The Omphales were counted among the eleven tribes that lived in classical Epirus as listed by
Strabo.[1] They belonged to the northwestern Greek group of tribes.[2] It is not certain whether they were part of the larger Epirote groups of the Chaonians or the Molossians.[1]
By 370 BC, they were part of the Molossian state during the reign of
Neoptolemus I of Epirus.[1] As part of the Molossian koinon they participated in the executive council of the Molossian League; the synarchontes (
Greek: συνάργοντες) with one member.[3] Participation in the council of the Molossian synarchontes is again recorded at an inscription of 344 BC.[4]
Location
The territory of the Omphales according to historians Nicholas G. L. Hammond and P. Cabanes was found between the
Drino and
Aoos rivers. Hammond states that they were a Molossian ethnos (tribe),[5][6] while P. Cabanes suggests that they were a Chaonian one and were assosiacated with the unidentified Chaonian settlement of Ompalion.[7] Both historians agree that they were located between the
Chaonians and the
Parauaei.[7] Hammond additionally states that their area stretched from Old (Upper)
Pogoni to
Antigonia.[7] Hatzopoulos disagrees on this and states that this area was inhabited by the Atintanes instead.[5] Another view presented by Dakaris states that they were located at the region of Kestrine, at the north of the
Thyamis river, in southern
Chaonia.[8]
^Hammond 1982, p. 284: "That they in fact spoke Greek was implied by Herodotus' inclusion of Molossi among the Greek colonists of Asia Minor, but it became demonstrable only when D. Evangelides published two long inscriptions of the Molossian state, set up c. 369 B.C. at Dodona, in Greek with Greek names, Greek patronymics and Greek tribal names such as Celaethi, Omphales, Tripolitae, Triphylae etc."