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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by NikoSilver (talk | contribs) at 21:34, 15 May 2007 (moved Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style (Republic of Macedonia-related articles) to Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style (Macedonia-related articles): as explained in talk it should include conventions for the other Macedonia/n/s as well). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 21:34, 15 May 2007 by NikoSilver (talk | contribs) (moved Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style (Republic of Macedonia-related articles) to Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style (Macedonia-related articles): as explained in talk it should include conventions for the other Macedonia/n/s as well)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
The following is a proposed Misplaced Pages policy, guideline, or process. The proposal may still be in development, under discussion, or in the process of gathering consensus for adoption.
Manual of Style (MoS)

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Related guidelines
These guidelines deal with the naming of articles related to the Republic of Macedonia. Please follow the conventions below. If you disagree with any of the conventions, please discuss in the talk page.

To write and edit Republic of Macedonia-related articles, please follow the conventions below. Note


Country/Province naming issues

Background

The Republic of Macedonia is a country in south-eastern Europe, situated between Albania, Bulgaria, Greece and Serbia. Since gaining independence from Yugoslavia in 1992, it has been embroiled in a dispute with Greece concerning its use of the name Macedonia, which is also the name of a northern region of Greece. The dispute remains unresolved, but three names for the republic and two names for the province are in general use in English-language sources:

Country

  • Republic of Macedonia - used by the country itself, plus about half of the United Nations' member states, including the US, Russia and China;
  • former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia - used by the UN and about half of its member states, plus the European Union (including Greece) and many other international organisations.
  • Macedonia (without any modifiers) - widely used by English-language news media.

A number of other variant names derived from former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia are also in use:

  • FYROM
  • FYRO Macedonia
  • FYR of Macedonia
  • FYR Macedonia
  • FY Republic of Macedonia

In addition, several alternative names (metonyms) have been coined by Greek nationalists who reject any use of the term "Macedonia" by any country other than Greece. These names are not in general use but may be used by some supporters of this point of view:

  • Pseudomacedonia
  • Republic of Skopje
  • Republic of Vardar

A United States envoy has also proposed the name Republika Makedonija-Skopje, but this has not been accepted by any party to the dispute.

These multiple overlapping names are often a cause of confusion on the part of:

  • Misplaced Pages's editors, who may be uncertain about which name to use;
  • Misplaced Pages's readers, who may not understand what the name means (e.g. if the acronym "FYROM" is used without spelling it out) or which Macedonia — the country or the Greek region — is being referred to.

To reduce the scope for confusion and promote consistency across Misplaced Pages articles, this page sets out conventions for describing the Republic of Macedonia.

Misplaced Pages standards

Misplaced Pages's approach to dealing with disputed placenames is set out in Misplaced Pages:Naming conflict. The naming conflict guidelines operate alongside the guidelines on general naming conventions and naming conventions for common names.

Naming standards set by external organisations are not automatically applicable to Misplaced Pages. For instance, the UN and most international organisations recognise the Republic of China (i.e. Taiwan) as Chinese Taipei. Despite this, Misplaced Pages uses Republic of China as the name for the entity that governs the island of Taiwan.

This is because Misplaced Pages's naming conflict guidelines mandate that articles on self-identifying entities should use the name, or an English translation thereof, chosen by the entity in question. ("Misplaced Pages does not take any position on whether a self-identifying entity has any right to use a name; this encyclopedia merely notes the fact that they do use that name.") Therefore the fact that the UN, the EU or any individual country uses a particular name for an entity does not require Misplaced Pages to use the same name.

Naming conventions (country)

  • The name Macedonia (used by itself without modifiers) should not be used to refer to the country, due to the need to differentiate between the country and the Greek region, unless already unquestionably clear from the context.
  • The name Republic of Macedonia is the established term that Misplaced Pages generally uses to refer to the country, as determined by the naming conflict guidelines. The country-level article is at Republic of Macedonia and all sub-level articles also use Republic of Macedonia, as do the related templates. This name should be used in all articles other than the exceptions set out below.
  • The name former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia should be used in articles about international organisations or events, where the organisations or events in question use that name, and in articles related to modern Greece, which uses that name for official business. Note that the initial "f" in "former" should not be capitalised unless it occurs at the start of a sentence.
  • The name FYR Macedonia should be used in articles about international organisations or events, where the organisations or events in question use that name.
  • The name FYROM should be avoided for general use, except perhaps in articles which already use former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia or FYR Macedonia. In such cases, the first use of former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia or FYR Macedonia should always be followed by (FYROM) if the abbreviated term is to be used later in the article. See Misplaced Pages:Manual of Style#Acronyms and abbreviations. Note that FYROM can be considered offensive both by citizens of the Republic and by some Greeks, the latter objecting to the implicit presence of "Macedonia".

