Dava (Dacian)


Dava was a Geto-Dacian name for a city, town or fortress. Generally, the name indicated a tribal center or an important settlement, usually fortified. Some of the Dacian settlements and the fortresses employed the Murus Dacicus traditional construction technique.
Most of these towns are attested by Ptolemy, and therefore date from at least the 1st century CE.
The dava towns can be found as south as the cities of Sandanski and Plovdiv in present-day Bulgaria. Strabo specified that the Dacians are the Getae. The Dacians, Getae and their kings were always considered as Thracians by the ancients, and were both said to speak the same Thracian language.

Etymology

Many city names of the Dacians were composed of an initial lexical element affixed to -dava, -daua, -deva, -deba, -daba or -dova. Therefore, dava "town" derived from the reconstructed proto-Indo-European *dhewa "settlement". A non-Indo European, Kartvelian solution has also been briefly mentioned, but dismissed as a random occurrence e.g., see comparison with modern Georgian დაბა, "town, village".

List of ''davae''

Below is a list of Dacian towns which include various forms of dava in their name: