The massive walls of Byllis were built around 350 BC when the Illyrians went through a dynamic development founding their own cities. The urban settlement was built on the territory of the community of the
Bylliones on an already existent Illyrian hilltop proto-urban area dating back to the previous century.[10] Later Byllis acquired the trappings of a Hellenistic town,[11] and because the southernmost Illyrian tribes, including the Bylliones, were inclined to become bilingual, it was also a Greek-speaking city.[12] Byllis received sacred ancient Greek envoys, known as
theoroi, during the early 2nd century BC, which only cities that were considered Greek were eligible to receive.[13] The time duration that passed before Illyrian cities were documented on a list of theorodokoi clarifies that acculturation did take place in southern Illyria, however it indicates that the process was gradual.[14]
During the
Roman-Illyrian war in 169/168 BC the Bylliones took part on the
Roman side against the Illyrian king
Gentius. However, the subsequent alliance of Byllis with
Molossians and
Macedonians led to its sacking and destruction by the Romans. After a long decline, in 30 BC the city became a
Romancolony. In Roman times Byllis rose again, also becoming a bishopric in late antiquity.[15]
Name
Attestation
The toponym is attested as Βύλλις, η on epigraphic material from the 3rd-2nd centuries BC, and as ΒουλλίςBoullis by
Ptolemy in his Geography. The city ethnic is attested as ΒυλλίωνByllion on the inscription of an oracular lead tablet from
Dodona dating back to the 4th century BC[16][17] and on coins of the Hellenistic era dating back to the 3rd-2nd centuries BC, or as ΒουλινόςBoulinos by
Pseudo-Scymnus.[16] The city is attested as a
polis exclusively in the work of
Stephanus of Byzantium in the 6th century AD, who mentions it as πόλις 'Ιλλυρίδοςpolis Illyridos,[16][18] and its ethnicon as ΒυλλιδεύςBullideus.[19][20] Stephanus of Byzantium mentions a town called Byllis as a seaside city in Illyria and its foundation legend, according to which the city was supposedly built by
Myrmidons under
Neoptolemus,
returning from the Trojan War towards its homeland.[21] This legendary tradition of the city is reflected also by numismatics of the Hellenistic era,[22] however it is contradicted by archaeological research.[23]
Usage
It has been suggested that the city had its own ethnic, Βυλλιδεύς, with coinage which bore the legend ΒΥΛΛΙΣ minted separately from the coinage of the tribe of the Bylliones which bore the legend ΒΥΛΛΙΟΝΩΝ.[24][25] However both those names appear on coins that were issued by the koinon of the
Bylliones. A recent analysis of the epigraphy and numismatics of the area seems to indicate an alternating use of the names: the ethnos with its territory on the one hand, and the "tribal" polis that was the capital of the ethnos on the other hand, being internally organized with a political authority represented by the decision-making bodies of the koinon of the Bylliones, while representing the urban center of reference for the community.[25]
History
Classical period
Byllis was founded on the territory of the Illyrian community of the
Bylliones around 350 BC, on an already existent proto-urban area dating back to the previous century.[2][1] Initially it was one of the several fortified Illyrian hilltops that controlled the high hills of the region of
Mallakastër.[26] The area was on the edge of the sphere of influence by
Apollonia and
Epidamnos, as well as of Epirus.[27] The foundation of the Illyrian city in the 4th century on the northern edge of the
Aoos valley is probably connected with the presence of bitumen mines near
Selenica, which were located on the opposite edge of the valley.[28]
Mid-4th century BC fortification walls were built with
isodomicashlar layers.[29][16] The walls were 2.25 km long and 3.5 m wide, enclosing an area of 30 hectares around a steep hill.[15] In the sanctuary of
Dodona a 4th-century BC inscription on a lead foil provides the earliest known attestation of the Bylliones, asking to which deity they should sacrifice in order to ensure the safety of their possessions.[30]
Hellenistic period
The city experienced a notable development in the Hellenistic period, representing the chief settlement of the Illyrian koinon of the Bylliones,[31] of which several hilltop centers are found in the lower valley of the
