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{{Short description|Ancient tribe in the Balkans}} | |||
:''This article is about the ancient peoples. For the Trojan allies, see ].'' | |||
{{About|the ancient tribe in the Balkans|the Trojan allies|Dardanoi|other uses|Dardania (disambiguation){{!}}Dardania}} | |||
] | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}} | |||
{{Infobox ethnic group | |||
| group = <!-- (defaults to {{PAGENAME}}) --> | |||
| native_name = | |||
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| image = Dardania kingdom.png | |||
| image_caption = By the 3rd century the location of the Dardani had resolved itself into the Kingdom of Dardania, which is shown in yellow. The solid lines give modern borders: Republic of Kosovo in the center, Serbia across the north, Macedonia across the south, Albania to the SW, and Montenegro to the NW. | |||
| image_alt = | |||
| image_upright = 1.5 | |||
| total = <!-- total population worldwide --> | |||
| total_year = <!-- year of total population --> | |||
| total_source = <!-- source of total population; may be ''census'' or ''estimate'' --> | |||
| total_ref = <!-- references supporting total population --> | |||
| genealogy = | |||
| regions = <!-- e.g., a list of regions (countries), especially if regionN etc below not used --> | |||
| languages = Palaeo-Balkan language group | |||
'''Dardania''' ({{lang-grc|Δαρδανία}}; {{lang-la|Dardania}}) was the region of the '''Dardani''' ({{lang-grc|Δαρδάνιοι}}; {{lang-la|Dardani}}).<ref></ref><ref></ref> | |||
| religions = | |||
Located at the ] contact zone, their identification as either ] or ] tribe is uncertain<ref>Wilkes, J. J. The Illyrians, 1992, ISBN 0631198075, Page 85, "... Whether the Dardanians were an Illyrian or a Thracian people has been much debated and one view suggests that the area was originally populated with Thracians who where then exposed to direct contact with illyrians over a long period..."</ref><ref>The central Balkan tribes in pre-Roman times: Triballi, Autariatae, Dardanians, Scordisci and Moesians, Amsterdam 1978, by Fanula Papazoglu, ISBN 9025607934, page 131., "the Dardanians ... living in the frontiers of the Illyrian and the ] worlds retained their individuality and, alone among the peoples of that region succeeded in maintaining themselves as an ethnic unity even when they were militarily and politically subjected by the Roman arms and when at the end of the ancient world, the Balkans were involved in far-reaching ethnic perturbations, the Dardanians, of all the Central Balkan tribes, played the greatest part in the genesis of the new peoples who took the place of the old"</ref>. Their territory itself was not considered part of ]<ref>The central Balkan tribes in pre-Roman times: Triballi, Autariatae...Fanula Papazoglu,1978,page 217</ref> by ]. The term used for their territory was ({{lang-grc|''Δαρδανική''}})<ref>The central Balkan tribes in pre-Roman times: Triballi, Autariatae...Fanula Papazoglu,1978,page 523</ref>, while for other tribes had more unspecified terms, such as ({{lang-grc|''Αυταριατών χώρα''}}) for the ]. Other than that, little to no data<ref>The central Balkan tribes in pre-Roman times: Triballi, Autariatae...Fanula Papazoglu,1978,page 187,"We have very little information about the territory of the Dardanians | |||
| related_groups = | |||
before its inclusion in the Roman state, "</ref> exists on the territory of the Dardanii prior to Roman conquest, especially on its southern extent. | |||
| footnotes = | |||
}} | |||
The '''Dardani''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|d|ɑr|d|ə|n|aɪ}}; {{langx|grc|Δαρδάνιοι, Δάρδανοι}}; {{langx|la|Dardani}}) or '''Dardanians''' were a ] people, who lived in a region that was named ] after their settlement there.<ref> Dardanioi, Georg Autenrieth, "A Homeric Dictionary", at Perseus</ref><ref></ref> They were among the oldest Balkan peoples, and their society was very complex.{{sfn|Šašel Kos|2010|p=626}} The Dardani were the most stable and conservative ethnic element among the peoples of the central Balkans, retaining an enduring presence in the region for several centuries.{{sfn|Wilkes|1992|p=144}}<ref name="Papazoglu131"/> | |||
Ancient tradition considered the Dardani as an ].<ref> - 'The Bessi live in huts and lead a wretched life; and their country borders on Mount Rhodope, on the country of the Paeonians, and on that of two Illyrian peoples — the Autariatae, and the Dardanians'</ref><ref> - 'The Ardiaei were called by the men of later times "Vardiaei." Because they pestered the sea through their piratical bands, the Romans pushed them back from it into the interior and forced them to till the soil. But the country is rough and poor and not suited to a farming population, and therefore the tribe has been utterly ruined and in fact has almost been obliterated. And this is what befell the rest of the peoples in that part of the world; for those who were most powerful in earlier times were utterly humbled or were obliterated, as, for example, among the Galatae the Boii and the Scordistae, and among the Illyrians the Autariatae, Ardiaei, and Dardanii, and among the Thracians the Triballi; 316that is, they were reduced in warfare by one another at first and then later by the Macedonians and the Romans'</ref><ref name=Papazoglu218>{{harvnb|Papazoglu|1978|p=218|ps=: "This statement is not without importance for our problem, for it too confirms that in mid-fifth century the lands north of Macedonia were considered to be Illyrian. There is, however, another statement in Herodotus, which N. Vulić insists on as clear evidence that in Herodotus' time the territory of the Dardanians was reckoned as Illyrian . It is a passage from the well - known section on the tributaries of the Danube , in which Herodotus says that the river Angrus flows " from the land of the Illyrians " 267 As the Angrus could be either the Southern Morava or the Ibar , and both rivers in their upper courses flowed through Dardania , Vulić's conclusion looks very reasonable . From all we have said above , the evidence of the ancient writers as to the ethnic origin of the Dardanians seems pretty unanimous and its interpretation offers no special difficulties The tradition according to which the Dardanians , like their neighbours the Autariatae and the Ardiaei , were Illyrians , is preserved in Strabo and Appian . It must be an old tradition , from the times when the three tribes were neighbours . In historians before Strabo ( Polybius , Livy ) and in historians who copied from earlier sources ( Justin , Pompeius Trogus ) , there is nothing to contradict that tradition . The mention of the Darda- nians alongside the Illyrians only shows that the name Illyrian , in addition to its wider ethnic sense , very early acquired a narrower political one . According to Herodotus indeed , for whom the name Illyrian could only have its general meaning , the lands north of Macedonia , round the sources of the Southern Morava and Ibar , were inhabited by Illyrians . This fact shows that ancient tradition considered the Dardanians to be Illyrians ."}}</ref><ref name=Zahariade>{{harvnb|Zahariade|2009|p=81|ps=; p. 92: "Dardania was an Illyrian land by tradition. Dardanians were considered Illyrians by Strabo and Appian and so a number of modern scholars, while others believe that at a later date the Dardanians were “Thracisized”... Most of the place-names especially in eastern Dardania turn out to be Thracian. The Thracian element in majority presumably following an expansion westwards seems to have intermingled with the Illyrian one. The ethnic frontier between Thracians and Dardanians was traced on the Morava (Margus) River until the Danube to the north splitting in two the Dardanian lands, with the eastern part significantly “thracisized”."}}</ref><ref name=Malcolm>Kosovo: A Short History p. 363 'As Papazoglu notes, most ancient sources classify Dardanians as Illyrians. Her reasons for rejecting this identification in a later essay, ‘Les Royaumes’, are obscure. There were Thracian names in the eastern strip of Dardania, but Illyrian names dominated the rest; Katicic has shown that these belong with two other Illyrian “‘onomastic provinces’ (see his summary in Ancient Languages, pp. 179-81, and the evidence in Papazoglu, ‘Dardanska onomastika’).'</ref><ref name=Wilkes>{{harvnb|Wilkes|2012|p=414|ps=: "'''Dardani''', an Illyrian people (their name may derive from the same root as ''dardhë'', the Albanian for 'pear') but also linked with Thracians and with Asia Minor, inhabited the upper Vardar valley and the Kosovo region in the southern Balkans."}}</ref><ref name="Vujcic2021">{{harvnb|Vujčić|2021|p=505|ps=: "Regardless of this episode, some sources clearly distinguish the Dardani from the rest of Illyrians, and Dardanian land from Illyria (Polyb. 2.6.4, 28.8.3; Liv. 43.20.1), and some take for granted that they are but one of the Illyrian tribes (Strab. 7.5.6, 12; App. Ill. 1.2). This is not the place to analyze this topic in detail, but, while the Dardani are obviously ethnically and linguistically a part of the Illyrian world, they seem to be separated from other Illyrian peoples by their geography and peculiar socio-political development."}}</ref> ], in particular – also mentioning ] and ] as Dardanian tribes – describes the Dardani as one of the three strongest Illyrian peoples, the other two being the ] and ].<ref name="perseus.tufts.edu">Strabo's geography - http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0239</ref>{{sfn|Hammond|1966|pp=239–241}} As Dardanians had followed their own peculiar geographical, social and political development in ], some ancient sources also distinguish them from those Illyrians dwelling in the central and southern coast of the eastern ] and its hinterland, who had constituted their own socio-political formation, referred to as ']' by ancient authors.<ref name="Vujcic2021"/><ref name=Papazoglu218/>{{sfn|Šašel Kos|2005|p=122}} The Dardani were also related to their ] neighbors.{{sfn|Wilkes|2012|p=414}}{{sfn|Šašel Kos|2010|p=625}}{{sfn|Shukriu|1996|p=20}} In Roman times, there appear ] names in the eastern strip of Dardania, and several Thracian and ] placenames also appear there, such as ] and ],<ref>Vladimir Georgiev (Gheorghiev), Raporturile dintre limbile dacă, tracă şi frigiană, "Studii Clasice" Journal, II, 1960, 39-58.</ref> but Illyrian names dominated the rest.<ref>Kosovo: A Short History p. 363 'As Papazoglu notes, most ancient sources classify Dardanians as Illyrians. Her reasons for rejecting this identification in a later essay, ‘Les Royaumes’, are obscure. There were Thracian names in the eastern strip of Dardania, but Illyrian names dominated the rest; Katicic has shown that these belong with two other Illyrian “‘onomastic provinces’ (see his summary in Ancient Languages, pp. 179-81, and the evidence in Papazoglu, ‘Dardanska onomastika’).'</ref> Nevertheless, ancient authors have not identified Dardanians with Thracians, and Strabo explicitly makes a clear distinction between them.{{sfn|Shukriu|1996|p=41}}<ref> - 'The Ardiaei were called by the men of later times "Vardiaei." Because they pestered the sea through their piratical bands, the Romans pushed them back from it into the interior and forced them to till the soil. But the country is rough and poor and not suited to a farming population, and therefore the tribe has been utterly ruined and in fact has almost been obliterated. And this is what befell the rest of the peoples in that part of the world; for those who were most powerful in earlier times were utterly humbled or were obliterated, as, for example, among the Galatae the Boii and the Scordistae, and among the Illyrians the Autariatae, Ardiaei, and Dardanii, and among the Thracians the Triballi; 316that is, they were reduced in warfare by one another at first and then later by the Macedonians and the Romans'</ref> | |||
The region was inhabited by ], ]<ref>The central Balkan tribes in pre-Roman times: Triballi, Autariatae, Dardanians, Scordisci and Moesians by Fanula Papazoglu,ISBN 9025607934,page 265</ref><ref name="Roman Empire Tome 4 1974, page 9">Pannonia and Upper Moesia: a history of the middle Danube provinces of the Roman Empire | |||
The Provinces of the Roman Empire Tome 4,ISBN-0710077149, 9780710077141,1974,page 9</ref> and ]<ref name="Roman Empire Tome 4 1974, page 9"/><ref>Wilkes, J. J. The Illyrians, 1992,ISBN 0631198075.,Page 85,"... Whether the Dardanians were an Illyrian or a Thracian people has been much debated and one view suggests that the area was originally populated with Thracians who where then exposed to direct contact with illyrians over a long period..."</ref>. After Roman conquest of Illyria at ], Romans colonized and founded several cities in the region<ref>Hauptstädte in Südosteuropa: Geschichte, Funktion, nationale Symbolkraft by Harald Heppner,page 134</ref>. | |||
The ] was attested since the 4th century BC in ancient sources reporting the wars the Dardanians waged against their south-eastern neighbor – ] – until the 2nd century BC.{{sfn|Wilkes|2012|p=414}} The historian ], a main source about the history of the Macedonian kings, refers to an 'lllyrian war' between 346 and the end of 343 BC, fought by 'Dardani and other neighbouring peoples' against ], who won the conflict.{{sfn|Wilkes|1996|pp=120-121}}{{sfn|Vujčić|2021|p=504}} After the ] weakened the state of the ] and ], the political and military role of the Dardanians began to grow in the region. They expanded their state to the area of ] which definitively disappeared from history, and to some territories of the southern Illyrians. The Dardanians strongly pressured the Macedonians, using every opportunity to attack them. However the Macedonians quickly recovered and consolidated their state, and the Dardanians lost their important political role. The strengthening of the Illyrian (]–]) state on their western borders also contributed to the restriction of Dardanian warlike actions towards their neighbors.{{sfn|Stipčević|1989|pp=38–39}} | |||
==Name and mythic origins== | |||
Beginning with ] in 1854, 19th century ] concluded that ''Dardanoi'' and ''Dardania'' may be related to a proto-] word meaning ''pear tree'' (''dardha'' in modern Albanian the definite form, ''dardhë'' indefinite form). Opinions differ whether the ultimate etymon of this word in ] was *''g'hord-'' (which would make it related also to Greek ''achrás'' 'wild pear'), or *''dheregh-''.<ref>Elsie, Robert (1998): "Dendronymica Albanica: A survey of Albanian tree and shrub names". ''Zeitschrift für Balkanologie'' 34: 163-200 </ref> | |||
Dardanians fought against ] proconsuls, and were finally defeated probably by ] in 39 BC or by ] in 29/8 BC.{{sfn|Wilkes|2012|p=414}} They were included in the Roman province of ]. After the Roman emperor ] divided the province of Moesia into ] and ] in 86 AD, the Dardani were located in southern Moesia Superior.{{sfn|Petrović|2019|pp=23–24}}{{sfn|Wilkes|2012|p=414}} A ] was established at ] in Dardanian territory under the ]. In the 2nd century AD Dardanians were still notorious as ] (''latrones dardaniae)''. During the late ] their territory was the homeland of many ], notably ] and ].{{sfn|Wilkes|2012|p=414}} | |||
] connected ] δάρδανος "burned up" (from the verb δαρδάπτω ''dardapto'' "to wear, to slay, to burn up").<ref>The Greek Myths by Robert Graves, ISBN 0140171991</ref> | |||
== Name == | |||
In ], ] (Δάρδανος), one of the sons of ] (the others being Enchelus, Autarieus, Maedus, Taulas, and Perrhaebus) was the ] ancestor of the ''Dardanoi'' (Δάρδανοι).<ref>Appian, ''The Foreign Wars, III, 1.2''</ref> | |||
