conclude that Sala does not write in the ''Cambridge History of Romance Languages'' that there is a general view stating that Romanian is the descendant of Latin variants spoken in vast regions of Southeastern and Central Europe. He admits that the existence of "Thraco-Dacian" is dubious. Furthermore, he confirms that the alleged "Thraco-Dacian substrate words" in Romanian may have actually been borrowed from Albanian.
:::::*Just for comparison, I quote an other specialist's words about the grouping Thracian and Dacian together (which is a general view according to Sala!): "'''All attempts to relate Thracian to ... Dacian''' (... preserved solely in plant names in Hesychius) '''are ... purely speculative'''." . Fortson's words are not contradicted by an other notable linguist, who says that "Fragmentarily attested IE languages can be divided into two basic groups: those that have at least one attested text/inscription and those that are attested only through onosmatics or individual words in texts written in other languages. In the first group there are ... Venetic ... Thracian ... In the second group we find languages like ... Dacian ..."
:::::*Summarizing my view: we are not here to describe a scholarly PoV as a "general view" even if the a scholar describes their own view as such. ] (]) 14:18, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
:::::I was just replying to Borsoka about substratum.
:::::To be completely fair, the definition of the language is not just a passing mention. It is there as part of the debate, (and it should not be used in such a way in my opinion), in a neutral text Latin should not even be mentioned since it is too broad of a topic to help. As you can see from a reply added recently, it is not me that insists on the language to be defined and used here. All I am saying, if we must say something about the language, it needs to be exact, not just a vague mention. Otherwise there is no point in saying it. ] (]) 14:27, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
::::::No, we do not need to say anything of the substratum: it is linked. Alternatively, we can list some of the possible substrate languages. What is clear, we cannot avoid mentioning that the so-called substrate words in Romanian may actually be loanwords from Albanian. Actually, all these are already mentioned in the article. So we can stop discussing the issue. ] (]) 15:13, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
::::::]
::::::It is stated in the start, then the article gets on the theories on the ethnogenesis. As ] proved it, there's no general view on the subject, and it's not fair to represent only one. Instead what everyone agrees on is represented. That text is there since years probably and no one criticized it. It says Romanian formed on the territory north of the line in this map. Saying that it formed on almost all of this territory doesn't specify the location more. ] (]) 15:15, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
:::::::Of course Borsoka proved it: '''''my view''': we are not here to describe a scholarly PoV as a "general view" even if the a scholar describes their own view as such.'' Her view and yours top the view of an academician published by Oxford. I will not take part in this sordid affair anymore, do as you like. Misplaced Pages has clearly lost its way if it allows such biased opinions to be the norm just because a few editors agree on it. ] (]) 17:11, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
:::::::::No, editors' views do not top the view of an academician (Sala) published by Cambridge (not by Oxford). Sala referred to one of his theories - the presentation of Thracian and Dacian as a single language - as a "general view" in a work published by CUP. However, this allegedly "general view" is described by an other linguist (]) as a pure speculation. A third linguist ] also separates the two languages (namely, Thracian and Dacian). Again, we cannot present a scholar's PoV as a general view if it is presented as a highly speculative theory in an other scholar's work. Perhaps, you should familiarize yourself with our community's basic policies, such as ]: PoV pushing is not in line with them. ] (]) 17:52, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
::::::::::Yes, @], it was Pana Dindelegan, not Sala we are discussing. Sala is offering a supporting view. So it is not just Oxford, but Cambridge as well that we call POVs here, based on lawyering Misplaced Pages rules. ] (]) 19:18, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
:::::::::::You were quoting Sala's text above. I proved above what a "general view" means in the context of this article: it can be labelled as speculation by other scholars. That Romanian is a direct descendant of the Latin variant spoken in Dacia Traiana in any way is also a scholarly PoV, not a "general view". ] (]) 02:00, 13 November 2022 (UTC)
::::::::::::Hello ]!
::::::::::::I see you would like to put the lead here and in other ] as generial view that the Romanian language was formed from Latin in Dacia Trajana (Transylvania) and it was uninterruptedly spoken 2000 years long until today. This is the Daco-Roman theory, which is highly debated by historians, which is mainly accepted in Romania, but the historiography of the surrounding local countries do not accept it for a simple reason, because this theory does not agree with their own historiography and their local historical knowledge. For instance, Transylvania was part of Hungary until 1920, and it was important region in the Hungarian history, which means the Hungarian historiography or local historical knowledge relates to the region. And the Hungarian (or the surronding countries, Poland, Austria, Germany, Bulgaria, Russia, Byzantine...) historiography in the territory of the Kingdom of Hungary does not know any Romanian presence before the 13th century, and I suppose the people should speak a language and not the stones, trees or birds, so I have a simple question, if we do not know about Romanian presence in the region then who spoke that language there? What is the evidences the Romanian language was spoken before the 13th century in Transylvania? I can accept your theory, if you provide real convincing historical evidences, because I see this theory is just a speculation. I think 1000 years is a huge gap between Roman Dacia and the documented presence of the Vlachs in the region. ] (]) 12:50, 13 November 2022 (UTC)


== Rome ==
:::::That is a question that might be better directed to others. I thought it might be useful to remove one un-necessary cause of friction. The source does indeed present a quotation from the "annals of the Russian church in Voskresen" but it does so without further attribution and I can't easily check it, or its standing among modern academics, any further. I would probably change the sentence to something like "The annals of the Russian church in Voskresen, written in Old Church Slavonic about 1504, describe a migration of Rumanians to Hungary about a century before." I hope this helps. I'll now take this page off my watch list, but feel free to ping me if I can be of any help. ] (]) 10:07, 6 October 2014 (UTC)
::::::{{U|Richard Keatinge}}, thank you for your remarks. Please also cheque Spinei 1986 on page 197 (actually, the name "Vladislaus" was borrowed from Spinei instead of the Hungarian form "László" used by Vékony). I also refer to Vékony's reference to the early Romanian chronicles by logofat Istratie, dascal Simion and calugar Misail who unanimously connect the Romanians' settlement with King László the Saint (on pages 12-13 from Vékony cited work). ] (]) 11:52, 6 October 2014 (UTC)


Rome has 2.743.796 Population ] (]) 11:49, 6 March 2023 (UTC)
::@]. The 1504 legend is also referred at ], which is more suitable and also includes text about other chronicles (for instance ] and ]). I suggest not repeat the idea at ]
] ] (]) 14:18, 6 October 2014 (UTC)
(]) 14:17, 6 October 2014 (UTC)
:::Exactly! I don't understand why ] also inserts it to ''Theories on the Romanians' ethnogenesis'' section. That is not the place for including the evolution of the theories and the written documents supporting each theory ] (]) 12:24, 10 October 2014 (UTC)


== Geographic space == == Rásonyi ==


{{Ping|Gyalu22}} Rásonyi published his views about the association of the Hungarian chronicles Blachi with the Bulaqs more than 40 years ago. Could you refer to works published by international publishing houses accepting Rásonyi's view? If not, we should not mention it either as per ]. ] (]) 16:49, 12 April 2023 (UTC)
I propose as geographic space: Roman provinces and Dacian provinces
] (]) 07:31, 8 October 2014 (UTC)