Aoos river.[2] The archaeological remains confirm that in Hellenistic times Byllis was a cultural and political centre of the region.[16] The creation of Hellenistic cities such as Byllis in the territory of southern Albania has been attributed to the successors of
Alexander the Great and
Pyrrhus of Epirus.[32]
In 314 the territorial community of Byllis was occupied by
Cassander of
Macedon. After two years it was under the rule of the Illyrian king
Glaukias of the
Taulantii, who drove out the
Macedonians from the region. Afterwards the area was occupied by
Pyrrhus of Epirus and his son
Alexander II of Epirus. In 270 BC the Illyrian king
Mytilos established control over the hinterland of Apollonia. Nevertheless the life of Byllis proceeded without much alteration.[33]
Local inscriptions begin in the middle of the 4th century BC and are related to a polis-like organization.[dubious –
discuss] They are exclusively in Greek, as are institutions, the titles of the officials and other parts of the organization of the settlement.[34][35] Those inscriptions reveal typical features of the north-western Greek dialect.[36] Archaeological explorations have not yet found a sanctuary or temple in the city of Byllis, however, a series of inscriptions show the adoption of the
Ancient Greek cults of
Zeus,
Hera,
Dionysius and
Artemis.[37] Among the typical Ancient Greek cults found in Byllis are those of
Zeus Tropaios,
Hera Teleia,
Poseidon, Parthenos.[a][36]
Ancient sources and epigraphic material provide evidence that the territory of the Bylliones included, close to the bitumen mines, a
fire sanctuary with an
oracle, named
Nymphaion in ancient Greek historiography, which was located on the border with nearby
Apollonia.[37] The nymphaeum also appears as a fire symbol engraved on coins of Byllis minted in the 3rd-2nd century BC.[37][15] A relief found near Byllis also shows the nymphs and a cloth wrapped around this fire, a scene that is repeated only with the nymphs depicted on a 1st-century BC silver coin of Apollonia, suggesting an admixture of
local traditions and religions with the forms and practices brought by
Greek colonists at Apollonia. Under Greek influence the local Illyrian spontaneous and
naturalistic cult started its canonization.[38]
The corpus of the names in Hellenistic epigraphic material mainly belong to the
northern Greek onomastic area (e.g. Alexander, Andriscus, Archelaus, Kebbas, Maketa, Machatas, Nikanor, Peukolaos, Phalakros, Philotas, Drimakos and Alexommas)[39] while a few names belong to
Illyrian onomastics (e.g. Preuratos, Triteutas, Trasos).[39] In the second half of the 20th century historians
Fanoula Papazoglu and
N.G.L. Hammond have asserted that Byllis was an
Ancient Greek foundation on the territory of the Illyrian Bylliones,[40] and
Miltiades Hatzopoulos (1997) has asserted that it was the northernmost Greek city of non-colonial foundation in the region.[41] In the 21st century scholars consider Byllis as an Illyrian city that later acquired the trappings of a
Hellenistic town, becoming very much organized on a Greek model.[11][14][42][43][28]
Because the southernmost Illyrian tribes, including the Bylliones, were inclined to become bilingual, it was also a Greek-speaking city.[12] Byllis received ancient Greek sacred envoys (
theoroi) from
Delphi, during the early 2nd century BC. Only cities that were considered Greek were eligible to receive theoroi, which indicates that by this time Byllis was considered a Greek city or that its inhabitants had become Greek-speaking.[13] The time duration that passed before Illyrian cities were documented on a list of theorodokoi clarifies that acculturation did take place in southern Illyria, however it indicates that the process was gradual.[14]
In the Hellenistic era (3rd century BC) a stadium, a theatre, an agora, two stoas, a cistern and a peristyle temple were built in the city.[44][16] There were 6 gates in the city walls. The road coming from
Apollonia passed through two of them, crossing Byllis in the direction of the narrows of gorges of the
Vjosa river on the way to
Macedonia or those of
Antigonia in the direction of
Epirus.[citation needed] In 2011 during a road reconstruction near the archaeological park found in the site a statue of the Hellenistic era, which may depict an Illyrian soldier or a war deity, was discovered.[45][better source needed]