The ethnonym of the ''Dardani'' has been attested in ancient Greek literature as {{transliteration|grc|Dardaneis}}, {{transliteration|grc|Dardanioi}} and {{transliteration|grc|Dardanoi}}, and in Latin as ''Dardani''.{{sfn|Papazoglu|1969|p=201}} The term used for their territory was {{transliteration|grc|Dardanike}} ({{lang|grc|Δαρδανική}}).<ref name="Papazoglu 1978 523">{{harvnb|Papazoglu|1978|p=523}}</ref> The root ''Dard-'' is attested outside the Dardanian region and the Trojan-Dardanian area in several other ancient ethnonyms, personal names, and toponyms: ''Dardas'', an ''opraetor epiratrum''; {{lang|grc|Δερδιενις}}, name of Macedonian-Elimiot princes; {{lang|grc|Δερδια}} in ]; {{lang|grc|Δερδενις}} in ]; in ancient ] ''Dardi'', a ]an tribe, ''Derdensis'' a region and {{lang|grc|Δαρδανον}}, a Daunian settlement. The suffix ''-ano'' in ''Dard-'' was common to many Indo-European languages.{{sfn|Baliu|2012|p=69}} | |||
Some ] proposed a connection between Dardani of the ] and the ]s of ], having a group of Dardan colonists settle in the Balkans and subsequently degenerate into a state of barbarism<ref>The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0631198075, page 220, "... Leaving aside Strabo's comment on the dirty habits of the Dardanians, there is little on which to judge the general health of the Illyrian population. ..."</ref>, but the Romans<ref>Greeks and Barbarians (Edinburgh Readings on the Ancient World) by T. Harrison,2001,ISBN 0415939593,page 140</ref> considered them to be Greeks as a whole, which contradicts modern scholarship. | |||
The names of the two main Dardanian tribes – ''Galabri/Galabrioi'' and ''Thunatae/Thunatai'' – have been respectively connected to the ] '']'' and '']'' in ] (south-eastern ]), of Palaeo-Balkan provenance.{{sfn|Baliu|2012|p=68}}{{sfn|Šašel Kos|2010|p=625}} | |||
==History== | |||
{{Main|Illyrians}} | |||
===Etymology=== | |||
The name ''Dardan-'' (ethnonym: {{lang|grc|Δάρδανοι}}/{{transliteration|grc|Dardani}}; toponym: {{lang|grc|Δαρδανική}}/{{transliteration|grc|Dardania}}) is traditionally connected to the same root as {{lang|sq|dardhë}}, the ] word for 'pear',{{sfn|Wilkes|2012|p=414}}{{sfn|Demiraj|1997|p=121}} as well as Alb. {{lang|sq|dardhán}}, {{lang|sq|dardán}}, 'farmer'.{{sfn|Demiraj|1997|p=121}} The ethnonym '']'', which is attested since Roman times for a tribe close to the Dardani or living in Dardania, is considered to be the ] translation of ''Dardani'' (cf. Latin ''pirus'' "pear"),{{sfn|Baliu|2012|pp=81}} which would confirm the link with the Albanian {{lang|sq|dardhë}}.{{sfn|Darlishta|2019|p=65}} | |||
In 1854, ] was the first to propose that the names ''Dardanoi'' and ''Dardania'' were related to the Albanian word {{lang|sq|]}} ("pear, pear-tree"). This is suggested by the fact that toponyms related to fruits or animals are not unknown in the region (cf. Alb. {{lang|sq|dele, delmë}} "sheep" supposedly related to Dalmatia, ] in Montenegro < Alb. {{lang|sq|ujk, ulk}} "wolf" etc.).<ref name="Wilkes244">{{cite book|last=Wilkes|first=John|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=l8q0QgAACAAJ&q=Wilkes%20the%20illyrians|title=The Illyrians|publisher=Wiley|year=1992|isbn=9780631146711|page=244}} "Names of individuals peoples may have been formed in a similar fashion, Taulantii from 'swallow' (cf. the Albanian tallandushe) or Erchelei the 'eel-men' and Chelidoni the 'snail-men'. The name of the Delmatae appears connected with the Albanian word for 'sheep' delmë) and the Dardanians with for 'pear' (''dardhë'')."</ref>{{sfn|Elsie|2015|p=310}} Albanian typical toponyms formed with the same root as ''dardhë'' have been attested: ''Dardhan-i'' (in 1467 CE), ''Dardhanesh-i'' (1431), ''Dardhasi'' (1431), ''Dardas'' (1467), ''Dardhë-a'' (1417), ''Darda'', ''Dardhicë-a'' (1431).{{sfn|Darlishta|2019|p=38}} Several modern toponyms are found in various parts of ], including Dardha in ], ] in ], Dardha in ], Dardha in ], ] in ], Dardhaj in ], and Dardhës in ]. Dardha in Puka is recorded as ''Darda'' in a 1671 ecclesiastical report and on a 1688 map by a Venetian cartographer. Dardha is also the name of an ] in the northern part of the ].{{sfn|Elsie|2015|p=310}}{{sfn|Demiraj|1997|p=121}} | |||
The Dardanians are first mentioned in IV century B.C. when their king ] succeeded into bringing various tribes in a single organization. Under his leadership Dardanians defeated several times Macedonians and Molossians. At this time they were so strong to rule Macedonia through a puppet king in 392-391 BC and their continuous invasions forced later Macedonian king to pay them a tribute in 372 BC In 385-384 we see them in alliance with Dionyssius defeating Molossians in a battle killing up to 15,000 Molossian soldiers and ruling their territory for a short period. They returned raiding Molossians in 360. In 359 BC Dardanians under Bardyllis won a decisive battle against Macedonian king ] by killing Macedonian king himself and 4,000 his soldiers and occupied the cities of upper Macedonia.<ref>The Cambridge ancient history: The fourth century B.C. Volume 6 of The Cambridge ancient history, Iorwerth Eiddon Stephen Edwards, ISBN 0521850738, 9780521850735 Authors D. M. Lewis, John Boardman Editors D. M. Lewis, John Boardman Edition 2, illustrated, revised Publisher Cambridge University Press, 1994 ISBN 0521233488, 9780521233484 Length 1097 pages. Page 428-429 link </ref><ref>The Macedonian Empire: The Era of Warfare Under Philip II and Alexander the Great, 359-323 B.C. Author James R. Ashley Edition illustrated Publisher McFarland, 2004 | |||
ISBN 0786419180, 9780786419180 Length 486 pages. Pages 111-112 link </ref> | |||
Opinions differ on the etymon of the root in ], and eventually in ]. On the basis of an alleged connection between Albanian ''dardhë'' and ] {{lang|grc|ἄχερδος, ἀχράς}} "wild pear", a common Indo-European root has been tentatively reconstructed by scholars: {{lang|ine-x-proto|*ĝʰor-d-}} "thorn bush"; {{lang|ine-x-proto|*(n)ĝʰ∂rdis}}; {{lang|ine-x-proto|*ĝʰerzd⁽ʰ⁾-}} "thorny, grain, barley". However it has been suggested that this connection is only conceivable assuming an ancient common Balkano-Aegean substrate word for Albanian and Greek.{{sfn|Demiraj|1997|pp=121–122}}{{sfn|Elsie|1998|p=71}}{{sfn|Baliu|2012|pp=77–78}} A proposed Indo-European root {{lang|ine-x-proto|*dʰeregh-}} "a thorny plant", with the Proto-Albanian form reconstructed as {{lang|ine-039|*dʰorĝʰ-eh₂-}}, is not clear.{{sfn|Demiraj|1997|pp=121–122}}{{sfn|Baliu|2012|pp=77–78}} More recently for the Albanian ''dardhë'' the ] {{lang|ine-039|*dardā}} has been reconstructed, itself a derivative of {{lang|sq|]}} "to tip out, pour, spill, secrete, cast (metals)" < PAlb {{lang|ine-039|*derda}}. In ] texts the root is recorded not ]: {{lang|sq|dardh}}. It continues Proto-Albanian {{lang|ine-039|*darda}}, which is close to onomatopoeic ] {{lang|lt|dardĕti}} "to rattle" ] {{lang|lv|dàrdêt}} "to creak", ] {{lang|cy|go-dyrddu}} "to mumble, to gumble" (the semantic development of "pear" that occurs in Albanian can also be seen in the ] parallel {{lang|sla|gruša}}, {{lang|sla|kruša}} "pear, pear tree" < {{lang|sla-x-proto|*grušiti}}, {{lang|sla-x-proto|*krušiti}} "to crumble, to break", and also in the Indo-European parallel {{lang|ine-x-proto|*peisom}} "pear" < {{lang|ine-x-proto|*peis-}}).{{sfn|Orel|1998|pp=56, 60}} Slavic toponyms with "Kruševo" (from Proto-Slavic kruša, "pear") and other related toponyms particularly found in the area of the ancient Dardani have been proposed as South Slavic translations of ''Darda-'' toponyms.<ref>Baliu, Begzad (2012). Onomastika e Kosoves: Ndermjet miteve dhe identiteteve (PDF). Era. p. 73. ISBN 978-9951040556.</ref> | |||
Following the disastrous defeat of Macedonians by Dardanians, when king Philip took control of Macedonian throne in 358, he reaffirmed the treaty with Dardanians marrying the Illyrian princess Audata, propably the daughter or the nice of Bardyllis.<ref>''The time of this marriage is somewhat disputed while some historians maintain that the marriage happened after the defeat of Bardyllis'' Women and monarchy in Macedonia Oklahoma Series in Classical Culture Author Elizabeth Donnelly Carney Edition illustrated Publisher University of Oklahoma Press, 2000 ISBN 0806132124,9780806132129 | |||
Length 369 pages </ref> This gave Philip valuable time to gather its forces and to defeat Dardanians still under Bardyllis in the decisive ] by killing about 7,000 of them eliminating the Dardanian menace for some time.<ref>The Macedonian Empire: The Era of Warfare Under Philip II and Alexander the Great, 359-323 B.C. Author James R. Ashley Edition illustrated Publisher McFarland, 2004 ISBN 0786419180, 9780786419180 Length 486 pages. Pages 111-112 link </ref><ref>The Genius of Alexander the Great Author N. G. L. Hammond Edition illustrated Publisher UNC Press, 1998 ISBN 0807847445, 9780807847442 Length 248 pages. Page 11 link </ref> | |||
Other roots have been connected to the name ''Dardan-'' by some scholars. It has been proposed a possible link to ''darda'' "bee", maybe originally with the meaning of "noise", "chatter", compared with Sanskrit ''dardurá-'' "frog", "pipe", Lithuanian ''dardėt́i'' "to rattle", "chatter" (which however is regarded by Orel{{sfn|Orel|1998|pp=56, 60}} as an onomatopoeic form connected to Albanian ''derdh'', hence to ''dardhë'', see above), Gkreek δάρδα · μέλισσα "bee", sometimes interpreted as μόλυσμα "stain", δαρδαίνει · μολύνει "to stain", both late antique attestations from ] (5th century CE) and with aberrant semantics.{{sfn|Savić|2022|p=}} Another link has been made with the PIE root ''*dhereĝh-'' "to hold", "strong", which would have evolved to ''dard-'' in consistency with the phonetic change of voiced palatal velars that are a characteristic trait of Albanian.{{sfn|Crăciun|2023|pp=79–80}} | |||
In ] under the lead of Cleitus the son of Bardyllis, Dardanians in alliance with other Illyrian tribes, of Taulanti under Glaukias and Autariate attacked Macedonia which was this time under Alexander the Great. The dardanians managed to capture some cities but were eventually defeated later by Alexander forces <ref>The Macedonian Empire: The Era of Warfare Under Philip II and Alexander the Great, 359-323 B.C. Author James R. Ashley Edition illustrated Publisher McFarland, 2004 ISBN 0786419180, 9780786419180 Length 486 pages page 117 link </ref><ref>The Cambridge ancient history: The fourth century B.C. Volume 6 of The Cambridge ancient history, Iorwerth Eiddon Stephen Edwards, ISBN 0521850738, 9780521850735 Authors D. M. Lewis, John Boardman Editors D. M. Lewis, John Boardman Edition 2, illustrated, revised Publisher Cambridge University Press, 1994 ISBN 0521233488, 9780521233484 Length 1097 pages. Page 428-429 link </ref> | |||
The opinion criticising the etymologies based on roots that originally included ''*g̑h'' because in the earliest form of Albanian PIE ''*g̑h'' turned into ''*dʑ'' and correspondingly later into ''*dz'', which should have been spelled in Greek/Latin documents with /z/, /s/, or a similar letter, instead of /d/, is refutable by the attestation of the Proto-Albanoid term ''diellina'' "]".{{sfn|Crăciun|2023|pp=79–81}} This term was mentioned as a "Thracian-Dacian" phytonym by the Ancient Greek pharmacologist ] (1st century AD), and it has a clear etymological connection with the Albanian word ''diell'' "sun" (''diellina'' "]" belongs to the genus called ''solanum'' with the Latin root ''sol'' "sun", being so named because of its yellow leaves), displaying a characteristic Albanian phonetic change in which the voiced palatal velar ''*ĝ(h)-'' turned into the interdental ''dh'' or the dental ''d'', passing through intermediate stages represented by the palato-alveolar affricate voiced ''ȷ́'' , dental affricate ''dz'' and further through a final stage ''dð'' (i.e. ''*ĝ(h)-'' > ''ȷ́'' > ''dz'' > ''dð'' > ''dh/d'': Alb. ''dielli'' < PAlb. ''*dðiella'' < ''*dziella-'' < EPAlb. ''*ȷ́élu̯a-'' < PIE ''*ǵʰélh₃u̯o-'' "yellow, golden, bright/shiny").{{sfn|Crăciun|2023|pp=77–81}} This phenomenon reflects the uncertainty of the Ancient Greek and Roman authors in transcribing the Proto-Albanian affricates, which were unfamiliar to them. Indeed, many similar examples of Palaeo-Balkan names with alternating spellings in ancient literature using both dentals and sibilants can be connected to an earlier stage of Albanian and furthermore provide strong support for ]'s thesis about the Proto-] dialects, spoken in the central-western Balkans including the historical regions of Dardania, Illyria proper, Paeonia, Upper Moesia, western Dacia and western Thrace.{{sfn|Crăciun|2023|pp=77–81}} | |||
In winter 280-279 BC when ] began invaded Macedonia, the Dardanian king offered to help Macedonians with 20,000 soldiers, but they were refused by Macedonian king ], eventually contributing to his defeat and consequent death. <ref>A history of Macedonia Volume 5 of Hellenistic culture and society Author Robert Malcolm Errington Edition illustrated Publisher University of California Press, 1990 ISBN 0520063198, 9780520063198 Length 320 pages. page 160 </ref><ref>The Illyrians By John Wilkes </ref><ref>A History of Macedonia: 336-167 B.C Volume 3 of A History of Macedonia, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond Authors Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond, Frank William Walbank Edition illustrated, reprint Publisher Oxford University Press, 1988 | |||
ISBN 0198148151, 9780198148159 Length 690 pages. Page 253 Link </ref> Unlike Macedonia, Dardanians didn't suffer much the Celtic invasion and Dardanian forces attacked them while they were returning north. | |||
=== The name in the ancient sources === | |||
Dardanians were a constant threat to Macedonian kingdom. In 229 they attacked again Macedonia defeating in an important battle Macedonian forces under ] <ref>A history of Macedonia Volume 5 of Hellenistic culture and society Author Robert Malcolm Errington Edition illustrated | |||
The name of the Dardani is mentioned for the first time in the ] in the name of ] who founded ] on the Aegean coast of ] and his people the ], from which the toponym '']'' is derived. Other parallel ethnic names in the Balkans and Anatolia, respectively include: '']'' and '']'', '']'' and '']''. These parallels indicate closer links than simply a correlation of names. According to a current explanation, the connection is likely related to the large-scale movement of peoples that occurred at the end of the ] (around 1200 BC), when the attacks of the ']' afflicted some of the established powers around the eastern ].<ref>{{harvnb|Wilkes|1992|p=145}}; {{harvnb|Crossland|1982|p=849}}; {{harvnb|Papazoglu|1969|pp=101–104}}; {{harvnb|Stipčević|1989|pp=22–23}}.</ref> | |||
Publisher University of California Press, 1990 ISBN 0520063198, 9780520063198 Length 320 pages </ref> | |||
In ancient historiography, the Dardani of the Balkans are mentioned as a people in the second century BCE by ] who describes their wars against ] in the third century BC.{{sfn|Buqinca|2021|pp=522–524}} Historians of Hellenistic and Roman antiquity who mention the Dardanians are ], ], ], ], ], ] and others. {{sfn|Buqinca|2021|p=216}} According to a mythological tradition reported by ] (2nd century AD), ''Dardanos'' (Δάρδανος), one of the sons of '']'' (Ἰλλυριός), was the ] ancestor of the ''Dardanoi'' (Δάρδανοι).{{sfn|Wilkes|1992|p=92}} In ancient sources the Dardani are mentioned as one of the ] and/or as a distinct grouping in the region of Dardania. As such, the Dardani were Illyrians from an ethno-linguistic perspective, but they had followed their own peculiar geographical, social and political development in ].{{sfn|Vujčić|2021|p=505}} | |||
In ], they invaded the ] province of ] together with the ] and the ].<ref>Wilkes, J. J. The Illyrians, 1992, ISBN 0631198075, Page 140, "... Autariatae at the expense of the Triballi until, as Strabo remarks, they in their turn were overcome by the Celtic Scordisci in the early third century Sc. ..."</ref> | |||
