Romanian archaeology

Romanian archaeology begins in the 19th century.

Archaeologists

 * Alexandru Odobescu (1834—1895)
 * Grigore Tocilescu (1850–1909)
 * Vasile Pârvan (1882–1927)
 * Constantin Daicoviciu (1898–1973)
 * living
 * Gheorghe I. Cantacuzino (b. 1938)

Institutes

 * Institute of Archaeology and Art History in Cluj-Napoca
 * Vasile Pârvan Institute of Archaeology in Bucharest

Museums

 * Archaeology Museum Piatra Neamț
 * Iron Gates Region Museum
 * Museum of Dacian and Roman Civilisation
 * National Museum of Romanian History
 * National Museum of Transylvanian History

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

 * Basarabi culture
 * Boian culture
 * Bug-Dniester culture
 * Bükk culture
 * Cernavoda culture
 * Chernyakhov culture
 * Coțofeni culture
 * Cucuteni-Trypillian culture
 * Danubian culture
 * Dudeşti culture
 * Globular Amphora culture
 * Gumelniţa-Karanovo culture
 * Hamangia culture
 * La Tène culture
 * Linear Pottery culture
 * Lipiţa culture
 * Otomani culture
 * Pecica culture
 * Tiszapolgár culture
 * Usatovo culture
 * Vinča culture
 * Wietenberg culture
 * Getae
 * Dacians
 * Roman

Literature

 * Alexandru Odobescu, Istoria arheologiei, 1877

Publications

 * Dacia by Vasile Pârvan Institute of Archaeology, published continuously since 1924

External detailed link for Romanian archaeological cultures

 * National Archaeological Record of Romania (RAN)
 * Romania's Mapserver for National Cultural Heritage