HISTORY OF DACIA
(600-0 B.C.)
OOC: Since everyone else, then why not me? I decided, however, to do this from a different point of view; this is a story of Dacian history, it is NOT a list of Dacian kings. A list of Dacian kings can, however, be found at the end of this historical outlook. There is also a lot of information in this historical outlook which can not be found from any of my earlier stories.
Also, I’m trying to write this as objectively as possible. So this is all OOC. If and when I have included secret diplomacy in these stories (as objective history writing demands me to do), I would most kindly request that certain players who may or may not be shocked about it will not get too mad at me.
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1. IN THE BEGINNING (600-350 B.C.)
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And so it began..
Dacian culture developed from the need of protection; as Scythians and Illyrians kept raiding the Danube area during the first few centuries of the last millenium B.C., the farming culture in moden-day Hungary started to unify itself against oppressors that spoke a different language. A society was born, and in time it developed into a civilization. By 500 B.C., the country of Dacia was known throughout the world. Dacian people were genetically linked closely to Thracian and that way to Greeks, but their culture was very unique compared to Illyrians, for example, who also formed a nation of their own during the 6th century B.C. and who the Greek culture gave a far greater infuelce.
Dacia was placed in a geographical location what some people might call unfortunate; it was located directly west from Aramid Luca, the greatest empire of that time. South from it was Byzantine, Luca’s closest ally, and in the west was Illyria. Illyrian barbarian raids had been the reason why Dacia needed a society to protect themselves in the first place! In the north there were Scythian and German barbarians.
Later Illyria would pay for this in a devastating war (for them), but the first 300 years were rather peaceful despite the fact that Dacia was surrounded by a rather scary punch of nations.
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Religion and Culture
Not much history was written about Dacia before king Oroles I rose to power in 350 B.C.. The few pieces of info that exist are religious writings. It has to be stated at this point that Dacia was not only a commercial but also a religious nation; in a matter of fact, the High Priest of god Zalmoxis was the king’s closest advisor.
Some Dacian religious books tell us about how the Dacian society turned into a real civilization: guided by the god Zalmoxis, the Dacians rose to the mountains near the Danube river and build strong fortifications against the Scythian and Illyrian raids. More and more farmers moved inside these protective fortifications, and soon Sarmizegetusa had developed into a great city, which would then turn into Dacian capital. City needed a leader, and a king soon rose to rule Sarmisegetuza and the land areas around it.
Dacia was born.
The modern-day Dacians believe that their high god Zalmoxis was also the first king of the nation, who ruled c. 590-570 B.C. and who was taken to heavens after his death, to rule all Dacians from there. This study was invented in around 200 B.C. by High Priest Decetrox who studied the Dacian holy writings carefully. He was the closest advisor of king Oroles III, who then adopted this theory into Dacian religion.
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2. THE ARPAD DYNASTY (c. 500-259 B.C.)
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Rise of the Arpads
According to old religious writings, a monk known as Arpad had received messages from god Zalmoxis himself, asking Arpad to make Dacians believe in him again. After a short religious uprising, the priests of the nation decided to place Arpad to the throne after his predecessor (whose name is, unfortunately, unknown) died without children.
Since the Dacians used a very bizarre calendar during that time, it is impossible to say exactly when Arpad the Holy ruled, but it has been estimated to be around 520-500 B.C.
Arpad I adopted the system according to which high priest was the king’s closest advisor, and also his follower to the throne if the king wouldn’t have any child. This rule would be later used to end the Arpad dynasty.
It was also around these times when boiled dog testicles, known as “hot dogs” to Dacians, became a traditional Dacian treat.
After king Arpad, the most important ruler of the Arpad Dynasty was king Oroles I, who ruled 350-331 B.C.. He started several libraries and started to keep track of all the trading that went on in Dacian lands, thus starting the “historic age” of Dacia; other than religious documents started to appear and since Oroles I, the names of all Dacian kings are known to us.
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Oroles II
In 277 B.C., king Oroles II, who was known as the “Incompetent”, rose to power. He ruled for 18 devastating years.
