Revision as of 17:37, 8 August 2006 view sourceAldux (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users27,291 edits remove a speculation and a strange statement← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 14:09, 25 December 2024 view source InfoWanderer (talk | contribs)342 edits →DemographicsTags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit | ||
(1,000 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{dablink|This article is about the region spanning several countries in southeastern Europe. For other uses of the term, see ] and ].}} | |||
{{Geographical |
{{short description|Geographical and historical region in Europe}} | ||
{{About|the supra-national region||Macedonia (disambiguation){{!}}Macedonia}} | |||
'''Macedonia''' is a ] and ] in ] whose area was re-defined in the early 20th century. It covers approximately 67,000 square kilometers and a population of 4.76 million. There is no official recognition of these arbitrary delimitation, especially since they include territories of ], ] and ] that are not called "Macedonia". This arbitrary territory corresponds to the basins of (from west to east) the ], ] and ]/] rivers (of which the Axios/Vardar drains by far the largest area) and the plains around ] and ]. | |||
{{pp-semi-indef}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2021}} | |||
{{Update|date=February 2023}} | |||
{{Infobox settlement | |||
| name = Macedonia | |||
|native_name = | |||
{{collapsible list | |||
|titlestyle = background: transparent; text-align: center; font-size: 0.8em; | |||
|liststyle = text-align: center; | |||
|title = {{resize|1.0em|Expand for local names}} | |||
| {{native name|sq|Maqedonia}} | |||
| {{native name|bg|Македония|italics=off}} | |||
| {{native name|el|Μακεδονία|italics=off}} | |||
| {{native name|mk|Македонија|italics=off}} | |||
| {{native name|sr|Македонија}}/{{lang|sr-Latn|Makedonija}} | |||
| {{native name|rup|Machedonia}} | |||
| {{native name|ruq|Machedonia}} | |||
}} | |||
|image_map = Macedonia topography-en.svg | |||
|map_caption = 2009 topographical map of the geographical region of Macedonia | |||
| subdivision_type = ] | |||
| subdivision_name = {{flag|Greece}}<br />{{flag|North Macedonia}}<br />{{flag|Bulgaria}}<br />{{flag|Albania}}<br />{{flag|Serbia}}<br />{{flag|Kosovo}} | |||
| area_total_km2 = 67,000 | |||
| area_footnotes = | |||
| population_blank1_title = Estimate | |||
| population_blank1 = over 4,760,000 | |||
| population_as_of = | |||
| population_density_km2 = | |||
|currency = | |||
|currency_code = | |||
|time_zone = |utc_offset = | |||
| footnotes = | |||
}} | |||
'''Macedonia''' ({{IPAc-en|audio=en-us-Macedonia.ogg|ˌ|m|æ|s|ɪ|ˈ|d|oʊ|n|i|ə}} {{respell|MASS|ih|DOH|nee|ə}}) is a ] and ] ] of the ] in ]. Its boundaries have changed considerably over time; however, it came to be defined as the modern geographical region by the mid-19th century. Today the region is considered to include parts of six Balkan countries: all of ], large parts of ] and ], and smaller parts of ], ], and ]. It covers approximately {{convert|67000|km2|mi2|0}} and has a population of around five million. ] comprises about half of Macedonia's area and population. | |||
According to geographer H.R. Wilkinson, "it defies definition". Its current 'geographical' limits are nonhomogeneous - either ethnically or geographically - and they were established only in 1899, by the Greek cartographer C. Nicolaides for political purposes. His map took hold a few years later <ref name="Wilkinson">Wilkinson, H.R. 1951. Maps and Politics (a review of the ethnographic cartography of Macedonia). Liverpool University Press</ref> (Wilkinson 1951:120). The map area was adopted by Bulgarian geographers V. Kancev, in 1900 and D.M.Brancoff in 1905.{{failed verification}}<ref name="Wilkinson"/> (Wilkinson 1951:130,136). The perception of the 'division' of a single area emerged as a historical hindsight.{{dubious}} | |||
Its oldest known settlements date back approximately to 7,000 BC. From the middle of the 4th century BC, the ] became the dominant power on the Balkan Peninsula; since then Macedonia has had a diverse history. | |||
==Etymology of the name of Macedonia== | |||
According to ancient ], '''Macedon''' - ] '''{{Polytonic|Μακεδών}}''' ''Makedōn'', ] '''{{Polytonic|Μακηδών}}''' ''Makēdōn'' - was the name of the first ''phylarch'' (tribal chief) of the '''{{Polytonic|Μακεδόνες}}''' ''Makedónes'', the part of the '''{{Polytonic|Μακεδνοί}}''' ''Makednoí'' tribe which initially settled western, southern and central Macedonia and founded the kingdom of ]. According to ] ('']'' 8.47), the ''Makednoí'' were in turn a tribe of the ]. All these names are probably derived from the ] adjective '''{{Polytonic|μακεδνός}}''' ''makednós'' (] '''{{Polytonic|μηκεδανός}}''' ''mēkedanós''), meaning "tall". This in turn is derived from the Doric noun '''{{Polytonic|μᾶκος}}''' ''mākos'' (Attic and ] ] '''{{Polytonic|μάκρος}}''' ''mákros'' and '''{{Polytonic|μῆκος}}''' ''mēkos''), meaning "length". Both the Macedonians (''Makedónes'') and their ''Makednoí'' tribal ancestors were regarded as tall people, and they are likely to have received their name on account of their height. See also ]. | |||
==Etymology== | |||
] uses the ] '''{{Polytonic|μακεδνῆς}}''', ''makednēs'', to describe a tall ] tree: | |||
{{main|Makedon (mythology)#Etymology}} | |||
:'''{{Polytonic|αἱ δ' ἱστοὺς ὑφόωσι καὶ ἠλάκατα στρωφῶσιν}}''' | |||
Both ]s ''Makedṓn'' and ''Makednós'' are morphologically derived from the Ancient Greek adjective ''makednós'' meaning "tall, slim", and are related to the term ].<ref>] (2010), "μακεδνός", in Etymological Dictionary of Greek (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 10), volume I, with the assistance of Lucien van Beek, Leiden, Boston: Brill, page 894</ref> | |||
:'''{{Polytonic|ἥμεναι, οἷά τε φύλλα μακεδνῆς αἰγείροιο}}''' | |||
:"and others weave webs, or, as they sit, twirl the yarn, | |||
:like unto the leaves of a tall poplar tree" | |||
::(of the female slaves of the ], ] 7.105f.) | |||
It has been suggested that the name ''Makedónes'' may mean "highlanders", from a hypothetical (i.e. unattested) ] ] '''*{{Polytonic|μακι-κεδόνες}}''' ''*maki-kedónes'' "of the high earth", with the first constituent '''{{Polytonic|μακι-}}''' ''maki-'', allegedly meaning "high", and an unattested second part '''{{Polytonic|-κεδών}}''' -''kedōn'', being cognate to Attic '''{{Polytonic|χθών}}''' ''khthōn'', "earth". However the word ''{{Polytonic|μᾶκος/μῆκος}}'' has only been used to describe tall physical stature in humans, and only in two instances has it been used to mean "height" of inanimate objects: the aforementioned Homeric tall poplar tree and the imaginary wall built around the city of ] (in the comedy by the same name by ]). Furthermore, if the word ''Makikedōn'' actually ever existed, it should be ] (''Μακικ'''έ'''δων'', as in ''αυτ'''ό'''χθων'', etc), ''not'' ]. | |||
==Boundaries and definitions== | ==Boundaries and definitions== | ||
{{further|History of Macedonia (ancient kingdom)}} | |||
The name of Macedonia has not been always used with regard to the region as defined today. In its beginnings, the ancient state of ] encompassed only a part of this region, approximately equal to the present-day ]. | |||
] The majority of the ] province of Macedonia consisted what is today ], but also included present-day geographical region of Macedonia and ]. It covered a much larger area than ]. | |||
===Ancient times=== | |||
In the ] and for the next 1,700 years, there was no Macedonian region. There was a number of different ''themas'' (provinces). A '']'' under the name of Macedonia was, however, carved out of the original Thema of ] well to the east of the ] during the ]. This ''thema'' variously included parts of ] and western Thrace within its shifting boundaries and gave its name to the ], whose founder, Emperor ], was probably of ] descent and born near ]. Hence, Byzantine documents of this era mentioning Macedonia and Macedonians actually refer to the ''thema'' by that name. The region of Macedonia (ruled by the ] throughout the 9th and the 10th century) was, on the other hand, incorporated into the Byzantine Empire in ] as the Thema of ]. | |||
] | |||
] | |||
The definition of Macedonia has changed several times throughout history. Prior to its expansion under ], the ancient kingdom of ], to which the modern region owes its name, lay entirely within the central and western parts of the current Greek province of ] and consisted of 17 provinces/districts or eparchies (]: επαρχία).<ref>The Ancient Greeks: New Perspectives, Stephanie Lynn Budin, ABC-CLIO, 2004, {{ISBN|1576078140}}, </ref> | |||
With the gradual conquest of southeastern Europe by the ] in the late ] and its incorporation into the Ottoman ], the name of Macedonia disappeared for good as an administrative designation for several centuries and was rarely displayed on maps.{{citation needed}} The name was again revived to mean a distinct geographical region with roughly the same borders as today by European cartographers in the ].{{dubious}} | |||
With the conquest of the region by the ] in the late ] and its incorporation into the Ottoman ], the name of Macedonia disappeared as an administrative designation for several centuries and was rarely displayed on maps. The name was again revived to mean a distinct geographical region with roughly the same borders as today by European cartographers in the ]. | |||
Expansion of Kingdom of Macedon: | |||
==Demographics== | |||
# Kingdom of ]: Macedonian Kingdom of Emathia consisting of six provinces ], ], ], ], ] and ]. | |||
:''Main articles: ] | |||
# Kingdom of ]: All the above provinces plus the eastern annexations ], ] and the western annexations ], ] and ]. | |||
# Kingdom of ]: All the above provinces plus the appendages of ] and ] to the north, ], ] and ] to the east and the ] to the south. | |||
===Roman era=== | |||
] | |||
In the 2nd century, Macedonia covered approximately the area where it is considered to be today, but the northern regions of today Republic of North Macedonia were not identified as Macedonian lands.<ref>Entangled Histories of the Balkans: Volume One, Roumen Daskalov, Tchavdar Marinov, BRILL, 2013, {{ISBN|900425076X}}, pp. 278–279.</ref> For reasons that are still unclear, over the next eleven centuries Macedonia's location was changed significantly. The ] consisted of what is today Northern and Central Greece, much of the geographical area of the Republic of North Macedonia and southeast Albania. Simply put, the Romans created a much larger administrative area under that name than the original ancient ]. In late Roman times, the provincial boundaries were reorganized to form the ], consisting of most of modern mainland Greece right across the Aegean to include ], southern Albania, ], and most of Republic of North Macedonia. | |||
] by the national boundaries of ] (]), the ], ] (]), ] (] and ]), ] (]), and ] (]).]] | |||
As a frontier region where several very different cultures meet, Macedonia has an extremely diverse demographic profile. | |||
===Byzantine era=== | |||
] (]) form the majority of the region's population, living almost entirely in ] (Aegean Macedonia), although there are also Greek minorities in ], ] and the ]. In ], Greeks number 58,785 according to the 1989 census, and in the ] (Pirin Macedonia) in ], 86 people declared themselves Greeks in the 2001 census (out of a total of 3,408 in all Bulgaria) and the number of Greeks in the Republic of Macedonia is 442 according to the 2002 census. | |||
In the Byzantine Empire, a ] was carved out of the original ], which was well east of the Struma River.<ref>''The migrations during the early Byzantine centuries also changed the meaning of the geographical term Macedonia, which seems to have moved to the east together with some of the non-Slavic population of the old Roman province. In the early 9th century an administrative unit (theme) of Makedonikon was established in what is now Thrace (split among Bulgaria, Greece, and Turkey) with Adrianopleas its capital. It was the birthplace of Emperor Basil I (867–886), the founder of the so-called Macedonian dynasty in Byzantinum.'' Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia, Dimitar Bechev, Scarecrow Press, 2009, {{ISBN|0810862956}}, p. .</ref> This '']'' variously included parts of ] and gave its name to the ].<ref>''By the beginning of the 9th century, the theme of Macedonia, with its capital at Adrianople consisted not of Macedonian but of Thracian territories. During the Byzantine period the Macedonia proper corresponded to the themes of Thessalonica and Strymon. The Ottoman administration ignored the name of Macedonia. It was only revived during the Renaissance, when western scholars rediscovered the ancient Greek geographical terminology.'' Brill's Companion to Ancient Macedon: Studies in the Archaeology and History of Macedon, 650 BC – 300 AD, Robin J. Fox, Robin Lane Fox, BRILL, 2011, {{ISBN|9004206507}}, .</ref> Hence, Byzantine documents of this era that mention Macedonia are most probably referring to the Macedonian thema. The region of Macedonia, on the other hand, which was ruled by the ] throughout the 9th and the 10th century, was incorporated into the Byzantine Empire in 1018 as the ].<ref>''When the barbarian invasions started in the fourth through seventh centuries AD in the Balkans, the remnants of the Hellenes who lived in Macedonia were pushed to eastern Thrace, the area between Adrianople (presently the Turkish city of Edirne) and Constantinople. This area would be called theme of Macedonia by the Byzantines... whereas the modern territory of R. of Macedonia was included in the theme of Bulgaria after the destruction of Samuels Bulgarian Empire in 1018.'' Contested Ethnic Identity: The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto, 1900–1996, Chris Kostov, Peter Lang, 2010, {{ISBN|3034301960}}, </ref> | |||
===Ottoman era=== | |||
] (also known as Macedonian Slavs) are the second largest ethnic group in the region. They are primarily of ] origin forming the majority of the population in the ]. According to the 2002 census, approximately 1,300 000 people declared themselves as Macedonians. According to the latest Bulgarian census held in 2001, there are 3,117 people declaring as ethnic Macedonians in the ] of ] (Pirin Macedonia). The official total number of ethnic Macedonians in Bulgaria is 5,071. The number of ] or Slavic speakers (without both terms been equivalent) in ] (Aegean Macedonia) is uncertain, as ] censi have not posed the question mother tongue in Macedonia since the ] census which recorded 41,017 ] mostly in the ]. The linguistic classification of the Slavic dialects spoken by these people can be either ] to ] depending on dialect<!--Trudgill-->, although the people themselves call their language '']''<!--Sotiriu-->. Most of these people declare themselves as ] (]), although there are small groups espousing ] and ] national identities. A political party promoting the concept and rights of what they describe as the "Macedonian minority in Greece" - the ] (Ουράνιο Τόξο) - was founded in September ], and received 2,955 votes in Macedonia in the ] elections. Similarly, a pro-Bulgarian political party, known as ] (Βουλγαρικά Ανθρώπινα Δικαιώματα στη Μακεδονία) was established in June ], promoting the concept and rights of what they describe as the "Bulgarian minority in Greece", although they have yet to participate in elections. In the 1989 Albanian census approximately 5,000 Albanian citizens declared themselves Macedonians. | |||
With the gradual conquest of southeastern Europe by the ] in the late 14th century, the name of Macedonia disappeared as an administrative designation for several centuries and was rarely displayed on maps. The name was again revived to mean a distinct geographical region in the 19th century,<ref>''The ancient name 'Macedonia' disappeared during the period of Ottoman rule and was only restored in the nineteenth century originally as geographical term.'' The Oxford Handbook of the History of Nationalism, John Breuilly, Oxford University Press, 2013, {{ISBN|0199209197}}, </ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Jelavich|first1=Barbara|title=History of the Balkans, Vol. 2: Twentieth Century|date=1983|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=0521274591|page=|quote=However, in the nineteenth century the term Macedonian was used almost exclusively to refer to the geographic region|url=https://archive.org/details/historyofbalkans0000jela/page/91}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.zeno.org/nid/20007065957 |publisher=Zeno.org |title=Mazedonien |work=] |date=1905 |volume=13 |location=Leipzig |publication-date=1905 |pages=488–491 |language=de |trans-title=Macedonia |quote=Neuerdings hat man sich wiederum gewöhnt, den Namen M. im Sinne der Alten, d. h. für das jetzige Wilajet Saloniki und den Süden des Wilajets Monastir, zu gebrauchen.}}</ref> defining the region bounded by ], the ] range, mounts ] and ], the western ], the lower course of the river Mesta (Greek ]) and the ],<ref>{{cite book|editor1-last=Brown|editor1-first=Keith|editor2-last=Ogilvie|editor2-first=Sarah|title=Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World|url=https://archive.org/details/conciseencyclope00brow|url-access=limited|date=2008|publisher=Elsevier Science|isbn=978-0080877747|page=}}</ref> developing roughly the same borders that it has today.<ref>''The region was not called "Macedonia" by the Ottomans, and the name "Macedonia" gained currency together with the ascendance of rival nationalism.'' Collective Memory, National Identity, and Ethnic Conflict: Greece, Bulgaria, and the Macedonian Question, Victor Roudometof, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002, {{ISBN|0275976483}}, .</ref> | |||
==Demographics== | |||
The identity of the Macedonians is a disputed question in the region; most Greeks oppose their use of the term "Macedonians" and some Bulgarians and Greeks consider them a subset of another people - usually the ]. This issue is discussed further in the article on the ]. | |||
{{Main|Demographic history of Macedonia}} | |||
During medieval and modern times, Macedonia has been known as a Balkan region inhabited by many ethnic groups.<ref>"Macedonia Redux", Eugene N. Borza, The Eye Expanded: Life and the Arts in Greco-Roman Antiquity</ref> Today, as a frontier region where several very different cultures meet, Macedonia has an extremely diverse demographic profile. The current demographics of Macedonia include: | |||
The other two major ethnic groups in the region are the ] and the ]. Bulgarians represent the bulk of the population of ] (Blagoevgrad Province), although there are Bulgarian-identifying groups in Albania, Greece and the Republic of Macedonia. Albania and Greece each have both a Bulgarian and an ethnic Macedonian organization, and in the 1,487 people claimed a Bulgarian ethnic identity, in the 2002 census. | |||
* ] self-identify culturally and regionally as "Macedonians" (Greek: Μακεδόνες, ''Makedónes''). They form the majority of the region's population (~51%). They number approximately 2,500,000 and, today, they live almost entirely in ]. The Greek Macedonian population is mixed, with other indigenous groups and with a large influx of Greek refugees descending from ], ], and ] in the early 20th century. This is due to the ], during which over 1.2 ] refugees replaced departing Turks and settled in Greece, including 638,000 in the Greek province of Macedonia.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.greek-language.gr/greekLang/modern_greek/tools/corpora/pi/content.html?c=9&t=3,3997|title=Διδακτικά Βιβλία του Παιδαγωγικού Ινστιτούτου|website=www.greek-language.gr}}</ref> Smaller Greek minorities exist in Bulgaria and the Republic of North Macedonia, although their numbers are difficult to ascertain. In official census results, only 86 persons declared themselves Greeks in Bulgarian Macedonia (Blagoevgrad Province) in 2011, out of a total of 1,379 in all of Bulgaria; while only 294 persons described themselves as Greeks in the 2021 census in the Republic of North Macedonia.<ref name=census-mk>{{cite web |url=https://www.stat.gov.mk/publikacii/2022/POPIS_DZS_web_EN.pdf |title=Total resident population, households and dwellings in the Republic of North Macedonia, census 2021 |website=State Statistical Office of the Republic of North Macedonia |pages=32–33}}</ref> | |||
* ] self-identify as "Macedonians" (Macedonian: Македонци, ''Makedonci'') in an ethnic sense as well as in the regional sense. They are the second largest ethnic group in the region. Being a ] ] they are also known as "Macedonian Slavs" and "Slav Macedonians" (Greek: Σλαβομακεδόνες, "Slavomakedones") in Greece, though this term can be viewed as derogatory by ethnic Macedonians, including those in ].<ref>Although acceptable in the past, current use of this name in reference to both the ethnic group and the language can be considered ] and offensive by ethnic Macedonians. In the past, the Macedonian Slavs in Greece seemed relieved to be acknowledged as ''Slavomacedonians''. Pavlos Koufis, a native of Greek Macedonia, pioneer of ethnic Macedonian schools in the region and local historian, says in ''Laografika Florinas kai Kastorias'' (Folklore of Florina and Kastoria), Athens 1996: | |||
<blockquote>" the KKE recognised that the Slavophone population was ethnic minority of Slavomacedonians. This was a term, which the inhabitants of the region accepted with relief. Slavomacedonians = Slavs+Macedonians. The first section of the term determined their origin and classified them in the great family of the Slav peoples."</blockquote> | |||
The ] reports: | |||
<blockquote>"... the term Slavomacedonian was introduced and was accepted by the community itself, which at the time had a much more widespread non-Greek Macedonian ethnic consciousness. Unfortunately, according to members of the community, this term was later used by the Greek authorities in a pejorative, discriminatory way; hence the reluctance if not hostility of modern-day Macedonians of Greece (i.e. people with a Macedonian national identity) to accept it."</blockquote></ref> They form the majority of the population in the ] where according to the 2021 census, approximately 1,100,000 people declared themselves as Macedonians.<ref name="census-mk" /> In 1999, the ] estimated a significant minority of ethnic Macedonians ranging from 10,000 to 30,000 that exist among the ].<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030523145306/http://dev.eurac.edu:8085/mugs2/do/blob.html?type=html&serial=1044526702223 |date=23 May 2003 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tD3TZJy5HagC&q=number+of+macedonians+&pg=PA152|title=Culture and Rights|access-date=18 March 2015|isbn=9780521797351|last1=Cowan|first1=Jane K.|last2=Dembour|first2=Marie-Bénédicte|last3=Wilson|first3=Richard A.|date=29 November 2001|publisher=Cambridge University Press }}</ref> There has not been a census in Greece on the question of mother tongue since 1951, when the census recorded 41,017 ], mostly in the ] periphery of Greece. The linguistic classification of the ] spoken by these people are nowadays typically classified as ]<!--Trudgill-->, with the exception of some eastern dialects which can also be classified as ], although the people themselves call their native language a variety of terms, including ''makedonski'', ''makedoniski'' ("Macedonian"),<ref>Lois Whitman (1994): ''Denying ethnic identity: The Macedonians of Greece'' Helsinki Human Rights Watch. p. 39 {{Google books |plainurl= |id=JxCnAHCCuxYC |title= }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url={{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=ZmesOn_HhfEC |page=33 }} |title=The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World|first= Loring M.|last= Danforth| page=62 |access-date=2014-08-07}}</ref> ''slaviká'' ({{langx|el|σλαβικά}}, "Slavic")<!--Sotiriou-->, ''dópia'' or ''entópia'' ({{langx|el|εντόπια}}, "local/indigenous "),<ref name="eurac">{{cite web|url=http://dev.eurac.edu:8085/mugs2/do/blob.html?type=html&serial=1044526702223 |title=Greek Helsinki Monitor – Report about Compliance with the Principles of the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities |access-date=2009-01-12 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030523145306/http://dev.eurac.edu:8085/mugs2/do/blob.html?type=html&serial=1044526702223 |archive-date=2003-05-23 }}</ref> ''balgàrtzki'', ''bògartski'' ("Bulgarian")<ref> – Shkifov, Blagoy and Ekaterina Shklifova. Bulgarian dialect texts from Aegean Macedonia, Sofia 2003, pp. 28–36, 172</ref> along with ''naši'' ("our own") and ''stariski'' ("old").<ref>Lois Whitman (1994): ''Denying ethnic identity: The Macedonians of Greece'' Helsinki Human Rights Watch. p. 37 {{Google books |plainurl= |id=JxCnAHCCuxYC |title= }}</ref> Most Slavic-speakers declare themselves as ethnic Greeks (]), although there are small groups espousing ethnic Macedonian<ref name="USCountryReport">"Northwestern Greece is home to an indeterminate number of citizens who speak a Slavic dialect at home, particularly in Florina province. Estimates ranged widely, from under 10,000 to 50,000. A small number identified themselves as belonging to a distinct ethnic group and asserted their right to "Macedonian" minority status" {{cite web|title=2002 U.S. Country Reports on Human Rights Practices – Greece|url=https://2001-2009.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2002/18368.htm|date=31 March 2003}}</ref> and Bulgarian national identities, however some groups reject all these ethnic designations and prefer terms such as ''"natives"'' instead.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://2001-2009.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2005/61651.htm|title=Greece|publisher=Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor|access-date=27 October 2016}}</ref> The ] are an officially recognised minority in Albania and are primarily concentrated around the ] region<ref>{{cite news|url=http://balkans.courriers.info/article24081.html|title=Minorités en Albanie : les Macédoniens craignent la réorganisation territoriale du pays|last=Naumovski|first=Jaklina|date=25 January 2014|publisher=Balkan Courriers|access-date=16 May 2014}}</ref> and ] and are primarily ] with the exception of the later region where Macedonians are predominantly Muslim.<ref></ref> In the 2011 Albanian census, 5,870 Albanian citizens declared themselves Macedonians.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140518101534/http://makfax.com.mk/298566/samo_0_2_otsto_makedonci_zhiveat_vo_albanija_spored_podatocite_na_tamoshnite_vlasti |date=18 May 2014 }} makfax.com.mk</ref> According to the latest Bulgarian census held in 2011, there are 561 people declaring themselves ethnic Macedonians in the ] of Bulgaria (]). The official number of ] is 1,654. | |||
