| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Dardania (Ancient Greek: Δαρδανία) was the region of the the Dardani (Ancient Greek: Δαρδάνιοι).[1] Located at the Thraco-Illyrian contact zone, their identification as either Illyrian or Thracian tribe is uncertain, sometimes a separate "Dardanian ethnic identity" being postulated.[2][3] In 88 BC, they invaded the Roman province of Macedonia together with the Scordisci and the Maedi.[4][5] In AD 6, they were conquered by Rome and became part of the province of Moesia Superior (corresponding to present-day Serbia, northern fringes of Macedonia and northern Bulgaria). According to Strabo, they were divided into two sub-groups, the Galabri and the Thunaki[6].
[edit] Name and mythic originsBeginning with Johann Georg von Hahn in 1854, 19th century historical linguistics concluded that Dardanoi and Dardania may be related to a proto-Albanian word meaning pear tree (dardha in modern Albanian the definite form, dardhë indefinite form). Opinions differ whether the ultimate etymon of this word in Proto-Indo-European was *g'hord- (which would make it related also to Greek achrás 'wild pear'), or *dheregh-.[7] Robert Graves connected Greek δάρδανος "burned up" (from the verb δαρδάπτω dardapto "to wear, to slay, to burn up").[8] In Greek mythology, Dardanus (Δάρδανος), one of the sons of Illyrius (the others being Enchelus, Autarieus, Maedus, Taulas, and Perrhaebus) was the eponymous ancestor of the Dardanoi (Δάρδανοι).[9] Some Roman ethnographers proposed a connection between Dardani of the Balkans and the Trojans Dardans of the Troad, having a group of Dardan colonists settle in the Balkans and subsequently degenerate into a state of barbarism.[10] [edit] HistoryMain article: Illyrians Dardania in the Roman Empire as part of the province of Moesia Superior (western portion of yellow area). The Dardanians are first mentioned in 88 BC when they invaded Macedonia. They settled in the West land of the Triballians (present-day Kosovo)[11]. The settlements were Thracian (Triballi) in pre-Roman times, attested in the etymology of place names surviving in the 3rd century AD when Dardania was given higher status. They make an appearance as a political entity in their own right in 86 BC, when they allied themselves with Mithridates VI of Pontus and are consequently defeated by Lucius Cornelius Sulla. Polybius[12] writes of an event in which the Dardani ask for Roman aid against their enemies. "When the Rhodian 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 Bastarnae, the size of their men, and their courage in the field.They gave information also of the treacherous practices of Perseus and the Gauls, 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 Thessalian 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 Aulus Postumius, accompanied by some young men." Dardania was conquered in AD 6 by Gaius Scribonius Curio and included into the Roman Empire, the Latin language was soon adopted as the main language of the tribe as many other conquered and Romanized[11]. At first, Dardania was not a separate Roman province, but was a region in the province of Moesia Superior in 87 AD.[13][14] Emperor Diocletian later 284 AD made Dardania into a separate [15] province with its capital at Naissus (Niš). During the Byzantine administration (in the 6th century AD), there was a Byzantine province of Dardania that included cities of Ulpiana, Scupi, Stobi, Justiniana Prima, and others. [edit] CitiesMain article: List of ancient Illyrian cities Dardania's largest towns by the time it was part of the Roman province of Moesia Superior were Ulpiana, Therranda, Vicianum, Skopi[16], and Damastion. By this time Naissus[17] (a previously Celtic settlement) was the province's most important city.The Romans had organized a mining town municipium Dardanicum[18] (in modern Socanica near the Ibar valley) was connected with the workings (metalla Dardanica[18]).Dacians[19] lived in Dardania in their city Quemedava. [edit] Rulers & NoblesMain article: List of Illyrians
[edit] LanguageMain article: Illyrian languages An extenstive study over onomastics has been undertaken by Radoslav Katičić 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).[24][25] [edit] See also[edit] References
[edit] Other sources
[edit] External links |
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |