History Research 2013; 1(2): 5-24
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There are indications that the Albanians, who are living today on the territory of ancient
Illyria, came there from the territory of the Roman Province of Moesia Superior (in the present-day
Serbia) and especially from the valley of the River of Morava which is now the territory of the Eastern
Serbia – i.e., the ancient Illyrians cannot be the ancestors of the present-day Albanians.
The last point deserve more attention. As the territory of the Province of Moesia Superior was in the ancient
times the zone of Dacian ethnicity, the modern Albanians can be only of the Dacian ethnical origin, but not of the
Illyrian one. In this case, however, the Albanians are of the same ethnical origin like the modern Romanians. Such conclusions
are supported by the following facts: 1) Illyrian toponyms from the time of ancient Greeks and Romans are not in accordance with the Albanian phonetic laws;
2) most ancient Latin loanwords in the Albanian language have the phonetic form of the eastern Balkan type of the Latin
language that is showing that the Albanians are descendent from the ancient Dacians; 3) the most part of terminology
in the Albanian language, which is in connection to the expression of littoral terms, is borrowed from different
languages what suggests that the Albanians have not been originally a coastal people; 4) only a few ancient
Greek loanwords exist in modern Albanian language; if Albanians of Illyrian origin were really indigenous population in
Epirus region there should be much more loanwords from the ancient Greek language; 5) there is no any reference to
the Albanians on the present-day Albania’s territory in any medieval historical source before the 9th century 54 ; and 6)
around one hundred words from the Romanian language are similar only to the words from the Albanian language. It
suggests that the Albanians came to the present-day Albania either from the present-day Romania or from the territory
of Serbia that is close to Romania.
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Similarly, the Hungarian historians and linguists are stressing that the Romanian theory of Romanian ethnical origin from the ancient Dacians is
unjust. The Hungarians are arguing that the Vlachs (or the Romanians as it is regarded in Romanian historiography) arrived in the 12th century when
the name of Vlach was mentioned for the first time in historical sources.
This opinion is primarily based on “the highly ideological Gesta Hungarorum
of the unknown cleric Anonymus three-hundred years after the events recorded [i. e., the Magyar settlement in the Pannonia and Transylvania] splendid victories over fictitious chiefs of the peoples ‘found here’ by the Magyars, actually projecting the twelfth-century status quo onto the ninth” [Kontler L., Millenium in Central Europe. A History of Hungary, Budapest: Atlantisz Publishing House, 1999, p. 43]. Contrary to their Hungarian colleagues, the Romanian historians and linguists developed the “Dacian-Vlach” theory of Romanian ethnical origin suggesting that the ancient Dacians were proto-Romanians. As a result, the modern Romanians are considered as original settlers in Transylvania and they have stronger historical rights to this territory than the Hungarians who came there just in the 10th century (for example, see: [Bolovan I. and others, A History of Romania, Iaşi, 1996, pp. 46–63]).
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The Romanian philologist Vasila Parvan launched a hypothesis in 1910 that the proto-Albanians left their original territories in the Carpathians between the 3rd and the 6th century A.D. and moved to the Balkans through Transylvania.
This is the latest and most exact conclusion from 2013 on where the Albanians originated from .............Vasila Parvan would seem to be the closest to the truth.
Albanians, taking refuge in Roman lands from northern Dacian/Carpathian area at a time when the "barbarians" where moving against the Romans from the east.
Interesting hypothesis.Who is Vasile Parvan?