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FALLACIES AND FACTS ON THE MACEDONIAN ISSUE
©2003
BY
MARCUS A TEMPLAR
There have been certain
fallacies circulating for the past few years due to ignorance on the
“Macedonian Issue”. It is exacerbated by
systematic propaganda emanating from AVNOJ, or communist Yugoslavia and
present-day FYROM,
and their intransigent ultra-nationalist Diaspora.
Fallacy #1
The inhabitants of The
former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (The FYROM) are ethnic Macedonians,
direct descendants of, or related to the ancient Macedonians.
Fact #1
The inhabitants of The FYROM are mostly Slavs,
Bulgarians and Albanians. They have nothing in common with the
ancient
Macedonians. Here are some testimonies from The FYROM’s officials:
a.
The former President of The FYROM, Kiro Gligorov said: “We are Slavs
who came to this area in the sixth
century ... we are not descendants of the
ancient Macedonians" (Foreign Information Service Daily Report, Eastern
Europe, February 26, 1992, p. 35).
b.
Also, Mr Gligorov declared: "We are Macedonians but we are Slav
Macedonians. That's who we are!
We have no connection to Alexander the Greek
and his Macedonia… Our ancestors came here in the
5th and 6th century"
(Toronto Star, March 15, 1992).
c.
On 22 January 1999, Ambassador of the FYROM to USA, Ljubica Achevska
gave a speech on the present
situation in the Balkans. In answering questions
at the end of her speech Mrs. Acevshka said: "We do not
claim to be
descendants of Alexander the Great … Greece is Macedonia’s second
largest trading partner,
and its number one investor. Instead of opting for
war, we have chosen the mediation of the United Nations,
with talks on the
ambassadorial level under Mr. Vance and Mr. Nemitz." In reply to another
question about
the ethnic origin of the people of FYROM, Ambassador Achevska
stated that "we are Slavs and we speak
a Slav language.”
d.
On 24 February 1999, in an interview with the Ottawa Citizen, Gyordan
Veselinov, FYROM'S Ambassador
to Canada, admitted, "We are not related to the
northern Greeks who produced leaders like Philip and
Alexander the Great. We
are a Slav people and our language is closely related to Bulgarian." He also
commented, “There is some confusion about the identity of the people of my
country."
e.
Moreover, the Foreign Minister of the FYROM, Slobodan Casule, in an
interview to Utrinski Vesnik of
Skopje on December 29, 2001, said that he
mentioned to the Foreign Minister of Bulgaria, Solomon Pasi,
that they "belong
to the same Slav people.”
Fallacy #2
The Macedonian Greeks
are of the same ethnic group as the “Macedonians” of The FYROM.
Fact #2
The Macedonian Greeks are NOT of the same ethnic group
as the Macedonian Slavs of The FYROM.
The Macedonian Greeks are just that,
Greeks who live in or originate from the geographic area of Macedonia.
They
are the only people, that by inheritance, can be called Macedonians.
Fallacy #3
Ancient Macedonians
were a tribe similar to the Greeks, but not Greek themselves.
Fact #3
Ancient Macedonians were
one of more than the 230 Hellenic tribes, sub-tribes, and families of the
Hellenic Nation
that spoke more than 200 dialects. For more information see
Herodotus, Thucydides, Titus Livius, Strabo, Nevi'im,
Ketuvim, Apocrypha (Macabees
I, 1-2). It was not until 1945 that their Hellenism has been challenged by
the Slavs
for expansionistic reasons.
Fallacy #4
Ancient Greece was a
country, a legal entity, as we understand it today.
Fact #4
No. Hellas (Greece) was
first recognized as a nation state or legal entity as we understand it today
in 1830.
From the beginning until that time, the term Hellas was only a
geographic term or an administrative area whose
borders were changing
depending on the needs of the Roman, Byzantine, or Ottoman Empires.
Fallacy #5
There was one ancient Greek language and the ancient
Macedonians spoke Macedonian, not Greek.
Fact #5
Linguistically, there is
no real distinction between a dialect and a language without a specific
factor. People usually
consider the political factor to determine whether a
certain kind of speech is a language or a dialect. Since the
Pan-Hellenic
area consisted of many small city- states (Attica, Lacedaemon, Corinth, etc.),
and larger states
(Molossia, Thesprotia, Macedonia, Acarnania, Aetolia, etc.),
it was common knowledge at the time that the people
of all those states were
speaking different languages, when in fact they were all variations of the
same language,
Hellenic or Greek.
