The tribe is mentioned only by
Livy (1st century BC – 1st century AD) as Penestae (in
Latin). They appear several times in Livy's accounts of the
Third Roman-Macedonian War, which occurred in the early 2nd century BC.[2]
Based on the presence of the typical
Illyrian suffix -st-, the name is considered to be Illyrian, such as Pirustae, for example.[5][6] However, the name may also be connected to the Πενέσται (Penestai), a
Thessalian social class, which can alternatively be considered a simple linguistic change of the
Ancient Greek term Μενέσται (Menéstai, "those who remain"), as already pointed out by
Archemachus of Euboea, or related to the Ancient Greek πένης (pénes, "poor").[6]
S o u t h e r n I l l y r i a i n t h e 3rd – 2nd c e n t u r i e s B C E
The tribe inhabited Penestia, an inland region in southeastern
Illyria, located around the
Black Drin valley north of
Lake Ohrid. The Penestae were bordered by the
Dassaretii and
Parthini to the south, the
Dardani to the north (from which they were separated by the
Skardon (or Scardus) Mountains). In the east, the Penestae were neighboured by
Ancient Macedonia. The nearby
Stuberra (present-day
Čepigovo) was used by
Perseus of Macedon to access
Uscana in Penestia from the south-east. The westernmost territory of the Penestae extended to the domains of the
Labeatae.[2][7]
Settlements
The chief settlement of the Penestae was
Uscana, most likely located in the valley of the Black Drin in the region of
Dibra.[8] The territory of the Penestae appears to have been densely populated, because Livy mentions the existence of eleven fortified settlements, in addition to Uscana,
Draudacum and
Oaeneum,[9] the latter being a strategically important settlement on the route to the tribal region of the
Labeatae, over which
Gentius ruled.[7] Draudacum and Oaeneum lied within the
Pollog Valley region, which was inhabited and ruled by both the Penestae and the
Dardanians.[10][11][12]
History
In Livy's accounts of the
Third Macedonian War, which was fought between the
Roman Republic and the
Kingdom of Macedon in the years 171–168 BC, the Penestae are not considered part of the realm of the Illyrian king Gentius.[13] During the that war the Penestae, alongside the
Parthini, remained loyal to
Rome.[14]
Perseus of Macedon, after his successful diplomatic actions in
Epirus and military campaigns against the
Dardani, also undertook several campaigns in Penestia. Firstly, he stopped at
Stuberra for supplies and equipment, and then he proceeded to
Uscana in Penestian territory.[7]
Siege of Uscana
The stronghold of
Uscana was occupied by a mixed force of
Romans and
Illyrians. The city resisted intensely until its inhabitants realized that they did not have enough grain to counter the siege over a much longer period, noting that Perseus'
Macedonian forces brought up to the walls their siege sheds. Therefore the Romans asked the Macedonian king to be allowed to leave with their properties and weapons or with their life and freedom. Perseus granted the first request, but then he confiscated the soldiers' weapons, took the Romans into custody and brought them to Stuberra. Meanwhile the Macedonian king sold into slavery the Illyrian soldiers and the inhabitants of the town.[7]
Siege of Oaeneum
The Macedonian king aimed also to capture
Oaeneum, another Penestian town strategically located on the route to the territory of the
Labeatae and the Illyrian kingdom of
Gentius. Hence Perseus left Stuberra and returned to Penestia. Proceeding on the way to Oaeneum he captured also
Draudacum and eleven other strongholds, mainly without undertaking battles; nevertheless he succeeded in taking 1,500 Roman soldiers prisoner. In order to besiege Oaeneum, the Macedonians built a mound against the
city-wall on which ladders were brought up by the soldiers. The city was besieged and subdued by the Macedonians, who murdered the adult males and took into custody the women and children. The booty obtained from the victory over the city was distributed to Perseus' men. The Macedonian victorious army returned to Stuberra, from where Perseus immediately sent envoys to Genthius to inform him about the great successes he achieved that year, and to urge the Illyrian king to join
Macedon against
Rome. Perseus' ambassadors crossed the
Skardus Mountains with great difficulty, then they went down to the
Illyrian coast arriving in
Scodra. Genthius therefore summoned them to
Lissus.[7]
The idiom spoken by the Penestae is included in the southern
Illyrian onomastic province in modern linguistics.[15][16] The territory they inhabited belongs to the area that is considered in current scholarship as the linguistic core of Illyrian.[17]
^Polomé 1983, p. 537: "The old kingdom of Illyria, south of Lissos, covered the territory of several tribes who shared a common language, apparently of Indo-European stock: the Taulantii, on the coast, south of Dyrrachium; the Parthini, north of this town; the Dassaretae, inland, near Lake Lychnidos and in the Drin valley; north of them were the Penestae; in the mountains, an older group, the Enchelei, lingered on." [footnote 84:] "In the oldest sources, the term 'Illyrian' appears to be restricted to the tribes of the Illyricum regnum (PAPAZOGLU, 1965). Linguistically, it can only legitimately be applied to the southeastern part of the expanded Roman Illyricum; the Delmatae and the Pannonii to the northwest mus have constituted an ethnically and linguistically distinct group (KATIČIĆ, 1968: 367-8)."
^Šašel Kos 2002, p. 117: "The Illyrian peoples, mentioned in the sources in which the events concerning the Illyrian kingdom are narrated – to name the most outstanding – are the Taulantii, Atintani, Parthini, Enchelei, Penestae, Dassaretii, Ardiaei, Labeates, and the Daorsi. All of these peoples were conceivably more or less closely related in terms of culture, institutions and language. Many of them may have had their own kings, some of whom attained great power and actively took part in the struggle for power in the Hellenistic world. The name “Illyrian” must have carried enough prestige at the time of the rise of the Ardiaean dynasty within the Illyrian kingdom that it was imposed at a later date, when the Romans conquered Illyria and the rest of the Balkans, as the official name of the future provinces of Dalmatia and Pannonia."
^Haebler 2002, p. 475: "To be cautious, only that language, which was spread along the south-eastern Adriatic coast northward and southward from Dyrrhachium (today Durrës) and inland to Lake Lychnidos (today Ohrid) in the settlement area of the Illyrian tribes of the Parthini, Taulanti, Dassaretae and Penestae, must be considered as Illyrian at present."
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