Tag: helmet

  • February 7, 2025

    February 7, 2025

    GDP Romania has overcome Poland in terms of the GDP per capita against purchasing power says a survey conducted by experts with the Romanian Academy of Economic Studies in Bucharest. According to the same sources, Romania is also ahead other economies in the region, such as Hungary, Croatia or Greece and the nominal GDP per capita has risen by 11% in the past five years, exceeding 80% of the EU average. We’ll be having more on this after the news

    WAGES According to the latest economic forecasts of the European Commission in Romania wages will moderately increase in 2025 and 2026. The European Commission has based its forecasts on the already significant increases in the minimum wages already made by the government in Bucharest, the lower inflation and the labour market relaxation, which is expected to reduce the unemployment rate. European Commission experts are expecting price hikes in energy and food to significantly decrease. The inflation rate is expected to drop down to the Central Bank’s target of 2.5% towards the end of 2026.

    THEFT The Dutch police have announced they have received hundreds of hints regarding the theft of the precious Romanian artefacts from the Drents Museum in Assen. Many of these are about the places where the suspects have been seen and their contacts. The police last week apprehended three suspects, two men and a woman who refused to say where the stolen objects are stashed. All the three suspects are still in police custody. Art detective, Arthur Brand says there is 50% risk the suspects have already melted the golden artefacts: an ancient helmet and three bracelets dating back to the old kingdom of Dacia, 25 hundred years ago, which had been loaned out by the National History Museum in Bucharest.

    VISIT The head of the US diplomacy, Marco Rubio, will be travelling to Israel and several Arab countries in mid-February, the US Department of State has announced. This would be Rubio’s first trip as a Secretary of State to the region after the US President, Donald Trump’s statement on resettling the Palestinians outside the Gaza Strip under US monitoring. Trump’s resettlement idea has prompted a series of accusations that he is planning ethnic cleansing and has drawn condemnation from the UN, human rights groups and Arab leaders. Rubio insists that Donald Trump proposed the reconstruction of the aforementioned territory, which at present offers improper dwelling conditions. According to AFP, Rubio will be participating in the Security Conference in Munich and is going on a Middle East tour, which will take him to Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Saudi Arabia over February 13 and 18.

    IMF Romania’s Prime Minister, Marcel Ciolacu, is meeting an IMF team, whose four days trip to Bucharest ends today. The IMF experts are having talks with Central Bank officials, including governor Isarescu. The IMF delegation hasn’t called for strict financial measures, like tax hikes or other austerity measures, Finance Minister Tanczos Barna says. Barna met the new head of the IMF mission to Romania, Joong Shik Kang on Thursday. At present Romania doesn’t have an IMF funding agreement underway, but the institution is presently monitoring Romania’s economy, under Article Four, which provides for a mandatory monitoring exercise involving all member states. The consultations’ main purpose was financial and economic assessment at national level as well as recommendations concerning monetary, financial and economic policies with a view to achieving economic stability and development.

    (bill)

     

  • Romania’s ancient history, re-eenacted

    Romania’s ancient history, re-eenacted

    The population of the Getae and the
    Dacians, in antiquity, had reportedly inhabited the territory between the
    Danube, the Black Sea, the Carpathian Mountains and the intra-Carpathian basin.
    Evidence of their material culture has been unearthed in several archaeological
    sites. The artefacts that have been found so far even date before the time Dacia was conquered by the Romans, but also after that period of time and
    after the ensuing merger of the Dacian and the Roman civilizations. The weapons
    that have been found among the excavated artefacts hold pride of place with
    respect to the most valuable evidence that usually helps archaeologists get
    the picture of the Getae and the Dacians’ standards of progress as compared to
    those of the Romans.