Deprecated names (country)

The following names are deprecated:

  • Pseudomacedonia, Republic of Skopje, Republic of Vardar should never be used for general purposes. Neither name is widely recognised and their use is exclusively associated with a particular nationalist point of view. Misplaced Pages's neutral point of view policy must be borne in mind.
  • Republika Makedonija-Skopje should never be used for general purposes, as it is an as-yet unagreed proposal without any official standing or recognition.
  • FYRO Macedonia, FYR of Macedonia and FY Republic of Macedonia are non-standard variants of former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia / FYROM and should not be used. Instances of these terms should be replaced by Republic of Macedonia, former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia or FYR Macedonia as appropriate to the circumstances described in the section above.

Province

The Greek province is called "Macedonia". This is the preferred self-identifying name. It is also acceptably referred to as "Greek Macedonia", and "Macedonia, Greece" in general English usage, mainly for disambiguation purposes (although most Greeks will consider the disambiguation a pleonasm). The name "Aegean Macedonia" is also found in scholarship, but its use is not advised as it is the name used by irredentist ethnic Macedonian nationalists of the United Macedonia movement. Therefore, the following naming conventions apply:

Naming conventions (province)

  • The name Macedonia (used by itself without modifiers) should not be used to refer to the province, due to the need to differentiate between the country and the Greek region, unless already unquestionably clear from the context.
  • The names Macedonia, Greece or Greek Macedonia is the established term that Misplaced Pages generally uses to refer to the province, as determined by the naming conflict guidelines. The province-level article is at Macedonia (Greece) and all sub-level articles should use these two names, as should the related templates.
  • The name Aegean Macedonia should be avoided for general use, except in articles describing the irredentist concept. Note that Aegean Macedonia can be considered offensive for some Greeks, but the Greek government has not raised issue.

Wikilinking

All wikilinks to the country should point to Republic of Macedonia directly or indirectly (through a valid redirect). You can either use a pipe (the | symbol) to direct a wikilink at this article, e.g.: ], or use the redirect itself, e.g.: ], provided that the latter redirects to the page for the country.

Images

Images providing information on the Republic of Macedonia (e.g. maps, graphs, charts etc.) should be capable of being used in multiple articles without requiring external interpretation. The name Republic of Macedonia should be used in such images. This may optionally be followed by the parenthesised acronym (FYROM).

People naming issues

Naming conventions (ethnic group)

The same logic should be applied to the name of the largest ethnic group of the country (Macedonians (ethnic group)):

  • Macedonians or ethnic Macedonians can be used in all articles related to the country, where there is no need for disambiguation.
  • Macedonian Slavs or Slav Macedonians in articles where there is need for disambiguation (mainly those also addressing the Greek Macedonians).

Deprecated names (ethnic group)

The following names should never be used, as they are exclusively associated with a particular nationalist point of view, have no general or official recognition and are seen as offensive by citizens of the Republic of Macedonia. Again, Misplaced Pages's neutral point of view policy must be borne in mind.

  • Skopians
  • Fyromians
  • Bulgaroskopians

Naming conventions (regional group)

The inhabitants of the Greek Macedonia share a strong regional identity. Greeks is the default ethnic description. However, in many cases where people are especially related to the particular province, a regional description may be required, and the following conventions should be used:

  • Macedonians should generally be avoided to prevent confusion with the ethnic group.
  • Greek Macedonians or Macedonian Greeks is not comparable to "American-Greeks" in the sense of being of ethnic Macedonian descent but living in Greece (or vice versa). It is a separate regional group of ethnic Greeks that lives mainly in the Greek region of Macedonia. The use of the modifier (Greek/s) is advised in all articles for disambiguation purposes with the citizens of the republic.
  • Aegean Macedonians or Aegeans should be avoided because it may have double meaning. It is used by members of the ethnic group for describing their compatriots that happen to originate from the Greek region, and rarely by western scholars for describing the Greek inhabitants of the region. It can also be considered offensive for Greeks under certain contexts.

Deprecated names (regional group)

Footnotes

  1. e.g. the European Union, NATO, the United Nations.
  2. e.g. Eurovision, International Olympic Committee, UEFA.
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