:''Az Árpád-kori Magyarország Történeti Földrajza'' volume 2 by György Györffy (see the p. 48) comes to mind, but that's even older. I've recently read another publication from the journal ''Történelmi Szemle'' (27th volume 4nd issue, p. 633) that seems to support the "Bulaq theory" over the Vlach one.
:For what? Do you suggest the following sentence: "The Romanians', or Vlachs', ethnogenesis started in the Roman provinces south of the Danube which were under Roman rule for 800 years. Their ancestors migrated to the territory of the former Roman province of Dacia in the 12th-13th centuries, which gave rise to a theory that claims that the Romanians are descended from the Roman colonist of this short-lived province and the autochtonous Dacians."? ] (]) 13:10, 8 October 2014 (UTC)
:I don't think that the view of Spinei is also covered and accepted by many works from international publishing houses. ] (]) 19:42, 12 April 2023 (UTC)
::One of Spinei's works are published by BRILL. The other work is referred to by Denis Deletant's studies about Romanian history. ] (]) 01:06, 13 April 2023 (UTC)
:::{{Ping|Gyalu22|OrionNimrod}} could you refer to books or articles published by international academic publishing houses that support Rásonyi's theory? ] (]) 02:31, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
::::I mentioned two.
::::Neither of these views are discussed and accepted by many books or articles published by international academic publishing houses. ] (]) 08:38, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
:::::1. The page you are referring to above does '''not''' support (or mention) the "Bulaq theory" ({{cite book|last=Györffy|first=György|author-link=György Györffy|year=1987|title=Doboka, erdélyi Fehér, Esztergom, Fejér, Fogaras, Gömör és Győr megye|trans-title=Doboka, Transylvanian Fehér, Esztergom, Fejér, Fogaras, Gömör és Győr Counties|series=Az Árpád-kori Magyarország történeti földrajza |volume=II.|publisher=Akadémiai Kiadó|language=hu|isbn=963-05-3533-5}}) 2. A random reference to the theory in respected journal does not verify the notablity of the theory. 3. I maintain that Rásonyi's theory is a typical marginal theory. Would you refer to books or articles published in English that support it? ] (]) 09:16, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
::::::# I don't have the book, but from an online preview I saw ''"A blak etnikumot illetően mongol kori források hozhatók fel annak tanúsítására, hogy itt a Volga-vidékéről eredeztetett török féle blak, ulaq népelemről lehet szó, e középkori tudós "''. And Györffy is a reputed mainstream historian.
::::::# My reference was wrong. On page 633, the theory is only explained, the author expresses sympathy on the next page (though he says on 633 already that he holds the ''Blacus'' name doesn't have anything to do with the Vlachs). I quote: ''"A blak, blök nép azonosításában két lehetőséget látok: 1. kunok előtti török, 2. eltörökösödött iráni népszórvány neve. Az előnyomuló kunok maguk közé szervezték ezt a szórványt, ennek következtében, de korábban is kerülhettek blak, blök szórványok a Volga mentére. Ahová viszont újlatin nyelvű vlachok nem érkeztek. Úgy vélem, hogy Anonymus kun körből merítette a Blacus (Blak) nevet, és ezért alkalmazta a szókezdő B-t"''.
::::::] (]) 09:44, 6 May 2023 (UTC)


== Change the title from "Origin of the Romanians" to the more academic wording "Ethnogenesis of the Romanians" ==
:::More convenient for all theories: The ethnogenesis started in the Roman and Dacian provinces.
Convenient for all theories. South or North of Danube.
] (]) 14:07, 8 October 2014 (UTC)
::::Maybe you do not clearly understand all the theories: at least according one of the main theories, the "Dacian provinces" played no role in the Romanians' ethnogenesis. ] (]) 14:37, 8 October 2014 (UTC)
::::: Maybe you do not know geography. According to continuity theory, Dacian provinces were the main teritory of origins. Read all pages!
I know that you deny even Hungarian chronicles of Anonymus and Keza. You make history denying al chronicles favourable to continuity theory ! So Dacian and Roman provinces cover continuity and contrary theories.
] (]) 09:17, 10 October 2014 (UTC)


Change the title from "Origin of the Romanians" to the more academic wording "Ethnogenesis of the Romanians". Thanks in advance. ] (]) 05:54, 27 April 2023 (UTC)


:If many people wouldn't understand the word "ethnogenesis", that's a strike against it. ] (]) 09:14, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
The introduction is not '''balanced''' Onle line for continuity and 4 lines against continuity.
:'''Oppose''' - I also think the "Origin of the Romanians" title is easier to understand. ] (]) 09:22, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
It is a propaganda of discontinuity ?
] (]) 09:39, 10 October 2014 (UTC) :'''Oppose''' - I think the same that "Origin of the Romanians" title is easier to understand. ] (]) 09:24, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:'''Oppose''' - Besides comprehensibility, similarity with the title of other articles covering the origin/ethnogenesis of other nations. Type in "origin of the" in the search bar.] (]) 14:00, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:I'm waiting for Romanians to vote as well. Seems unfair for only Hungarians to vote regarding wikipedia articles about Romanians...Hungarians opposing a proposal by a Romanian is not something uncommon but quite expected. On the other hand, typing "Origins of" indeed shows different results. So on that point I understand the perspective.
:However "Origins of" for saying Romanians are a few kilometers South or North of the Danube is not the same as origins of groups coming thousands of kilometers away from Siberia or India... ] (]) 14:22, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
::I can tell of myself and OrionNimrod that we are Hungarians, but I don't know how you determined the ethnicity of the two other voters. ] (]) 16:55, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:'''Oppose''' not a familiar word to many. I'm not Hungarian. Since there are many theories, you could follow ]. ] (]) 14:32, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
::Than rename it to "Origin hypotheses of the Romanians"? ] (]) 15:49, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:::Yes, I'd support that. ] (]) 16:19, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
::Seems many nations has many origin theories. Hungarians also has origin theories. I think modern genetic could help, however because all nations mixed during centuries each other of various levels, perhaps the combination of more theory can be also the truth. ] (]) 17:12, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:::I'm so glad we finally agree. I knew we could eventually see eye to eye. Like I already said "I personally think on all articles instead of "Origins of Croats/Romanians/Albanians etc" it should be changed to "Ethnogenesis hypotheses of Croats/Romanians/Albanians" etc. Just saying "origins" doesn't sound academic but almost derogatory and not just "simplified". This is an academic issue, not a "simplistic" issue. "
:::This is not the "simple English language version" but just the normal English language version, so words like "ethnogenesis" should be fine. Ethno means "ethnicity" and "genesis" means "origin". ] (]) 17:19, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:Maybe I'm asking too much but has anyone read the Romanians wikipedia page but the German version?https://de.wikipedia.org/Rum%C3%A4nen 10% is a few words about Romanians like "there 23,8 million Romanians around the world" and 90% is about the "Ethnogenesis of the Romanians" ("Die rumänische Ethnogenese"). This must be the most unprofessional article I've ever read on wikipedia. It's nothing like the superior English version with many references and topics regarding Romanians. Nothing about the ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ].
:I asked in German using google translate on the German wikipedia version of "Romanians" but nobody helped *sigh*. Can anyone please help? ] (]) 17:44, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
'''Comment''' See also ]. ] (]) 16:42, 27 April 2023 (UTC)


:I already said "typing "Origins of" indeed shows different results. So on that point I understand the perspective."
::There are ~5 lines for both of the theories, what are you talking about? ] (]) 12:13, 10 October 2014 (UTC)
:I personally think on all articles instead of "Origins of Croats/Romanians/Albanians etc" it should be changed to "Ethnogenesis hypotheses of Croats/Romanians/Albanians" etc. Just saying "origins" doesn't sound academic but almost derogatory and not just "simplified". This is an academic issue, not a "simplistic" issue. ] (]) 17:10, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:::Eurocentral, you clearly misunderstand WP: it is not me or you who can deny or support anything, because we need to use sources when editing encyclopedia. So it is not "me" who denies the reliability of Anonymus's report of the Vlachs in Transylvania, but a number of scholars (including Macartney, Deletant and other British historians). ] (]) 05:50, 11 October 2014 (UTC)
::# I think it's more important for a title to be clear than to be "academic sounding".
::# The article doesn't only outline the hypotheses about the origin of the Romanians, most of it is about archaeological, linguistic, genetic and literal data regarding the ancient times.
::] (]) 19:45, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:::There are plenty "academic sounding" titles on wikipedia, especially since this is not the simple English version. ] (]) 19:49, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
:::Then just "Ethnogenesis of the Romanians" without "Ethnogenesis hypotheses of Romanians". ] (]) 19:52, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
::::"Origin" for similarity with other articles. ] (]) 05:01, 28 April 2023 (UTC)
:::::Well, "ethnogenesis" can be added to the other articles in order to be similar, especially since ethnogenesis is the correct word for the academic context. ] (]) 07:47, 28 April 2023 (UTC)
::::::There is nothing incorrect about the word origin. ] (]) 16:24, 28 April 2023 (UTC)


* '''Oppose'''. There's no other Misplaced Pages article titled "Ethnogenesis of" but several using "Origins of". Per Misplaced Pages policy ] (with other articles) the best option here would be to keep the current version. Furthermore, Ethnogenesis does indeed sound more professional but not necessarily better because of that, "Origins of" has the benefit of simplicity. ] ] ] 13:14, 28 April 2023 (UTC)
== Vulgar Latin ==