The Illyrian koinon of the Bylliones, which had been
hellenized to a degree and was bilingual,[46] was a coalition of one or two poleis,[47] as attested after 232 BC.[48] The league was restricted to Byllis and
Nikaea,[49] and Byllis considered Nikaia as one of its
demes.[47] Nikaia was a member of the league, as a 2nd-century BC inscription indicates.[50]
During the
Roman-Illyrian war in 169/168 BC the Bylliones took part on the
Roman side against the Illyrian king
Gentius. However, subsequently Byllis allied with the
Molossians and
Macedonians against the Romans, leading to its sacking and destruction by the Roman army.[15]
After a long decline, the city rose again in 30 BC as a
Roman colony,[15] which is attested by epigraphic material and by
Pliny the Elder,[15] who called it Colonia Bullidensis.[52] Its territory is called Bylliake (Βυλλιακή) by
Strabo.[53] The walls of Byllis carry more than four inscriptions written in Greek with details regarding their construction by the engineer Victorinus, as ordered by
Emperor Justinian I (483-565).[54][55]
During the early Christian period Byllis remained an important settlement in Epirus Nova though it was reduced in size. A significant number of
basilica churches have been unearthed which contained mosaic floors and various carvings.[56] Two of those basilicas had possibly
diaconicon chambers attached,[57] while a
baptistery was established at basicila B.[58]
Association with see of Apollonia
One of the participants in the
Council of Ephesus in 431 was a Felix who signed once as Bishop of
Apollonia and Byllis, at another time as Bishop of Apollonia. Some assume that the two towns formed a single episcopal see, others suppose he was, strictly speaking, Bishop only of Apollonia, but was temporarily in charge also of Byllis during a vacancy of that see. At the
Council of Chalcedon in 451, Eusebius subscribes simply as Bishop of Apollonia. In the letter of the bishops of
Epirus Nova to the Byzantine Emperor
Leo I in 458, Philocharis subscribed as Bishop of what the manuscripts call "Vallidus", and which editors think should be corrected to "Byllis". Whether Philocharis is to be considered Bishop also of Apollonia depends on the interpretation of the position of Felix in 431.[59][60][61]
Beaudry, Nicolas, Chevalier, Pascale (2020). 'Les espaces domestiques et économiques du groupe épiscopal protobyzantin de Byllis (Albanie)', Archaeology of a World of Changes. Late Roman and Early Byzantine Architecture, Sculpture and Landscapes, Oxford, pp. 201–218.
Beaudry, Nicolas (2010). 'Një punishte për prodhimin e verës në Bylisi', Monumentet 28, pp. 41–50.
Belli Pasqua, Roberta (2017). Lavarone, Massimo (ed.). "Ricerca archeologica e valorizzazione: riflessioni sul Parco Archeologico di Byllis (Albania)". Quaderni Friulani di Archeologia (XXVII). Società Friulana di Archeologia: 89–97.
ISSN1122-7133.
Bowden, William (2003). Epirus Vetus: The Archaeology of a Late Antique Province. Duckworth.
ISBN0-7156-3116-0.
Chevalier, Pascale, et al. (2003). 'Trois basiliques et un groupe épiscopal des Ve-VIe siècles réétudiés à Byllis (Albanie)', Hortus Artium Medievalium 9, pp. 155–165.
Fiedler, M.; Lahi, B.; Shehi, E.; Pánczél, S.-P.; Velo, K.; Döhner, Gregor (2021). "Ausgrabungen in der Kleinsiedlung Babunjë bei Apollonia (Albanien) Bericht zu den Kampagnen 2018–2019". Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Römische Abteilung (RM). 127: 110–144.
Hammond, N. G. L. (1989). "The Illyrian Atintani, the Epirotic Atintanes and the Roman Protectorate". The Journal of Roman Studies. 79: 11–25.
doi:
10.2307/301177.
JSTOR301177.
S2CID162831458.
Haxhimihali, Marin (2004). 'Byllis et sa région à la lumière des sources écrites du VIe siècle', L'Illyrie méridionale et l'Épire dans l'Antiquité IV, Paris, pp. 463–466.
Hansen, Mogens Herman; Nielsen, Thomas Heine (2004). An Inventory of Archaic and Classical Poleis. Oxford University Press.
ISBN978-0-19-814099-3.
Hatzopoulos, M. B.; Sakellariou, M.; Loukopoulou, L. D. (1997). Epirus, Four Thousand Years of Greek History and Civilization. Ekdotike Athenon.
ISBN960-213-377-5.
Hodges, Richard (2021). "Seeking salvation at Byllis in the 6th century". Journal of Roman Archaeology. Cambridge University Press: 1–7.
doi:
10.1017/S1047759421000660.
S2CID250284278.
Hoti, Afrim (2022).