* ] are ethnic Bulgarians who self-identify regionally as "Macedonians" (Bulgarian: Mакедонци, ''Makedontsi''). They represent the bulk of the population of ] (also known as "]"). They number approximately 250,000 in the ] where they are mainly situated. There are small Bulgarian-identifying groups in Albania, Greece and the Republic of North Macedonia. In the Republic of North Macedonia, 3,504 people claimed a Bulgarian ethnic identity in the 2021 census.<ref name="census-mk" /> | |||
* ] are another major ethnic group in the region. Ethnic Albanians make up the majority in certain northern and western parts of the Republic of North Macedonia, and account for 24.3% of the total population of the Republic of North Macedonia, according to the 2021 census.<ref name="census-mk" /> | |||
* Smaller numbers of ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ] (] and ]) can also be found in Macedonia. | |||
<gallery class="center"> | |||
Ethnic ] make up the majority in certain northern and western parts of the Republic of Macedonia, and account for 25.2% of the total population of the Republic of Macedonia, according to the last census held in 2002. | |||
File:Ethnographische Karte von Makedonien (1899).jpg|Distribution of ethnic groups in Macedonia in 1892 (''Deutsche Rundschau für Geographie und Statistik'' – ''German Bevieiofor Geography and Statistics'') | |||
File:Ethnographic map of the central Balkans, ca. 1900.png|Ethnographic map of the vilayets of Kosovo, Saloniki, Scutari, Janina and Monastir, ca. 1900 (''Institute and Museum of Military History'') | |||
File:Distribution of races in the Balkans c.1910.jpg|Distribution of ethnic groups in the Balkan Peninsula and Asia Minor in 1910 (''Historical Atlas'' by William R. Shepherd, New York) | |||
File:Distribution Of Races 1918 National Geographic.jpg|Distribution of ethnic groups in the Balkan Peninsula and Asia Minor in 1918 (''National Geographic'') | |||
</gallery> | |||
===Religion=== | |||
Smaller numbers of ], ], ], ], ] (] and ]), ] and ] (] and ]) are also be found in Macedonia. | |||
]]] | |||
] in ]]] | |||
{{see also|Religion in Macedonia (Greece)|Religion in North Macedonia|Religion in Pirin Macedonia}} | |||
Most |
Most present-day inhabitants of the region are ] ], principally of the ], ], ] and ] Churches. Notable ] minorities are present among the Albanian, ] (]), ] (]), ], and ] populations. | ||
During the period of ], main religion in the region of Macedonia was the ]. After the Roman conquest of Macedonia, the ] was also introduced. Many ancient religious monuments, dedicated to Greek and Roman deities are preserved in this region. During the period of ], ecclesiastical structure was established in the region of Macedonia, and the ] became the ] of the Roman province of ].{{sfn|Nesbitt|Oikonomides|1991|p=51}} The ] also became the senior ecclesiastical primate of the entire ], and in 535 his jurisdiction was reduced to the administrative territory of the ].{{sfn|Meyendorff|1989|p=}} Later it came under the jurisdiction of the ]. | |||
==History== | |||
===Ancient Macedonia (500 BC to 146 BC)=== | |||
:''Main article: ].'' | |||
During the Middle Ages and up to 1767, western and northern regions of Macedonia were under the jurisdiction of the ]. Northern fringes of the region (areas surrounding ] and ]) had temporary jurisdiction under the ]. Both the Archbishopric of Ohrid and the Patriarchate of Peć became abolished and absorbed into the ] in the middle of the 18th century.{{sfn|Runciman|1968|p=}} During the period of ] rule, a partial ] was also recorded. In spite of that, the ] remained the dominant religion of local population. | |||
] | |||
Macedonia is known to have been inhabited since ] times. Its recorded history began with the emergence of the ancient kingdom of ''']''' in what is now the Greek part of Macedonia and the neighboring ] district in the south of the present-day Republic of Macedonia. By ], the early Macedonian kingdom had become subject to the ] but played no significant part in the wars between the Persians and the Greeks. | |||
During the 19th century, religious life in the region was strongly influenced by rising national movements. Several major ] disputes arose in the region of Macedonia, main of them being schisms between the ] and the newly created ] (1872), and later between the ] and the newly created ] (1967). | |||
King ] (died ]) was the first Macedonian king to play a significant role in Greek politics, promoting the adoption of the ] and culture. The Hellenic character of Macedon grew over the next century until, under the rule of ], Macedon extended its power in the ] over the rest of northern Greece. Philip's son ] created an even bigger empire, not only conquering the rest of Greece but also seizing control of the ], ] and lands as far east as the fringes of ]. | |||
==History== | |||
Much of the impetus towards the creation of this common identity was provided by Alexander the Great. Alexander's conquests produced a lasting extension of Greek culture and thought across the ancient ], but his empire broke up on his death. His generals divided the empire between them, founding their own states and dynasties - notably ], ], ], ], ], and ]. Macedon itself was taken by ], who ruled it until his death in ]. ] took control in ] following a period of civil strife. During his long reign, which lasted until ], he successfully restored Macedonian prosperity despite losing many of the subjugated Greek city-states. His successor ] (reigned ]-]) re-established Macedonian power across the region. | |||
{{see also|History of Macedonia (ancient kingdom)|History of modern Macedonia (Greece)|History of the Republic of North Macedonia}} | |||
===Early Neolithic=== | |||
] sovereignty was brought to an end at the hands of the rising power of ] in the ]. ] took his kingdom to war against the Romans in two wars during his reign (]-]). The ] (]-]) was fairly successful for the Macedonians but Philip was decisively defeated in the ] in (]-]). Although he survived war with Rome, his successor ] (reigned ]-]) did not; having taken Macedon into the ] in (]-]), he lost his kingdom when he was defeated. Macedonia was initially divided into four republics subject to Rome before finally being annexed in ] as a ]. | |||
While Macedonia shows signs of human habitation as old as the ] period (among which is the ] with the oldest European humanoid), the earliest known settlements, such as ] in ] (today's Greek Macedonia), date back 9,000 years.<ref>R.J. Rodden and K.A. Wardle, Nea Nikomedia: The Excavation of an Early Neolithic Village in Northern Greece 1961–1964, Vol I, The Excavation and the Ceramic Assemblage, British School at Athens Supplementary Volume 25, 1996</ref> The houses at Nea Nikomedeia were constructed—as were most structures throughout the Neolithic in northern Greece—of ] on a timber frame. The cultural assemblage includes well-made pottery in simple shapes with occasional decoration in white on a red background, clay female figurines of the 'rod-headed' type known from ] to the ], stone axes and adzes, chert blades, and ornaments of stone including curious 'nose plugs' of uncertain function. The assemblage of associated objects differs from one house to the next, suggesting some degree of craft specialisation had already been established from the beginning of the site's history. The farming economy was based on the cultivation of cereal crops such as wheat and barley and ] and on the herding of sheep and goats, with some cattle and pigs. Hunting played a relatively minor role in the economy. Surviving from 7000 to 5500 BCE, this Early Neolithic settlement was occupied for over a thousand years. | |||
=== |
===Middle Neolithic=== | ||
The Middle Neolithic period ({{circa|5500}} to 4500 BCE) is at present best represented at ] in the ] Valley in western Macedonia, where the typical red-on-cream pottery in the ] style emphasises the settlement's southern orientation. Pottery of this date has been found at a number of sites in Central and Eastern Macedonia but so far none has been extensively excavated. | |||
===Late Neolithic=== | |||
With the division of the ] into west and east in ] AD, Macedonia came under the rule of Rome's ] successors. The city of ] became an important trade and cultural centre. Despite the empire's power, from the beginning of the 6th century the Byzantine dominions were subject to frequent massive movements and attacks on the part of the trans-Danubian Slavs. In the beginning of the 7th century at the time when domestic troubles weakened the defenses at the northern frontier of the Byzantine state, they made their settlement between the Danube and the Aimos range. From then onwards, Slavic invasions were carried on intermittently and Slavic penetrations of the northern parts of the Balkan Peninsula continued either in the form of war-like invasions. In 598 the Slavic tribes besieged ] and settled its hinterlands in great numbers. Unlike the settlers of Bythinia and Thrace, those Slavs could only be removed by force. Whereas the Byzantine state's prevailing Greek culture flourished in Thessaloniki and the Aegean Sea ], various parts of Macedonia were settled from around ] AD by ]. The bulk of the Slavs settled in the north of the region but substantial Slavic populations also settled in rural places of what is now the northern part of Greek Macedonia. The population of the entire region was, however, severely depleted by destructive invasions of ], ], and ]. | |||
The Late Neolithic period ({{circa|4500}} to 3500 BCE) is well represented by both excavated and unexcavated sites throughout the region (though in Eastern Macedonia levels of this period are still called Middle Neolithic according to the terminology used in the Balkans). Rapid changes in pottery styles, and the discovery of fragments of pottery showing trade with quite distant regions, indicate that society, economy and technology were all changing rapidly. Among the most important of these changes were the start of copper working, convincingly demonstrated by Renfrew to have been learnt from the cultural groups of Bulgaria and Roumania to the North.<ref>A.C. Renfrew, The autonomy of the south-east European Copper Age, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 35 1969: 12–47.</ref> Principal excavated settlements of this period include Makryialos<ref>Stella G. Souvatzi, A Social Archaeology of Households in Neolithic Greece: An Anthropological Approach Series: Cambridge Studies in Archaeology, 2008, 166–178</ref> and Paliambela near the western shore of the Thermaic gulf, Thermi to the south of ] and ]<ref>Colin Renfrew, Marija Gimbutas and Ernestine S. Elster 1986. Excavations at Sitagroi, a prehistoric village in northeast Greece. Vol. 1. Los Angeles : Institute of Archaeology, University of California, 1986, Monumenta archaeologica 13; E. Elster and C. Renfrew, Prehistoric Sitagroi: Excavations in Northeast Greece, 1968–1970, vol. 2: The Final Report, Monumenta Archaeologica 20 (Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA, 2003), {{ISBN|1-931745-03-X}}</ref> and Dikili Tas in the Drama plain. Some of these sites were densely occupied and formed large mounds (known to the local inhabitants of the region today as 'toumbas'). Others were much less densely occupied and spread for as much as a kilometer (Makryialos). Both types are found at the same time in the same districts and it is presumed that differences in social organisation are reflected by these differences in settlement organisation. Some communities were clearly concerned to protect themselves with different kinds of defensive arrangements: ditches at Makryialos and concentric walls at Paliambela. The best preserved buildings were discovered at Dikili Tas, where long timber-framed structures had been organised in rows and some had been decorated with bulls' skulls fastened to the outside of the walls and plastered over with clay. | |||
The Slavic settlements were referred to by Byzantine Greek historians as "Sklavines". Although the Sklavines participated in several assaults against the ] - alone or aided by ] or ]. In the early 7th century ] organized a massive expeditions against the Sklaviniai of the Greek peninsula, in which he reportedly captured over 110,000 Slavs and transferred them to Cappadocia. By the time of ] (who also organized campaigns against the Slavs), the vast majority of the Slavs of Macedonia were captured and transferred to central Asia Minor where they were forced to recognize the authority of the Byzantine emperor and serve in its ranks. Slavic influence in the region re-emerged along with the rise of the Bulgarian Kingdom, which did as much as to temporarily incorporate parts of the region to its domain in ] AD. There are no Byzantine records of "Sklavines" after ]/] as the surviving Slavs of northern Macedonia were assimilated into the Bulgarian Kingdom. | |||
Remarkable evidence for cult activity has been found at ]-Topolnica, which straddles the Greek Bulgarian border to the north of ]. Here a deep pit appeared to have been roofed to make a subterranean room; in it were successive layers of debris including large numbers of figurines, bulls' skulls, and pottery, including several rare and unusual shapes.<ref>Stella G. Souvatzi, A Social Archaeology of Households in Neolithic Greece: An Anthropological Approach | |||
At the end of the ] what is now ] (]) was turned into the political and cultural center of the ] as Byzantine emperor ] conquered the eastern part of the country, including the capital of ], in ]. A new capital was established at ], which also became the seat of the ]. After several decades of almost incessant war, Bulgaria fell under Byzantine rule in ]. The whole of Macedonia was incorporated into the Byzantine Empire as the province of Bulgaria and the Bulgarian Patriarchate was reduced in rank to an archbishopric. | |||
Series: Cambridge Studies in Archaeology, 2008, 217–220</ref> | |||
The farming economy of this period continued the practices established at the beginning of the Neolithic, although sheep and goats were less dominant among the animals than they had previously been, and the cultivation of vines ('']'') is well attested. | |||
In the ] and ] Byzantine control was punctuated by periods of ], ] and ] rule in the north. Conquered by the Ottoman army in the first half of the ], Macedonia remained a part of the ] for nearly 500 years, during which it gained a substantial ] minority. (Thessaloniki later becomes the home of a large ]ish population following ]'s expulsions of Jews after ].) | |||
Only a few burials have been discovered from the whole of the Neolithic period in northern Greece and no clear pattern can be deduced. Grave offerings, however, seem to have been very limited. | |||
===Ottoman period=== | |||
{{unsourced}} | |||
The ], in their struggle to capture Constantinople included many Slavs in their army, who after the fall of the Empire settled places in the Greek mainland. In spite of belonging to the same race these populations never felt a common national feeling and most of them were absorbed by the Greek nation. The Slavs of the Ottoman Macedonia were members of the Orthodox ] according to the Ottoman administration system that was recognizing religious and not national identities and they were equalized politically with the ], ] or ]. | |||
===Ancient Macedonia (500 to 146 BCE)=== | |||
===Emergence of a Macedonian region=== | |||
{{main|Macedonia (ancient kingdom)}} | |||
] | |||
In classical times, the region of Macedonia comprised parts of what at the time was known as Macedonia, Illyria and Thrace. Among others, in its lands were located the kingdoms of Paeonia, Dardania, Macedonia and Pelagonia, historical tribes like the Agrianes, and colonies of southern Greek city states. Prior to the Macedonian ascendancy, parts of southern Macedonia were populated by the ],<ref>Thucydides. ''The Peloponnesian War'',.</ref> while western, (i. e., ]) Macedonia, was inhabited by Macedonian and ]. Whilst numerous wars are later recorded between the Illyrian and Macedonian Kingdoms, the Bryges might have co-existed peacefully with the Macedonians.<ref>Borza, Eugene N. ''In the Shadow of Olympus: the Emergence of Macedon''. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1990, {{ISBN|0-691-00880-9}}, p. 65. "There is no record of conflict between the Bryges and the local population; they are described as ''synoikoi'' ("fellow inhabitant" or neighbors) of the Macedonians."</ref> In the time of ], ], whose exact boundaries are obscure, originally included the whole ] River valley and the surrounding areas, in what is now the northern part of the Greek region of ], most of the ], and a small part of western Bulgaria.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9057963/Paeonia|title=Paeonia – historical region}}</ref> By 500 BCE, the ancient kingdom of ] was centered somewhere between the southern slopes of Lower Olympus and the lowest reach of the Haliakmon River.<ref>N.G.L. Hammond, "Connotations of 'Macedonia' and of 'Macedones' Until 323 B. C.", ''The Classical Quarterly'', New Series, Vol. 45, No. 1, (1995), p. 122</ref> Since 512/511 BCE, the kingdom of Macedonia was ] to the ], but after the ] it regained its independence.{{sfn|Roisman|Worthington|2010|pp=135–138, 342–345}} Under Philip II and Alexander the Great, the kingdom of Macedonia forcefully expanded, placing the whole of the region of Macedonia under their rule. | |||
] | |||
Alexander's conquests produced a lasting extension of Hellenistic culture and thought across the ancient ], but his empire broke up on his death. His generals divided the empire between them, founding their own states and dynasties. The kingdom of Macedon was taken by ], who ruled it until his death in 297 BC. At the time, Macedonian control over the Thracoillyrian states of the region slowly waned, although the kingdom of Macedonia remained the most potent regional power. This period also saw several Celtic invasions into Macedonia. However, the ] were each time successfully repelled by Cassander, and later Antigonus, leaving little overall influence on the region.<ref>The Celts. A history. Daithi O Hogain. Boydell Press. {{ISBN|0-85115-923-0}}</ref> | |||
After the revival of Greek, Serbian, and Bulgarian statehood in the ], The Ottoman lands in Europe that became identified as ''Macedonia'', were contested by all three governments, leading to the creation in the ] and ] of rival armed groups who divided their efforts between fighting the Turks and one another. | |||
===Roman Macedonia=== | |||
The most important of these was the Bulgarian-sponsored ] (BMARC, SMARO from 1902) (an alternative version says that it consisted of the ] (MRO, TMORO from 1902)), under ] who in ] rebelled in the so-called ], fighting for an autonomous or independent Macedonian state (before 1902 only Bulgarians could join, but afterwards, it invited ''anyone who feels Macedonian, whether Greek, Slav or Jew to join together''), and the Greek efforts from ] until ] (]). Diplomatic intervention by the European powers led to plans for an autonomous Macedonia under Ottoman rule. Due to the area's mixed population of, mainly, Bulgarians, Greeks, Turks and indeterminate mixtures of Christians and Muslims, as well as Albanians and Serbs, it gave birth to a mixed salad dish called 'Macedoine' or 'Macedonian salad'. | |||
{{Main|Macedonia (province)}} | |||
] | |||
], including the provinces of ], ] (periodically abolished), ], ], ], ], and ].]] | |||
]ian sovereignty in the region was brought to an end at the hands of the rising power of Rome in the 2nd century BC. ] took his kingdom to war against the Romans in two wars during his reign (221–179 BC). The ] (215–205 BC) was fairly successful for the Macedonians but Philip was decisively defeated in the ] in (200–197 BC). Although he survived war with Rome, his successor ] (reigned 179–168 BC) did not; having taken Macedon into the ] in (171–168 BC), he lost his kingdom when he was defeated. Macedonia was initially divided into four republics subject to Rome before finally being annexed in 146 BC as a ]. Around this time, vulgar Latin was introduced in the Balkans by Latin-speaking colonists and military personnel. | |||
===The birth of nationalism and of the Macedonian identity=== | |||
Over the centuries Macedonia had become a multicultural region. The historical references mention Greeks, Bulgarians, Turks, Albanian, Gypsies, Jews and Vlachs. Eventually, in the 20th century, 'Bulgarians' came to be understood as synonymous with 'Macedonian Slavs' and, eventually, 'ethnic Macedonians'. The restricted borders of the modern Greek state at its inception in ] disappointed the inhabitants of northern Greece (Epirus and Macedonia){{citation needed}}. Addressing these concerns in 1844, the Greek Prime Minister Kolettis addressed the constitutional assembly in Athens that "the kingdom of Greece is not Greece; it is only a part, the smallest and poorest, of Greece. The Greek is not only he who inhabits the kingdom, but also he who lives in ] (Epirus), or ] (Macedonia), or ] (Macedonia), or ] (Thrace)" . He mentions cities and islands that were under Ottoman possession as composing the 'Great Idea' (Μεγάλη Ιδέα) which dreamt of a reconstructed classical Greek world or Byzantine state. The important idea here is that for Greece, Macedonia was a region with large Greek populations expecting annexation to the new Greek state. At this time, the region which today is the Republic of Macedonia was known as the "fief of Skopje" {{citation needed}}. | |||