The most advanced of all Hellenic dialects
was the dialect of Attica (Athens) or Attic.
When people state “ancient Greek
language” they mean the Attic dialect and any comparison of the Macedonian
dialect to ancient Greek is actually a comparison to the Attic dialect. The
difference between Macedonian and
Attic was like the difference between Low
and High German. Nobody doubts that both are Germanic languages,
although
they differ from one another. Another good example of a multi-dialectal
linguistic regime is present-day Italy.
The official language of Italy is the
Florentine, but common people still speak their own dialects.
Two people from
different areas of Italy cannot communicate if both speak their respective
dialect, and yet they
both speak Italian. Why should the Hellenic language be
treated differently?
At that time, Greeks
spoke more than 200 Hellenic dialects or languages, as the ancient Greeks used
to call them.
Some of the well-known dialects were Ionic, Attic, Doric, Aeolic, Cypriot, Arcadic, Aetolic, Acarnanic, Macedonian
and Locric.
Moreover, we know that the Romans considered the Macedonians as Hellenic
speaking peoples.
Livy wrote, "…The Aetolians, the Acarnanians, the
Macedonians, men of the same speech, are united or disunited
by trivial causes
that arise from time to time …" (Livy, History of Rome, b. XXXI
par. XXIX). The Aetolians and
Acarnanians were definitely Hellenic tribes.
On another occasion Livy writes "…[General Paulus] took his official
seat surrounded by the whole crowd of Macedonians … his announcement
was translated into Greek and repeated by
Gnaeus Octavius the praetor…”.
If the crowd of Macedonians were not Greek speaking, why then did the
Romans need to translate Paulus' speech into Greek? (Livy, History of Rome,
b. XLV, para XXIX).
The Macedonian dialect
was an Aeolic dialect of the Western Greek language group (Hammond, The
Macedonian
State, p. 193). All those dialects differ from each other, but
never in a way that one person could not understand
the other. The Military
Yugoslavian Encyclopedia of the 1974 edition (Letter M, page 219), a
very anti-Hellenic
biased publication, states, “… u doba rimske
invazije, njihov jezik bio grčki, ali se dva veka ranije dosta razlikovao
od
njega, mada ne toliko da se ta dva naroda nisu mogla sporazumevati.” (…
at the time of the Roman invasion
their language was Hellenic, but two
centuries before it was different enough, but not as much as the two peoples
could not understand one another).
After the death of Alexander the Great, the situation
changed in the vast empire into a new reality. Ptolemy II,
Philadelphos
(308-246 BC) the Pharaoh (king) of Egypt realized that the physical
unification of the Greeks and
the almost limitless expansion of the Empire
required the standardization of the already widely used common
language or Koinē. Greek was already the lingua franca of the vast Hellenistic world in
all four kingdoms of the
Diadochi (Alexander's Successors). It was already
spoken, but neither an official alphabet nor grammar had yet been devised.
Alexandria, Egypt was
already the Cultural Center of the Empire in about 280 BC. Ptolemy II
assigned Aristeas,
an Athenian scholar, to create the grammar of the new
language, one that not only all Greeks, but all inhabitants
of the Empire
would be able to speak. Thus, Aristeas used the Attic dialect as basis for
the new language.
Aristeas and the scholars who were assisting him trimmed
the language a little, eliminated the Attic idiosyncrasies
and added words as
well as grammatical and syntactical rules mainly from the Doric, Ionic, and Aeolic dialects.
The Spartan Doric, however, was excluded from it (see
Tsakonian further down). So, they standardized THE
Hellenic language, called
Koine or Common.
The language was far from
perfect. Non-Greeks encountered difficulties reading it since there was no
way to
separate words, sentences and paragraphs. In addition, they were
unable to express their feelings and the
right intonation. During that time,
Greek was a melodic language, even more melodic than Italian is today.
The system of paragraphs,
sentences, and some symbols like ~. ;`'! , were the result of
continuous improvement
and enhancement of the language with the contribution
of many Greek scholars from all over the World.
There were a few
alphabets employed by various Hellenic cities or states, and these alphabets
included letters
specific to the sounds of their particular dialect. There
were two main categories, the Eastern and the Western
alphabets. The first
official alphabet omitted all letters not in use any longer (
sampi,
qoppa,
digamma
also
known as
stigma
in Greek numbering) and it presented a 24-letter alphabet for the new Koinē
language.
However, the inclusion and use of small letters took place over a
period of many centuries after the standardization
of Koinē.
After the new language
was completed with its symbols, the Jews of Egypt felt that it was an
opportunity for them
to translate their sacred books into Greek since it was
the language that the Jews of Diaspora spoke.
