The People of Macedonia affirm that:
1) The ancient Macedonians were a distinct European people, conscious and proud of their nationality, their customs, their language, and their name. The same applies to their descendants today.
2) The ancient Macedonians regarded the Greeks as neighbors not as kinsmen. The Greeks treated the Macedonians as foreigners (‘barbarians”) whose native language was Macedonian not Greek.
3) In 1913, Greece and her Balkan allies Sebia and Bulgaria partitioned Macedonia, and if today a portion of Macedonia belongs to Greece, it is by virtue of an illegal partition of the whole and occupation of a part of Macedonia.
MACEDONIANS THROUGH THE AGES
Throughout antiquity, the Chasia and Kamvounia mountains, Mount Olympus, and the Vale of Tempe separated Macedonia from Greece. On the north, Macedonia extended as far as the Vardar watershed and along the Struma and Mesta valleys, past the city of Blagoevgrad to the sources of the Bistrica River in the Rila Mountain in today’s Bulgaria. Macedonia covered a land area of c. 26,000 square miles.
In the course of the second pre-Christian millennium, the ancient Greeks descended in several migratory waves as goatherds and shepherds from the interior of the Balkans into Greece. Some passed through the Morava-Vardar Valley and across the plain of Thessaly on their way south, while others went south through Epirus. More recent scholars point to Asia Minor as the original Greek homeland.
There is no evidence that prehistoric Macedonia was ever occupied by Greeks.
The Bronze Age Mycenaean Greek civilization, named so after the city of Mycenae on the Peloponnesus, thrived from c. 1400 to 1100 B.C. in mainland Greece and on the Aegean islands. Archaeological finds from Macedonia are meager and sporadic; scholars believe that ancient Macedonia lay beyond the cultural and ethnic borders of Mycenaean Greece.
The ancient Macedonians claimed kinship with the Illyrians, Thracians, and Phrygians, not with the Greeks. In fact, the Brygians of Macedonia were believed to be the European branch of the people who in Asia Minor were known as the Phrygians.
Ancient Macedonia was home to many tribes and nations. Homer did not know the Macedonians by this name. Of the many Macedonian peoples, Homer only mentions the Paeones who lived in the heart of Macedonia. In the Trojan War, the Paeones joined the besieged Trojans, an indication that they were not Greeks. Greek and other historians frequently mention the Brygians. Their name derives from the Macedonian word
breg, “hill/mountain”. The Brygians were the “hillsmen” of Macedonia. Another remarkable people were the Mygdones, who lived in Aegean Macedonia, in Asia Minor, and in Upper Mesopotamia.
Greek migrants came to Macedonia, Thrace, and lllyria after they had exhausted the possibilities of settlement in Asia Minor, Italy, France, Spain, and Scythia, known today as Ukraine and Russia. Some famous ancient Greeks went to Macedonia and Thrace in search of livelihood or adventure. These included Pythagoras, Euripides, Herodotus, and Aristotle’s ancestors. However, the Greeks did not consider Macedonia especially attractive for permanent settlement. Neither did the Macedonians welcome them as openheartedly as did the Italians and Scythians. Perhaps Aristotle who left Macedonia while still a young man would have never gone back had the Macedonian king Philip 11(360-336 B.C.) not hired him to be his son’s tutor. In any case, by the middle of the fourth pre-Christian century, Greek settlers were expelled from Macedonia, their cities, including Aristotle’s native Stagira, razed to the ground by Philip, and Aristotle died in exile in Greece.
The ancient Macedonians regarded the Greeks as potentially dangerous neighbors, never as kinsmen. The Greeks unanimously stereotyped the Macedonians as “barbarians” and treated them in the same bigoted manner in which they treated all non-Greeks. Herodotus, the Father of History, relates how the Macedonian king Alexander 1(498-454 B.C.), a Philhellene, that is, “a friend of the Greeks,” and logically a non-Greek, wanted to take part in the Olympic games. The Greek athletes protested, saying they would not run with a barbarian. The historian Thucydides, himself half barbarian, considered the Macedonians as barbarians. Demosthenes, the great Athenian statesman and orator, spoke of the Macedonian king Philip II as:
“
not only no Greek, nor related to the Greeks, but not even a
barbarian from any place that can be named with honours, but a
pestilent knave from Macedonia, whence it was never yet
possible to buy a decent slave.”
[Third Philippic, 31]
The Macedonian “barbarian” defeated Greece at the battle of Chaeronea in August 338 B.C. and appointed himself “Commander of the Greeks.” The date is conirnonly taken as the end of Greek history and the beginning of the Macedonian era.
[Greece did not regain its independence until 1827 A.D.]