His diplomacy with Aramid Luca is rather intriguing and has been kept as a Dacian secret until very recently. It appears that while king Oroles II tried to keep good relations with nations that were against Aramid Luca (especially Gaul and Kartyria), he had also made an important pact with Luca. A secret alliance, as he himself called it. Despite all this (or maybe because of it), he often hinted to Kartyrian leaders that he wasn’t exactly a lover of the Lucans.
These actions were very contriversial but it has to be admitted that because of this kind of “diplomatic manouvering”, Dacia could grow without getting harrassed by any of it’s neighbours. If the barbarian wars had not started in 270 B.C., the rule of Oroles II would have been just as peaceful time as the 300 years before him had been.
Oroles II was especially economically very incompetent. The reason why the entire Dacian economy didn’t collapse during his reign was partly because of luck and partly because high priest Burebista helped Oroles.
Oroles died because of food poisoning after eating a spoiled hot dog in 259 B.C.. He was 41-year-old and had no children, and therefore high priest Burebista, who was not related to the Arpad family, became the new king. The Arpad Dynasty was no more.
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3. RISE OF DACIA (259-200 B.C.)
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Barbarian Wars
After 300 years of peace, the barbarian wars continued in 270 B.C.. Fightings lasted for almost 50 years. While 300-400 years ago the attackers had been Illyrian and Scythian, now the Germannics were on a crazy rampage.
During the reign of Oroles II, the attacks were rather small. Only a couble of thousands of Dacian soldiers got killed, and the attacks always stopped on fortresses build near Sarmisegetuza, where the legendary fortress archers always managed to drive the invaders away.
Burebista, who was Dacian High Priest and who became the king in 259 B.C. since Oroles II died childless, raised a rather large army of militia from local population to defend their homeland against barbarian invasions. Militia’s actions were succesful, and for some time, the barbarian attacks stopped, allowing Burebista to concentrate on the Illyrian war.
Burebista was followed by Oroles III, also known as Oroles the Conqueror, in 238 B.C.. The ever-so-great Lucan Empire had fallen after war losses, and land areas in the eastern coast of the Black Sea which formerly belonged to Aramid Luca were now controlled by barbarians. Oroles saw this as his chance to gain access to the Black Sea. He started an aggressive and succesful war which nearly doubled the land size of Dacia. Access to the Black Sea was also gained, and the well-fortified city of Orolestusa was founded there.
In the west, the expansion continued with Oroles himself leading his armies on the battlefield.
The end to barbarian wars came in the battle of Erlau in 221 B.C. when a barbarian leader named Hermann beat the Dacian troops. Oroles was dividing his troops into two sections during each battle, to surround the barbarians, and Hermann learned to take advantage of this; he attacked the center of Dacian troops, which was the weakest point in the strategy that Oroles was using. After the loss in Erlau, Oroles invited Hermann the German over to Sarmizegetusa and peace was signed.
This peace gave birth to the nation of Ostland.
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Burebista and the Illyrian war
A new dynasty was started when Burebista I was crowned in 259 B.C..
The Burebista Dynasty, which would rule Dacia for several centuries, was born.
When he started his career as a king, Burebista found himself in a strange position: his predecessor had accidentally grown a rather big and a rather well-educated army, wasting a whole lot of money away while doing so. Oroles II had truly been an incompetent and a very lucky leader. This was indeed an accident not to be put to waste; Dacia, being a commercial people, needed a port to the sea to conduct trade! Burebista was planning to attack Illyria, but there was one thing stopping him.
Illyria had just sided with Kartyria, Rome and Portugal, to form a huge coalition against the Gauls. For a while Burebista was, while negotiationg about it with the Luca-hating Kartyrians, planning to attack Byzantium, but dropped the plan not willing to get the great Aramid Luca attack him (altough at this point it was already starting to seem like Luca would eventually fall). Besides, Burebista still had respect for the secret alliance that his predecessor had signed with Aramid Luca, altough he often wondered if it was wise to be in such an alliance.
Illyria was attacked, and when Carthagia and Portugal started fighting each other, Kartyria and Rome were indeed unhappy with Dacia. But promising that Illyria could continue their war against Gaul after a vassalization, Kartyrians were satisfied. Coincidentally, after vassalization the Illyrians no longer wanted to fight the Gauls.
On a certain cold night in the fall of 255 B.C., the Dacian troops crossed the Danube river and entered Illyria. Usually the shore would have been fortified by Illyrian soldiers, but like said they were fighting the Gauls and their defence was thus very insecure. Dacians used their famous “blocking strategy” to reach the shores of the Mediterranian. It has to be remembered that the commercial Dacians needed a port to the sea badly, and now that goal was fulfilled.
