DANUBIANS PEOPLE
Danubians people has been selected by Roberto Amati in relation to the real history of european integration, then enlisted in the EUROPEAN PEOPLE category, accompanied by own fact SHEET useful to the comprehension, completed of historical MAPS AND IMAGES or with a direct linking to the related Blog contents dedicated to the entire history of european integration and the future of Europe.
The international name for Danubians people is a scientific term to indicate the most ancient European peoples living since around 10.000 years ago in the danubian plain all along the final course of the Danube river and probably over the Carpathians and Balkans mountainous chains: they were part of the descendants of the Japhet genealogy narrowed in the Holy Byble, such as the Prhygian and the Thracian well known to the ancient Greeks who shared the socalled "old Europe" culture at the Neolitich age and probably were far relatives...
Danubians came probably from Anatolia area and introduced the agrarian model of society in Europe, by clearing forests and cultivating losses in the fertile pluvial valleys, domesticating cows, pigs, dogs and sheeps, using new tools and foods. They formed the first kingdoms in Europe and founded the cities of Sarmizegetusa, Nyse(Nys) and Nistra, before to be annexed by the Persian empire and after that by the Macedonians and definitely included in the Greek history as one of the Diadochi reigns formed by the succession of Alexander empire.
When Romans conquered the whole area in II century AD, the Danubians people gave name to the provinces of Tracia, Dacia, Moesia, inherited by the Bizantine Empire as themes or diocesis and successively assigned to many differents people came from all over Europe, such as Goths, Bulgars and Slavs.
Danubians were in great part a Caucasian anthropologic human group with phehotype of brown or dark haired and large percentage of brown eyes, speaking indoeuropean languages and sharing a typical danubian culture from Neolithic age (called "old Europe") that defined the Danube Valley civilty for long time, before they lost a self-identifying sense during Middle Age and probably went extinguisched. The most famous Danubians people were the members of the Phrygian, Isaurian, Psydian and Thracian dinasties of Roman emperors who managed the falling of the Pars Occidens caused by the Barbarian invasions and gave continuity to the Christian Empire by operating fundamental reforms of the krowning rith to enhance ortodoxy religion in front of paganismes and heretics of that period.
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