English: Eastern Europe in 7-8 centuries according with the romanian, serbian & bulgarian point of view. There are two conflicting and incompatible theories regarding the presence of speakers of Eastern Romance languages in the region between the years 275 and 1275, for a thousand years. According to one, visible in the “Školski istorijski atlas, Zavod za izdavanje udžbenika SR Srbije”, Belgrad 1970
File:A view on 6th to 8th century ethnic distribution in Romania.png, they could have lived only in a very small area north of the Danube, and appeared in the south long after the Slavs, who upon arriving found only non-Romanized Illyrians and Thracians, despite the six centuries of presence of the Roman Empire. According to the other, visible on the map
[1] as it was restored by Gyalu22, they could have lived only in a very small area south of the Danube, and are appeared in the north long after the Magyars, who upon arriving found only scattered and nomadic Avars and Slavs, but no sedentary population in the middle Danube basin, between the Alps, the Drava and the Carpathian arc, despite the Moravian and Blatozerian attested principalities. These two theories have in common that they consider that all the peoples of the period were able to cross the Carpathians, the Danube and the Balkans, “except” the speakers of the Eastern Romance languages known as “Vlachs”. This is why secondary sources make it seem like they disappeared for a millennium and then inexplicably reappeared. These antagonistic theories ignore the linguistic works which conclude that there was a long cohabitation between peoples during this “dark millennium” on both banks of the Danube and both slopes of the Carpathians. These are two theories influenced by the nationalisms of modern states, and there is no scientific reason to prefer one rather than the other, nor to qualify the linguistic arguments and the works of Romanian historians as "fake", on the way of some politicians with ideas as exclusive as they are extreme and vehement.