So on the island of Pharos, by
Alexandria's seaport, 72 Jewish rabbis were secluded and isolated as they
translated their sacred books (Torah, Nevi’im, Ketuvim, etc.) from Aramaic and
Hebrew to the Koinē Greek,
the newly created language. This is known as the
Septuagint translation. The Koinē evolved and in about
two to three centuries
it became the language that Biblical scholars call Biblical Greek. In fact,
only those
who have studied the Attic dialect can understand the difference
between the Septuagint Greek and the Greek
of the New Testament.
Although the Koinē was officially in use, common folk
in general continued to speak their own dialect and here
and there one can
sense the insertion of elements of the Attic dialect in various documents such
as the
New Testament. The Gospel according to St. John and the Revelation are
written in perfect Attic.
The other three Synoptic Gospels were written in Koinē with the insertion of some Semitic grammatical concepts
(i.e. the Hebrew
genitive) and invented words (i.e. epiousios).
The outcome is that today in Greece there are many
variations in speech; of course not to the point of people not understanding
each other, but still there is divergence in the Greek spoken tongue. Today
the Hellenic language
accepts only one dialect, the Tsakonian, which is a
direct development of the ancient Doric dialect of Sparta.
The Demotic is a
development of mostly the Doric sound system, whereas the Katharevousa is a
made-up
language based on the Classical Attic. Presently, the speech in
various areas of Greece somehow differs from
each other and sometimes an
untrained ear might have difficulty understanding the local speech. Pontic
and
Cypriot Greek are very good examples to the unacquainted ear. Tsakonian
dialect, the descendant of the
Spartan Doric, is almost impossible to
understand if one is not familiar with it.
Over the years, Macedonia
had several names. At first the Macedonians gave the land the name, Emathia,
after their leader Emathion. It derives from the word amathos, amathoeis
meaning sand or sandy.
From now on, all of its names are
Greek. Later it was called Maketia or Makessa and finally
Makedonia
(Macedonia). The latter names are derived from the Doric/Aeolic word “makos,”
(in Attic “mēkos)
meaning length (see Homer, Odyssey, VII, 106), thus
Makednos means long or tall, but also a
highlander or mountaineer. (cf. Orestae, Hellenes).
In Opis, during the
mutiny of the Macedonian Army, Alexander the Great spoke to the whole
Macedonian
Army addressing them in Greek (Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander,
VII, 9,10). The Macedonian soldiers
listened to him and they were dumbfounded
by what they heard from their Commander-in-Chief. They were upset.
Immediately after Alexander left for the Palace, they demanded that Alexander
allow them
to enter the palace so that they could talk to him.
When this was reported to
Alexander, he quickly came out and saw their restrained disposition; he heard
the
majority of his soldiers crying and lamenting, and was moved to tears. He
came forward to speak, but they
remained there imploring him. One of them,
named Callines, whose age and command of the Companion
cavalry made him
preeminent spoke as follows: “Sire, what grieves the Macedonians is
that you have
already made some Persians your ‘kinsmen’, and the Persians are
called ‘kinsmen’ of Alexander and are
allowed to kiss you, while not one of
the Macedonians has been granted this honor” (Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander,
VII, 8-11).
The previous story
clearly reveals that the Macedonians were speaking Greek since they could
understand their leader.
There were thousands of them, not just some selected
few who happened to speak Greek. It would be unrealistic
for Alexander the
Great to speak to them in a language they supposedly did not speak. It would
be impossible to
believe that the Macedonian soldiers were emotionally moved
to the point that all of them were lamenting after
listening to a language
they did not understand. There is no way for the Macedonians to have taken a
crash course
in Greek in 20 minutes so that they would be able to understand
the speech simultaneously as Alexander was
delivering it.
Furthermore, the
Macedonians wore a distinctive hat, the “kausia”
(καυσία) (Polybius IV 4,5;
Eustathius 1398;
Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander, VII 22; cf. Sturz,
Macedonian Dialect, 41) from the Greek word for heat that
separated them
from the rest of the Greeks. That is why the Persians called them “yauna takabara,” which meant
“Greeks wearing the hat”. The Macedonian hat was very
distinctive from the hats of the other Greeks, but the
Persians did not
distinguished the Macedonians, because the Macedonian speech was also Greek
(Hammond, The Macedonian State p. 13 cf. J.M. Balcer, Historia, 37
[1988] 7).
