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Romanian archaeology begins in the 19th century.
Archaeology was in its infancy in Rome when this photograph of the Temples of Saturn and Vespasian was made in the 1860s
Archaeologists
living
Institutes
Museums
Sites
Acidava (Enoşeşti) – Dacian, Roman
Apulon (Piatra Craivii) – Dacian
Apulum (Alba Iulia) – Roman, Dacian
Argedava (Popeşti) – Dacian, possibly
Burebista 's court or capital
Argidava (Vărădia) – Dacian, Roman
Basarabi (Calafat) –
Basarabi culture (8th - 7th centuries BC), related to
Hallstatt culture
Boian Lake –
Boian culture (dated to 4300–3500 BC)
Callatis (Mangalia) – Greek colony
Capidava – Dacian, Roman
Cernavodă –
Cernavodă culture , Dacian
Coasta lui Damian (Măerişte)
Dacian Fortresses of the Orăştie Mountains
Drobeta – Roman
Giurtelecu Şimleului
Histria – Greek colony
Lumea Noua (near Alba Iulia) – middle Neolithic to
Chalcolithic
Napoca (Cluj-Napoca) – Dacian, Roman
Peștera cu Oase – the oldest
early modern human remains in Europe
Porolissum (near Zalău) – Roman
Potaissa (Turda) – Roman
Sarmizegetusa Regia –
Dacian capital
Sarmizegetusa Ulpia Traiana –
Roman capital of
province of Dacia
Trophaeum Traiani /
Civitas Tropaensium (Adamclisi) – Roman
Tomis (Constanţa) – Greek colony
Ziridava /
Şanţul Mare (Pecica) – Dacian,
Pecica culture , 16 archaeological horizons have been distinguished, starting with the Neolithic and ending with the Feudal Age
Cultures
Literature
Publications
See also
References
Further reading
External detailed link for Romanian archaeological cultures
Archaeology of Europe
Sovereign states States with limited recognition Dependencies and other entities