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Illyrians

The Illyrians (Ancient Greek: Ἰλλυριοί, Illyrioi; Latin: Illyrii) were a group of Indo-European-speaking peoples who inhabited the western Balkan Peninsula in ancient times. They constituted one of the three main Paleo-Balkan populations, along with the Thracians and Greeks.

Illyrian tribes in the 1st-2nd centuries CE.

The territory the Illyrians inhabited came to be known as Illyria to later Greek and Roman authors, who identified a territory that corresponds to most of Albania, Montenegro, Kosovo,[a] much of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, western and central Serbia and some parts of Slovenia between the Adriatic Sea in the west, the Drava river in the north, the Morava river in the east and the Ceraunian Mountains in the south.[1] The first account of Illyrian peoples dates back to the 6th century BC, in the works of the ancient Greek writer Hecataeus of Miletus.

The name "Illyrians", as applied by the ancient Greeks to their northern neighbors, may have referred to a broad, ill-defined group of peoples. It has been suggested that the Illyrian tribes never collectively identified as "Illyrians", and that it is unlikely that they used any collective nomenclature at all.[2] Illyrians seems to be the name of a specific Illyrian tribe who were among the first to encounter the ancient Greeks during the Bronze Age.[3] The Greeks later applied this term Illyrians, pars pro toto, to all people with similar language and customs.[4]

In archaeological, historical and linguistic studies, research about the Illyrians, from the late 19th to the 21st century, has moved from Pan-Illyrian theories, which identified as Illyrian even groups north of the Balkans to more well-defined groupings based on Illyrian onomastics and material anthropology since the 1960s as newer inscriptions were found and sites excavated. There are two principal Illyrian onomastic areas: the southern and the Dalmatian-Pannonian, with the area of the Dardani as a region of overlapping between the two. A third area, to the north of them – which in ancient literature was usually identified as part of Illyria – has been connected more to the Venetic language than to Illyrian. Illyric settlement in Italy was and still is attributed to a few ancient tribes which are thought to have migrated along the Adriatic shorelines to the Italian peninsula from the geographic "Illyria": the Dauni, the Peuceti and Messapi (collectively known as Iapyges).

The term "Illyrians" last appears in the historical record in the 7th century, referring to a Byzantine garrison operating within the former Roman province of Illyricum.[5] What happened to the Illyrians after the settlement of the Slavs in the region is a matter of debate among scholars, and includes the question whether the Albanian language is a descendant of an Illyrian language.

Etymology

While the Illyrians are largely recorded under the ethnonyms of Illyrioi (Ἰλλυριοί) and Illyrii, these appear to be misspelt renditions by Greek or Latin-speaking writers. Based on historically attested forms denoting specific Illyrian tribes or the Illyrians as a whole (e.g., Úlloí (Ύλλοί) and Hil(l)uri),[6][7] the native tribal name from which these renditions were based has been reconstructed by linguists such as Heiner Eichner as *Hillurio- (< older *Hullurio-). According to Eichner, this ethnonym, translating to 'water snake', is derived from Proto-Indo-European *ud-lo ('of water, aquatic') sharing a common root with Ancient Greek üllos (ϋλλος) meaning 'fish'[8] or a 'small water snake'.[9] The Illyrian ethnonym shows a dl > ll shift via assimilation as well as the addition of the suffix -uri(o) which is found in Illyrian toponyms such as Tragurium.[8]

Eichner also points out the tribal name's close semantic correspondence to that of the Enchelei which translates to 'eel-people', depicting a similar motif of aquatic snake-like fauna. It is also pointed out that the Ancient Greeks must have learned this name from a tribe in southern Illyria, later applying it to all related and neighbouring peoples.[10]

Terminology and attestation

The terms 'Illyrians', 'Illyria' and 'Illyricum' have been used throughout history for ethnic and geographic contextualizations that have changed over time. Re-contextualizations of these terms often confused ancient writers and modern scholars. Notable scholarly efforts have been dedicated to trying to analyze and explain these changes.[11]

The first known mention of Illyrians occurred in the late 6th and the early 5th century BC in fragments of Hecataeus of Miletus, the author of Γενεαλογίαι (Genealogies) and of Περίοδος Γῆς or Περιήγησις (Description of the Earth or Periegesis), where the Illyrians are described as a barbarian people.[12][13][note 1] In the Macedonian history during the 6th and 5th century B.C., the term 'Illyrian' had a political meaning that was quite definite, denoting a kingdom established on the north-western borders of Upper Macedonia.[16] From the 5th century B.C. onwards, the term 'Illyrian' was already applied to a large ethnic group whose territory extended deep into the Balkan mainland.[17][note 2] Ancient Greeks clearly considered the Illyrians as a completely distinct ethnos from both the Thracians (Θρᾷκες) and the Macedonians (Μακεδόνες).[23]

Most scholars hold that the territory originally designated as 'Illyrian' was roughly located in the region of the south-eastern Adriatic (modern Albania and Montenegro) and its hinterland, then was later extended to the whole Roman Illyricum province, which stretched from the eastern Adriatic to the Danube.[11] After the Illyrians had come to be widely known to the Greeks due to their proximity, this ethnic designation was broadened to include other peoples who, for some reason, were considered by ancient writers to be related with those peoples originally designated as Illyrians (Ἰλλυριοί, Illyrioi).[17][24]

The original designation may have occurred either during the Middle/Late Bronze Age[25] or at the beginning of the 8th century BC.[2] According to the former hypothesis, the name was taken by traders from southern Greece from a small group of people on the coast, the Illyrioi/Illyrii (first mentioned by Pseudo-Skylax and later described by Pliny the Elder), and thereafter applied to all of the people of the region; this has been explained by the substantial evidence of Minoan and Mycenaean contact in the valley where the Illyrioi/Illyrii presumably lived.[25] According to the latter hypothesis the label Illyrians was first used by outsiders, in particular Ancient Greeks; this has been argued on the basis that when the Greeks began to frequent the eastern Adriatic coast with the colonization of Corcyra, they started to have some knowledge and perceptions of the indigenous peoples of western Balkans.[2]

It has been suggested that the Illyrian tribes evidently never collectively identified themselves as Illyrians and that it is unlikely that they used any collective nomenclature at all.[2] Most modern scholars are certain that all the peoples of western Balkans that were collectively labeled as 'Illyrians' were not a culturally or linguistically homogeneous entity.[26][27] For instance, some tribes like the Bryges would not have been identified as Illyrian.[28] What criteria were initially used to define this group of peoples or how and why the term 'Illyrians' began to be used to describe the indigenous population of western Balkans cannot be said with certainty.[29] Scholarly debates have been waged to find an answer to the question whether the term 'Illyrians' (Ἰλλυριοί) derived from some eponymous tribe, or whether it has been applied to designate the indigenous population as a general term for some other specific reason.[30]

Illyrii proprie dicti

Ancient Roman writers Pliny the Elder and Pomponius Mela used the term Illyrii proprie dicti ('properly called Illyrians') to designate a people that was located in the coast of modern Albania and Montenegro.[30] Many modern scholars view the 'properly called Illyrians' as a trace of the Illyrian kingdom known in the sources from the 4th century BC until 167 BC, which was ruled in Roman times by the Ardiaei and Labeatae when it was centered in the Bay of Kotor and Lake Skadar. According to other modern scholars, the term Illyrii may have originally referred only to a small ethnos in the area between Epidaurum and Lissus, and Pliny and Mela may have followed a literary tradition that dates back as early as Hecataeus of Miletus.[12][30] Placed in central Albania, the Illyrii proprie dicti also might have been Rome's first contact with Illyrian peoples. In that case, it did not indicate an original area from which the Illyrians expanded.[31] The area of the Illyrii proprie dicti is largely included in the southern Illyrian onomastic province in modern linguistics.[32]

Origins

 
Sites from prehistory in Illyria (J. Wilkes, 1992).

Archaeology

The Illyrians emerged from the fusion of PIE-descended Yamnaya-related population movements ca. 2500 BCE in the Balkans with the pre-existing Balkan Neolithic population, initially forming "Proto-Illyrian" Bronze Age cultures in the Balkans.[33][34][35] The proto-Illyrians during the course of their settlement towards the Adriatic coast merged with such populations of a pre-Illyrian substratum – like Enchelei might have been –, leading to the formation of the historical Illyrians who were attested in later times. It has been suggested that the myth of Cadmus and Harmonia may be a reflection in mythology of the end of the pre-Illyrian era in the southern Adriatic region as well as in those regions located north of Macedonia and Epirus.[36]

Older Pan-Illyrian theories which emerged in the 1920s placed the proto-Illyrians as the original inhabitants of a very large area which reached central Europe. These theories, which have been dismissed, were used in the politics of the era and its racialist notions of Nordicism and Aryanism.[26] The main fact which these theories tried to address was the existence of traces of Illyrian toponymy in parts of Europe beyond the western Balkans, an issue whose origins are still unclear.[37] The specific theories have found little archaeological corroboration, as no convincing evidence for significant migratory movements from the Urnfield-Lusatian culture into the west Balkans has ever been found.[38][39][40]

Archaeogenetics

Mathieson et al. 2018 archaeogenetic study included three samples from Dalmatia: two Early & Middle Bronze Age (1631-1521/1618-1513 calBCE) samples from Veliki Vanik (near Vrgorac) and one Iron Age (805-761 calBCE) sample from Jazinka Cave in Krka National Park. According to ADMIXTURE analysis they had approximately 60% Early European Farmers, 33% Western Steppe Herders and 7% Western Hunter-Gatherer-related ancestry. The male individual from Veliki Vanik carried the Y-DNA haplogroup J2b2a1-L283 while his and two female individuals mtDNA haplogroup were I1a1, W3a1 and HV0e.[41] Freilich et al. 2021 identify the Veliki Vanik samples as related to the Cetina culture (EBA-MBA western Balkans).

Patterson et al. 2022 study examined 18 samples from the Middle Bronze Age up to Early Iron Age Croatia, which was part of Illyria. Out of the nine Y-DNA samples retrieved, which coincide with the historical territory where Illyrians lived (including tested Iapydes and Liburni sites), almost all belonged to the patrilineal line J2b2a1-L283 (>J-PH1602 > J-Y86930 and >J-Z1297 subclades) with the exception of one R1b-L2. The mtDNA haplogroups fell under various subclades of H, H1, H3b, H5, J1c2, J1c3, T2a1a, T2b, T2b23, U5a1g, U8b1b1, HV0e. In a three-way admixture model, they approximately had 49-59% EEF, 35-46% Steppe and 2-10% WHG-related ancestry.[42] In Lazaridis et al. (2022) key parts of the territory of historical territory of Illyria were tested. In 18 samples from the Cetina culture, all males except for one (R-L51 > Z2118) carried Y-DNA haplogroup J-L283. Many of them could be further identified as J-L283 > Z597 (> J-Y15058 > J-Z38240 > J-PH1602). The majority of individuals carried mtDNA haplogroups J1c1 and H6a1a. The related Posušje culture yielded the same Y-DNA haplogroup (J-L283 > J-Z38240). The same J-L283 population appears in the MBA-IA Velim Kosa tumuli of Liburni in Croatia (J-PH1602), and similar in LBA-IA Velika Gruda tumuli in Montenegro (J-Z2507 > J-Z1297 > J-Y21878). The oldest J-L283 (> J-Z597) sample in the study was found in MBA Shkrel, northern Albania as early as the 19th century BCE. In northern Albania, IA Çinamak, half of them men carried J-L283 (> J-Z622, J-Y21878) and the other half R-M269 (R-CTS1450, R-PF7563). The oldest sample in Çinamak dates to the first era of post-Yamnaya movements (EBA) and carries R-M269.[43] Autosomally, Croatian Bronze Age samples from various sites, from Cetina valley and Bezdanjača Cave were "extremely similar in their ancestral makeup",[44] while from Montenegro's Velika Gruda mainly had an admixture of "Anatolian Neolithic (~50%), Eastern European hunter-gatherer (~12%), and Balkan hunter-gatherer ancestry (~18%)".[45] The oldest Balkan J-L283 samples have bee found in final Early Bronze Age (ca. 1950 BCE) site of Mokrin in Serbia and about 100-150 years later in Shkrel, northern Albania.[46][47]

Aneli et al. 2022 based on samples from EIA Dalmatia argue that the Early Iron Age Illyrians made "part of the same Mediterranean continuum" with the "autochthonous [...] Roman Republicans" and had high affinity with Daunians, part of Iapygians in Apulia, southeastern Italy. Iron Age male samples from Daunian sites have yielded J-M241>J-L283+, R-M269>Z2103+ and I-M223 lineages.[48] Three Bronze Age males which carry J-L283 have been found in the Late Bronze Age Nuragic civilization of Sardinia. This late find in Sardinia in comparison to western Balkan samples suggests a dispersal from the western Balkans towards this region, perhaps via an intermediary group in the Italian peninsula.[49]

In ancient Greek and Roman literature

Different versions of the genealogy of the Illyrians, their tribes and their eponymous ancestor, Illyrius, existed in the ancient world both in fictional and non-fictional Greco-Roman literature. The fact that there were many versions of the genealogical story of Illyrius was ascertained by Ancient Greek historian Appian (1st–2nd century AD). However, only two versions of all these genealogical stories are attested.[50][51] The first version—which reports the legend of Cadmus and Harmonia—was recorded by Euripides and Strabo in accounts that would be presented in detail in Bibliotheca of Pseudo-Apollodorus (1st to 2nd century AD).[52] The second version—which reports the legend of Polyphemus and Galatea—was recorded by Appian (1st–2nd century AD) in his Illyrike.[50]

According to the first version Illyrius was the son of Cadmus and Harmonia, whom the Enchelei had chosen to be their leaders. He eventually ruled Illyria and became the eponymous ancestor of the whole Illyrian people.[53] In one of these versions, Illyrius was named so after Cadmus left him by a river named the Illyrian, where a serpent found and raised him.[52]

Appian writes that many mythological stories were still circulating in his time,[54] and he chose a particular version because it seemed to be the most correct one. Appian's genealogy of tribes is not complete as he writes that other Illyrian tribes exist, which he hasn't included.[52] According to Appian's tradition, Polyphemus and Galatea gave birth to Celtus, Galas, and Illyrius,[55] three brothers, progenitors respectively of Celts, Galatians and Illyrians. Illyrius had multiple sons: Encheleus, Autarieus, Dardanus, Maedus, Taulas and Perrhaebus, and daughters: Partho, Daortho, Dassaro and others. From these, sprang the Taulantii, Parthini, Dardani, Encheleae, Autariates, Dassaretii and the Daorsi. Autareius had a son Pannonius or Paeon and these had sons Scordiscus and Triballus.[4] Appian's genealogy was evidently composed in Roman times encompassing barbarian peoples other than Illyrians like Celts and Galatians.[56] and choosing a specific story for his audience that included most of the peoples who dwelled in the Illyricum of the Antonine era.[54] However, the inclusion in his genealogy of the Enchelei and the Autariatae, whose political strength has been highly weakened, reflects a pre-Roman historical situation.[57][note 3]

Basically, ancient Greeks included in their mythological accounts all the peoples with whom they had close contacts. In Roman times, ancient Romans created more mythical or genealogical relations to include various new peoples, regardless of their large ethnic and cultural differences. Appian's genealogy lists the earliest known peoples of Illyria in the group of the first generation, consisting mostly of southern Illyrian peoples firstly encountered by the Greeks, some of which were the Enchelei, the Taulantii, the Dassaretii and the Parthini.[58][59] Some peoples that came to the Balkans at a later date such as the Scordisci are listed in the group that belongs to the third generation. The Scordisci were a Celtic people mixed with the indigenous Illyrian and Thracian population. The Pannonians have not been known to the Greeks, and it seems that before the 2nd century BC they did not come into contact with the Romans. Almost all the Greek writers referred to the Pannonians with the name Paeones until late Roman times. The Scordisci and Pannonians were considered Illyrian mainly because they belonged to Illyricum since the early Roman Imperial period.[60]

History

Iron Age

 
Illyrian tribes in the 7th–4th centuries BCE.

Depending on the complexity of the diverse physical geography of the Balkans, arable farming and livestock (mixed farming) rearing had constituted the economic basis of the Illyrians during the Iron Age.[citation needed]

In southern Illyria organized realms were formed earlier than in other areas of this region. One of the oldest known Illyrian kingdoms is that of the Enchelei, which seems to have reached its height from the 8th–7th centuries BC, but the kingdom fell from dominant power around the 6th century BC.[61] It seems that the weakening of the kingdom of Enchelae resulted in their assimilation and inclusion into a newly established Illyrian realm at the latest in the 5th century BC, marking the arising of the Dassaretii, who appear to have replaced the Enchelei in the lakeland area of Lychnidus.[62][63] According to a number of modern scholars the dynasty of Bardylis—the first attested Illyrian dynasty—was Dassaretan.[64][note 4]

The weakening of the Enchelean realm was also caused by the strengthening of another Illyrian kingdom established in its vicinity—that of the Taulantii—which existed for some time along with that of the Enchelei.[68] The Taulantii—another people among the more anciently known groups of Illyrian tribes—lived on the Adriatic coast of southern Illyria (modern Albania), dominating at various times much of the plain between the Drin and the Aous, comprising the area around Epidamnus/Dyrrhachium.[69][note 5] In the 7th century BC the Taulantii invoked the aid of Corcyra and Corinth in a war against the Liburni. After the defeat and expulsion from the region of the Liburni, the Corcyreans founded in 627 BC on the Illyrian mainland a colony called Epidamnus, thought to have been the name of a barbarian king of the region.[71] A flourishing commercial centre emerged and the city grew rapidly. The Taulantii continued to play an important role in Illyrian history between the 5th and 4th–3rd centuries BC, and in particular, in the history of Epidamnus, both as its neighbors and as part of its population. Notably they influenced the affairs in the internal conflicts between aristocrats and democrats.[72][73] The Taulantian kingdom seems to have reached its climax during Glaukias' rule, in the years between 335 BC and 302 BC.[74][75][76]

The Illyrian kingdoms frequently came into conflicts with the neighbouring Ancient Macedonians, and the Illyrian pirates were also seen as significant threat to the neighbouring peoples.[77]

At the Neretva Delta, there was a strong Hellenistic influence on the Illyrian tribe of Daors. Their capital was Daorson located in Ošanići near Stolac in Herzegovina, which became the main center of classical Illyrian culture. Daorson, during the 4th century BC, was surrounded by megalithic, 5 meter high stonewalls, composed out of large trapeze stones blocks. Daors also made unique bronze coins and sculptures. The Illyrians even conquered Greek colonies on the Dalmatian islands.