*'''Oppose''' - sorry, Ninhursag3, but this article is constructed around the location of Romanians during the late Antiquity-Early Middle Ages, hence the term "origin" is more accurate. The ethnogenesis as a process is discussed here only in supporting arguments related to the possible location. Perhaps a different article dealing with mechanism of the process and its implications might be needed, yet I'm not sure wikipedians won't see it as forking.--] (]) 08:27, 30 April 2023 (UTC)
What did Schramm write? Did he use the "Vulgar Latin" expression? It may be misleading. ] (]) 12:00, 10 October 2014 (UTC)
::I don't know, but ''Vulgar Latin'' is more precise.
::"'''Vulgar Latin''' is a generic term of the ''nonstandard'' (as opposed to '']'') ]s of ] from which the ] developed. The word ''vulgar'' in this case refers to its original meaning of ''common'' or ''vernacular'', and not the more pejorative usage, ''tasteless'' or ''indecent''." (from the article ]). ] (]) 12:07, 10 October 2014 (UTC)
:::If you do not know then do not change the sentence. It may be misleading. ] (]) 12:33, 10 October 2014 (UTC)
::::I know, it is not right to alter sourced text. I will check the sources and add new ones if necessary.
::::The initial phrasing (''Romanians, known by the exonym Vlachs in the Middle Ages, speak a language descended from Latin which was once spoken in south-eastern Europe'') was even more misleading. It could have benn understood like this: ''Romanians, known by the exonym Vlachs in the Middle Ages, '''speak a language''' (descended from Latin) '''which was once spoken in south-eastern Europe''''' ] (]) <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned"> — Preceding ] comment added 12:52, 10 October 2014 (UTC)</span><!--Template:Undated--> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


== Vlachs from Greece == == Romance language ==


{{re|WikiUser70176}} The sources which you have ]d are awfull. IMHO, I would go for only Martin Maiden. 2016. Romanian, Istro-Romanian, Megleno-Romanian, and Aromanian. In Adam Ledgeway and Martin Maiden (eds.), The Oxford guide to the Romance languages, 91-125. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ] (]) 18:49, 11 May 2023 (UTC)
Why are Vlachs from Greece mentioned in the first phrase? As far as I know, ] and ] are two different peoples. ] (]) 12:16, 10 October 2014 (UTC)


:That was not a very nice and civil thing to do, i.e. undoing my edit before I even got the chance to respond. '''I was about to say "thanks!" for pointing me to Maiden'''. It took me a while to locate the source as I don't have access to it, even with my academic credentials. And to read it. And to formulate a concise and neutral POV paragraph. Instead of my thanks, I will say:
:Their languages are considered by linguists to have evolved from the same original ]. ] (]) 20:03, 10 October 2014 (UTC)
:* 1. I cite what I read. If you want me to cite something else, give me that something else, or better yet, do it yourself.
:* 2. All my sources comply with WP:VERIFY. Graduate theses are accepted and I have no clue about what ideological book you refer to.
:* 3. "Awfull" (sic!) is not an argument, is an opinion, therefore safely disregarded. My sources follow WP:SOURCE policy. Check again.
:* 4. The place to debate your proposed paragraph is here, on the talk page, not on the main page. BTW, I was fine with your proposed paragraph. I will add that "the ] is a linguistic group that evolved from several dialects of ] which separated from the ] languages in the course of the period from the 5th to the 8th centuries.<ref>"Istoria limbii române" ("History of the Romanian Language"), Vol. II, Ed. Academia Română, Bucharest, 1969</ref>. As a scholar myself, I value ''any'' country's National Academy's point of view - scholarly speaking only - above any other source (save for consensus in peer-reviewed papers), as does WP:SOURCE, as should any editor that values objectivity. At the very least it should be mentioned. I have only the 1969 edition but if you have a more recent one, feel free to amend my sentence.
:* 5. Please don't start an edit-war. I am not an extremist or a nationalist or whathaveyou. You also removed a reference to the Max Planck Institute Linguistic Database (why?!, if even these people aren't reliable, than who on Earth are?!). In my experience, people who remove academic references are POV pushers and there is no debate with them. Consequently, I will not engage you. In addition, given your belligerent past, your tendency to hold grudges as evidenced by your editing history, and - most importantly - your present aggressive tone to me, someone you had no previous interactions with, this shall be my only reply and edit here. So if you revert my edits, so be it; enjoy ''your page'' and POV pushing. I'm out. Cheers.
: ''']]''' 20:17, 11 May 2023 (UTC)


::Hmm... I don't agree. The Academy of Sciences of the Socialist Republic of Romania was a strongly politicized and ideological body. So, even if they wrote that the sky is blue, ] another source for it. Vladimir Tismaneanu and some other peers of him were making sport of Ceausescu's speech introducing ''juche'' to Romania, but an older professor reminded them that's how Stalinist purges have started. That happened in 1971, see ], but of course National-Communism was introduced to the Romanian people soon after the death of Dej, with many nationalists of the Iron Guard and the historical parties getting rehabilitated in order to write propaganda for the regime. Or since even the early 1960s (before Dej's death). See ].
::But they are still different people, as Spaniards and Italians are different people. And no, Vlachs they didn't speak "proto-Romanian". Rather, Romanian is a standarization of various East Romance languages native to Wallachia, Moldavia, etc; whilst the Vlachs of Macedonia, Serbia, Greece evolved their lanaguegs from their own, ''distinct'', albeit very similar, version of East Romance dialects. ] (]) 06:19, 13 October 2014 (UTC)
:::Please read more carefully Piledhighandeep's above remark: nobody claims that Vlachs speak a "Proto-Romanian" language. And if you read any of the books written by lingusts which are cited in the article you will find that all scholars agree that the four variants of Romanian developed from the same "Proto-Romanian language". Would you please explain how East Romance languages could be native to Moldavia which was never part of the Roman Empire? Could we also speak of the native Romance languages to South America or the native Germanic languages of South Africa as well? ] (]) 09:28, 13 October 2014 (UTC)


::And can assure you that if we debase our standards to recognize Master's theses as ], the hell would break loose at Misplaced Pages.
::::I thought I had understood it: He is stating that extant Romanian and Vlach languages derive from one common ancestor - 'proto-Romanian', ie that particular type of 'Vulgar Latin' spoken in the Roman Balkans ?
::::If so, then my contention is that this is not fully correct. Whilst entirely acknowledging that this is indeed a ''communis opinio'', it nevertheless is concept built from flawed methodology- ie 19th century nationalism, Herderian notions of language & ethnicity, and the simplistic ''Stammbaum'' language model.
::::I am thus saying, that there were in fact several different Balkan Romance lects in existence, say, between 200 - 600. There was no standardized ' Vulgar Latin' from which they derive; although they are undoubtedly very close and mutually understandable (I presume). The only "proto" Language itself was Latin itself, with no intermediate 'proto-Romanian'. ] (]) 12:10, 13 October 2014 (UTC)


::Yup, I wrote {{tq|There were people sent to prison just because they dared to criticize Ceausescu's retarded ''juche'' ideology.}} And I can agree it is aggressive. There is however no indication that the aggressiveness was directed towards you. That's only your ''interpretation'' of what I wrote. In fact, it is directed towards my country's past and towards how historians and social scientists chose to serve the retarded ''juche'' ideology. The mystery is: why do you think I was writing that about ''you?'' You were probably not born yet at the time we are discussing. I stated a harsh truth about a harsh reality, but ''not about you.'' ] (]) 22:11, 11 May 2023 (UTC)
:::::Thank you for your above clarification. I tend to accept your above approach even if I think that there must have been a close connection among the "Vulgar Latin" or "Proto-Romanian" dialects from which the four existing Romanian variants (and their dialects) developed, because the common features of the structure of these languages and the common pool of Latin, Albanian and Common Slavic vocabulary suggest that they are much more closely related to each other than to any other languages. All the same, we need at least one scholarly work to be referred to, if we want to present our POV in WP. ] (]) 12:20, 13 October 2014 (UTC)
::] currently the Academy's view is that the language developed from the Latin spoken in the Roman provinces on the Danube (commonly referred as Danubian Latin) and went trough a stage called Common Romanian (ref Sala From Latin to Romanian). The idea that Daco-Romance languages developed separately, or from several dialects, or only in close connexion is, to my knowledge, extinct. ] (]) 13:05, 14 May 2023 (UTC)
:::@] I agree. Put it in! ''']]''' 00:46, 15 May 2023 (UTC)
::::Find another source, instead of the sick National-Communist propaganda book. There should be plenty of other sources. ] (]) 11:39, 16 May 2023 (UTC)


One ] from ] beats a dozen of dubious citations. ] (]) 19:02, 11 May 2023 (UTC)
:Of course ongoing contacts and convergence occurred. Borsoka, my comment was just in passing, to be honest. I didnt really have an issue with anything written in the main article. I am not aware of any thing new in terms of professional literature; although plenty of works in general (incl Indo-European) nothing specifically on Romanian. But this is a reflection of the stangnation in scholarship rather than the fact its not applicatble to 'proto-Romanian'. Nevertheless, the original commentator still had a valid point - from what I understand Romanians do not perceive Vlachs as 'fellow Romanians" but often call them Macedonians, etc, despite their undoubted ties ] (]) 00:16, 14 October 2014 (UTC)


We stand for ], we have no time to waste with a Master's thesis and with a book of ''ancilla ideologiae.'' I'm not even saying that that book is junk, but they were clearly running a state-sponsored ideological propaganda show. There were people sent to prison just because they dared to criticize Ceausescu's retarded ''juche'' ideology. ] (]) 19:40, 11 May 2023 (UTC)
== Dacians are a part of Thracian family ==
:I think WP:RSN thread might interest editors involved in this thread. ] (]) 15:27, 16 May 2023 (UTC)
]
::The book was not making propaganda ''for'' the Romanian people, but against it. The difference with Proletcultism was the that mystique of the tractor was replaced with sugary myths of Romanian exceptionalism. ] (]) 19:22, 16 May 2023 (UTC)
Thracians inhabited an enormous area between Aegean Sea and Western Asia Minor and Pripet marshes, Bohemia and Bug river(C. C. Giurescu, The Formation of the Romanian People (1980), p.22)


{{reflist-talk}}
Herodotus, mentions the Dacians as "the bravest and fairest of all the Thracians". Herodotus IV.93, V.3-4, V.6 and Strabo VII.3.2
wrote that Dacians belong to Thracian family.
According to Mircea Eliade, the huge number of the branches coming out of the Thracian genealogical tree would amount to approximately 200. ("The Dictionary of Religions," page. 265)
Professor Dumitru Balasa drew up a chart of these and counted no less than 150 Thracian branches (see "The Country of the Sun" or "The History of Daco-Romania," Kagaion Publishing House, 1997. Descendants of Thracians are present Romanians and Aromanians.
] (]) 17:43, 13 October 2014 (UTC)


== Why are hungarian users write about the origin of romanians? ==


I hope you banned the liars like Rásonyi from contributing, this incident should come to mind:
G. Cardos et all, "Paleo-mtDNA analysis and population genetic aspects of old Thracian populations from South-East of Romania"
Rom J Leg Med 12(4) 239-246 (2004) www.scribd.com/doc/326027/Paleo-mtDNA-analysis-and-population-genetic-aspects-of-old-Thracian-populations-from-South-East-of-Romania ()
*Casson, Lionel. "The Thracians". ''The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin'', New Series, Vol. 35, No. 1, (Summer, 1977), pp.&nbsp;2–6.
] (]) 18:03, 13 October 2014 (UTC)


https://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/IncidentArchive1073#User:Borsoka_and_User:Fakirbakir ] (]) 03:59, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
: A common but outdated assumption. Quite simply, Herodotus' purpose wasn't to give an accurate ethnolinguistic description of barbarians (ie the Thracians) (who he actually didn't know anything about), but to entertain / use for propaganda / etc. The "Thracians" were diverse people, linguistically, culturally and politically. There is no proof that Roman Era Dacians of Decebalus saw the 6th century BC Odrysians as fellow Dacians or 'brothers', nor the 3rd centruy Carpi . Rather, this is the result of an uncritical reading of Herodotus, and nationalistic sentiments shared by Balkan (Romanian and Bulgarian) scholars, who also ignore the fact that many of the 'tribes' actually appear at very different periods in prehistory. We don't even know what languages they spoke , we just have a handful of names, toponyms and even fewer inscriptions, none of which have been deciphered consensually. The greeks engaged in ethnographic stereotypes. Its like western colonists calling all native Americans "Indians", which they are not, and secondly are actually possess diverse languages, cultures, and have no 'national' feeling of belonging part of a larger 'family'.
:Could you clarify the connection between Rásonyi and myself? As far as I can remember I have never cited Rásonyi. Yes, chauvinistic Romanian editors (most of them banned from our community years ago) and their sockpuppets have made several attempts to achieve a topic ban against me for years. They have so far always failed. ] (]) 04:07, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
: Eg this can be gleamed at variously :https://www.academia.edu/382684/Peter_Delev._Stratifying_Herodotus_Local_Tribes_between_the_Lower_Axios_and_the_Nestos._Thracia_16_2005_105-121,
:https://www.academia.edu/2454127/Archaeology_and_Nationalism_in_Europe_Two_Case_Studies_from_the_Northwest_and_Southeast_of_Europe
:http://www.colbud.hu/mult_ant/Thyssen-Materials/Niculescu.htm


== Low-quality sourcing ==
: Also, there is a new ''Companion'' coming out on Ancient Thrace. One would hope it introduces some newer approaches on the subject also..


I am not tagging the article, though it would be great if someone well-versed on the topic worked on it. Most of the article is based on partisan Romanian and Hungarian scholars who are mostly of a low quality. There is also large dependence on other old, largely discredited scholars like Schramm and Georgiev. The theory of the origin north of the Danube is treated as equal with the theory of the origin south of the Danube, though nowadays there is hardly any high-quality, non-partisan linguist specializing in the Paleo-Balkans claiming that the core of the Romanian population originated north of the Danube. ] (]) 15:38, 12 March 2024 (UTC)
: finally, I don't know what's the purpose of that genetics paper. Apart from it being dated and very low resolution (they didn't even derive any haplogroups), it tells us nothing really about how Romanians 'came to be' ] (]) 00:19, 14 October 2014 (UTC)

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"General view"

The general view is that the territory where the language formed was a large one, consisting of both the north and the south of the Danube (encompassing the regions of Dacia, Moesia, and possibly Illyria), more precisely to the north of the Jiriček Line

I have some reasons, Aristeus01, why this shouldn't be in the lead:

  1. It replaces the admigration theory, which is notable.
  2. The "general view" is the Daco-Roman theory. It's held by the majority of scholars.
  3. The cited sources (Sala, Dindelegan, Pop), AFAIK descend the Romanians mainly from the Daco-Romans. They believe that Romanized elements from south of the Danube can also be found in their people, just as probably 99% of supporters of the Daco-Roman theory. "The theory of Daco-Roman continuity argues that the Romanians are mainly descended from the Daco-Romans, a people developing through the cohabitation of the native Dacians and the Roman colonists in the province of Dacia Traiana (primarily in present-day Romania) north of the river Danube." If they bind the survival of the Daco-Roman population to the south to north migration, than they are supporters of the admigration theory, but they certainly didn't develop a fourth theory.