    The Romans’ presence in the Lower Danube
    dates from the first century B.C. Quite a few of the Getae and Dacian tribes
    had entered the orbit of the Roman civilization. However, there were tribes
    that rejected such a merger of simply refused to be Roman subjects. The most
    rebellious Dacian king was Decebalus of the late first century AD. His state
    was located in the central-south-eastern part of today’s Romania, in the Southern
    Carpathians’ Sureanu Mountains. In the wake of two wars, 101-102 and 105-106 AD, waged by
    Emperor Trajan, Decebalus, the Dacian King was overpowered, beheaded, and his
    kingdom was conquered. Therefore, the Dacian-Roman synthesis emerged, which historians
    describe as the act underlying the formation of the Romanian nation.


    Established in 2007, the Terra Dacica Aeterna Association is made of
    a group of enthusiasts who stage re-enactment performances and promote the Getae
    and the Dacian culture. Dacia, the last frontier of the Roman era is the
    title of an exhibition and at its opening, Andrei Duduman of the aforementioned
    Association dressed himself in a Dacian’s apparel and presented the Dacians’ weapons,
    in a bid to provide a clear picture of the weapons Dacians and Romans used when
    they fought each other 1900 years ago. Andrei Duduman:

    We have the Dacian warrior, some sort of heavy infantry chieftain. For the Dacian warrior, the
    key visual item was the shield, whose design is inspired by the models on the
    column, they can be admired in the lapidarium as part of Romania’s Museum of National
    History. The second very important element is the sword, of a Celtic pattern,
    whose sheath is decorated with motifs that can be found on the famous Dacian
    matrix unearthed in Sarmizegetusa.
    Another item, crucial for the protection of the warrior, is the chain mail
    shirt. In our case, it is a chain mail shirt, a riveted one, perfect for a more
    affluent warrior, a richer one. The riveting made the shirt more resistant. The
    chain mail shirt provided protection from strikes, cuts, but les so in the case
    of stabs. It was especially designed to protect the warrior from cuts. I wear a
    Spangenhelm-type of helmet, of Sarmatian inspiration. It was made of metal
    segments, held together by stripes and rivets. As for the civilian part of my
    apparel, so to speak, I wear some silver jewels, the famous Dacian nails, in
    our case, there is only three of them. As far as I know, helmets with 5, with 7,
    with 9 nails have also been excavated, their number varies according to the resources and means of
    those wearing them. I also have several glass beads, and, of course, some
    rings, also made of silver, they are replicas of original artefacts. A very important
    item, an insignium of a Dacian nobleman, was the Sicca, the famous Dacian Sicca,
    a dagger.


    In turn, Lucian Vulpe played
    the part of a Roman legionnaire:


    With the
    Dacians, the gear was somehow non-standardized, having all sorts of decorations,
    without any gear resembling the others, yet with the Romans, everything was
    standardized. The Roman army was a professional army, everybody dressed and
    fought the same. The standard Roman legionnaire’s only key weapon was the
    gladius, an Iberian weapon, originating from Spain, which oftentimes was used
    not only in duels, but it was effective at thrusting. It was used in thrusting
    as in battle, many legionnaires had to close ranks and there was not enough room
    for them to move. Each legionnaire was protected by a lorica segmentata. It was a flexible, very mobile body armor, made of plate sheet segments, very easy to recondition during a fight. He also had a helmet which
    protected him very well from the Dacians’ curved or straight weapons. After the
    First Dacian-Roman War, the Roman helmet was reinforced, two iron bars were added
    in the middle, to help the legionnaires defend themselves against the Dacian Falx
    (sword). Completing the gear is the Roman shield, mostly decorated
    with wings and on which the name of the legion was inscribed, in our case the 5th
    Macedonica Legion, stationed in Turda. His footwear was made of caligae, the classic
    Roman sandals, whose pattern could vary. In the case of a centurion, they were
    more abundantly decorated and more performing than those of the ordinary
    legionnaires. They also had a tunic and a cloak, known as the Pennula, protecting
    the Roman soldiers from the rain or helping them to keep warm.


    With their weapons and their
    apparel, the Dacians and the Romans came back to life at Romania’s National
    Museum of History. In today’s world, the aficionados of the distant past have rendered flesh and blood to this long-forgotten world. (EN)