]<ref>Polybius, Histories,25.6</ref> writes of an event in which the Dardani ask for Roman aid against their enemies. | |||
: When the ] envoys arrived in Rome the Senate, after listening to their address, deferred its answer. Meanwhile the Dardanian envoys came with reports as to the number of the ], the size of their men, and their courage in the field.They gave information also of the treacherous practices of ] and the ], and said that they were more afraid of him than of the Bastarnae, and therefore begged the help of the Romans. The report of the Dardani being supported by that of the ] envoys who arrived at that time, and who also begged for help, the Senators determined to send some commissioners to see with their own eyes the truth of these reports; and they accordingly at once appointed and despatched ], accompanied by some young men. | |||
In the late 1st century BCE, in Rome a new ideological discourse was formed. Propagated by poets like ] and ], it constructed a glorious Trojan past for the Romans, who were claimed to be descendants of Trojan Dardanians. In the years before the Trojan origin story became the official Roman narrative about their origins, the Romans came into conflict in the Balkans with the Dardani.{{sfn|Boteva|2021|p=410}} In public discourse this created the problem that the Roman army could be seen as fighting against a people who could be related to the ancestors of the Romans. The image of the historical Dardani in the 1st century BC was that of Illyrian barbarians who raided their Macedonian frontier and had to be dealt with. In this context, the name of a people known as the '']'' appeared in Roman sources. The ''Moesi'' are mentioned only in three ancient sources in the period after the death of Emperor Augustus in 14 CE. The name itself was taken from the name of the ] in Asia Minor.<ref name="Boteva411">{{harvnb|Boteva|2021|p=411}}</ref> The choice seems to be related to the fact that the Trojan-era Mysians lived close to the Trojan-era Dardanians. As the name of the ''Dardani'' in Roman discourse became linked to the ancestors of the Romans, the actual Dardani began to be covered in Roman literature by other names. After the death of Augustus, their name in connection to the Balkans became a political problem. After the death of Augustus, the new emperor was ], his stepson and the most senior Roman general in the Balkans. As Tiberius had played a key role in the Roman conquest of the Balkans, as emperor he couldn't be portrayed as the conqueror of ''Dardanians'', whose name had been constructed as the name of the mythical progenitors of the Romans. Thus, the decision to create a new name for Dardania and the Dardani was made. Despite this decision and the administrative use of the names ''Moesia'' and ''Moesi'' for the ''Dardani'' and ''Dardania'', the original use of the name persisted by authors like Appian.<ref name="Boteva411"/> The name ''Dardania'' was not used for several hundred years after this period in an administrative context. It was only recreated by Emperor ] in the 3rd century CE.{{sfn|Rama|2021|p=114}} | |||
In AD ], they were conquered by Rome and became part of the province of ] (corresponding to present-day ], northern fringes of ] and northern ]). According to ], they were divided into two sub-groups, the ] and the ]<ref>]: in English translation, ed. H. L. Jones (1924), at LacusCurtius</ref>. | |||
== History == | |||
Dardania was conquered in ] by ] and included into the ], the Latin language was soon adopted as the main language of the tribe as many other conquered and Romanized<ref name="balkaninstitut.com">http://www.balkaninstitut.com/pdf/izdanja/B_XXXVII_2007.pdf</ref>. At first, Dardania was not a separate Roman province, but was a region in the province of ] in ].<ref>The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0631198075, page 210,"... Here the old name of Dardania appears as a new province formed out of Moesia, along with Moesia Prima, Dacia (not Trajan's old province but a ...)"</ref><ref>The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992,ISBN 0631198075, page 210, "...Though its line is far from certain there seems little doubt that most of the Dardanians were excluded from Illyricum and were to become a part of the province of Moesia..."</ref> Emperor ] later (]) made Dardania into a separate <ref>The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0631198075, page 210,"...Here the old name of Dardania appears as a new province formed out of Moesia, along with Moesia Prima, Dacia (not Trajan's old province but a ...)"</ref> province with its capital at Naissus (Niš). During the ] administration (in the ]), there was a Byzantine province of Dardania that included cities of Ulpiana, Scupi, Stobi, ], and others. | |||
=== Emergence === | |||
The territory of present-day ] which formed the core area of the Dardani has been inhabited since the ]. ] and ] are two of the most significant sites in the Neolithic period. During the late 3rd millennium BCE, ] tribes migrated and settled in the region alongside the existing Neolithic population. New practices in agriculture and cattle breeding appear in this period and new settlements formed in Kosovo. Co-existence and intermingling of the Neolithic population and the PIE-speakers gave rise to the ] which developed in the Bronze Age (2100-1100 BCE) in settlements including Vlashnjë, Korishë, Pogragjë, Bardhi i Madh and Topanicë. | |||
As with the rest of the Illyrians, today almost nothing survives except for names<ref>Wilkes (1992): "Though almost nothing of it survives, except for names, the Illyrian language has figured prominently…" (p. 67)</ref>.The Illyrians in the antiquity were subject to varying degrees of ]<ref name="ISBN 0195102339 1995, page 202">A dictionary of the Roman Empire Oxford paperback reference,ISBN 0195102339,1995,page 202,"contact with the peoples of the Illyrian kingdom and at the Celticized tribes of the Delmatae"</ref><ref>Pannonia and Upper Moesia. A History of the Middle Danube Provinces of the Roman Empire. A Mocsy, S Frere</ref>, ]<ref>Stanley M. Burstein, Walter Donlan, Jennifer Tolbert Roberts, and Sarah B. Pomeroy. A Brief History of Ancient Greece: Politics, Society, and Culture. Oxford University Press, p. 255.</ref>, ]<ref name="Epirus Vetus 2003, page 211">Epirus Vetus: The Archaeology of a Late Antique Province (Duckworth Archaeology) by William Bowden,2003,page 211: "... in the ninth century. Wilkes suggested that they represented a `Romanized population of Illyrian origin driven out by Slav settlements further north', ..."</ref><ref name="Byzantium 1991, page 248">The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium (3-Volume Set) by Alexander P. Kazhdan,1991,page 248,"... were well fortified. In the 6th and 7th C. the romanized Thraco-Illyrian population was forced to settle in the mountains; they reappear ..."</ref> and later ]. | |||
Archaeological research in the territory of Dardania greatly expanded since 2000. In contemporary research, a periodization of four phases of development of pre-Roman Dardania is being utilized:{{sfn|Alaj|2019|p=18}} | |||
==Rulers & Nobles== | |||
#11th-9th century BCE, a transitory period between the Bronze and the Iron Age | |||
{{Main|List of Illyrians}} | |||
#8th-7th century BCE, Iron Age I phase | |||
*], ]<ref></ref> forerunners of the dynasty of Bardyllis | |||
#6th-4th century BCE, Iron Age II phase, during which contacts with the Mediterranean and imports from Greece increase | |||
* ]<ref name="Harding, Philip 1985, p. 93">Harding, Philip. From the End of the Peloponnesian War to the Battle of Ipsus, 1985, p. 93, ISBN 0521299497. Grabos became the most powerful Illyrian king after the death of Bardylis in 358.</ref> of the Dardani from ] -] | |||
#4th-1st century BCE, Hellenistic period. | |||
* ]<ref name="Harding p. 93">Harding, p. 93. Grabos became the most powerful Illyrian king after the death of Bardylis in 358.</ref> perhaps<ref name="J. Wilkes 1992, p. 121">The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0631198075, p. 121,"The Illyrians of Grabus are unlikely to have been the subjects of Bardyllis defeated only two years earlier though some have suggested Grabus was his son and succesor"</ref> Bardyllis's son ] - ]<ref name="Simon Hornblower 2002, page 272">The Greek world, 479-323 BC by Simon Hornblower,2002,ISBN-0415163269,page 272</ref> | |||
:* ]<ref>Plutarch's Lives Volume 1 by Plutarch, Arthur Hugh Clough, John Dryden, and James Atlas,2001,"Bircenna, Bardyllis the Illyrian's daughter"</ref> - daughter of Bardylis ] | |||
* ]<ref name="Hellenic Studies 1973, p. 79">"The Journal of Hellenic Studies by Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies (London, England)", 1973, p. 79. Cleitus was evidently the son of Bardylis II the grandson of the very old Bardylis who had fallen in battle against Phillip II in 385 BC.</ref> Bardyllis's son, ] | |||
* ]<ref name="Hellenic Studies 1973, p. 79"/> son of Bardyllis II, ] | |||
* ]<ref>The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0-631-19807-5, p. 129, "No Illyrian production of coins is known before King Monunius struck his coins at Dyrrhachium (see figure 11), followed by Mytilus around ten years later"</ref> of the Dardani first Illyrian to mint coins, around ] | |||
:* ]<ref>The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0631198075, page 85"... Longarus, Bato and Monunius, whose daughter Etuta was married to the Illyrian king Gentius, are all Illyrian.</ref> daughter of ] ] | |||
* ]<ref>The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0-631-19807-5, p. 129, "No Illyrian production of coins is known before King Monunius struck his coins at Dyrrhachium (see figure 11), followed by Mytilus around ten years later</ref> succesor to Monunius, around ] | |||
* ]<ref>The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0631198075, p. 86, "... including the names of Dardanian rulers, Longarus, Bato, Monunius and Etuta, and those on later epitaphs, Epicadus, Scerviaedus, Tuta, Times and Cinna. Other Dardanian names are linked with ..."</ref> of the Dardani father of Bato | |||
* ]<ref name="J. Wilkes 1992, p. 85">The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0631198075, p. 85, "The recorded names of Dardanian leader during the Macedonian and the Roman wars, Longarus, Bato..."</ref> of the Dardani son of Longarus | |||
In the Iron Age habitation further developed with the emergence of the ], an ] material culture which developed in the Iron Age western Balkans.{{sfn|Alaj|2019|p=14}} The Dardani - as they became known in classical antiquity - were one of the particular groups of the Glasinac-Mat culture.<ref name="Alaj15">{{harvnb|Alaj|2019|p=15}}</ref> | |||
==Dardanian Kingdom== | |||
] | |||
The forerunners of the dynasty of Bardyllis, the ], were ]s<ref></ref>. The domain of the Dardanian kings was made up of many<ref>The central Balkan tribes in pre-Roman times: Triballi, Autariatae ... by Fanula Papazoglu,1978,ISBN-9025607934,page 445,"The assumption that the Dardanian kingdom was composed of a considerable number of tribes and tribal groups, finds confirmation in Strabo's statement about"</ref> tribes. The first and most prominent king of the Dardani was ]<ref name="Harding, Philip 1985, p. 93"/> who ruled from ] to ]. He was perhaps succeeded by ] (] - ])<ref name="Harding p. 93"/><ref name="Simon Hornblower 2002, page 272"/> that may have been<ref name="J. Wilkes 1992, p. 121"/> Bardyllis's son. Little is known about ]<ref name="Hellenic Studies 1973, p. 79"/> (]) Bardyllis's son. ]<ref name="Hellenic Studies 1973, p. 79"/> (]) was his son. ] and Mytilus followed. Tribal chiefs ] and his son ] took part in the wars<ref name="J. Wilkes 1992, p. 85"/> against ] and ]ians. The Dardanians, in all their history, always<ref>The central Balkan tribes in pre-Roman times: Triballi, Autariatae, Dardanians, Scordisci and Moesians by Fanula Papazoglu,ISBN 9025607934,page 216</ref> had separate domains from the rest of the ]. | |||
The ] cultural group was a Late Bronze Age cultural manifestation in what was to become Dardania, closely connected to the Balkan-Danubian complex.{{sfn|Drançolli|2020|pp=4311–4312}}{{sfn|Vranić|2014a|p=35}}<ref name="SCIN">{{cite web|url=http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-0241/2006/0350-02410656073S.pdf |title=Regional characteristics of the Brnjica cultural group|year=2006|accessdate=2010-08-03|url-status=live|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110723055300/http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-0241/2006/0350-02410656073S.pdf|archivedate=2011-07-23 |last=Stojic|first=Milorad}}</ref> It dates between the 14th and 10th centuries BCE,{{sfn|Drançolli|2020|pp=4311–4312}} and appears in Kosovo, Morava valley, Sandzak, Macedonia and South-East Serbia.<ref> MILORAD STOJI] | |||
==Roman Dardania== | |||
Institute of Archaeology, Belgrade</ref> In ]n historiography, starting from Milutin Garašanin in the 1970s and 1980s, the Brnjica culture came to be interpreted as the "]" and non-"]" linguistic component of the later Dardani.{{sfn|Vranić|2014a|p=35}}{{sfn|Stojic|2006|p=73|ps=: "Until recently, our knowledge of the Brnjica cultural group (or cultural group Donja Brnjica – Gornja Stra`ava) was based on the research results from fifteen or so sites, mainly necropolises.1 There were no data on settlements and habitations.2 The total archaeological collection of the Brnjica community amounted to less than three hundred objects, mostly ceramic vessels.3 This cultural group was characterized as the final phase, »… of a long evolution to be followed with certainty through the entire Bronze Age, while closely connected to the Balkan–Danube complex and elements the linguists mark as Dako–Moesian. Therefore, this group’s finds could be identified with the non-Illyrian component in the Dardanian ethnogenesis.«4"}} Before that change, Yugoslavian scholars had regarded the Dardani as of Illyrian origin. The narrative of a distinct "Daco-Moesian" concept developed as a response to Albanian and Bulgarian researchers, and especially to changes inside Yugoslavia due to increasing local nationalisms.{{sfn|Vranić|2014b|p=169}} | |||
{{Expand section|date=February 2010}} | |||
{{Main|Moesia}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
During the administrative reforms of ] (244 - 311) and ] (272 – 337), the ] was created, encompassing most of the central Balkans and the Greek peninsula. After a few years, however, the diocese was split in two, forming the ] and the ], encompassing the provinces of ], ], Dardania, ] and ]. | |||
=== Classical antiquity === | |||
Since 238, Moesia was constantly invaded or raided by the ], and the Goths, who had already invaded Moesia in 250. Hard pressed by the ], the Goths again crossed the Danube during the reign of ] (376) and with his permission settled in Moesia. | |||
] | |||
In Dardania tribal aristocracy and pre-urban development emerged from the 6th–5th centuries BC. The contacts of the Dardanians with the ] began early and intensified during the Iron Age. Trade connections with the ] were created from the 7th century BC onwards.{{sfn|Shukriu|2008|p=9}} The proto-urban development was followed by the creation of urban centers and the emergence of craftsmanship, and a Dardanian ] began to develop from the 4th century BC.{{sfn|Shukriu|2008|p=9}} Material culture and accounts in classical sources suggest that Dardanian society reached an advanced phase of development.{{sfn|Šašel Kos|2010|p=626}}{{sfn|Gavrilović Vitas|2021|p=3}} | |||
