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Mytilos

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Mytilos
King
Reignc.270 – 231 BC
PredecessorMonunios
FatherMonunios(probable)

MytilosorMytilus(Ancient Greek:Μύτιλος;Latin:Mytilus;ruledc.270 – 231 BC[1]) was anIllyriankingwho reigned in southernIllyria,around the hinterland ofDyrrhachionandApollonia.[2]He was the successor ofMonunios,and probably his son.[3]Mytilus is mentioned byPompeius Trogus(1st century BC) andFrontinus(1st century AD) reporting the events of the military conflict between the Illyrians and theEpirotesunderAlexander II,son ofPyrrhus.[4]From around 270 BC Mytilus minted inDyrrhachionhis own bronze coins bearing the king's name and the symbol of the city.[5]

Biography

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Mytilus reigned in the hinterland ofDyrrachionandApollonia.[2]Mytilus minted his own bronze coins dating back to around 270 BC, with the symbols ofDyrrhachionand the king's name.[6]The fact that his coins were struck in the city mint ofDyrrhachionstresses that he exercised to some extent his authority over the city, as had done his predecessorMonunios.[7]After Monunios, Mytilus is the second Illyrian king to have struck coins bearing his name.[3][2]Coinage ofApolloniafrom the same period bore only his monogram, as well as symbols similar to those of the Aetolian League, an adversary ofEpirus.[8]Copies of the Illyrian coins are kept at theArchaeological Museum in Zagreb,Croatia.[9]The bronze coins had the head of Hercules on the obverse and on the reverse, Heracles' symbols: quiver, bow and mace with the words ΒΑΣΙΛΕΩΣ ΜΥΤΙΛ.[6]

The Illyrian king Mytilus also appears in the historical accounts of ancient writersPompeius Trogus(1st century BC) andFrontinus(1st century AD), which describe the war he waged around 270 BC against the successor ofPyrrhus,Alexander II of Epirus.[4]Mytilus, presumably, retained his authority in Durrës after Alexander II invaded his territory in or around 270 BC. On one occasion, some Epirotes were dressed in Illyrian clothes and were put them to plunder their own sites. Unsuspecting, the Illyrians relaxed their defences and rushed to emulate them, believing that men in front of them were just their own probes.[clarification needed]So they were easy victims of Epirus.[10][11]The control of Durrës andApolloniameans that at the time of Mytilus, the Illyrians had regained the extent and authority it enjoyed in the time ofGlaucias.Mytilus had even taken an excursion into the territory of Epirus.[12]It is during this time thatRomewas first invited to intervene against the Illyrians, Epirotes and the Aetolians in theBalkans.[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Mesihović & Šačić 2015,p. 137.
  2. ^abcCrawford 1985,pp. 220–221: "Some of the native communities also began to produce coinage, in the Hellenistic period, two 'kings' called Monounios and Mytilos reigning in the hinterland of Apollonia and Dyrrhachium (the former silver, the latter bronze), Rhizon (silver as well as bronze), Lissus, Scodra, Olumpa and Lychnus, and the Daorsi and the Labeatae, in the late third or early second centuries."
  3. ^abŠašel Kos 2005,p. 258: "Around 270 BC, soon after Pyrrhus' death, and obviously also after the death of Monunios, the name of king Mytilus appears on bronze coins of Dyrrhachium. He may have been Monunios' son and in any case he was his successor, of whom nothing else is known in the sources."
  4. ^abŠašel Kos 2002,p. 109;Mesihović & Šačić 2015,p. 133.
  5. ^Mesihović & Šačić 2015,p. 133;Šašel Kos 2005,p. 258;Crawford 1985,pp. 220–221.
  6. ^abMesihović & Šačić 2015,p. 133.
  7. ^Šašel Kos 2002,p. 109.
  8. ^Wilkes 1992,p. 129: "No Illyrian production of coins is known before King Monunios struck his coins at Dyrrhachium (see figure 11), followed by Mytilus around ten years later."
  9. ^Duje Rendić-Miočević, Illyrian rulers' coins from the Archaeological Museum in Zagreb.
  10. ^Justin, Prol. XXV
  11. ^Papazoglu, Les Origines...
  12. ^Frontinius II 5,10
  13. ^Cass. Dio. Fr 42.1

Bibliography

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  • Crawford, Michael Hewson(1985).Coinage and Money under the Roman Republic: Italy and the Mediterranean Economy.The Library of Numismatics. Berkeley: University of California Press.ISBN0-520-05506-3.
  • Dzino, Danijel (2010).Illyricum in Roman Politics, 229 BC–AD 68.Cambridge University Press.ISBN978-0-521-19419-8.
  • Mesihović, Salmedin;Šačić, Amra (2015).Historija Ilira[History of Illyrians] (in Bosnian). Sarajevo: Univerzitet u Sarajevu [University of Sarajevo].ISBN978-9958-600-65-4.
  • Šašel Kos, Marjeta (2002)."Pyrrhus and Illyrian Kingdom(s?)".Greek Influence Along the East Adriatic Coast.Knjiga Mediterana.26:101–119.ISBN9531631549.
  • Šašel Kos, Marjeta (2005).Appian and Illyricum.Narodni muzej Slovenije.ISBN961616936X.
  • Wilkes, John (1992).The Illyrians.Wiley-Blackwell.ISBN0-631-19807-5.
  • Winnifrith, Tom (2020).Nobody's Kingdom: A History of Northern Albania.Signal Books.ISBN9781909930919.