After Philip II of Macedon defeated Bardylis (358 BC), the Grabaei under Grabos II became the strongest state in Illyria.[78] Philip II killed 7,000 Illyrians in a great victory and annexed the territory up to Lake Ohrid. Next, Philip II reduced the Grabaei, and then went for the Ardiaei, defeated the Triballi (339 BC), and fought with Pleurias (337 BC).[79]

 
Queen Teuta of the Ardieai orders the Roman ambassadors to be killed – painted by Augustyn Mirys

During the second part of the 3rd century BC, a number of Illyrian tribes seem to have united to form a proto-state stretching from the central part of present-day Albania up to Neretva river in Herzegovina. The political entity was financed on piracy and ruled from 250 BC by the king Agron. The Illyrian attack under Agron, against Aerolians mounted in either 232 or 231 BC, is described by Polybius:

One hundred lembi with 5000 men on board sailed up to land at Medion. Dropping anchor at daybreak, they disembarked speedily and in secret. They then formed up in the order that was usual in their own country, and advanced in their several companies against the Aetolian lines. The latter were overwhelmed with astonishment at the unexpected nature and boldness of the move; but they had long been inspired with overweening self-confidence, and having full reliance on their own forces were far from being dismayed. They drew up the greater part of their hoplites and cavalry in front of their own lines on the level ground, and with a portion of their cavalry and their light infantry they hastened to occupy some rising ground in front of their camp, which nature had made easily defensible. A single charge, however, of the Illyrians, whose numbers and close order gave them irresistible weight, served to dislodge the light-armed troops, and forced the cavalry who were on the ground with them to retire to the hoplites. But the Illyrians, being on higher ground, and charging down on from it upon the Aetolian trrops formed up on the plain, routed them without difficulty. The Medionians joined the action by sallying out of the town and charging the Aetolians, thus, after killing a great number, and taking a still greater number prisoners, and becoming masters also of their arms and baggage, the Illyrians, having carried out the orders of Agron, conveyed their baggage and the rest of their booty to their boats and immediately set sail for their own country.[80]

He was succeeded by his wife Teuta, who assumed the regency for her stepson Pinnes following Agron's death in 231 BC.[81]

In his work The Histories, Polybius (2nd century BC) reported first diplomatic contacts between the Romans and Illyrians.[82] In the Illyrian Wars of 229 BC, 219 BC and 168 BC, Rome overran the Illyrian settlements and suppressed the piracy that had made the Adriatic unsafe for Roman commerce.[83] There were three campaigns, the first against Teuta the second against Demetrius of Pharos and the third against Gentius.[84] The initial campaign in 229 BC marks the first time that the Roman Navy crossed the Adriatic Sea to launch an invasion.[85] The impetus behind the emergence of larger regional groups, such as "Iapodes", "Liburnians", "Pannonians" etc., is traced to increased contacts with the Mediterranean and La Tène 'global worlds'.[86] This catalyzed "the development of more complex political institutions and the increase in differences between individual communities".[87] Emerging local elites selectively adopted either La Tène or Hellenistic and, later, Roman cultural templates "in order to legitimize and strengthen domination within their communities. They were competing fiercely through either alliance or conflict and resistance to Roman expansion. Thus, they established more complex political alliances, which convinced (Greco-Roman) sources to see them as ‘ethnic’ identities."[88]

The Roman Republic subdued the Illyrians during the 2nd century BC. An Illyrian revolt was crushed under Augustus, resulting in the division of Illyria in the provinces of Pannonia in the north and Dalmatia in the south.[citation needed] Depictions of the Illyrians, usually described as "barbarians" or "savages", are universally negative in Greek and Roman sources.[89]

Roman era and Late Antiquity

Prior to the Roman conquest of Illyria, the Roman Republic had started expanding its power and territory across the Adriatic Sea. The Romans came nevertheless into a series of conflicts with the Illyrians, equally known as the Illyrian Wars, beginning in 229 BC until 168 BC as the Romans defeated Gentius at Scodra.[90] The Great Illyrian Uprising took place in the Roman province of Illyricum in the 1st century AD, in which an alliance of native peoples revolted against the Romans. The main ancient source that describes this military conflict is Velleius Paterculus, which was incorporated into the second book of Roman History. Another ancient source about it is the biography of Octavius Augustus by Pliny the Elder.[91] The two leaders of uprising were Bato the Breucian and Bato the Daesitiate.[citation needed]

Geographically, the name 'Illyria' came to mean Roman Illyricum which from the 4th century to the 7th century signified the prefecture of Illyricum. It covered much of the western and central Balkans. After the defeat of the Great Illyrian Revolt and the consolidation of Roman power in the Balkans, the process of integration of Illyrians in the Roman world accelerated even further. Some Illyrian communities were organized in their pre-Roman locations under their own civitates. Others migrated or were forcefully resettled in different regions. Some groups like the Azali were transferred from their homeland to frontier areas (northern Hungary) after the Great Illyrian Revolt. In Dacia, Illyrian communities like the Pirustae who were skilled miners were settled to the gold mines of Alburnus Maior where they formed their own communities. In Trajan's period these population movements were likely part of a deliberate policy of resettling, while later they involved free migrations. In their new regions, they were free salaried workers. Inscriptions show that by that era many of Illyrians had acquired Roman citizenship.[92]

By the end of the 2nd century and beginning of the 3rd century CE, Illyrian populations had been highly integrated in the Roman Empire and formed a core population of its Balkan provinces. During the crisis of the Third Century and the establishment of the Dominate, a new elite faction of Illyrians who were part of the Roman army along the Pannonian and Danubian Limes rose in Roman politics. This faction produced many emperors from the late 3rd to the 6th century CE who are collectively known as the Illyrian Emperors and include the Constantinian, Valentinianic and Justinianic dynasties.[93][94][95][96][97] Gaius Messius Quintus Traianus Decius , a native of Sirmium, is usually recognized as the first Illyrian emperor in historiography.[98] The rise of the Illyrian Emperors represents the rise of the role of the army in imperial politics and the increasing shift of the center of imperial politics from the city of Rome itself to the eastern provinces of the empire.

The term Illyrians last appears in the historical record in the 7th century AD, in the Miracula Sancti Demetrii, referring to a Byzantine garrison operating within the former Roman province of Illyricum.[5][99] However, in the acts of the Second Council of Nicaea from 787, Nikephoros of Durrës signed himself as "Episcopus of Durrës, province of the Illyrians".[100] Since the Middle Ages the term "Illyrian" has been used principally in connection with the Albanians, although it was also used to describe the western wing of the Southern Slavs up to the 19th century,[101] being revived in particular during the Habsburg monarchy.[102][103] In Byzantine literature, references to Illyria as a defined region in administrative terms end after 1204 and the term specifically began to refer only to the more confined Albanian territory.[104]

Society

Social and political organisation

The structure of Illyrian society during classical antiquity was characterised by a conglomeration of numerous tribes and small realms ruled by warrior elites, a situation similar like that in most other societies at that time. Thucidides in the History of the Peloponnesian War (5th century BC) addresses the social organisation of the Illyrian tribes via a speech he attributes to Brasidas, in which he recounts that the mode of rulership among the Illyrian tribes is that of dynasteia—which Thucidides used in reference to foreign customs—neither democratic, nor oligarchic. Brasidas then goes on to explain that in the dynasteia the ruler rose to power "by no other means than by superiority in fighting".[105] Pseudo-Scymnus (2nd century BC) in reference to the social organisation of Illyrian tribes in earlier times than the era he lived in makes a distinction between three modes of social organisation. A part of the Illyrians were organized under hereditary kingdoms, a second part was organized under chieftains who were elected but held no hereditary power and some Illyrians were organised in autonomous communities governed by their own internal tribal laws. In these communities social stratification had not yet emerged.[106]

Warfare

The history of Illyrian warfare and weaponry spanned from around the 10th century BC up to the 1st century AD in the region defined by the Ancient Greek and Roman historians as Illyria. It concerns the armed conflicts of the Illyrian tribes and their kingdoms in the Balkan Peninsula and the Italian Peninsula as well as their pirate activity in the Adriatic Sea within the Mediterranean Sea.[citation needed]

The Illyrians were a notorious seafaring people with a strong reputation for piracy especially common during the regency of king Agron and later queen Teuta.[107][108] They used fast and maneuverable ships of types known as lembus and liburna which were subsequently used by the Ancient Macedonians and Romans.[109] Livy described the Illyrians along the Liburnians and Istrians as nations of savages in general noted for their piracy.[110]

Illyria appears in Greco-Roman historiography from the 4th century BC. Illyrians were regarded as bloodthirsty, unpredictable, turbulent, and warlike by Ancient Greeks and Romans.[111] They were seen as savages on the edge of their world.[89] Polybius (3rd century BC) wrote: "the Romans had freed the Greeks from the enemies of all mankind".[112] According to the Romans, the Illyrians were tall and well-built.[113] Herodianus writes that "Pannonians are tall and strong always ready for a fight and to face danger but slow witted".[114] Illyrian rulers wore bronze torques around their necks.[115]

Apart from conflicts between Illyrians and neighbouring nations and tribes, numerous wars were recorded among Illyrian tribes too.[citation needed]

Culture

Language

 
The chromolithographic Bronze belt plaque of Vače, Slovenia of the Hallstatt culture

The languages spoken by the Illyrian tribes are an extinct and poorly attested Indo-European language group, and it is not clear whether the languages belonged to the centum or the satem group. The Illyrians were subject to varying degrees of Celticization, Hellenization, Romanization and later Slavicization which possibly lead to the extinction of their languages.[116][117][118] In modern research, use of concepts like "Hellenization" and "Romanization" has declined as they have been criticized as simplistic notions which can't describe the actual processes via which material development moved from the centres of the ancient Mediterranean to its periphery.[89]

The vast majority of knowledge of Illyrian is based on the Messapian language if the latter is considered an Illyrian dialect.[citation needed] The non-Messapian testimonies of Illyrian are too fragmentary to allow any conclusions whether Messapian should be considered part of Illyrian proper, although it has been widely thought that Messapian was related to Illyrian. An extinct Indo-European language, Messapian was once spoken in Messapia in the southeastern Italian Peninsula. It was spoken by the three Iapygian tribes of the region, the Messapians, the Daunii and the Peucetii.[citation needed]

On both sides on the border region between southern Illyria and northern Epirus the contact between the Illyrian and Greek languages produced an area of bilingualism between the two, although it is unclear how the impact of the one language to the other developed because of the scarcity of available archaeological material. However, this did not occur at the same level on both sides, with the Illyrians being more willing to adopt the more prestigious Greek language.[119][120] Ongoing research may provide further knowledge about these contacts beyond present limited sources.[120] Illyrians were exposed not only to Doric and Epirote Greek but also to Attic-Ionic.[120]

The Illyrian languages were once thought to be connected to the Venetic language in the Italian Peninsula but this view was abandoned.[121] Other scholars have linked them with the adjacent Thracian language supposing an intermediate convergence area or dialect continuum, but this view is also not generally supported. All these languages were likely extinct by the 5th century AD although traditionally, the Albanian language is identified as the descendant of Illyrian dialects that survived in remote areas of the Balkans during the Middle Ages but evidence "is too meager and contradictory for us to know whether the term Illyrian even referred to a single language".[122][123]

The ancestor dialects of the Albanian language would have survived somewhere along the boundary of Latin and Ancient Greek linguistic influence, the Jireček Line. There are various modern historians and linguists who believe that the modern Albanian language might have descended from a southern Illyrian dialect whereas an alternative hypothesis holds that Albanian was descended from the Thracian language.[124][122] Not enough is known of the ancient language to completely prove or disprove either hypothesis, see Origin of the Albanians.[125]

Linguistic evidence and subgrouping

Modern studies about Illyrian onomastics, the main field via which the Illyrians have been linguistically investigated as no written records have been found, began in the 1920s and sought to more accurately define Illyrian tribes, the commonalities, relations and differences between each other as they were conditioned by specific local cultural, ecological and economic factors, which further subdivided them into different groupings.[126][127] This approach has led in contemporary research in the definition of three main onomastic provinces in which Illyrian personal names appear near exclusively in the archaeological material of each province. The southern Illyrian or south-eastern Dalmatian province was the area of the proper Illyrians (the core of which was the territory of Illyrii proprie dicti of the classical authors, located in modern Albania) and includes most of Albania, Montenegro and their hinterlands. This area extended along the Adriatic coast from the Aous valley[32] in the south, up to and beyond the Neretva valley in the north.[32][128] The second onomastic province, the central Illyrian or middle Dalmatian-Pannonian province began to its north and covered a larger area than the southern province. It extended along the Adriatic coast between the Krka and Cetina rivers, covered much of Bosnia (except for its northern regions), central Dalmatia (Lika) and its hinterland in the central Balkans included western Serbia and Sandžak. The third onomastic province further to the north defined as North Adriatic area includes Liburnia and the region of modern Ljubljana in Slovenia. It is part of a larger linguistic area different from Illyrian that also comprises Venetic and its Istrian variety. These areas are not strictly defined geographically as there was some overlap between them.[129][130][128] The region of the Dardani (modern Kosovo, parts of northern North Macedonia, parts of eastern Serbia) saw the overlap of the southern Illyrian and Dalmatian onomastic provinces. Local Illyrian anthroponymy is also found in the area.[131]

In its onomastics, southern Illyrian (or south-east Dalmatian) has close relations with Messapic. Most of these relations are shared with the central Dalmatian area.[132] In older scholarship (Crossland (1982)), some toponyms in central and northern Greece show phonetic characteristics that were thought to[according to whom?] indicate that Illyrians or closely related peoples were settled in those regions before the introduction of the Greek language.[dubious ][133] However, such views largely relied on subjective ancient testimonies and are not supported by the earliest evidence (epigraphic etc.).[134]

Religion

The Illyrians, as most ancient civilizations, were polytheistic and worshipped many gods and deities developed of the powers of nature. The most numerous traces—still insufficiently studied—of religious practices of the pre-Roman era are those relating to religious symbolism. Symbols are depicted in every variety of ornament and reveal that the chief object of the prehistoric cult of the Illyrians was the Sun,[135][136] worshipped in a widespread and complex religious system.[135] The solar deity was depicted as a geometrical figure such as the spiral, the concentric circle and the swastika, or as an animal figure the likes of the birds, serpents and horses.[137][136] The symbols of water-fowl and horses were more common in the north, while the serpent was more common in the south.[136] Illyrian deities were mentioned in inscriptions on statues, monuments, and coins of the Roman period, and some interpreted by Ancient writers through comparative religion.[138][139] There appears to be no single most prominent god for all the Illyrian tribes, and a number of deities evidently appear only in specific regions.[138]

In Illyris, Dei-pátrous was a god worshiped as the Sky Father, Prende was the love-goddess and the consort of the thunder-god Perendi, En or Enji was the fire-god, Jupiter Parthinus was a chief deity of the Parthini, Redon was a tutelary deity of sailors appearing on many inscriptions in the coastal towns of Lissus, Daorson, Scodra and Dyrrhachium, while Medaurus was the protector deity of Risinium, with a monumental equestrian statue dominating the city from the acropolis. In Dalmatia and Pannonia one of the most popular ritual traditions during the Roman period was the cult of the Roman tutelary deity of the wild, woods and fields Silvanus, depicted with iconography of Pan. The Roman deity of wine, fertility and freedom Liber was worshipped with the attributes of Silvanus, and those of Terminus, the god protector of boundaries. Tadenus was a Dalmatian deity bearing the identity or epithet of Apollo in inscriptions found near the source of the Bosna river. The Delmatae also had Armatus as a war god in Delminium. The Silvanae, a feminine plural of Silvanus, were featured on many dedications across Pannonia. In the hot springs of Topusko (Pannonia Superior), sacrificial altars were dedicated to Vidasus and Thana (identified with Silvanus and Diana), whose names invariably stand side by side as companions. Aecorna or Arquornia was a lake or river tutelary goddess worshipped exclusively in the cities of Nauportus and Emona, where she was the most important deity next to Jupiter. Laburus was also a local deity worshipped in Emona, perhaps a deity protecting the boatmen sailing.[citation needed]

It seems that the Illyrians did not develop a uniform cosmology on which to center their religious practices.[136] A number of Illyrian toponyms and anthroponyms derived from animal names and reflected the beliefs in animals as mythological ancestors and protectors.[140] The serpent was one of the most important animal totems.[141] Illyrians believed in the force of spells and the evil eye, in the magic power of protective and beneficial amulets which could avert the evil eye or the bad intentions of enemies.[135][138] Human sacrifice also played a role in the lives of the Illyrians.[142] Arrian records the chieftain Cleitus the Illyrian as sacrificing three boys, three girls and three rams just before his battle with Alexander the Great.[143] The most common type of burial among the Iron Age Illyrians was tumulus or mound burial. The kin of the first tumuli was buried around that, and the higher the status of those in these burials the higher the mound. Archaeology has found many artifacts placed within these tumuli such as weapons, ornaments, garments and clay vessels. The rich spectrum in religious beliefs and burial rituals that emerged in Illyria, especially during the Roman period, may reflect the variation in cultural identities in this region.[144]

Archaeology

 
Details of the late antique cathedral complex in Byllis, Albania and the Adriatic sea in the distance.
 