The Dardani are referred to as one of the opponents of ] in the 4th century BC, clashing with ] who managed to subdue them and their neighbors, probably during the early period of his reign.{{sfn|Vujčić|2021|p=504}} The Dardani have remained quiet until Philip II's death, after which they were planning ]. However an open war have not been caused by their riots, since ] managed to have the full control of the kingdom and its army after succeeding his father to the Macedonian throne. Indeed, the Dardani have not been mentioned in the ancient accounts concerning the events of ].{{sfn|Vujčić|2021|pp=504–505}} It appears that the Dardani evaded the Macedonian rule during the ] between 284 BC and 281 BC, at the time of ]'empire. Thereafter the Dardani became a constant threat to Macedon on its northern borders.{{sfn|Petrović|2006|p=8}} | |||
Late Roman<ref>Starinar,Books 45-46,by Srpsko arheološko društvo,Arheološki institut (Belgrade, Serbia),page 33</ref> Dardania did not include the eastern part of the Dardania of ]. | |||
In 279 BC, at the times of the ], Dardania was raided by several Celtic tribes on their campaigns that were undertaken to plunder the treasuries of Greek temples.{{sfn|Petrović|2006|p=8}} During these events an unnamed Dardanian king offered to help the Macedonians with 20,000 soldiers to counteract the invading Celts, but it was refused by the Macedonian king ] who, underestimating the Celtic strength, died fighting them.<ref>{{cite book|author=Robert Malcolm Errington|title=A History of Macedonia|url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_PYgkqP_s1PQC|year=1990|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-06319-8|page=}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Hammond|1988|p=253}}</ref>{{sfn|Petrović|2006|p=8}} Only at the oracle of ] the Celts eventually arrested and were defeated. Afterwards they withdrew in the north passing through Dardania, however they were completely destroyed by the Dardani.{{sfn|Petrović|2006|p=9}} Further references to the Dardani are provided in the ancient sources describing Dardanian constant wars against Macedonians from the second half of the 3rd century BC.{{sfn|Petrović|2006|p=9}} | |||
==Byzantine Dardania== | |||
{{Expand section|date=February 2010}} | |||
{{Main|Diocese of Moesia}} | |||
{{See|Diocese of Dacia}} | |||
{{See|Diocese of Macedonia}} | |||
] | |||
The area remained part of the ] until the late 9th century, when it was conquered by the ]. After this it passed on the ] again under ] and the ], and later in the Serbian ], and in the 14th century it became part of the ]. | |||
After the Celtic invasion of the Balkans weakened the state of the Macedonians and ], the political and military role of the Dardanians began to grow in the region. They expanded their state to the area of ] which definitively disappeared from history.{{sfn|Stipčević|1989|pp=38–39}} In 230 the Dardani under ]<ref>{{harvnb|Hammond|1988|p=338}}</ref> captured ] from the Paeonians.{{sfn|Errington|1990|p=185}} Taking advantage of Macedonian weakness, in 229 the Dardani attacked Macedonia and defeated ] in an important battle.<ref>A history of Macedonia Volume 5 of Hellenistic culture and society, Robert Malcolm Errington, University of California Press, 1990, {{ISBN|0-520-06319-8}}, {{ISBN|978-0-520-06319-8}} </ref> After obtaining a great victory over the Macedonian army the Dardani invaded Macedon proper. The Dardanian expansion in Macedon, similar to the ] expansion in Epirus around the same years, may have been part of a general movement among the Illyrian peoples.{{sfn|Eckstein|2008|pp=34–35}} | |||
==Cities== | |||
{{Main|List_of_ancient_cities_in_Illyria#Roman_Dardania}} | |||
Dardania's largest towns by the time it was part of the ] province of ] were ], ], ], ]<ref>The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0631198075,Page 49,"...historic Lychnitis around Ohrid and in Dardania around Skopje in the upper Vardar basin. Among the many tumuli surviving in Pelagonia only Visoi has so far been ..."</ref>, ], and ]. By this time ]<ref></ref> (a previously ]ic settlement) was the province's most important city.The Romans had organized a mining town ]<ref name="J. Wilkes 1992, Page 258">The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0631198075, Page 258,"In the south the new city named municipium Dardanicum, was another 'mining town' connected with the local workings (Metalla Dardanica)."</ref> (in modern ] near the ]) was connected with the workings (''metalla Dardanica''<ref name="J. Wilkes 1992, Page 258"/>). ]<ref>Ethnic continuity in the Carpatho-Danubian area by Elemér Illyés,1988,ISBN-0880331461,page 223</ref> lived in Dardania in their city ]. | |||
In this period Dardanian influence on the region grew and some other Illyrian tribes deserted ], joining the Dardani under Longarus and forcing Teuta to call off her expedition forces in Epirus.<ref>{{harvnb|Hammond|1988|p=335}}</ref> When ] rose to the Macedonian throne, skirmishing with Dardani began in 220-219 BC and he managed to capture Bylazora from them in 217 BC. Skirmishes continued in 211 and in 209 when a force of Dardani under Aeropus, probably a pretender to the Macedonian throne, captured Lychnidus and looted Macedonia taking 20.000 prisoners and retreating before Philip's forces could reach them.<ref>{{harvnb|Hammond|1988|p=404}}</ref> | |||
==Language== | |||
{{Main|Illyrian languages}} | |||
An extenstive study over ] has been undertaken by ] which puts the Dardani language area in the Central Illyrian area (''"Central Illyrian"'' consisting of most of ex-Yugoslavia, north of southern Montenegro to the west of Morava, excepting ancient Liburnia in the North-West, but perhaps extending into Pannonia in the north).<ref>Katičić, Radoslav (1964b) "Die neuesten Forschungen uber die einhemiche Sprachschist in den Illyrischen Provinzen" in Benac (1964a) 9-58 Katičić, Radoslav (1965b) "Zur frage der keltischen und panonischen Namengebieten im romischen Dalmatien" ANUBiH 3 GCBI 1, 53-76</ref><ref>Katičić, Radoslav. Ancient languages of the Balkans. The Hague - Paris (1976)</ref> | |||
{{Further|Dardanian-Bastarnae war}} | |||
==See also== | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
In 201 ] along with Pleuratus the Illyrian and Amynander king of Athamania, cooperated with Roman consul Sulpicius in his expedition against Philip V.<ref>{{harvnb|Hammond|1988|p=420}}</ref> Being always under the menace of Dardanian attacks on Macedonia, around 183 BC ] made an alliance with the ] and invited them to settle in Polog, the region of Dardania closest to Macedonia.<ref>{{harvnb|Hammond|1988|p=470}}</ref> A joint campaign of the Bastarnae and Macedonians against the Dardanians was organized, but Philip V died and his son ] withdrew his forces from the campaign. The Bastarnae crossed the Danube in huge numbers and although they didn't meet the Macedonians, they continued the campaign. Some 30,000 Bastarnae under the command of Clondicus seem to have defeated the Dardani.<ref>{{harvnb|Hammond|1988|p=491}}</ref> In 179 BC, the ] conquered the Dardani, who later in 174 pushed them out, in a war which proved catastrophic, with a few years later, in 170 BC, the Macedonians defeating the Dardani.{{sfn|Mócsy|2014|p=10}} Macedonia and Illyria became Roman protectorates in 168 BC.{{sfn|Papazoglu|1978|p=173}} The ], a tribe of Celtic origin, most likely subdued the Dardani in the mid-2nd century BC, after which there was no mention of the Dardani for a long time.{{sfn|Mócsy|2014|p=12}} | |||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
=== Roman era === | |||
] into two provinces in 86 AD, the Dardani were located in southern Moesia Superior.]] | |||
{{See also|Dardania (Roman province)}} | |||
Illyria and Macedonia became Roman protectorates in 168 BC.{{sfn|Papazoglu|1978|p=173}} In 97 BC, the Dardani are mentioned again, defeated by the Macedonian Roman army.{{sfn|Mócsy|2014|p=15}} In 88 BC, the Dardani invaded the ] province of ] together with the ] and the ].<ref>{{harvnb|Wilkes|1992|p=140}} {{blockquote| ... Autariatae at the expense of the Triballi until, as Strabo remarks, they in their turn were overcome by the Celtic Scordisci in the early third century}}</ref>{{failed verification|date=May 2016}} | |||
The Romans found an ancient formed economy in Dardania, based on agriculture and animal husbandry, mining and metallurgy, in different handicrafts and in trade. The Romans focused especially in exploitation of mines, same as in other provinces, and in road construction.<ref>Michael Rostovtzeff, The Social and Economic History of the Roman Empire (Oxford 1957), 242-243</ref><ref name=":0">Prehistory and Antique History of Kosova, Edi Shukriu, p. 18</ref> | |||
==Other sources== | |||
*András Mócsy, Sheppard Frere, ''Pannonia and Upper Moesia: A History of the Middle Danube Provinces of the Roman Empire'', Routledge (1974), ISBN 0710077149. | |||
It seems quite probable that the Dardani actually lost independence in 28 BC thus, the final occupation of Dardania by Rome has been connected with the beginnings of ]' rule in 6 AD, when they were finally conquered by Rome. Dardania was conquered by ] and the Latin language was soon adopted as the main language of the tribe as many other conquered and Romanized.<ref name="balkaninstitut.com">http://www.balkaninstitut.com/pdf/izdanja/B_XXXVII_2007.pdf {{Bare URL PDF|date=March 2022}}</ref> After the Roman emperor ] divided the province of ] into Moesia Superior and Moesia Inferior in 86 AD, the Dardani were located in southern Moesia Superior.{{sfn|Petrović|2019|pp=23–24}} | |||
] | |||
At first, Dardania was not a separate Roman province, but became a region in the province of ] in 87 AD.<ref name="Wilkes-1992-210">{{harvnb|Wilkes|1992|p=210}} {{blockquote|Here the old name of Dardania appears as a new province formed out of Moesia, along with Moesia Prima, Dacia (not Trajan's old province but a... Though its line is far from certain there seems little doubt that most of the Dardanians were excluded from Illyricum and were to become a part of the province of Moesia)}}</ref> Emperor ] later (284) made Dardania into a separate<ref name="Wilkes-1992-210"/> province with its capital at ] (]). During the ] administration (in the 6th century), there was a Byzantine province of Dardania that included cities of ], ], ], and others. | |||
==Polity== | |||
{{See also|Kingdom of Dardania}} | |||
===History of the tribal government=== | |||
A Dardanian ] began to develop from the 4th century BC.{{sfn|Shukriu|2008|p=9}} The ] was attested since the 4th century BC in ancient sources reporting the wars the Dardanians waged against their south-eastern neighbor – ] – until the 2nd century BC.{{sfn|Wilkes|2012|p=414}}{{sfn|Stipčević|1989|pp=38–39}} The Dardanian kingdom was made up of many tribes and tribal groups, confirmed by ],<ref>{{harvnb|Papazoglu|1978|p=445}} {{blockquote|The assumption that the Dardanian kingdom was composed of a considerable number of tribes and tribal groups, finds confirmation in Strabo's statement about}}</ref> who mentions the ] and ] as Dardanian tribes, and describes the Dardani as one of the three strongest Illyrian peoples, the other two being the ] and ].<ref name="perseus.tufts.edu"/>{{sfn|Hammond|1966|pp=239–241}} | |||
The Dardanians, in all their history, always had separate domains from the rest of the ].<ref>{{harvnb|Papazoglu|1978|p=216}}</ref> The term used for their territory was ({{lang|grc|Δαρδανική}}),<ref name="Papazoglu 1978 523"/> while other tribal areas had more unspecified terms, such as ''Autariaton khora'' ({{lang|grc|Αὐταριατῶν χώρα}}), for the "land of ]." The term was used to describe the Dardanian political status as a semi-independent country in the later ].{{sfn|Dzino|2008|p=188}} Little data exists about the territory of the Dardani prior to Roman conquest, especially on its southern extent which has been contested with Macedon, so scholars use information provided in Roman times to define the bounds of Dardanian territory.<ref>{{harvnb|Papazoglu|1978|p=187}}</ref> | |||
An unnamed Dardanian king is mentioned in ancient sources describing the events of the region of the early 3rd century BC. He offered the ]ian king ] 20,000 soldiers to counteract the ], but Ceraunos declined the offer.{{sfn|Petrović|2006|p=8}} Tribal chiefs ] and his son ] took part in the wars against ] and ]ians.<ref name="Wilkes-1992-85">{{harvnb|Wilkes|1992|p=85}} {{blockquote|Whether the Dardanians were an Illyrian or a Thracian people has been much debated and one view suggests that the area was originally populated with Thracians who then exposed to direct contact with Illyrians over a long period. The meaning of this state of affairs has been variously interpreted, ranging from notions of Thracianization' (in part) of an existing Illyrian population to the precise opposite. In favour of the latter may be the close correspondence of Illyrian names in Dardania with those of the southern 'real' lllyrians to their west, including the names of Dardanian rulers, Longarus, Bato, Monunius and Etuta, and those on later epitaphs, Epicadus, Scerviaedus, Tuta, Times and Cinna.}}</ref> | |||
=== Dardanian rulers === | |||
*Unnamed Dardanian king (early 3rd century BC), who offered the ]ian king ] 20,000 soldiers to counteract the ], but Ceraunos declined the offer.{{sfn|Petrović|2006|p=8}} | |||
*];<ref name="Wilkes-1992-86">{{harvnb|Wilkes|1992|p=86}} {{blockquote|... including the names of Dardanian rulers, Longarus, Bato, Monunius and Etuta, and those on later epitaphs, Epicadus, Scerviaedus, Tuta, Times and Cinna. Other Dardanian names are linked with...}}</ref> | |||
**]<ref name="Wilkes-1992-86"/> | |||
**] | |||
] (Etleva){{sfn|Buqinca|2021|p=133}} was the daughter of ] of Dardania and the ] of ].{{sfn|Buqinca|2021|p=133}} Some scholars believe that Illyrian rulers ],<ref name="Harding-1985-93">{{cite book|author=Phillip Harding|title=From the End of the Peloponnesian War to the Battle of Ipsus|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZfZhWwdtiH4C|date=21 February 1985|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-29949-7|page=93|quote=Grabos became the most powerful Illyrian king after the death of Bardylis in 358.}}</ref> ],<ref>{{harvnb|Heckel|2006|p=64}}</ref> ] (son of Bardylis),<ref name="Wilkes 1996 120">{{harvnb|Wilkes|1996|p=120}}</ref> ],<ref name=Heckel86>{{harvnb|Heckel|2006|p=86}}</ref> ] (daughter of Bardylis II),<ref>{{harvnb|Hammond|1988|p=47}}</ref> and ] were Dardanian, however this is considered an old fallacy because it is unsupported by any ancient source, while some facts and ancient geographical locations go squarely against it.{{sfn|Cabanes|2002|pp=50–51, 56, 75}}{{sfn|Mortensen|1991|pp=49–59}}{{sfn|Lane Fox|2011|p=342}}{{sfn|Vujčić|2019|p=115}}{{sfn|Vujčić|2021|pp=501–504}} Nevertheless, ], if not Dardanian, probably had some kind of hegemony on Dardanians during his reign.{{sfn|Buqinca|2021|pp=131, 133}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Buqinca |first=Arianit |title=Dardanët e Ilirisë (VI - I p.e.s.) |publisher=Instituti Albanologjik |year=2022 |isbn=978-9951-24-155-7 |edition=1st |location=Prishtina |page=48 |language=Albanian |trans-title=The Dardanians of Illyria}}</ref> | |||
==Foreign relations== | |||
===Bad press=== | |||