With the division of the ] into west and east in 298 AD, Macedonia came under the rule of Rome's ] successors. The population of the entire region was, however, depleted by destructive invasions of various ] and ] c. 300 – 5th century AD. Despite this, other parts of the Byzantine empire continued to flourish, in particular some coastal cities such as ] became important trade and cultural centres. Despite the empire's power, from the beginning of the 6th century the Byzantine dominions were subject to frequent raids by various ] which, in the course of centuries, eventually resulted in drastic demographic and cultural changes in the Empire's Balkan provinces. Although traditional scholarship attributes these changes to large-scale colonizations by Slavic-speaking groups, it has been proposed that a generalized dissipation of Roman identity might have commenced in the 3rd century, especially among rural provincials who were crippled by harsh taxation and famines. Given this background, penetrations carried by successive waves of relatively small numbers of Slavic warriors and their families might have been capable of assimilating large numbers of indigenes into their cultural model, which was sometimes seen as a more attractive alternative{{citation needed|date=December 2021}}. In this way and in the course of time, great parts of Macedonia came to be controlled by Slavic-speaking communities. Despite numerous attacks on Thessaloniki, the city held out, and Byzantine-Roman culture continued to flourish, although Slavic cultural influence steadily increased. | |||
The Congress of Berlin (1878) changed the Balkan map again. The treaty restored Macedonia and Thrace to the Ottoman Empire. Serbia, Romania and Montenegro were granted full independence, and some territorial expansion at the expense of the Ottoman Empire. Russia would maintain military advisors in Bulgaria and Eastern Rumelia until May 1879. Austria-Hungary was permitted to occupy Bosnia, Herzegovina and the Sanjak of Novi Pazar. The Congress of Berlin also forced Bulgaria, newly given autonomy by the 1878 Treaty of San Stefano, to cede territory to the Ottoman Empire. The territorial losses dissatisfied Bulgaria whose ambition it was to review the treaty. Besides, Serbia was now interested in Macedonian lands, as was Greece, which after the addition of Thessaly to Greece in (1881) was bordering Macedonia. Thus, the Berlin Congress renewed the struggle for Macedonia rather than setting up a permanent regime. In the following years, all of the neighboring states struggled over Macedonia, and were only kept at bay by the Ottoman Army and the involvement of the Great Powers in the region. | |||
The Slavic settlements organized themselves along tribal and territorially based lines which were referred to by Byzantine Greek historians as "Sklaviniai". The Sklaviniai continued to intermittently assault the Byzantine Empire, either independently, or aided by ] or ] contingents. Around 680 AD a "Bulgar" group (which was largely composed of the descendants of former Roman Christians taken captive by the Avars), led by Khan ] (theorized to have belonged to the same ] as the Danubian Bulgarian khan ]), settled in the ], and launched campaigns to the region of Thessaloniki. When the Empire could spare imperial troops, it attempted to regain control of its lost Balkan territories. By the time of ] a significant number of the Slavs of Macedonia were captured and transferred to central Asia Minor where they were forced to recognize the authority of the Byzantine emperor and serve in his ranks. In the late 7th century, ] again organized a massive expedition against the Sklaviniai and Bulgars of Macedonia. Launching from Constantinople, he subdued many Slavic tribes and established the ''Theme of Thrace'' in the hinterland of the Great City, and pushed on into Thessaloniki. However, on his return he was ambushed by the Slavo-Bulgars of Kuber, losing a great part of his army, booty, and subsequently his throne.<ref>The Early Medieval Balkans. John Fine. Page 71: "In 688/89 the emperor Justinian II marched through Thrace where at least enough Byzantine rule had been restored for a theme administration to be established.... The purpose of the campaign was to punish the Bulgars and Slavs. Justinian successfully subdued many Slavs (taking many captives) and reached Thessaloniki. On his return toward Constantinople in 689 he was ambushed by the Bulgars who wiped out most of his army"</ref> Despite these temporary successes, rule in the region was far from stable since not all of the Sklaviniae were pacified, and those that were often rebelled. The emperors rather resorted to withdrawing their defensive line south along the Aegean coast, until the late 8th century. Although a new theme—that of "Macedonia"—was subsequently created, it did not correspond to today's geographic territory, but one farther east (centred on Adrianople), carved out of the already existing Thracian and Helladic themes. | |||
Serbian policy had a distinct anti-Bulgarian flavor, attempting to prevent the Bulgarian Exarchate (established in 1870) influencing the inhabitants of Macedonia. On the other hand, Bulgaria was using the power of its religious institutions to promote its language and make more people identify with Bulgaria. Bramos argues that behind Bulgarian foreign policy was Russia, which wanted to acquire an exit to Aegean Sea, and that a serious obstacle to this was the Greek influence in Macedonia . Greece, in addition, was in an advantageous position for protecting its interests through the influence of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, responsible for educational issues. Sponsoring Greek-language schools, however, put the Patriarchate in dispute with the Exarchate, the protector of Bulgarian interests. Indeed, belonging to one or another institution could define a person's national identity. Simply, if a person supported the Patriarchate they were regarded as Greek, whereas if they supported the Exarchate they were regarded as Bulgarian. | |||
===Medieval Macedonia=== | |||
The aim of the adversaries, however, was not primarily to extend their influence over Macedonia but merely to prevent Macedonia succumbing to the influence of the other. This often violent attempt to persuade the people that they belonged to one ethnic group or another pushed some people to reject both. The severe pressure on the peaceful peasants of Macedonia worked against the plans of the Serbians and Bulgarians to make them adopt their ethnic idea and eventually a social divide became apparent. The British Ambassador in Belgrade in 1927 said: "At present the unfortunate Macedonian peasant is between the hammer and the anvil. One day 'comitadjis' come to his house and demand under threat lodging, food and money and the next day the gendarm hales him off to prison for having given them; the Macedonian is really a peaceable, fairly industrious agriculturist and if the (Serbian) government give him adequate protection, education, freedom from malaria and decent communications, there seems no reason why he should not become just as Serbian in sentiment as he was Bulgarian 10 years ago". As a result of this game of tug-of-war, the Slavs of Macedonia did not have any national identity{{citation needed}}. Moreover, when the imperialistic plans of the surrounding states made possible the division of Macedonia, some Macedonian intellectuals such as Misirkov mentioned the necessity of creating a Macedonian national identity which would distinguish the Macedonian Slavs from Bulgarians, Serbians or Greeks. | |||
{{Further|Byzantine Empire|Bulgaria (theme)|Macedonia (theme)|Strymon (theme)|Thessalonica (theme)}} | |||
There are no Byzantine records of "Sklaviniai" after 836/837 as they were absorbed into the expanding ]. Slavic influence in the region strengthened along with the rise of this state, which incorporated parts of the region to its domain in 837. In the early 860s ], two ] brothers from Thessaloniki, created the first Slavic ] in which the ] language was first transcribed, and are thus commonly referred to as the apostles of the Slavic world. Their cultural heritage was acquired and developed in medieval Bulgaria, where after 885 the region of ] (present-day Republic of North Macedonia) became a significant ecclesiastical center with the nomination of the Saint ] for "first archbishop in Bulgarian language" with residence in this region. In conjunction with another disciple of Saints Cyril and Methodius, ], Clement created a flourishing Slavic cultural center around Ohrid, where pupils were taught theology in the ] language and the Glagolitic and ] at what is now called ]. The Bulgarian-Byzantine boundary in the beginning of 10th century passed approximately {{convert|20|km|0|abbr=on}} north of Thessaloniki according to the inscription of Narash. According to the Byzantine author ], at that time the neighbouring settlements around Thessaloniki were inhabited by "Scythians" (Bulgarians) and the Slavic tribes of ] and ], in addition to Greeks. | |||
Baptizing Macedonian Slavs as Serbian or Bulgarian aimed therefore to justify these countries' territorial claims over Macedonia. The Greek side, with the assistance of the Patriarchate that was responsible for the schools, could more easily maintain control, because they were spreading Greek identity. For the very same reason the Bulgarians, when preparing the Exarchate's government (1871) included Macedonians in the assembly as "brothers" to prevent any ethnic diversification. On the other hand, the Serbs, unable to establish Serbian-speaking schools, used propaganda. Their main concern was to prevent the Slavic-speaking Macedonians from acquiring Bulgarian identity through concentrating on the myth of the ancient origins of the Macedonians and simultaneously by the classification of Bulgarians as Tatars and not as Slavs, emphasizing their 'Macedonian' characteristics as an intermediate stage between Serbs and Bulgarians. To sum up the Serbian propaganda attempted to inspire the Macedonians with a separate ethnic identity to diminish the Bulgarian influence. This choice was the 'Macedonian ethnicity'. The Bulgarians never accepted an ethnic diversity from the Slav Macedonians, giving geographic meaning to the term. In 1893 they established the VMRO (Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization) aiming to confront the Serbian and Greek action in Macedonia. VMRO hoped to answer the Macedonian question through a revolutionary movement, and so they instigated the Ilinden Uprising (1903) to release some Ottoman territory. Bulgaria used this to internationalize the Macedonian question. Ilinden changed Greece's stance which decided to take Para-military action. In order to protect the Greek Macedonians and Greek interests, Greece sent officers to train guerrillas and organize militias (]), known as ''makedonomahi'' (Macedonian fighters), essentially to fight the Bulgarians. After that it was obvious that the ] could be answered only with a war. | |||
At the end of the 10th century, what is now the Republic of North Macedonia became the political and cultural heartland of the ], after Byzantine emperors ] conquered the eastern part of the Bulgarian state during the ]. The Bulgarian capital ] and the Bulgarian Tsar Boris II were captured, and with the deposition of the Bulgarian regalia in the ], Bulgaria was officially annexed to Byzantium. A new capital was established at Ohrid, which also became the seat of the ]. A new dynasty, that of the ] under Tsar ] and his successors, continued resistance against the Byzantines for several more decades, before also ] in 1018. The western part of Bulgaria including Macedonia was incorporated into the Byzantine Empire as the province of Bulgaria (]) and the Bulgarian Patriarchate was reduced in rank to an ]. | |||
The rise of the Albanian and the Turkish nationalism after ], however, prompted Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria to bury their differences with regard to Macedonia and to form a joint coalition against the ] in ]. Disregarding public opinion in Bulgaria, which was in support of the establishment of an autonomous Macedonian province under a Christian governor, the Bulgarian government entered a pre-war treaty with Serbia which divided the region into two parts{{citation needed}}. The part of Macedonia west and north of the line of partition was contested by both Serbia and Bulgaria and was subject to the arbitration of the ]n ] after the war. Serbia formally renounced any claims to the part of Macedonia south and east of the line, which was declared to be within the Bulgarian sphere of interest. The pre-treaty between Greece and Bulgaria, however, did not include any agreement on the division of the conquered territories - evidently both countries hoped to occupy as much territory as possible having their sights primarily set on ]. | |||
Intermittent Bulgarian uprisings continued to occur, often with the support of the Serbian princedoms to the north. Any temporary independence that might have been gained was usually crushed swiftly by the Byzantines. It was also marked by ] between the ] and Byzantium. The Normans launched offensives from their lands acquired in southern Italy, and temporarily gained rule over small areas in the northwestern coast. | |||
] | |||
] | |||
In the ], Bulgaria, Serbia, Greece and Montenegro occupied almost all Ottoman-held territories in Europe. Bulgaria bore the brunt of the war fighting on the Thracian front against the main Ottoman forces. Both her war expenditures and casualties in the ] were higher than those of Serbia, Greece and Montenegro combined. Macedonia itself was occupied by Greek, Serbian and Bulgarian forces. The Ottoman Empire in the ] in May ] assigned the whole of Macedonia to the ], without, specifying the division of the region, in order to promote problems between the allies. Dissatisfied with the creation of an autonomous ]n state, which denied her access to the ], Serbia asked for the suspension of the pre-war division treaty and demanded from Bulgaria greater territorial concessions in Macedonia. Later in May the same year, Greece and Serbia signed a secret treaty in ] stipulating the division of Macedonia according to the existing lines of control. Both Serbia and Greece, as well as Bulgaria, started to prepare for a final war of partition. | |||
At the end of the 12th century, some northern parts of Macedonia were temporarily conquered by ] of ]. In the 13th century, following the ], Macedonia was disputed among ], ] crusaders of the short-lived ], and the ]. Most of southern Macedonia was secured by the ] and then by the ], while the north was ruled by Bulgaria. After 1261 however, all of Macedonia returned to Byzantine rule, where it largely remained until the ]. Taking advantage of this conflict, the Serb ruler ] expanded his realm and founded the ], which included all of Macedonia, northern and central Greece – excluding Thessaloniki, Athens and the Peloponnese. Dushan's empire however broke up shortly after his death in 1355. After his death local rulers in the regions of Macedonia were despot ] in eastern Macedonia, and kings ] and his son ] in western regions of Macedonia. | |||
]]] | |||
In June ], Bulgarian Tsar ], without consulting the government, and without any declaration of war, ordered Bulgarian troops to attack the Greek and Serbian troops in Macedonia, initiating the ]. The Bulgarian army was in full retreat in all fronts. The Serbian army chose to stop its operations when achieved all its territorial goals and only then the Bulgarian army took a breath. During the last 2 days the Bulgarians managed to achieve a defensive victory against the advancing Greek army in the ]. However at the same time the Romanian army crossed the undefended northern border and easily advanced towards ]. Romania interfered in the war, in order to satisfy its territorial claims against Bulgaria. The ] also interfered, easily reassuming control of Eastern Thrace with ]. The ], also known as Inter-Ally War, left Bulgaria only with the Struma valley and a small part of Thrace with minor ports at the Aegean sea. Vardar Macedonia was incorporated into Serbia and thereafter referred to as South Serbia. Southern (Aegean) Macedonia was incorporated into Greece and thereafter was referred to as northern Greece. The region suffered heavily during the Second Balkan War. During its advance at the end of June, the Greek army set fire to the Bulgarian quarter of the town of ] and over 160 villages around Kilkis and ] driving some 50,000 refugees into Bulgaria proper. The Bulgarian army retaliated by burning the Greek quarter of ] and by arming Muslims from the region of ] which led to a massacre of Greek civilians{{citation needed}}. | |||
===Ottoman Macedonia=== | |||
In September of ], the Greek government authorized the landing of the troops in Thessaloniki. In 1916 the pro-German King of Greece agreed with the Germans to allow military forces of the Central Powers to enter Greek Macedonia in order to attack Bulgarian forces in Thessaloniki. As a result, Bulgarian troops occupied the eastern part of Greek Macedonia, including the port of ]. The region was, however, restored to Greece following the victory of the ] in ]. After the destruction of the Greek Army in Asia Minor in ] Greece and Turkey exchanged most of Macedonia's Turkish minority and the Greek inhabitants of Thrace and ], as a result of which Aegean Macedonia experienced a large addition to its population and became overwhelmingly Greek in ethnic composition. Serbian-ruled Macedonia was incorporated into the ] (later the ]) in ]. Yugoslav Macedonia was subsequently subjected to an intense process of "]" during the ] and ]. | |||
]]] | |||
</ref> ]] | |||
{{Further|Greek Macedonia under the Ottoman Empire|Vardar Macedonia under the Ottoman Empire|Demographic history of Ottoman Macedonia}} | |||
Since the middle of the 14th century, the Ottoman threat was looming in the Balkans, as the Ottomans defeated the various Christian principalities, whether Serb, Bulgarian or Greek. After the Ottoman victory in the ] in 1371, most of Macedonia accepted vassalage to the Ottomans and by the end of the 14th century the Ottoman Empire gradually annexed the region. The final Ottoman capture of ] (1430) was seen as the prelude to the fall of ] itself. Macedonia remained a part of the ] for nearly 500 years, during which time it gained a substantial ] minority. Thessaloniki later become the home of a large ] population following the expulsions of Jews after 1492 from ]. | |||
===Birth of nationalism and of Macedonian identities=== | |||
During ] the boundaries of the region shifted yet again. When the German forces occupied the area, most of Yugoslav Macedonia and part of Aegean Macedonia were transferred for administration to Bulgaria. During the Bulgarian administration of Eastern Greek Macedonia, some 100,000 Bulgarian refugees from the region were resettled there and perhaps as many Greeks were deported or fled to Greece. Western Aegean Macedonia was occupied by ], with the western parts of Yugoslav Macedonia being annexed to Italian-occupied Albania. The remainder of Greek Macedonia (including all of the coast) was occupied by ]. One of the worst episodes of ] happened here when 60,000 Jews from ] were deported to ] in occupied ]. Only a few thousand survived. | |||
{{More citations needed|date=February 2008|section}} | |||
Over the centuries Macedonia had become a multicultural region. The historical references mention Greeks, Bulgarians, Turks, Albanians, Gypsies, Jews, Aromanians and Megleno-Romanians.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kroraina.com/knigi/en/jf/jf_1.html|title=J. Fraser – Pictures from the Balkans – 1|first=Vassil|last=Karloukovski|website=www.kroraina.com}}</ref> It is often{{who|date=April 2012}} claimed that ], the fruit or vegetable salad, was named after the area's very mixed population, as it could be witnessed at the end of the 19th century. From the Middle Ages to the early 20th century the ] was identified mostly as Bulgarian.<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref>Pulcherius, ''Recueil des historiens des Croisades. Historiens orientaux''. III, p. 331 – a passage in English – </ref> | |||
Macedonia was liberated in ], when the Red Army's advance in the Balkan Peninsula forced the German forces to retreat. The pre-war borders were restored under U.S. and British pressure because the Bulgarian government was insisting to keep its military units on Greek soil. The Bulgarian Macedonia returned fairly rapidly to normality, but the Bulgarian patriots in Yugoslav Macedonia underwent a process of ethnic cleansing by the Belgrade authorities, and Greek Macedonia was ravaged by the ], which broke out in December 1944 and did not end until October ]. | |||
During the period of ] many Bulgarians from these regions supported the struggle for creation of Bulgarian cultural educational and religious institutions, including ].<ref>Journal Bulgarski knizhitsi, Constantinople, No. 10 May 1858, p. 19, in English – , , , Vacalopulos, Konstandinos A. Modern history of Macedonia, Thessaloniki 1988, pp. 52, 57, 64</ref> Eventually, in the 20th century, 'Bulgarians' came to be understood as synonymous with 'Macedonian Slavs' and, eventually, 'ethnic Macedonians'. ], a philologist and publicist, wrote his work "]" (1903), for which he is heralded by ] as one of the founders of the Macedonian nation. | |||
After this civil war, a large number of former ELAS fighters who took refuge in communist Bulgaria and Yugoslavia and described themselves as "ethnic Bulgarian/Macedonian" were prohibited from reestablishing to their former estates by the Greek authorities. Most of them were accused in Greece for crimes committed during the period of the German occupation. | |||
After the revival of Greek, Serbian, and Bulgarian statehood in the 19th century, the Ottoman lands in Europe that became identified as "Macedonia", were contested by all three governments, leading to the creation in the 1890s and 1900s of rival armed groups who divided their efforts between fighting the Turks and one another. The most important of these was the ], which organized the so-called ] in 1903, fighting for an autonomous or independent Macedonian state, and the Greek efforts from 1904 until 1908 (]). Diplomatic intervention by the European powers led to plans for an autonomous Macedonia under Ottoman rule. | |||
===Macedonia in Balkan Wars, World War I and II=== | |||
====The Balkan Wars==== | |||
] | |||
The decline of the Ottoman Empire and its imminent collapse was what the Balkan states had been waiting to inherit its European territory. The ] (1908) proved a nationalistic movement thwarting the peoples' expectations of the empire's modernization and sped up the end of the Ottoman occupation of Balkans. To this direction was oriented the alliance between the Balkan states in the spring 1913. Precisely the First Balkan War, which lasted six weeks, commenced on 8/10/1912 when Montenegro declared war on the Ottoman Empire whose forces finally fought four different wars in Thrace, Macedonia, Northern and Southern Albania and Kosovo. The Macedonian campaign, which is the main concern of this chapter, was fought in atrocious conditions. The retreat of the Ottoman army from Macedonia succeeded the desperate effort of the Greek and Bulgarian forces to reach the city of Thessalonica, the "single prize of the first Balkan War" for whose status no prior agreements were done. In this case possession would be equal to acquisition. The Greek forces entered the city first liberating officially , a progress only positive for them. Glenny says: "for the Greeks it was a good war" . | |||
The restricted borders of the modern Greek state at its inception in 1830 disappointed the inhabitants of northern Greece (Epirus and Macedonia).{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} Addressing these concerns in 1844, the Greek Prime Minister Kolettis addressed the constitutional assembly in Athens that "the ] is not Greece; it is only a part, the smallest and poorest, of Greece. The Greek is not only he who inhabits the kingdom, but also he who lives in Ioannina, or Thessaloniki, or Serres, or Odrin" . He mentions cities and islands that were under Ottoman possession as composing the ] (Greek: Μεγάλη Ιδέα, ''Megáli Idéa'') which meant the reconstruction of the ] or the revival of the ]. The important idea here is that for Greece, Macedonia was a region with large Greek populations expecting annexation to the new Greek state. | |||
The first Balkan War managed to liberate Balkans from Turks and settled the major issues except Macedonia. In the spring 1913 the Serbs and Greeks begun the ']' and the ']' of the parts in Macedonia they already controlled, while Bulgarians faced some difficulties against the Jews and the Turkish populations. Moreover, the possession of Thessalonica was a living dream for the Bulgarians that were preparing for a new war. For this, the Bulgarian troops had a secret order to launch surprise attacks on the Serbs. Greece and Serbia acknowledging the Bulgarian plans signed a bilateral defensive agreement (May 1913) . Consequently, Greece and Serbia decided to attack Bulgaria in its moment of maximum weakness, exhausted by its sacrifice the previous winter. Besides, they had to fight also the Romanians who were claim Bulgarian lands . | |||
