Category
page 13rd-century BC monarchs in Europe
Agathocles of Syracuse
Greek tyrant of Syracuse from 317 to 289 BC
Hiero II of Syracuse
3rd-century BC Sicilian Greek ruler
Agis IV
king of Sparta

Nabis
Last king of Sparta from 207 to 192 BC

Cleomenes III
king of Sparta

Leonidas II
King of Sparta
Areus I
King of Sparta from 309 to 265
Agron of Illyria
king of Ardiaean Kingdom
Archidamus V
king of Sparta ca. 228 BCE
Cleombrotus II
king of Sparta
Acrotatus
Agiad King of Sparta from 265 to 262 BC
Eucleidas
Eucleidas () reigned Sparta from 227 BC to 222 BC. He was an Agiad, son of Leonidas II, in the place of the Eurypontid king.
Lykourgos
king of Sparta
Alexandros II of Epirus
king of Epirus from 272 BC to 255 BC
Areus II
child king of Sparta from 262 to 254 BC
Archidamus IV
king of Sparta
Eudamidas III
king of Sparta from 241 to 228 BC
Pelops of Sparta
King of Sparta
Eudamidas II
24th King of Sparta
Neoptolemus II of Epirus
ancient Greek royal
Agesipolis III
King of Sparta

Dromichaetes
Dromichaetes () was king of the Getae on both sides of the lower Danube (present day Romania and Bulgaria) around 300 BC.
Pinnes
King of Ardieai
Bardylis II
illyrian king

Ballaios
Ballaios (; ruled 260 230 BC) was an Illyrian king of the Ardiaei tribe. Attested only in coinage, Ballaios is considered as the predecessor of Agron. He is considered to have been a powerful and influential king as testified by the abundance of his silver and bronze coinage found along both coasts of the Adriatic. A hoard found in 2010 is one of the biggest hoards of ancient coins known, not only from Illyria. The capital of Ballaios' kingdom was Rhizon.
Scerdilaidas
Scerdilaidas or Skerdilaid (; ruled 218–206 BC) was an Illyrian ruler of the Illyrian kingdom under the Labeatan dynasty. Before taking the throne, Scerdilaidas was commander of the Illyrian armies and played a major role in the Illyrian Wars against the Romans.
Longarus
Longarus (ruled c. 231 – 206 BC) was an Illyrian king of the Dardanian Kingdom. Longarus was at war with various Macedonian kings and managed to conquer at different times part of Macedonia. Longarus was an ally of the Paeonian State and liberated the Paeonians in order to open the routes towards Macedonia. Longarus' influence grew and many other Illyrians from the Ardiaean Kingdom joined him.

Mytilus
Mytilos or Mytilus (; ; ruled 270231 BC) was an Illyrian king who reigned in southern Illyria, around the hinterland of Dyrrhachion and Apollonia. He was the successor of Monunios, and probably his son. Mytilus is mentioned by Pompeius Trogus (1st century BC) and Frontinus (1st century AD) reporting the events of the military conflict between the Illyrians and the Epirotes under Alexander II, son of Pyrrhus. From around 270 BC Mytilus minted in Dyrrhachion his own bronze coins bearing the king's name and the symbol of the city.

Monunius
Monounios or Monunius (; ; ruled 290 – 270 BC) was an Illyrian king who reigned in southern Illyria, in the territory of the Taulantii, around the hinterland of Dyrrhachion and Apollonia. He is the first known Illyrian king to have struck his own silver coins, which were minted in Dyrrhachion. The fact that Monounios' coins were struck in the city mint of Dyrrhachion stresses that he exercised to some extent his authority over the city, as did his successor and probably son Mytilos later.
Eurydice
wife of Antipater

Audoleon
Audoleon () was king of the ancient kingdom of Paeonia from 315 until his death in 285 or 284 BC. He succeeded his father, Patraus, under unknown circumstances.
Parisades II
king of the Bosporan Kingdom from 284 to 245 BC
Pleuratus III
king of Illyria

Pleuratus II
illyrian king of the Ardiaean Kingdom c.250 BC
Raizdos
Raizdos (Ῥαίζδος, the Latin form would be Rhaezdus) was possibly a king of the Odrysians in Thrace in the early 3rd century BC. He is attested in an inscription from Delphi as the father of Kotys III, who was king sometime between 276 and 267 BC (the date of the inscription). The date and the names suggest the possibility that Raizdos was the son of Kotys II, himself attested in an inscription from Athens dated to 330 BC (perhaps before he became king, if he is to be identified as a son of Seuthes III). Several scholars have considered the name "Raizdos" a variant orthography of "Roigos", a Th
Rhescuporis I
Odrysian King of Thrace, 240–215 BC
Leukon II of Bosporus
king of the Bosporan Kingdom
Cotys II
king of the Odrysian kingdom of Thrace from c. 300 to c. 280 BC
Spártokos IV
king of the Bosporan Kingdom
Bato of Dardania
chieftain of the Dardani in Illyria
Cotys III
ruled ca. 270 BC

Spártokos III
king of the Bosporan Kingdom from 304 to 284 BC
Hygiainon
Hygiaenon () was an Archon of the Bosporan Kingdom after his predecessor, Leucon II, was slain by his wife Alcathoe in c. 220 BC. Although he was not part of the Spartocid dynasty, he seems to have been a supporter of Camasarye, the heiress and queen of the Bosporan Kingdom. He is said to have been an eminent member of the aristocracy, and backed the unmarried Camasarye, who later married her cousin Paerisades III.
Apollodorus of Cassandreia
tyrant of the ancient Greek city of Cassandreia (formerly Potidaea) in the peninsula of Pallene
Seuthes IV
king of Odrysia (3rd century BC)
Kuji of Colchis
Rhemaxos
Rhemaxos was an ancient king who ruled to the north of Danube around 200 BC and who was the protector of the Greek colonies in Dobruja, receiving a tribute from them in exchange of protection against outside attacks. It appears that the links with the Greek cities lasted a rather long time, as several treaties have been found.
Leon of Paionia
father of Dropion king of Paionia
Istolacio
Istolatios or Istolatius was a warlord and military chief of the Turdetani, he lived in the 3rd century BC. Endowed with great prestige, he organized a large army with Turdetans and Celtiberian and Iberian troops to oppose the Carthaginian invasion of Hamilcar Barca.
Dropion
thumb|right|250px|Paeonia; tribes and environs
Dropion (Greek: Δροπίων; 250–230 BC) was an ancient Paeonian king, the son of Leon of Paionia.