On the mountainsides of the Himalayas and the
Indian Caucasus and under Pakistani and Afghanistan jurisdiction lives a tribe
whose people call themselves Kalash. They claim to be the descendants of
Alexander the Great’s soldiers who for various
reasons were left behind in the
depths of Asia and could not follow the Great General in his new conquests.
Having no
contact with the outside world for almost 23 centuries, they are
quite different from any other neighboring nations.
Light complexioned, and
blue eyed in the midst of dark skinned neighbors, their language, even though
it has been
affected and influenced by the many Muslim languages of nations
that surround the Kalash tribe, still incorporates
vocabulary and has many
elements of the ancient Greek language. They greet their visitors with "ispanta"
from the
Greek verb "ασπάζομαι" (greetings) and they warn them about "heman"
from the ancient Greek noun "χειμών" (winter).
These indigenous people still
believe in the twelve Olympian gods and their architecture resembles very much
the
Macedonian architecture (National Herald, “A School in the Tribe of Kalash
by Greeks", October 11, 1996).
Michael Wood, the British
scholar in his In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great (p.8), quotes
the following
statement made by a Kalash named Kazi Khushnawaz:
Long long ago, before the days
of Islam, Sikander e Aazem came to India. The Two Horned one whom
you British
people call Alexander the Great. (sic) He conquered the world, and was a very
great man,
brave and dauntless and generous to his followers. When he left to
go back to Greece, some of his men
did not wish to go back with him but
preferred to stay here. Their leader was a general called
Shalakash [Seleucus].
With some of his officers and men, he came to these valleys and they settled
here and took local women, and here they stayed. We, the Kalash, the Black
Kafir of the
Hindu Kush, are the descendants of their children. Still some of
our words are the same as theirs,
our music and our dances, too; we worship
the same gods. This is why we believe the Greeks are our first ancestors...
(Seleucus was one of the
Generals of Alexander the Great. He was born in 358 or 354 BC in the town of
Europos, Macedonia and died in August/September 281 BC near Lysimathia,
Thrace.)
The Kalash today worship
the ancient Greek gods and especially Di Zau [Dias Zeus], the great sky god.
Unfortunately, their language died out only in Muslim times. This is further
evidence that Macedonians and
Greeks spoke the same language, had the same
religion and the same customs.
Accusations of
Macedonians being barbarians started in Athens and they were the result of
political fabrications
based on the Macedonian way of life and not on their
ethnicity or language. (Casson, Macedonia, Thrace and
Illyria, p158,
Errington, A History of Macedonia, p 4).
Demosthenes traveled to
Macedonia twice for a total
of nine months. He knew very well what language
the Macedonians were speaking. We encountered similar
behavior with Thrasyboulos. He states that the Acarnanians were barbarians only when the
Athenians
encountered a conflict of political interest from the Acarnanians.
The Macedonian way of life differed in
many ways from the southern Greek way
of life, but that was very common among the Western Greeks such
as Chaones,
Molossians, Thesprotians, Acarnanians, Aetolians and Macedonians (Errington,
A History of Macedonia, p 4.)
Macedonian state institutions were
similar to those of the Mycenean and
Spartan (Wilcken, Alexander the Great,
p 23). Regarding Demosthenes addressing Philip as “barbarian”
even Badian an
opponent of the Greekness of Macedonians states “It may have nothing to do
with
historical fact, any more than the orators' tirades against their
personal enemies usually have.”
(E. Badian, Studies in the History of Art
Vol 10: Macedonia And Greece in Late Classical and Early Hellenistic Times,
Greeks and Macedonians).
Fallacy #6
Ancient Macedonia was
a nation state.
Fact #6
Before Phillip II,
Macedonia was divided into small typical city-states having adopted the same
concept of
internal civic structure as the southern Greek city-states. Each
Macedonian city-state or area had its own
main city and government. Philip II
united the Macedonian city-states by instituting and establishing a
Homeric
style of a Kingdom, maintaining the infrastructure of the smaller city-states
with the various kings
paying tribute to the king of all Macedonia. We know
this from the fact that at one time the king of
Lyncestis (present day Bitola
- Florina) was Alexander. The point that has to be made clear is that a
man’s
first loyalty was to his city, not to the King of Macedonia (Hammond, The
Macedonian State, p. 9).
Fallacy #7
Over the years the
ancient Macedonians disappeared.
Fact #7
The ancient Macedonians,
under the influence of the new common language, the Koine, as developed over
the years, were amalgamated with the rest of the Hellenes, or Greeks.
