Dacian tribes. Teurisci tribe located in Dacia cf. Ptolemy Geography
Teurisci was a Dacian tribe at the time of Ptolemy (140 AD).[1][2] They were originally considered a branch of the Celtic Taurisci (Noricum), who moved to Upper Tisza. However, the archaeology shows that Celts have been absorbed by Dacians, at some point[3] creating a Celto-Dacian cultural horizon in the upper Tisza.[4][better source needed]
^Dacia: Landscape, Colonization and Romanization by Ioana A Oltean, ISBN 0-415-41252-8, 2007, page 46
^Thomas H Dyer in Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography: Iabadius-Zymethus edited by Sir William Smith, Boston, Little Brown and Co. 1857, page 1133
^Dacia: Landscape, Colonization and Romanization by Ioana A Oltean, ISBN 0-415-41252-8, 2007, page 47
^Mannova 1963. sfn error: no target: CITEREFMannova1963 (help)
Teurisci was a Dacian tribe at the time of Ptolemy (140 AD). They were originally considered a branch of the Celtic Taurisci (Noricum), who moved to Upper...
an Illyrian tribe, in the south-west, and the Carni, a Venetic tribe. Teurisci, attested by Ptolemy in Dacia, were originally a group of the Celtic Taurisci...
of the Carpathians are recorded the Anarti, Teurisci and Costoboci. The Anarti (or Anartes) and the Teurisci were originally probably Celtic peoples or...
that the Anarti were settled on the northwestern edge of Dacia with the Teurisci bordering them on the east, and further east there were the Costoboci....
according to Julius Capitolinus" Saldenses Scaugdae Sense Suci Terici Teurisci Trixae Tyrageti[unreliable source?] Troglodytae Artakioi[failed verification]...
archaeological excavation has revealed that some Celtic tribes (Anartes, Teurisci) had migrated eastwards as far as Transylvania, where they were eventually...