Drugarce, pa i tebe nema da te zemam za seriozen. 
Posto sekoj kako ke mu se digne ke napise. Toj drugarot pogore 
Let 3 ne znae deka postoele ALBANOI i deka nemalo fakti za toa (
mozda ke doznae deka postoi nesto sto se vika kniga, pa ke najde)
 
A za toa deka nemalo traga od iliri vo Albanija, mislam deka i ti treba da citas poveke brat.
 
Od Trst pa se do Preveza bile iliri. 
 
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/283125/Illyrian-language
 
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/283105/Illyria
 
The Illyrians, bearers of the Hallstatt culture (
see Hallstatt), were divided into tribes, each a self-governing community with a council of elders and a chosen leader. A strong tribal chieftain, however, could unite several tribes into a kingdom. 
The last and best-known Illyrian kingdom had its capital at Scodra (
modern Shkodër, Albania). One of its most important rulers was 
King Agron (second half of the 3rd century bc), who, in alliance with Demetrius II of Macedonia, defeated the Aetolians (231). Agron, however, died suddenly, and during the minority of his son, his widow, Teuta, acted as regent. Queen Teuta attacked Sicily and the Greek colonies of the coast with part of the Illyrian navy. Simultaneously, she antagonized Rome, which finally sent a large fleet to the eastern shores of the Adriatic. Although Teuta submitted in 228, the Illyrian kingdom of the interior was not destroyed, and a second naval expedition was sent against Illyria in 219. 
Philip V of Macedonia aided his Illyrian neighbours and thus started a protracted war that ended with the conquest of the whole Balkan Peninsula by the Romans. The last Illyrian king, Genthius, surrendered in 168 bc.