- Monunius
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Monunius King Monunius Reign c.290 BC -c. 270 BC Greek Μονούνιος Place of death Royal Tombs of Selcë e Poshtme Predecessor Bardyllis II Successor Mytilus Dynasty Dardanian Monunius (Greek: Μονούνιος; ruled c.290–c.270 BC[1]) was an Illyrian king of the Dardanian State. As a figure, Monunius has left more archaeological traces than historical ones. Monunius was a strong opponent of Macedonia but offered aid of 10,000 soldiers to Ptolemy during the Gallic Invasions, which was refused. The Dardanian State headed under Monunius ranked among the strongest in the Balkansat that time. The invasions of the Gauls through the Balkans did not effect the Dardanians as much as the Macedonians while they even whipped out a few of their forces when they return northwards.
In 281 BC Monunius entered into an alliance with Pyrrhus. Their joint interests against a strong Macedonia had induced Pyrrhus to accept as his ally Monunius. He is the first Illyrian to have struck his own silver coins after probably gaining control over the Taulantii State and the Greek colonies on the coast.[2] The king was buried in the Royal Tombs of Selca e Poshtme in the city of Pelion. A helmet with an inscription in Greek[3] letters found in modern Ohrid and silver coins bearing both the king's and Macedonian symbols indicates the inspirations of the Monunius for Macedonia, perhaps in the time of confusion following the Gallic invasions.[4] After the death of Ptolemy's death, Monunius might have taken the Macedonian throne for a brief period.[5]
Many Dardanian rulers of the same age were named Monunius and there seems to be some confusion[6] as to whom certain actions and events pertain. It is not known whether the same king struck coins in Durrës and offered military aid to the Macedons. The hypothesis is doubtful because silver coins minted by Monunius bear only the symbols of Durrës and Appolonia, and they have been never found away from the coastal lowlands. However nowadays many attribute these events to the same king. The name of the Dardanian king who offered Macedonia help against the Celts is not known but some have connected him with the Monunius who struck coins in Durrës.
Contents
Gallic Invasions
During the fourth century BC, a Gallic population had settled in Pannonia, in the territory of present Hungry. Many Illyrians tribes had been subdued. About 280 BC, according to Diodorus and Pausanias, they moved in three directions: toward Macedonia and Illyria, toward Greece, and toward Thrace.[7] The main army consisted of 150,000 foot soldiers equipped with great shield and 10,000 horsemen, was followed by 2,000 wagons transporting food and equipment. All the states of the Balkans looked at this Gallic movement with great apprehension, but Ptolemy, the king of Macedonia, took the news of the approach of the Gauls casually. In 279 BC Monunius offered the young king military aid against the Gauls. Ptolemy looked down with derision on the proposal of the Dardanians, who sent delegates to say that they could offer 20,000 warriors to assist him.[8] In an insulting manner, he said that the work was for the Macedonians to do and that they who had subjugated all the east, had no need for the Dardanians to protect their borders. Monunius allied with Thrace, had waged a war against Ptolemy for the Macedonian throne short time before the invasion of the Gauls while the true political reason why the alliance was rejected is not known. When Monunius was told of this, he replied that the soon glorious Macedonian kingdom would fall because of the immaturity of a youth.[9]
The battle that took place only a few days later resulted in the Macedonian army being routed and the king himself wounded and taken prisoner by the Gauls. The Gauls then made their way south towards the Delphi. Chichorus the commander of the Gauls decided to take them back to their own country along the same route, where more battles awaited them. In the end they were all whiped out by Monunius's forces in the Dardanian State, through which they had to pass.[10] Another variant of the return of the Gauls through the Dardanian State is that the Medii and the Dardanians made peace with the Gauls in return for a part of the stolen gold in the temples.[11]
Minting of coins
Main article: Illyrian coinageIn 280 BC, Monunius gained control of the Taulantii State. Even though Illyrians had minted coins well before the 3rd century BC, Monunius is the first Illyrian king to issue his own coins in 280 BC. Monunius's mint of silver coinage brought an important financial resource under state control. The royal staters, with the legend 'Basileos Monuniou' (of King Monunius), were a cop of the coins of Durrës the place where they were minted. The coins of Monunius differed only in having the jaw of the boar set over the cow, as a symbol of the royal Illyrian name. The mint also had the abbreviated name ΔYP (for Durrës) to donate the place where they were minted, as well as showing royal sovereignty over the city. These coins have been found in great numbers in the Illyrian city of Gurëzeza, and in the interior of modern day Albania beyond the Greek colony of Apollonia.
Royal Tombs of Selcë e Poshtme
Main article: Royal Tombs of Selca e PoshtmeMonunius's second main centre might have been the ancient city of Pelion in Dassaretia, near the present day village of Selca e Poshtme in Albania, in the old residence of the Illyrian kings. It has been claimed that the king was buried in the Royal Tombs of Selca e Poshtme. The ten burials inside the royal tombs were laden with bodies and urns accompanied by a great number of objects, belonging to a second burial period, after the royal grave was robbed in the last decades of the third century BC. Seemingly, the robbery made it impossible to tie the grave to a specific historical person.However, two reliefs decorating the sides of the grave's facade might serve to identify him. They show a shield of the Illyrian type and a helmet of the Hellenistic rulers. The former indicates a local king, while the latter is in complete conformity with a bronze helmet found in the region of Lake Ohrid during the First World War, now kept at the Antike Sammlung Museum in Berlin. On the back of the helmet, in calligraphy virtually identical to that on the coins of King Monunius, the same words are written: Basileos Monouniou. It cannot be said with certainty whether the helmet was part of the first inventory, looted or taken out of a grave in Pelion, but it is surely evidence that the Dardanian State of Monunius extended as far as the Lyncestian Lakes. From here Monunius could have intervened in the quarrel about the Macedonian throne, eventually turning into a claimant or it. This is surely the meaning of the minting of a second series of silver coins bearing his name and traditional Macedonian symbols, the head of Heracles on the face and on the reverse, Olypmian Zeus, sitting on the throne. That this was a short lived dream of the Dradanian king is shown by the fact that so few coins were minted, so much so that only one specimen is preserved today. Although after the smoke had cleared in the aftermath of Ptolemy's death, Monunius may have held Macedon for a brief period.[12][13]
See also
- Illyrian warfare
- List of rulers of Illyria
- Illyrian coinage
- Gallic invasion of the Balkans
- Royal Tombs of Selca e Poshtme
References
- ^ http://www.illyrians.org/illyriankings.html
- ^ The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0-631-19807-5, page 129
- ^ The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0-631-19807-5, page 197
- ^ The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0-631-19807-5, page 146
- ^ Papazoglu, Les Origines...
- ^ The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0-631-19807-5, page 146
- ^ Diodorus (Exc., Hoeschel, page 495-497)
- ^ Justin (XXIV, 4,9)
- ^ Pausanias (X, 19,7)
- ^ Diodorus (Exc. Hoeschel, pp. 495-497)
- ^ Appian (Illyrike 5)
- ^ Papazoglu, Les Origines...
- ^ The Illyrians to the Albnanians - Neritan Ceka, pp. 113-114
Sources
- The Illyrians to the Albanians - Neritan Ceka, 2005
- The Illyrians by J. J. Wilkes, 1992, ISBN 0-631-19807-5
Categories:- Illyrian royalty
- 3rd-century BC people
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