Walls of ancient Daorson, located at Ošanići near Stolac in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

In total, at least six material cultures have been described to have emerged in Illyrian territories. Based on existing archaeological finds, comparative archaeological and geographical definition about them has been difficult.[145] Archaeogenetic studies have shown that a major Y-DNA haplogroup among Illyrians, J2b-L283 spread via Cetina culture across the eastern Adriatic from the Cetina valley in Croatia to Montenegro and northern Albania. The earliest archaeogenetic find related to Cetina in Albania is the Shkrel tumulus (19th century BCE). It is the oldest J2b-L283 find in the region historically known as Illyria. Freilich et al. (2021) determined that Cetina related samples from Veliki Vanik carry similar ancestry to a Copper Age sample from the site of Beli Manastir-Popova Zemlja (late Vučedol culture), eastern Croatia. The same autosomal profile persists in the Iron Age sample from Jazinka cave.[146] Cetina finds have been found in the western Adriatic since the second half of the thirds millenium in southern Italy. In Albania, new excavations show spread of Cetina culture in sites of central Albania (Blazi, Nezir, Keputa). Inland Cetina spread in Bosnia and Herzegovina, in particular Kotorac, a site near Sarajevo and contacts have been demonstrated with the Belotić Bela Crkva culture.[147] During the developed Middle Bronze Age, Belotić Bela Crkva which has been recognized as another Proto-Illyrian culture developed in northeastern Bosnia and western Serbia (Čačak area). Both inhumation and cremation have been observed in sites of this culture. Similar burial customs have been observed in the Glasinac plateau of eastern Bosnia, where the Glasinac-Mati culture first developed.[148]

During the 7th century BC, the beginning of the Iron Age, the Illyrians emerge as an ethnic group with a distinct culture and art form. Various Illyrian tribes appeared, under the influence of the Halstatt cultures from the north, and they organized their regional centers.[149] The cult of the dead played an important role in the lives of the Illyrians, which is seen in their carefully made burials and burial ceremonies, as well as the richness of the burial sites. In the northern parts of the Balkans, there existed a long tradition of cremation and burial in shallow graves, while in the southern parts, the dead were buried in large stone, or earth tumuli (natively called gromile) that in Herzegovina were reaching monumental sizes, more than 50 meters wide and 5 meters high. The Japodian tribe (found from Istria in Croatia to Bihać in Bosnia) have had an affinity for decoration with heavy, oversized necklaces out of yellow, blue or white glass paste, and large bronze fibulas, as well as spiral bracelets, diadems and helmets out of bronze.[citation needed] Small sculptures out of jade in form of archaic Ionian plastic are also characteristically Japodian. Numerous monumental sculptures are preserved, as well as walls of citadel Nezakcij near Pula, one of numerous Istrian cities from Iron Age. Illyrian chiefs wore bronze torques around their necks much like the Celts did.[150] The Illyrians were influenced by the Celts in many cultural and material aspects and some of them were Celticized, especially the tribes in Dalmatia[151] and the Pannonians.[152] In Slovenia, the Vače situla was discovered in 1882 and attributed to Illyrians. Prehistoric remains indicate no more than average height, male 165 cm (5 ft 5 in), female 153 cm (5 ft 0 in).[114]

Early Middle Ages

It is also evident that in a region which stretches from the southern Dalmatian coast, its hinterland, Montenegro, northern Albania up to Kosovo and Dardania, apart from a uniformity in onomastics there were also some archaeological similarities. However, it cannot be determined whether these tribes living there also formed a linguistic unity.[153]

The Komani-Kruja culture is an archaeological culture attested from late antiquity to the Middle Ages in central and northern Albania, southern Montenegro and similar sites in the western parts of North Macedonia. It consists of settlements usually built below hillforts along the Lezhë (Praevalitana)-Dardania and Via Egnatia road networks which connected the Adriatic coastline with the central Balkan Roman provinces. Its type site is Komani and its fort on the nearby Dalmace hill in the Drin river valley. Kruja and Lezha represent significant sites of the culture. The population of Komani-Kruja represents a local, non-Slavic western Balkan people which was linked to the Roman Justinianic military system of forts. The development of Komani-Kruja is significant for the study of the transition between the classical antiquity population of Albania to the medieval Albanians who were attested in historical records in the 11th century. Within Albanian archaeology, based on the continuity of pre-Roman Illyrian forms in the production of several types of local objects found in graves, the population of Komani-Kruja is framed as a group which descended from the local Illyrians who "re-asserted their independence" from the Roman Empire after many centuries and formed the core of the later historical region of Arbanon.[154] Illyrian-Albanian links were the main focus of Albanian nationalism during the Communism period.[155] What was established in this early phase of research was that Komani-Kruja settlements represented a local, non-Slavic population which has been described as Romanized Illyrian, Latin-speaking or Latin-literate.[156][157] This is corroborated by the absence of Slavic toponyms and survival of Latin ones in the Komani-Kruja area. In terms of historiography, the thesis of older Albanian archaeology is an untestable hypothesis as no historical sources exist which can link Komani-Kruja to the first definite attestation of medieval Albanians in the 11th century.[156][157] The nationalist interpretation of the Komani-Kruja cemeteries has been roundly rejected by non-Albanian scholars. John Wilkes has described it as "a highly improbable reconstruction of Albanian history". Some Albanian scholars even today have continued to espouse this model of continuity.[158]

Limited excavations campaigns occurred until the 1990s. Objects from a vast area covering nearby regions the entire Byzantine Empire, the northern Balkans and Hungary and sea routes from Sicily to Crimea were found in Dalmace and other sites coming from many different production centres: local, Byzantine, Sicilian, Avar-Slavic, Hungarian, Crimean and even possibly Merovingian and Carolingian. Within Albanian archaeology, based on the continuity of pre-Roman Illyrian forms in the production of several types of local objects found in graves, the population of Komani-Kruja was framed as a group which descended from the local Illyrians who "re-asserted their independence" from the Roman Empire after many centuries and formed the core of the later historical region of Arbanon.[154] As research focused almost entirely on grave contexts and burial sites, settlements and living spaces were often ignored.[159] Other views stressed that as an archaeological culture it shouldn't be connected to a single social or ethnic group but be contextualized in a broader Roman-Byzantine or Christian framework, nor should material finds be separated in ethnic categories as they can't be correlated to a specific culture. In this view, cemeteries from nearby regions which were classified as belonging to Slavic groups shouldn't be viewed as necessarily representing another people but as representations of class and other social factors as "ethnic identity was only one factor of varying importance".[160] Yugoslav archaeology proposed an opposite narrative and tried to frame the population as Slavic, especially in the region of western Macedonia.[161] Archaeological research has shown that these sites were not related to regions then inhabited by Slavs and even in regions like Macedonia, no Slavic settlements had been founded in the 7th century.[162]

Archaeologically, while it was considered possible and even likely that Komani-Kruja sites were used continuously from the 7th century onwards, it remained an untested hypothesis as research was still limited.[163] Whether this population represented local continuity or arrived at an earlier period from a more northern location as the Slavs entered the Balkans remained unclear at the time but regardless of their ultimate geographical origins, these groups maintained Justinianic era cultural traditions of the 6th century possibly as a statement of their collective identity and derived their material cultural references from the Justinianic military system.[164] In this context, they may have used burial customs as a means of reference to an "idealized image of the past Roman power".[164]

Research greatly expanded after 2009, and the first survey of Komani's topography was produced in 2014. Until then, except for the area of the cemetery, the size of the settlement and its extension remained unknown. In 2014, it was revealed that Komani occupied an area of more than 40 ha, a much larger territory than originally thought. Its oldest settlement phase dates to the Hellenistic era.[165] Proper development began in late antiquity and continued well into the Middle Ages (13th-14th centuries). It indicates that Komani was a late Roman fort and an important trading node in the networks of Praevalitana and Dardania. Participation in trade networks of the eastern Mediterranean via sea routes seems to have been very limited even in nearby coastal territory in this era.[166] The collapse of the Roman administration in the Balkans was followed by a broad demographic collapse with the exception of Komani-Kruja and neighbouring mountainous regions.[167] In the Avar-Slavic raids, communities from present-day northern Albania and nearby areas clustered around hill sites for better protection as is the case of other areas like Lezha and Sarda. During the 7th century, as Byzantine authority was reestablished after the Avar-Slavic raids and the prosperity of the settlements increased, Komani saw an increase in population and a new elite began to take shape. Increase in population and wealth was marked by the establishment of new settlements and new churches in their vicinity. Komani formed a local network with Lezha and Kruja and in turn this network was integrated in the wider Byzantine Mediterranean world, maintained contacts with the northern Balkans and engaged in long-distance trade.[168] Winnifrith (2020) recently described this population as the survival of a "Latin-Illyrian" culture which emerged later in historical records as Albanians and Vlachs. In Winnifrith's view, the geographical conditions of northern Albania favored the continuation of the Albanian language in hilly and mountainous areas as opposed to lowland valleys.[169] He adds that the language and religion of this culture remain uncertain. With bishops absent abroad, "the mountain flocks cannot have been too versed in theological or linguistic niceties".[169]

Nationalism

Albanians

The possible continuity between the Illyrian populations of the Western Balkans in antiquity and the Albanians has played a significant role in Albanian nationalism from the 19th century until the present day.[170][171]

South Slavs

At the beginning of the 19th century, many educated Europeans regarded the South Slavs as the descendants of ancient Illyrians. However, this is incorrect as Southern Slavs are descendants of Slavic tribes that migrated to the Balkans. Consequently, when Napoléon conquered part of the South Slavic lands, these areas were named after ancient Illyrian provinces (1809–1814).[172] After the demise of the First French Empire in 1815, the Habsburg monarchy became increasingly centralized and authoritarian, and fear of Magyarization arouse patriotic resistance among Croatians.[173] Under the influence of Romantic nationalism, a self-identified "Illyrian movement", in the form of a Croatian national revival, opened a literary and journalistic campaign initiated by a group of young Croatian intellectuals during the years of 1835–49.[174][175]

In popular culture

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The political status of Kosovo is disputed. Having unilaterally declared independence from Serbia in 2008, Kosovo is formally recognised as an independent state by 101 out of 193 (52.3%) UN member states (with another 13 recognising it at some point but then withdrawing their recognition), while Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own territory.
  1. ^ Hecataeus' works can only be analyzed indirectly since the fragments have been preserved in the works of other ancient authors. The majority of the fragments are transmitted in the geographical lexicon (Ἐθνικά, Ethnica) of Stephanus of Byzantium (6th century AD), of which we possess only a later abridgment (epitome by Hermolaos). On the other hand, Stephanus is regarded by modern scholars a reliable source in general.[14][15]
  2. ^ According to Borza due to the fact that the Illyrian tribes moved constantly there are no precise borders of 'Illyris' by Ancient Greek authors. Illyris approximately consisted an area located north of Epirus and western Macedonia,[18] and covered northern and central Albanian down to the mouth of the Aous.[19] According to Crossland (1982), Greeks of the 5th century B.C. recognized the Illyrii (Ἰλλυριοί) as an important non-Greek people living to the north of the Aetolians and the Acarnanians and further north in the territory of modern-day central and northern Albania, where Epidamnus/Dyrrhachium and Apollonia were founded by Greek colonists.[20] The Aous river, traditionally seen as a border region between Illyria and Epirus has been challenged as having such a status in contemporary research. Rather a transboundary area existed between Illyrians and tribes of Epirus which included the land of the Atintanians in the north and Tymphaea to the south. More recent scholarship places the Ceraunian Mountains as the barrier between Illyrians and the tribes of Epirus. But this mountainous barrier did not act as a border but rather as an area of cultural meeting.[21][22]
  3. ^ According to some modern scholars Appian's Illyrian genealogy ultimately originated with Timaeus. Appian's immediate source probably was Timagenes, who was also used by Pompeius Trogus for the early history of the Illyrians.[57]
  4. ^ There is also another historical reconstruction that considers Bardylis a Dardanian ruler, who during the expansion of his dominion included the region of Dassaretis in his realm, but this interpretation has been challenged by historians who consider Dardania too far north for the events involving the Illyrian king Bardylis and his dynasty.[65][66][67]
  5. ^ When describing the Illyrian invasion of Macedonia ruled by Argaeus I, somewhere between 678 and 640 BC, the historian Polyaenus (fl. 2nd-century CE) recorded the oldest known king in Illyria, Galaurus or Galabrus, a ruler of the Taulantii who reigned in the latter part of the 7th century BC. However, nothing guarantees the authenticity of Polyaenus' passage.[70]

