Ancient peoples
inhabited the lands that now make up Yugoslavia for
millennia before Rome conquered the region in the first
century A.D. Archeological findings reveal that during the
Paleolithic period (ca. 200,000-8,000 B.C.) man's ancestors
hunted and foraged in the mountains, valleys, and interior
plains of today's Yugoslavia. In the Mesolithic period
(8,000-6,000 B.C.), man expanded the use of tools and
weapons and settled throughout the country. Farming came to
the area at the dawn of the Neolithic Period (6,000-2,800
B.C.) and spread throughout the region by 4,000 B.C.
Yugoslavia's Neolithic inhabitants planted cereal grains,
raised livestock, fished, hunted, wove simple textiles,
built houses of wood or mud, and made coarse pottery and
implements. Man began working
with pure copper in the region in the third millennium B.C.
During the Bronze Age (2,800-700 B.C.), the population grew,
settlements multiplied, and craftsmen began casting
ornaments, tools, and weapons. After about 1450 B.C., smiths
began working with locally mined gold and silver, horses and
chariots became more common, and trade routes stretched to
northern Europe and the Aegean. During the Iron Age
(beginning 700 B.C.), trade flourished between the
developing city-states of Italy and Greece and the region's
first identifiable peoples: Illyrian-speaking tribes north
of Lake Ohrid and west of the Vadar River (in present-day
Macedonia), Thracian speakers in the area of modern Serbia,
and the Veneti, who probably spoke an Italic tongue, in
Istria and the Julian Alps (in present-day Slovenia and
northwest Croatia). Greeks set up
trading posts along the eastern Adriatic coast after 600
B.C. and founded colonies there in the fourth century B.C.
Greek influence proved ephemeral, however, and the native
tribes remained herdsmen and warriors. Bardylis, a tribal
chief of Illyria (present-day northwest Yugoslavia), assumed
control of much of Macedonia in 360 B.C.: Philip II and his
son, Alexander the Great, later united Macedonia and
campaigned as far north as present-day Serbia. In the fourth
century B.C., invading Celts forced the Illyrians southward
from the northern Adriatic coast, and over several centuries
a mixed Celtic-Illyrian culture arose in much of modern
Slovenia, Croatia, and Serbia, producing wheelturned
pottery, jewelry, and iron tools. In the third
century B.C., Rome conquered the west Adriatic coast and
began exerting influence on the opposite shore. Greek
allegations that the Illyrians were disrupting commerce and
plundering coastal towns helped precipitate a Roman punitive
strike in 229 B.C., and in subsequent campaigns Rome forced
Illyrian rulers to pay tribute. Roman armies often crossed
Illyria during the Roman-Macedonian wars, and in 168 B.C.
Rome conquered the Illyrians and destroyed the Macedonia of
Philip and Alexander. For many years the Dinaric Alps
sheltered resistance forces, but Roman dominance increased.
In 35 B.C., the emperor Octavian conquered the coastal
region and seized inland Celtic and Illyrian strongholds; in
A.D. 9, Tiberius consolidated Roman control of the western
Balkan peninsula; and by A.D. 14, Rome had subjugated the
Celts in what is now Serbia. The Romans brought order to the
region, and their inventive genius produced lasting
monuments. But Rome's most significant legacy to the region
was the separation of the empire's Byzantine and Roman
spheres (the Eastern and Western Roman Empires,
respectively), which created a cultural chasm that would
divide East from West, Eastern Orthodox from Roman Catholic,
and Serb from Croat and Slovene. Over the next 500
years, Latin culture permeated the region. The Romans
divided their western Balkan territories into separate
provinces. New roads linked fortresses, mines, and trading
towns. The Romans introduced viticulture in Dalmatia,
instituted slavery, and dug new mines. Agriculture thrived
in the Danube Basin, and towns throughout the country
blossomed into urban areas with forums, temples, water
systems, coliseums, and public baths. In addition to gods of
the Greco-Roman pantheon, Roman legionnaires brought the
mystic cult of Mithras from Persia. The Roman army also
recruited natives of the conquered regions, and five sons of
Illyrian peasants rose through the ranks to become emperor.
The Illyrian, Celtic, and Thracian languages all eventually
died out, but the centuries of Roman domination failed to
create cultural uniformity. Internal strife
and an economic crisis rocked the empire in the third
century A.D., and two ethnic Illyrian emperors, born in
areas now in Yugoslavia, took decisive steps to prolong the
empire's life. Emperor Diocletian, born in Dalmatia,
established strong central control and a bureaucracy,
abolished the last Roman republican institutions, and
persecuted Christians in an attempt to make them identify
more with the state than the church. Emperor Constantine,
born near Nis, reunited the empire after years of turmoil,
established dynastic succession, founded a new capital at
Byzantium in A.D. 330, and legalized
Christianity. In 395 the sons
of Emperor Theodosius split the empire into eastern and
western halves. The division, which became a permanent
feature of the European cultural landscape, separated Greek
Constantinople (as Byzantium was renamed in A.D. 330) from
Latin Rome and eventually the Eastern Orthodox and Roman
Catholic churches. It likewise separated the lands in what
is now Yugoslavia, exercising a critical influence on the
Serbs and Croats. Economic and administrative breakdown soon
softened the empire's defenses, especially in the western
half, and barbarian tribes began to attack. In the fourth
century, the Goths sacked Roman fortresses along the Danube
River, and in A.D. 448 the Huns ravaged Sirmium (now Sremska
Mitrovica northwest of present-day Belgrade), Singidunum
(now Belgrade), and Emona (now Ljubljana). The Ostrogoths
had conquered Dalmatia and other provinces by 493. Emperor
Justinian drove the invaders out in the sixth century, but
the defenses of the empire proved inadequate to maintain
this gain. Slavic tribesmen
poured across the empire's borders during the fifth and
sixth centuries. The Slavs, characteristically sedentary
farming and livestock-raising tribes, spoke an IndoEuropean
language and organized themselves into clans ruled by a
council of family chiefs. All land and significant wealth
was held in common. In the sixth century, the Slavs allied
with the more powerful Avars to plunder the Danube Basin.
Together, they erased almost all trace of Christian life in
Dalmatia and the northwestern parts of present-day
Yugoslavia. In A.D. 626 these tribes surrounded
Constantinople itself. The Avar incursions proved key to the
subsequent development of Yugoslavia because they
immediately preceded, and may have precipitated, the arrival
of the Serbs and Croats.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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