"Dyrrhachium bizantina e il suo territorio (VI-VIII sec.)". In Sonia Antonelli; Vasco La Salvia; Maria Cristina Mancini; Oliva Menozzi; Marco Moderato; Maria Carla Somma (eds.). Archaeologiae Una storia al plural: Studi in memoria di Sara Santoro. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd. pp. 245–250.
ISBN9781803272979.
Lasagni, Chiara (2019). Le realtà locali nel mondo greco: Ricerche su poleis ed ethne della Grecia occidentale. Studi e testi di epigrafia. Edizioni dell'Orso.
ISBN978-88-6274-962-6.
^
abLippert & Matzinger 2021, pp. 101–102: "Das Koinon der Byllionen hatte ihren Hauptsitz in Byllis rund 5 km nordöst-lich von Nikaia und ebenfalls am rechten Ufer der Vjosa (> Abb. 30). Die Stadt wurde urn 350 v. Chr. auf einem steilen Hügel angelegt und umfasste eine Fläche von 30 ha."
^
abcBelli Pasqua 2014, p. 427: "Fondata intorno alla metà del IV a.C. in una zona già sede di abitati protourbani risalenti al secolo precedente, Byllis fu la sede principale della comunità territoriale dei Bylliones, della quale sono stati individuati numerosi centri, dislocati sulle colline che delimitano la valle del fiume Vjosa."
^Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. (23 November 2020).
Ancient Macedonia. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 212.
ISBN978-3-11-071868-3. Byllis, city on the border between Illyria and Epirus
^Abdy, Richard Anthony (2007).
Roman Butrint: An Assessment. Oxbow Books for the Butrint Foundation. p. 190.
ISBN978-1-84217-234-6. the Caesarean colony at Corinth, and possible Caesarean colonies at Dyme and Byllis, represent the most obvious impact of Roman settlement in Epirus and Achaea .
^
abWinnifrith 2002, p. 58: "There are however, some other sites in Southern Albania which cannot be attributed to sudden Macedonian or Molossian advance, notably Amantia, Byllis and Selce, thought by some to be Pelium, where Alexander the Great fought a difficult campaign. Their massive walls were constructed before the end of the fourth century, and the literary sources talk of them as Illyrian rather than Epirote or Macedonian foundations. Later Amantia and Byllis acquired the trappings of a Hellenistic town."
^
abN.G.L Hammond.
Perspectives on Albania. Macmillan, 1992.
ISBN978-0-333-51282-1, p. 37: The southernmost Illyrian tribes tended to become bilingual. Thus Byllis, the largest city in the territory of the Illyrian Bylliones, was a Greek-speaking city, visited by Greek envoys from the shrines of Greece.
^
abPeter Allan Hansen.
Carmina epigraphica Graeca. Novus Eboracus, 1983.
ISBN978-3-11-008387-3, p. 295: "Sacred envoys from Greek sanctuaries visited Greek cities only: Dyrrachium, Apollonia, Oricum, Amantia and Byllis (BCH 45 [1921], 1f.), from which it appears that Byllis was a Greek city, founded probably by Pyrrhus, or that its citizens, the Byllideis, had become Greek-speaking.".
^
abcStocker 2009, p. 309: "The Argive list also included two specific cities in Chaonia, Phoinice and Himara, both of which must have been Greek, but no "Illyrian" cities. A century later, however, on the Delphic list (ca. 220-189 B.C.), Byllis and Abantiai were included among the recipients of a sacred envoy.1102 The length of time that elapsed before Illyrian cities were recorded on a list of theorodokoi makes it clear that acculturation did occur in southern Illyria, but that the process was gradual."
^
abLippert & Matzinger 2021, p. 78: "Vielleicht besteht ein gewisser Zusammenhang mit der Gründung der illyrischen Stadt Byllis im 4. Jh. am gegenüber liegenden Talrand."
^Chevalier & Beaudry 2018, p. 436: "Fondée au IVe siècle av. J.-C., la capitale de la tribu illyrienne des Bylliones connaît un essor notable à la période hellénistique."
^Winnifrith, T. J. (5 May 2021).
Nobody's Kingdom: A History of Northern Albania. Andrews UK Limited. p. 27.
ISBN978-1-909930-96-4. Alexander's successors and then Pyrrhus were also powerful in Southern Albnia, and the creation of Hellenistic cities like Byllis and Amantia with impressive amphitheatres should not be attributed to a sudden surge of Illyrian strength.
^Hammond, N. G. L. (1989). "The Illyrian Atintani, the Epirotic Atintanes and the Roman Protectorate". The Journal of Roman Studies. 79: 11–25.
doi:
10.2307/301177.
ISSN0075-4358.
JSTOR301177.
S2CID162831458. The fallacy of supposing that the cities of northern Epirus were 'Illyrian cities', made clear in my book Epirus in I967, has been reasserted by F. Papazoglou I986, 439 as regards Amantia, Byllis, Nicaea and Olympe ('J'ai dit 'a bon escient "cites grecques"... There is little point in proposing an Illyrian label for cities in which the language, the institutions, the officials, the onomastics, the city-planning and the fortifications were Greek.
^
abHatzopoulos, Sakellariou & Loukopoulou 1997, p. 144: "The texts in the inscriptions of the city date from the middle of the 4th century B.C. and reveal typical features of the north-western Greek dialect. The cults of the cities are Greek (Zeus Tropaios72, Hera Teleia73, Poseidon ? 4, Parthenos75 etc .), as are the political institutions, though it is difficult to clarify their precise content "
^Hatzopoulos, Sakellariou & Loukopoulou 1997, pp.
144-145: "... the omasticon of Byllis, Nikaia and their regions consists of Greek names...This important testimony to the basically Greek character of the inhabitants is not invalidated by the presence of a few Illyrians names (Preuratos...)" ... "Hammond asserts that Byllis was a Greek colony founded in the chora of the Illyrian Bylliones" ... "Fanoula Papazoglou also speaks of "Greek foundations on barbarian territory".
^Papadopoulos 2016, p. 382: "...indigenous sites that became, by the 4th century BC or later, cities very much organised on a Greek model (e.g. Byllis, Nikaia, Amantia, Lissos)." p. 383: "Then there was the establishment of a new type of site in the Illyrian hinterland, away from the coastal areas usually inhabited by Greeks, especially during the developed Iron Age, which have come to be known as ‘proto-urban’ centres (for general overviews, see Lafe 2003; Ceka 2011). These proto-urban centres are different to komai in many important respects, not least that they are fortified. It is not yet fully understood whether sites such as Margëlliç, Gurëzezë, Mashkjezë, Byllis, Klos/Nikaia and Dimal (Kalaja e Krotinës) represent true towns, hilltop refuges, or regional trading and meeting places (for bibliography on these sites, see Papadopoulos et al. 2007: 108; 2014: 8–9)... Also unclear are the processes by which these Illyrian ‘proto-urban’ sites developed, as well as the relationship of these centres to one another and to the coastal colonies."
^Lasagni 2019, p. 73: "poleis illiriche ellenizzate di Byllis o Amantia" ... Eckstein 2008, 52-54 (cit. a pagina 53): «Whereas Apollonia was a Roman amicus, no links were established with the Hellenized Illyrian city-states of Byllis and Amantia, ...
^Robert, L. "Discours inaugaural", L' Illyrie méridionale et L'Épire dans l'Antiquité, Actes du colloque international de Clermont-Ferrand. Clermont-Ferrand, 1984, p. 14.
^Ceka and Mucaj (2005). Byllis. Migjeni. pp. 108–109.
ISBN99943-672-7-7.
^Chalkia, Eugenia (1997). "Early Christian Art". Epirus. Ekdotike Athenon: 166–81.
ISBN9789602133712. A similar shrinkage occurred at Byllis ... was reduced to only 11, but the town did not lose its importance, which is attested by the discovery of a great number of basilicas richly adorned with carving and mosaic floors.
^Chalkia, Eugenia (1997). "Early Christian Art". Epirus. Ekdotike Athenon: 166–81.
ISBN9789602133712. "Among the southern annexes, an apsidal room with its own atrium stood apart and seems to have served as the diakonikon of the church, where the faithful deposited their offerings .
^Chalkia, Eugenia (1997). "Early Christian Art". Epirus. Ekdotike Athenon: 166–81.
ISBN9789602133712. In basilica B at Byllis... the baptisteries take the form of a simple rectangular room on the south side of the church
^Daniele Farlati-Jacopo Coleti, Illyricum Sacrum, vol. VII, Venezia 1817,
pp. 395-396