What do you think? Gyalu22 (talk) 09:12, 10 November 2022 (UTC)

And the "general view" contradicts the view presented in international literature that emphasizes that the venue of the Romanian ethnogenesis is uncertain. Furthermore, the present lead does not represent the main body of the article, so the previous text is to be restored. Borsoka (talk) 09:28, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
That is not the case: The 3 theories refer to the second and third stages of Romanian language, when Common Romanian (5th or 6th century up to 11th or 12th) and then Common Daco-Romanian (12th or 13th century up to 16th) was used. The first stage is the local Vulgar Latin. Vulgar Latin in its particular variant, called Danubian Latin, that gave way to Common Romanian, was spoken exactly as the phrasing says. That is when the language formed, roughly in the first half of the first millennium. The article, and in general the topic of Romanian language, is deficitary in understanding and presenting this distinctions. The admigration theory can be presented separately, I didn't consider it notable because as @Borsoka said somewhere "if the theory includes the territory north of the Danube it is part of continuity theory" - again, and I can't stress this enough, the 3 theories speak of later stages of the language, when it was already formed ie when we can speak of it as a separate, individual language. By the way, as it stands, Pană Dindelegan is the foremost authority in the study of Romanian language at the moment, and to answer Borsoka as well, her "view" and the views of other Romanian linguists such as Sala are not some local nationalist opinions opposed to "International literature", they are the current International literature on the subject, published in Cambridge and Oxford guides to the language's nature and history. If the article opposes this, it is the article that needs to change - wiki editors should not take the liberty of compiling texts form disparate sources in order to promote their own opinion. Aristeus01 (talk) 10:12, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
1. You unilaterally changed a stable version of the lead without discussing it. 2. You ignored that there are three editors who oppose your edit. Please stop edit warring and read WP:3RR carefully because edit warring may have serious consequences. 3. The stable version summarizes the text of the main body, your preferred version introduces a text that is not mentioned in the main text. 4. Your text presents a scholarly PoV as a fact: no, it is not a general view that the venue of the Romanians' ethnogenesis included lands both to the north and to the south of the Danube. There are several scholars cited in the article who do not accept this vies. Borsoka (talk) 11:08, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
It is not "a scholarly POV", and it is not "Romanian ethnogenesis", it is language attestation. I think you fail to make the distinction, which I explained earlier. The version stands, you guys need to familiarize yourselves with the subject and stop changing it to your POV. Please do not threaten me with "serious consequences", it is a serious enough as it is that 3 users suddenly and simultaneously decide something should be changed. Aristeus01 (talk) 11:15, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
Because the article is about the origin of the Romanian people and not the language, therefore it's not the 1/3 of the lead's purpose to talk about that, instead of presenting the three theories on that.
I don't see how what you wrote presents the three stages of development of the Daco-Romanian language anyways. Gyalu22 (talk) 11:20, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
Editors of two international encyclopedias of the Romance languages do not accept Dindelegan's and Sala's PoV as a fact. I did not say that the two Romanian linguists are nationalists. I only referred to the fact that they are representatives of one of the well-known scholarly theories about the Romanians' ethnogenesis - the continuity theory. I did not threaten you, I draw your attention to the consequences of edit warring, fully in accordance with the relevant policy. I think unilateral changes of stable texts and edit wars can be described as a strange behaviour. Borsoka (talk) 12:12, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
Which are the other 2 international encyclopedias?
Did they declare themselves as supporters of a theory? Is Schramm or Schutz a supporter of one side or international literature?
Edit war? Did I change your edits or did you change mine? Aristeus01 (talk) 14:46, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
1. Cambridge/Oxford cited in the article and the lead. 2. They are representatives of a theory: they are convinced that Romanian descended of a variant of Latin that was spoken in many provinces, including Dacia Traiana, and Dacia Traiana was part of the territory where Common Romanian developed. 3. Schramm and Schutz are representatives of an opposite theory. They are convinced that Romanian developed from a variant spoken in the middle of the Balkan Peninsula, and the first Romanian speakers did not move to lands to the north of the Lower Danube before the 12th century. 4. You rewrote the lead without discussing your changes, deleted a reference to a third theory (although it is verified in the main text of the article) and introduced an allegedly "general view" referring to books written by representatives of one of the theories. Borsoka (talk) 15:44, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
1. Cambridge/Oxford have also published the sources I cited. Why would one be cited and the other not?
2. No, that's completely inaccurate. Everybody, including Schramm, is convinced Romanian descended from the Latin spoken in those provinces, the issue is where it was spoken after Latin seized to be a living language.
3. Agreed. As such their views should not be presented as "main literature".
4. As I said, I have no problem adding the admigration theory, I simply followed your reasoning that it is either north or south. Admigration theory though speaks of the second stage of language, when it was already formed. Aristeus01 (talk) 16:32, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
1. Nobody said that any of the sources cannot be cited. However, a PoV cannot be presented as a general view. 2. No, Schramm, Schütz, etc do not say that Dacia Traiana or Upper Pannonia played any role in the formation of the Romanian language. For instance from the Latin variant spoken in Hispania at least 3 Romance languaged developed. 3. Their views are presented as PoVs. 4. Perhaps we should present the theories as they are presented in RSs. Borsoka (talk) 16:54, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
1.Then why are we not citing them?
2. Schramm says Common Romanian or Wurzelstock in his phrasing developed south of the Danube after 600 CE (page 20 in my Romanian language copy) from the popular Latin, he does not contest popular Latin being spoken in all those provinces (he does say Dacians did not contribute to it which is not the same thing). No serious researcher contests this popular Latin was spoken in those provinces. I don't have Schutz at hand but I doubt he makes a different claim.
3. Then why object if I double their views by opposing view? (see river names origin)
4. RSs? Aristeus01 (talk) 17:25, 10 November 2022 (UTC)

1. We can, and the article does cite them, but we cannot present their PoV as a "general view". 2. Popular Latin was also spoken in what is today Algeria, Tunesia, etc. 3. I do not object. That the large river's name are of pre-Roman origin are mentioned in the article. 4. Reliable sources. Borsoka (talk) 18:34, 10 November 2022 (UTC)