] | |||
The treaty of Bucharest (August 1913) took off most of the Bulgarian conquests of the previous years. Large part of Macedonia became Southern Serbia, including the territory of what today is the Republic of Macedonia and Aegean Macedonia became Northern Greece. Greece almost doubled its territory and population size and its northern frontiers remain today, more or less the same since the Balkan Wars. However, when Serbia acquired 'Vardarska Banovina' (the region of Vardar Macedonia; the present-day Republic of Macedonia), it launched having expansionist views aiming to descend to the Aegean, with Thessalonica as he highest ambition. However, Greece after the population exchange with Bulgaria, soon after its victory in the Balkan wars, managed to give national homogeneity in the Aegean and any remaining Slavic-speakers were absorbed . | |||
The 1878 ] changed the Balkan map again. The treaty restored Macedonia and Thrace to the Ottoman Empire. Serbia, Romania and Montenegro were granted full independence, and some territorial expansion at the expense of the Ottoman Empire. Russia would maintain military advisors in Bulgaria and Eastern Rumelia until May 1879. Austria-Hungary was permitted to occupy Bosnia, Herzegovina and the Sanjak of Novi Pazar. The Congress of Berlin also forced Bulgaria, newly given autonomy by the 1878 ], to return over half of its newly gained territory to the Ottoman Empire. This included Macedonia, a large part of which was given to Bulgaria, due to Russian pressure and the presence of significant numbers of Bulgarians and adherents to the ]. The territorial losses dissatisfied Bulgaria; this fuelled the ambitions of many Bulgarian politicians for the following seventy years, who wanted to review the treaty – by peaceful or military means and to reunite all lands which they claimed had a Bulgarian majority. Besides, Serbia was now interested in the Macedonian lands, until then only Greece was Bulgaria's main contender, which after the addition of Thessaly to Greece in (1881) was bordering Macedonia. Thus, the Berlin Congress renewed the struggle for Turkey in Europe, including the so-called Macedonia region, rather than setting up a permanent regime. In the following years, all of the neighboring states struggled over Turkey in Europe; they were only kept at bay by their own restraints, the Ottoman Army and the territorial ambitions of the Great Powers in the region. | |||
====World War I==== | |||
Serbian policy had a distinct anti-Bulgarian flavor, attempting to prevent the Bulgarian influencing the inhabitants of Macedonia. On the other hand, Bulgaria was using the power of its religious institutions (Bulgarian Exarchate established in 1870) to promote its language and make more people identify with Bulgaria. Greece, in addition, was in an advantageous position for protecting its interests through the influence of Patriarchate of Constantinople which traditionally sponsored Greek-language and Greek-culture schools also in villages with few Greeks. This put the Patriarchate in dispute with the Exarchate, which established schools with Bulgarian education. Indeed, belonging to one or another institution could define a person's national identity. Simply, if a person supported the Patriarchate they were regarded as Greek, whereas if they supported the Exarchate they were regarded as Bulgarian. Locally, however, villagers were not always able to express freely their association with one or the other institution as there were numerous armed groups trying to defend and/or expand the territory of each. Some were locally recruited and self-organized while others were sent and armed by the protecting states. | |||
After World War I the status quo of Macedonia remained the same. The establishment of the 'Kingdom of Serbians, Croats and Slovenes' in 1918, which in 1929 was renamed 'Yugoslavia' (South Slavia) predicted no special regime for Skopje neither recognized any Macedonian national identity. In fact, the claims to Macedonian identity remained silent at a propaganda level because, eventually, north Macedonia had been a Serbian conquest. | |||
The aim of the adversaries, however, was not primarily to extend their influence over Macedonia but merely to prevent Macedonia succumbing to the influence of the other. This often violent attempt to persuade the people that they belonged to one ethnic group or another pushed some people to reject both. The severe pressure on the peaceful peasants of Macedonia worked against the plans of the Serbians and Bulgarians to make them adopt their ethnic idea and eventually a social divide became apparent. The British Ambassador in Belgrade in 1927 said: "At present the unfortunate Macedonian peasant is between the hammer and the anvil. One day 'comitadjis' come to his house and demand under threat lodging, food and money and the next day the gendarm hales him off to prison for having given them; the Macedonian is really a peaceable, fairly industrious agriculturist and if the (Serbian) government give him adequate protection, education, freedom from malaria and decent communications, there seems no reason why he should not become just as Serbian in sentiment as he was Bulgarian 10 years ago". As a result of this game of tug-of-war, the development of a distinct Macedonian national identity was impeded and delayed. Moreover, when the imperialistic plans of the surrounding states made possible the division of Macedonia, some Macedonian intellectuals such as Misirkov mentioned the necessity of creating a Macedonian national identity which would distinguish the Macedonian Slavs from Bulgarians, Serbians or Greeks. | |||
The situation in Serbian Macedonia changed after the Revolution in Russia (1918-1919). According to Sfetas, Comintern was handling Macedonia as a matter of tactics, depending on the political circumstances. In early 1920s supported the position for a single and independent Macedonia in a Balkan Soviet Democracy. In actual fact, the Soviets wished a common frontier of the Bulgarian communist agriculturists and the Bulgarian-Macedonian societies in order to destabilize the Balkan Peninsula. IMRO, under the protection of Comintern, promoted the idea of an independent Macedonia in a Federation of Balkan states, unifying all Macedonians. However, the possible participation of Bulgaria in a new war, on the ] side, ended the Soviet support some years later. | |||
] | |||
====World War II and beyond==== | |||
Baptizing Macedonian Slavs as Serbian or Bulgarian aimed therefore to justify these countries' territorial claims over Macedonia. The Greek side, with the assistance of the Patriarchate that was responsible for the schools, could more easily maintain control, because they were spreading Greek identity. For the very same reason the Bulgarians, when preparing the Exarchate's government (1871) included Macedonians in the assembly as "brothers" to prevent any ethnic diversification. On the other hand, the Serbs, unable to establish Serbian-speaking schools, used propaganda. Their main concern was to prevent the ] from acquiring Bulgarian identity through concentrating on the myth of the ancient origins of the Macedonians and simultaneously by the classification of Bulgarians as Tatars and not as Slavs, emphasizing their 'Macedonian' characteristics as an intermediate stage between Serbs and Bulgarians. To sum up the Serbian propaganda attempted to inspire the Macedonians with a separate ethnic identity to diminish the Bulgarian influence. This choice was the 'Macedonian ethnicity'. The Bulgarians never accepted an ethnic diversity from the Slav Macedonians, giving geographic meaning to the term. In 1893 they established the ] (VMRO) aiming to confront the Serbian and Greek action in Macedonia. VMRO hoped to answer the ] through a revolutionary movement, and so they instigated the ] (1903) to release some Ottoman territory. Bulgaria used this to internationalize the Macedonian question. Ilinden changed Greece's stance which decided to take Para-military action. In order to protect the Greek Macedonians and Greek interests, Greece sent officers to train guerrillas and organize militias (]), known as ''makedonomahi'' (Macedonian fighters), essentially to fight the Bulgarians. After that it was obvious that the Macedonian question could be answered only with a war. | |||
During the German occupation of Greece (1941-1944) the Greek Communist Party-KKE was the main resistance factor with its military branch EAM-ELAS (National Liberating Frontier). Although many members of EAM were Slavic-speaking, they had either Bulgarian, Greek or distinct Macedonian conscience. To take advantage of the situation KKE established SNOF (Macedonian Liberating Frontier-1943) with the cooperation of the Yugoslav leader Tito, who was ambitious enough to make plans for the Greek Macedonia. For this he established the Anti-Fascistic Assembly for the National Liberation of Macedonia (ASNOM) giving an actual liberating character to the whole region of Macedonia. Besides, KKE was very positive to the option of a greater Macedonia including the Greek region, since it realized that a victory in the ] was utopic. Later EAM and SNOF disagreed in issues of policy and they finally crashed and the former was expelled from Greece (1944) . | |||
] | |||
Yugoslav Macedonia was the only region that Tito had not developed a Partisan movement because of the Bulgarian occupation of a large part of Macedonian area. To the improvement of the situation, in 1943 was established the Communist Party of 'Macedonia' in Tetovo with the prospect that it would support the resistance against Axon. In the meanwhile the Bulgarians proved violent losing moral support from the civilians. In the end of the war "a Macedonia national consciousness hardly existed beyond a general conviction, gained from bitter experience, that rule from Sofia was as unpalatable as that from Belgrade. Bur if there were no Macedonian nation there was a Communist Party of Macedonia around which the People's Republic of Macedonia was built" . In August 1944 Tito established People's Republic of Macedonia. Firstly, he limited the Serbian territory and secondly he implied with his political decision that only Macedonia of Vardar was liberated , whilst the Aegean and Pirin were still under foreign occupation . | |||
The rise of the Albanian and the Turkish nationalism after 1908, however, prompted Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria to bury their differences with regard to Macedonia and to form a joint coalition against the ] in 1912. Disregarding public opinion in Bulgaria, which was in support of the establishment of an autonomous Macedonian province under a Christian governor, the Bulgarian government entered a pre-war treaty with Serbia which divided the region into two parts.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} The part of Macedonia west and north of the line of partition was contested by both Serbia and Bulgaria and was subject to the arbitration of the Russian Tsar after the war. Serbia formally renounced any claims to the part of Macedonia south and east of the line, which was declared to be within the Bulgarian sphere of interest. The pre-treaty between Greece and Bulgaria, however, did not include any agreement on the division of the conquered territories – evidently both countries hoped to occupy as much territory as possible having their sights primarily set on Thessaloniki. | |||
The end of the War did not bring peace to Greece and a strenuous civil war between the Government forces and EAM broke out with about 50,000 casualties for both sides. The defeat of the Communists (1949) forced its Slav-speaking members to leave Greece followed by the last non Greek-speaking inhabitants . ''Since 1923 the only internationally recognized minority in Greece are the Muslims in West Thrace'' | |||
In the ], Bulgaria, Serbia, Greece and Montenegro occupied almost all Ottoman-held territories in Europe. Bulgaria bore the brunt of the war fighting on the Thracian front against the main Ottoman forces. Both her war expenditures and casualties in the First Balkan War were higher than those of Serbia, Greece and Montenegro combined. Macedonia itself was occupied by Greek, Serbian and Bulgarian forces. The Ottoman Empire in the ] in May 1913 assigned the whole of Macedonia to the ], without, specifying the division of the region, to promote problems between the allies. Dissatisfied with the creation of an autonomous Albanian state, which denied her access to the ], Serbia asked for the suspension of the pre-war division treaty and demanded from Bulgaria greater territorial concessions in Macedonia. Later in May the same year, Greece and Serbia signed a secret treaty in Thessaloniki stipulating the division of Macedonia according to the existing lines of control. Both Serbia and Greece, as well as Bulgaria, started to prepare for a final war of partition. | |||
The Yugoslav communist leader ] separated Yugoslav Macedonia from Serbia after the war. It became a republic of the new federal Yugoslavia (as the Socialist Republic of Macedonia) in ], with its capital at ]. Tito also promoted the concept of a separate Macedonian nation, as a means of severing the ties of the ] with Bulgaria. Although the ] is very close to ], the differences were deliberately emphasized and the region's historical figures were promoted as being uniquely Macedonian (rather than Serbian or Bulgarian){{citation needed}}. A separate ] was established, splitting off from the ],but it has not been recognized by any other Orthodox Church, including the ]. The Communist Party sought to deter pro-Bulgarian sentiment, which was punished severely; convictions were still being handed down as late as ]. | |||
] | |||
Tito had a number of reasons for doing this. First, as an ethnic Croat, he wanted to reduce Serbia's dominance in Yugoslavia; establishing a territory formerly considered Serbian as an equal to Serbia within Yugoslavia achieved this effect. Secondly, he wanted to sever the ties of the Macedonian Slav population with ] as recognition of that population as Bulgarian would have undermined the unity of the Yugoslav federation. Third of all, Tito sought to justify future Yugoslav claims towards the rest of Macedonia (] and ]), in the name of the "liberation" of the region. The potential "Macedonian" state would remain as a constituent republic within Yugoslavia, and so Yugoslavia would manage to get access to the ]. | |||
In June 1913, Bulgarian Tsar ], without consulting the government, and without any declaration of war, ordered Bulgarian troops to attack the Greek and Serbian troops in Macedonia, initiating the ]. The Bulgarian army was in full retreat in all fronts. The Serbian army chose to stop its operations when achieved all its territorial goals and only then the Bulgarian army took a breath. During the last two days the Bulgarians managed to achieve a defensive victory against the advancing Greek army in the ]. However at the same time the Romanian army crossed the undefended northern border and easily advanced towards ]. Romania interfered in the war, in order to satisfy its territorial claims against Bulgaria. The ] also interfered, easily reassuming control of Eastern Thrace with ]. The Second Balkan War, also known as Inter-Ally War, left Bulgaria only with the Struma valley and a small part of Thrace with minor ports at the Aegean sea. Vardar Macedonia was incorporated into Serbia and thereafter referred to as South Serbia. Southern (Aegean) Macedonia was incorporated into Greece and thereafter was referred to as northern Greece. The region suffered heavily during the Second Balkan War. During its advance at the end of June, the Greek army set fire to the Bulgarian quarter of the town of ] and over 160 villages around Kilkis and Serres driving some 50,000 refugees into Bulgaria proper. The Bulgarian army retaliated by burning the Greek quarter of ] and by arming Muslims from the region of ] which led to a ] of Greek civilians.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} | |||
In September 1915, the Greek government authorized the landing of the troops in Thessaloniki. In 1916 the pro-German King of Greece agreed with the Germans to allow military forces of the Central Powers to enter Greek Macedonia to attack Bulgarian forces in Thessaloniki. As a result, Bulgarian troops occupied the eastern part of Greek Macedonia, including the port of ]. The region was, however, restored to Greece following the victory of the ] in 1918. After the destruction of the Greek Army in Asia Minor in 1922 Greece and Turkey exchanged most of Macedonia's Turkish minority and the Greek inhabitants of Thrace and ], as a result of which Aegean Macedonia experienced a large addition to its population and became overwhelmingly Greek in ethnic composition. Serbian-ruled Macedonia was incorporated into the ] (later the ]) in 1918. Yugoslav Macedonia was subsequently subjected to an intense process of "]" during the 1920s and 1930s. | |||
Tito's designs on Macedonia were asserted as early as August, ], when in a proclamation he claimed that his goal was to reunify "all parts of Macedonia, divided in 1912 and 1913 by Balkan imperialists"{{citation needed}}. To this end, he opened negotiations with Bulgaria for a new federal state, which would also probably have included Albania, and supported the Greek Communists in the ]. The idea of reunification of all of Macedonia under Communist rule was abandoned as late as ] when the Greek Communists lost and Tito fell out with the ] and pro-Soviet Bulgaria. | |||
During ] the boundaries of the region shifted yet again. When the German forces occupied the area, most of Yugoslav Macedonia and part of Aegean Macedonia were transferred for administration to Bulgaria. During the Bulgarian administration of Eastern Greek Macedonia, some 100,000 Bulgarian refugees from the region were resettled there and perhaps as many Greeks were deported or fled to other parts of Greece. Western Aegean Macedonia was occupied by ], with the western parts of Yugoslav Macedonia being annexed to Italian-occupied Albania. The remainder of Greek Macedonia (including all of the coast) was occupied by ]. One of the worst episodes of ] happened here when 60,000 Jews from Thessaloniki were deported to ] in occupied ]. Only a few thousand survived. | |||
Across the border in Greece, ] were seen as a potentially disloyal "]" within the Greek state by both the US and Greece, and its existence was officially denied. Greeks were resettled in the region many of whom emigrated (especially to ]) along with many Greek-speaking natives, because of the hard economic conditions after the Second World War and the Greek Civil War. Although there was some liberalization between ] and ], the Greek military dictatorship re-imposed harsh restrictions. The situation gradually eased after Greece's return to democracy, although even as recently as the ] Greece has been criticised by international human rights activists for "harassing" Macedonian Slav political activists, who, nonetheless, are free to maintain their own political party (]). Elsewhere in Greek Macedonia, economic development after the war was brisk and the area rapidly became the most prosperous part of the region. The coast was heavily developed for ], particularly on the ] peninsula. | |||
Macedonia was liberated in 1944, when the Red Army's advance in the Balkan Peninsula forced the German forces to retreat. The pre-war borders were restored under U.S. and British pressure because the Bulgarian government was insisting to keep its military units on Greek soil. The Bulgarian Macedonia returned fairly rapidly to normality, but the Bulgarian patriots in Yugoslav Macedonia underwent a process of ethnic cleansing by the Belgrade authorities, and Greek Macedonia was ravaged by the ], which broke out in December 1944 and did not end until October 1949. | |||
Under ], ] loyalist and head of the ], Bulgaria initially accepted the existence of a distinctive Macedonian identity. It had been agreed that ] would join Yugoslavian Macedonia and for this reason the population declared itself "Macedonian" in the ] census{{citation needed}}. This caused resentment and many people were imprisoned or interned in rural areas outside ]. After Tito's split from the ] this position was abandoned and the existence of a Macedonian nation or language was denied. | |||
After this civil war, a large number of former ELAS fighters who took refuge in communist Bulgaria and Yugoslavia and described themselves as "ethnic Macedonians" were prohibited from reestablishing to their former estates by the Greek authorities. Most of them were accused in Greece for crimes committed during the period of the German occupation. | |||
Attempts of Macedonian historians after the ]s to claim a number of prominent figures of the ] ] cultural revival and armed resistance movement as Macedonians has caused ever since a bitter resentment in Sofia. ] has repeatedly accused the ] of appropriating Bulgarian national heroes and symbols and of editing works of literature and historical documents so as to prove the existence of a ] consciousness before the ]s. The publication in the ] of the folk song collections 'Bulgarian Folk Songs' by the ] and 'Songs of the Macedonian Bulgarians' by Serbian archaeologist Verkovic under the "politically correct" titles 'Collection' and 'Macedonian Folk Songs' are some of the examples quoted by the ]. The issue has soured the relations of ] with former ] and later with the ] for decades. | |||
== |
===Macedonia in the Balkan Wars, World War I and II=== | ||
{{More citations needed section|date=January 2020}} | |||
], the president of Yugoslav Macedonia, sought to keep his republic outside the fray of the ] in the early ]. Yugoslav Macedonia's very existence had depended on the active support of the Yugoslav state and Communist Party. As both began to collapse, the Macedonian authorities allowed and encouraged a stronger assertion of Macedonian Slav national identity than before. This included toleration of demands from Macedonian Slav nationalists for the reunification of Macedonia. The ] were unhappy about an erosion of their national rights in the face of a more assertive Macedonian Slav nationalism. Some nationalist Serbs called for the republic's re-incorporation into Serbia, although in practice this was never a likely prospect, given Serbia's preoccupation with ] and ]. | |||
====Balkan Wars==== | |||
As communism fell throughout Eastern Europe in the late 20th century, Macedonia followed its other federation partners and declared its independence from Yugoslavia in late 1991. In ], the (then Socialist) Republic of Macedonia held a referendum on independence which produced an overwhelming majority in favor, although it was boycotted by the ethnic Albanians, although they did create ethnic political parties and actively contributed in the Macedonian government, parliament etc. The republic seceded peacefully from the ], declaring its independence as the ]. ] was consequently the first country to officially recognize ]'s independence - as early as February 1992, followed by other countries as well. The new Macedonian constitution took effect November 20, 1991 and called for a system of government based on a parliamentary democracy. ] became the first President of the new independent state, succeeded by ]. | |||
{{see also|First Balkan War}} | |||
The imminent ] was welcomed by the Balkan states, as it promised to restore their European territory. The ] of 1908 proved a nationalistic movement thwarting the peoples' expectations of the empire's modernization and hastened the end of the Ottoman occupation of the Balkans. To this end, an alliance was struck among the Balkan states in Spring 1913. The First Balkan War, which lasted six weeks, commenced in August 1912, when Montenegro declared war on the Ottoman Empire, whose forces ultimately engaged four different wars in Thrace, Macedonia, Northern and Southern Albania and Kosovo. The Macedonian campaign was fought in atrocious conditions. The retreat of the Ottoman army from Macedonia succeeded the desperate effort of the Greek and Bulgarian forces to reach the city of ], the "single prize of the first Balkan War" for whose status no prior agreements were done. In this case possession would be equal to acquisition. The Greek forces entered the city first liberating officially, a progress only positive for them. Glenny says: "for the Greeks it was a good war". | |||
