- The Tyrageti,
Tyragetae, or
Tyrangitae (Gr****: Τυραγγεῖται, Tυραγγέται, or Τυρεγέται,
Strabo vii.; Ptol. iii. 5. § 25), literally, the
Getae of the Tyras...
- now
called the Dniester. The
surrounding native tribe was
called the
Tyragetae. The
ruins of
Tyras are now
located in the
modern city of Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi...
-
ethnonym Getae was
first used by Herodotus. The root was also used for the
Tyragetae, Thyssagetae, M****agetae, and others.
Strabo stated in his Geographica...
-
named the "Oarus", was
almost certainly the Volga.
Getae M****agetae
Tyragetae Geats Gutes Herodotus. Histories, 4.22.1: "...after the desert, if one...
- Celts,
specifically by
tribes such as the Costoboci, Carpi, Britogali,
Tyragetae, and Bastarnae. In the 6th
century BC, Gr****
settlers established the...
- the mountains),
afterwards broadens out
towards the
north as far as the
Tyragetae; but I
cannot tell the
precise boundarie[citation needed] The Dacians...
-
variant of
Yamnaya culture. In
classical antiquity,
Budjak was
inhabited by
Tyragetae, Bastarnae, Scythians, and Roxolani. In 6th
century BC
Ancient Gr**** colonists...
- 2003, page 33: "... the
Carps and the Roxolani), by Bastarns, and by
Tyragetae (another Geto-Dacian tribe)..." The
Cambridge Ancient History, Volume...
-
inhabited by
Thracian and
Scythian tribes.
Pliny the
Elder names the
Tyragetae, a
Getae tribe living on an
island of the
Dniester (ancient name "Tyras")...
-
listing Agathyrsi, Bastarnae, Britolagai, Costoboci, Roxolani, Thrakes, and
Tyragetae. Also, some
modern authors surmise the
existence of
ethnic groups formed...