Tribal aristocracy and pre-urban development first emerged in Dardania from the 6th–5th centuries BC. This proto-urban development was followed by the creation of urban centers and the emergence of craftsmanship, and a Dardanian
polity began to develop from the fourth century. Moreover, Dardani contact with the
Mediterranean world began early and intensified during the Iron Age. Trade connections with the
Ancient Greek world developed from the seventh century onwards. Material culture and accounts in classical sources suggest that Dardanian society reached an advanced phase of development. The first written references to the Dardani are as opponents of Macedon in the fourth century, clashing with
Philip II who managed to subdue them and their neighbors in 345. However, Philip took no new territory and ended Macedon's borders near the Danube watershed in
Paeonia. The Dardani then remained quiet until Philip's assassination in 336, after which they began planning to revolt alongside the
Illyrians and the
Thracians. The first century historian
Pompey Trogue reports that these
barbarous nations...were of wavering faith and perfidious dispositions and that only
Alexander III's smooth succession averted disaster. Indeed, the Dardani are not mentioned in any ancient accounts of Alexander's Balkan campaign in 335. They remain absent from our sources until 284 when
Lysimachus seized Paeonia, which had revolted earlier in 322, forcing her prince Ariston to flee to Dardania. It appears that the Dardani escaped the Macedonian yoke entirely during the
Wars of the Diadochi as they again began to freely raid Upper Greece under the reign of Lysimachus. Thereafter the Dardani became a constant threat to Macedonia's northern borders. In 279, during a
Celtic incursion of the Balkans,
Dardania itself began to be raided by several tribes on their way to plunder Greece. In that same year an unnamed Dardanian king offered 20,000 warriors to the Macedonian king
Ptolemy Ceraunus to stop the invading Celts. Ptolemy found this offer insulting and rudely refused the embassy by saying that the Macedonians were in a sad condition if, after having subdued the whole east without assistance, they now required aid from the Dardanians to defend their country; and that he had for soldiers the sons of those who had served under Alexander the Great, and had been victorious throughout the world.Underestimating the Celtic strength, Ptolemy was later captured in battle and subsequently decapitated by their Gallic leader
Bolgios. The tribes then pushed on towards Southern Greece, but were permanently turned back at
Delphi by the Greeks. The remainder withdrew north through Dardania where they were, according to
Diodorous, subsequently destroyed by the Dardani. They then disappear from the written historical record until the 230s BC when a constant series of wars, raids, and counter-raids began against the Macedonians. Following the Celtic invasion, and the consequent diminishment in power of the Macedonians, the influence of Dardania began to grow in the region. In 230, the Dardani under
Longarus captured the strategic city of
Bylazora in Paeonia. At some point in 230–229 in an unknown location in north-west Macedonia, they defeated the Antigonid king
Demetrius II who died shortly the next spring. The Dardanian expansion into Macedonia, similar to the
Ardiaean expansion into Epirus in the same period, may have been part of a broader movement among the Illyrian peoples. Groups of Illyrians began to desert the Ardiaen queen
Teuta at around the same time and join the Dardani, forcing her to end an expedition into
Phoenice. When
Philip V rose to the Macedonian throne, skirmishing with Dardania began in 220-219 and he managed to recapture Bylazora from them in 217. Skirmishes continued in 211 and in 209 when a force of Dardani under Aeropus, probably a pretender to the Macedonian throne, captured
Lychnidus and looted Macedonia taking 20.000 prisoners and retreating before Philip's forces could reach them. In 201,
Bato of Dardania (along with
Pleuratus III the Illyrian and
Amynander of Athamania cooperated with
Roman consul Sulpicius Galba Maximus in his expedition against Philip V. Always being under the menace of Dardanian attacks on Macedonia,
Philip V made an alliance with the
Bastarnae at around 183 and invited them to settle in
Polog, the region of Dardania closest to Macedonia. A joint campaign of the Bastarnae and Macedonians against the Dardanians was organized, but Philip V died and his son
Perseus of Macedon withdrew his forces from the campaign. The Bastarnae crossed the Danube in huge numbers and although they didn't meet the Macedonians, they continued the campaign. Some 30,000 Bastarnae under the command of Clondicus seem to have defeated the Dardani. In 179, the
Bastarnae conquered the Dardani, who later in 174 pushed them out, in a war which proved catastrophic, with a few years later, in 170, the Macedonians defeating the Dardani. Macedonia and Illyria became protectorates of the
Roman Republic in 168. The Dardanian Kingdom retained its sovereignty until 28 BC, when the
Roman Empire under
Augustus conquered the region. The Romans created
the province of
Moesia from parts of Dardania, but later made it
a separate province called Dardania. == Geography ==