Dacia Books
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Random House (01 September 2009)Price: $19.80 -

The Johns Hopkins University Press (01 January 1979)Price: $25.35 -

Da Capo Press (11 August 2009)Price: $19.80 -

W.W. Norton & Co. (17 August 2000)Price: $10.85 -

University of California Press (13 February 1990)Price: $26.95
Definition
The Dacian kingdom crumbled into four (or five) principalities, only to re-emerge under Decebalus (ca 87-106 AD). He fought victoriously against Domitian's general Cornelius Fuscus, but he was eventually defeated and forced to sign a peace treaty which made the Dacian kingdom a client of Rome, receiving Roman money and technical support in return. The situation lasted until Trajan, waged two extensive wars (101-102 AD and 105-106 AD) in order to crush the Dacian kingdom and raze all the strongholds.
Dacia became a Roman province for 170 years, until Aurelian (or possibly Gallienus) abandoned it, evacuating the army and the administration. Two new provinces, each called Dacia were created to the South of the Danube, in the territory of modern Serbia in order to show that the Roman Empire had lost nothing. After 275 AD Dacia was overcome by the Goths, the Huns, and the Avars in the Migration Age.
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