Unlike their ] neighbors, in pre-Roman times the Dardani were not Hellenized.{{sfn|Petrović|2019|p=24}} From the Greek point of view, they were barbarians. Because of this prejudice they received some bad press in the Ancient Greek and Roman historiography. The tribe was viewed of as "extremely barbaric".<ref>{{cite book|author1=Aelian|author2=Diane Ostrom Johnson|title=An English translation of Claudius Aelianus' Varia historia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SFAXAQAAIAAJ|date=June 1997|publisher=E. Mellen Press|isbn=978-0-7734-8672-0}}</ref>{{page needed|date=August 2014}}<ref name="Papazoglu-1978-517">{{harvnb|Papazoglu|1978|p=517}} {{blockquote|There must have been some reason why it was said of the Dardanians, and not of any other people, that they only bathed three times in their lives ...like the Dardanians', which was applied not to dirty folk, as might be expected, but to the miserly (ἐπὶ τῶν φειδωλῶν)! For the Greeks, obviously, to bathe or not was only a question of expense and financial means.}}</ref> ] and other writers{{who|date=October 2011}} wrote that they bathed only three<ref> "...whence it is said of the Dardanians, an Illyrian people, that they bathe only thrice in their lives—at birth, marriage, and after death."</ref> times in their lives. At birth, when they were wed and after they died. ] refers to them as wild<ref>{{cite book|author=James Oliver Thomson|title=History of Ancient Geography|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rQipbjusDyQC&pg=PA249|year=1948|publisher=Biblo & Tannen Publishers|isbn=978-0-8196-0143-8|pages=249–}}</ref> and dwelling in dirty caves under dung-hills.<ref name=Strabo>, "The Dardanians are so utterly wild that they dig caves beneath their dung-hills and live there, but still they care for music, always making use of musical instruments, both flutes and stringed instruments"</ref> This however may have had to do not with cleanliness, as bathing had to do with monetary<ref name="Papazoglu-1978-517"/> status from the viewpoint of the ]. | |||
===Enslavement=== | |||
Dardanian slaves or freedmen at the time of the Roman conquest were clearly of ] origin, according to their personal names.{{sfn|Papazoglu|1978|p=224}} It has been noted that personal names were mostly of the "Central-Dalmatian type".{{sfn|Papazoglu|1978|p=245}} | |||
==Culture== | |||
=== Language === | |||
{{Infobox language | |||
| name = Dardanian | |||
| states = ] | |||
| region = central ] | |||
| fam2 = (?) ] | |||
| familycolor = indo-european | |||
| iso3 = none | |||
| glotto = none | |||
}} | |||
The Dardanians had their own language.{{sfn|Buqinca|2021|p=133}} An extensive study based on ] of the Roman era has been undertaken by ] which puts the Dardanian language area in the Central Illyrian area (''"Central Illyrian"'' consisting of most of former Yugoslavia, north of southern Montenegro to the west of Morava, excepting ancient Liburnia in the northwest, but perhaps extending into Pannonia in the north).<ref>Katičić, Radoslav (1964b) "''Die neuesten Forschungen über die einhemiche Sprachschist in den Illyrischen Provinzen''" in Benac (1964a) 9-58 Katičić, Radoslav (1965b) "''Zur frage der keltischen und panonischen Namengebieten im römischen Dalmatien''" ANUBiH 3 GCBI 1, 53-76</ref><ref>Katičić, Radoslav. Ancient languages of the Balkans. The Hague - Paris (1976)</ref> Another extensive study based on onomastics in Thrace, eastern Macedonia, Moesia, Dacia and Bithynia has been carried out by Dan Dana in the 2010s, also taking into consideration current Balkan historical linguistics. Dana concludes that the Illyrian character of Dardanian onomastics is unquestionable and that it is appropriate to definitively rule out the idea of a Thracian origin or participation (at least appreciable) in the ethnogenesis of the Dardani.{{sfn|Dana|2014|p=LXXXII}} Since the Dardani were neighbored to the east by the Thracians, the eastern parts of Dardania were at the Thraco-Illyrian contact zone. As shown by archaeological research Illyrian names are predominant in western Dardania (present-day Kosovo), and occasionally appear in eastern Dardania (present-day south-eastern Serbia), while Thracian names are found in the eastern parts, but are absent from the western parts.<ref name="Vujcic2021"/><ref name=Malcolm/><ref name=Zahariade/><ref name="Papazoglu131">{{harvnb|Papazoglu|1978|p=131}} {{blockquote|the Dardanians ... living in the frontiers of the Illyrian and the Thracian worlds retained their individuality and, alone among the peoples of that region, succeeded in maintaining themselves as an ethnic unity even when they were militarily and politically subjected by the Roman arms and when, towards the end of the ancient world, the Balkans were involved in far-reaching ethnic perturbations, the Dardanians, of all the Central Balkan tribes, played the greatest part in the genesis of the new peoples who took the place of the old}}</ref> The correspondence of Illyrian onomastics in Dardania – including those of the Dardanian ruling dynasty – with those of the southern Illyrians suggests "thracianization" of parts of Dardania at a later date.<ref name=Zahariade/><ref name="RoismanWorthington2011">{{cite book|author1=Joseph Roisman|author2=Ian Worthington|title=A Companion to Ancient Macedonia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QsJ183uUDkMC|date=7 July 2011|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|isbn=978-1-4443-5163-7|page=301}}</ref><ref name="Wilkes-1992-85"/> The linguistic relationship between ']' and ']' is uncertain due to the paucity of the available written material of those languages, consisting only of onomastic and toponymic evidence in the case of Illyrian, and the same for Thracian except for a few short inscriptions of difficult interpretation. Dardanian in the context of a distinct language is considered in recent decades as potentially significant for the history of the ].{{sfn|Rusakov|2017|pp=555–556}} | |||
===Religion=== | |||
Graves from the 6th and 5th centuries BCE in ] contain long iron bars which were placed in the tombs are a means of payment to the afterlife. They indicate that the tribe of the Dardani had developed a concept about the afterlife as shown later in other archaeological material like the votive monument of ].{{sfn|Shukriu|2008|p=11}} The weapons included double-edged axes (]), which might have been used in a ritualistic manner related to ] which was prevalent in the northern Illyrian tribes {{sfn|Shukriu|2008|p=10}} | |||
Among the characteristic Dardanian deities were ], considered to have been the indigenous god of ] and ],{{sfn|Zeqo|2016|p=14}}{{sfn|Ferri|2006|p=229}} and ] ("Dardanian Goddess"). They are attested in votive inscriptions of the Roman period in Dardania. | |||
] represented an ancient deity in ]<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Shukriu |first=Edi |year=2004 |title=Dea Dardane - Ikonografia dhe funksionet |trans-title=Dea Dardania - Iconography and functions |url=https://www.academia.edu/1787800 |journal=Kosova}}</ref>]] | |||
A monument representing a round labyrinth that was dedicated to the "Dardanian Goddess" was found in Smira. This monument provides evidence for cosmogonic and cosmologic knowledges among the Dardani.{{sfn|Shukriu|2008|pp=22–23}} The labyrinth was realized based on the concept of the ]. There is used a numerological and geometric approach through a multidimensional holographic field, which illustrates the Dardanian perception of the cosmic order and the interconnection between the material world and the higher realm.{{sfn|Shukriu|2008|p=23}} | |||
Dardanian funerary stelae portray representations of their mourning practice, which accurately mirrors the Albanian traditional lamentation of the dead – ]. The lamentation of the dead is represented on the stelae through the depiction of the mourners with raised hands, grabbing their heads and beating their chests.{{sfn|Joseph|Dedvukaj|2024|pp=1–3}} | |||
===Music=== | |||
Strabo writes that Dardanians cared about music, always using musical instruments, both of the ] and ] type.<ref name=Strabo/> | |||
== See also == | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
== References == | |||
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}} | |||
== Bibliography == | |||
{{Refbegin|30em|indent=yes}} | |||
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*{{cite thesis|last=Alaj|first=Premtim|year=2019|title=Les habitats de l'Age du fer sur le territoire de l'actuel Kosovo|publisher=Université de Lyon|url=https://hal.inria.fr/tel-02503916/}} | |||
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*{{cite book|last=Baliu|first=Begzad|title=Onomastikë dhe identitet|trans-title=Onomastics and Identity|year=2012|publisher=Era|isbn=978-9951-04-071-6|language=sq|url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikibooks/sq/9/9d/Begzad_Baliu._Onomastike_dhe_identitet_paust.pdf}} | |||
*{{cite journal |last1=Boteva |first1=Dilyana |editor1-last=Mitthof |editor1-first=Fritz |editor2-last=Cenati |editor2-first=Chiara |editor3-last=Zerbini |editor3-first=Livio |title=Society and Myths: How was the Name of Moesia Invented? |journal=Ad Ripam Fluminis Danuvi: Papers of the 3rd International Conference on the Roman Danubian Provinces, Vienna, 11th–14th November 2015 |date=2021 |url=https://www.academia.edu/48895776 }} | |||
*{{cite thesis|last=Buqinca|first=Arianit|year=2021|title=Recherche sur les Dardaniens : VIe- Ier siècles av. J.- C.|publisher=Université de Lyon|url=http://www.theses.fr/2021LYSE2007|language=French|oclc=1254025622}} | |||
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*{{cite book|last=Cabanes|first=Pierre|title=Iliri od Bardileja do Gencia (IV. – II. stoljeće prije Krista)|trans-title=The Illyrians from Bardylis to Gentius (4th – 2nd century BC)|year=2002|orig-year=1988|language=Croatian|translator=Vesna Lisičić|publisher=Svitava|editor1=Dinko Čutura|editor2=Bruna Kuntić-Makvić|isbn=953-98832-0-2}} | |||
*{{cite journal|last=Crăciun|first=Radu|title=Diellina, një bimë trako-dake me emër proto-albanoid|trans-title=Diellina, a Thracian-Dacian plant with a Proto-Albanoid name|journal=]|issn=0563-5780|publisher=]|number=1–2|year=2023|pages=77–83|doi=10.62006/sf.v1i1-2.3089 |doi-access=free}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Crossland|first=R. A.|chapter=Linguistic problems of the Balkan area in late prehistoric and early classical periods|title=The Cambridge Ancient History: The Prehistory of the Balkans; and the Middle East and the Aegean world, tenth to eighth centuries B.C.|publisher=Cambridge University Press|volume=III (part 1)|year=1982|edition=2|editor1=J. Boardman|editor2=I. E. S. Edwards|editor3=N. G. L. Hammond|editor4=E. Sollberger|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vXljf8JqmkoC|isbn=0521224969}} | |||
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*{{cite book|last=Dana|first=Dan|title=Onomasticon Thracicum (OnomThrac): Répertoire des noms indigènes de Thrace, Macédoine Orientale, Mésies, Dacie et Bithynie|publisher=Centre de recherche de l'antiquité grecque et romaine, Fondation nationale de la recherche scientifique|volume=70|series=Meletēmata / Kentron Hellēnikēs kai Rōmaïkēs Archaiotētos|year=2014|lang=fr|isbn=9789609538244|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OchGrgEACAAJ}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Drançolli|first=Jahja|chapter=Kosova: Archaeological Heritage|title=Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology|pages=4308–4319|editor=Claire Smith|publisher=Springer International Publishing|year=2020|isbn=9783030300166|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i7vPxwEACAAJ}} | |||
*{{cite thesis|last=Darlishta|first=Hana|title=Овоштарската лексика на албанските говори во Македонија|year=2019|publisher=]}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Demiraj|first=Bardhyl|title=Albanische Etymologien: Untersuchungen zum albanischen Erbwortschatz|series=Leiden Studies in Indo-European|volume=7|year=1997|language=de|place=Amsterdam, Atlanta|publisher=Rodopi|isbn=9789042001619|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xZftQtCaYE0C}} | |||
*{{cite journal|last=Dzino|first=Danijel|title=Strabo 7, 5 and imaginary Illyricum|journal=Athenaeum|volume=96|number=1|publisher=Edizioni New Press|year=2008|pages=173–192}} | |||
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*{{cite journal|last=Elsie|first=Robert|year=1998|title=Dendronymica Albanica: A survey of Albanian tree and shrub names|journal=Zeitschrift für Balkanologie|number=34|pages=163–200|url=http://www.elsie.de/pdf/articles/A1998DendronEngl.pdf}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Elsie|first=Robert|author-link=Robert Elsie|title=The Tribes of Albania: History, Society and Culture|publisher=I.B.Tauris|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i2IpDAAAQBAJ|year=2015|isbn=9780857739322}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Eckstein|first=Arthur M.|author-link=Arthur Eckstein|title=Rome Enters the Greek East From Anarchy to Hierarchy in the Hellenistic Mediterranean, 230–170 BC|publisher=Blackwell Publishing|year=2008|isbn=978-1-4051-6072-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Czk_jxbHEDQC}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Errington|first=Robert Malcolm|title=A History of Macedonia|series=Hellenistic culture and society|volume=5|location=Berkeley, CA|publisher=University of California Press|year=1990|isbn=0-520-06319-8|url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_PYgkqP_s1PQC}} | |||
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*{{cite journal|last=Falileyev|first=Alexander|title=The Silent Europe ''La Europa silenciosa''|journal=Palaeohispanica|year=2020|issn=1578-5386|doi=10.36707/palaeohispanica.v0i20.372|number=20|pages=887–919|s2cid=230710587|doi-access=free}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Ferri|first=Naser|title=Kosova Archeologica - Kosova Arkeologjike|chapter=Simpoziumi ndërkombëtar mbi Dioklecianin dhe epokën e tij (i mbajtur në Split më 18-22 shtator 2005)|trans-chapter=International Symposium on Diocletian and his period (held in Split from 18-22 September 2005)|publisher=Instituti Arkeologjik i Kosovës |year=2006|editor-last=Drançolli|editor-first=Jahja|pages=222–230}} | |||
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*{{cite journal|last=Hammond|first=Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière|title=The Kingdoms in Illyria circa 400-167 B.C.|journal=The Annual of the British School at Athens|publisher=British School at Athens|volume=61|year=1966|pages=239–253|doi=10.1017/S0068245400019043|jstor=30103175|s2cid=164155370}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Hammond|first=Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière|title=Epirus: the Geography, the Ancient Remains, the History and Topography of Epirus and Adjacent Areas|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kEFoAAAAMAAJ|publisher=Clarendon Press|year=1967|isbn=0198142536}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Hammond|first=Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière|title=A History of Macedonia: 336-167 B.C|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qpb3JdwuDQIC|year=1988|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-814815-9}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Heckel|first=Waldemar|title=Who's Who in the Age of Alexander the Great: Prosopography of Alexander's Empire|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JJ4K1wFZkrsC|year=2006|publisher=Wiley|isbn=978-1-4051-1210-9}} | |||
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{{Refend}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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Latest revision as of 18:49, 6 November 2024
Ancient tribe in the Balkans This article is about the ancient tribe in the Balkans. For the Trojan allies, see Dardanoi. For other uses, see Dardania.Ethnic group
The Dardani (/ˈdɑːrdənaɪ/; Ancient Greek: Δαρδάνιοι, Δάρδανοι; Latin: Dardani) or Dardanians were a Paleo-Balkan people, who lived in a region that was named Dardania after their settlement there. They were among the oldest Balkan peoples, and their society was very complex. The Dardani were the most stable and conservative ethnic element among the peoples of the central Balkans, retaining an enduring presence in the region for several centuries.
