The Cotofeni culture was followed by various Bronze Age cultures, which gradually evolved into the proto-Dacians between 1500-1200 BC. The final step of Dacian ethnogenesis is the immigration of Agathyrsi (the first Scythians) in 800-700 BC, who were assimilated by the Dacians.
The Agatyrsi were pushed towards the territory of Romania by other Scythian groups who migrated West. They settled into Transylvania, where they assimilated into Geto-Dacian culture while contributing important elements to it.
The Agatyrsi were known for metal work and setting their laws in verse and music for easy memorization. By 600 BC, the Dacian region of Transylvania was famous for gold mining and for the high sophistication of its metal artifacts.
In Dacia, gold artefacts were pervasive and often had religious significance. Many Dacian men and women wore gold bracelets and pendants as a sign of Zamolxian religious wows.
It is this treasure that would motivate the Roman emperor Trajan to conquer the Dacian capital and occupy its most famous gold mining regions, which later be exploited by the Romans for gold production.
Soviet lies about Chisinau (the capital of the Republic of Moldova):
-Chisinau fell into disrepair during the union of Eastern Moldova with Romania (1918-1940)
-Chisinau was treated by Romania as a provincial backwater
-Chisinau was neglected & exploited by Romania
Chisinau developed intensively during interbellum under the administration of Romania. Many comfortable houses, urban villas, apartment buildings, very well-designed schools were built, and libraries, printing houses, and theaters were opened.
The first mechanized mill and bread, sausage, candy, shoe, knitwear, fur factories etc. opened. Exhibitions of industrial goods & agricultural machinery were organized. In 1919, the Chamber of Commerce and Industry was set up in Chisinau.
-Romania is an aggressive imperialist power
-Romania annexed Moldova & North Bukovina in 1918 from the peaceful Soviet Union
-Romania was a Nazi totalitarian state which allied with Hitler and attacked the peaceful Soviet Union in 1941 for no reason
A map of earth fortifications (of vallum type) on the territory of Romania, most of them built during the Roman period.
The Roman fortifications in Dobrudja were built both before and after the Aurelian retreat from Romania Dacia in 271/74, since Dobrucja (then called Scythia Minor) remained part of the Roman (and later Bizantine Empire) after that.
The map also shows some fortifications built during the time when the Thervingi (the Gothic group which will later migrate West to become the Visigoths) were present in the region (3rd and 4th century AD).
In Romania, the Cernavoda culture was followed by the Cotofeni culture, which represents a synthesis of Indo-European and previous Old Europe cultures. This is an early bronze age culture marked by increased used of new metal decorations and tools.
The Cernavoda I culture followed the Suvorovo culture in the regions of Budjak and Dobrudja in present day Ukraine, Romania and Bulgaria. It represents a further (and likely violent) migration of Indo-European groups into the lower Danube region.
In its second and third phases, this culture expanded to cover the banks of lower Danube in what are now Romania and Bulgaria, at the same time that the Sredny Stog culture evolved into the Yamnaya culture.
It is believed that proto-Anatolian languages evolved within the Cernavoda and Suvorovo cultures, part of whose members migrated south into the Balkans and finally to Anatolia, where they became the Hittites, Luvians, Lydians etc. of antiquity.
The Suvorovo culture (4500-4100 BC) controlled the Budjak and Dobrudja regions of Ukraine, Romania & Bulgaria. It signals the first expansion of Indo-Europeans (proto-Hittites) from the Stredny Stog culture into Old Europe.
The Stredny Stog culture was one of the first Indo-European cultures -- and could be the Indo-European Urheimat. It had contacts with the Cucuteni-Trypillians and expanded over regions previously controlled by them and by the Gumelnita-Karanovo culture.