Ardiaean

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English

Etymology

From Ardiaei +‎ -an.

Adjective

Ardiaean (comparative more Ardiaean, superlative most Ardiaean)

  1. Pertaining to the Ardiaei.
    • 2011, Joseph Roisman, Ian Worthington, A Companion to Ancient Macedonia, page 228:
      The Ardiaean monarchy, whose warships had caused serious trouble in the Straits of Otranto, was punished and greatly reduced in power; Rome also gained as informal 'friends' several Greek cities on the Illyrian coast and a couple of tribes a bit farther inland, all of which had been threatened by the Ardiaei.
    • 2012, Arthur M. Eckstein, Rome Enters the Greek East:
      This shows the main Roman concern in the region—to protect Italian merchants in the Stratis of Otranto from Ardiaean piracy.
    • 2016, Gareth C. Sampson, Rome Spreads Her Wings:
      With these ports under Roman control, the Ardiaean challenge to Roman mastery of the Adriatic would be ended.

Noun

Ardiaean (plural Ardiaeans)

  1. A member of the Ardiaei nation.
    • 2008, Gillian Gloyer, Albania: The Bradt Travel Guide, page 4:
      The Ardiaeans were seafarers – their coins ( and the modern 20 lek coin ) show a small, fast galley called a liburnis, which was a particular favourite of pirates – and in 229BC their attacks on Italian ships brought them to war with Rome, then emerging as the most powerful state in Italy.
    • 2010, Frances Anne Pownall, Lessons from the Past, page 152:
      As a result, some of the Ardiaeans are killed by the Celts, while others throw themselves into a river, unable to control their stomachs. Thus, as a direct result of their lack of self-control, the Ardiaeans are destroyed by their enemies in a very shameful way.
    • 2023, Michael L. Galaty, Lorenc Bejko, Archaeological Investigations in a Northern Albanian Province, page 443:
      The first named Illyrian "king" was Pleuratus II, an Ardiaean, who reigned from 260–250 BC.