exploreCARPATHIA
Attractions along the Carpathians
Transylvania / Romania

Statue of Decebal

Statuia lui Decebal
Statue of Decebal
Statuia lui Decebal
Statue of Decebal - Deva 00
Saturnian, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Original function:
statue / memorial / relief
Current function:
statue / memorial / relief
Settlement:
Address:
Piața Victoriei
Historical Hungarian county:
Hunyad
Country:
Romania
GPS coordinates:
45.8784676532, 22.9025417375
Google map:

History

The Romanians themselves can't decide whether they are the descendants of the conquered Dacians or the conquering Romans, so they have erected statues to both Decebal and Emperor Trajan in Déva, just to be sure. Nothing of the Dacian language and culture has survived after little more than a century and a half of Roman rule. The Romanians claim that some of their words are derived from the Dacians, but in fact they are of unknown origin, as nothing of the Dacian language has survived. The province of Dacia, founded by the Romans, also ceased to exist around 270 AD, when the Romans moved its population, largely made up of the military and settlers who had arrived after their conquest, south of the Danube to Moesia to escape the invasion of Germanic tribes. There is no archeological or documental proof of their continued existance in present day Transylvania afterwards.

{"item":"sight","set":{"sightId":1826,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Statuia lui Decebal","address":"Pia\u021ba Victoriei","mapdata":"1|1134|2158","gps_lat":"45.8784676532","gps_long":"22.9025417375","religion":0,"oldtype":"38","newtype":"38","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022Saturnian, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Statue_of_Decebal_-_Deva_00.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022256\u0022 alt=\u0022Statue of Decebal - Deva 00\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/b\/b1\/Statue_of_Decebal_-_Deva_00.jpg\/256px-Statue_of_Decebal_-_Deva_00.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Statue_of_Decebal_-_Deva_00.jpg\u0022\u003ESaturnian\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/3.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 3.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Statue of Decebal","note":"","history":"The Romanians themselves can't decide whether they are the descendants of the conquered Dacians or the conquering Romans, so they have erected statues to both Decebal and Emperor Trajan in D\u00e9va, just to be sure. Nothing of the Dacian language and culture has survived after little more than a century and a half of Roman rule. The Romanians claim that some of their words are derived from the Dacians, but in fact they are of unknown origin, as nothing of the Dacian language has survived. The province of Dacia, founded by the Romans, also ceased to exist around 270 AD, when the Romans moved its population, largely made up of the military and settlers who had arrived after their conquest, south of the Danube to Moesia to escape the invasion of Germanic tribes. There is no archeological or documental proof of their continued existance in present day Transylvania afterwards.","town":{"townId":71,"name_HU":"D\u00e9va","name_LO":"Deva","seolink":"deva","oldcounty":35,"country":4}},"language":"en","region":"romania","regionid":4,"offer":[],"gallery":false,"album":false}