The first Balkan War managed to liberate Balkans from Turks and settled the major issues except Macedonia. In the spring 1913 the Serbs and Greeks begun the ']' and the ']' of the parts in Macedonia they already controlled, while Bulgarians faced some difficulties against the Jews {{Citation needed|date=August 2008}} and the Turkish populations. Moreover, the possession of Thessalonica was a living dream for the Bulgarians that were preparing for a new war. For this, the Bulgarian troops had a secret order in June 1913 to launch surprise attacks on the Serbs. Greece and Serbia signed a previous bilateral defensive agreement (May 1913). Consequently, Bulgaria decided to attack Greece and Serbia. After some initial gains the Bulgarians were forced to retreat back to Bulgaria proper and lose nearly all of the land they had conquered during the first war. | |||
==Controversy: the Republic of Macedonia and Greece== | |||
The Treaty of Bucharest (August 1913) took off most of the Bulgarian conquests of the previous years. A large part of Macedonia became southern Serbia, including the territory of what today is the Republic of North Macedonia, and southern Macedonia became ]. Greece almost doubled its territory and population size and its northern frontiers remain today, more or less the same since the Balkan Wars. However, when Serbia acquired 'Vardarska Banovina' (the present-day Republic of North Macedonia), it launched having expansionist views aiming to descend to the Aegean, with Thessalonica as the highest ambition. However, Greece after the population exchange with Bulgaria, soon after its victory in the Balkan wars, managed to give national homogeneity in the Aegean and any remaining Slavic-speakers were absorbed. | |||
Although no controversy exists in regards to whether or not parts of the historic region of Macedonia are incorporated in the present-day Republic of Macedonia, as indeed part of the ancient Macedonian kingdom is, there is controversy, however, with regards to the Slavic peoples who are concentrated in less than half of the region. They first arrived in the late ] and early ] centuries AD when ]-speaking populations overturned Macedonia's ] ethnic composition <ref name="Britannica-Macedonia">Macedonia. (2006). In ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. Retrieved June 16, 2006, from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service: </ref>. As a result, the appropriation by the "Republic of Macedonia" of what Greece held as its "Greek symbols", raised concerns in Greece as well as fuelling nationalist anger. This anger was reinforced by the legacy of the Civil War and the view in some quarters, that members of Greece's ] were pro-Yuoslavian and presented a danger to its borders. The status of the Republic of Macedonia became a heated political issue in Greece where demonstrations took place in ] while one million Macedonian Greeks took to the streets in ] in ], under the slogan: "Macedonia is Greek", referring to the name and ancient history of the region, not posing a territorial claim against their northern neighbor. Initially, the Greek government objected formally to any use of the name Macedonia (including any derivative names) and also to the use of symbols such as the ]. On the other hand, also in 1992, demonstrations by more than 100,000 ] took place in the capital of the Republic of Macedonia - ] over the failure to receive recognition and supporting the constitutional name of the country. | |||
Many volunteers from Macedonia joined Bulgarian army and participated in the battles against Bulgarian enemies in these wars—on the strength of the ] and other units. | |||
The controversy was not just nationalist, but it also played out in Greece's internal politics. The two leading Greek political parties, the ruling conservative ] under ] and the socialist ] under ], sought to outbid each other in whipping up nationalist sentiment and the long-term (rather than immediate) threat posed by the irredentist policies of Skopje. To complicate matters further, New Democracy itself was divided; the then prime minister, Mitsotakis, favored a compromise solution on the Macedonian question, while his foreign minister ] took a hard-line approach. The two eventually fell out and Samaras was sacked, with Mitsotakis reserving the foreign ministry for himself. He failed to reach an agreement on the Macedonian issue despite ] mediation; he fell from power in October ], largely as a result of Samaras causing the government's majority of one, to fall, in September ]. | |||
====World War I==== | |||
When ] took power following the October 1993 elections, he established a "hard line" position on the issue. The ] recommended recognition of the "Republic of Macedonia" under the temporary name of the "former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" (or FYROM for short), which would be used internationally while the country continued to use "Republic of Macedonia" as its constitutional name. The ] and European Union (ergo, including Greece) agreed to this proposal and duly recognized FYROM. This was followed by new, though smaller demonstrations in Greek cities against what was termed a "betrayal" by Greece's allies. Papandreou supported and encouraged the demonstrations, boosting his own popularity by taking the "hard line" against the Republic of Macedonia. In February ], he imposed a total trade embargo on the country, with the exception of food, medicines and humanitarian aid. The effect on the Republic of Macedonia's economy was limited, namely because the real damage to its economy had been caused by the collapse of Yugoslavia and the loss of central European markets due to the war. Also, many Greeks broke the trade embargo by entering through Bulgaria. However, the embargo had bad impact on the Republic of Macedonia's economy as the country was cut-off from the port of ] and became landlocked because of the ] embargo on Yugoslavia to the north, and the Greek embargo to the south. Later, the signing of the Interim accord between Greece and the Republic of Macedonia marked the increased cooperation between the two neighboring states. The blockade had a political cost for Greece, as there was little understanding or sympathy for the country's position, and exasperation over what was seen as Greek obstructionism from some of its European Union partners. Greece was also used wherever possible as a scapegoat by the EU for its disastrous policies in Bosnia {{fact}}. Athens was criticized in some quarters for contributing to the rising tension in the Balkans, even though the wars in the former Yugoslavia were widely seen as having been triggered by the premature recognition of its successor republics, a move to which Greece had objected from the beginning {{fact}}. It later emerged that Greece had only agreed to the dissolution of Yugoslavia in return for EU solidarity on the Macedonian issue {{fact}}. In ], the ] took Greece to the ] in an effort to overturn the embargo, but while the court provisionally ruled in Greece's favor, the embargo was lifted by Athens the following year before a final verdict was reached. This was for the "Republic of Macedonia" and Greece to enter into an "interim agreement" in which the Republic of Macedonia agreed to remove any implied territorial claims to the greater Macedonia region from its constitution and to drop the Vergina Sun from its flag. In return, Greece lifted the blockade. | |||
{{see also|World War I}} | |||
After World War I ] the status quo of Macedonia remained the same. The establishment of the 'Kingdom of Serbians, Croats and Slovenes' in 1918, which in 1929 was renamed 'Yugoslavia' (South Slavia) predicted no special regime for Skopje neither recognized any Macedonian national identity. In fact, the claims to Macedonian identity remained silent at a propaganda level because, eventually, North Macedonia had been a Serbian conquest. | |||
The situation in Serbian Macedonia changed after the Communist Revolution in Russia (1918–1919). According to Sfetas, Comintern was handling Macedonia as a matter of tactics, depending on the political circumstances. In the early 1920s it supported the position for a single and independent Macedonia in a Balkan Soviet Democracy. Actually, the Soviets desired a common front of the Bulgarian communist agriculturists and the Bulgarian-Macedonian societies to destabilize the Balkan Peninsula. The ] (IMRO), under the protection of Comintern, promoted the idea of an independent Macedonia in a Federation of Balkan states, unifying all Macedonians. However, the possible participation of Bulgaria in a new war, on the ] side, ended the Soviet support some years later. | |||
The majority{{fact}} of countries have recognized the Republic of Macedonia under its constitutional name, notably the ], the ] and ], and also its neighbours ], ], ], ], ] etc., although as the country is referred in the UN only under the provisional reference the "former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia", the constitutional name is used only in bilateral relations and in relations where a state not recognizing the constitutional name is not a party. | |||
====World War II==== | |||
Discussions continue over the Greek objection regarding the country's name, but without any resolution so far. | |||
{{see also|World War II}} | |||
Bulgaria joined the ] in 1941, when German troops prepared to invade Greece from Romania reached the Bulgarian borders and demanded permission to pass through Bulgarian territory. Threatened by direct military confrontation, ] had no choice but to join the ], which officially happened on 1 March 1941. There was little popular opposition, since the Soviet Union was in a non-aggression pact with Germany. | |||
On 6 April 1941, despite having officially joined the Axis Powers, the Bulgarian government maintained a course of military passivity during the initial stages of the ] and the ]. As German, Italian, and Hungarian troops crushed Yugoslavia and Greece, the Bulgarians remained on the sidelines. The Yugoslav government surrendered on 17 April. The Greek government was to hold out until 30 April. On 20 April, the period of Bulgarian passivity ended. The Bulgarian Army entered the Aegean region. The goal was to gain an ] outlet in Thrace and Eastern Macedonia and much of eastern Serbia. The so-called ] was divided between Bulgaria and Italians which occupied West Macedonia. The Bulgarian occupation of Macedonia was technically viewed as interim administration in anticipation of a conclusive internationally recognized settlement of the legal status of the so-called "New Lands" after the end of the Second World War. Bulgarian administration greatly contributed to economic rebirth of the region – the poorest one in the former ] – through introducing measures such as allotment of arable lands to local landless peasantry and by establishing plenty of new elementary and secondary schools. Local population with Bulgarian ethnic origins was given full Bulgarian citizenship. In general, Bulgarians themselves regarded the incorporation of former Yugoslav ] as a way to achieve national unity. Two new oblasts (provinces) were formed and most public vacancies were filled up with representatives of the local population. | |||
==Controversy: the Republic of Macedonia and Bulgaria== | |||
During the German occupation of Greece (1941–1944), the Greek Communist Party-KKE was the main resistance factor with its military branch ]-] (National Liberation Front). Although many members of EAM were Slavic-speaking, they had either Bulgarian, Greek or distinct Macedonian conscience. To take advantage of the situation KKE established ] with the cooperation of the Yugoslav leader Tito, who was ambitious enough to make plans for Greek Macedonia. For this he established the Anti-Fascistic Assembly for the National Liberation of Macedonia (ASNOM) giving an actual liberating character to the whole region of Macedonia. Besides, KKE was very positive to the option of a greater Macedonia, including the Greek region, since it realized that a victory in the Greek Civil War was utopic. Later EAM and SNOF disagreed in issues of policy and they finally crashed and the latter was expelled from Greece (1944). | |||
There are controversial census data about the number of ] in Bulgaria. In the censuses in 1946 and 1956 200,000 and 187,000 citizens have declared themselves as Macedonians respectively. In 2001 only 5,071 citizens declared as Macedonians. Bulgarian governments throughout the period continued their policy of non-recognition of Macedonians as a distinct ethnic group. There were repeated complaints of official harassment of ] activists in the ]'s. Attempts of ] separatist organization UMO Ilinden to commemorate the grave of revolutionary ] throughout the ]'s were usually hampered by the Bulgarian police. Several incidents of mobbing of UMO Ilinden members by pro-Bulgarian organization IMRO activists were also reported. After the ]n Electoral Committee endorsed in ] the registration of a wing of UMO Ilinden, which had dropped separatist demands from its Charter, the mother organization became largely inactive. No major incidents or harassment has been reported since then. | |||
====Post–World War II==== | |||
There are several Macedonian organizations in Bulgaria: ''Traditional Macedonian Organization Ilinden'', later renamed to ''] independent - Ilinden'', registered in 1992 at the Sofia City Court. Later, in 1998, the organization was registered as a public NGO. The ''United Macedonian Organization (UMO) - Ilinden'' is another organization. In 1990, the Blagoevgrad District Court refused to register this organization as some parts of the organization statute weren't in accordance with the Bulgarian Constitution. In October 1994 this association split up on three different factions. Later two wings were unified under the ''UMO Ilinden - PIRIN'' organization. In 1998 the European Commission of Human Rights gave admissibility to two out of five complaints of Macedonians from Pirin Macedonia. There is a newspaper published by the Macedonian organizations in Bulgaria: Narodna Volja (People's Will) which is printed in 2,500 copies . | |||
The end of the War did not bring peace to Greece and a strenuous civil war between the Government forces and EAM broke out with about 50,000 casualties for both sides. The defeat of the Communists in 1949 forced their Slav-speaking members to either leave Greece or fully adopt Greek language and surnames. The Slav minorities were discriminated against, and not even recognised as a minority. Since 1923 the only internationally recognized minority in Greece are the Muslims in Western Thrace. | |||
Yugoslav Macedonia was the only region where Yugoslav communist leader ] had not developed a Partisan movement because of the Bulgarian occupation of a large part of that area. To improve the situation, in 1943 the Communist Party of Macedonia was established in ] with the prospect that it would support the resistance against the Axis. In the meantime, the Bulgarians' violent repression led to loss of moral support from the civilian population. By the end of the war "a Macedonian national consciousness hardly existed beyond a general conviction, gained from bitter experience, that rule from Sofia was as unpalatable as that from Belgrade. But if there were no Macedonian nation there was a Communist Party of Macedonia, around which the People's Republic of Macedonia was built". | |||
Cases of harassment of pro-] organisations and activists have been reported in the ]. In ] several teenagers threw smoke bombs at the conference of pro-]n organization 'Radko' in ] causing panic and confusion among the delegates. The perpetrators were afterwards acclaimed by the ] press as national heroes. 'Radko' was later banned by the ] Constitutional Court as separatist. The organization has continued its activity, though mostly in the cultural field. | |||
Tito thus separated Yugoslav Macedonia from Serbia after the war. It became a republic of the new federal Yugoslavia (as the Socialist Republic of Macedonia) in 1946, with its capital at ]. Tito also promoted the concept of a separate Macedonian nation, as a means of severing the ties of the ] with Bulgaria. A separate ] was established, splitting off from the ]. The Communist Party sought to deter pro-Bulgarian sentiment, which was punished severely. | |||
] | |||
In 2001 'Radko' issued in Skopje the original version of the folk song collection 'Bulgarian Folk Songs' by the ] (issued under an edited name in the Republic of Macedonia and viewed as a collection of Slav Macedonian lyrics). The book triggered a wave of other publications, among which the memoirs of the Greek bishop of ], in which he talked about the Greek-Bulgarian church struggle at the beginning of the ], as well the on the causes and conduct of the Balkan Wars from 1913. Neither of these addressed the ethnic Macedonian population of Macedonia as ] but as Bulgarians. Being the first publications to question the official ] position of the existence of a distinct Macedonian identity going back to the time of ] (]), the books triggered a reaction of shock and disbelief in Macedonian public opinion. The scandal after the publication of 'Bulgarian Folk Songs' resulted in the sacking of the ] Minister of Culture, Dimitar Dimitrov. | |||
Across the border in Greece, ] were seen as a potentially disloyal "]" within the Greek state by both the US and Greece, and their existence as a minority was officially denied. Greeks were resettled in the region many of whom emigrated (especially to ]) along with many Greek-speaking natives, because of the hard economic conditions after the Second World War and the Greek Civil War. Although there was some liberalization between 1959 and 1967, the Greek military dictatorship re-imposed harsh restrictions. The situation gradually eased after Greece's return to democracy, although even as recently as the 1990s Greece has been criticised by international human rights activists for "harassing" Macedonian Slav political activists, who, nonetheless, are free to maintain their own political party (]). Elsewhere in Greek Macedonia, economic development after the war was brisk and the area rapidly became the most prosperous part of the region. The coast was heavily developed for tourism, particularly on the ] peninsula. | |||
As of ], Bulgaria started to grant Bulgarian citizenship to members of the Bulgarian minorities in a number of countries, including the Republic of Macedonia. The vast majority of the applications have been from Macedonian citizens. As at May, ], some 14,000 Macedonians had applied for a Bulgarian citizenship on the grounds of Bulgarian origin and 4,000 of them had already received their Bulgarian passports. The main reason behind this was the possibility to travel in European Union and other countries without need of a visa, which is still not possible having only the Macedonian passport. In June, 2004, the Macedonian state television announced with alarm that at least one member of every fourth household in the eastern part of the Republic of Macedonia had already received a Bulgarian passport or had at least applied for one. The last quoted number so far was of 63,000 Macedonians (the number has not been confirmed officially) by the Macedonian daily Vecher on ], ].In ] the former macedonian Premier and chief of IMRO-DPMNE ] became a Bulgarian citizen. | |||
Under ], ] loyalist and head of the ], Bulgaria initially accepted the existence of a distinctive Macedonian identity. It had been agreed that ] would join Yugoslav Macedonia and for this reason the population was forced to declare itself "Macedonian" in the 1946 census.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} This caused resentment and many people were imprisoned or interned in rural areas outside Pirin Macedonia. After Tito's split from the ] this position was abandoned and the existence of a Macedonian ethnicity or language was denied. | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{Portal|Greece|North Macedonia|Bulgaria}} | |||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
<references/> | |||
==Sources== | |||
{{refbegin|30em}} | |||
* {{Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250}} | |||
* {{The Early Medieval Balkans}} | |||
* {{The Late Medieval Balkans}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Meyendorff|first=John|author-link=John Meyendorff|year=1989|title=Imperial unity and Christian divisions: The Church 450–680 A.D.|location=Crestwood, NY|publisher=St. Vladimir's Seminary Press|isbn=9780881410563|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6J_YAAAAMAAJ}} | |||
* {{Catalogue of Byzantine Seals at Dumbarton Oaks and in the Fogg Museum of Art|volume=1}} | |||
* {{The Last Centuries of Byzantium, 1261–1453}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Obolensky|first=Dimitri|author-link=Dimitri Obolensky|title=The Byzantine Commonwealth: Eastern Europe, 500–1453|year=1974|orig-year=1971|location=London|publisher=Cardinal|isbn=9780351176449|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RlBoAAAAMAAJ}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Ostrogorsky|first=George|author-link=George Ostrogorsky|year=1956|title=History of the Byzantine State|location=Oxford|publisher=Basil Blackwell|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Bt0_AAAAYAAJ}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Popović|first=Radomir V.|title=Le Christianisme sur le sol de l'Illyricum oriental jusqu'à l'arrivée des Slaves|year=1996|location=Thessaloniki|publisher=Institute for Balkan Studies|isbn=9789607387103|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YwsQAQAAIAAJ}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last1=Roisman|first1=Joseph|last2=Worthington|first2=Ian|title=A Companion to Ancient Macedonia|year=2010|location=Malden, MA|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|isbn=9781444351637|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QsJ183uUDkMC}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Runciman|first=Steven|author-link=Steven Runciman|title=The Great Church in Captivity: A Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople from the Eve of the Turkish Conquest to the Greek War of Independence|year=1968|edition=1.|location=Cambridge|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=9780521071888|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WxsrAAAAIAAJ}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Slijepčević|first=Đoko M.|title=The Macedonian Question: The Struggle for Southern Serbia|year=1958|location=Chicago|publisher=The American Institute for Balkan Affairs|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pi0xAAAAIAAJ}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Soulis|first=George Christos|title=The Serbs and Byzantium during the reign of Tsar Stephen Dušan (1331–1355) and his successors|year=1984|location=Washington|publisher=Dumbarton Oaks Library and Collection|isbn=9780884021377|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NXFpAAAAMAAJ}} | |||
* {{Cite book|editor-last=Stanković|editor-first=Vlada|title=The Balkans and the Byzantine World before and after the Captures of Constantinople, 1204 and 1453|year=2016|location=Lanham, Maryland|publisher=Lexington Books|isbn=9781498513265|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=avTADAAAQBAJ}} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
==External links== | |||
{{Commons category|Macedonia (region)}} | |||
{{wikiquote|Macedonia}} | |||
{{coord|41|N|22|E|source:wikidata|display=title}} | |||
== External links == | |||
* '''General''' | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** Museums of Macedonia | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
* '''Bulgarian perspective''' | |||
** | |||
** | |||
* '''Greek perspective''' | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
* '''Macedonian Slav perspective''' | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
** | |||
* '''Serbian perspective''' | |||
** | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Macedonia (region)}} | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 14:09, 25 December 2024
Geographical and historical region in Europe This article is about the supra-national region. For other uses, see Macedonia.
