PREHISTORIC
by
Nicolae Densusianu
NICOLAE
DENSUSIANU, his life and work.
PREFACE
by Dr. C. I. Istrati
(TN - When Nicolae Densusianu died
in 1911, only 1120 pages from Prehistoric Dacia had been printed.
The whole book had 1152 pages, without the introduction and final conclusion,
which were only in unfinished note form and could not be used afterwards.
Dr.C.I.Istrati was asked by the
executor of his testament to publish the rest of the pages, and to write a
preface for the whole work. The preface is 114 pages long, so I will present it
here in a much shortened form. The reader must not forget that the voice is
Dr.Istrati’s and the time of writing was 1912).
Nicolae
Densusianu (1846 –
1911) was born at Densus, a little Romanian village in
His was an old Romanian family, Pop de Hateg, and his father Bizantius, was the priest of the
village. He grew up therefore in a Romanian cultural environment, although
stifled by persecution, lack of freedom of speech and suppression of their
mother language, Romanian.
He took his law degree at the
In 1878 he received a commission from the
In 1884 he published “The revolution of Horia in Transylvania and
Hungary, 1784-1785, written on the basis of 783 official documents”,
banned in Hungary, work which was the last word in documenting the terrible
tragedy of that section of our national population, the uprising which had
preceded the French revolution.
In 1885 he published “Monuments for the history of the country of
Fagaras” treating in detail the real ancient history of the Romanians
of Transylvania, compared to their present situation, under Austro-Hungarian
rule. He deplored the fact “that once falsehood is introduced in history, it is
very difficult to uproot it and even to discover it”.
During this same year he started work on his great
masterpiece Prehistoric Dacia, and, in order to gather material for it, he
departed in 1887 on a scientific trip towards
He returned to his country,
Between 1887 and 1897 6 volumes of “Documents regarding the History
of Romanians, 1199-1345,
collected and accompanied by notes”, and in 1893 he wrote the study “The religious independence of the
In 1894 he voluntarily withdrew from public work, refused a
new, very good position, being content with minimal means of subsistence, in
order to have the peace and quiet needed to finish his monumental work Prehistoric
Dacia. In 1895 though, he took a commission from the War Ministry and
wrote “The glorious princes and famous captains of the Romanian countries”.
After 1897 he decided to dedicate all his time to Prehistoric
Dacia.
In his own words “I
always had in my sight the history of the entire Romanian element, in whatever
countries it found itself in ancient times, either constituted in bigger
states, or organized in districts only, provinces and national counties, or,
finally, scattered in smaller and more remote ethnic islands, because of other
superimposed nations, but leading a Romanian way of life”.
Tired and sick, he retired in 1899 even from the continuing
publication of the historical documents, but continues to publish short studies
on different subjects, in parallel to his great work. So, in 1901 he published
“Military Romania” and the study “The origin and historical importance of the
Romanian cavalry”, and in 1902 he was named a member correspondent of the
Romanian Geographical Society. In 1904 he published a study about the
development of the Romanian language, affirming that “to accept phonetics as a
basis for the correct writing and speech, means to distort a common Romanian
language, the chronology, the formation and unity of which go back into the
most remote of times”. In 1906 he wrote an unpublished study regarding “The military history of the Romanian people,
from the most remote times until the 18th century”, and in 1909
he published two very important studies: “The
war of 1330 between King Carol Robert of Hungary and Basarab, the Domn (TN
– the equivalent of king, or prince, ruler of the country) of The Romanian Country” and “The
war of 1369-1370 between Ludovic I, the King of Hungary and Vladislav Basarab,
the Domn of The Romanian Country”.
Finally, he devoted himself wholly to Prehistoric Dacia,
which took him forty years in all to complete. Only to make it ready for print
took him the last eleven years of his life, dedicated to assiduous work, but
alas, he died before seeing it published.
Apart from his lengthy travel through
To this questionnaire he received answers from all the lands
inhabited by Romanians, sent mainly by the local school teachers, who were in
direct contact with the communities.
In Prehistoric Dacia, Densusianu
unveils a past almost entirely unknown, a glorious past for
He knew profoundly the classics, and mastered their
language, and read them in original, so that he gives the right interpretation
of texts formerly appeared with the wrong meaning, owing to the lack of
knowledge of the translator.
It is incredible and defies the imagination how he finds, to
the last detail, in Romanian legends and ballads, the ancient deeds described
in the ancient texts, starting with Homer himself.