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  99. ^ Juka 1984, p. 60: "Since the Illyrians are referred to for the last time as an ethnic group in Miracula Sancti Demetri (7th century AD), some scholars maintain that after the arrival of the Slavs the Illyrians were extinct."
  100. ^ Meksi, Aleksandër (1989) Të dhëna për historinë e hershme mesjetare të Shqipërisë (fundi i shek. VI — fillimi i shek. XI), / Données sur l'histoire médiévale ancienne de l'Albanie Iliria Année 1989, 19-1, p. 120
  101. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 2: "The name Illyrian was used to identify the western wing of the Southern Slavs up to the nineteenth century, although since the Middle Ages it has been used primarily in connection with the Albanians."
  102. ^ Djilas 1991, pp. 20–21.
  103. ^ Stergar 2016, pp. 111–112.
  104. ^ Koder 2017, p. 206.
  105. ^ Matijasić 2011, p. 26.
  106. ^ Šašel Kos 1993, p. 120.
  107. ^ The Illyrians (The Peoples of Europe) by John Wilkes, 1996, page 158, "...Illyrian success continued when command passed to Agron's widow Teuta, who granted individual ships a licence to universal plunder. In 231 ac the fleet and army attacked Ells and Messenia..."
  108. ^ Møller, Bjørn. "Piracy, Maritime Terrorism and Naval Strategy." Copenhagen: Danish Institute for International Studies, November 16, 2008. 10.
  109. ^ Dell, Harry J. 1967. The Origin and Nature of Illyrian Piracy. Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 16, (3) (Jul.): 344-58. 345.
  110. ^ Livy. The History of Rome, Band 2 - The History of Rome, Livy. T. Cadell and W. Davies, 1814. p. 324.
  111. ^ Whitehorne 1994, p. 37; Eckstein 2008, p. 33; Strauss 2009, p. 21; Everitt 2006, p. 154.
  112. ^ Champion 2004, p. 113.
  113. ^ Juvenal 2009, p. 127.
  114. ^ a b Wilkes 1992, p. 219.
  115. ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 223.
  116. ^ Bunson 1995, p. 202; Mócsy 1974.
  117. ^ Pomeroy et al. 2008, p. 255
  118. ^ Bowden 2003, p. 211; Kazhdan 1991, p. 248.
  119. ^ Malkin 1998, p. 143.
  120. ^ a b c Filos 2017, pp. 222, 241
  121. ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 183.
  122. ^ a b Eastern Michigan University Linguist List: The Illyrian Language 2012-02-18 at the Wayback Machine, linguistlist.org; accessed April 3, 2014
  123. ^ Ammon et al. 2006, p. 1874: "Traditionally, Albanian is identified as the descendant of Illyrian, but Hamp (1994a) argues that the evidence is too meager and contradictory for us to know whether the term Illyrian even referred to a single language."
  124. ^
    • Ceka 2005, pp. 40–42, 59
    • Thunmann, Johannes E. "Untersuchungen uber die Geschichte der Oslichen Europaischen Volger". Teil, Leipzig, 1774.
    • see Malcolm, Noel. Origins: Serbs, Vlachs, and Albanians. Malcolm is of the opinion that the Albanian language was an Illyrian dialect preserved in Dardania and then it (re-?)conquered the Albanian lowlands
    • Indo-European language and culture: an introduction By Benjamin W. Fortson Edition: 5, illustrated Published by Wiley-Blackwell, 2004 ISBN 1-4051-0316-7, ISBN 978-1-4051-0316-9
    • Stipčević, Alexander. Iliri (2nd edition). Zagreb, 1989 (also published in Italian as "Gli Illiri")
    • NGL Hammond The Relations of Illyrian Albania with the Greeks and the Romans. In Perspectives on Albania, edited by Tom Winnifrith, St. Martin’s Press, New York 1992
    • Encyclopedia of Indo-European culture By J. P. Mallory, Douglas Q. Adams Edition: illustrated Published by Taylor & Francis, 1997 ISBN 1-884964-98-2, ISBN 978-1-884964-98-5
  125. ^ Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 9;Fortson 2004
  126. ^ Stipčević 1977, p. 15.
  127. ^ Fine 1983, pp. 9–10.
  128. ^ a b De Simone 2017, p. 1869.
  129. ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 70.
  130. ^ Polomé 1982, p. 867.
  131. ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 86.
  132. ^ Polomé 1983, p. 537.
  133. ^ Crossland 1982, pp. 841–842.
  134. ^ Giannakis, Georgios; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (2017). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 222. ISBN 9783110532135. Crossland posited a posited (partial) Hellenization of pre-classical Epirus, with Greek elites ruling over non-Greek populations; cf. Nilsson (1909). A very brief synopsis of older works and views is available in Kokoszko&Witczak (2009,112) who in turn also favor a 'Hellenization' scenario Nonetheless, such views, which rely largely on some subjective ancient testimonies, are no supported by the earliest (and not only) epigraphic evidence.
  135. ^ a b c Stipčević 1977, p. 182.
  136. ^ a b c d Wilkes 1992, p. 244.
  137. ^ Stipčević 1977, pp. 182, 186.
  138. ^ a b c Wilkes 1992, p. 245.
  139. ^ West 2007, p. 15.
  140. ^ Stipčević 1977, p. 197.
  141. ^ Stipčević 1976, p. 235.
  142. ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 123.
  143. ^ F. A. Wright (1934). ALEXANDER THE GREAT. London: GEORGE ROUTLEDGE SONS, LTD. pp. 63–64.
  144. ^ Brandt, Ingvaldsen & Prusac 2014, p. 249.
  145. ^ Stipčević 1977, p. 107.
  146. ^ Freilich et al. 2021.
  147. ^ Gori 2018, p. 201.
  148. ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 34.
  149. ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 140.
  150. ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 233.
  151. ^ Bunson 1995, p. 202; Hornblower & Spawforth 2003, p. 426
  152. ^ Hornblower & Spawforth 2003, p. 1106
  153. ^ Matzinger, Joachim (2016). "Die albanische Autochthoniehypotheseaus der Sicht der Sprachwissenschaft" (PDF). Südosteuropa-Institut. Retrieved 9 August 2020. Das Albanische sei die Nachfolgesprache des Illyrischen: An der sprachlichen Realität des Illyrischen kann prinzipiell nicht gezweifelt werden. Auf welcher Basis beruht aber die heutige Kenntnis des Illyrischen? Nach moderner Erkenntnis ist das, was Illyrisch zu nennen ist, auf den geographischen Bereich der süddalmatischen Küste und ihrem Hinterland zu begrenzen (modernes Crna Gora, Nordalbanien und Kosovo/Kosova [antikes Dardanien]), wo nach älteren griechi-schen Autoren Stämme beheimatet waren, die gemeinhin illyrisch benannt wurden (Hei-ner EICHNER). Das Gebiet deckt sich mit einem auch relativ einheitlichen Namensgebiet (Radoslav KATIČIĆ) und es gibt es zum Teil archäologische Übereinstimmungen (Hermann PARZINGER). Ob diese Stämme auch eine sprachlicheEinheitgebildet haben, lässt sich nicht feststellen. Aus diesem Grund darf der Begriff 'Illyrer' und 'illyrisch' primär nur als Sammelbegriffverstanden werden
  154. ^ a b Wilkes 1996, p. 278.
  155. ^ Curta, Florin (2013). "Seventh-Century Fibulae with Bent Stem in the Balkans". Archaeologia Bulgarica. 17 (1): 49–70. In Albania, for a long time, the fibulae with bent stem have been regarded as the foremost element linking the Koman(i) culture to the Iron-Age civilization of the Illyrians, the main focus of Albanian nationalism during the Communist period
  156. ^ a b Wilkes 1996, p. 278
  157. ^ a b Bowden 2003, p. 61
  158. ^ Bowden, William (2019). "Conflicting ideologies and the archaeology of Early Medieval Albania". Archeologia Medievale. All’Insegna del Giglio: 47. ISSN 0390-0592. The nationalist interpretation of the cemeteries has, on the other hand, been roundly rejected by foreign scholars. Wilkes influential volume on the Illyrians described it as "a highly improbable reconstruction of Albanian history", and as noted above, I have published a number of trenchant critiques of it... of the earlier model.
  159. ^ Nallbani 2017, p. 315.
  160. ^ Vroom, Joanita (9 October 2017). "Saranda in the waves of time". In Moreland, John; Mitchell, John; Leal, Bea (eds.). Encounters, Excavations and Argosies: Essays for Richard Hodges. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd. p. 249. ISBN 978-1-78491-682-4. All the cemeteries in south-eastern Albania have exactly the same shapes and incised decoration styles as Lako's ones in Saranda (especially his Nos. 23-27 in Table 3) but are dated later, that is to say between the 8th and 11th/12th centuries. Albanian archaeologists often connect these early medieval cemeteries to the so-called 'Komani-Kruja culture', and associate them with one particurlar ethnic group (regularly described as 'Slavic'). Recently, however, this view has been criticized by other scholars, who prefer to situate the 'Komani-Kruja culture' in a regionalized Romano-Byzantine or Christian context of various ethnic and social groups, adopting additional foreign elements(Popovic 1975:455-457; Popovic 1984: 214-243; Bowden 2003; 210-21; Curta 2006: 103-105). Consequently, we can conclude that the identification of the pottery finds from the Basilica excavation in Saranda with one period (the 6th and 7th centuries) and with one ethnic group (in this case the Slavs) is without doubt erroneous.
  161. ^ Curta 2012, p. 73.
  162. ^ Curta 2012, pp. 73–74
  163. ^ Bowden 2004, p. 229
  164. ^ a b Curta 2013
  165. ^ Nallbani 2017, p. 320.
  166. ^ Curta 2021, p. 79.
  167. ^ Curta 2021, p. 314.
  168. ^ Nallbani 2017, p. 325.
  169. ^ a b Winnifrith 2021, pp. 98–99.
  170. ^ Dzino 2014b, p. 11, 15–16.
  171. ^ Gori, Maja (November 2012). "Who are the Illyrians? The Use and Abuse of Archaeology in the Construction of National and Trans-National Identities in the Southwestern Balkans". Archaeological Review from Cambridge: Archaeology and the (De)Construction of National and Supra-National Polities. 27 (2): 71–84.
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  173. ^ Djilas 1991, p. 22.
  174. ^ Despalatovic 1975.
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External links