This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (February 2023) |
Macedonia
Expand for local names
| |
---|---|
2009 topographical map of the geographical region of Macedonia | |
Country | Greece North Macedonia Bulgaria Albania Serbia Kosovo |
Area | |
• Total | 67,000 km (26,000 sq mi) |
Population | |
• Estimate | over 4,760,000 |
Macedonia (/ˌmæsɪˈdoʊniə/ MASS-ih-DOH-nee-ə) is a geographical and historical region of the Balkan Peninsula in Southeast Europe. Its boundaries have changed considerably over time; however, it came to be defined as the modern geographical region by the mid-19th century. Today the region is considered to include parts of six Balkan countries: all of North Macedonia, large parts of Greece and Bulgaria, and smaller parts of Albania, Serbia, and Kosovo. It covers approximately 67,000 square kilometres (25,869 sq mi) and has a population of around five million. Greek Macedonia comprises about half of Macedonia's area and population.
Its oldest known settlements date back approximately to 7,000 BC. From the middle of the 4th century BC, the Kingdom of Macedon became the dominant power on the Balkan Peninsula; since then Macedonia has had a diverse history.
Etymology
Main article: Makedon (mythology) § EtymologyBoth proper nouns Makedṓn and Makednós are morphologically derived from the Ancient Greek adjective makednós meaning "tall, slim", and are related to the term Macedonia.
Boundaries and definitions
Further information: History of Macedonia (ancient kingdom)Ancient times
The definition of Macedonia has changed several times throughout history. Prior to its expansion under Alexander the Great, the ancient kingdom of Macedonia, to which the modern region owes its name, lay entirely within the central and western parts of the current Greek province of Macedonia and consisted of 17 provinces/districts or eparchies (Ancient Greek: επαρχία).
Expansion of Kingdom of Macedon:
- Kingdom of Perdiccas I: Macedonian Kingdom of Emathia consisting of six provinces Emathia, Pieria, Bottiaea, Mygdonia, Eordaea and Almopia.
- Kingdom of Alexander I: All the above provinces plus the eastern annexations Crestonia, Bisaltia and the western annexations Elimiotis, Orestis and Lynkestis.
- Kingdom of Philip II: All the above provinces plus the appendages of Pelagonia and Macedonian Paeonia to the north, Sintike, Odomantis and Edonis to the east and the Chalkidike to the south.
Roman era
In the 2nd century, Macedonia covered approximately the area where it is considered to be today, but the northern regions of today Republic of North Macedonia were not identified as Macedonian lands. For reasons that are still unclear, over the next eleven centuries Macedonia's location was changed significantly. The Roman province of Macedonia consisted of what is today Northern and Central Greece, much of the geographical area of the Republic of North Macedonia and southeast Albania. Simply put, the Romans created a much larger administrative area under that name than the original ancient Macedon. In late Roman times, the provincial boundaries were reorganized to form the Diocese of Macedonia, consisting of most of modern mainland Greece right across the Aegean to include Crete, southern Albania, southwest Bulgaria, and most of Republic of North Macedonia.
Byzantine era
In the Byzantine Empire, a province under the name of Macedonia was carved out of the original Theme of Thrace, which was well east of the Struma River. This thema variously included parts of Thrace and gave its name to the Macedonian dynasty. Hence, Byzantine documents of this era that mention Macedonia are most probably referring to the Macedonian thema. The region of Macedonia, on the other hand, which was ruled by the First Bulgarian Empire throughout the 9th and the 10th century, was incorporated into the Byzantine Empire in 1018 as the Themе of Bulgaria.
Ottoman era
With the gradual conquest of southeastern Europe by the Ottomans in the late 14th century, the name of Macedonia disappeared as an administrative designation for several centuries and was rarely displayed on maps. The name was again revived to mean a distinct geographical region in the 19th century, defining the region bounded by Mount Olympus, the Pindus range, mounts Shar and Osogovo, the western Rhodopes, the lower course of the river Mesta (Greek Nestos) and the Aegean Sea, developing roughly the same borders that it has today.
Demographics
Main article: Demographic history of MacedoniaDuring medieval and modern times, Macedonia has been known as a Balkan region inhabited by many ethnic groups. Today, as a frontier region where several very different cultures meet, Macedonia has an extremely diverse demographic profile. The current demographics of Macedonia include:
- Macedonian Greeks self-identify culturally and regionally as "Macedonians" (Greek: Μακεδόνες, Makedónes). They form the majority of the region's population (~51%). They number approximately 2,500,000 and, today, they live almost entirely in Greek Macedonia. The Greek Macedonian population is mixed, with other indigenous groups and with a large influx of Greek refugees descending from Asia Minor, Pontic Greeks, and East Thracian Greeks in the early 20th century. This is due to the population exchange between Greece and Turkey, during which over 1.2 Anatolian Greek refugees replaced departing Turks and settled in Greece, including 638,000 in the Greek province of Macedonia. Smaller Greek minorities exist in Bulgaria and the Republic of North Macedonia, although their numbers are difficult to ascertain. In official census results, only 86 persons declared themselves Greeks in Bulgarian Macedonia (Blagoevgrad Province) in 2011, out of a total of 1,379 in all of Bulgaria; while only 294 persons described themselves as Greeks in the 2021 census in the Republic of North Macedonia.
- Ethnic Macedonians self-identify as "Macedonians" (Macedonian: Македонци, Makedonci) in an ethnic sense as well as in the regional sense. They are the second largest ethnic group in the region. Being a South Slavic ethnic group they are also known as "Macedonian Slavs" and "Slav Macedonians" (Greek: Σλαβομακεδόνες, "Slavomakedones") in Greece, though this term can be viewed as derogatory by ethnic Macedonians, including those in Greek Macedonia. They form the majority of the population in the Republic of North Macedonia where according to the 2021 census, approximately 1,100,000 people declared themselves as Macedonians. In 1999, the Greek Helsinki Monitor estimated a significant minority of ethnic Macedonians ranging from 10,000 to 30,000 that exist among the Slavic-speakers of Greek Macedonia. There has not been a census in Greece on the question of mother tongue since 1951, when the census recorded 41,017 Slavic-speakers, mostly in the West Macedonia periphery of Greece. The linguistic classification of the Slavic dialects spoken by these people are nowadays typically classified as Macedonian, with the exception of some eastern dialects which can also be classified as Bulgarian, although the people themselves call their native language a variety of terms, including makedonski, makedoniski ("Macedonian"), slaviká (Greek: σλαβικά, "Slavic"), dópia or entópia (Greek: εντόπια, "local/indigenous "), balgàrtzki, bògartski ("Bulgarian") along with naši ("our own") and stariski ("old"). Most Slavic-speakers declare themselves as ethnic Greeks (Slavophone Greeks), although there are small groups espousing ethnic Macedonian and Bulgarian national identities, however some groups reject all these ethnic designations and prefer terms such as "natives" instead. The Macedonian minority in Albania are an officially recognised minority in Albania and are primarily concentrated around the Prespa region and Golo Brdo and are primarily Eastern Orthodox Christian with the exception of the later region where Macedonians are predominantly Muslim. In the 2011 Albanian census, 5,870 Albanian citizens declared themselves Macedonians. According to the latest Bulgarian census held in 2011, there are 561 people declaring themselves ethnic Macedonians in the Blagoevgrad Province of Bulgaria (Pirin Macedonia). The official number of ethnic Macedonians in Bulgaria is 1,654.
- Macedonian Bulgarians are ethnic Bulgarians who self-identify regionally as "Macedonians" (Bulgarian: Mакедонци, Makedontsi). They represent the bulk of the population of Bulgarian Macedonia (also known as "Pirin Macedonia"). They number approximately 250,000 in the Blagoevgrad Province where they are mainly situated. There are small Bulgarian-identifying groups in Albania, Greece and the Republic of North Macedonia. In the Republic of North Macedonia, 3,504 people claimed a Bulgarian ethnic identity in the 2021 census.
- Albanians are another major ethnic group in the region. Ethnic Albanians make up the majority in certain northern and western parts of the Republic of North Macedonia, and account for 24.3% of the total population of the Republic of North Macedonia, according to the 2021 census.
- Smaller numbers of Turks, Bosniaks, Roma, Serbs, Aromanians, Megleno-Romanians, Egyptians, Armenians and Jews (Sephardim and Romaniotes) can also be found in Macedonia.
- Distribution of ethnic groups in Macedonia in 1892 (Deutsche Rundschau für Geographie und Statistik – German Bevieiofor Geography and Statistics)
- Ethnographic map of the vilayets of Kosovo, Saloniki, Scutari, Janina and Monastir, ca. 1900 (Institute and Museum of Military History)
- Distribution of ethnic groups in the Balkan Peninsula and Asia Minor in 1910 (Historical Atlas by William R. Shepherd, New York)
- Distribution of ethnic groups in the Balkan Peninsula and Asia Minor in 1918 (National Geographic)
Religion
See also: Religion in Macedonia (Greece), Religion in North Macedonia, and Religion in Pirin MacedoniaMost present-day inhabitants of the region are Eastern Orthodox Christians, principally of the Bulgarian Orthodox, Greek Orthodox, Macedonian Orthodox and Serbian Orthodox Churches. Notable Muslim minorities are present among the Albanian, Bulgarian (Pomaks), Macedonian (Torbeš), Bosniak, and Turkish populations.
During the period of classical antiquity, main religion in the region of Macedonia was the Ancient Greek religion. After the Roman conquest of Macedonia, the Ancient Roman religion was also introduced. Many ancient religious monuments, dedicated to Greek and Roman deities are preserved in this region. During the period of Early Christianity, ecclesiastical structure was established in the region of Macedonia, and the see of Thessaloniki became the metropolitan diocese of the Roman province of Macedonia. The archbishop of Thessaloniki also became the senior ecclesiastical primate of the entire Eastern Illyricum, and in 535 his jurisdiction was reduced to the administrative territory of the Diocese of Macedonia. Later it came under the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople.
During the Middle Ages and up to 1767, western and northern regions of Macedonia were under the jurisdiction of the Archbishopric of Ohrid. Northern fringes of the region (areas surrounding Skopje and Tetovo) had temporary jurisdiction under the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć. Both the Archbishopric of Ohrid and the Patriarchate of Peć became abolished and absorbed into the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople in the middle of the 18th century. During the period of Ottoman rule, a partial islamization was also recorded. In spite of that, the Eastern Orthodox Christianity remained the dominant religion of local population.
During the 19th century, religious life in the region was strongly influenced by rising national movements. Several major ethnoreligious disputes arose in the region of Macedonia, main of them being schisms between the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople and the newly created Bulgarian Exarchate (1872), and later between the Serbian Orthodox Church and the newly created Macedonian Orthodox Church (1967).
History
See also: History of Macedonia (ancient kingdom), History of modern Macedonia (Greece), and History of the Republic of North MacedoniaEarly Neolithic
While Macedonia shows signs of human habitation as old as the paleolithic period (among which is the Petralona cave with the oldest European humanoid), the earliest known settlements, such as Nea Nikomedeia in Imathia (today's Greek Macedonia), date back 9,000 years. The houses at Nea Nikomedeia were constructed—as were most structures throughout the Neolithic in northern Greece—of wattle and daub on a timber frame. The cultural assemblage includes well-made pottery in simple shapes with occasional decoration in white on a red background, clay female figurines of the 'rod-headed' type known from Thessaly to the Danube Valley, stone axes and adzes, chert blades, and ornaments of stone including curious 'nose plugs' of uncertain function. The assemblage of associated objects differs from one house to the next, suggesting some degree of craft specialisation had already been established from the beginning of the site's history. The farming economy was based on the cultivation of cereal crops such as wheat and barley and pulses and on the herding of sheep and goats, with some cattle and pigs. Hunting played a relatively minor role in the economy. Surviving from 7000 to 5500 BCE, this Early Neolithic settlement was occupied for over a thousand years.
Middle Neolithic
The Middle Neolithic period (c. 5500 to 4500 BCE) is at present best represented at Servia in the Haliacmon Valley in western Macedonia, where the typical red-on-cream pottery in the Sesklo style emphasises the settlement's southern orientation. Pottery of this date has been found at a number of sites in Central and Eastern Macedonia but so far none has been extensively excavated.
Late Neolithic
The Late Neolithic period (c. 4500 to 3500 BCE) is well represented by both excavated and unexcavated sites throughout the region (though in Eastern Macedonia levels of this period are still called Middle Neolithic according to the terminology used in the Balkans). Rapid changes in pottery styles, and the discovery of fragments of pottery showing trade with quite distant regions, indicate that society, economy and technology were all changing rapidly. Among the most important of these changes were the start of copper working, convincingly demonstrated by Renfrew to have been learnt from the cultural groups of Bulgaria and Roumania to the North. Principal excavated settlements of this period include Makryialos and Paliambela near the western shore of the Thermaic gulf, Thermi to the south of Thessaloniki and Sitagroi and Dikili Tas in the Drama plain. Some of these sites were densely occupied and formed large mounds (known to the local inhabitants of the region today as 'toumbas'). Others were much less densely occupied and spread for as much as a kilometer (Makryialos). Both types are found at the same time in the same districts and it is presumed that differences in social organisation are reflected by these differences in settlement organisation. Some communities were clearly concerned to protect themselves with different kinds of defensive arrangements: ditches at Makryialos and concentric walls at Paliambela. The best preserved buildings were discovered at Dikili Tas, where long timber-framed structures had been organised in rows and some had been decorated with bulls' skulls fastened to the outside of the walls and plastered over with clay.
Remarkable evidence for cult activity has been found at Promachonas-Topolnica, which straddles the Greek Bulgarian border to the north of Serres. Here a deep pit appeared to have been roofed to make a subterranean room; in it were successive layers of debris including large numbers of figurines, bulls' skulls, and pottery, including several rare and unusual shapes.
The farming economy of this period continued the practices established at the beginning of the Neolithic, although sheep and goats were less dominant among the animals than they had previously been, and the cultivation of vines (Vitis vinifera) is well attested.
Only a few burials have been discovered from the whole of the Neolithic period in northern Greece and no clear pattern can be deduced. Grave offerings, however, seem to have been very limited.
Ancient Macedonia (500 to 146 BCE)
Main article: Macedonia (ancient kingdom)In classical times, the region of Macedonia comprised parts of what at the time was known as Macedonia, Illyria and Thrace. Among others, in its lands were located the kingdoms of Paeonia, Dardania, Macedonia and Pelagonia, historical tribes like the Agrianes, and colonies of southern Greek city states. Prior to the Macedonian ascendancy, parts of southern Macedonia were populated by the Bryges, while western, (i. e., Upper) Macedonia, was inhabited by Macedonian and Illyrian tribes. Whilst numerous wars are later recorded between the Illyrian and Macedonian Kingdoms, the Bryges might have co-existed peacefully with the Macedonians. In the time of Classical Greece, Paionia, whose exact boundaries are obscure, originally included the whole Axius River valley and the surrounding areas, in what is now the northern part of the Greek region of Macedonia, most of the Republic of North Macedonia, and a small part of western Bulgaria. By 500 BCE, the ancient kingdom of Macedon was centered somewhere between the southern slopes of Lower Olympus and the lowest reach of the Haliakmon River. Since 512/511 BCE, the kingdom of Macedonia was subject to the Persians, but after the battle of Plataia it regained its independence. Under Philip II and Alexander the Great, the kingdom of Macedonia forcefully expanded, placing the whole of the region of Macedonia under their rule. Alexander's conquests produced a lasting extension of Hellenistic culture and thought across the ancient Near East, but his empire broke up on his death. His generals divided the empire between them, founding their own states and dynasties. The kingdom of Macedon was taken by Cassander, who ruled it until his death in 297 BC. At the time, Macedonian control over the Thracoillyrian states of the region slowly waned, although the kingdom of Macedonia remained the most potent regional power. This period also saw several Celtic invasions into Macedonia. However, the Celts were each time successfully repelled by Cassander, and later Antigonus, leaving little overall influence on the region.
Roman Macedonia
Main article: Macedonia (province)Macedonian sovereignty in the region was brought to an end at the hands of the rising power of Rome in the 2nd century BC. Philip V of Macedon took his kingdom to war against the Romans in two wars during his reign (221–179 BC). The First Macedonian War (215–205 BC) was fairly successful for the Macedonians but Philip was decisively defeated in the Second Macedonian War in (200–197 BC). Although he survived war with Rome, his successor Perseus of Macedon (reigned 179–168 BC) did not; having taken Macedon into the Third Macedonian War in (171–168 BC), he lost his kingdom when he was defeated. Macedonia was initially divided into four republics subject to Rome before finally being annexed in 146 BC as a Roman province. Around this time, vulgar Latin was introduced in the Balkans by Latin-speaking colonists and military personnel.
With the division of the Roman Empire into west and east in 298 AD, Macedonia came under the rule of Rome's Byzantine successors. The population of the entire region was, however, depleted by destructive invasions of various Gothic and Hun tribes c. 300 – 5th century AD. Despite this, other parts of the Byzantine empire continued to flourish, in particular some coastal cities such as Thessaloniki became important trade and cultural centres. Despite the empire's power, from the beginning of the 6th century the Byzantine dominions were subject to frequent raids by various Slavic tribes which, in the course of centuries, eventually resulted in drastic demographic and cultural changes in the Empire's Balkan provinces. Although traditional scholarship attributes these changes to large-scale colonizations by Slavic-speaking groups, it has been proposed that a generalized dissipation of Roman identity might have commenced in the 3rd century, especially among rural provincials who were crippled by harsh taxation and famines. Given this background, penetrations carried by successive waves of relatively small numbers of Slavic warriors and their families might have been capable of assimilating large numbers of indigenes into their cultural model, which was sometimes seen as a more attractive alternative. In this way and in the course of time, great parts of Macedonia came to be controlled by Slavic-speaking communities. Despite numerous attacks on Thessaloniki, the city held out, and Byzantine-Roman culture continued to flourish, although Slavic cultural influence steadily increased.
