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Carpi (people) : ウィキペディア英語版
Carpi (people)

The Carpi or Carpiani were an ancient people that resided in the eastern parts of modern Romania in the historical region of Moldavia from no later than c. AD 140 and until at least AD 318.
The ethnic affiliation of the Carpi remains disputed, as there is no direct evidence in the surviving ancient literary sources. A strong body of modern scholarly opinion considers that the Carpi were a tribe of the Dacian nation.〔Virgil Cândea. (''An Outline of Romanian History'' )〕〔J.B. Bury. (''The Cambridge Medieval History volumes 1-5'' )〕〔Gudmund Schutte. (''Our Forefathers, Volumul 1'' )〕 Other scholars have linked the Carpi to a variety of ethnic groups, including Sarmatians, Thracians, Slavs, Germans, and Celts.
About a century after their earliest mention by Ptolemy, during which time their relations with Rome appear to have been peaceful, the Carpi emerged in c. 238 as among Rome's most persistent enemies. In the period AD 250-270, the Carpi were an important component of a loose coalition of transdanubian barbarian tribes that also included Germanic and Sarmatian elements. These were responsible for a series of large and devastating invasions of the Balkan regions of the empire which nearly caused its disintegration in the "Crisis of the Third Century".
In the period 270-318, the Roman "military emperors" acted to remove the Carpi threat to the empire's borders. were inflicted on the Carpi in 273, 297, 298-308 and in 317. were forcibly transferred by the Roman military to the Roman province of Pannonia (modern western Hungary) as part of the emperors' policy of repopulating the devastated Danubian provinces with surrendered barbarian tribes. Since the Carpi are no longer mentioned in documents after 318, it is possible that the Carpi were largely removed from the Carpathian region by c. 318 or, if any remained, it is possible that they mingled with other peoples resident or immigrating into Moldavia, such as the Sarmatians or Goths.
== Name etymology ==
The Greco-Romans called this people the ''Carpi'' or ''Carpiani''.〔Hist. Aug. ''Gordiani Tres'' XXVI.3〕 Probably the earliest mention of them, under the name ''Καρπιανοί'' (''Carpiani'' in Latin) is in the ''Geographia'' of the 2nd-century Greek geographer Ptolemy, composed c. AD 140.〔Ptolemy III.5.1, 10〕〔Smith's ''Carpi''〕
The name Carpi or Carpiani may derive from the same root as the name of the Carpathian mountain range that they occupied, also first mentioned by Ptolemy under the name ''Καρπάτης - Karpátes''.〔Bichir (1976) 145〕
The root may be the putative Proto-Indo-European word
*''ker/sker'', meaning "peak" or "cliff" (cf. Albanian ''karpë'' "rock", Romanian ''(ş)carpă'' "precipice", and Latin ''scarpa'').〔Köbler ''
*Ker (1)''〕 Scholars who support this derivation are divided between those who believe the Carpi gave their name to the mountain range (i.e. the name means "mountains of the Carpi")〔" Parvan Vasile (1926) 153"〕〔Martini, Peter I., Chesworth Ward (2010) 255〕 and those who claim the reverse. In the latter case, ''Carpiani'' could mean simply "people of the Carpathians".〔cf. Bichir (1976) 145〕 But the similarity between the two names may be coincidence, and they may derive from different roots. For example, it has been suggested that the name may derive from the Slavic root-word ''krepu'' meaning "strong" or "brave".〔Müller (1883) 430 (note 5)〕 Also, it had been suggested that Carpathian Mountains may derive from the Sanskrit root "kar" 'cut' that would give the meaning of 'rugged mountains'.〔"Tomaschek (1883) 403"〕
Some scholars consider that the following peoples recorded in ancient sources correspond to Ptolemy's ''Karpiani'':
* the ''Kallipidai'' mentioned in the ''Histories'' of Herodotus (composed around 430 BC) as residing in the region of the river ''Borysthenes'' (Dnieper)〔Herodotus IV.17〕〔" Parvan (1926) 153"〕
* the ''Karpídai'' around the mouth of the river ''Tyras'' (Dniester) recorded in a fragment of Pseudo-Scymnus (composed c. 90 BC)〔〔Pseudo-Scymnus 842〕
* the ''Harpii'', located near the Danube delta, mentioned by Ptolemy himself.〔〔Ptolemy III.10〕
*
If so, their locations could imply that the Carpi had very gradually migrated westwards in the period 400 BC - AD 140, a view championed by Kahrstedt.〔cf. Bichir (1976) 149〕 These names' common element ''carp-'' appears frequently in Dacian and Thracian placenames and personal names.〔〔Van Den Gheyn, S. J. (1930) 385〕 But there is no consensus that these groups are in fact Carpi. Bichir suggests that they were Thraco-Dacian tribes distantly related to the Carpi.〔cf. Bichir (1976) 148-50〕

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