  • Phallic Cult of the Illyrians

illyrians, this, article, about, ancient, inhabitants, balkans, other, uses, disambiguation, ancient, greek, Ἰλλυριοί, illyrioi, latin, illyrii, were, group, indo, european, speaking, peoples, inhabited, western, balkan, peninsula, ancient, times, they, consti. This article is about the ancient inhabitants of the Balkans For other uses see Illyrians disambiguation The Illyrians Ancient Greek Ἰllyrioi Illyrioi Latin Illyrii were a group of Indo European speaking peoples who inhabited the western Balkan Peninsula in ancient times They constituted one of the three main Paleo Balkan populations along with the Thracians and Greeks Illyrian tribes in the 1st 2nd centuries CE The territory the Illyrians inhabited came to be known as Illyria to later Greek and Roman authors who identified a territory that corresponds to most of Albania Montenegro Kosovo a much of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina western and central Serbia and some parts of Slovenia between the Adriatic Sea in the west the Drava river in the north the Morava river in the east and the Ceraunian Mountains in the south 1 The first account of Illyrian peoples dates back to the 6th century BC in the works of the ancient Greek writer Hecataeus of Miletus The name Illyrians as applied by the ancient Greeks to their northern neighbors may have referred to a broad ill defined group of peoples It has been suggested that the Illyrian tribes never collectively identified as Illyrians and that it is unlikely that they used any collective nomenclature at all 2 Illyrians seems to be the name of a specific Illyrian tribe who were among the first to encounter the ancient Greeks during the Bronze Age 3 The Greeks later applied this term Illyrians pars pro toto to all people with similar language and customs 4 In archaeological historical and linguistic studies research about the Illyrians from the late 19th to the 21st century has moved from Pan Illyrian theories which identified as Illyrian even groups north of the Balkans to more well defined groupings based on Illyrian onomastics and material anthropology since the 1960s as newer inscriptions were found and sites excavated There are two principal Illyrian onomastic areas the southern and the Dalmatian Pannonian with the area of the Dardani as a region of overlapping between the two A third area to the north of them which in ancient literature was usually identified as part of Illyria has been connected more to the Venetic language than to Illyrian Illyric settlement in Italy was and still is attributed to a few ancient tribes which are thought to have migrated along the Adriatic shorelines to the Italian peninsula from the geographic Illyria the Dauni the Peuceti and Messapi collectively known as Iapyges The term Illyrians last appears in the historical record in the 7th century referring to a Byzantine garrison operating within the former Roman province of Illyricum 5 What happened to the Illyrians after the settlement of the Slavs in the region is a matter of debate among scholars and includes the question whether the Albanian language is a descendant of an Illyrian language Contents 1 Etymology 2 Terminology and attestation 2 1 Illyrii proprie dicti 3 Origins 3 1 Archaeology 3 2 Archaeogenetics 4 In ancient Greek and Roman literature 5 History 5 1 Iron Age 5 2 Roman era and Late Antiquity 6 Society 6 1 Social and political organisation 6 2 Warfare 7 Culture 7 1 Language 7 1 1 Linguistic evidence and subgrouping 7 2 Religion 8 Archaeology 8 1 Early Middle Ages 9 Nationalism 9 1 Albanians 9 2 South Slavs 10 In popular culture 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksEtymology EditWhile the Illyrians are largely recorded under the ethnonyms of Illyrioi Ἰllyrioi and Illyrii these appear to be misspelt renditions by Greek or Latin speaking writers Based on historically attested forms denoting specific Illyrian tribes or the Illyrians as a whole e g Ulloi Ylloi and Hil l uri 6 7 the native tribal name from which these renditions were based has been reconstructed by linguists such as Heiner Eichner as Hillurio lt older Hullurio According to Eichner this ethnonym translating to water snake is derived from Proto Indo European ud lo of water aquatic sharing a common root with Ancient Greek ullos yllos meaning fish 8 or a small water snake 9 The Illyrian ethnonym shows a dl gt ll shift via assimilation as well as the addition of the suffix uri o which is found in Illyrian toponyms such as Tragurium 8 Eichner also points out the tribal name s close semantic correspondence to that of the Enchelei which translates to eel people depicting a similar motif of aquatic snake like fauna It is also pointed out that the Ancient Greeks must have learned this name from a tribe in southern Illyria later applying it to all related and neighbouring peoples 10 Terminology and attestation EditThe terms Illyrians Illyria and Illyricum have been used throughout history for ethnic and geographic contextualizations that have changed over time Re contextualizations of these terms often confused ancient writers and modern scholars Notable scholarly efforts have been dedicated to trying to analyze and explain these changes 11 The first known mention of Illyrians occurred in the late 6th and the early 5th century BC in fragments of Hecataeus of Miletus the author of Genealogiai Genealogies and of Periodos Gῆs or Perihghsis Description of the Earth or Periegesis where the Illyrians are described as a barbarian people 12 13 note 1 In the Macedonian history during the 6th and 5th century B C the term Illyrian had a political meaning that was quite definite denoting a kingdom established on the north western borders of Upper Macedonia 16 From the 5th century B C onwards the term Illyrian was already applied to a large ethnic group whose territory extended deep into the Balkan mainland 17 note 2 Ancient Greeks clearly considered the Illyrians as a completely distinct ethnos from both the Thracians 8rᾷkes and the Macedonians Makedones 23 Most scholars hold that the territory originally designated as Illyrian was roughly located in the region of the south eastern Adriatic modern Albania and Montenegro and its hinterland then was later extended to the whole Roman Illyricum province which stretched from the eastern Adriatic to the Danube 11 After the Illyrians had come to be widely known to the Greeks due to their proximity this ethnic designation was broadened to include other peoples who for some reason were considered by ancient writers to be related with those peoples originally designated as Illyrians Ἰllyrioi Illyrioi 17 24 The original designation may have occurred either during the Middle Late Bronze Age 25 or at the beginning of the 8th century BC 2 According to the former hypothesis the name was taken by traders from southern Greece from a small group of people on the coast the Illyrioi Illyrii first mentioned by Pseudo Skylax and later described by Pliny the Elder and thereafter applied to all of the people of the region this has been explained by the substantial evidence of Minoan and Mycenaean contact in the valley where the Illyrioi Illyrii presumably lived 25 According to the latter hypothesis the label Illyrians was first used by outsiders in particular Ancient Greeks this has been argued on the basis that when the Greeks began to frequent the eastern Adriatic coast with the colonization of Corcyra they started to have some knowledge and perceptions of the indigenous peoples of western Balkans 2 It has been suggested that the Illyrian tribes evidently never collectively identified themselves as Illyrians and that it is unlikely that they used any collective nomenclature at all 2 Most modern scholars are certain that all the peoples of western Balkans that were collectively labeled as Illyrians were not a culturally or linguistically homogeneous entity 26 27 For instance some tribes like the Bryges would not have been identified as Illyrian 28 What criteria were initially used to define this group of peoples or how and why the term Illyrians began to be used to describe the indigenous population of western Balkans cannot be said with certainty 29 Scholarly debates have been waged to find an answer to the question whether the term Illyrians Ἰllyrioi derived from some eponymous tribe or whether it has been applied to designate the indigenous population as a general term for some other specific reason 30 Illyrii proprie dicti Edit Main article Illyrii proprie dicti Ancient Roman writers Pliny the Elder and Pomponius Mela used the term Illyrii proprie dicti properly called Illyrians to designate a people that was located in the coast of modern Albania and Montenegro 30 Many modern scholars view the properly called Illyrians as a trace of the Illyrian kingdom known in the sources from the 4th century BC until 167 BC which was ruled in Roman times by the Ardiaei and Labeatae when it was centered in the Bay of Kotor and Lake Skadar According to other modern scholars the term Illyrii may have originally referred only to a small ethnos in the area between Epidaurum and Lissus and Pliny and Mela may have followed a literary tradition that dates back as early as Hecataeus of Miletus 12 30 Placed in central Albania the Illyrii proprie dicti also might have been Rome s first contact with Illyrian peoples In that case it did not indicate an original area from which the Illyrians expanded 31 The area of the Illyrii proprie dicti is largely included in the southern Illyrian onomastic province in modern linguistics 32 Origins EditFurther information Glasinac culture and Central Bosnian cultural group Sites from prehistory in Illyria J Wilkes 1992 Archaeology Edit The Illyrians emerged from the fusion of PIE descended Yamnaya related population movements ca 2500 BCE in the Balkans with the pre existing Balkan Neolithic population initially forming Proto Illyrian Bronze Age cultures in the Balkans 33 34 35 The proto Illyrians during the course of their settlement towards the Adriatic coast merged with such populations of a pre Illyrian substratum like Enchelei might have been leading to the formation of the historical Illyrians who were attested in later times It has been suggested that the myth of Cadmus and Harmonia may be a reflection in mythology of the end of the pre Illyrian era in the southern Adriatic region as well as in those regions located north of Macedonia and Epirus 36 Older Pan Illyrian theories which emerged in the 1920s placed the proto Illyrians as the original inhabitants of a very large area which reached central Europe These theories which have been dismissed were used in the politics of the era and its racialist notions of Nordicism and Aryanism 26 The main fact which these theories tried to address was the existence of traces of Illyrian toponymy in parts of Europe beyond the western Balkans an issue whose origins are still unclear 37 The specific theories have found little archaeological corroboration as no convincing evidence for significant migratory movements from the Urnfield Lusatian culture into the west Balkans has ever been found 38 39 40 Archaeogenetics Edit Mathieson et al 2018 archaeogenetic study included three samples from Dalmatia two Early amp Middle Bronze Age 1631 1521 1618 1513 calBCE samples from Veliki Vanik near Vrgorac and one Iron Age 805 761 calBCE sample from Jazinka Cave in Krka National Park According to ADMIXTURE analysis they had approximately 60 Early European Farmers 33 Western Steppe Herders and 7 Western Hunter Gatherer related ancestry The male individual from Veliki Vanik carried the Y DNA haplogroup J2b2a1 L283 while his and two female individuals mtDNA haplogroup were I1a1 W3a1 and HV0e 41 Freilich et al 2021 identify the Veliki Vanik samples as related to the Cetina culture EBA MBA western Balkans Patterson et al 2022 study examined 18 samples from the Middle Bronze Age up to Early Iron Age Croatia which was part of Illyria Out of the nine Y DNA samples retrieved which coincide with the historical territory where Illyrians lived including tested Iapydes and Liburni sites almost all belonged to the patrilineal line J2b2a1 L283 gt J PH1602 gt J Y86930 and gt J Z1297 subclades with the exception of one R1b L2 The mtDNA haplogroups fell under various subclades of H H1 H3b H5 J1c2 J1c3 T2a1a T2b T2b23 U5a1g U8b1b1 HV0e In a three way admixture model they approximately had 49 59 EEF 35 46 Steppe and 2 10 WHG related ancestry 42 In Lazaridis et al 2022 key parts of the territory of historical territory of Illyria were tested In 18 samples from the Cetina culture all males except for one R L51 gt Z2118 carried Y DNA haplogroup J L283 Many of them could be further identified as J L283 gt Z597 gt J Y15058 gt J Z38240 gt J PH1602 The majority of individuals carried mtDNA haplogroups J1c1 and H6a1a The related Posusje culture yielded the same Y DNA haplogroup J L283 gt J Z38240 The same J L283 population appears in the MBA IA Velim Kosa tumuli of Liburni in Croatia J PH1602 and similar in LBA IA Velika Gruda tumuli in Montenegro J Z2507 gt J Z1297 gt J Y21878 The oldest J L283 gt J Z597 sample in the study was found in MBA Shkrel northern Albania as early as the 19th century BCE In northern Albania IA Cinamak half of them men carried J L283 gt J Z622 J Y21878 and the other half R M269 R CTS1450 R PF7563 The oldest sample in Cinamak dates to the first era of post Yamnaya movements EBA and carries R M269 43 Autosomally Croatian Bronze Age samples from various sites from Cetina valley and Bezdanjaca Cave were extremely similar in their ancestral makeup 44 while from Montenegro s Velika Gruda mainly had an admixture of Anatolian Neolithic 50 Eastern European hunter gatherer 12 and Balkan hunter gatherer ancestry 18 45 The oldest Balkan J L283 samples have bee found in final Early Bronze Age ca 1950 BCE site of Mokrin in Serbia and about 100 150 years later in Shkrel northern Albania 46 47 Aneli et al 2022 based on samples from EIA Dalmatia argue that the Early Iron Age Illyrians made part of the same Mediterranean continuum with the autochthonous Roman Republicans and had high affinity with Daunians part of Iapygians in Apulia southeastern Italy Iron Age male samples from Daunian sites have yielded J M241 gt J L283 R M269 gt Z2103 and I M223 lineages 48 Three Bronze Age males which carry J L283 have been found in the Late Bronze Age Nuragic civilization of Sardinia This late find in Sardinia in comparison to western Balkan samples suggests a dispersal from the western Balkans towards this region perhaps via an intermediary group in the Italian peninsula 49 In ancient Greek and Roman literature EditDifferent versions of the genealogy of the Illyrians their tribes and their eponymous ancestor Illyrius existed in the ancient world both in fictional and non fictional Greco Roman literature The fact that there were many versions of the genealogical story of Illyrius was ascertained by Ancient Greek historian Appian 1st 2nd century AD However only two versions of all these genealogical stories are attested 50 51 The first version which reports the legend of Cadmus and Harmonia was recorded by Euripides and Strabo in accounts that would be presented in detail in Bibliotheca of Pseudo Apollodorus 1st to 2nd century AD 52 The second version which reports the legend of Polyphemus and Galatea was recorded by Appian 1st 2nd century AD in his Illyrike 50 According to the first version Illyrius was the son of Cadmus and Harmonia whom the Enchelei had chosen to be their leaders He eventually ruled Illyria and became the eponymous ancestor of the whole Illyrian people 53 In one of these versions Illyrius was named so after Cadmus left him by a river named the Illyrian where a serpent found and raised him 52 Appian writes that many mythological stories were still circulating in his time 54 and he chose a particular version because it seemed to be the most correct one Appian s genealogy of tribes is not complete as he writes that other Illyrian tribes exist which he hasn t included 52 According to Appian s tradition Polyphemus and Galatea gave birth to Celtus Galas and Illyrius 55 three brothers progenitors respectively of Celts Galatians and Illyrians Illyrius had multiple sons Encheleus Autarieus Dardanus Maedus Taulas and Perrhaebus and daughters Partho Daortho Dassaro and others From these sprang the Taulantii Parthini Dardani Encheleae Autariates Dassaretii and the Daorsi Autareius had a son Pannonius or Paeon and these had sons Scordiscus and Triballus 4 Appian s genealogy was evidently composed in Roman times encompassing barbarian peoples other than Illyrians like Celts and Galatians 56 and choosing a specific story for his audience that included most of the peoples who dwelled in the Illyricum of the Antonine era 54 However the inclusion in his genealogy of the Enchelei and the Autariatae whose political strength has been highly weakened reflects a pre Roman historical situation 57 note 3 Basically ancient Greeks included in their mythological accounts all the peoples with whom they had close contacts In Roman times ancient Romans created more mythical or genealogical relations to include various new peoples regardless of their large ethnic and cultural differences Appian s genealogy lists the earliest known peoples of Illyria in the group of the first generation consisting mostly of southern Illyrian peoples firstly encountered by the Greeks some of which were the Enchelei the Taulantii the Dassaretii and the Parthini 58 59 Some peoples that came to the Balkans at a later date such as the Scordisci are listed in the group that belongs to the third generation The Scordisci were a Celtic people mixed with the indigenous Illyrian and Thracian population The Pannonians have not been known to the Greeks and it seems that before the 2nd century BC they did not come into contact with the Romans Almost all the Greek writers referred to the Pannonians with the name Paeones until late Roman times The Scordisci and Pannonians were considered Illyrian mainly because they belonged to Illyricum since the early Roman Imperial period 60 History EditFor Illyrian prehistory and the Bronze Age see Illyrians Origins Iron Age Edit Illyrian tribes in the 7th 4th centuries BCE Depending on the complexity of the diverse physical geography of the Balkans arable farming and livestock mixed farming rearing had constituted the economic basis of the Illyrians during the Iron Age citation needed In southern Illyria organized realms were formed earlier than in other areas of this region One of the oldest known Illyrian kingdoms is that of the Enchelei which seems to have reached its height from the 8th 7th centuries BC but the kingdom fell from dominant power around the 6th century BC 61 It seems that the weakening of the kingdom of Enchelae resulted in their assimilation and inclusion into a newly established Illyrian realm at the latest in the 5th century BC marking the arising of the Dassaretii who appear to have replaced the Enchelei in the lakeland area of Lychnidus 62 63 According to a number of modern scholars the dynasty of Bardylis the first attested Illyrian dynasty was Dassaretan 64 note 4 The weakening of the Enchelean realm was also caused by the strengthening of another Illyrian kingdom established in its vicinity that of the Taulantii which existed for some time along with that of the Enchelei 68 The Taulantii another people among the more anciently known groups of Illyrian tribes lived on the Adriatic coast of southern Illyria modern Albania dominating at various times much of the plain between the Drin and the Aous comprising the area around Epidamnus Dyrrhachium 69 note 5 In the 7th century BC the Taulantii invoked the aid of Corcyra and Corinth in a war against the Liburni After the defeat and expulsion from the region of the Liburni the Corcyreans founded in 627 BC on the Illyrian mainland a colony called Epidamnus thought to have been the name of a barbarian king of the region 71 A flourishing commercial centre emerged and the city grew rapidly The Taulantii continued to play an important role in Illyrian history between the 5th and 4th 3rd centuries BC and in particular in the history of Epidamnus both as its neighbors and as part of its population Notably they influenced the affairs in the internal conflicts between aristocrats and democrats 72 73 The Taulantian kingdom seems to have reached its climax during Glaukias rule in the years between 335 BC and 302 BC 74 75 76 The Illyrian kingdoms frequently came into conflicts with the neighbouring Ancient Macedonians and the Illyrian pirates were also seen as significant threat to the neighbouring peoples 77 At the Neretva Delta there was a strong Hellenistic influence on the Illyrian tribe of Daors Their capital was Daorson located in Osanici near Stolac in Herzegovina which became the main center of classical Illyrian culture Daorson during the 4th century BC was surrounded by megalithic 5 meter high stonewalls composed out of large trapeze stones blocks Daors also made unique bronze coins and sculptures The Illyrians even conquered Greek colonies on the Dalmatian islands After Philip II of Macedon defeated Bardylis 358 BC the Grabaei under Grabos II became the strongest state in Illyria 78 Philip II killed 7 000 Illyrians in a great victory and annexed the territory up to Lake Ohrid Next Philip II reduced the Grabaei and then went for the Ardiaei defeated the Triballi 339 BC and fought with Pleurias 337 BC 79 Queen Teuta of the Ardieai orders the Roman ambassadors to be killed painted by Augustyn Mirys During the second part of the 3rd century BC a number of Illyrian tribes seem to have united to form a proto state stretching from the central part of present day Albania up to Neretva river in Herzegovina The political entity was financed on piracy and ruled from 250 BC by the king Agron The Illyrian attack under Agron against Aerolians mounted in either 232 or 231 BC is described by Polybius One hundred lembi with 5000 men on board sailed up to land at Medion Dropping anchor at daybreak they disembarked speedily and in secret They then formed up in the order that was usual in their own country and advanced in their several companies against the Aetolian lines The latter were overwhelmed with astonishment at the unexpected nature and boldness of the