The Slavic settlements organized themselves along tribal and territorially based lines which were referred to by Byzantine Greek historians as "Sklaviniai". The Sklaviniai continued to intermittently assault the Byzantine Empire, either independently, or aided by Bulgar or Avar contingents. Around 680 AD a "Bulgar" group (which was largely composed of the descendants of former Roman Christians taken captive by the Avars), led by Khan Kuber (theorized to have belonged to the same clan as the Danubian Bulgarian khan Asparukh), settled in the Pelagonian plain, and launched campaigns to the region of Thessaloniki. When the Empire could spare imperial troops, it attempted to regain control of its lost Balkan territories. By the time of Constans II a significant number of the Slavs of Macedonia were captured and transferred to central Asia Minor where they were forced to recognize the authority of the Byzantine emperor and serve in his ranks. In the late 7th century, Justinian II again organized a massive expedition against the Sklaviniai and Bulgars of Macedonia. Launching from Constantinople, he subdued many Slavic tribes and established the Theme of Thrace in the hinterland of the Great City, and pushed on into Thessaloniki. However, on his return he was ambushed by the Slavo-Bulgars of Kuber, losing a great part of his army, booty, and subsequently his throne. Despite these temporary successes, rule in the region was far from stable since not all of the Sklaviniae were pacified, and those that were often rebelled. The emperors rather resorted to withdrawing their defensive line south along the Aegean coast, until the late 8th century. Although a new theme—that of "Macedonia"—was subsequently created, it did not correspond to today's geographic territory, but one farther east (centred on Adrianople), carved out of the already existing Thracian and Helladic themes.
Medieval Macedonia
Further information: Byzantine Empire, Bulgaria (theme), Macedonia (theme), Strymon (theme), and Thessalonica (theme)There are no Byzantine records of "Sklaviniai" after 836/837 as they were absorbed into the expanding First Bulgarian Empire. Slavic influence in the region strengthened along with the rise of this state, which incorporated parts of the region to its domain in 837. In the early 860s Saints Cyril and Methodius, two Byzantine Greek brothers from Thessaloniki, created the first Slavic Glagolitic alphabet in which the Old Church Slavonic language was first transcribed, and are thus commonly referred to as the apostles of the Slavic world. Their cultural heritage was acquired and developed in medieval Bulgaria, where after 885 the region of Ohrid (present-day Republic of North Macedonia) became a significant ecclesiastical center with the nomination of the Saint Clement of Ohrid for "first archbishop in Bulgarian language" with residence in this region. In conjunction with another disciple of Saints Cyril and Methodius, Saint Naum, Clement created a flourishing Slavic cultural center around Ohrid, where pupils were taught theology in the Old Church Slavonic language and the Glagolitic and Cyrillic script at what is now called Ohrid Literary School. The Bulgarian-Byzantine boundary in the beginning of 10th century passed approximately 20 km (12 mi) north of Thessaloniki according to the inscription of Narash. According to the Byzantine author John Kaminiates, at that time the neighbouring settlements around Thessaloniki were inhabited by "Scythians" (Bulgarians) and the Slavic tribes of Drugubites and Sagudates, in addition to Greeks.
At the end of the 10th century, what is now the Republic of North Macedonia became the political and cultural heartland of the First Bulgarian Empire, after Byzantine emperors John I Tzimiskes conquered the eastern part of the Bulgarian state during the Rus'–Byzantine War of 970–971. The Bulgarian capital Preslav and the Bulgarian Tsar Boris II were captured, and with the deposition of the Bulgarian regalia in the Hagia Sophia, Bulgaria was officially annexed to Byzantium. A new capital was established at Ohrid, which also became the seat of the Bulgarian Patriarchate. A new dynasty, that of the Comitopuli under Tsar Samuil and his successors, continued resistance against the Byzantines for several more decades, before also succumbing in 1018. The western part of Bulgaria including Macedonia was incorporated into the Byzantine Empire as the province of Bulgaria (Theme of Bulgaria) and the Bulgarian Patriarchate was reduced in rank to an Archbishopric.
Intermittent Bulgarian uprisings continued to occur, often with the support of the Serbian princedoms to the north. Any temporary independence that might have been gained was usually crushed swiftly by the Byzantines. It was also marked by periods of war between the Normans and Byzantium. The Normans launched offensives from their lands acquired in southern Italy, and temporarily gained rule over small areas in the northwestern coast.
At the end of the 12th century, some northern parts of Macedonia were temporarily conquered by Stefan Nemanja of Serbia. In the 13th century, following the Fourth Crusade, Macedonia was disputed among Byzantine Greeks, Latin crusaders of the short-lived Kingdom of Thessalonica, and the revived Bulgarian state. Most of southern Macedonia was secured by the Despotate of Epirus and then by the Empire of Nicaea, while the north was ruled by Bulgaria. After 1261 however, all of Macedonia returned to Byzantine rule, where it largely remained until the Byzantine civil war of 1341–1347. Taking advantage of this conflict, the Serb ruler Stefan Dushan expanded his realm and founded the Serbian Empire, which included all of Macedonia, northern and central Greece – excluding Thessaloniki, Athens and the Peloponnese. Dushan's empire however broke up shortly after his death in 1355. After his death local rulers in the regions of Macedonia were despot Jovan Uglješa in eastern Macedonia, and kings Vukašin Mrnjavčević and his son Marko Mrnjavčević in western regions of Macedonia.
Ottoman Macedonia
Further information: Greek Macedonia under the Ottoman Empire, Vardar Macedonia under the Ottoman Empire, and Demographic history of Ottoman MacedoniaSince the middle of the 14th century, the Ottoman threat was looming in the Balkans, as the Ottomans defeated the various Christian principalities, whether Serb, Bulgarian or Greek. After the Ottoman victory in the Battle of Maritsa in 1371, most of Macedonia accepted vassalage to the Ottomans and by the end of the 14th century the Ottoman Empire gradually annexed the region. The final Ottoman capture of Thessalonica (1430) was seen as the prelude to the fall of Constantinople itself. Macedonia remained a part of the Ottoman Empire for nearly 500 years, during which time it gained a substantial Turkish minority. Thessaloniki later become the home of a large Sephardi Jewish population following the expulsions of Jews after 1492 from Spain.
Birth of nationalism and of Macedonian identities
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Macedonia" region – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (February 2008) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Over the centuries Macedonia had become a multicultural region. The historical references mention Greeks, Bulgarians, Turks, Albanians, Gypsies, Jews, Aromanians and Megleno-Romanians. It is often claimed that macédoine, the fruit or vegetable salad, was named after the area's very mixed population, as it could be witnessed at the end of the 19th century. From the Middle Ages to the early 20th century the Slavic-speaking population in Macedonia was identified mostly as Bulgarian.
During the period of Bulgarian National Revival many Bulgarians from these regions supported the struggle for creation of Bulgarian cultural educational and religious institutions, including Bulgarian Exarchate. Eventually, in the 20th century, 'Bulgarians' came to be understood as synonymous with 'Macedonian Slavs' and, eventually, 'ethnic Macedonians'. Krste Misirkov, a philologist and publicist, wrote his work "On the Macedonian Matters" (1903), for which he is heralded by Macedonians as one of the founders of the Macedonian nation.
After the revival of Greek, Serbian, and Bulgarian statehood in the 19th century, the Ottoman lands in Europe that became identified as "Macedonia", were contested by all three governments, leading to the creation in the 1890s and 1900s of rival armed groups who divided their efforts between fighting the Turks and one another. The most important of these was the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization, which organized the so-called Ilinden-Preobrazhenie Uprising in 1903, fighting for an autonomous or independent Macedonian state, and the Greek efforts from 1904 until 1908 (Greek Struggle for Macedonia). Diplomatic intervention by the European powers led to plans for an autonomous Macedonia under Ottoman rule.
The restricted borders of the modern Greek state at its inception in 1830 disappointed the inhabitants of northern Greece (Epirus and Macedonia). Addressing these concerns in 1844, the Greek Prime Minister Kolettis addressed the constitutional assembly in Athens that "the Kingdom of Greece is not Greece; it is only a part, the smallest and poorest, of Greece. The Greek is not only he who inhabits the kingdom, but also he who lives in Ioannina, or Thessaloniki, or Serres, or Odrin" . He mentions cities and islands that were under Ottoman possession as composing the Great Idea (Greek: Μεγάλη Ιδέα, Megáli Idéa) which meant the reconstruction of the classical Greek world or the revival of the Byzantine Empire. The important idea here is that for Greece, Macedonia was a region with large Greek populations expecting annexation to the new Greek state.
The 1878 Congress of Berlin changed the Balkan map again. The treaty restored Macedonia and Thrace to the Ottoman Empire. Serbia, Romania and Montenegro were granted full independence, and some territorial expansion at the expense of the Ottoman Empire. Russia would maintain military advisors in Bulgaria and Eastern Rumelia until May 1879. Austria-Hungary was permitted to occupy Bosnia, Herzegovina and the Sanjak of Novi Pazar. The Congress of Berlin also forced Bulgaria, newly given autonomy by the 1878 Treaty of San Stefano, to return over half of its newly gained territory to the Ottoman Empire. This included Macedonia, a large part of which was given to Bulgaria, due to Russian pressure and the presence of significant numbers of Bulgarians and adherents to the Bulgarian Exarchate. The territorial losses dissatisfied Bulgaria; this fuelled the ambitions of many Bulgarian politicians for the following seventy years, who wanted to review the treaty – by peaceful or military means and to reunite all lands which they claimed had a Bulgarian majority. Besides, Serbia was now interested in the Macedonian lands, until then only Greece was Bulgaria's main contender, which after the addition of Thessaly to Greece in (1881) was bordering Macedonia. Thus, the Berlin Congress renewed the struggle for Turkey in Europe, including the so-called Macedonia region, rather than setting up a permanent regime. In the following years, all of the neighboring states struggled over Turkey in Europe; they were only kept at bay by their own restraints, the Ottoman Army and the territorial ambitions of the Great Powers in the region.
Serbian policy had a distinct anti-Bulgarian flavor, attempting to prevent the Bulgarian influencing the inhabitants of Macedonia. On the other hand, Bulgaria was using the power of its religious institutions (Bulgarian Exarchate established in 1870) to promote its language and make more people identify with Bulgaria. Greece, in addition, was in an advantageous position for protecting its interests through the influence of Patriarchate of Constantinople which traditionally sponsored Greek-language and Greek-culture schools also in villages with few Greeks. This put the Patriarchate in dispute with the Exarchate, which established schools with Bulgarian education. Indeed, belonging to one or another institution could define a person's national identity. Simply, if a person supported the Patriarchate they were regarded as Greek, whereas if they supported the Exarchate they were regarded as Bulgarian. Locally, however, villagers were not always able to express freely their association with one or the other institution as there were numerous armed groups trying to defend and/or expand the territory of each. Some were locally recruited and self-organized while others were sent and armed by the protecting states.
The aim of the adversaries, however, was not primarily to extend their influence over Macedonia but merely to prevent Macedonia succumbing to the influence of the other. This often violent attempt to persuade the people that they belonged to one ethnic group or another pushed some people to reject both. The severe pressure on the peaceful peasants of Macedonia worked against the plans of the Serbians and Bulgarians to make them adopt their ethnic idea and eventually a social divide became apparent. The British Ambassador in Belgrade in 1927 said: "At present the unfortunate Macedonian peasant is between the hammer and the anvil. One day 'comitadjis' come to his house and demand under threat lodging, food and money and the next day the gendarm hales him off to prison for having given them; the Macedonian is really a peaceable, fairly industrious agriculturist and if the (Serbian) government give him adequate protection, education, freedom from malaria and decent communications, there seems no reason why he should not become just as Serbian in sentiment as he was Bulgarian 10 years ago". As a result of this game of tug-of-war, the development of a distinct Macedonian national identity was impeded and delayed. Moreover, when the imperialistic plans of the surrounding states made possible the division of Macedonia, some Macedonian intellectuals such as Misirkov mentioned the necessity of creating a Macedonian national identity which would distinguish the Macedonian Slavs from Bulgarians, Serbians or Greeks.
Baptizing Macedonian Slavs as Serbian or Bulgarian aimed therefore to justify these countries' territorial claims over Macedonia. The Greek side, with the assistance of the Patriarchate that was responsible for the schools, could more easily maintain control, because they were spreading Greek identity. For the very same reason the Bulgarians, when preparing the Exarchate's government (1871) included Macedonians in the assembly as "brothers" to prevent any ethnic diversification. On the other hand, the Serbs, unable to establish Serbian-speaking schools, used propaganda. Their main concern was to prevent the Slavic-speaking Macedonians from acquiring Bulgarian identity through concentrating on the myth of the ancient origins of the Macedonians and simultaneously by the classification of Bulgarians as Tatars and not as Slavs, emphasizing their 'Macedonian' characteristics as an intermediate stage between Serbs and Bulgarians. To sum up the Serbian propaganda attempted to inspire the Macedonians with a separate ethnic identity to diminish the Bulgarian influence. This choice was the 'Macedonian ethnicity'. The Bulgarians never accepted an ethnic diversity from the Slav Macedonians, giving geographic meaning to the term. In 1893 they established the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (VMRO) aiming to confront the Serbian and Greek action in Macedonia. VMRO hoped to answer the Macedonian question through a revolutionary movement, and so they instigated the Ilinden Uprising (1903) to release some Ottoman territory. Bulgaria used this to internationalize the Macedonian question. Ilinden changed Greece's stance which decided to take Para-military action. In order to protect the Greek Macedonians and Greek interests, Greece sent officers to train guerrillas and organize militias (Macedonian Struggle), known as makedonomahi (Macedonian fighters), essentially to fight the Bulgarians. After that it was obvious that the Macedonian question could be answered only with a war.
The rise of the Albanian and the Turkish nationalism after 1908, however, prompted Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria to bury their differences with regard to Macedonia and to form a joint coalition against the Ottoman Empire in 1912. Disregarding public opinion in Bulgaria, which was in support of the establishment of an autonomous Macedonian province under a Christian governor, the Bulgarian government entered a pre-war treaty with Serbia which divided the region into two parts. The part of Macedonia west and north of the line of partition was contested by both Serbia and Bulgaria and was subject to the arbitration of the Russian Tsar after the war. Serbia formally renounced any claims to the part of Macedonia south and east of the line, which was declared to be within the Bulgarian sphere of interest. The pre-treaty between Greece and Bulgaria, however, did not include any agreement on the division of the conquered territories – evidently both countries hoped to occupy as much territory as possible having their sights primarily set on Thessaloniki.
In the First Balkan War, Bulgaria, Serbia, Greece and Montenegro occupied almost all Ottoman-held territories in Europe. Bulgaria bore the brunt of the war fighting on the Thracian front against the main Ottoman forces. Both her war expenditures and casualties in the First Balkan War were higher than those of Serbia, Greece and Montenegro combined. Macedonia itself was occupied by Greek, Serbian and Bulgarian forces. The Ottoman Empire in the Treaty of London in May 1913 assigned the whole of Macedonia to the Balkan League, without, specifying the division of the region, to promote problems between the allies. Dissatisfied with the creation of an autonomous Albanian state, which denied her access to the Adriatic, Serbia asked for the suspension of the pre-war division treaty and demanded from Bulgaria greater territorial concessions in Macedonia. Later in May the same year, Greece and Serbia signed a secret treaty in Thessaloniki stipulating the division of Macedonia according to the existing lines of control. Both Serbia and Greece, as well as Bulgaria, started to prepare for a final war of partition.
In June 1913, Bulgarian Tsar Ferdinand, without consulting the government, and without any declaration of war, ordered Bulgarian troops to attack the Greek and Serbian troops in Macedonia, initiating the Second Balkan War. The Bulgarian army was in full retreat in all fronts. The Serbian army chose to stop its operations when achieved all its territorial goals and only then the Bulgarian army took a breath. During the last two days the Bulgarians managed to achieve a defensive victory against the advancing Greek army in the Kresna Gorge. However at the same time the Romanian army crossed the undefended northern border and easily advanced towards Sofia. Romania interfered in the war, in order to satisfy its territorial claims against Bulgaria. The Ottoman Empire also interfered, easily reassuming control of Eastern Thrace with Edirne. The Second Balkan War, also known as Inter-Ally War, left Bulgaria only with the Struma valley and a small part of Thrace with minor ports at the Aegean sea. Vardar Macedonia was incorporated into Serbia and thereafter referred to as South Serbia. Southern (Aegean) Macedonia was incorporated into Greece and thereafter was referred to as northern Greece. The region suffered heavily during the Second Balkan War. During its advance at the end of June, the Greek army set fire to the Bulgarian quarter of the town of Kilkis and over 160 villages around Kilkis and Serres driving some 50,000 refugees into Bulgaria proper. The Bulgarian army retaliated by burning the Greek quarter of Serres and by arming Muslims from the region of Drama which led to a massacre of Greek civilians.
In September 1915, the Greek government authorized the landing of the troops in Thessaloniki. In 1916 the pro-German King of Greece agreed with the Germans to allow military forces of the Central Powers to enter Greek Macedonia to attack Bulgarian forces in Thessaloniki. As a result, Bulgarian troops occupied the eastern part of Greek Macedonia, including the port of Kavala. The region was, however, restored to Greece following the victory of the Allies in 1918. After the destruction of the Greek Army in Asia Minor in 1922 Greece and Turkey exchanged most of Macedonia's Turkish minority and the Greek inhabitants of Thrace and Anatolia, as a result of which Aegean Macedonia experienced a large addition to its population and became overwhelmingly Greek in ethnic composition. Serbian-ruled Macedonia was incorporated into the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later the Kingdom of Yugoslavia) in 1918. Yugoslav Macedonia was subsequently subjected to an intense process of "Serbianization" during the 1920s and 1930s.
During World War II the boundaries of the region shifted yet again. When the German forces occupied the area, most of Yugoslav Macedonia and part of Aegean Macedonia were transferred for administration to Bulgaria. During the Bulgarian administration of Eastern Greek Macedonia, some 100,000 Bulgarian refugees from the region were resettled there and perhaps as many Greeks were deported or fled to other parts of Greece. Western Aegean Macedonia was occupied by Italy, with the western parts of Yugoslav Macedonia being annexed to Italian-occupied Albania. The remainder of Greek Macedonia (including all of the coast) was occupied by Nazi Germany. One of the worst episodes of the Holocaust happened here when 60,000 Jews from Thessaloniki were deported to extermination camps in occupied Poland. Only a few thousand survived.
Macedonia was liberated in 1944, when the Red Army's advance in the Balkan Peninsula forced the German forces to retreat. The pre-war borders were restored under U.S. and British pressure because the Bulgarian government was insisting to keep its military units on Greek soil. The Bulgarian Macedonia returned fairly rapidly to normality, but the Bulgarian patriots in Yugoslav Macedonia underwent a process of ethnic cleansing by the Belgrade authorities, and Greek Macedonia was ravaged by the Greek Civil War, which broke out in December 1944 and did not end until October 1949.
After this civil war, a large number of former ELAS fighters who took refuge in communist Bulgaria and Yugoslavia and described themselves as "ethnic Macedonians" were prohibited from reestablishing to their former estates by the Greek authorities. Most of them were accused in Greece for crimes committed during the period of the German occupation.
Macedonia in the Balkan Wars, World War I and II
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Balkan Wars
See also: First Balkan WarThe imminent collapse of the Ottoman Empire was welcomed by the Balkan states, as it promised to restore their European territory. The Young Turk Revolution of 1908 proved a nationalistic movement thwarting the peoples' expectations of the empire's modernization and hastened the end of the Ottoman occupation of the Balkans. To this end, an alliance was struck among the Balkan states in Spring 1913. The First Balkan War, which lasted six weeks, commenced in August 1912, when Montenegro declared war on the Ottoman Empire, whose forces ultimately engaged four different wars in Thrace, Macedonia, Northern and Southern Albania and Kosovo. The Macedonian campaign was fought in atrocious conditions. The retreat of the Ottoman army from Macedonia succeeded the desperate effort of the Greek and Bulgarian forces to reach the city of Thessalonica, the "single prize of the first Balkan War" for whose status no prior agreements were done. In this case possession would be equal to acquisition. The Greek forces entered the city first liberating officially, a progress only positive for them. Glenny says: "for the Greeks it was a good war".
