Chaonians
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Chaonians (Greek: Χάονες, Chaones), were an ancient Greek tribe that inhabited the region of Epirus in the north-west of modern Greece and southern Albania.[1] On their central frontier lay another Epirote kingdom, that of the Molossians, to their southwest stood the kingdom of the Thesprotians, and to their north the lived the Illyrian tribes. According to Virgil, Chaon was the eponymous ancestor of the Chaonians.[2] By the 5th century BC, they were eventually conquered and had combined to a large degree with the neighboring Thesprotians and Molossians. The Chaonians were part of the Epirote League until 170 BC when they were annexed by the Roman Republic.
Contents |
[edit] Descriptions by ancient writers
According to Strabo,[3] the Chaonians, along with the Molossians, were the most famous among the fourteen tribes of Epirus, because they once ruled over the whole of Epirus.
The Illyrians occupied the coastal and hinterland regions further north; however, the Periplus of Pseudo-Scylax makes a clear distinction between the Chaonians and the Illyrian tribes.[4] The Illyrians and Chaonians appear to have had — at least at times — a confrontational relationship; Polybius recounts a devastating raid mounted in 230 BC by the Illyrians against Phoenice, the chief city of the Chaonians. The incident had major political ramifications. Many Italian traders who were in the town at the time of the sacking were killed or enslaved by the Illyrians, prompting the Roman Republic to launch the first of the two Illyrian Wars the following year.[5]
[edit] Political structure
The Chaonians were settled Kata Komas (Greek: Κατά Κώμας) meaning in a collection of villages and not in an organized polis (despite the fact that they called their community a polis) and were a tribal state in the 5th century BC.[6] Aristophanes had used the name of the tribe as a pun to illustrate the chaos of Athenian foreign policy.[7] According to Thucydides, their leaders were chosen on an annual basis; he names two such leaders, Photius and Nikanor "from the ruling lineage".[8] In the 4th century BC, the Chaonians adopted the term prostates (Greek: Προστάτες, "protectors") to describe their leaders, like most Greek tribal states at the time. Other terms for office were grammateus (Greek: Γραμματέυς, "secretary"), demiourgoi (Greek: Δημιουργοί, "creators"), hieromnemones (Greek: Ιερομνήμονες, "of the sacred memory") and synarchontes (Greek: Συνάρχοντες, "co-rulers").[9][10] They joined the Epirote League, founded in 325/320 BC, uniting their territories with those of the Thesprotians and Molossians in a loosely federated state that became a major power in the region until it was conquered by Rome in 170 BC.[11] During the 2nd century, the Prasaebi replaced the Chaones in their control of Buthrotum, as attested in inscriptions from that period.
[edit] Geography
- Further information: Chaonia
Chaonia or Chaon (Ancient Greek: Χαονία or Χάων) was the name of the northwestern part of Epirus. Strabo in Geography[12] places Chaonia as part of Epirus, and reached from the city of Onchesmos (now called Saranda) in the north, to the River Thyamis in the south, and as far as the Ambracian Gulf, including to the south the ancient city of Cestrine (now called Filiates), and represented the southernmost border to the wider region of Illyria. The Roman historian Appian mentions Chaonia as the southern border along with Macedon,Thrace and Thesprotia in his description and geography of the Illyrian Wars indicating that beyond these regions the Illyrians dwell.[13] Phoenice (Phoinike) was the most important city of the Chaonians.[14] The strength of the Chaonian tribes prevented the Greek city-states from establishing any colonies on the coast of Chaonia.[15]
[edit] Mythological origins
The Chaonians claimed that their royal house was of Trojan descent, asserting ancestry through the eponymous hero Chaon (Ancient Greek: Χάων) who gave his name to Chaonia. The stories are unclear as to whether he was the friend or the brother of Helenus, the son of Priam of Troy, but in either case, he accompanied him to the court of Neoptolemus, the son of Achilles who was credited with founding the city of Buthrotum.[16] The stories concerning Chaon's death are as unclear as that of his relationship to Helenus. Chaon was either killed in a hunting accident or offered himself as a sacrifice to the gods during an epidemic, thus saving the lives of his countrymen. In either case, when Helenus became the ruler of the country, he named a part of the kingdom after Chaon.[17] The Chaonians' neighbours, the Molossians and Thesprotians, also asserted Trojan ancestry. It has been suggested that the very similar Chaaonian origin-myth may have arisen as a response to the self-definitions of the Molossians and Thesprotians.[18]
[edit] List of Chaonians
- Photius and Nicanor , leaders of Chaones in Peloponnesian war (ca. 431-421 BC)
- Doropsos Δόροψος theorodokos in Epidauros (ca. 365 BC)[19]
- Antanor (son of Euthymides) proxenos in Delphi (325-275 bc)[20]
- Peukestos proxenos in Thyrrheion,Acarnania (3rd c. BC) -πητοῦ Χάονα Πευκεστόν, Σωτι-[21]
- Myrtilos officer, he gave proxeny decree to Boeotian Kallimelos (late 3rd c. BC) [22]
- Boiskos (son of Messaneos) prostates (late 3rd c. BC)[23]
- Lykidas (son of Hellinos) prostates (ca. 232-168 BC)[24]
- -tos (son of Lysias) winner in Pale(wrestling) Panathenaics 194/3 BC[25]
- Charops, father of Machatas, father of Charops the younger , philoroman politicians (2th c.BC)[26]
[edit] References
- ^ Hammond, NGL (1994). Philip of Macedon. London, UK: Duckworth. "Epirus was a land of milk and animal products...The social unit was a small tribe, consisting of several nomadic or semi-nomadic groups, and these tribes, of which more than seventy names are known, coalesced into large tribal coalitions, three in number: Thesprotians, Molossians and Chaonians...We know from the discovery of inscriptions that these tribes were speaking the Greek language (in a West-Greek dialect)"
- ^ Virgil, Aeneid, 3.295
- ^ Strabo. The Geography, Book VII, Chapter 7.5. [1]
- ^ James Cowles Prichard, Researches Into the Physical History of Mankind, p. 470. Sherwood, Gilbert & Piper, 1841.