1. They literary say general view. How should we then phrase it? Hal of our sources say the general view is clear and another half say the general view is unclear?
2. why is this so difficult ? The Vulgar Latin spoken developed before 5th or 6th century in a particular way which became Common Romanian. The Popular Latin spoken in North Africa was the same to begin with and gradually changed during the same period into North African Romance.
4. Being which ones exactly? For me RS especially includes Romanian Academy sources. Aristeus01 (talk) 19:22, 10 November 2022 (UTC)
I see the discussion has frozen. Can you (Aristeus01) give a reason why should the formation of the Romanian language be explained as explicitly as the theories on the ethnogenesis which the article is about (see short desc.) and the lead should summarize? Why should that be written so far from the second sentence that already gives enough specification (I again emphasize) in the introduction of the article about another subject? Please also take it into consideration that citations should be avoided in the begginning. Gyalu22 (talk) 18:10, 11 November 2022 (UTC)
It is simply because the discussion begins with the language exposition. I don't know how many times I have to repeat this, Romanian language formed from Vulgar Latin spoken on both sides of the Danube, that is an uncontestable fact. If we follow a short description of language with ethnogenesis theories it implies the opposite, that the language formed sometime after the 5th or 6th century. We are being amateurish in this case, since the ethnogenesis theories talk about the part after the Danubian Limes seized to function, when Common Romanian was already an independent - formed - language. Aristeus01 (talk) 00:37, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
No, it is not an uncontestable fact. Could we say Spanish developed from a variant of Latin spoken in Hispania, North Africa and Gaul? Migrations between the provinces were nor unusual. What is incontestable that we do not know from which variant of Latin Romanian developed. We do not know because the substratum has not been identified. Borsoka (talk) 02:24, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
"This is the stage we have reached in the modern English-speaking and Spanish-speaking world; it is, for example, quite common to hear the noun phrases ‘Australian English’ or ‘español venezolano’, but it is still thought of as a bit exaggerated to use the noun phrases ‘Australian’ or ‘venezolano’, as if the speech of those areas no longer qualified to fit within English or Spanish."
"The question of periodization is thus not so much that of how and when a language changes, for change is continuous (‘seamless’, in Penny’s description, who is there comparing diachronic stages with the seamlessness of the synchronic dialect continuum), as of why a language should change its name."
"The Thraco-Dacians, a people of Indo-European origin, occupied in the pre-Christian era a vast territory from the Carpathians to the Aegean Islands. Contact between the Romans and the Thraco-Dacians occurred both to the north and to the south of the Danube."
"There is a long list of languages which have been invoked as substrates acting in various ways on the lexical and structural development of Romance languages. For many of these (e.g., Ligurian, ‘Alpine’, Sicanian, ‘Palaeo-Sardinian’, ‘Illyrian’, ‘Messapic’, ‘Venetic’), the evidence is frankly so tenuous, or dubious, that there is little point in dwelling on them."
A few quotes from Cambridge History of the Romance Languages, a book with multiple authors published in 2016, to hopefully help you understand where I'm coming from.
We know which variant of Latin Romanian evolved from because we use "umbrella terms", phrases that cover extensive areas and periods, for multiple features. A single or a couple of features do not individualize a language from the main group. Therefore we can say Iberian Latin, Danubian Latin, or North African Latin without tedious repetition of the fact this are all geographical adjectives. They were a single language. When we step over the threshold of 5th and 6th century in our case of interest, Danubian Latin is called Common Romanian. We need to reinforce here it was not a clear cut change, as in it suddenly stopped being Latin in a particular year, it is the same language that we, the modern researchers, label differently for convenience. To someone in the 6th century the language he/she spoke was essentially the same with what their grandparents spoke a century earlier. So variant does not mean a different Latin language. It was the same Latin all over the Romanized territories and we call it Danubian Latin or say, Balkan Latin maybe, because that is where it was geographically attested in regards to later development, not because it was a different language from Iberian Latin.
As for substrate, as the quotes above say, the large and inclusive phrase Thraco-Dacian is used, meaning the language spoken in the eastern half of the Balkans. If this touches a sensitive cord of the adherent to one of the other Origin of Romanians supporters, I need to make it very clear to everyone Thraco-Dacian does not mean the language features come from Sarmisegetusa or any individual spot on the map, words are not people to live and belong to an exact location, they are used wherever the language is used, in our case a territory far larger than modern Romania, therefore it neither confirms or deny the continuity theory, for example. It is further understood from this phrasing Dacian was a Thracian language or dialect, not a different language altogether. So yes, we know what the substratum is, it's just not the answer some hoped for, that is: it does not reduce the language evolution to a small region and particular ancient state or tribe.
The insistence on having the substratum named in a different way is a moribund idea that, as Gyalu22 and I were discussing, has had only a couple of supporters in recent decades and is no longer repeated in specialized literature. Furthermore, we must not exaggerate the influence of the substrate in language formation. Substrate added features that contribute but do not define Romance language evolution. If the substrate was definitory we would not speak of Spanish as a Romance language but perhaps as an Iberian language, likewise French would a Celtic language. The accent here is on the geographical area more than on the type of substrate which is there mostly ho help us label stages of a continuous process. Aristeus01 (talk) 12:04, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
The "general view" text doesn't say anything about the substratum so I don't know why are you discussing that. The territory of the formation of Romanian is disputed, so/and it doesn't have to be explained thoroughly in this lead for said reasons. Just because the place where the language originates from is briefly and loosely defined it doesn't mean it has to be exactly defined. Gyalu22 (talk) 13:25, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
Just to complete Aristeus01's quotes:
  • ad 3.: "The Thraco-Dacians, a people of Indo-European origin, occupied in the pre-Christian era a vast territory from the Carpathians to the Aegean Islands. Contact between the Romans and the Thraco-Dacians occurred both to the north and to the south of the Danube, but initially to the south, where the Romans had conquered all the Balkan Peninsula up to the Danube in the first century BC."
  • ad 4. "There is a long list of languages which have been invoked as substrates acting in various ways on the lexical and structural development of Romance languages. For many of these (e.g., Ligurian, ‘Alpine’, Sicanian, ‘Palaeo-Sardinian’, ‘Illyrian’, ‘Messapic’, ‘Venetic’), the evidence is frankly so tenuous, or dubious, that there is little point in dwelling on them. Very often one has a list of vocabulary items (often toponyms, geomorphic terms or plant names) of no obvious etymology but distributed geographically in an area which corresponds, more or less, to the territory in which the assumed substrate was spoken, so that a substrate explanation seems appealing but cannot be proved."
  • What does Sala say about Thraco-Dacian? a.) "The Thraco-Dacians, a people of Indo-European origin, occupied in the pre-Christian era a vast territory from the Carpathians. (Whether Thracian and Geto-Dacian are different languages is debated, but the general view is that they are the same.)" b.) "There is very little direct information about Thraco-Dacian: a few glosses (fifty-seven 'Dacian' plant names mentioned in two treatises on medical botany ...), personal names, tribes, deities, human settlements, hydronyms and names of mountains preserved in ancient authors, in Greek or Latin inscriptions, or on coins..." c. "To identify Thraco-Dacian words, two major methods are used: (a) comparison of Romanian and Albanian ... the latter being considered the direct descendant of Thracian. (There is no way of knowing, however, whether a term is inherited from the substrate, or borrowed from Albanian.)" . Based on the quotes we can conclude that Sala does not write in the Cambridge History of Romance Languages that there is a general view stating that Romanian is the descendant of Latin variants spoken in vast regions of Southeastern and Central Europe. He admits that the existence of "Thraco-Dacian" is dubious. Furthermore, he confirms that the alleged "Thraco-Dacian substrate words" in Romanian may have actually been borrowed from Albanian.
  • Just for comparison, I quote an other specialist's words about the grouping Thracian and Dacian together (which is a general view according to Sala!): "All attempts to relate Thracian to ... Dacian (... preserved solely in plant names in Hesychius) are ... purely speculative." . Fortson's words are not contradicted by an other notable linguist, who says that "Fragmentarily attested IE languages can be divided into two basic groups: those that have at least one attested text/inscription and those that are attested only through onosmatics or individual words in texts written in other languages. In the first group there are ... Venetic ... Thracian ... In the second group we find languages like ... Dacian ..."
  • Summarizing my view: we are not here to describe a scholarly PoV as a "general view" even if the a scholar describes their own view as such. Borsoka (talk) 14:18, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
I was just replying to Borsoka about substratum.
To be completely fair, the definition of the language is not just a passing mention. It is there as part of the debate, (and it should not be used in such a way in my opinion), in a neutral text Latin should not even be mentioned since it is too broad of a topic to help. As you can see from a reply added recently, it is not me that insists on the language to be defined and used here. All I am saying, if we must say something about the language, it needs to be exact, not just a vague mention. Otherwise there is no point in saying it. Aristeus01 (talk) 14:27, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
No, we do not need to say anything of the substratum: it is linked. Alternatively, we can list some of the possible substrate languages. What is clear, we cannot avoid mentioning that the so-called substrate words in Romanian may actually be loanwords from Albanian. Actually, all these are already mentioned in the article. So we can stop discussing the issue. Borsoka (talk) 15:13, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
It is stated in the start, then the article gets on the theories on the ethnogenesis. As Borsoka proved it, there's no general view on the subject, and it's not fair to represent only one. Instead what everyone agrees on is represented. That text is there since years probably and no one criticized it. It says Romanian formed on the territory north of the line in this map. Saying that it formed on almost all of this territory doesn't specify the location more. Gyalu22 (talk) 15:15, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
Of course Borsoka proved it: my view: we are not here to describe a scholarly PoV as a "general view" even if the a scholar describes their own view as such. Her view and yours top the view of an academician published by Oxford. I will not take part in this sordid affair anymore, do as you like. Misplaced Pages has clearly lost its way if it allows such biased opinions to be the norm just because a few editors agree on it. Aristeus01 (talk) 17:11, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
No, editors' views do not top the view of an academician (Sala) published by Cambridge (not by Oxford). Sala referred to one of his theories - the presentation of Thracian and Dacian as a single language - as a "general view" in a work published by CUP. However, this allegedly "general view" is described by an other linguist (Benjamin W. Fortson IV) as a pure speculation. A third linguist Mate Kapović also separates the two languages (namely, Thracian and Dacian). Again, we cannot present a scholar's PoV as a general view if it is presented as a highly speculative theory in an other scholar's work. Perhaps, you should familiarize yourself with our community's basic policies, such as WP:NPOV: PoV pushing is not in line with them. Borsoka (talk) 17:52, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
Yes, @Borsoka, it was Pana Dindelegan, not Sala we are discussing. Sala is offering a supporting view. So it is not just Oxford, but Cambridge as well that we call POVs here, based on lawyering Misplaced Pages rules. Aristeus01 (talk) 19:18, 12 November 2022 (UTC)
You were quoting Sala's text above. I proved above what a "general view" means in the context of this article: it can be labelled as speculation by other scholars. That Romanian is a direct descendant of the Latin variant spoken in Dacia Traiana in any way is also a scholarly PoV, not a "general view". Borsoka (talk) 02:00, 13 November 2022 (UTC)
Hello Aristeus01!
I see you would like to put the lead here and in other articles as generial view that the Romanian language was formed from Latin in Dacia Trajana (Transylvania) and it was uninterruptedly spoken 2000 years long until today. This is the Daco-Roman theory, which is highly debated by historians, which is mainly accepted in Romania, but the historiography of the surrounding local countries do not accept it for a simple reason, because this theory does not agree with their own historiography and their local historical knowledge. For instance, Transylvania was part of Hungary until 1920, and it was important region in the Hungarian history, which means the Hungarian historiography or local historical knowledge relates to the region. And the Hungarian (or the surronding countries, Poland, Austria, Germany, Bulgaria, Russia, Byzantine...) historiography in the territory of the Kingdom of Hungary does not know any Romanian presence before the 13th century, and I suppose the people should speak a language and not the stones, trees or birds, so I have a simple question, if we do not know about Romanian presence in the region then who spoke that language there? What is the evidences the Romanian language was spoken before the 13th century in Transylvania? I can accept your theory, if you provide real convincing historical evidences, because I see this theory is just a speculation. I think 1000 years is a huge gap between Roman Dacia and the documented presence of the Vlachs in the region. OrionNimrod (talk) 12:50, 13 November 2022 (UTC)