move but they had long been inspired with overweening self confidence and having full reliance on their own forces were far from being dismayed They drew up the greater part of their hoplites and cavalry in front of their own lines on the level ground and with a portion of their cavalry and their light infantry they hastened to occupy some rising ground in front of their camp which nature had made easily defensible A single charge however of the Illyrians whose numbers and close order gave them irresistible weight served to dislodge the light armed troops and forced the cavalry who were on the ground with them to retire to the hoplites But the Illyrians being on higher ground and charging down on from it upon the Aetolian trrops formed up on the plain routed them without difficulty The Medionians joined the action by sallying out of the town and charging the Aetolians thus after killing a great number and taking a still greater number prisoners and becoming masters also of their arms and baggage the Illyrians having carried out the orders of Agron conveyed their baggage and the rest of their booty to their boats and immediately set sail for their own country 80 He was succeeded by his wife Teuta who assumed the regency for her stepson Pinnes following Agron s death in 231 BC 81 In his work The Histories Polybius 2nd century BC reported first diplomatic contacts between the Romans and Illyrians 82 In the Illyrian Wars of 229 BC 219 BC and 168 BC Rome overran the Illyrian settlements and suppressed the piracy that had made the Adriatic unsafe for Roman commerce 83 There were three campaigns the first against Teuta the second against Demetrius of Pharos and the third against Gentius 84 The initial campaign in 229 BC marks the first time that the Roman Navy crossed the Adriatic Sea to launch an invasion 85 The impetus behind the emergence of larger regional groups such as Iapodes Liburnians Pannonians etc is traced to increased contacts with the Mediterranean and La Tene global worlds 86 This catalyzed the development of more complex political institutions and the increase in differences between individual communities 87 Emerging local elites selectively adopted either La Tene or Hellenistic and later Roman cultural templates in order to legitimize and strengthen domination within their communities They were competing fiercely through either alliance or conflict and resistance to Roman expansion Thus they established more complex political alliances which convinced Greco Roman sources to see them as ethnic identities 88 The Roman Republic subdued the Illyrians during the 2nd century BC An Illyrian revolt was crushed under Augustus resulting in the division of Illyria in the provinces of Pannonia in the north and Dalmatia in the south citation needed Depictions of the Illyrians usually described as barbarians or savages are universally negative in Greek and Roman sources 89 Roman era and Late Antiquity Edit Main article Illyrian Wars Further information Roman provinces of Illyricum Dalmatia and Moesia Prior to the Roman conquest of Illyria the Roman Republic had started expanding its power and territory across the Adriatic Sea The Romans came nevertheless into a series of conflicts with the Illyrians equally known as the Illyrian Wars beginning in 229 BC until 168 BC as the Romans defeated Gentius at Scodra 90 The Great Illyrian Uprising took place in the Roman province of Illyricum in the 1st century AD in which an alliance of native peoples revolted against the Romans The main ancient source that describes this military conflict is Velleius Paterculus which was incorporated into the second book of Roman History Another ancient source about it is the biography of Octavius Augustus by Pliny the Elder 91 The two leaders of uprising were Bato the Breucian and Bato the Daesitiate citation needed Geographically the name Illyria came to mean Roman Illyricum which from the 4th century to the 7th century signified the prefecture of Illyricum It covered much of the western and central Balkans After the defeat of the Great Illyrian Revolt and the consolidation of Roman power in the Balkans the process of integration of Illyrians in the Roman world accelerated even further Some Illyrian communities were organized in their pre Roman locations under their own civitates Others migrated or were forcefully resettled in different regions Some groups like the Azali were transferred from their homeland to frontier areas northern Hungary after the Great Illyrian Revolt In Dacia Illyrian communities like the Pirustae who were skilled miners were settled to the gold mines of Alburnus Maior where they formed their own communities In Trajan s period these population movements were likely part of a deliberate policy of resettling while later they involved free migrations In their new regions they were free salaried workers Inscriptions show that by that era many of Illyrians had acquired Roman citizenship 92 By the end of the 2nd century and beginning of the 3rd century CE Illyrian populations had been highly integrated in the Roman Empire and formed a core population of its Balkan provinces During the crisis of the Third Century and the establishment of the Dominate a new elite faction of Illyrians who were part of the Roman army along the Pannonian and Danubian Limes rose in Roman politics This faction produced many emperors from the late 3rd to the 6th century CE who are collectively known as the Illyrian Emperors and include the Constantinian Valentinianic and Justinianic dynasties 93 94 95 96 97 Gaius Messius Quintus Traianus Decius a native of Sirmium is usually recognized as the first Illyrian emperor in historiography 98 The rise of the Illyrian Emperors represents the rise of the role of the army in imperial politics and the increasing shift of the center of imperial politics from the city of Rome itself to the eastern provinces of the empire The term Illyrians last appears in the historical record in the 7th century AD in the Miracula Sancti Demetrii referring to a Byzantine garrison operating within the former Roman province of Illyricum 5 99 However in the acts of the Second Council of Nicaea from 787 Nikephoros of Durres signed himself as Episcopus of Durres province of the Illyrians 100 Since the Middle Ages the term Illyrian has been used principally in connection with the Albanians although it was also used to describe the western wing of the Southern Slavs up to the 19th century 101 being revived in particular during the Habsburg monarchy 102 103 In Byzantine literature references to Illyria as a defined region in administrative terms end after 1204 and the term specifically began to refer only to the more confined Albanian territory 104 Society EditSocial and political organisation Edit The structure of Illyrian society during classical antiquity was characterised by a conglomeration of numerous tribes and small realms ruled by warrior elites a situation similar like that in most other societies at that time Thucidides in the History of the Peloponnesian War 5th century BC addresses the social organisation of the Illyrian tribes via a speech he attributes to Brasidas in which he recounts that the mode of rulership among the Illyrian tribes is that of dynasteia which Thucidides used in reference to foreign customs neither democratic nor oligarchic Brasidas then goes on to explain that in the dynasteia the ruler rose to power by no other means than by superiority in fighting 105 Pseudo Scymnus 2nd century BC in reference to the social organisation of Illyrian tribes in earlier times than the era he lived in makes a distinction between three modes of social organisation A part of the Illyrians were organized under hereditary kingdoms a second part was organized under chieftains who were elected but held no hereditary power and some Illyrians were organised in autonomous communities governed by their own internal tribal laws In these communities social stratification had not yet emerged 106 Warfare Edit Main articles Illyrian warfare and weaponry The history of Illyrian warfare and weaponry spanned from around the 10th century BC up to the 1st century AD in the region defined by the Ancient Greek and Roman historians as Illyria It concerns the armed conflicts of the Illyrian tribes and their kingdoms in the Balkan Peninsula and the Italian Peninsula as well as their pirate activity in the Adriatic Sea within the Mediterranean Sea citation needed The Illyrians were a notorious seafaring people with a strong reputation for piracy especially common during the regency of king Agron and later queen Teuta 107 108 They used fast and maneuverable ships of types known as lembus and liburna which were subsequently used by the Ancient Macedonians and Romans 109 Livy described the Illyrians along the Liburnians and Istrians as nations of savages in general noted for their piracy 110 Illyria appears in Greco Roman historiography from the 4th century BC Illyrians were regarded as bloodthirsty unpredictable turbulent and warlike by Ancient Greeks and Romans 111 They were seen as savages on the edge of their world 89 Polybius 3rd century BC wrote the Romans had freed the Greeks from the enemies of all mankind 112 According to the Romans the Illyrians were tall and well built 113 Herodianus writes that Pannonians are tall and strong always ready for a fight and to face danger but slow witted 114 Illyrian rulers wore bronze torques around their necks 115 Apart from conflicts between Illyrians and neighbouring nations and tribes numerous wars were recorded among Illyrian tribes too citation needed Illyrian ship dating from the 8th 7th century BC The Sica Illyrian type helmetCulture EditLanguage Edit The chromolithographic Bronze belt plaque of Vace Slovenia of the Hallstatt culture Main article Illyrian language Further information Thraco Illyrian See also Albanian Messapian Venetic and Paleo Balkan languages The languages spoken by the Illyrian tribes are an extinct and poorly attested Indo European language group and it is not clear whether the languages belonged to the centum or the satem group The Illyrians were subject to varying degrees of Celticization Hellenization Romanization and later Slavicization which possibly lead to the extinction of their languages 116 117 118 In modern research use of concepts like Hellenization and Romanization has declined as they have been criticized as simplistic notions which can t describe the actual processes via which material development moved from the centres of the ancient Mediterranean to its periphery 89 The vast majority of knowledge of Illyrian is based on the Messapian language if the latter is considered an Illyrian dialect citation needed The non Messapian testimonies of Illyrian are too fragmentary to allow any conclusions whether Messapian should be considered part of Illyrian proper although it has been widely thought that Messapian was related to Illyrian An extinct Indo European language Messapian was once spoken in Messapia in the southeastern Italian Peninsula It was spoken by the three Iapygian tribes of the region the Messapians the Daunii and the Peucetii citation needed On both sides on the border region between southern Illyria and northern Epirus the contact between the Illyrian and Greek languages produced an area of bilingualism between the two although it is unclear how the impact of the one language to the other developed because of the scarcity of available archaeological material However this did not occur at the same level on both sides with the Illyrians being more willing to adopt the more prestigious Greek language 119 120 Ongoing research may provide further knowledge about these contacts beyond present limited sources 120 Illyrians were exposed not only to Doric and Epirote Greek but also to Attic Ionic 120 The Illyrian languages were once thought to be connected to the Venetic language in the Italian Peninsula but this view was abandoned 121 Other scholars have linked them with the adjacent Thracian language supposing an intermediate convergence area or dialect continuum but this view is also not generally supported All these languages were likely extinct by the 5th century AD although traditionally the Albanian language is identified as the descendant of Illyrian dialects that survived in remote areas of the Balkans during the Middle Ages but evidence is too meager and contradictory for us to know whether the term Illyrian even referred to a single language 122 123 The ancestor dialects of the Albanian language would have survived somewhere along the boundary of Latin and Ancient Greek linguistic influence the Jirecek Line There are various modern historians and linguists who believe that the modern Albanian language might have descended from a southern Illyrian dialect whereas an alternative hypothesis holds that Albanian was descended from the Thracian language 124 122 Not enough is known of the ancient language to completely prove or disprove either hypothesis see Origin of the Albanians 125 Linguistic evidence and subgrouping Edit Modern studies about Illyrian onomastics the main field via which the Illyrians have been linguistically investigated as no written records have been found began in the 1920s and sought to more accurately define Illyrian tribes the commonalities relations and differences between each other as they were conditioned by specific local cultural ecological and economic factors which further subdivided them into different groupings 126 127 This approach has led in contemporary research in the definition of three main onomastic provinces in which Illyrian personal names appear near exclusively in the archaeological material of each province The southern Illyrian or south eastern Dalmatian province was the area of the proper Illyrians the core of which was the territory of Illyrii proprie dicti of the classical authors located in modern Albania and includes most of Albania Montenegro and their hinterlands This area extended along the Adriatic coast from the Aous valley 32 in the south up to and beyond the Neretva valley in the north 32 128 The second onomastic province the central Illyrian or middle Dalmatian Pannonian province began to its north and covered a larger area than the southern province It extended along the Adriatic coast between the Krka and Cetina rivers covered much of Bosnia except for its northern regions central Dalmatia Lika and its hinterland in the central Balkans included western Serbia and Sandzak The third onomastic province further to the north defined as North Adriatic area includes Liburnia and the region of modern Ljubljana in Slovenia It is part of a larger linguistic area different from Illyrian that also comprises Venetic and its Istrian variety These areas are not strictly defined geographically as there was some overlap between them 129 130 128 The region of the Dardani modern Kosovo parts of northern North Macedonia parts of eastern Serbia saw the overlap of the southern Illyrian and Dalmatian onomastic provinces Local Illyrian anthroponymy is also found in the area 131 In its onomastics southern Illyrian or south east Dalmatian has close relations with Messapic Most of these relations are shared with the central Dalmatian area 132 In older scholarship Crossland 1982 some toponyms in central and northern Greece show phonetic characteristics that were thought to according to whom indicate that Illyrians or closely related peoples were settled in those regions before the introduction of the Greek language dubious discuss 133 However such views largely relied on subjective ancient testimonies and are not supported by the earliest evidence epigraphic etc 134 Religion Edit Main article Illyrian religion See also Paleo Balkan mythology The Illyrians as most ancient civilizations were polytheistic and worshipped many gods and deities developed of the powers of nature The most numerous traces still insufficiently studied of religious practices of the pre Roman era are those relating to religious symbolism Symbols are depicted in every variety of ornament and reveal that the chief object of the prehistoric cult of the Illyrians was the Sun 135 136 worshipped in a widespread and complex religious system 135 The solar deity was depicted as a geometrical figure such as the spiral the concentric circle and the swastika or as an animal figure the likes of the birds serpents and horses 137 136 The symbols of water fowl and horses were more common in the north while the serpent was more common in the south 136 Illyrian deities were mentioned in inscriptions on statues monuments and coins of the Roman period and some interpreted by Ancient writers through comparative religion 138 139 There appears to be no single most prominent god for all the Illyrian tribes and a number of deities evidently appear only in specific regions 138 In Illyris Dei patrous was a god worshiped as the Sky Father Prende was the love goddess and the consort of the thunder god Perendi En or Enji was the fire god Jupiter Parthinus was a chief deity of the Parthini Redon was a tutelary deity of sailors appearing on many inscriptions in the coastal towns of Lissus Daorson Scodra and Dyrrhachium while Medaurus was the protector deity of Risinium with a monumental equestrian statue dominating the city from the acropolis In Dalmatia and Pannonia one of the most popular ritual traditions during the Roman period was the cult of the Roman tutelary deity of the wild woods and fields Silvanus depicted with iconography of Pan The Roman deity of wine fertility and freedom Liber was worshipped with the attributes of Silvanus and those of Terminus the god protector of boundaries Tadenus was a Dalmatian deity bearing the identity or epithet of Apollo in inscriptions found near the source of the Bosna river The Delmatae also had Armatus as a war god in Delminium The Silvanae a feminine plural of Silvanus were featured on many dedications across Pannonia In the hot springs of Topusko Pannonia Superior sacrificial altars were dedicated to Vidasus and Thana identified with Silvanus and Diana whose names invariably stand side by side as companions Aecorna or Arquornia was a lake or river tutelary goddess worshipped exclusively in the cities of Nauportus and Emona where she was the most important deity next to Jupiter Laburus was also a local deity worshipped in Emona perhaps a deity protecting the boatmen sailing citation needed It seems that the Illyrians did not develop a uniform cosmology on which to center their religious practices 136 A number of Illyrian toponyms and anthroponyms derived from animal names and reflected the beliefs in animals as mythological ancestors and protectors 140 The serpent was one of the most important animal totems 141 Illyrians believed in the force of spells and the evil eye in the magic power of protective and beneficial amulets which could avert the evil eye or the bad intentions of enemies 135 138 Human sacrifice also played a role in the lives of the Illyrians 142 Arrian records the chieftain Cleitus the Illyrian as sacrificing three boys three girls and three rams just before his battle with Alexander the Great 143 The most common type of burial among the Iron Age Illyrians was tumulus or mound burial The kin of the first tumuli was buried around that and the higher the status of those in these burials the higher the mound Archaeology has found many artifacts placed within these tumuli such as weapons ornaments garments and clay vessels The rich spectrum in religious beliefs and burial rituals that emerged in Illyria especially during the Roman period may reflect the variation in cultural identities in this region 144 Archaeology EditSee also List of settlements in Illyria Further information Prehistoric Balkans Details of the late antique cathedral complex in Byllis Albania and the Adriatic sea in the distance Walls of ancient Daorson located at Osanici near Stolac in Bosnia and Herzegovina In total at least six material cultures have been described to have emerged in Illyrian territories Based on existing archaeological finds comparative archaeological and geographical definition about them has been difficult 145 Archaeogenetic studies have shown that a major Y DNA haplogroup among Illyrians J2b L283 spread via Cetina culture across the eastern Adriatic from the Cetina valley in Croatia to Montenegro and northern Albania The earliest archaeogenetic find related to Cetina in Albania is the Shkrel tumulus 19th century BCE It is the oldest J2b L283 find in the region historically known as Illyria Freilich et al 2021 determined that Cetina related samples from Veliki Vanik carry similar ancestry to a Copper Age sample from the site of Beli Manastir Popova Zemlja late Vucedol culture eastern Croatia The same autosomal profile persists in the Iron Age sample from Jazinka cave 146 Cetina finds have been found in the western Adriatic since the second half of the thirds millenium in southern Italy In Albania new excavations show spread of Cetina culture in sites of central Albania Blazi Nezir Keputa Inland Cetina spread in Bosnia and Herzegovina in particular Kotorac a site near Sarajevo and contacts have been demonstrated with the Belotic Bela Crkva culture 147 During the developed Middle Bronze Age Belotic Bela Crkva which has been recognized as another Proto Illyrian culture developed in northeastern Bosnia and western Serbia Cacak area Both inhumation and cremation have been observed in sites of this culture Similar burial customs have been observed in the Glasinac plateau of eastern Bosnia where the Glasinac Mati culture first developed 148 During the 7th century BC the beginning of the Iron Age the Illyrians emerge as an ethnic group with a distinct culture and art form Various Illyrian tribes appeared under the influence of the Halstatt cultures from the north and they organized their regional centers 149 The cult of the dead played an important role in the lives of the Illyrians which is seen in their carefully made burials and burial ceremonies as well as the richness of the burial sites In the northern parts of the Balkans there existed a long tradition of cremation and burial in shallow graves while in the southern parts the dead were buried in large stone or earth tumuli natively called gromile that in Herzegovina were reaching monumental sizes more than 50 meters wide