Then, the Dacian armies turned south. After the Illyrian capital was taken out, the nation started to fall.
But Burebista was unhappy. He wanted a shore and a vassal; not an annexed nation with unhappy, rebellious people in it.
His next manouvers earned him the nickname “peacemaker”: crown prince Leo of Illyria would become the leader of a new, half-democratic Free Illyria (which would, of course, be nothing but a puppet country for Dacia). The country was set up immediately, and for Burebista’s further amazement, once southern Illyria had accepted this vassalization, northern Illyria fell under the rule of Prince Leo I, as the most loyal Illyrians fled the country.
The war came to an end in 15 years after it started, so it really was a quick campaign. 4 years later Burebista the Peacemaker died.
His legacy lives on in Burebistatusa, fomerly an Illyrian city on the coast of Mediterranian which Dacia controls. It has a strange mixture of Illyrian Illyrian Greek and Dacian Slavic cultures, and before his death, Burebista got to see the first ships of the Dacian naval forces be built there. It also soon developed into a center of trading.
The fact that barbarian wars were raging at the same time when Illyria was vassalized shows Burebista’s capabilities to handle his nation with his military forces.
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The trip to Morocco
The most famous actions of Burebista’s son, king Oroles III, have already been written under “Barbarian wars”, but of course he did a lot more than just fight the barbarians.
It was during his reign, in around 200 B.C., when the religious reforms (which have already been mentioned earlier) took place.
Aramid Luca (soon to be known as Khorvashid Luca) was collapsing quickly while Carthage was on the rise, and the nation of Bosporan would soon be born in the northern coast of the Black Sea. Because of Luca’s downhill, Oroles abandoned the policy of his predecessors and turned to Byzantium, who had been Dacia’s friend before but mainly because both were friends to Luca (Dacia secretly, though).
Now Free Illyria and Dacia signed an alliance with Byzantium. Luca was forgotten.
Then Byzantium joined the anti-Carthagian alliance together with Kartyria and Rome. Dacia was drawn in by Byzantine. Some bizarre events took place; in 201 B.C., Oroles III found himself in northern Africa attacking the uppermost corner of Mauri, modernday Morocco. It was his style of leading to always be there in the frontline commanding his men personally. There, just when he heard that the new Byzantine emperor had betrayed them and joined the Carthagian side, he got an arrow in his chest and died at the age of 67, after ruling for 37 years.
His son, the new king Rholes I, withdrew from Mauri. He was rather mad at Eram Constantine, the new Byzantine emperor, for dragging Dacia into this situation. For a while he even considered some sort of a paypack, but realized then that it would not benefit anyone. Dacia withdrew from the war and signed peace with everyone.
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4. AGE OF STAGNANCY (200-0 B.C.)
The ages of war were behind (at least for a few centuries). The only historically significant action during these two centuries was done by Decebalus the Wise; The nation of Ostland had been born in 221 B.C. but by the time of Decebalus, Dacia's eastern neighbour had collapsed due to tribal strife, and Decebalus managed to peacefully get most of the German tribes on his side. Other events during these two centuries included the Dacian fever, a disease which also had a great effect on surrounding nations, and building of fortresses, which was economiclly very expensive. These two were main reasons for the age of stagnancy, along with lack of good leadership (this was a problem especially in Free Illyria, Dacia's vassal).
King Rhemaxos II, who was the ruler in 0 B.C., decided to put an end to this age of stagnancy. Among other things, he started a new project; the academy of naval warfare. King Burebista’s faith in naval power had not been forgotten.
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A LIST OF DACIAN KINGS (600-0 B.C.)
c. 590-570 B.C. King Zalmoxis (His existance as a king is a myth, he turned into a god after death)
570-520 unkown
c. 520-500 B.C. King Arpad I (“the Holy”

500-430 B.C. Unknown
c. 430-410 B.C. King Duras I
c. 410-370 B.C. King Cotiso I
370-350 B.C. Unknown
350-331 B.C. King Oroles I
331-324 B.C. King Duras II
324-301 B.C. King Duras III
301-277 B.C. King Duras IV
277-259 B.C. King Oroles II (“the Incompetent”

259-238 B.C. King Burebista I (“the Peacemaker”

238-201 B.C. King Oroles III (“the Conqueror”

201-187 B.C. King Rholes I
187-150 B.C. King Duras V
150-132 B.C. King Rhemaxos I
132-130 B.C. King Duras VI
130-119 B.C. King Duras VII
119-99 B.C. King Oroles IV
99-54 B.C. King Decebalus (“the Wise”

54-29 B.C. King Dicomes I
29-9 B.C. King Dicomes II
9 B.C.- King Rhemaxos II
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ADDED AFTERWARDS: Reasons for the age of stagnancy (such as the Dacian fever, lack of leadership, etc..)