The first Balkan War managed to liberate Balkans from Turks and settled the major issues except Macedonia. In the spring 1913 the Serbs and Greeks begun the 'Serbianization' and the 'Hellenization' of the parts in Macedonia they already controlled, while Bulgarians faced some difficulties against the Jews and the Turkish populations. Moreover, the possession of Thessalonica was a living dream for the Bulgarians that were preparing for a new war. For this, the Bulgarian troops had a secret order in June 1913 to launch surprise attacks on the Serbs. Greece and Serbia signed a previous bilateral defensive agreement (May 1913). Consequently, Bulgaria decided to attack Greece and Serbia. After some initial gains the Bulgarians were forced to retreat back to Bulgaria proper and lose nearly all of the land they had conquered during the first war.
The Treaty of Bucharest (August 1913) took off most of the Bulgarian conquests of the previous years. A large part of Macedonia became southern Serbia, including the territory of what today is the Republic of North Macedonia, and southern Macedonia became northern Greece. Greece almost doubled its territory and population size and its northern frontiers remain today, more or less the same since the Balkan Wars. However, when Serbia acquired 'Vardarska Banovina' (the present-day Republic of North Macedonia), it launched having expansionist views aiming to descend to the Aegean, with Thessalonica as the highest ambition. However, Greece after the population exchange with Bulgaria, soon after its victory in the Balkan wars, managed to give national homogeneity in the Aegean and any remaining Slavic-speakers were absorbed.
Many volunteers from Macedonia joined Bulgarian army and participated in the battles against Bulgarian enemies in these wars—on the strength of the Macedonian-Adrianopolitan Volunteer Corps and other units.
World War I
See also: World War IAfter World War I Macedonian Campaign the status quo of Macedonia remained the same. The establishment of the 'Kingdom of Serbians, Croats and Slovenes' in 1918, which in 1929 was renamed 'Yugoslavia' (South Slavia) predicted no special regime for Skopje neither recognized any Macedonian national identity. In fact, the claims to Macedonian identity remained silent at a propaganda level because, eventually, North Macedonia had been a Serbian conquest.
The situation in Serbian Macedonia changed after the Communist Revolution in Russia (1918–1919). According to Sfetas, Comintern was handling Macedonia as a matter of tactics, depending on the political circumstances. In the early 1920s it supported the position for a single and independent Macedonia in a Balkan Soviet Democracy. Actually, the Soviets desired a common front of the Bulgarian communist agriculturists and the Bulgarian-Macedonian societies to destabilize the Balkan Peninsula. The Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO), under the protection of Comintern, promoted the idea of an independent Macedonia in a Federation of Balkan states, unifying all Macedonians. However, the possible participation of Bulgaria in a new war, on the Axis side, ended the Soviet support some years later.
World War II
See also: World War IIBulgaria joined the Axis powers in 1941, when German troops prepared to invade Greece from Romania reached the Bulgarian borders and demanded permission to pass through Bulgarian territory. Threatened by direct military confrontation, Tsar Boris III had no choice but to join the Tripartite pact, which officially happened on 1 March 1941. There was little popular opposition, since the Soviet Union was in a non-aggression pact with Germany.
On 6 April 1941, despite having officially joined the Axis Powers, the Bulgarian government maintained a course of military passivity during the initial stages of the invasion of Yugoslavia and the Battle of Greece. As German, Italian, and Hungarian troops crushed Yugoslavia and Greece, the Bulgarians remained on the sidelines. The Yugoslav government surrendered on 17 April. The Greek government was to hold out until 30 April. On 20 April, the period of Bulgarian passivity ended. The Bulgarian Army entered the Aegean region. The goal was to gain an Aegean Sea outlet in Thrace and Eastern Macedonia and much of eastern Serbia. The so-called Vardar Banovina was divided between Bulgaria and Italians which occupied West Macedonia. The Bulgarian occupation of Macedonia was technically viewed as interim administration in anticipation of a conclusive internationally recognized settlement of the legal status of the so-called "New Lands" after the end of the Second World War. Bulgarian administration greatly contributed to economic rebirth of the region – the poorest one in the former Kingdom of Yugoslavia – through introducing measures such as allotment of arable lands to local landless peasantry and by establishing plenty of new elementary and secondary schools. Local population with Bulgarian ethnic origins was given full Bulgarian citizenship. In general, Bulgarians themselves regarded the incorporation of former Yugoslav Vardar Banovina as a way to achieve national unity. Two new oblasts (provinces) were formed and most public vacancies were filled up with representatives of the local population.
During the German occupation of Greece (1941–1944), the Greek Communist Party-KKE was the main resistance factor with its military branch EAM-ELAS (National Liberation Front). Although many members of EAM were Slavic-speaking, they had either Bulgarian, Greek or distinct Macedonian conscience. To take advantage of the situation KKE established SNOF with the cooperation of the Yugoslav leader Tito, who was ambitious enough to make plans for Greek Macedonia. For this he established the Anti-Fascistic Assembly for the National Liberation of Macedonia (ASNOM) giving an actual liberating character to the whole region of Macedonia. Besides, KKE was very positive to the option of a greater Macedonia, including the Greek region, since it realized that a victory in the Greek Civil War was utopic. Later EAM and SNOF disagreed in issues of policy and they finally crashed and the latter was expelled from Greece (1944).
Post–World War II
The end of the War did not bring peace to Greece and a strenuous civil war between the Government forces and EAM broke out with about 50,000 casualties for both sides. The defeat of the Communists in 1949 forced their Slav-speaking members to either leave Greece or fully adopt Greek language and surnames. The Slav minorities were discriminated against, and not even recognised as a minority. Since 1923 the only internationally recognized minority in Greece are the Muslims in Western Thrace.
Yugoslav Macedonia was the only region where Yugoslav communist leader Josip Broz Tito had not developed a Partisan movement because of the Bulgarian occupation of a large part of that area. To improve the situation, in 1943 the Communist Party of Macedonia was established in Tetovo with the prospect that it would support the resistance against the Axis. In the meantime, the Bulgarians' violent repression led to loss of moral support from the civilian population. By the end of the war "a Macedonian national consciousness hardly existed beyond a general conviction, gained from bitter experience, that rule from Sofia was as unpalatable as that from Belgrade. But if there were no Macedonian nation there was a Communist Party of Macedonia, around which the People's Republic of Macedonia was built".
Tito thus separated Yugoslav Macedonia from Serbia after the war. It became a republic of the new federal Yugoslavia (as the Socialist Republic of Macedonia) in 1946, with its capital at Skopje. Tito also promoted the concept of a separate Macedonian nation, as a means of severing the ties of the Slav population of Yugoslav Macedonia with Bulgaria. A separate Macedonian Orthodox Church was established, splitting off from the Serbian Orthodox Church. The Communist Party sought to deter pro-Bulgarian sentiment, which was punished severely.
Across the border in Greece, Slavophones were seen as a potentially disloyal "fifth column" within the Greek state by both the US and Greece, and their existence as a minority was officially denied. Greeks were resettled in the region many of whom emigrated (especially to Australia) along with many Greek-speaking natives, because of the hard economic conditions after the Second World War and the Greek Civil War. Although there was some liberalization between 1959 and 1967, the Greek military dictatorship re-imposed harsh restrictions. The situation gradually eased after Greece's return to democracy, although even as recently as the 1990s Greece has been criticised by international human rights activists for "harassing" Macedonian Slav political activists, who, nonetheless, are free to maintain their own political party (Rainbow). Elsewhere in Greek Macedonia, economic development after the war was brisk and the area rapidly became the most prosperous part of the region. The coast was heavily developed for tourism, particularly on the Halkidiki peninsula.
Under Georgi Dimitrov, Soviet loyalist and head of the Comintern, Bulgaria initially accepted the existence of a distinctive Macedonian identity. It had been agreed that Pirin Macedonia would join Yugoslav Macedonia and for this reason the population was forced to declare itself "Macedonian" in the 1946 census. This caused resentment and many people were imprisoned or interned in rural areas outside Pirin Macedonia. After Tito's split from the Soviet bloc this position was abandoned and the existence of a Macedonian ethnicity or language was denied.
See also
- Macedonia (terminology)
- Demographic history of Macedonia
- Macedonia (Greece)
- Republic of North Macedonia
- Blagoevgrad Province
- History of Albania
- History of the Balkans
- History of Bulgaria
- History of Greece
- History of Greek Macedonia
- History of the Republic of North Macedonia
- History of Serbia
- Macedonian nationalism
- Irredentism
- List of homonymous states and regions
References
- Beekes, Robert S. P. (2010), "μακεδνός", in Etymological Dictionary of Greek (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 10), volume I, with the assistance of Lucien van Beek, Leiden, Boston: Brill, page 894
- The Ancient Greeks: New Perspectives, Stephanie Lynn Budin, ABC-CLIO, 2004, ISBN 1576078140, p. 12.
- Entangled Histories of the Balkans: Volume One, Roumen Daskalov, Tchavdar Marinov, BRILL, 2013, ISBN 900425076X, pp. 278–279.
- The migrations during the early Byzantine centuries also changed the meaning of the geographical term Macedonia, which seems to have moved to the east together with some of the non-Slavic population of the old Roman province. In the early 9th century an administrative unit (theme) of Makedonikon was established in what is now Thrace (split among Bulgaria, Greece, and Turkey) with Adrianopleas its capital. It was the birthplace of Emperor Basil I (867–886), the founder of the so-called Macedonian dynasty in Byzantinum. Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia, Dimitar Bechev, Scarecrow Press, 2009, ISBN 0810862956, p. Iii.
- By the beginning of the 9th century, the theme of Macedonia, with its capital at Adrianople consisted not of Macedonian but of Thracian territories. During the Byzantine period the Macedonia proper corresponded to the themes of Thessalonica and Strymon. The Ottoman administration ignored the name of Macedonia. It was only revived during the Renaissance, when western scholars rediscovered the ancient Greek geographical terminology. Brill's Companion to Ancient Macedon: Studies in the Archaeology and History of Macedon, 650 BC – 300 AD, Robin J. Fox, Robin Lane Fox, BRILL, 2011, ISBN 9004206507, p. 35.
- When the barbarian invasions started in the fourth through seventh centuries AD in the Balkans, the remnants of the Hellenes who lived in Macedonia were pushed to eastern Thrace, the area between Adrianople (presently the Turkish city of Edirne) and Constantinople. This area would be called theme of Macedonia by the Byzantines... whereas the modern territory of R. of Macedonia was included in the theme of Bulgaria after the destruction of Samuels Bulgarian Empire in 1018. Contested Ethnic Identity: The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto, 1900–1996, Chris Kostov, Peter Lang, 2010, ISBN 3034301960, p. 48.
- The ancient name 'Macedonia' disappeared during the period of Ottoman rule and was only restored in the nineteenth century originally as geographical term. The Oxford Handbook of the History of Nationalism, John Breuilly, Oxford University Press, 2013, ISBN 0199209197, p. 192.
- Jelavich, Barbara (1983). History of the Balkans, Vol. 2: Twentieth Century. Cambridge University Press. p. 91. ISBN 0521274591.
However, in the nineteenth century the term Macedonian was used almost exclusively to refer to the geographic region
- "Mazedonien" [Macedonia]. Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon (in German). Leipzig: Zeno.org. 1905. pp. 488–491.
Neuerdings hat man sich wiederum gewöhnt, den Namen M. im Sinne der Alten, d. h. für das jetzige Wilajet Saloniki und den Süden des Wilajets Monastir, zu gebrauchen.
- Brown, Keith; Ogilvie, Sarah, eds. (2008). Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World. Elsevier Science. p. 663. ISBN 978-0080877747.
- The region was not called "Macedonia" by the Ottomans, and the name "Macedonia" gained currency together with the ascendance of rival nationalism. Collective Memory, National Identity, and Ethnic Conflict: Greece, Bulgaria, and the Macedonian Question, Victor Roudometof, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002, ISBN 0275976483, p. 89.
- "Macedonia Redux", Eugene N. Borza, The Eye Expanded: Life and the Arts in Greco-Roman Antiquity
- "Διδακτικά Βιβλία του Παιδαγωγικού Ινστιτούτου". www.greek-language.gr.
- ^ "Total resident population, households and dwellings in the Republic of North Macedonia, census 2021" (PDF). State Statistical Office of the Republic of North Macedonia. pp. 32–33.
- Although acceptable in the past, current use of this name in reference to both the ethnic group and the language can be considered pejorative and offensive by ethnic Macedonians. In the past, the Macedonian Slavs in Greece seemed relieved to be acknowledged as Slavomacedonians. Pavlos Koufis, a native of Greek Macedonia, pioneer of ethnic Macedonian schools in the region and local historian, says in Laografika Florinas kai Kastorias (Folklore of Florina and Kastoria), Athens 1996:
" the KKE recognised that the Slavophone population was ethnic minority of Slavomacedonians. This was a term, which the inhabitants of the region accepted with relief. Slavomacedonians = Slavs+Macedonians. The first section of the term determined their origin and classified them in the great family of the Slav peoples."
The Greek Helsinki Monitor reports:
"... the term Slavomacedonian was introduced and was accepted by the community itself, which at the time had a much more widespread non-Greek Macedonian ethnic consciousness. Unfortunately, according to members of the community, this term was later used by the Greek authorities in a pejorative, discriminatory way; hence the reluctance if not hostility of modern-day Macedonians of Greece (i.e. people with a Macedonian national identity) to accept it."
- Report about Compliance with the Principles of the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities (Greece) – GREEK HELSINKI MONITOR (GHM) Archived 23 May 2003 at the Wayback Machine
- Cowan, Jane K.; Dembour, Marie-Bénédicte; Wilson, Richard A. (29 November 2001). Culture and Rights. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521797351. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
- Lois Whitman (1994): Denying ethnic identity: The Macedonians of Greece Helsinki Human Rights Watch. p. 39 at Google Books
- Danforth, Loring M. The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World. p. 62. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
- "Greek Helsinki Monitor – Report about Compliance with the Principles of the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities". Archived from the original on 23 May 2003. Retrieved 12 January 2009.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - Шклифов, Благой and Екатерина Шклифова, Български диалектни текстове от Егейска Македония, София 2003, с. 28–36, 172 – Shkifov, Blagoy and Ekaterina Shklifova. Bulgarian dialect texts from Aegean Macedonia, Sofia 2003, pp. 28–36, 172
- Lois Whitman (1994): Denying ethnic identity: The Macedonians of Greece Helsinki Human Rights Watch. p. 37 at Google Books
- "Northwestern Greece is home to an indeterminate number of citizens who speak a Slavic dialect at home, particularly in Florina province. Estimates ranged widely, from under 10,000 to 50,000. A small number identified themselves as belonging to a distinct ethnic group and asserted their right to "Macedonian" minority status" "2002 U.S. Country Reports on Human Rights Practices – Greece". 31 March 2003.
- "Greece". Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
- Naumovski, Jaklina (25 January 2014). "Minorités en Albanie : les Macédoniens craignent la réorganisation territoriale du pays". Balkan Courriers. Retrieved 16 May 2014.
- minorityrights.org
- Only 0.2 % Macedonians live in Albania according to the Albanian authorities Archived 18 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine makfax.com.mk
- Nesbitt & Oikonomides 1991, p. 51.
- Meyendorff 1989.
- Runciman 1968.
- R.J. Rodden and K.A. Wardle, Nea Nikomedia: The Excavation of an Early Neolithic Village in Northern Greece 1961–1964, Vol I, The Excavation and the Ceramic Assemblage, British School at Athens Supplementary Volume 25, 1996
- A.C. Renfrew, The autonomy of the south-east European Copper Age, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 35 1969: 12–47.
- Stella G. Souvatzi, A Social Archaeology of Households in Neolithic Greece: An Anthropological Approach Series: Cambridge Studies in Archaeology, 2008, 166–178
- Colin Renfrew, Marija Gimbutas and Ernestine S. Elster 1986. Excavations at Sitagroi, a prehistoric village in northeast Greece. Vol. 1. Los Angeles : Institute of Archaeology, University of California, 1986, Monumenta archaeologica 13; E. Elster and C. Renfrew, Prehistoric Sitagroi: Excavations in Northeast Greece, 1968–1970, vol. 2: The Final Report, Monumenta Archaeologica 20 (Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA, 2003), ISBN 1-931745-03-X
- Stella G. Souvatzi, A Social Archaeology of Households in Neolithic Greece: An Anthropological Approach Series: Cambridge Studies in Archaeology, 2008, 217–220
- Thucydides. The Peloponnesian War,2.99.
- Borza, Eugene N. In the Shadow of Olympus: the Emergence of Macedon. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-691-00880-9, p. 65. "There is no record of conflict between the Bryges and the local population; they are described as synoikoi ("fellow inhabitant" or neighbors) of the Macedonians."
- "Paeonia – historical region".
- N.G.L. Hammond, "Connotations of 'Macedonia' and of 'Macedones' Until 323 B. C.", The Classical Quarterly, New Series, Vol. 45, No. 1, (1995), p. 122
- Roisman & Worthington 2010, pp. 135–138, 342–345.
- The Celts. A history. Daithi O Hogain. Boydell Press. ISBN 0-85115-923-0
- The Early Medieval Balkans. John Fine. Page 71: "In 688/89 the emperor Justinian II marched through Thrace where at least enough Byzantine rule had been restored for a theme administration to be established.... The purpose of the campaign was to punish the Bulgars and Slavs. Justinian successfully subdued many Slavs (taking many captives) and reached Thessaloniki. On his return toward Constantinople in 689 he was ambushed by the Bulgars who wiped out most of his army"
- From E. Livieratos & Chrys. Paliadeli, "European chartography and politics ..." (Ευρωπαϊκή χαρτογραφία και πολιτική. ...",) Thessaloniki, 2013, p. 141. In Greek
- Karloukovski, Vassil. "J. Fraser – Pictures from the Balkans – 1". www.kroraina.com.
- Engin Deniz Tanir, The Mid-Nineteenth century Ottoman Bulgaria from the viewpoints of the French Travelers, A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate School of Social Sciences of Middle East Technical University, 2005, pp. 99, 142
- Kaloudova, Yordanka. Documents on the situation of the population in the southwestern Bulgarian lands under Turkish rule, Военно-исторически сборник, 4, 1970, p. 72
- Pulcherius, Recueil des historiens des Croisades. Historiens orientaux. III, p. 331 – a passage in English – http://promacedonia.org/en/ban/nr1.html#4
- Journal Bulgarski knizhitsi, Constantinople, No. 10 May 1858, p. 19, in English – , From a letter of Georgi Gogov, Voden, to G.S. Rakovski, Belgrade, regarding the abuses perpetrated by the Greek bishop Nikodim and his persecution of Bulgarian patriots, Newspaper Makedonia, Constantinople, No. 26, May 27th, 1867, Vacalopulos, Konstandinos A. Modern history of Macedonia, Thessaloniki 1988, pp. 52, 57, 64
- Henry Robert Wilkinson: Maps and Politics: A Review of the Ethnographic Cartography of Macedonia. Liverpool University Press, Liverpool 1951, pp. 73–74.
Sources
- Curta, Florin (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-81539-0.
- Fine, John V. A. Jr. (1991) . The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08149-7.
- Fine, John V. A. Jr. (1994) . The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08260-4.
- Meyendorff, John (1989). Imperial unity and Christian divisions: The Church 450–680 A.D. Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press. ISBN 9780881410563.
- Nesbitt, John; Oikonomides, Nicolas, eds. (1991). Catalogue of Byzantine Seals at Dumbarton Oaks and in the Fogg Museum of Art, Volume 1: Italy, North of the Balkans, North of the Black Sea. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. ISBN 0-88402-194-7.
- Nicol, Donald M. (1993). The Last Centuries of Byzantium, 1261–1453 (Second ed.). London: Rupert Hart-Davis Ltd. ISBN 0-246-10559-3.
- Obolensky, Dimitri (1974) . The Byzantine Commonwealth: Eastern Europe, 500–1453. London: Cardinal. ISBN 9780351176449.
- Ostrogorsky, George (1956). History of the Byzantine State. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
- Popović, Radomir V. (1996). Le Christianisme sur le sol de l'Illyricum oriental jusqu'à l'arrivée des Slaves. Thessaloniki: Institute for Balkan Studies. ISBN 9789607387103.
- Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian (2010). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 9781444351637.
- Runciman, Steven (1968). The Great Church in Captivity: A Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople from the Eve of the Turkish Conquest to the Greek War of Independence (1. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521071888.
- Slijepčević, Đoko M. (1958). The Macedonian Question: The Struggle for Southern Serbia. Chicago: The American Institute for Balkan Affairs.
- Soulis, George Christos (1984). The Serbs and Byzantium during the reign of Tsar Stephen Dušan (1331–1355) and his successors. Washington: Dumbarton Oaks Library and Collection. ISBN 9780884021377.
- Stanković, Vlada, ed. (2016). The Balkans and the Byzantine World before and after the Captures of Constantinople, 1204 and 1453. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books. ISBN 9781498513265.
External links
41°N 22°E / 41°N 22°E / 41; 22
Categories: