20 Greek writers or recorders used not the local tribal name but the general name, which was intelligible to Greek readers. The point is of importance, because Papazoglou, F. in Historia 14 (1965) 143 ff.Google Scholar and again in Les Illyriense et les Albanais,ed. Garašanin, M. (Belgrade 1988)189Google Scholar has argued for the existence of an Illyrian State and has identified Bardylis as king of that State. In BSA 61 (1966)239ff. I disagreed, my view being that there were a number of Illyrian kings, each ruling over his own cluster of tribes, and that Bardylis was the strongest such king c.400-358. Another view has been advanced by Carlier, P. in L’lllyrie meridionale et I’Epire dans I’antiquité, ed. Cabanes, P. (Adosa 1987) 42,Google Scholar that the term ‘the king of the Illyrians’ meant the supreme hegemon of the Illyrians, recognised as military commander by the majority of the Illyrians. However, there is no suggestion of such a system in our sources; we hear rather of the tribes fighting one another (Strabo C 316 init. and 317 fin.), and we do not see any example of such a hegemony, e.g. in 335 B.C. when the kings Glaucias and Cleitus acted as equals and the Autariatae were intending to make a separate attack (Arr. An. 1.5.1). It was the very lack of such a unification of ‘the majority of tribes’ that enabled Philip to defeat them one by one — Bardylis, Grabus, ‘Dardano ceterosque finitimos’, Pleuratus, and Pleurias (see HM 2.21 for their tribes).