Greeks prospered under the Macedonjans, but they prospered in Egypt and West Asia, not in Greece and not in Macedonia. Though the Macedonians expelled the Greeks from Macedonia and Thrace, they permitted them to settle throughout their vast empire in Asia and Africa. Antiochia and Alexandria, to name just the two most important cities established by Macedonians, grew into great cosmopolitan metropolises where Europeans, Africans, and Asians traded goods, ideas, and insults conversing mainly in Greek, the
lingua franca (common language) of the Macedoman empire.
Other significant historical signposts include:
• Greece was conquered by Macedonia at the battle of Chaeronea in 338 B.C.
• Both Macedonia and Greece were annexed by the Romans to their empire after the baffle of Pydna in 168 B.C.
• Under the Romans, the Greeks continued to prosper in the Levant, Asia Minor, and Egypt, less so in Greece and not at all in Macedonia. While the Romans did not establish any province by the name of Greece or Hellas, there were two Macedonias in their Empire: Macedonia Prima
, known today as the Aegean Macedonia, and Macedonia Salutaris, known today as the Vardar and Pirin Macedonias. The two Macedonian provinces formed the Diocese of Macedonia, to which the Romans attached all of modern Greece and Albania. Latin was the official language in Roman Macedonia from 168 B.C. until the demise of Roman rule at the end of the sixth Christian century.
• After the establishment of Christianity, the Macedonians and Greeks shed their ethnicity in favor of the new identity as Christian and Roman citizens. Those who spoke Latin called themselves
Romani. Those who spoke Greek, whether they were Macedonians, Greeks, Armenians, or Arabs, referred to themselves as
Rhomaioi, a Greek word for Romans. Those who used Slavic language were known as
Slovene.
• In the sixth century, the Paeones, now called Slavs, came back and captured all of Macedonia from the East Romans, with the exception of a few coastal cities. Macedonia maintained its independence and resisted attacks by the Armenian and Syrian dynasties who held power in New Rome (Byzantium) and by the shamanist and nomadic Bulgars who roamed the steppes of the Dobrudja with their herds. Since the sixth century, the native Macedonian language has been the dominant speech of the land. It was first systematized in the middle of the ninth Christian century by SS. Cyril and Methodius, the apostles of the Slavs who were born in Thessalonica/Solun. The Macedonian language has functioned as the principal literary, liturgical, and colloquial language of Macedonia ever since.
• In 867, the first European dynasty assumed power in medieval East Rome. The dynasty is called Macedonian because the parents of its founder, Basil I, originated from the Byzantine province of Macedonia. The Macedonian rulers in Byzantium spoke Macedonian and Greek and thought of themselves as Macedonians and Rhomaioi. In the tenth century, another dynasty came to power in Macedonia proper and reached its apogee under Tsar Samuel at the turn of the millennium.
• In 1014, the Macedonian Roman (Byzantine) Emperor Basil II defeated Tsar Samuel and soon annexed Macedonia to his East Roman state. Under the Macedonian rulers and their successors in Byzantium, the Macedonians retained their language, customs, and their church organization.
• The East Roman Empire was destroyed by the Crusaders in 1204. During the next two and a half centuries, the Macedonians fought foreign invaders, adventurers, and bandits who tried to dominate their land. The Ottoman Turks established their rule in Macedonia in the fifteenth century. The Turks used the name
Rumelia for their possessions in the Balkan Peninsula in the belief that they had once belonged to the Roman (Byzantine) Empire.
• In 1827, the Christian European powers intervened on behalf of Greek rebels and forced the Turks to grant them independence. In 1832, the same powers established the first modem Greek state, chose Prince Otto of Bavaria to be “King of the Hellenes,” and sent him to Athens.
• Macedonia entered this century as a province of the Ottoman Empire, divided among the Solun, Bitola, and Kosovo vilayets. The region was occupied primarily by Macedonians. The census in the three vilayets taken by the Ottoman state in 1905 found 3,171,690 inhabitants. Other than to Macedonians, this region was home to many Albanians, Turks, Romi, Vlachs, Jews, and Greeks.
• After the Ottoman state was weakened by internal troubles, Montenegro, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Greece attacked their former masters. In this war, called the First Balkan War, the Turks lost Macedonia. The victorious Balkan kingdoms convened in Bucharest in August 1913 to divide the spoils. By the Treaty of Bucharest, Macedonia was partitioned. Greece was awarded Aegean Macedonia and renamed it “Northern Greece”; Bulgaria annexed Pirin Macedonia and abolished the Macedonian name, and Serbia took Vardar Macedonia and renamed it “Southern Serbia.”
• The Republic of Macedonia was created out of the ashes of the Second World War and Josip Broz Tito, the anti-fascist leader of Yugoslavia, recognized the Macedonians as a distinct people with their own nationality, language, and culture when he created modern Yugoslavia. Macedonia became a sovereign state by a popular referendum held in September 1991 when the majority of voters chose independence.