Rome

Rome has 2.743.796 Population 2A04:2410:1706:5280:F9C5:93C9:1946:8658 (talk) 11:49, 6 March 2023 (UTC)

Rásonyi

@Gyalu22: Rásonyi published his views about the association of the Hungarian chronicles Blachi with the Bulaqs more than 40 years ago. Could you refer to works published by international publishing houses accepting Rásonyi's view? If not, we should not mention it either as per WP:DUE. Borsoka (talk) 16:49, 12 April 2023 (UTC)

Az Árpád-kori Magyarország Történeti Földrajza volume 2 by György Györffy (see the p. 48) comes to mind, but that's even older. I've recently read another publication from the journal Történelmi Szemle (27th volume 4nd issue, p. 633) that seems to support the "Bulaq theory" over the Vlach one.
I don't think that the view of Spinei is also covered and accepted by many works from international publishing houses. Gyalu22 (talk) 19:42, 12 April 2023 (UTC)
One of Spinei's works are published by BRILL. The other work is referred to by Denis Deletant's studies about Romanian history. Borsoka (talk) 01:06, 13 April 2023 (UTC)
@Gyalu22 and OrionNimrod: could you refer to books or articles published by international academic publishing houses that support Rásonyi's theory? Borsoka (talk) 02:31, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
I mentioned two.
Neither of these views are discussed and accepted by many books or articles published by international academic publishing houses. Gyalu22 (talk) 08:38, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
1. The page you are referring to above does not support (or mention) the "Bulaq theory" (Györffy, György (1987). Doboka, erdélyi Fehér, Esztergom, Fejér, Fogaras, Gömör és Győr megye . Az Árpád-kori Magyarország történeti földrajza (in Hungarian). Vol. II. Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 963-05-3533-5.) 2. A random reference to the theory in respected journal does not verify the notablity of the theory. 3. I maintain that Rásonyi's theory is a typical marginal theory. Would you refer to books or articles published in English that support it? Borsoka (talk) 09:16, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
  1. I don't have the book, but from an online preview I saw "A blak etnikumot illetően mongol kori források hozhatók fel annak tanúsítására, hogy itt a Volga-vidékéről eredeztetett török féle blak, ulaq népelemről lehet szó, e középkori tudós ". And Györffy is a reputed mainstream historian.
  2. My reference was wrong. On page 633, the theory is only explained, the author expresses sympathy on the next page (though he says on 633 already that he holds the Blacus name doesn't have anything to do with the Vlachs). I quote: "A blak, blök nép azonosításában két lehetőséget látok: 1. kunok előtti török, 2. eltörökösödött iráni népszórvány neve. Az előnyomuló kunok maguk közé szervezték ezt a szórványt, ennek következtében, de korábban is kerülhettek blak, blök szórványok a Volga mentére. Ahová viszont újlatin nyelvű vlachok nem érkeztek. Úgy vélem, hogy Anonymus kun körből merítette a Blacus (Blak) nevet, és ezért alkalmazta a szókezdő B-t".
Gyalu22 (talk) 09:44, 6 May 2023 (UTC)

Change the title from "Origin of the Romanians" to the more academic wording "Ethnogenesis of the Romanians"

Change the title from "Origin of the Romanians" to the more academic wording "Ethnogenesis of the Romanians". Thanks in advance. Ninhursag3 (talk) 05:54, 27 April 2023 (UTC)

If many people wouldn't understand the word "ethnogenesis", that's a strike against it. AnonMoos (talk) 09:14, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
Oppose - I also think the "Origin of the Romanians" title is easier to understand. RF354 (talk) 09:22, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
Oppose - I think the same that "Origin of the Romanians" title is easier to understand. OrionNimrod (talk) 09:24, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
Oppose - Besides comprehensibility, similarity with the title of other articles covering the origin/ethnogenesis of other nations. Type in "origin of the" in the search bar.Gyalu22 (talk) 14:00, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
I'm waiting for Romanians to vote as well. Seems unfair for only Hungarians to vote regarding wikipedia articles about Romanians...Hungarians opposing a proposal by a Romanian is not something uncommon but quite expected. On the other hand, typing "Origins of" indeed shows different results. So on that point I understand the perspective.
However "Origins of" for saying Romanians are a few kilometers South or North of the Danube is not the same as origins of groups coming thousands of kilometers away from Siberia or India... Ninhursag3 (talk) 14:22, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
I can tell of myself and OrionNimrod that we are Hungarians, but I don't know how you determined the ethnicity of the two other voters. Gyalu22 (talk) 16:55, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
Oppose not a familiar word to many. I'm not Hungarian. Since there are many theories, you could follow Origin hypotheses of the Croats. Johnbod (talk) 14:32, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
Than rename it to "Origin hypotheses of the Romanians"? Ninhursag3 (talk) 15:49, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
Yes, I'd support that. Johnbod (talk) 16:19, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
Seems many nations has many origin theories. Hungarians also has origin theories. I think modern genetic could help, however because all nations mixed during centuries each other of various levels, perhaps the combination of more theory can be also the truth. OrionNimrod (talk) 17:12, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
I'm so glad we finally agree. I knew we could eventually see eye to eye. Like I already said "I personally think on all articles instead of "Origins of Croats/Romanians/Albanians etc" it should be changed to "Ethnogenesis hypotheses of Croats/Romanians/Albanians" etc. Just saying "origins" doesn't sound academic but almost derogatory and not just "simplified". This is an academic issue, not a "simplistic" issue. "
This is not the "simple English language version" but just the normal English language version, so words like "ethnogenesis" should be fine. Ethno means "ethnicity" and "genesis" means "origin". Ninhursag3 (talk) 17:19, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
Maybe I'm asking too much but has anyone read the Romanians wikipedia page but the German version?https://de.wikipedia.org/Rum%C3%A4nen 10% is a few words about Romanians like "there 23,8 million Romanians around the world" and 90% is about the "Ethnogenesis of the Romanians" ("Die rumänische Ethnogenese"). This must be the most unprofessional article I've ever read on wikipedia. It's nothing like the superior English version with many references and topics regarding Romanians. Nothing about the Culture of Romania, List of Romanian inventors and discoverers, Romanian literature, Romanian architecture, Science and technology in Romania, Vlachs, Great Vlachia, Wallachia, Moldavia, Alexandru Ioan Cuza, Danubian Principalities, Unification of Moldavia and Wallachia, United Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia, Greater Romania, Romanian language, Romanian Orthodox Church, Romanian Greek Catholic Church.
I asked in German using google translate on the German wikipedia version of "Romanians" but nobody helped *sigh*. Can anyone please help? Ninhursag3 (talk) 17:44, 27 April 2023 (UTC)

Comment See also Origin of the Albanians. RF354 (talk) 16:42, 27 April 2023 (UTC)

I already said "typing "Origins of" indeed shows different results. So on that point I understand the perspective."
I personally think on all articles instead of "Origins of Croats/Romanians/Albanians etc" it should be changed to "Ethnogenesis hypotheses of Croats/Romanians/Albanians" etc. Just saying "origins" doesn't sound academic but almost derogatory and not just "simplified". This is an academic issue, not a "simplistic" issue. Ninhursag3 (talk) 17:10, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
  1. I think it's more important for a title to be clear than to be "academic sounding".
  2. The article doesn't only outline the hypotheses about the origin of the Romanians, most of it is about archaeological, linguistic, genetic and literal data regarding the ancient times.
Gyalu22 (talk) 19:45, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
There are plenty "academic sounding" titles on wikipedia, especially since this is not the simple English version. Ninhursag3 (talk) 19:49, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
Then just "Ethnogenesis of the Romanians" without "Ethnogenesis hypotheses of Romanians". Ninhursag3 (talk) 19:52, 27 April 2023 (UTC)
"Origin" for similarity with other articles. Gyalu22 (talk) 05:01, 28 April 2023 (UTC)
Well, "ethnogenesis" can be added to the other articles in order to be similar, especially since ethnogenesis is the correct word for the academic context. Ninhursag3 (talk) 07:47, 28 April 2023 (UTC)
There is nothing incorrect about the word origin. Gyalu22 (talk) 16:24, 28 April 2023 (UTC)
  • Oppose. There's no other Misplaced Pages article titled "Ethnogenesis of" but several using "Origins of". Per Misplaced Pages policy WP:CONSISTENT (with other articles) the best option here would be to keep the current version. Furthermore, Ethnogenesis does indeed sound more professional but not necessarily better because of that, "Origins of" has the benefit of simplicity. Super Ψ Dro 13:14, 28 April 2023 (UTC)
  • Oppose - sorry, Ninhursag3, but this article is constructed around the location of Romanians during the late Antiquity-Early Middle Ages, hence the term "origin" is more accurate. The ethnogenesis as a process is discussed here only in supporting arguments related to the possible location. Perhaps a different article dealing with mechanism of the process and its implications might be needed, yet I'm not sure wikipedians won't see it as forking.--Aristeus01 (talk) 08:27, 30 April 2023 (UTC)

Romance language

@WikiUser70176: The sources which you have WP:CITEd are awfull. IMHO, I would go for only Martin Maiden. 2016. Romanian, Istro-Romanian, Megleno-Romanian, and Aromanian. In Adam Ledgeway and Martin Maiden (eds.), The Oxford guide to the Romance languages, 91-125. Oxford: Oxford University Press. tgeorgescu (talk) 18:49, 11 May 2023 (UTC)

That was not a very nice and civil thing to do, i.e. undoing my edit before I even got the chance to respond. I was about to say "thanks!" for pointing me to Maiden. It took me a while to locate the source as I don't have access to it, even with my academic credentials. And to read it. And to formulate a concise and neutral POV paragraph. Instead of my thanks, I will say:
  • 1. I cite what I read. If you want me to cite something else, give me that something else, or better yet, do it yourself.
  • 2. All my sources comply with WP:VERIFY. Graduate theses are accepted and I have no clue about what ideological book you refer to.
  • 3. "Awfull" (sic!) is not an argument, is an opinion, therefore safely disregarded. My sources follow WP:SOURCE policy. Check again.
  • 4. The place to debate your proposed paragraph is here, on the talk page, not on the main page. BTW, I was fine with your proposed paragraph. I will add that "the Eastern Romance sub-branch is a linguistic group that evolved from several dialects of Vulgar Latin which separated from the Western Romance languages in the course of the period from the 5th to the 8th centuries.. As a scholar myself, I value any country's National Academy's point of view - scholarly speaking only - above any other source (save for consensus in peer-reviewed papers), as does WP:SOURCE, as should any editor that values objectivity. At the very least it should be mentioned. I have only the 1969 edition but if you have a more recent one, feel free to amend my sentence.
  • 5. Please don't start an edit-war. I am not an extremist or a nationalist or whathaveyou. You also removed a reference to the Max Planck Institute Linguistic Database (why?!, if even these people aren't reliable, than who on Earth are?!). In my experience, people who remove academic references are POV pushers and there is no debate with them. Consequently, I will not engage you. In addition, given your belligerent past, your tendency to hold grudges as evidenced by your editing history, and - most importantly - your present aggressive tone to me, someone you had no previous interactions with, this shall be my only reply and edit here. So if you revert my edits, so be it; enjoy your page and POV pushing. I'm out. Cheers.
♦ WikiUser70176 ♦ 20:17, 11 May 2023 (UTC)
Hmm... I don't agree. The Academy of Sciences of the Socialist Republic of Romania was a strongly politicized and ideological body. So, even if they wrote that the sky is blue, WP:CITE another source for it. Vladimir Tismaneanu and some other peers of him were making sport of Ceausescu's speech introducing juche to Romania, but an older professor reminded them that's how Stalinist purges have started. That happened in 1971, see July Theses, but of course National-Communism was introduced to the Romanian people soon after the death of Dej, with many nationalists of the Iron Guard and the historical parties getting rehabilitated in order to write propaganda for the regime. Or since even the early 1960s (before Dej's death). See National communism in Romania.
And can assure you that if we debase our standards to recognize Master's theses as WP:RS, the hell would break loose at Misplaced Pages.
Yup, I wrote There were people sent to prison just because they dared to criticize Ceausescu's retarded juche ideology. And I can agree it is aggressive. There is however no indication that the aggressiveness was directed towards you. That's only your interpretation of what I wrote. In fact, it is directed towards my country's past and towards how historians and social scientists chose to serve the retarded juche ideology. The mystery is: why do you think I was writing that about you? You were probably not born yet at the time we are discussing. I stated a harsh truth about a harsh reality, but not about you. tgeorgescu (talk) 22:11, 11 May 2023 (UTC)
@WikiUser70176 currently the Academy's view is that the language developed from the Latin spoken in the Roman provinces on the Danube (commonly referred as Danubian Latin) and went trough a stage called Common Romanian (ref Sala From Latin to Romanian). The idea that Daco-Romance languages developed separately, or from several dialects, or only in close connexion is, to my knowledge, extinct. Aristeus01 (talk) 13:05, 14 May 2023 (UTC)
@Aristeus01 I agree. Put it in! ♦ WikiUser70176 ♦ 00:46, 15 May 2023 (UTC)
Find another source, instead of the sick National-Communist propaganda book. There should be plenty of other sources. tgeorgescu (talk) 11:39, 16 May 2023 (UTC)

One WP:RS from WP:CHOPSY beats a dozen of dubious citations. tgeorgescu (talk) 19:02, 11 May 2023 (UTC)

We stand for WP:BESTSOURCES, we have no time to waste with a Master's thesis and with a book of ancilla ideologiae. I'm not even saying that that book is junk, but they were clearly running a state-sponsored ideological propaganda show. There were people sent to prison just because they dared to criticize Ceausescu's retarded juche ideology. tgeorgescu (talk) 19:40, 11 May 2023 (UTC)

I think WP:RSN thread Origin of the Romanians might interest editors involved in this thread. Peter Gulutzan (talk) 15:27, 16 May 2023 (UTC)
The book was not making propaganda for the Romanian people, but against it. The difference with Proletcultism was the that mystique of the tractor was replaced with sugary myths of Romanian exceptionalism. tgeorgescu (talk) 19:22, 16 May 2023 (UTC)

References

  1. "Istoria limbii române" ("History of the Romanian Language"), Vol. II, Ed. Academia Română, Bucharest, 1969

Why are hungarian users write about the origin of romanians?

I hope you banned the liars like Rásonyi from contributing, this incident should come to mind:

https://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/IncidentArchive1073#User:Borsoka_and_User:Fakirbakir 2A02:2F04:5001:A900:78BE:D4D:2367:6E6D (talk) 03:59, 2 March 2024 (UTC)

Could you clarify the connection between Rásonyi and myself? As far as I can remember I have never cited Rásonyi. Yes, chauvinistic Romanian editors (most of them banned from our community years ago) and their sockpuppets have made several attempts to achieve a topic ban against me for years. They have so far always failed. Borsoka (talk) 04:07, 2 March 2024 (UTC)

Low-quality sourcing

I am not tagging the article, though it would be great if someone well-versed on the topic worked on it. Most of the article is based on partisan Romanian and Hungarian scholars who are mostly of a low quality. There is also large dependence on other old, largely discredited scholars like Schramm and Georgiev. The theory of the origin north of the Danube is treated as equal with the theory of the origin south of the Danube, though nowadays there is hardly any high-quality, non-partisan linguist specializing in the Paleo-Balkans claiming that the core of the Romanian population originated north of the Danube. Ktrimi991 (talk) 15:38, 12 March 2024 (UTC)

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