His argumentation is solid, well-grounded, extremely well
informed. He was accused of advancing hypotheses, but he proved. He proved the
millenary continuity of the Romanian people and the conservative force of our
nation.
The general essence of his theory is in short the following:
Densusianu starts from the prehistoric man and gradually
reconstitutes the biggest empire known to the ancient world, the Pelasgian empire. He shows the
extraordinary role played for the human civilization by this empire, owing
especially to the deified kings Uranos and Saturn, and their wives Gaea and
Rhea.
He proves – it can’t be said otherwise – that the entire, but
absolutely the entire mythology, so-called Greek, was born in the mountains of
He proves that a principal branch of these Pelasgians spoke a
language called by him proto-Latin, which gave birth to Latin and the neo-Latin
languages. He shows how tribes of this empire (the basis of which he believes
to have been mostly religious), composed mainly of shepherds, and later by
metal-workers, descended and founded
He tries to recreate the customs, belief and language of
these peoples and manages to explain countless historical facts, which so far
had been unclear.
If we, Romanians, have resisted the floods of invasions, if
we exist, from far beyond the Nister in the east (Dnestr), to Istria,
Switzerland and Little Valahia of Bohemia in the west, from south Poland in the
north, to Athens and the islands of the Archipelagos in the south, it is not
only because the Roman colonists were brought here by Trajan. Our essence is
proto-Latin, we were the ancient Arimii (as they were called in remote times),
one of the principal tribes of the Pelasgians. One of their branches were Rimii
who founded Rome, Aromanii of today already existed, and it was from here that
they penetrated far to the end of Asia, the north of Africa, to Spain and
Denmark, as in all of these regions it can be observed that their ancient
populations were branches of the same people, who dwelt and had their centre
especially in Transylvania and Oltenia.
(TN – Dr.C.I.Istrati continues with
a long presentation of the work, with quotations and extra supporting material
by other authors, the short form of which follows):
Densusianu begins his work with The Quaternary Epoch – the Paleolithic period. His first chapter is
about The first inhabitants of
He then treats extensively and competently the prehistoric ceramic of
In the following chapter Densusianu treats The prehistoric monuments of
The author treats then The
commemorative mounds of Osiris, about Osiris’
expedition to the Ister and his wars with Typhon in today Oltenia, and
writes about The giant furrow of Novac
(Ostrea).
(TN – at this point in the preface
Dr.Istrati mentions a study of his, about “a number of statuettes representing
Egyptian divinities, found in
The next chapter studies The
megalithic monuments of Dacia, and makes comparisons with the ones from
western Europe, after which Densusianu treats at length the Termini liberi Patris (the great sacred
road of the Hyperboreans), of which a considerable part still exists in
Basarabia.
He also presents The
megalithic simulacra of the Pelasgian divinities (on the peaks of the
Carpathians), and The principal
prehistoric divinities of
These were: Uranos
(Caelus, Kerus, Cerus manus/Caraiman) and Gaea (Earth, Tellus, Terra, Mater, Caia); Saturn (Dokius Caeli filius,
Omolos) and Rhea (Cybele, Terra
(TN – Here again, Dr.Istrati adds
the description and three photos of a statuette of Cybele found at Romula,
Romanati district, in which Cybele is represented sitting on a throne flanked
by a lion on each side.
He continues with more photos and
descriptions of statuettes of Rhea found in
On the same theme of Cybele, Densusianu proves as absolute
historical truth, that Sibylla Erythrea or Dacica was born in the mountains of
The next chapter describes The cyclopic altars on Caraiman mountain and The Sky Column on the
Another important chapter is about The Columns of Hercules, and he proves again, beyond any doubt,
that they were near the Iron Gates on the Danube, after which follows a chapter
about the origin of metalworking, north of the Lower Danube, on the territory
of Dacia. He also explains the origin of the
Copper tablets of the Hyperboreans, the
Tall copper column from the mountains of Olt, the Giant copper crater on top of
the Sky Column and the Great Gold
Column. While still on these topics, he also discusses
(TN : The author of the preface
finishes with praises for the extraordinary scientific and national value of Prehistoric
Dacia and hopes that this great work will be translated in other
European languages, so that this new vast treasure of information and material,
including the Romanian folk legends, poems, customs, etc, related to it, will
revolutionize the established way of thinking about the birth and development
of civilizations in Europe and around the Mediterranean).