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ORIGIN OF THE MACEDONIANS
INTRODUCTION
Many writers investigated the origin of the
Macedonians in their own way and have, as a result, arrived
at different conclusions, often in conflict with one another.'
This subject is of vital significance to us, Macedonians,
for we want to know whether or not our ancestors were Greek.
Much more so, because aligned with it, is another question
of equal importance, namely, whether Greece has any inheritance
rights upon Macedonia, or whether, in the absence of such
historical or ethnological rights, Macedonia can be considered
a property without an owner where anybody can stake his
claim.
The Greek origin of the Macedonians or rather the homogeneity
of the Greeks and the Macedonians are proven by the history
of the settlement of the Indo- Europeans in Europe, particularly
the South Group, i. e. the Thracians, the Greeks and the
Illyrians, in the Balkan Peninsula.
THE FIRST SETTLERS
The Thracians, having arrived first, occupied the eastern
part of the peninsula and Macedonia. The Greeks probably
came after the Thracians, about 2500 B. C., making their
way through the valleys of Axios, the Morava (Margos) and
the mountainous passes of Illyria. They stopped at the Western
part of the Balkan pleninsula and Macedonia, which was seized
from the Thracians. This land has been their station and
was Arian-Greek for many centuries before Southern Greece
became Greek. Further movements to the south were obstructed
by the chain of the Kambounian mountains and Olympus. It
was then that they built in Amphaxitis' and further south,
the cities of Eidomene, Europus, Atalante, Gortynia, Ichnae,
Dion.
About five centuries later the Thracians regained Central
Macedonia as a result of which some Greek tribes, such as
the Ionians and Achaeans occupying the afore- mentioned
cities,, were forced to submit but retained the names of
their native towns, while others moved south- ward and built
new cities by the same names in various parts, especially
in Arcadia, where, according to Strabo only Achaeans settled
(Gortys-Gortynia, Europus, Eidomene, Atalante). Others,
such as the Penestae of northern Macedonia who spoke an
archaic dialect, settled in Thessaly, having left behind
them the name of the old country Penestia in its original
seat.
THE APPEARANCE OF THE ILLYRIANS
In the 13th century B. C. the Illyrians penetrated the westernmost
parts of the Balkan peninsula. They occupied Penestia and
the territory up to the Genousos River, as shown by the
folklore, before, during and after Strabo, up to this very
day. According to an ancient tradition, the town of Pylon,
near lake Lychnitis (Achris or Ochrida), formed the meeting
point of the boundaries of Macedonia and Illyria. This territory
has also been known under the name of Dassaretia, and constituted
the outermost limit of Macedonia and Epirus ("Finis
Macedonia et Epiri", Itiner.Hierosol.) at least during
the Greco-Roman period.' The Illyrian incursion and pressure
forced out many Eordian's from the plain of the Eordian
River ( (Devole) who settled in another plain near the lake
of the ancient Arnissa (Ostrovo) in Western Macedonia. This
territory was known thereafter as Eordia or Eordaea (in
an old inscription discovered in Epidaurus another form
of the name is given: Euordia) which was derived from the
Eordians.
MACEDONIANS (DORIANS) MIGRATE ALL OVER GREECE
The latter in turn pushed out the Macedonian tribe of the
Dorians (whom Kretchmer identifies with the Douriopes of
Macedonia) and forced them to leave the country around the
mountains of Olympus and Pindus (Herodotus, Pindar, Strabo)
and settled in the land to the south of the Kambounian mountains
as well as to the south of the Isthmus of Corinth. They
(the Dorians) were followed by other tribes of the so-called
north- western type and were scattered all over Greece,
except Arcadia. From such new settlers certain localities
derived and retained up to this day their historical names,
i. e. Boeotia, Phocis Acarnania, Thessaly, etc. The Boeotians
themselves must have come down from the western Macedonian
mountain Boion, from which their name is derived. But they
were not alien to the extension of the Boion mountain further
south, that is Pindus, from which Pindar's name is derived.
ESTABLISHMENT OF THE CENTRAL MACEDONIAN THRONE
Those who remained in Macedonia settled in small villages
and, divided according to areas in independent Kingdoms,
were engaged in constant warfare with their neighbors, the
Illyrians, whom they kept in check. Between 700-500 B. C.
the dynasty of Orestis (the territory sow covered by Kastoria
and Korytsa) appeared and established the central Macedonian
throne in Aegae (Vergina) of Emathia after subduing the
local kings of the other Macedonian territories of Pelagonia
(Monastir), Lyngus (Florina), Douriopia (Krousovo-Perlepes),
Elimia (Kozane- Grevena), Tymphaea (Konitsa), Eordia (Ptolemais),
Pieria ( Katerini-Litochoron ) and Bottiaea (Giannitsa-
Pella).
The town of Aegae (in Central Macedonia) was the seat of
the King of the entire Macledonia who ruled over the already
subdued small kingdoms. These, according to Thucydides,
"were allies and subjects, but also had kings of their
own". That is, to put it in another way, they were
federative units, having approximately the same relation
with the central government as the small states of Germany
had with the King of Prussia before the first World War
(1914-18).
