Category
page 1Ancient Lyncestians
Leonnatus
Leonnatus (; 356 BC – 322 BC) was a Macedonian officer of Alexander the Great and one of the diadochi.
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== Early life and background ==
Leonnatus was a member of the royal house of Lyncestis, a small Greek kingdom that had been included in Macedonia by King Philip II of Macedon. The Suda records that Leonnatus was related to Eurydice I, mother of Philip II of Macedon.

Lynkestis
thumb|300px|Lynkestis had been originally an autonomous kingdom in Upper Macedonia outside the original territory of the Kingdom of Macedon (blue area). After Philip II's expansion in the second half of the 4th century BC Lynkestis was incorporated into his kingdom (light blue area).
Lynkestis, Lyncestis, Lyngistis, Lynkos or Lyncus ( or Λύγκος or Lyncus) was a region and principality traditionally located in Upper Macedonia. It was the northernmost mountainous region of Upper Macedonia, located east of the Prespa Lakes.
Alexander of Lyncestis
4th-century BC Greek general
Sirras
Sirras or Sirrhas (; d. 390 BC) was the son-in-law of the king of Lynkestis, Arrhabaeus ( 423–393 BC), having married his daughter Irra. He participated in an Illyrian-Lynkestian coalition's defeat of the attempted invasion of Lynkestis by the Macedonian king Archelaus. He may have been a Lynkestian prince-regent or an Illyrian chieftain, part of the Illyrian force in a previous and also successful Illyrian-Lynkestian coalition against Sparta and Macedon during the Peloponnesian War.
Aeropus of Lyncestis
4th-century BC Macedonian commander
Arrhabaeus
Arrhabaeus () or Arrhibaeus may refer to:
Amyntas
4th-century BC Macedonian general