and 5 meters high The Japodian tribe found from Istria in Croatia to Bihac in Bosnia have had an affinity for decoration with heavy oversized necklaces out of yellow blue or white glass paste and large bronze fibulas as well as spiral bracelets diadems and helmets out of bronze citation needed Small sculptures out of jade in form of archaic Ionian plastic are also characteristically Japodian Numerous monumental sculptures are preserved as well as walls of citadel Nezakcij near Pula one of numerous Istrian cities from Iron Age Illyrian chiefs wore bronze torques around their necks much like the Celts did 150 The Illyrians were influenced by the Celts in many cultural and material aspects and some of them were Celticized especially the tribes in Dalmatia 151 and the Pannonians 152 In Slovenia the Vace situla was discovered in 1882 and attributed to Illyrians Prehistoric remains indicate no more than average height male 165 cm 5 ft 5 in female 153 cm 5 ft 0 in 114 Early Middle Ages Edit It is also evident that in a region which stretches from the southern Dalmatian coast its hinterland Montenegro northern Albania up to Kosovo and Dardania apart from a uniformity in onomastics there were also some archaeological similarities However it cannot be determined whether these tribes living there also formed a linguistic unity 153 The Komani Kruja culture is an archaeological culture attested from late antiquity to the Middle Ages in central and northern Albania southern Montenegro and similar sites in the western parts of North Macedonia It consists of settlements usually built below hillforts along the Lezhe Praevalitana Dardania and Via Egnatia road networks which connected the Adriatic coastline with the central Balkan Roman provinces Its type site is Komani and its fort on the nearby Dalmace hill in the Drin river valley Kruja and Lezha represent significant sites of the culture The population of Komani Kruja represents a local non Slavic western Balkan people which was linked to the Roman Justinianic military system of forts The development of Komani Kruja is significant for the study of the transition between the classical antiquity population of Albania to the medieval Albanians who were attested in historical records in the 11th century Within Albanian archaeology based on the continuity of pre Roman Illyrian forms in the production of several types of local objects found in graves the population of Komani Kruja is framed as a group which descended from the local Illyrians who re asserted their independence from the Roman Empire after many centuries and formed the core of the later historical region of Arbanon 154 Illyrian Albanian links were the main focus of Albanian nationalism during the Communism period 155 What was established in this early phase of research was that Komani Kruja settlements represented a local non Slavic population which has been described as Romanized Illyrian Latin speaking or Latin literate 156 157 This is corroborated by the absence of Slavic toponyms and survival of Latin ones in the Komani Kruja area In terms of historiography the thesis of older Albanian archaeology is an untestable hypothesis as no historical sources exist which can link Komani Kruja to the first definite attestation of medieval Albanians in the 11th century 156 157 The nationalist interpretation of the Komani Kruja cemeteries has been roundly rejected by non Albanian scholars John Wilkes has described it as a highly improbable reconstruction of Albanian history Some Albanian scholars even today have continued to espouse this model of continuity 158 Limited excavations campaigns occurred until the 1990s Objects from a vast area covering nearby regions the entire Byzantine Empire the northern Balkans and Hungary and sea routes from Sicily to Crimea were found in Dalmace and other sites coming from many different production centres local Byzantine Sicilian Avar Slavic Hungarian Crimean and even possibly Merovingian and Carolingian Within Albanian archaeology based on the continuity of pre Roman Illyrian forms in the production of several types of local objects found in graves the population of Komani Kruja was framed as a group which descended from the local Illyrians who re asserted their independence from the Roman Empire after many centuries and formed the core of the later historical region of Arbanon 154 As research focused almost entirely on grave contexts and burial sites settlements and living spaces were often ignored 159 Other views stressed that as an archaeological culture it shouldn t be connected to a single social or ethnic group but be contextualized in a broader Roman Byzantine or Christian framework nor should material finds be separated in ethnic categories as they can t be correlated to a specific culture In this view cemeteries from nearby regions which were classified as belonging to Slavic groups shouldn t be viewed as necessarily representing another people but as representations of class and other social factors as ethnic identity was only one factor of varying importance 160 Yugoslav archaeology proposed an opposite narrative and tried to frame the population as Slavic especially in the region of western Macedonia 161 Archaeological research has shown that these sites were not related to regions then inhabited by Slavs and even in regions like Macedonia no Slavic settlements had been founded in the 7th century 162 Archaeologically while it was considered possible and even likely that Komani Kruja sites were used continuously from the 7th century onwards it remained an untested hypothesis as research was still limited 163 Whether this population represented local continuity or arrived at an earlier period from a more northern location as the Slavs entered the Balkans remained unclear at the time but regardless of their ultimate geographical origins these groups maintained Justinianic era cultural traditions of the 6th century possibly as a statement of their collective identity and derived their material cultural references from the Justinianic military system 164 In this context they may have used burial customs as a means of reference to an idealized image of the past Roman power 164 Research greatly expanded after 2009 and the first survey of Komani s topography was produced in 2014 Until then except for the area of the cemetery the size of the settlement and its extension remained unknown In 2014 it was revealed that Komani occupied an area of more than 40 ha a much larger territory than originally thought Its oldest settlement phase dates to the Hellenistic era 165 Proper development began in late antiquity and continued well into the Middle Ages 13th 14th centuries It indicates that Komani was a late Roman fort and an important trading node in the networks of Praevalitana and Dardania Participation in trade networks of the eastern Mediterranean via sea routes seems to have been very limited even in nearby coastal territory in this era 166 The collapse of the Roman administration in the Balkans was followed by a broad demographic collapse with the exception of Komani Kruja and neighbouring mountainous regions 167 In the Avar Slavic raids communities from present day northern Albania and nearby areas clustered around hill sites for better protection as is the case of other areas like Lezha and Sarda During the 7th century as Byzantine authority was reestablished after the Avar Slavic raids and the prosperity of the settlements increased Komani saw an increase in population and a new elite began to take shape Increase in population and wealth was marked by the establishment of new settlements and new churches in their vicinity Komani formed a local network with Lezha and Kruja and in turn this network was integrated in the wider Byzantine Mediterranean world maintained contacts with the northern Balkans and engaged in long distance trade 168 Winnifrith 2020 recently described this population as the survival of a Latin Illyrian culture which emerged later in historical records as Albanians and Vlachs In Winnifrith s view the geographical conditions of northern Albania favored the continuation of the Albanian language in hilly and mountainous areas as opposed to lowland valleys 169 He adds that the language and religion of this culture remain uncertain With bishops absent abroad the mountain flocks cannot have been too versed in theological or linguistic niceties 169 Nationalism EditAlbanians Edit Further information Albanian nationalism The possible continuity between the Illyrian populations of the Western Balkans in antiquity and the Albanians has played a significant role in Albanian nationalism from the 19th century until the present day 170 171 South Slavs Edit Further information Illyrian movement At the beginning of the 19th century many educated Europeans regarded the South Slavs as the descendants of ancient Illyrians However this is incorrect as Southern Slavs are descendants of Slavic tribes that migrated to the Balkans Consequently when Napoleon conquered part of the South Slavic lands these areas were named after ancient Illyrian provinces 1809 1814 172 After the demise of the First French Empire in 1815 the Habsburg monarchy became increasingly centralized and authoritarian and fear of Magyarization arouse patriotic resistance among Croatians 173 Under the influence of Romantic nationalism a self identified Illyrian movement in the form of a Croatian national revival opened a literary and journalistic campaign initiated by a group of young Croatian intellectuals during the years of 1835 49 174 175 In popular culture EditThe plot of 2022 movie Illyricvm is set in 37 BC and it deals with interactions between Romans and Illyrian tribes 176 See also EditPrehistory of the Balkans List of ancient Illyrian peoples and tribes List of rulers in Illyria List of settlements in Illyria Proposed Illyrian vocabulary List of ancient tribes in Illyria Adriatic Veneti Origin of Albanians History of Albania Early history of Bosnia and Herzegovina History of Croatia before the Croats Prehistoric SerbiaNotes Edit The political status of Kosovo is disputed Having unilaterally declared independence from Serbia in 2008 Kosovo is formally recognised as an independent state by 101 out of 193 52 3 UN member states with another 13 recognising it at some point but then withdrawing their recognition while Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own territory Hecataeus works can only be analyzed indirectly since the fragments have been preserved in the works of other ancient authors The majority of the fragments are transmitted in the geographical lexicon Ἐ8nika Ethnica of Stephanus of Byzantium 6th century AD of which we possess only a later abridgment epitome by Hermolaos On the other hand Stephanus is regarded by modern scholars a reliable source in general 14 15 According to Borza due to the fact that the Illyrian tribes moved constantly there are no precise borders of Illyris by Ancient Greek authors Illyris approximately consisted an area located north of Epirus and western Macedonia 18 and covered northern and central Albanian down to the mouth of the Aous 19 According to Crossland 1982 Greeks of the 5th century B C recognized the Illyrii Ἰllyrioi as an important non Greek people living to the north of the Aetolians and the Acarnanians and further north in the territory of modern day central and northern Albania where Epidamnus Dyrrhachium and Apollonia were founded by Greek colonists 20 The Aous river traditionally seen as a border region between Illyria and Epirus has been challenged as having such a status in contemporary research Rather a transboundary area existed between Illyrians and tribes of Epirus which included the land of the Atintanians in the north and Tymphaea to the south More recent scholarship places the Ceraunian Mountains as the barrier between Illyrians and the tribes of Epirus But this mountainous barrier did not act as a border but rather as an area of cultural meeting 21 22 According to some modern scholars Appian s Illyrian genealogy ultimately originated with Timaeus Appian s immediate source probably was Timagenes who was also used by Pompeius Trogus for the early history of the Illyrians 57 There is also another historical reconstruction that considers Bardylis a Dardanian ruler who during the expansion of his dominion included the region of Dassaretis in his realm but this interpretation has been challenged by historians who consider Dardania too far north for the events involving the Illyrian king Bardylis and his dynasty 65 66 67 When describing the Illyrian invasion of Macedonia ruled by Argaeus I somewhere between 678 and 640 BC the historian Polyaenus fl 2nd century CE recorded the oldest known king in Illyria Galaurus or Galabrus a ruler of the Taulantii who reigned in the latter part of the 7th century BC However nothing guarantees the authenticity of Polyaenus passage 70 References Edit Shpuza 2022 p 553 Zindel et al 2018 p 346 Bejko et al 2015 p 4 Hammond amp Wilkes 2012 p 726 Dausse 2015 p 28 a b c d Roisman amp Worthington 2010 p 280 Boardman 1982 p 629 a b Wilkes 1992 p 92 a b Schaefer 2008 p 130 Eichner Heiner 2004 Illyrisch die unbekannte Sprache DOC Die Illyrer Asparn an der Zaya p 105 Appendini Francesco Maria 1802 Historiae urbium et Regionum Italiae rariores in Italian A Forni p 24 a b Eichner 2004 p 106 yllos Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias Eichner 2004 pp 106 7 a b Dzino 2014 pp 45 46 sfn error no target CITEREFDzino2014 help a b Matijasic 2011 p 293 Dzino 2014 pp 47 48 sfn error no target CITEREFDzino2014 help Matijasic 2011 p 295 296 Matijasic 2015 p 132 Katicic 1976 pp 154 155 a b Katicic 1976 p 156 Borza 1991 p 191 Illyrian tribes moved about constantly and there are no fixed land borders to the area known by the Greeks as Illyris Rouphly speaking Illyris consisted of the large region north of Epirus and western Macedonia Hammond 1994 p 438 Illyris a geographical term which the Greeks applied to a territory neighbouring their own covers more or less the area of northern and central Albania down to the mouth of the Aous Crossland 1982 p 839 Greeks of the fifth century B C knew the Illyrii as an important non Greek people living to the north of the Aetolians and the Acarnanians and further north in the territory which now forms central and northern Albania where Greek colonists had founded Epidamnus Dyrrhachium and Apollonia Dausse 2015 p 28 La cartographie recente de Lauriane Martinez Seve41 fait apparaitre une vaste zone entre Illyrie Epire et Macedoine constituee du nord au sud de l Atintanie de la Paravee et de la Tymphee De celle ci depend la frontiere entre Illyriens et Epirotes Elle s applique en revanche moins bien au fleuve Aoos pour definir une frontiere entre Epire et Illyrie Pour les zones de montagnes nous pouvons citer les monts Acrocerauniens qui pourraient marquer le passage entre la partie chaone de l Epire et l Illyrie Mais la plupart du temps la montagne est le lieu de vie de nombreuses populations de la Grece du Nord A ce titre elle constitue plus un lieu de rencontre qu une barriere Wilkes 1992 p 97 Crossland 1982 p 841 Wilkes 1992 pp 81 183 a b Campbell 2009 p 120 a b Wilkes 1992 p 38 Elsie 2015 p 2 Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian 7 July 2011 A Companion to Ancient Macedonia John Wiley amp Sons p 280 ISBN 978 1 4443 5163 7 Dzino 2014 p 47 sfn error no target CITEREFDzino2014 help a b c Dzino 2014 p 46 sfn error no target CITEREFDzino2014 help Garasanin 1982 pp 585 586 a b c Wilkes 1992 p 92 Wilkes 1992 p 33 35 39 Dzino 2014b p 15 19 Lazaridis amp Alpaslan Roodenberg 2022 pp 8 10 11 13 Sasel Kos 2005 p 235 Wilkes 1992 p 39 Wilkes 1992 p 38 81 Stipcevic 1977 p 17 Dzino 2014b p 13 19 Mathieson I Alpaslan Roodenberg S Posth C Szecsenyi Nagy A Rohland N Mallick S et al March 2018 The genomic history of southeastern Europe Nature 555 7695 197 203 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 197M doi 10 1038 nature25778 PMC 6091220 PMID 29466330 Patterson Nick et al 2022 Large scale migration into Britain during the Middle to Late Bronze Age PDF Nature 601 7894 588 594 doi 10 1038 s41586 021 04287 4 PMC 8889665 PMID 34937049 S2CID 245509501 Lazaridis amp Alpaslan Roodenberg 2022 Supplementary Files Table S1 Supplementary Materials Lazaridis amp Alpaslan Roodenberg 2022 pp 256 Supplementary Materials Lazaridis amp Alpaslan Roodenberg 2022 pp 220 Supplementary Materials Zegarac Aleksandra Winkelbach L Blocher J Diekmann Y Kreckovic Gavrilovic M 2021 Ancient genomes provide insights into family structure and the heredity of social status in the early Bronze Age of southeastern Europe Scientific Reports 11 1 10072 doi 10 1038 s41598 021 89090 x PMC 8115322 PMID 33980902 Lazaridis amp Alpaslan Roodenberg 2022 Supplementary Materials Table S1 Aneli Serena Saupe Tina Montinaro Francesco Solnik Anu Molinaro Ludovica Scaggion Cinzia Carrara Nicola Raveane Alessandro Kivisild Toomas Metspalu Mait Scheib Christiana Pagani Luca 2022 The genetic origin of Daunians and the Pan Mediterranean southern Italian Iron Age context Molecular Biology and Evolution 39 2 doi 10 1093 molbev msac014 PMC 8826970 PMID 35038748 Lazaridis amp Alpaslan Roodenberg 2022 p 322 Supplementary Materials a b Sasel Kos 2004 pp 493 502 Sasel Kos 2005 p 124 a b c Sasel Kos 2005 p 124 Grimal amp Maxwell Hyslop 1996 p 230 Apollodorus amp Hard 1999 p 103 Book III 5 4 a b Sasel Kos 2004 p 493 Grimal amp Maxwell Hyslop 1996 p 168 Katicic 1995 p 246 a b Sasel Kos 2005 p 123 Sasel Kos 2004 p 502 Papazoglu 1978 p 213 Sasel Kos 2004 p 503 Stipcevic 1989 p 34 Sasel Kos 2004 p 500 Castiglioni 2010 pp 93 95 Mortensen 1991 pp 49 59 Cabanes 2002 pp 50 51 56 75 Castiglioni 2010 p 58 Lane Fox 2011 p 342 Cambi Cace amp Kirigin 2002 p 106 Mesihovic amp Sacic 2015 pp 129 130 Cabanes 2002 pp 50 51 56 75 Mortensen 1991 pp 49 59 Lane Fox 2011 p 342 Stipcevic 1989 p 35 Wilkes 1992 pp 97 98 Cabanes 2002 p 51 Wilkes 1992 pp 110 111 Wilkes 1992 p 112 Mesihovic amp Sacic 2015 pp 39 40 Dzino 2014 p 49 sfn error no target CITEREFDzino2014 help Wilkes 1992 pp 112 122 126 Stipcevic 1989 pp 35 36 Polybius sfn error no target CITEREFPolybius help Hammond 1994 p 438 Hammond 1993 pp 106 107 Polybius 2 3 Elsie 2015 p 3 Bajric 2014 p 29 Wilkes 1992 p 158 Boak amp Sinnigen 1977 p 111 Gruen 1986 p 76 Dzino 2012 pp 74 76 Dzino 2012 p 97 Dzino 2012 pp 84 85 a b c Wilkes 1992 p 4 Battles of the Greek and Roman Worlds A Chronological Compendium of 667 Battles to 31Bc from the Historians of the Ancient World Greenhill Historic Series by John Drogo Montagu ISBN 1 85367 389 7 2000 page 47 Mesihovic 2011 pp 8 15 Holleran 2016 p 103 Lenski Noel 2014 06 26 Failure of Empire Valens and the Roman State in the Fourth Century A D Univ of California Press 2014 pp 45 67 ISBN 9780520283893 Odahl Charles M 2001 Constantine and the Christian empire London Routledge pp 40 41 ISBN 978 0 415 17485 5 Lenski Noel Emmanuel 2002 Failure of empire Valens and the Roman state in the fourth century A D University of California Press p 56 ISBN 978 0 520 23332 4 Retrieved 12 October 2010 Croke Brian 2001 Count Marcellinus and his chronicle Oxford University Press p 89 ISBN 978 0 19 815001 5 Retrieved 12 October 2010 Maas Michael 2005 The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Justinian Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1139826877 Bohec Yann Le 2013 The Imperial Roman Army Routledge p 83 ISBN 9781135955069 Juka 1984 p 60 Since the Illyrians are referred to for the last time as an ethnic group in Miracula Sancti Demetri 7th century AD some scholars maintain that after the arrival of the Slavs the Illyrians were extinct Meksi Aleksander 1989 Te dhena per historine e hershme mesjetare te Shqiperise fundi i shek VI fillimi i shek XI Donnees sur l histoire medievale ancienne de l Albanie Iliria Annee 1989 19 1 p 120 Cirkovic 2004 p 2 The name Illyrian was used to identify the western wing of the Southern Slavs up to the nineteenth century although since the Middle Ages it has been used primarily in connection with the Albanians Djilas 1991 pp 20 21 Stergar 2016 pp 111 112 Koder 2017 p 206 Matijasic 2011 p 26 Sasel Kos 1993 p 120 The Illyrians The Peoples of Europe by John Wilkes 1996 page 158 Illyrian success continued when command passed to Agron s widow Teuta who granted individual ships a licence to universal plunder In 231 ac the fleet and army attacked Ells and Messenia Moller Bjorn Piracy Maritime Terrorism and Naval Strategy Copenhagen Danish Institute for International Studies November 16 2008 10 Dell Harry J 1967 The Origin and Nature of Illyrian Piracy Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 16 3 Jul 344 58 345 Livy The History of Rome Band 2 The History of Rome Livy T Cadell and W Davies 1814 p 324 Whitehorne 1994 p 37 Eckstein 2008 p 33 Strauss 2009 p 21 Everitt 2006 p 154 Champion 2004 p 113 Juvenal 2009 p 127 a b Wilkes 1992 p 219 Wilkes 1992 p 223 Bunson 1995 p 202 Mocsy 1974 Pomeroy et al 2008 p 255 Bowden 2003 p 211 Kazhdan 1991 p 248 Malkin 1998 p 143 a b c Filos 2017 pp 222 241 Wilkes 1992 p 183 a b Eastern Michigan University Linguist List The Illyrian Language Archived 2012 02 18 at the Wayback Machine linguistlist org accessed April 3 2014 Ammon et al 2006 p 1874 Traditionally Albanian is identified as the descendant of Illyrian but Hamp 1994a argues that the evidence is too meager and contradictory for us to know whether the term Illyrian even referred to a single language Ceka 2005 pp 40 42 59 Thunmann Johannes E Untersuchungen uber die Geschichte der Oslichen Europaischen Volger Teil Leipzig 1774 see Malcolm Noel Origins Serbs Vlachs and Albanians Malcolm is of the opinion that the Albanian language was an Illyrian dialect preserved in Dardania and then it re conquered the Albanian lowlands Indo European language and culture an introduction By Benjamin W Fortson Edition 5 illustrated Published by Wiley Blackwell 2004 ISBN 1 4051 0316 7 ISBN 978 1 4051 0316 9 Stipcevic Alexander Iliri 2nd edition Zagreb 1989 also published in Italian as Gli Illiri NGL Hammond The Relations of Illyrian Albania with the Greeks and the Romans In Perspectives on Albania edited by Tom Winnifrith St Martin s Press New York 1992 Encyclopedia of Indo European culture By J P Mallory Douglas Q Adams Edition illustrated Published by Taylor amp Francis 1997 ISBN 1 884964 98 2 ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 9 Fortson 2004 Stipcevic 1977 p 15 Fine 1983 pp 9 10 a b De Simone 2017 p 1869 Wilkes 1992 p 70 Polome 1982 p 867 Wilkes 1992 p 86 Polome 1983 p 537 Crossland 1982 pp 841 842 Giannakis Georgios Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis 2017 Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG p 222 ISBN 9783110532135 Crossland posited a posited partial Hellenization of pre classical Epirus with Greek elites ruling over non Greek populations cf Nilsson 1909 A very brief synopsis of older works and views is available in Kokoszko amp Witczak 2009 112 who in turn also favor a Hellenization scenario Nonetheless such views which rely largely on some subjective ancient testimonies are no supported by the earliest and not only epigraphic evidence a b c Stipcevic 1977 p 182 a b c d Wilkes 1992 p 244 Stipcevic 1977 pp 182 186 a b c Wilkes 1992 p 245 West 2007 p 15 Stipcevic 1977 p 197 Stipcevic 1976 p 235 Wilkes 1992 p 123 F A Wright 1934 ALEXANDER THE GREAT London GEORGE ROUTLEDGE SONS LTD pp 63 64 Brandt Ingvaldsen amp Prusac 2014 p 249 Stipcevic 1977 p 107 Freilich et al 2021 Gori 2018 p 201 sfn error no target CITEREFGori2018 help Wilkes 1992 p 34 Wilkes 1992 p 140 Wilkes 1992 p 233 Bunson 1995 p 202 Hornblower amp Spawforth 2003 p 426 Hornblower amp Spawforth 2003 p 1106 Matzinger Joachim 2016 Die albanische Autochthoniehypotheseaus der Sicht der Sprachwissenschaft PDF Sudosteuropa Institut Retrieved 9 August 2020 Das Albanische sei die Nachfolgesprache des Illyrischen An der sprachlichen Realitat des Illyrischen kann prinzipiell nicht gezweifelt werden Auf welcher Basis beruht aber die heutige Kenntnis des Illyrischen Nach moderner Erkenntnis ist das was Illyrisch zu nennen ist auf den geographischen Bereich der suddalmatischen Kuste und ihrem Hinterland zu begrenzen modernes Crna Gora Nordalbanien und Kosovo Kosova antikes Dardanien wo nach alteren griechi schen Autoren Stamme beheimatet waren die gemeinhin illyrisch benannt wurden Hei ner EICHNER Das Gebiet deckt sich mit einem auch relativ einheitlichen Namensgebiet Radoslav KATICIC und es gibt es zum Teil archaologische Ubereinstimmungen Hermann PARZINGER Ob diese Stamme auch eine sprachlicheEinheitgebildet haben lasst sich nicht feststellen Aus diesem Grund darf der Begriff Illyrer und illyrisch primar nur als Sammelbegriffverstanden werden a b Wilkes 1996 p 278 Curta Florin 2013 Seventh Century Fibulae with Bent Stem in the Balkans Archaeologia Bulgarica 17 1 49 70 In Albania for a long time the fibulae with bent stem have been regarded as the foremost element linking the Koman i culture to the Iron Age civilization of the Illyrians the main focus of Albanian nationalism during the Communist period a b Wilkes 1996 p 278 a b Bowden 2003 p 61 Bowden William 2019 Conflicting ideologies and the archaeology of Early Medieval Albania Archeologia Medievale All Insegna del Giglio 47 ISSN 0390 0592 The nationalist interpretation of the cemeteries has on the other hand been roundly rejected by foreign scholars Wilkes influential volume on the Illyrians described it as a highly improbable reconstruction of Albanian history and as noted above I have published a number of trenchant critiques of it of the earlier model Nallbani 2017 p 315 Vroom Joanita 9 October 2017 Saranda in the waves of time In Moreland John Mitchell John Leal Bea eds Encounters Excavations and Argosies Essays for Richard Hodges Archaeopress Publishing Ltd p 249 ISBN 978 1 78491 682 4 All the cemeteries in south eastern Albania have exactly the same shapes and incised decoration styles as Lako s ones in Saranda especially his Nos 23 27 in Table 3 but are dated later that is to say between the 8th and 11th 12th centuries Albanian archaeologists often connect these early medieval cemeteries to the so called Komani Kruja culture and associate them with one particurlar ethnic group regularly described as Slavic Recently however this view has been criticized by other scholars who prefer to situate the Komani Kruja culture in a regionalized Romano Byzantine or Christian context of various ethnic and social groups adopting additional foreign elements Popovic 1975 455 457 Popovic 1984 214 243 Bowden 2003 210 21 Curta 2006 103 105 Consequently we can conclude that the identification of the pottery finds from the Basilica excavation in Saranda with one period the 6th and 7th centuries and with one ethnic group in this case the Slavs is without doubt erroneous Curta 2012 p 73 Curta 2012 pp 73 74 Bowden 2004 p 229 a b Curta 2013 Nallbani 2017 p 320 Curta 2021 p 79 Curta 2021 p 314 Nallbani 2017 p 325 a b Winnifrith 2021 pp 98 99 Dzino 2014b p 11 15 16 Gori Maja November 2012 Who are the Illyrians The Use and Abuse of Archaeology in the Construction of National and Trans National Identities in the Southwestern Balkans Archaeological Review from Cambridge Archaeology and the De Construction of National and Supra National Polities 27 2 71 84 Djilas 1991 p 20 Djilas 1991 p 22 Despalatovic 1975 Dzino 2014b p 9 10 Illyricvm smo stvarali 8 godina a rekonstruirali smo i ilirski jezik www vecernji hr in Croatian Retrieved 2022 10 16 Bibliography EditAmmon Ulrich Dittmar Norbert Mattheier Klaus J Trudgill Peter 2006 Sociolinguistics An International Handbook of the Science of Language and Society Walter de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 018418 4 Apollodorus Hard Robin 1999 The Library of Greek Mythology Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 283924 1 Bajric Amela 2014 Illyrian Queen Teuta and the Illyrians in Polybius s passage on the Roman mission in Illyria Vjesnik Arheoloskog muzeja u Zagrebu in Croatian 46 1 29 56 Bejko Lorenc Morris Sarah Papadopoulos John Schepartz Lynne 2015 The Excavation of the Prehistoric Burial Tumulus at Lofkend Albania ISD LLC ISBN 978 1938770524 Benac Alojz 1964 Vorillyrier Protoillyrier und Urillyrier Symposium Sur la Delimitation Territoriale et Chronologique des Illyriens a l Epoque Prehistorique Sarajevo Naucno drustvo SR Bosne i Hercegovine 59 94 Boak Arthur Edward Romilly Sinnigen William Gurnee 1977 A History of Rome to A D 565 Macmillan ISBN 9780024108005 Boardman John 1982 The Cambridge Ancient History Volume III Part I The Prehistory of the Balkans the Middle East and the Aegean World Tenth to Eighth Centuries B C Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 22496 9 Boardman John Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 1982 The Cambridge Ancient History The Expansion of the Greek World Eighth to Six Centuries B C Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 23447 6 Bowden William 2003 Epirus Vetus The Archaeology of a Late Antique Province Duckworth ISBN 0 7156 3116 0 Bowden William 2004 Balkan Ghosts Nationalism and the Question of Rural Continuity in Albania In Christie Neil ed Landscapes of Change Rural Evolutions in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 1840146172 Brandt J Rasmus Ingvaldsen HIkon Prusac Marina 2014 Death and Changing Rituals Function and meaning in ancient funerary practices Oxbow Books ISBN 978 1 78297 639 4 Budden Hoskins Sandy Malovoz Andreja Wu Mu Chun Waldock Lisa 2022 Mediating Marginality Mounds Pots and Performances at the Bronze Age Cemetery of Puric Ljubanj Eastern Croatia Archaeopress ISBN 978 1 78969 973 9 Bunson Matthew 1995 A Dictionary of the Roman Empire Oxford University Press US ISBN 0 19 510233 9 Cabanes Pierre 1988 Les illyriens de Bardulis a Genthios IVe IIe siecles avant J C The Illyrians from Bardylis to Gentius 4th 2nd century BC in French Paris SEDES ISBN 2718138416 Cabanes Pierre 2002 1988 Cutura Dinko Kuntic Makvic Bruna eds Iliri od Bardileja do Gencia IV II stoljece prije Krista The Illyrians from Bardylis to Gentius 4th 2nd century BC in Croatian Translated by Vesna Lisicic Svitava ISBN 953 98832 0 2 Campbell Duncan R J 2009 The so called Galatae Celts and Gauls in the Early Hellenistic Balkans and the Attack on Delphi in 280 279 BC Thesis University of Leicester Castiglioni Maria Paola 2007 Genealogical Myth and Political Propaganda in Antiquity the Re Use of Greek Myths from Dionysius to Augustus In Carvalho Joaquim ed Religion and Power in Europe Conflict and Convergence Edizioni Plus ISBN 978 88 8492 464 3 Castiglioni Maria Paola 2010 Cadmos serpent en Illyrie itineraire d un heros civilisateur Edizioni Plus ISBN 9788884927422 Ceka Neritan 2005 The Illyrians to the Albanians Publ House Migjeni ISBN 99943 672 2 6 Cambi Nenad Cace Slobodan Kirigin Branko eds 2002 Greek influence along the East Adriatic Coast Knjiga Mediterana Vol 26 ISBN 9531631549 Champion Craige Brian 2004 Cultural Politics in Polybius s Histories Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 0 520 23764 1 Crossland R A 1982 Linguistic Problems of the Balkan Area in Late Prehistoric and Early Classical Periods In J Boardman I E S Edwards N G L Hammond E Sollberger eds The Cambridge Ancient History The Prehistory of the Balkans and the Middle East and the Aegean world tenth to eighth centuries B C Vol III part 1 2 ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521224969 Curta Florin 2021 The Long Sixth Century in Eastern Europe BRILL ISBN 978 9004456983 Curta Florin 2012 Were there any Slavs inCurta seventh century Macedonia Istorija Skopje 47 61 75 Dausse Marie Pierre 2015 Souchon Cecile ed La Grece du Nord aux IVe et IIIe siecles avant J C des Etats puissants aux frontieres floues Actes des congres nationaux des societes historiques et scientifiques 24 31 doi 10 4000 books cths 2013 ISBN 9782735508679 De Simone Carlo 2017 Illyrian In Klein Jared Joseph Brian Fritz Matthias eds Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics Vol 3 Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 054243 1 Despalatovic Elinor Murray 1975 Ljudevit Gaj and the Illyrian Movement New York East European Quarterly Djilas Aleksa 1991 The Contested Country Yugoslav Unity and Communist Revolution 1919 1953 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 16698 1 Durman Aleksandar Obelic Bogomil 1989 Radiocarbon dating of the Vucedol culture complex Radiocarbon 3 Dzino Danijel 2012 Contesting Identities of pre Roman Illyricum Ancient West amp East 11 69 95 doi 10 2143 AWE 11 0 2175878 Dzino Danijel 2014a Illyrians in ancient ethnographic discourse Dialogues d histoire ancienne 40 2 45 65 doi 10 3917 dha 402 0045 Dzino Danijel 2014b Constructing Illyrians Prehistoric Inhabitants of the Balkan Peninsula in Early Modern and Modern Perceptions Balkanistica 27 1 1 39 Eckstein Arthur M 2008 Rome Enters the Greek East From Anarchy to Hierarchy in the Hellenistic Mediterranean 230 170 BC Blackwell Pub ISBN 978 1 4051 6072 8 Elsie Robert 2015 The Early History of Albania PDF Keeping an Eye on the Albanians Selected Writings in the Field of Albanian Studies Albanian Studies Vol 16 ISBN 978 1 5141 5726 8 Evans Arthur John 1883 1885 Antiquarian Researches in Illyricum I IV Communicated to the Society of Antiquaries of London Archaeologia Westminster Nichols amp Sons Evans Arthur John 1878 Illyrian Letters Longmans Green and Co ISBN 1 4021 5070 9 Everitt Anthony 2006 Augustus The Life of Rome s First Emperor Random House Incorporated ISBN 1 4000 6128 8 Freilich Suzanne Ringbauer Harald Los Dzeni Novak Mario Tresic Pavicic Dinko Schiffels Stephan 2021 Reconstructing genetic histories and social organisation in Neolithic and Bronze Age Croatia Scientific Reports 11 1 16729 doi 10 1038 s41598 021 94932 9 PMC 8373892 PMID 34408163 Filos Panagiotis 2017 Giannakis Georgios Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds The Dialectal Variety of Epirus Walter de Gruyter ISBN 9783110532135 Fine John V A 1983 The Early Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 08149 3 Fortson Benjamin W 2004 Indo European Language and Culture An Introduction Wiley Blackwell ISBN 1 4051 0316 7 Frazee Charles A 1997 World History Ancient and Medieval Times to A D 1500 Barron s Educational Series ISBN 0 8120 9765 3 Galaty Michael L 2002 Modeling the Formation and Evolution of an Illyrian Tribal System Ethnographic and Archaeological Analogs In Parkinson William A ed The Archaeology of Tribal Societies Berghahn Books ISBN 1789201713 Garasanin M 1982 The Early Iron Age in the Central Balkan Area c 1000 750 B C In J Boardman I E S Edwards N G L Hammond E Sollberger eds The Cambridge Ancient History The Prehistory of the Balkans and the Middle East and the Aegean world tenth to eighth centuries B C Vol III part 1 2 ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521224969 Grimal Pierre Maxwell Hyslop A R 1996 The Dictionary of Classical Mythology Wiley Blackwell ISBN 0 631 20102 5 Gruen Erich S 1986 The Hellenistic World and the Coming of Rome Volume 1 Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 0 520 05737 6 Gori Maja Recchia Giulia Tomas Helen 2018 The Cetina phenomenon across the Adriatic during the 2nd half of the 3rd millennium BC new data and research perspectives 38 Convegno Nazionale Sulla Preistoria Protostoria Storia DellaDaunia Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 1966 The Kingdoms in Illyria circa 400 167 B C The Annual of the British School at Athens British School at Athens 61 239 253 doi 10 1017 S0068245400019043 JSTOR 30103175 S2CID 164155370 Hammond N G L 1993 Studies concerning Epirus and Macedonia before Alexander Hakkert ISBN 9789025610500 Hammond N G L 1994 Illyrians and North west Greeks The Cambridge Ancient History Volume 6 The Fourth Century BC Cambridge University Press 422 443 doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521233484 017 ISBN 9781139054331 Hammond N G L 1981 The western frontier of Macedonia in the reign of Philip II Ancient Macedonian Studies in Honor of Charles F Edson Institute for Balkan Studies Hammond N G L Wilkes J J 2012 Illyrii In Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony Eidinow Esther eds The Oxford Classical Dictionary OUP Oxford p 726 ISBN 978 0 19 954556 8 Harding Phillip 1985 From the End of the Peloponnesian War to the Battle of Ipsus Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 29949 7 Heth Raleigh C 2021 ILLYRIANS Ἰllyrioi oἱ The Herodotus Encyclopedia London Wiley Blackwell 2 E O ISBN 978 1 118 68964 6 Holleran Claire 2016 Labour Mobility in the Roman World A Case Study of Mines in Iberia In De Ligt Luuk Tacoma Laurens Ernts Tacoma eds Migration and Mobility in the Early Roman Empire BRILL ISBN 978 9004307377 Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony 2003 The Oxford Classical Dictionary Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 860641 9 Juka S S 1984 Kosova The Albanians in Yugoslavia in Light of Historical Documents An Essay Waldon Press ISBN 9780961360108 Juvenal Decimus Junius 2009 The Satires of Decimus Junius Juvenalis and of Aulus Persius Flaccus BiblioBazaar LLC ISBN 978 1 113 52581 9 Katicic Radoslav 1976 Ancient Languages of the Balkans Trends in linguistics State of the art report Vol 4 5 Mouton Katicic Radoslav 1995 Illyricum mythologicum in Croatian Zagreb Antibarbarus ISBN 9789536160327 Kazhdan Aleksandr Petrovich 1991 The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium New York and Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Koder Johannes 2017 Illyrikon und Illyrios In Beihammer Alexander ed Prosopon Rhomaikon Erganzende Studien zur Prosopographie der mittelbyzantinischen Zeit De Gruyter ISBN 978 3110532951 Kohl Philip L Fawcett Clare P 1995 Nationalism Politics and the Practice of Archaeology Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 48065 5 Kuhn Herbert 1976 Geschichte der Vorgeschichtsforschung Walter de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 005918 5 Lazaridis Iosif Alpaslan Roodenberg Songul et al 26 August 2022 The genetic history of the Southern Arc A bridge between West Asia and Europe Science 377 6609 eabm4247 doi 10 1126 science abm4247 PMID 36007055 S2CID 251843620 Lane Fox R 2011 Philip of Macedon Accession Ambitions and Self Presentation In Lane Fox R ed Brill s Companion to Ancient Macedon Studies in the Archaeology and History of Macedon 650 BC 300 AD Leiden Brill pp 335 366 ISBN 978 90 04 20650 2 Malkin Irad 1998 The Returns of Odysseus Colonization and Ethnicity University of California Press ISBN 0520920260 Mallory J P Adams Douglas Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Taylor amp Francis ISBN 1 884964 98 2 Matijasic Ivan 2011 Shrieking like Illyrians Historical Geography and the Greek Perspective of the Illyrian World in the 5th Cent BC Arheoloski Vestnik Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts 62 Matijasic Ivan 2015 Geografia del mondo illirico tra V e IV secolo a C AdriAtlas et l histoire de l espace adriatique du VIe s a C au VIIIe s p C Actes du colloque international de Rome 4 6 novembre 2013 Scripta Antiqua Vol 79 Ausonius ISBN 978 2 35613 145 4 Mazaris Maximus 1975 Mazaris Journey to Hades or Interviews with Dead Men about Certain Officials of the Imperial Court Seminar Classics 609 Buffalo New York Department of Classics State University of New York at Buffalo Mesihovic Salmedin 2011 Rimski vuk i ilirska zmija Posljednja borba PDF in Bosnian Filozofski fakultet u Sarajevu ISBN 978 9958 625 21 3 Mesihovic Salmedin Sacic Amra 2015 Historija Ilira History of Illyrians in Bosnian Sarajevo Univerzitet u Sarajevu University of Sarajevo ISBN 978 9958 600 65 4 Mocsy Andras 1974 Pannonia and Upper Moesia A History of the Middle Danube Provinces of the Roman Empire Routledge ISBN 0 7100 7714 9 Mortensen Kate 1991 The Career of Bardylis The Ancient World Vol 22 Ares Publishers pp 49 59 Nallbani Etleva 2017 Early Medieval North Albania New Discoveries Remodeling Connections The Case of Medieval Komani In Gelichi Sauro Negrelli Claudio eds Adriatico altomedievale VI XI secolo Scambi porti produzioni PDF Universita Ca Foscari Venezia ISBN 978 88 6969 115 7 Papazoglu Fanula 1969 Srednjobalkanska plemena u predrimsko doba Tribali Autarijati Dardanci Skordisci i Mezi Djela Akademija nauka i umjetnosti Bosne i Hercegovine Odjeljenje drustvenih nauka in Croatian Vol 30 Sarajevo Akademija nauka i umjetnosti Bosne i Hercegovine Papazoglu Fanula 1978 The Central Balkan Tribes in pre Roman Times Triballi Autariatae Dardanians Scordisci and Moesians Amsterdam Hakkert ISBN 9789025607937 Polome Edgar Charles 1982 Balkan Languages Illyrian Thracian and Daco Moesian In J Boardman I E S Edwards N G L Hammond E Sollberger eds The Cambridge Ancient History The Prehistory of the Balkans and the Middle East and the Aegean world tenth to eighth centuries B C Vol III part 1 2 ed Cambridge University Press pp 866 888 ISBN 0521224969 Polome Edgar C 1983 The Linguistic Situation in the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire In Haase Wolfgang ed Sprache und Literatur Sprachen und Schriften Forts Walter de Gruyter pp 509 553 ISBN 3110847035 Pomeroy Sarah B Burstein Stanley M Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer Tolbert 2008 A Brief History of Ancient Greece Politics Society and Culture Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 537235 9 Reitsema Laurie Kyle Britney Koci Marlon Horton Rachel Reinberger Katherine Lela Surja Shehi Eduard 2022 Bioarchaeological evidence for ancient human diet and migration at Epidamnus Dyrrachion and Apollonia in Illyria Albania Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 14 5 doi 10 1007 s12520 022 01553 y S2CID 248231970 Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian 2010 A Companion to Ancient Macedonia John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Sasel Kos Marjeta 1993 Cadmus and Harmonia in Illyria Arheoloski Vestnik 44 Sasel Kos Marjeta 2004 Mythological stories concerning Illyria and its name In P Cabanes J L Lamboley eds L Illyrie meridionale et l Epire dans l Antiquite Vol 4 pp 493 504 Sasel Kos Marjeta 2005 Appian and Illyricum Narodni muzej Slovenije ISBN 961616936X Schaefer Richard T 2008 Encyclopedia of Race Ethnicity and Society SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1 4129 2694 2 Shpuza Saimir 2022 D un limen a une polis Orikos aux periodes archaique et classique In Brancato Rodolfo ed Schemata la citta oltre la forma per una nuova definizione dei paesaggi urbani e delle loro funzioni urbanizzazione e societa nel Mediterraneo pre classico eta arcaica Edizioni Quasar ISBN 9788854912755 Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Smith William 1874 A Smaller Classical Dictionary of Biography Mythology and Geography Abridged from the Larger Dictionary J Murray Srejovic Dragoslav 1996 Illiri e Traci Editoriale Jaca Book ISBN 88 16 43607 7 Stergar Rok 2016 Illyrian Autochthonism and the Beginnings of South Slav Nationalisms in the West Balkans In Search of Pre Classical Antiquity Rediscovering Ancient Peoples in Mediterranean Europe 19th and 20th c Brill ISBN 978 90 04 33542 4 Stipcevic Aleksandar 1976 Simbolismo illirico e simbolismo albanese appunti introduttivi Iliria in Italian 5 233 236 doi 10 3406 iliri 1976 1234 Stipcevic Aleksandar 1977 The Illyrians History and Culture Noyes Press ISBN 978 0 8155 5052 5 Stipcevic Alexander 1989 Iliri povijest zivot kultura Zagreb Skolska knjiga ISBN 9788603991062 Syvanne Ilkka 2020 Aurelian and Probus The Soldier Emperors Who Saved Rome Yorkshire Pen and Sword Military ISBN 978 1 5267 6750 9 Strauss Barry 2009 The Spartacus War Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4165 3205 7 West Morris L 2007 Indo European Poetry and Myth Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199280759 Whitehorne John Edwin George 1994 Cleopatras Routledge ISBN 0 415 05806 6 Wilkes J J 1969 Dalmatia Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674189508 Wilkes J J 1992 The Illyrians Blackwell ISBN 06 3119 807 5 Wilkes John 1996 1992 The Illyrians Wiley ISBN 978 0 631 19807 9 Winnifrith Tom 2021 Nobody s Kingdom A History of Northern Albania Andrews UK Limited ISBN 978 1909930964 Zindel Christian Lippert Andreas Lahi Bashkim Kiel Machiel 2018 Albanien Ein Archaologie und Kunstfuhrer von der Steinzeit bis ins 19 Jahrhundert in German Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 9783205200109 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Illyria and Illyrians Phallic Cult of the Illyrians Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Illyrians amp oldid 1141741520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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