Mystery enshrouds
the exact origins of today's Albanians. Most historians of
the Balkans believe the Albanian people are in large part
descendants of the ancient Illyrians, who, like other Balkan
peoples, were subdivided into tribes and clans. The name
Albania is derived from the name of an Illyrian tribe called
the Arber, or ArbereshÎ, and later Albanoi, that lived
near DurrÎs. The Illyrians were Indo-European
tribesmen who appeared in the western part of the Balkan
Peninsula about 1000 B.C., a period coinciding with the end
of the Bronze Age and beginning of the Iron Age. They
inhabited much of the area for at least the next millennium.
Archaeologists associate the Illyrians with the Hallstatt
culture, an Iron Age people noted for production of iron and
bronze swords with winged-shaped handles and for
domestication of horses. The Illyrians occupied lands
extending from the Danube, Sava, and Morava rivers to the
Adriatic Sea and the Sar Mountains. At various times, groups
of Illyrians migrated over land and sea into
Italy. The Illyrians
carried on commerce and warfare with their neighbors. The
ancient Macedonians probably had some Illyrian roots, but
their ruling class adopted Greek cultural characteristics.
The Illyrians also mingled with the Thracians, another
ancient people with adjoining lands on the east. In the
south and along the Adriatic Sea coast, the Illyrians were
heavily influenced by the Greeks, who founded trading
colonies there. The present-day city of DurrÎs evolved
from a Greek colony known as Epidamnos, which was founded at
the end of the seventh century B.C. Another famous Greek
colony, Apollonia, arose between DurrÎs and the port
city of VlorÎ. The Illyrians
produced and traded cattle, horses, agricultural goods, and
wares fashioned from locally mined copper and iron. Feuds
and warfare were constant facts of life for the Illyrian
tribes, and Illyrian pirates plagued shipping on the
Adriatic Sea. Councils of elders chose the chieftains who
headed each of the numerous Illyrian tribes. From time to
time, local chieftains extended their rule over other tribes
and formed short-lived kingdoms. During the fifth century
B.C., a well-developed Illyrian population center existed as
far north as the upper Sava River valley in what is now
Slovenia. Illyrian friezes discovered near the present-day
Slovenian city of Ljubljana depict ritual sacrifices,
feasts, battles, sporting events, and other
activities. The Illyrian
kingdom of Bardhyllus became a formidable local power in the
fourth century B.C. In 358 B.C., however, Macedonia's Philip
II, father of Alexander the Great, defeated the Illyrians
and assumed control of their territory as far as Lake Ohrid.
Alexander himself routed the forces of the Illyrian
chieftain Clitus in 335 B.C., and Illyrian tribal leaders
and soldiers accompanied Alexander on his conquest of
Persia. After Alexander's death in 323 B.C., independent
Illyrian kingdoms again arose. In 312 B.C., King Glaucius
expelled the Greeks from DurrÎs. By the end of the
third century, an Illyrian kingdom based near what is now
the Albanian city of ShkodÎr controlled parts of
northern Albania, Montenegro, and Hercegovina. Under Queen
Teuta, Illyrians attacked Roman merchant vessels plying the
Adriatic Sea and gave Rome an excuse to invade the
Balkans. In the Illyrian
Wars of 229 and 219 B.C., Rome overran the Illyrian
settlements in the Neretva River valley. The Romans made new
gains in 168 B.C., and Roman forces captured Illyria's King
Gentius at ShkodÎr, which they called Scodra, and
brought him to Rome in 165 B.C. A century later, Julius
Caesar and his rival Pompey fought their decisive battle
near DurrÎs (Dyrrachium). Rome finally subjugated
recalcitrant Illyrian tribes in the western Balkans dwing
the region of Emperor Tiberius in A.D. 9. The Romans divided
the lands that make up present-day Albania among the
provinces of Macedonia, Dalmatia, and Epirus. For about four
centuries, Roman rule brought the Illyrian-populated lands
economic and cultural advancement and ended most of the
enervating clashes among local tribes. The Illyrian mountain
clansmen retained local authority but pledged allegiance to
the emperor and acknowledged the authority of his envoys.
During a yearly holiday honoring the Caesars, the Illyrian
mountaineers swore loyalty to the emperor and reaffirmed
their political rights. A form of this tradition, known as
the kuvend, has survived to the present day in northern
Albania. The Romans
established numerous military camps and colonies and
completely latinized the coastal cities. They also oversaw
the construction of aqueducts and roads, including the Via
Egnatia, a famous military highway and trade route that led
from DurrÎs through the Shkumbin River valley to
Macedonia and Byzantium (later Constantinople). Copper,
asphalt, and silver were extracted from the mountains. The
main exports were wine, cheese, oil, and fish from Lake
Scutari and Lake Ohrid. Imports included tools, metalware,
luxury goods, and other manufactured articles. Apollonia
became a cultural center, and Julius Caesar himself sent his
nephew, later the Emperor Augustus, to study
there. Illyrians
distinguished themselves as warriors in the Roman legions
and made up a significant portion of the Praetorian Guard.
Several of the Roman emperors were of Illyrian origin,
including Diocletian (284-305), who saved the empire from
disintegration by introducing institutional reforms, and
Constantine the Great (324-37)--who accepted Christianity
and transferred the empire's capital from Rome to Byzantium,
which he called Constantinople. Emperor Justinian
(527-65)--who codified Roman law, built the most famous
Byzantine church, the Hagia Sofia, and reextended the
empire's control over lost territories- -was probably also
an Illyrian. Christianity came
to the Illyrian-populated lands in the first century A.D.
Saint Paul wrote that he preached in the Roman province of
Illyricum, and legend holds that he visited DurrÎs.
When the Roman Empire was divided into eastern and western
halves in A.D. 395, the lands that now make up Albania were
administered by the Eastern Empire but were ecclesiastically
dependent on Rome. In A.D. 732, however, a Byzantine
emperor, Leo the Isaurian, subordinated the area to the
patriarchate of Constantinople. For centuries thereafter,
the Albanian lands became an arena for the ecclesiastical
struggle between Rome and Constantinople. Most Albanians
living in the mountainous north became Roman Catholic, while
in the southern and central regions, the majority became
Orthodox.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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