Fallacy #8
If the ancient
Macedonians were Greeks, why then was Alexander I, the king of Macedonia,
named Philhellene (lover of Greece)? This title is bestowed only to
foreigners.
Fact #8
The king of Macedonia,
Alexander I, was named Philhellene by the Theban poet Pindaros for the same
reason Jason of Pherrai and Euagoras of Cyprus were called Philhellenes
(Isocrates 107A, 199A).
The title Philhellene in ancient times meant Philopatris (lover of the homeland) or simply put “a patriot”
(Plato,
Politics, 470E; Xenophon, Agesilaus, 7, 4),
which is why Alexander
the Great did not touch
the traditional house of Pindaros when he ordered his
soldiers to burn Thebes.
Fallacy #9
The ancient Greeks had
a Greek or Hellenic national conscience and the Macedonians, by
destroying
Greek cities, proved that they were not Greeks.
Fact #9
Greece is an area which
lacking geographic continuity fostered alienation of individual tribes not
only in the
general sense, but also in a narrower sense. That explains why the
ancient Greeks did not have a common
national conscience which is why they
were warring against each other. The Macedonians destroyed or
burned cities
belonging to other Greek City States for the same reason the Athenians, the
Thebans, and
the Spartans battled one another.
They knew that somehow
they were related, but local conscience was much stronger than a Pan- Hellenic
one.
Ancient Greeks, of the Hellenic mainland, were united before an enemy
attack that could endanger the
common freedom and welfare. This fact was
displayed anytime the Persians attacked the Hellenic lands.
Greeks from Ionia
and Aeolia (present day Aegean shores of Turkey), however, were mostly Persian
allies
in opposition to the Mainland Greeks.
It was common practice
for various Hellenic states to form political/military alliances with each
other and
against each other, but they did not develop ethnic partnerships.
There are plenty of such alliances in the
ancient Hellenic world.
A few centuries went by
until the Greeks began developing a national conscience. The Greeks
definitely
achieved the completion of a national conscience by the time
Justinian was crowned the Emperor of Byzantium.
Very few ancient Greeks, such
as Pericles, Demosthenes and Phillip II of Macedonia had the vision of a
united country, but each one wanted to see his own state as the leading force
of such a union. Pericles
dreamed of it, Demosthenes advocated it, but Phillip
II materialized it. Also, the Macedonians had
common religious practices and
customs as the Spartans.
Fallacy #10
The ancient
Macedonians were one of the Illyrian tribes.
Fact #10
Although there is a lot of evidence (mostly indirect)
regarding the language of the ancient Macedonians, there is
one piece of
evidence offered by Polybius in book XXVIII, paragraphs 8 and 9, where it
states that the
Macedonians were using translators when they were
communicating with the Illyrians. This means the
Macedonians and the
Illyrians did not speak the same language. For instance, Perseus, the
Macedonian
king, sent Adaeus of Berroia (who spoke only Greek) and Pleuratus
the Illyrian, as a translator (because
he spoke the Illyrian language) on a
mission to the Illyrian king Genthius (169 BC). Pleuratus was an
exile living
in Perseus' court. Moreover there is evidence that the Illyrians and the
Macedonians were vicious enemies.
Fallacy #11
Many of the Greeks
living in Greek Macedonia are actually refugees that came to Macedonia during
the First World War and especially during the 1920's and 1930' from Turkey,
the Middle East,
Georgia, Russia, Ukraine and Bulgaria.
Fact #11
It is very true that a
good number of the Greeks living in Greek Macedonia are refugees from various
Middle Eastern countries. However, it is also true that these Greeks are
descendants of those ancient Greeks, including ancient
Macedonians, who either
colonized various areas of what presently are Russia, Ukraine, Georgia,
Bulgaria,
Turkey, the Middle East, or followed the greatest General of all
times, Alexander the Great. These Greeks
simply came home after at least two
and one half millennia of spreading the Greek spirit, culture, language
and
civilization. Mother Greece made her lands available to her returning and
thought to be lost offspring. It was the least she could do. After all they
had every right to come home, just as the Jews did and they
are still going
home to Israel.
Fallacy #12
Sts. Cyril and
Methodius were Slavs and that is the rationale why they are called
“the
Apostles of the Slavs” and also “the Slav Apostles.”
Fact#12
The term “Slav Apostles”
or the “Apostles of the Slavs” does not mean that the two brothers were
Slavs.
St. Thomas is called “the Indian Apostle,” but we all know that he was
not an Indian. He simply taught
Christianity to the Indians. The Greek
brothers from Thessaloniki taught Christianity to the Slavs, they
gave them
the alphabet (presently called Cyrillic), and they translated the sacred and
liturgical books of
Christianity into the Old Church Slavonic, otherwise known
as Old Bulgarian.