- ^ R. M. Errington, "Rome and Greece to 205 BC", in The Cambridge Ancient History, 2nd ed., vol. 8: 81-106
- ^ Heine, Thomas. Yet More Studies in the Ancient Greek Polis, 1997, ISBN 3515072225. When the Chaonian people in the mid-fourth century consulted the oracle of Zeus at Dodona they called their own community a polis although at that time the Chaonians were settled Kata komas and must have been an ethnos rather than a polis.
- ^ Reckford, Kenneth J. Aristophanes' Old-And-New Comedy, 1987, ISBN 0807817201, p. 167.
- ^ Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War 2. 80. 5.
- ^ Horsley, G. H. R. New Documents Illustrating Early Christianity, 1987, ISBN 0858375990. More recently still N.G.L. Hammond JHS 105 1985 156-160 has examined a number or Macedonian terms for office in the period 336-309 BC... prostates was the name for the senior civic official beside the king...and various tribal states like (the Molossoi and Chaonians).
- ^ Hornblower, Simon. The Greek World, 479-323 B.C., 2002, ISBN 0415163269. "Even before about 385 the Molossian tribes had combined with the neighbouring Thesprotians and Chaonians to form a Molossian state with a king and officials called prostates (president), grammateus (secretary), and tribal representatives called demiourgoi also hieromnemones some kind of Cult figure (See for all of this SGDI 1334-67, Also seg 23.471,15 synarchontes federal officials)"..."Orestis was part of the federal organisation".
- ^ P. R. Franke, "Pyrrhus", in The Cambridge Ancient History VII Part 2: The Rise of Rome to 220 BC, p. 469, ed. Frank William Walbank. Cambridge University Press, 1984. ISBN 0521234468.
- ^ Strabo. The Geography, Book VII, Chapter 7.5. [2]
- ^ http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=App.+Ill.+1.1 Appian, The Foreign Wars (ed. Horace White),Ill. 1.1,THE ILLYRIAN WARS CHAPTER I,"THE Greeks call those people Illyrians who occupy the region beyond Macedonia and Thrace from Chaonia and Thesprotia to the river Ister (Danube). This is the length of the country. Its breadth is from Macedonia and the mountains of Thrace to Pannonia and the Adriatic and the foot-hills of the Alps. Its breadth is five days' journey and its length thirty -- so the Greek writers say. The Romans measured the country and found its length to be upward of 6000 stades and its width about 1200."
- ^ Herman, Mogens. An Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis, 2004, p. 348, ISBN 0198140991. Phoinike seems to have been the political center of the Chaonians.
- ^ N.G.L. Hammond, "Illyris, Epirus and Macedonia", in The Cambridge Ancient History III Part 3: The expansion of the Greek world, eighth to sixth centuries B.C., p. 269. Cambridge University Press, 1925. ISBN 0521234476
- ^ Virgil. Aeneid, 3.295.
- ^ Grimal, Pierre. "Chaon." The Dictionary of Classical Mythology. Trans. A. R. Maxwell-Hyslop. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell, 1986, p. 98.
- ^ Irad Malkin, The Returns of Odysseus: Colonization and Ethnicity, p. 138. University of California Press, 1998. ISBN 0520211855
- ^ IG IV²,1 95 col I.1 line 29
- ^ FD III 4:409 II.7
- ^ IG IX,1² 2:243
- ^ Cabanes, L'Épire 547,16
- ^ SEG 38:468
- ^ SEG 48:683 (manumission record)
- ^ IG II² 2313 col II.8 line 34
- ^ Hannibal's Legacy: The Hannibalic War's Effects on Roman Life [3] by Arnold Joseph Toynbee