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213:(reigned 87–106) used Roman prisoners to deviate the course of the Sargetia river and buried a treasure at the bottom. He buried "so much silver and gold and some other artefacts who can survive moisture", after which the river was returned to its original course. The rest of the treasure was deposited in surrounding caves, and the Roman prisoners were slaughtered.
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The Roman claim that they looted in a single hoard 165 tons of gold and 300 tons of silver is accepted by some historians. This amount is perhaps credible in terms of the massive Dacian exploitation of precious metals in the
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has estimated the treasure at 165,500 kg of gold and 331,000 kg of silver. Between 1540 and 1759, in
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Taylor, Timothy (1994). "Thracians, Scythians, and
Dacians".
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193:nobles surrendered or were caught. One of them,
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209:According to the story, the Dacian king
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181:Dacian bracelet in Vienna, Austria
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