Pope John Paul II in his Encyclical Epistles of
December 31, 1980, and June 2, 1985, while he was
commemorating the two
brothers, affirmed the fact that both were Greeks from Thessaloniki.
Professors Ivan Lazaroff,
Plamen Pavloff, Ivan Tyutyundzijeff and Milko Palangurski of the Faculty of
History of Sts. Cyril and Methodius University in Veliko Tŭrnovo, Bulgaria in
their book, Kratka istoriya na bŭlgarskiya narod (Short History of
the Bulgarian Nation, pp 36-38), state very explicitly that the two
brothers were Greeks from Thessaloniki. The late Oscar Halecki,
Professor of
Eastern European History, in his book Borderlands of Western Civilization,
A History of East Central Europe (chapter Moravian State and the Apostles
of the Slavs)
agrees with the authors of Kratka istoriya na bŭlgarskiya
narod.
Fallacy #13
The present day Emblem
of the FYROM is the lion. This lion is the same lion that Alexander the Great
is depicted wearing above his head imprinted on some old coins.
Fact #13
There is nothing in
common between The FYROM’s lion and the lion's skin that Alexander the Great
wears
in some coins. The FYROM’s lion is actually the Bulgarian lion, which
is depicted in the Bulgarian Coat of Arms.
Alexander’s lion is the
lion's skin that Heracles killed in Nemea, which is one of the 12 deeds
executed by the
mythological hero. The lion skin that Alexander the Great
wears signifies his ancestral relationship to Heracles
(Hercules). There is
an unpublished inscription from Xanthos dating from the third century BC
(cf.
Robert, Amyzon, 1,162, n 31) where the Ptolemies refer to their
Ancestors as “Herakleidas Argeadas”
(Errington, A History of Macedonia,
p 265, n 6).
Fallacy #14
In other coins we see
Alexander the Great having two horns on his head and this signifies that he
was
a very bad man.
Fact #14
In the Middle Eastern
tradition a horned man meant that he was powerful. Darius in his letters to
Alexander the Great called him, Zul-Al-Kurnain or Double Horned one. Thus the
horns on Alexander’s
head means that he was recognized as most powerful.
Fallacy #15
After the battle of
Granicus, Alexander sent the Athenians 300 full suits of Persian armor as a
present,
with the following inscription: "Alexander, son of Philip, and the
Greeks, except the Lacedaemonians,
dedicate these spoils, taken from the
Persian who dwell in Asia.” J.R. Hamilton in a note on this
event states,
“In view of the small part, which the Greeks had played in the battle the
inscription
[with the omission of any mention of the Macedonians] must be
regarded as propaganda designed
for his Greek allies. Alexander does not
fail to stress the absence of the Spartans.”
Fact #15
J.R. Hamilton’s
assumption is unconvincing. Alexander the Great had no reason to please
anyone because the
troops from South Greece were only 9,400, and as he admits,
they only played a small part in the battle.
Being the master of the
expeditionary force and ignoring his Macedonians while exalting the “foreign
Greeks”,
Alexander would have faced the same angry Macedonians that he
was confronted with in Opis when he
appointed foreigners (Persians and Medes)
to high ranks and offices in his Army and administration.
However, none of
the Macedonians complained about the inscription after the battle of Granicus
because they considered themselves included in it.
The fact is that
Alexander the Great considered himself and his Macedonians, Greek. He claimed
ancestry
on his mother’s side from Achilles and on his father’s side from
Hercules (Heracles). His ancestor,
Alexander I, stated that he was Greek
(Herodotus, Histories, V, 20, 22; VIII, 137; IX, 45).
The Macedonians themselves were Greek speaking peoples
(see: Papazoglu,
Makedonski Gradovi, p 333 and Central Balkan Tribes, p 135; Casson,
Macedonia,
Thrace and Illyria, pp157-162; NGL Hammond, The
Macedonian State, pp 12-15 and 193; Cavaignac, Histoire de l’ antiquité,
i, p 67; Hoffman, Die Makedonen, p. 259; Errington, A History of
Macedonia, p 3;
Yugoslavian Military Encyclopedia 1974 “Antička Makedonija”; Hogarth, Philip and Alexander, p.5, n 4),
Urlich
Wilcken, Alexander the Great, II pp 23 and 24, Botsford, Hellenic
History, p 237).
Some of the scholars
mentioned above initially were not sure about the Greekness of the Macedonians
(i.e. NGL Hammod). Newly discovered artifacts and monuments that were
excavated indicating the
Macedonians were actually Greek made them admit their
previous error. NGL Hammond explains the
reason why scholars like Badian do
not consider the Macedonians Greeks in his book,
The Macedonian State
(page 13, note 29). Hammond states that most recently E. Badian in Barr-Sharrar
(pp 33-51) disregarded the evidence as explained in A History of Macedonia
(NGL Hammond and
G. T. Griffith, 1979 pp 39-54). In Barr-Sharrar,
Badian holds the view that the Macedonians
(whom he does not define) spoke a
language other than Greek. Badian keeps ignoring evidence that is
against his
beliefs and convictions choosing only certain proof and ignoring other
relevant proof.
That is exactly the pattern others, like E. Borza, P. Green,
etc. have chosen to follow.
All names, whether
members of the royal family or not, including names of other simple Macedonian
citizens, i.e. Kallinis (Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander, VII par 11),
Limnos from Chalastra (Plutarch, Parallel Lives of Famous Greeks and Romans,
chap. Alexander) and all toponymies in the area of
the Macedonian homeland
were Greek. The Macedonian homeland included the city-states of Imathia,
Pieria, Bottiea, Mygdonia, Crestonia, Bisaltia, Sintiki, Odomantis, Edonis,
Elimea, Orestis, Eordea,
Almopia, Lyncestis, Pelagonia and Macedonian Paeonia.
Macedonian Paeonia is the part of
Paeonia which lies south of the narrow pass
at the area of Demir Kapija (The FYROM).
Fanula Papazoglu
indirectly agrees with the concept of the above borderlines stating, “…
it is often forgotten
that ancient Macedonia occupied only a relatively small
part of the Yugoslav Macedonia” (Papazoglu,
Central Balkan Tribes, p.
268). Papazoglu’s two maps at the end of her doctoral dissertation
(Makedonski
gradovi u rimsko doba, Skoplje, 1957) portray only Macedonian territories
under Roman rule.
Macedonia conquered the
already Hellenized Paeonia in 217 BC under King Philip V, 106 years after the
death of Alexander the Great. Any map that incorporates Paeonia into
Macedonia before that year is absolutely false.
All inscriptions and artifacts excavated, including
those in Trebenište and Oleveni near Bitola, are in pure Greek.
With a few
exceptions, the only time one sees non-Greek names and toponymies is in areas
that constituted
the expansion of Macedonia, i.e. Paeonia, Thrace, etc. Any
non-Greek names, words or toponymies found in the Macedonian homeland are
remnant of Thracians, Phrygians or Paeonians that used to live there before
their
expulsion by the Macedonians.
Participation in the
Olympic Games was unequivocally and definitely a function that only athletes
of strictly
Hellenic origin could partake. Archelaus had won in the Olympic
and Pythian Games (Solinus 9, 16) and
Alexander I had also won in the Olympic
Games (Herodotus, Histories, V, 22).
It is stated by
Herodotus (Histories VIII, 43)
that a number of Peloponnesian cities inhabited by Lacedaemonians, Corinthians, Sicyonians, Epidaurians, Troezinians, and
Hermionians and that with the exception of Hermionians
all others were of
Dorian and Macedonian blood. The above people were living in cities located
in Peloponnesus,
which makes the Macedonians as Greek as the Dorians.
The answer as to why
Alexander sent the 300 full suits of Persian armor to goddess Athena, goes
back to the
battle of Thermopylae and all events that followed. But in order
for one to understand it better, one has to
know the story of the battle of
Thermopylae.
The Persian Army and
Navy, headed by Xerxes, won the battle against the 1300 Greeks (1000 from
Phocis)
lead by the 300 Spartans whose commander was Leonidas. It is
important for one to note that the Persians
were victorious only when a local
Greek, Ephialtes, betrayed a secret passage to the enemy who came from
behind
and thus surrounded the few Greeks. It is also important to know that
according to Lycourgos' laws,
Spartans were not allowed to leave the
battlefield for any reason, nor they were allowed to follow anyone
in the
battle. That’s why the Spartans did not follow Alexander against the
Persians.
Herodotus (Histories b. VIII, 114) tells us:
… the Spartans upon the
urging of the Oracle of Delphi sent a messenger to Xerxes demanding
reparations for the death of Leonidas. The man who obtained an interview with
Xerxes said to him:
‘My lord, King of the Medes, the Lacedaemonians and the
house of Heracles in Sparta demand
satisfaction for blood, because you killed
their king while he was fighting in defense of Greece.’