EXPANSION OF THE KINGDOM OF MACEDONIA
Following the repulse of the Persians, King Alexander I,
occupied the entire territory between the rivers Axios and
Strymon, with the exception of the coastline. Philip II,
father of Alexander the Great, extended his dominion eastward
to the shores of Euxine. He imposed his political influence
even beyond Kaemus (the Balkan Mountains) as far as the
Danube River, after having traversed all the land beyond
the river Axios from the south to north as well as from
east to west: that is from Scythia Minor (Dobrudja),where,
according to Atheneus, he married Meda or Medope, the daughter
of Kothela, King of Odessa (Varna).
Along the coastline of the Aegean, the Propontis and the
Euxinus already existed colonies founded by Greeks from
Southern Greece since the 8th century B. C. But Philip founded
other colonies inland of which we know only Philippi, Kabyle
and Philippopolis. These were the bases for a methodical
intercourse with, and hellenization of the Thracians in
the interior. '4' But Philip's colonies must have been many
more, for Philippopolis alone in the center of Thrace, without
any other support (that is, a series of similar colonies),
would not have been able to remain Greek in character together
with her suburbs up to the recent exchanges of populations.'5'
In the nearby tombs jewels of genuine Greek workmanship
were discovered testifying to the presence not merely of
transient merchants, but of Greek colonists as well, who
penetrated and settled in the interior as an extension of
the Greek colonies founded along the coastline in the 8th
century B. C. and afterwards.
DISSEMINATION OF GREEK CULTURE
It was through the presence of such settlers that the taste
and pursuit of works of classical Greek art has already
been imparted in the 5th century B. C., which coincides
with the beginning of coinage in the Greek colonies along
the coastline. The presence of such abundant works of Greek
art in the interior can not be explained only by the existence
of the Greek coastal colonies. Similar colonies also existed
along the coast of Dacia, but the interior did not assume
a Greek character by the presence of any such Greek works
in large numbers. There is, from this point of view, a similarity
between northern Thrace and the peninsula of Taurus. This
peninsula, however, has been almost purely Greek with Iphigenia
in Tauris and Prometheus in Caucasus. All in all, the Greek
nation has, at least from the time: of Philip, been the
master not only of the coastline, but of the interior of
Thrace as well. With the exception of the Romans and the
Turks, no other Balkan people has seized the coast, but
only occasionally and in such a manner as travelers are
accommodated for s night in hotels.(6)
CONSOLIDATION OF THE STATE OF MACEDONIA
Throughout this period and until the days of the Byzantine
Empire, no other people has ever invaded Macedonia to displace
the Arian-Greeks. Nor have Greek colonists come from Southern
Greece. Had they tried to, they would have been unable to
fill up a vast land, such as Western Macedonia. Poor and
thin-soiled, it was not suitable for colonization. Besides,
in Southern Greece, which was cut up into city-states, no
Power could have been found strong enough, to conceive the
idea, and have the necessary means, in order to colonize
the whole of the interior of a distant country, which would
have meant the displacement of the native population. In
such case it would have been necessary to determine the
racial character of the population and explain its presence
there, had it not been originally Greek.
Legends, such as those about immigration of Kings and other
settlers from Southern Greece to Macedonia (Temenides, Bacchiadae,
Kadmeians) were invented by the Greeks precisely to explain
the Greek character of the Macedonians. All this is due
to the fact that the ancient Greeks could not understand
this in any other way, since they did not know their own
origin and the route their ancestors followed in coming
into Macedonia and Greece.
THE MACEDONIANS CLUNG TO THEIR OLD TRADITIONS
This being the case, the inhabitants of Macedonia are descendants
of the old Arian (Greek) settlers. Prehistorical data are
very clear on this point. Since the dawn of history, the
names of the people and the places in 'Macledonia are Greek
(Karanos, Perdiccas, Amyntas, Aeropus, Alcetas, Kleitos,
Emathia, Eidomene, Haliacmon, Echedorus, Dion, etc). In
addition, there is a tradition that the Greek dialect of
the Macedonians preserved, and rightly so, the old peculiarities
of the Homeric times, retaining the nominative cases of
the first declension without "s", as is the case
with the Thessalian and the Boeotian dialects, such as ippota,
mhtieta, nepheligereta, olympionica, etc. This very thing
is also denoted by the name Ptolemaios (Homeric Ptolemos),
while the southerners were saying later polemos-Polemon.
It is not improper to mention here that the bodyguards of
the kings of Macedonia were called "etairoi" of
the King, that is, fellow-warriors and companions, as in
the time of Homer.
Thus, the Macedonian dialect was preserved in an undeveloped
and archaic state, as was the case with their entire civilization,
but it was Greek. It follows, therefore, that the people,
too, were rude and backward, but they were Greeks, appearing
as such during the time of Philip and Alexander and even
later, when the light of civilization was shining on in
their own land. The Greeks moved to Peloponnesus from what
is called "Sterea Hellas" Central or Middle Greece.
The latter, however, was not wholly evacuated as a result
of this southward movement, The same holds true as to Thessaly,
whose population or rather a part of it, moved to Middle
Greece. Another example: Greeks from all over Greece had
left their original hometowns and settled in colonies outside
Greece. The latter, however, has never been evacuated altogether
by its Greek inhabitants. Thus Macedonia, too, sent out
her surplus population without ceasing to be a country of
Greeks.'7'
Copyright©
hellenic cyprus
2002
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