Sarmizegetusa Regia, the former capital city of the Dacians’ kingdom, is situated in the Şureanu (Orăştie) Mountains in the Southern Carpathians, Romania. This chapter reviews, from the astronomical point of view, two of the monuments located on its Sacred Terrace – the altar known as the “Andesite Sun” and the Central Apse of the Great Round Sanctuary – as well as sanctuaries at the nearby site of Costes¸ti. Astronomical analyses taking into consideration (a) the astronomical-geometrical methods of the time (the analemma of a sundial after Vitruvius and the stereographical projection in the sense of Hipparchus), (b) astronomical instruments of the time (the gnomon, the sundial and the astrolabe), and (c) other instruments known to the Dacians (the compass), have concluded that these monuments may have enabled the Dacians to carry out a number of astronomical observations. This would confirm several reports by contemporary historians regarding the Dacians’4 knowledge of astronomy.
CITATION STYLE
Stănescu, F. (2015). Astronomical orientation in the ancient Dacian sanctuaries of Romania. In Handbook of Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy (pp. 1365–1376). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-6141-8_130
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