Ancient tradition considered the Dardani as an Illyrian people. Strabo, in particular – also mentioning Galabri and Thunatae as Dardanian tribes – describes the Dardani as one of the three strongest Illyrian peoples, the other two being the Ardiaei and Autariatae. As Dardanians had followed their own peculiar geographical, social and political development in Dardania, some ancient sources also distinguish them from those Illyrians dwelling in the central and southern coast of the eastern Adriatic Sea and its hinterland, who had constituted their own socio-political formation, referred to as 'Illyrian kingdom' by ancient authors. The Dardani were also related to their Thracian neighbors. In Roman times, there appear Thracian names in the eastern strip of Dardania, and several Thracian and Dacian placenames also appear there, such as Dardapara and Quemedava, but Illyrian names dominated the rest. Nevertheless, ancient authors have not identified Dardanians with Thracians, and Strabo explicitly makes a clear distinction between them.
The Kingdom of Dardania was attested since the 4th century BC in ancient sources reporting the wars the Dardanians waged against their south-eastern neighbor – Macedon – until the 2nd century BC. The historian Justin, a main source about the history of the Macedonian kings, refers to an 'lllyrian war' between 346 and the end of 343 BC, fought by 'Dardani and other neighbouring peoples' against Philip II of Macedon, who won the conflict. After the Celtic invasion of the Balkans weakened the state of the Macedonians and Paeonians, the political and military role of the Dardanians began to grow in the region. They expanded their state to the area of Paeonia which definitively disappeared from history, and to some territories of the southern Illyrians. The Dardanians strongly pressured the Macedonians, using every opportunity to attack them. However the Macedonians quickly recovered and consolidated their state, and the Dardanians lost their important political role. The strengthening of the Illyrian (Ardiaean–Labeatan) state on their western borders also contributed to the restriction of Dardanian warlike actions towards their neighbors.
Dardanians fought against Roman proconsuls, and were finally defeated probably by Marcus Antonius in 39 BC or by Marcus Licinius Crassus in 29/8 BC. They were included in the Roman province of Moesia. After the Roman emperor Domitian divided the province of Moesia into Moesia Superior and Moesia Inferior in 86 AD, the Dardani were located in southern Moesia Superior. A Roman colony was established at Scupi in Dardanian territory under the Flavian dynasty. In the 2nd century AD Dardanians were still notorious as brigands (latrones dardaniae). During the late Imperial period their territory was the homeland of many Roman emperors, notably Constantine the Great and Justinian I.
Name
The ethnonym of the Dardani has been attested in ancient Greek literature as Dardaneis, Dardanioi and Dardanoi, and in Latin as Dardani. The term used for their territory was Dardanike (Δαρδανική). The root Dard- is attested outside the Dardanian region and the Trojan-Dardanian area in several other ancient ethnonyms, personal names, and toponyms: Dardas, an opraetor epiratrum; Δερδιενις, name of Macedonian-Elimiot princes; Δερδια in Thessaly; Δερδενις in Lesbos; in ancient Apulia Dardi, a Daunian tribe, Derdensis a region and Δαρδανον, a Daunian settlement. The suffix -ano in Dard- was common to many Indo-European languages.
The names of the two main Dardanian tribes – Galabri/Galabrioi and Thunatae/Thunatai – have been respectively connected to the Messapic Kalabroi/Calabri and Daunioi/Daunii in Apulia (south-eastern Italy), of Palaeo-Balkan provenance.
Etymology
The name Dardan- (ethnonym: Δάρδανοι/Dardani; toponym: Δαρδανική/Dardania) is traditionally connected to the same root as dardhë, the Albanian word for 'pear', as well as Alb. dardhán, dardán, 'farmer'. The ethnonym Pirustae, which is attested since Roman times for a tribe close to the Dardani or living in Dardania, is considered to be the Latin translation of Dardani (cf. Latin pirus "pear"), which would confirm the link with the Albanian dardhë.
In 1854, Johann Georg von Hahn was the first to propose that the names Dardanoi and Dardania were related to the Albanian word dardhë ("pear, pear-tree"). This is suggested by the fact that toponyms related to fruits or animals are not unknown in the region (cf. Alb. dele, delmë "sheep" supposedly related to Dalmatia, Ulcinj in Montenegro < Alb. ujk, ulk "wolf" etc.). Albanian typical toponyms formed with the same root as dardhë have been attested: Dardhan-i (in 1467 CE), Dardhanesh-i (1431), Dardhasi (1431), Dardas (1467), Dardhë-a (1417), Darda, Dardhicë-a (1431). Several modern toponyms are found in various parts of Albania, including Dardha in Berat, Dardha in Korça, Dardha in Librazhd, Dardha in Puka, Dardhas in Pogradec, Dardhaj in Mirdita, and Dardhës in Përmet. Dardha in Puka is recorded as Darda in a 1671 ecclesiastical report and on a 1688 map by a Venetian cartographer. Dardha is also the name of an Albanian tribe in the northern part of the District of Dibra.
Opinions differ on the etymon of the root in Proto-Albanian, and eventually in Proto-Indo-European. On the basis of an alleged connection between Albanian dardhë and Greek ἄχερδος, ἀχράς "wild pear", a common Indo-European root has been tentatively reconstructed by scholars: *ĝʰor-d- "thorn bush"; *(n)ĝʰ∂rdis; *ĝʰerzd⁽ʰ⁾- "thorny, grain, barley". However it has been suggested that this connection is only conceivable assuming an ancient common Balkano-Aegean substrate word for Albanian and Greek. A proposed Indo-European root *dʰeregh- "a thorny plant", with the Proto-Albanian form reconstructed as *dʰorĝʰ-eh₂-, is not clear. More recently for the Albanian dardhë the Proto-Albanian *dardā has been reconstructed, itself a derivative of derdh "to tip out, pour, spill, secrete, cast (metals)" < PAlb *derda. In Old Albanian texts the root is recorded not umlautized: dardh. It continues Proto-Albanian *darda, which is close to onomatopoeic Lithuanian dardĕti "to rattle" Latvian dàrdêt "to creak", Welsh go-dyrddu "to mumble, to gumble" (the semantic development of "pear" that occurs in Albanian can also be seen in the Slavic parallel gruša, kruša "pear, pear tree" < *grušiti, *krušiti "to crumble, to break", and also in the Indo-European parallel *peisom "pear" < *peis-). Slavic toponyms with "Kruševo" (from Proto-Slavic kruša, "pear") and other related toponyms particularly found in the area of the ancient Dardani have been proposed as South Slavic translations of Darda- toponyms.
Other roots have been connected to the name Dardan- by some scholars. It has been proposed a possible link to darda "bee", maybe originally with the meaning of "noise", "chatter", compared with Sanskrit dardurá- "frog", "pipe", Lithuanian dardėt́i "to rattle", "chatter" (which however is regarded by Orel as an onomatopoeic form connected to Albanian derdh, hence to dardhë, see above), Gkreek δάρδα · μέλισσα "bee", sometimes interpreted as μόλυσμα "stain", δαρδαίνει · μολύνει "to stain", both late antique attestations from Hesychius (5th century CE) and with aberrant semantics. Another link has been made with the PIE root *dhereĝh- "to hold", "strong", which would have evolved to dard- in consistency with the phonetic change of voiced palatal velars that are a characteristic trait of Albanian.
The opinion criticising the etymologies based on roots that originally included *g̑h because in the earliest form of Albanian PIE *g̑h turned into *dʑ and correspondingly later into *dz, which should have been spelled in Greek/Latin documents with /z/, /s/, or a similar letter, instead of /d/, is refutable by the attestation of the Proto-Albanoid term diellina "henbane". This term was mentioned as a "Thracian-Dacian" phytonym by the Ancient Greek pharmacologist Pedanius Dioscorides (1st century AD), and it has a clear etymological connection with the Albanian word diell "sun" (diellina "henbane" belongs to the genus called solanum with the Latin root sol "sun", being so named because of its yellow leaves), displaying a characteristic Albanian phonetic change in which the voiced palatal velar *ĝ(h)- turned into the interdental dh or the dental d, passing through intermediate stages represented by the palato-alveolar affricate voiced ȷ́ , dental affricate dz and further through a final stage dð (i.e. *ĝ(h)- > ȷ́ > dz > dð > dh/d: Alb. dielli < PAlb. *dðiella < *dziella- < EPAlb. *ȷ́élu̯a- < PIE *ǵʰélh₃u̯o- "yellow, golden, bright/shiny"). This phenomenon reflects the uncertainty of the Ancient Greek and Roman authors in transcribing the Proto-Albanian affricates, which were unfamiliar to them. Indeed, many similar examples of Palaeo-Balkan names with alternating spellings in ancient literature using both dentals and sibilants can be connected to an earlier stage of Albanian and furthermore provide strong support for Eric Hamp's thesis about the Proto-Albanoid dialects, spoken in the central-western Balkans including the historical regions of Dardania, Illyria proper, Paeonia, Upper Moesia, western Dacia and western Thrace.
The name in the ancient sources
The name of the Dardani is mentioned for the first time in the Iliad in the name of Dardanus who founded Dardanus on the Aegean coast of Anatolia and his people the Dardanoi, from which the toponym Dardanelles is derived. Other parallel ethnic names in the Balkans and Anatolia, respectively include: Eneti and Enetoi, Bryges and Phryges. These parallels indicate closer links than simply a correlation of names. According to a current explanation, the connection is likely related to the large-scale movement of peoples that occurred at the end of the Bronze Age (around 1200 BC), when the attacks of the 'Sea Peoples' afflicted some of the established powers around the eastern Mediterranean.
In ancient historiography, the Dardani of the Balkans are mentioned as a people in the second century BCE by Polybius who describes their wars against Macedon in the third century BC. Historians of Hellenistic and Roman antiquity who mention the Dardanians are Diodorus Siculus, Marcus Terentius Varro, Strabo, Sallust, Appian, Dionysius of Halicarnassus and others. According to a mythological tradition reported by Appian (2nd century AD), Dardanos (Δάρδανος), one of the sons of Illyrius (Ἰλλυριός), was the eponymous ancestor of the Dardanoi (Δάρδανοι). In ancient sources the Dardani are mentioned as one of the Illyrian people and/or as a distinct grouping in the region of Dardania. As such, the Dardani were Illyrians from an ethno-linguistic perspective, but they had followed their own peculiar geographical, social and political development in Dardania.
In the late 1st century BCE, in Rome a new ideological discourse was formed. Propagated by poets like Horace and Ovid, it constructed a glorious Trojan past for the Romans, who were claimed to be descendants of Trojan Dardanians. In the years before the Trojan origin story became the official Roman narrative about their origins, the Romans came into conflict in the Balkans with the Dardani. In public discourse this created the problem that the Roman army could be seen as fighting against a people who could be related to the ancestors of the Romans. The image of the historical Dardani in the 1st century BC was that of Illyrian barbarians who raided their Macedonian frontier and had to be dealt with. In this context, the name of a people known as the Moesi appeared in Roman sources. The Moesi are mentioned only in three ancient sources in the period after the death of Emperor Augustus in 14 CE. The name itself was taken from the name of the Mysians in Asia Minor. The choice seems to be related to the fact that the Trojan-era Mysians lived close to the Trojan-era Dardanians. As the name of the Dardani in Roman discourse became linked to the ancestors of the Romans, the actual Dardani began to be covered in Roman literature by other names. After the death of Augustus, their name in connection to the Balkans became a political problem. After the death of Augustus, the new emperor was Tiberius, his stepson and the most senior Roman general in the Balkans. As Tiberius had played a key role in the Roman conquest of the Balkans, as emperor he couldn't be portrayed as the conqueror of Dardanians, whose name had been constructed as the name of the mythical progenitors of the Romans. Thus, the decision to create a new name for Dardania and the Dardani was made. Despite this decision and the administrative use of the names Moesia and Moesi for the Dardani and Dardania, the original use of the name persisted by authors like Appian. The name Dardania was not used for several hundred years after this period in an administrative context. It was only recreated by Emperor Diocletian in the 3rd century CE.
History
Emergence
The territory of present-day Kosovo which formed the core area of the Dardani has been inhabited since the Neolithic era. Runik and Vlashnjë are two of the most significant sites in the Neolithic period. During the late 3rd millennium BCE, Proto-Indo-European tribes migrated and settled in the region alongside the existing Neolithic population. New practices in agriculture and cattle breeding appear in this period and new settlements formed in Kosovo. Co-existence and intermingling of the Neolithic population and the PIE-speakers gave rise to the material culture which developed in the Bronze Age (2100-1100 BCE) in settlements including Vlashnjë, Korishë, Pogragjë, Bardhi i Madh and Topanicë.
Archaeological research in the territory of Dardania greatly expanded since 2000. In contemporary research, a periodization of four phases of development of pre-Roman Dardania is being utilized:
- 11th-9th century BCE, a transitory period between the Bronze and the Iron Age
- 8th-7th century BCE, Iron Age I phase
- 6th-4th century BCE, Iron Age II phase, during which contacts with the Mediterranean and imports from Greece increase
- 4th-1st century BCE, Hellenistic period.
In the Iron Age habitation further developed with the emergence of the Glasinac-Mat culture, an Illyrian material culture which developed in the Iron Age western Balkans. The Dardani - as they became known in classical antiquity - were one of the particular groups of the Glasinac-Mat culture.
The Brnjica cultural group was a Late Bronze Age cultural manifestation in what was to become Dardania, closely connected to the Balkan-Danubian complex. It dates between the 14th and 10th centuries BCE, and appears in Kosovo, Morava valley, Sandzak, Macedonia and South-East Serbia. In Yugoslavian historiography, starting from Milutin Garašanin in the 1970s and 1980s, the Brnjica culture came to be interpreted as the "Daco-Moesian" and non-"Illyrian" linguistic component of the later Dardani. Before that change, Yugoslavian scholars had regarded the Dardani as of Illyrian origin. The narrative of a distinct "Daco-Moesian" concept developed as a response to Albanian and Bulgarian researchers, and especially to changes inside Yugoslavia due to increasing local nationalisms.
Classical antiquity
In Dardania tribal aristocracy and pre-urban development emerged from the 6th–5th centuries BC. The contacts of the Dardanians with the Mediterranean world began early and intensified during the Iron Age. Trade connections with the Ancient Greek world were created from the 7th century BC onwards. The proto-urban development was followed by the creation of urban centers and the emergence of craftsmanship, and a Dardanian polity began to develop from the 4th century BC. Material culture and accounts in classical sources suggest that Dardanian society reached an advanced phase of development.
The Dardani are referred to as one of the opponents of Macedon in the 4th century BC, clashing with Philip II who managed to subdue them and their neighbors, probably during the early period of his reign. The Dardani have remained quiet until Philip II's death, after which they were planning defection. However an open war have not been caused by their riots, since Alexander the Great managed to have the full control of the kingdom and its army after succeeding his father to the Macedonian throne. Indeed, the Dardani have not been mentioned in the ancient accounts concerning the events of Alexander's Balkan campaign. It appears that the Dardani evaded the Macedonian rule during the Wars of the Diadochi between 284 BC and 281 BC, at the time of Lysimachus'empire. Thereafter the Dardani became a constant threat to Macedon on its northern borders.
In 279 BC, at the times of the great Celtic invasion, Dardania was raided by several Celtic tribes on their campaigns that were undertaken to plunder the treasuries of Greek temples. During these events an unnamed Dardanian king offered to help the Macedonians with 20,000 soldiers to counteract the invading Celts, but it was refused by the Macedonian king Ptolemy Keraunos who, underestimating the Celtic strength, died fighting them. Only at the oracle of Delphi the Celts eventually arrested and were defeated. Afterwards they withdrew in the north passing through Dardania, however they were completely destroyed by the Dardani. Further references to the Dardani are provided in the ancient sources describing Dardanian constant wars against Macedonians from the second half of the 3rd century BC.
After the Celtic invasion of the Balkans weakened the state of the Macedonians and Paeonians, the political and military role of the Dardanians began to grow in the region. They expanded their state to the area of Paeonia which definitively disappeared from history. In 230 the Dardani under Longarus captured Bylazora from the Paeonians. Taking advantage of Macedonian weakness, in 229 the Dardani attacked Macedonia and defeated Demetrius II in an important battle. After obtaining a great victory over the Macedonian army the Dardani invaded Macedon proper. The Dardanian expansion in Macedon, similar to the Ardiaean expansion in Epirus around the same years, may have been part of a general movement among the Illyrian peoples.
In this period Dardanian influence on the region grew and some other Illyrian tribes deserted Teuta, joining the Dardani under Longarus and forcing Teuta to call off her expedition forces in Epirus. When Philip V rose to the Macedonian throne, skirmishing with Dardani began in 220-219 BC and he managed to capture Bylazora from them in 217 BC. Skirmishes continued in 211 and in 209 when a force of Dardani under Aeropus, probably a pretender to the Macedonian throne, captured Lychnidus and looted Macedonia taking 20.000 prisoners and retreating before Philip's forces could reach them.
Further information: Dardanian-Bastarnae warIn 201 Bato of Dardania along with Pleuratus the Illyrian and Amynander king of Athamania, cooperated with Roman consul Sulpicius in his expedition against Philip V. Being always under the menace of Dardanian attacks on Macedonia, around 183 BC Philip V made an alliance with the Bastarnae and invited them to settle in Polog, the region of Dardania closest to Macedonia. A joint campaign of the Bastarnae and Macedonians against the Dardanians was organized, but Philip V died and his son Perseus of Macedon withdrew his forces from the campaign. The Bastarnae crossed the Danube in huge numbers and although they didn't meet the Macedonians, they continued the campaign. Some 30,000 Bastarnae under the command of Clondicus seem to have defeated the Dardani. In 179 BC, the Bastarnae conquered the Dardani, who later in 174 pushed them out, in a war which proved catastrophic, with a few years later, in 170 BC, the Macedonians defeating the Dardani. Macedonia and Illyria became Roman protectorates in 168 BC. The Scordisci, a tribe of Celtic origin, most likely subdued the Dardani in the mid-2nd century BC, after which there was no mention of the Dardani for a long time.
Roman era
See also: Dardania (Roman province)Illyria and Macedonia became Roman protectorates in 168 BC. In 97 BC, the Dardani are mentioned again, defeated by the Macedonian Roman army. In 88 BC, the Dardani invaded the Roman province of Macedonia together with the Scordisci and the Maedi.
The Romans found an ancient formed economy in Dardania, based on agriculture and animal husbandry, mining and metallurgy, in different handicrafts and in trade. The Romans focused especially in exploitation of mines, same as in other provinces, and in road construction.
It seems quite probable that the Dardani actually lost independence in 28 BC thus, the final occupation of Dardania by Rome has been connected with the beginnings of Augustus' rule in 6 AD, when they were finally conquered by Rome. Dardania was conquered by Gaius Scribonius Curio and the Latin language was soon adopted as the main language of the tribe as many other conquered and Romanized. After the Roman emperor Domitian divided the province of Moesia into Moesia Superior and Moesia Inferior in 86 AD, the Dardani were located in southern Moesia Superior.
At first, Dardania was not a separate Roman province, but became a region in the province of Moesia Superior in 87 AD. Emperor Diocletian later (284) made Dardania into a separate province with its capital at Naissus (Niš). During the Byzantine administration (in the 6th century), there was a Byzantine province of Dardania that included cities of Ulpiana, Scupi, Justiniana Prima, and others.
Polity
See also: Kingdom of DardaniaHistory of the tribal government
A Dardanian polity began to develop from the 4th century BC. The Kingdom of Dardania was attested since the 4th century BC in ancient sources reporting the wars the Dardanians waged against their south-eastern neighbor – Macedon – until the 2nd century BC. The Dardanian kingdom was made up of many tribes and tribal groups, confirmed by Strabo, who mentions the Galabri and Thunatae as Dardanian tribes, and describes the Dardani as one of the three strongest Illyrian peoples, the other two being the Ardiaei and Autariatae.
The Dardanians, in all their history, always had separate domains from the rest of the Illyrians. The term used for their territory was (Δαρδανική), while other tribal areas had more unspecified terms, such as Autariaton khora (Αὐταριατῶν χώρα), for the "land of Autariatae." The term was used to describe the Dardanian political status as a semi-independent country in the later Roman Republic. Little data exists about the territory of the Dardani prior to Roman conquest, especially on its southern extent which has been contested with Macedon, so scholars use information provided in Roman times to define the bounds of Dardanian territory.
An unnamed Dardanian king is mentioned in ancient sources describing the events of the region of the early 3rd century BC. He offered the Macedonian king Ptolemy Ceraunos 20,000 soldiers to counteract the invading Celts, but Ceraunos declined the offer. Tribal chiefs Longarus and his son Bato took part in the wars against Romans and Macedonians.
Dardanian rulers
- Unnamed Dardanian king (early 3rd century BC), who offered the Macedonian king Ptolemy Ceraunos 20,000 soldiers to counteract the invading Celts, but Ceraunos declined the offer.
- Longarus;
Etuta (Etleva) was the daughter of Monunius II of Dardania and the illyrian queen of Ardiaei. Some scholars believe that Illyrian rulers Bardylis, Audata, Cleitus (son of Bardylis), Bardylis II, Bircenna (daughter of Bardylis II), and Monunios were Dardanian, however this is considered an old fallacy because it is unsupported by any ancient source, while some facts and ancient geographical locations go squarely against it. Nevertheless, Bardylis, if not Dardanian, probably had some kind of hegemony on Dardanians during his reign.
Foreign relations
Bad press
Unlike their Thracian neighbors, in pre-Roman times the Dardani were not Hellenized. From the Greek point of view, they were barbarians. Because of this prejudice they received some bad press in the Ancient Greek and Roman historiography. The tribe was viewed of as "extremely barbaric". Claudius Aelianus and other writers wrote that they bathed only three times in their lives. At birth, when they were wed and after they died. Strabo refers to them as wild and dwelling in dirty caves under dung-hills. This however may have had to do not with cleanliness, as bathing had to do with monetary status from the viewpoint of the Greeks.
Enslavement
Dardanian slaves or freedmen at the time of the Roman conquest were clearly of Paleo-Balkan origin, according to their personal names. It has been noted that personal names were mostly of the "Central-Dalmatian type".
Culture
Language
Dardanian | |
---|---|
Native to | Kingdom of Dardania |
Region | central Balkans |
Language family | Indo-European
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | None (mis ) |
Glottolog | None |
The Dardanians had their own language. An extensive study based on onomastics of the Roman era has been undertaken by Radoslav Katičić which puts the Dardanian language area in the Central Illyrian area ("Central Illyrian" consisting of most of former Yugoslavia, north of southern Montenegro to the west of Morava, excepting ancient Liburnia in the northwest, but perhaps extending into Pannonia in the north). Another extensive study based on onomastics in Thrace, eastern Macedonia, Moesia, Dacia and Bithynia has been carried out by Dan Dana in the 2010s, also taking into consideration current Balkan historical linguistics. Dana concludes that the Illyrian character of Dardanian onomastics is unquestionable and that it is appropriate to definitively rule out the idea of a Thracian origin or participation (at least appreciable) in the ethnogenesis of the Dardani. Since the Dardani were neighbored to the east by the Thracians, the eastern parts of Dardania were at the Thraco-Illyrian contact zone. As shown by archaeological research Illyrian names are predominant in western Dardania (present-day Kosovo), and occasionally appear in eastern Dardania (present-day south-eastern Serbia), while Thracian names are found in the eastern parts, but are absent from the western parts. The correspondence of Illyrian onomastics in Dardania – including those of the Dardanian ruling dynasty – with those of the southern Illyrians suggests "thracianization" of parts of Dardania at a later date. The linguistic relationship between 'Illyrian' and 'Thracian' is uncertain due to the paucity of the available written material of those languages, consisting only of onomastic and toponymic evidence in the case of Illyrian, and the same for Thracian except for a few short inscriptions of difficult interpretation. Dardanian in the context of a distinct language is considered in recent decades as potentially significant for the history of the Albanian language.
Religion
Graves from the 6th and 5th centuries BCE in Romajë contain long iron bars which were placed in the tombs are a means of payment to the afterlife. They indicate that the tribe of the Dardani had developed a concept about the afterlife as shown later in other archaeological material like the votive monument of Smirë. The weapons included double-edged axes (Labrys), which might have been used in a ritualistic manner related to sun worship which was prevalent in the northern Illyrian tribes
Among the characteristic Dardanian deities were Andinus, considered to have been the indigenous god of vegetation and soil fertility, and Dea Dardanica ("Dardanian Goddess"). They are attested in votive inscriptions of the Roman period in Dardania.
A monument representing a round labyrinth that was dedicated to the "Dardanian Goddess" was found in Smira. This monument provides evidence for cosmogonic and cosmologic knowledges among the Dardani. The labyrinth was realized based on the concept of the trinity. There is used a numerological and geometric approach through a multidimensional holographic field, which illustrates the Dardanian perception of the cosmic order and the interconnection between the material world and the higher realm.
Dardanian funerary stelae portray representations of their mourning practice, which accurately mirrors the Albanian traditional lamentation of the dead – gjâma. The lamentation of the dead is represented on the stelae through the depiction of the mourners with raised hands, grabbing their heads and beating their chests.
Music
Strabo writes that Dardanians cared about music, always using musical instruments, both of the wind and string type.
See also
References
- "Δαρδάνιοι, Δάρδανοι, Δαρδανίωνες" Dardanioi, Georg Autenrieth, "A Homeric Dictionary", at Perseus
- Latin Dictionary
- ^ Šašel Kos 2010, p. 626.
- Wilkes 1992, p. 144.
- ^ Papazoglu 1978, p. 131
the Dardanians ... living in the frontiers of the Illyrian and the Thracian worlds retained their individuality and, alone among the peoples of that region, succeeded in maintaining themselves as an ethnic unity even when they were militarily and politically subjected by the Roman arms and when, towards the end of the ancient world, the Balkans were involved in far-reaching ethnic perturbations, the Dardanians, of all the Central Balkan tribes, played the greatest part in the genesis of the new peoples who took the place of the old
- Strabo's geography - Illyria - 'The Bessi live in huts and lead a wretched life; and their country borders on Mount Rhodope, on the country of the Paeonians, and on that of two Illyrian peoples — the Autariatae, and the Dardanians'
- Strabo: The Geography - Illyria - 'The Ardiaei were called by the men of later times "Vardiaei." Because they pestered the sea through their piratical bands, the Romans pushed them back from it into the interior and forced them to till the soil. But the country is rough and poor and not suited to a farming population, and therefore the tribe has been utterly ruined and in fact has almost been obliterated. And this is what befell the rest of the peoples in that part of the world; for those who were most powerful in earlier times were utterly humbled or were obliterated, as, for example, among the Galatae the Boii and the Scordistae, and among the Illyrians the Autariatae, Ardiaei, and Dardanii, and among the Thracians the Triballi; 316that is, they were reduced in warfare by one another at first and then later by the Macedonians and the Romans'
- ^ Papazoglu 1978, p. 218: "This statement is not without importance for our problem, for it too confirms that in mid-fifth century the lands north of Macedonia were considered to be Illyrian. There is, however, another statement in Herodotus, which N. Vulić insists on as clear evidence that in Herodotus' time the territory of the Dardanians was reckoned as Illyrian . It is a passage from the well - known section on the tributaries of the Danube , in which Herodotus says that the river Angrus flows " from the land of the Illyrians " 267 As the Angrus could be either the Southern Morava or the Ibar , and both rivers in their upper courses flowed through Dardania , Vulić's conclusion looks very reasonable . From all we have said above , the evidence of the ancient writers as to the ethnic origin of the Dardanians seems pretty unanimous and its interpretation offers no special difficulties The tradition according to which the Dardanians , like their neighbours the Autariatae and the Ardiaei , were Illyrians , is preserved in Strabo and Appian . It must be an old tradition , from the times when the three tribes were neighbours . In historians before Strabo ( Polybius , Livy ) and in historians who copied from earlier sources ( Justin , Pompeius Trogus ) , there is nothing to contradict that tradition . The mention of the Darda- nians alongside the Illyrians only shows that the name Illyrian , in addition to its wider ethnic sense , very early acquired a narrower political one . According to Herodotus indeed , for whom the name Illyrian could only have its general meaning , the lands north of Macedonia , round the sources of the Southern Morava and Ibar , were inhabited by Illyrians . This fact shows that ancient tradition considered the Dardanians to be Illyrians ."
- ^ Zahariade 2009, p. 81; p. 92: "Dardania was an Illyrian land by tradition. Dardanians were considered Illyrians by Strabo and Appian and so a number of modern scholars, while others believe that at a later date the Dardanians were “Thracisized”... Most of the place-names especially in eastern Dardania turn out to be Thracian. The Thracian element in majority presumably following an expansion westwards seems to have intermingled with the Illyrian one. The ethnic frontier between Thracians and Dardanians was traced on the Morava (Margus) River until the Danube to the north splitting in two the Dardanian lands, with the eastern part significantly “thracisized”."
- ^ Kosovo: A Short History p. 363 'As Papazoglu notes, most ancient sources classify Dardanians as Illyrians. Her reasons for rejecting this identification in a later essay, ‘Les Royaumes’, are obscure. There were Thracian names in the eastern strip of Dardania, but Illyrian names dominated the rest; Katicic has shown that these belong with two other Illyrian “‘onomastic provinces’ (see his summary in Ancient Languages, pp. 179-81, and the evidence in Papazoglu, ‘Dardanska onomastika’).'
- Wilkes 2012, p. 414: "Dardani, an Illyrian people (their name may derive from the same root as dardhë, the Albanian for 'pear') but also linked with Thracians and with Asia Minor, inhabited the upper Vardar valley and the Kosovo region in the southern Balkans."
- ^ Vujčić 2021, p. 505: "Regardless of this episode, some sources clearly distinguish the Dardani from the rest of Illyrians, and Dardanian land from Illyria (Polyb. 2.6.4, 28.8.3; Liv. 43.20.1), and some take for granted that they are but one of the Illyrian tribes (Strab. 7.5.6, 12; App. Ill. 1.2). This is not the place to analyze this topic in detail, but, while the Dardani are obviously ethnically and linguistically a part of the Illyrian world, they seem to be separated from other Illyrian peoples by their geography and peculiar socio-political development."
- ^ Strabo's geography - http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0239
- ^ Hammond 1966, pp. 239–241.
- Šašel Kos 2005, p. 122.
- ^ Wilkes 2012, p. 414.
- ^ Šašel Kos 2010, p. 625.
- Shukriu 1996, p. 20.
- Vladimir Georgiev (Gheorghiev), Raporturile dintre limbile dacă, tracă şi frigiană, "Studii Clasice" Journal, II, 1960, 39-58.
- Kosovo: A Short History p. 363 'As Papazoglu notes, most ancient sources classify Dardanians as Illyrians. Her reasons for rejecting this identification in a later essay, ‘Les Royaumes’, are obscure. There were Thracian names in the eastern strip of Dardania, but Illyrian names dominated the rest; Katicic has shown that these belong with two other Illyrian “‘onomastic provinces’ (see his summary in Ancient Languages, pp. 179-81, and the evidence in Papazoglu, ‘Dardanska onomastika’).'
- Shukriu 1996, p. 41.
- Strabo: The Geography - Illyria - 'The Ardiaei were called by the men of later times "Vardiaei." Because they pestered the sea through their piratical bands, the Romans pushed them back from it into the interior and forced them to till the soil. But the country is rough and poor and not suited to a farming population, and therefore the tribe has been utterly ruined and in fact has almost been obliterated. And this is what befell the rest of the peoples in that part of the world; for those who were most powerful in earlier times were utterly humbled or were obliterated, as, for example, among the Galatae the Boii and the Scordistae, and among the Illyrians the Autariatae, Ardiaei, and Dardanii, and among the Thracians the Triballi; 316that is, they were reduced in warfare by one another at first and then later by the Macedonians and the Romans'
- Wilkes 1996, pp. 120–121.
- ^ Vujčić 2021, p. 504.
- ^ Stipčević 1989, pp. 38–39.
- ^ Petrović 2019, pp. 23–24.
- Papazoglu 1969, p. 201.
- ^ Papazoglu 1978, p. 523
- Baliu 2012, p. 69.
- Baliu 2012, p. 68.
- ^ Demiraj 1997, p. 121.
- Baliu 2012, pp. 81.
- Darlishta 2019, p. 65.
- Wilkes, John (1992). The Illyrians. Wiley. p. 244. ISBN 9780631146711. "Names of individuals peoples may have been formed in a similar fashion, Taulantii from 'swallow' (cf. the Albanian tallandushe) or Erchelei the 'eel-men' and Chelidoni the 'snail-men'. The name of the Delmatae appears connected with the Albanian word for 'sheep' delmë) and the Dardanians with for 'pear' (dardhë)."
- ^ Elsie 2015, p. 310.
- Darlishta 2019, p. 38.
- ^ Demiraj 1997, pp. 121–122.
- Elsie 1998, p. 71.
- ^ Baliu 2012, pp. 77–78.
- ^ Orel 1998, pp. 56, 60.
- Baliu, Begzad (2012). Onomastika e Kosoves: Ndermjet miteve dhe identiteteve (PDF). Era. p. 73. ISBN 978-9951040556.
- Savić 2022.
- Crăciun 2023, pp. 79–80.
- Crăciun 2023, pp. 79–81.
- ^ Crăciun 2023, pp. 77–81.
- Wilkes 1992, p. 145; Crossland 1982, p. 849; Papazoglu 1969, pp. 101–104; Stipčević 1989, pp. 22–23.
- Buqinca 2021, pp. 522–524.
- Buqinca 2021, p. 216.
- Wilkes 1992, p. 92.
- Vujčić 2021, p. 505.
- Boteva 2021, p. 410.
- ^ Boteva 2021, p. 411
- Rama 2021, p. 114.
- Alaj 2019, p. 18.
- Alaj 2019, p. 14.
- Alaj 2019, p. 15
- ^ Drançolli 2020, pp. 4311–4312.
- ^ Vranić 2014a, p. 35.
- Stojic, Milorad (2006). "Regional characteristics of the Brnjica cultural group" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 3 August 2010.
- REGIONAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE BRNJICA CULTURAL GROUP MILORAD STOJI] Institute of Archaeology, Belgrade
- Stojic 2006, p. 73: "Until recently, our knowledge of the Brnjica cultural group (or cultural group Donja Brnjica – Gornja Stra`ava) was based on the research results from fifteen or so sites, mainly necropolises.1 There were no data on settlements and habitations.2 The total archaeological collection of the Brnjica community amounted to less than three hundred objects, mostly ceramic vessels.3 This cultural group was characterized as the final phase, »… of a long evolution to be followed with certainty through the entire Bronze Age, while closely connected to the Balkan–Danube complex and elements the linguists mark as Dako–Moesian. Therefore, this group’s finds could be identified with the non-Illyrian component in the Dardanian ethnogenesis.«4"
- Vranić 2014b, p. 169.
- ^ Shukriu 2008, p. 9.
- Gavrilović Vitas 2021, p. 3.
- Vujčić 2021, pp. 504–505.
- ^ Petrović 2006, p. 8.
- Robert Malcolm Errington (1990). A History of Macedonia. University of California Press. p. 160. ISBN 978-0-520-06319-8.
- Hammond 1988, p. 253
- ^ Petrović 2006, p. 9.
- Hammond 1988, p. 338
- Errington 1990, p. 185.
- A history of Macedonia Volume 5 of Hellenistic culture and society, Robert Malcolm Errington, University of California Press, 1990, ISBN 0-520-06319-8, ISBN 978-0-520-06319-8 p. 174
- Eckstein 2008, pp. 34–35.
- Hammond 1988, p. 335
- Hammond 1988, p. 404
- Hammond 1988, p. 420
- Hammond 1988, p. 470
- Hammond 1988, p. 491
- Mócsy 2014, p. 10.
- ^ Papazoglu 1978, p. 173.
- Mócsy 2014, p. 12.
- Mócsy 2014, p. 15.
- Wilkes 1992, p. 140
... Autariatae at the expense of the Triballi until, as Strabo remarks, they in their turn were overcome by the Celtic Scordisci in the early third century
- Michael Rostovtzeff, The Social and Economic History of the Roman Empire (Oxford 1957), 242-243
- Prehistory and Antique History of Kosova, Edi Shukriu, p. 18
- http://www.balkaninstitut.com/pdf/izdanja/B_XXXVII_2007.pdf
- ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 210
Here the old name of Dardania appears as a new province formed out of Moesia, along with Moesia Prima, Dacia (not Trajan's old province but a... Though its line is far from certain there seems little doubt that most of the Dardanians were excluded from Illyricum and were to become a part of the province of Moesia)
- Papazoglu 1978, p. 445
The assumption that the Dardanian kingdom was composed of a considerable number of tribes and tribal groups, finds confirmation in Strabo's statement about
- Papazoglu 1978, p. 216
- Dzino 2008, p. 188.
- Papazoglu 1978, p. 187
- ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 85
Whether the Dardanians were an Illyrian or a Thracian people has been much debated and one view suggests that the area was originally populated with Thracians who then exposed to direct contact with Illyrians over a long period. The meaning of this state of affairs has been variously interpreted, ranging from notions of Thracianization' (in part) of an existing Illyrian population to the precise opposite. In favour of the latter may be the close correspondence of Illyrian names in Dardania with those of the southern 'real' lllyrians to their west, including the names of Dardanian rulers, Longarus, Bato, Monunius and Etuta, and those on later epitaphs, Epicadus, Scerviaedus, Tuta, Times and Cinna.
- ^ Wilkes 1992, p. 86
... including the names of Dardanian rulers, Longarus, Bato, Monunius and Etuta, and those on later epitaphs, Epicadus, Scerviaedus, Tuta, Times and Cinna. Other Dardanian names are linked with...
- ^ Buqinca 2021, p. 133.
- Phillip Harding (21 February 1985). From the End of the Peloponnesian War to the Battle of Ipsus. Cambridge University Press. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-521-29949-7.
Grabos became the most powerful Illyrian king after the death of Bardylis in 358.
- Heckel 2006, p. 64
- Wilkes 1996, p. 120
- Heckel 2006, p. 86
- Hammond 1988, p. 47
- Cabanes 2002, pp. 50–51, 56, 75.
- Mortensen 1991, pp. 49–59.
- Lane Fox 2011, p. 342.
- Vujčić 2019, p. 115.
- Vujčić 2021, pp. 501–504.
- Buqinca 2021, pp. 131, 133.
- Buqinca, Arianit (2022). Dardanët e Ilirisë (VI - I p.e.s.) [The Dardanians of Illyria] (in Albanian) (1st ed.). Prishtina: Instituti Albanologjik. p. 48. ISBN 978-9951-24-155-7.
- Petrović 2019, p. 24.
- Aelian; Diane Ostrom Johnson (June 1997). An English translation of Claudius Aelianus' Varia historia. E. Mellen Press. ISBN 978-0-7734-8672-0.
- ^ Papazoglu 1978, p. 517
There must have been some reason why it was said of the Dardanians, and not of any other people, that they only bathed three times in their lives ...like the Dardanians', which was applied not to dirty folk, as might be expected, but to the miserly (ἐπὶ τῶν φειδωλῶν)! For the Greeks, obviously, to bathe or not was only a question of expense and financial means.
- Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898) "...whence it is said of the Dardanians, an Illyrian people, that they bathe only thrice in their lives—at birth, marriage, and after death."
- James Oliver Thomson (1948). History of Ancient Geography. Biblo & Tannen Publishers. pp. 249–. ISBN 978-0-8196-0143-8.
- ^ Strabo,7.5, "The Dardanians are so utterly wild that they dig caves beneath their dung-hills and live there, but still they care for music, always making use of musical instruments, both flutes and stringed instruments"
- Papazoglu 1978, p. 224.
- Papazoglu 1978, p. 245.
- Katičić, Radoslav (1964b) "Die neuesten Forschungen über die einhemiche Sprachschist in den Illyrischen Provinzen" in Benac (1964a) 9-58 Katičić, Radoslav (1965b) "Zur frage der keltischen und panonischen Namengebieten im römischen Dalmatien" ANUBiH 3 GCBI 1, 53-76
- Katičić, Radoslav. Ancient languages of the Balkans. The Hague - Paris (1976)
- Dana 2014, p. LXXXII.
- Joseph Roisman; Ian Worthington (7 July 2011). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. John Wiley & Sons. p. 301. ISBN 978-1-4443-5163-7.
- Rusakov 2017, pp. 555–556.
- Shukriu 2008, p. 11.
- Shukriu 2008, p. 10.
- Zeqo 2016, p. 14.
- Ferri 2006, p. 229.
- Shukriu, Edi (2004). "Dea Dardane - Ikonografia dhe funksionet" [Dea Dardania - Iconography and functions]. Kosova.
- Shukriu 2008, pp. 22–23.
- Shukriu 2008, p. 23.
- Joseph & Dedvukaj 2024, pp. 1–3.
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External links
Media related to Dardani (Balkans) at Wikimedia Commons
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