Xerxes laughed, and
for a time did not answer…
The royal house of Sparta (Herodotus VII, 204), and the
royal house of Macedonia (cf. Fact #13) both
claimed descent from Heracles
(Hercules).
Taking into consideration
all of the above, we come to the conclusion that Alexander the Great, being
victorious
at the battle of Granicus, sent 300 full armor uniforms to goddess
Athena who was also the goddess of war,
and in this way he AVENGED the 300
Spartans who died defending Greece.
Conclusion:
An abundance of
information regarding the ancient Greek past comes to us from the Greek
Mythology. Unfortunately, Mythology cannot be a dependable source since it
cannot furnish trustworthy information which
would help us reconstruct the
Hellenic past. However, it does not mean it is completely useless either.
It
elucidates through symbolism truths leading us to the right path while
searching for historical facts through
written or unwritten monuments. Such
monuments are the only ones accepted by historians in their attempt
to unlock
hidden elements that hold the key to the reconstruction of the past of all
Hellenic group of nations.
Countries are products of
historical events, which is why they are born and die. Nations do not.
Nations are
entities that take a very arduous time to evolve. The same thing
is true for their appellation. Nations cannot be
given birth and receive names
whenever politicians wish by legislation, as it is the case of the FYROM.
The present-day Hellenic
nation is the result of social, civic and linguistic amalgamation
of more than 230
tribes speaking more than 200 dialects that claimed
descent from Hellen, son of Deukalion. The Hellenic nation
is blessed
to espouse in its lengthy life great personalities such as politicians,
educators, soldiers, philosophers
and authors. They have all contributed in
their own way to the molding of their nation. They are the result of
natural
maturity and a consequence of historical, social, civic, linguistic and
political developments that have
taken place in the last 4,000 years.
“When we take into
account the political conditions, religion and morals of the Macedonians, our
conviction is
strengthened that they were a Greek race and akin to the Dorians. Having stayed behind in the extreme north,
they were unable to
participate in the progressive civilization of the tribes which went further
south...” (Wilcken,
Alexander the Great, p 22).
Most historians
have assessed the Macedonian state of affairs in a similar fashion. The
Macedonians were a Hellenic group of tribes belonging to the Western Greek
ethnic group.
The Macedonians incorporated the territory of the
native people into Macedonia and forced the Pieres, a
Thracian tribe, out of
the area to Mt. Pangaeum and the Bottiaiei from Bottiaia. They further
expelled the
Eordi from Eordaia and the Almopes from Almopia and they
similarly expelled all tribes (Thracian, Paeonian,
Illyrian) they found in
areas of Anthemus, Crestonia, Bysaltia and other lands. The Macedonians
absorbed the few inhabitants of the above tribes that stayed behind. They
established their suzerainty over the land of Macedonia
without losing their
ethnicity, language, or religion (Thucydides, II, 99). They also incorporated
the lands of the
Elimeiotae, Orestae, Lyncestae, Pelagones, and Deriopes all
tribes living in Upper Macedonia who were
Greek speakers, but of a different (Molossian)
dialect from that spoken by the Macedonians (Hammond, The Macedonian State,
p. 390). Then, living with savage northern neighbors such as Illyrians,
Thracians, Paeonians and later Dardanians, the Macedonians physically
deflected their neighbors’ hordes forming an impenetrable fence denying them
the opportunity to attack the Greek city-states of the south, which is why
they are considered the bastion of Hellenism.
N. G. L. Hammond states:
What language did these `Macedones'
speak? The name itself is Greek in root and in ethnic termination.
It probably
means `highlanders', and it is comparable to Greek tribal names such as `Orestai'
and
`Oreitai', meaning 'mountain-men'. A reputedly earlier variant, `Maketai',
has the same root, which
means `high', as in the Greek adjective makednos
or the noun mekos. The genealogy of eponymous
ancestors which Hesiod
recorded […] has a bearing on the question of Greek speech. First,
Hesiod
made Macedon a brother of Magnes; as we know from inscriptions that
the Magnetes spoke the
Aeolic dialect of the Greek language, we have a
predisposition to suppose that the Macedones
spoke the Aeolic dialect.
Secondly, Hesiod made Macedon and Magnes first cousins of Hellen's
three sons
- Dorus, Xouthus, and Aeolus-who were the founders of three dialects of Greek
speech,
namely Doric, Ionic, and Aeolic. Hesiod would not have recorded this
relationship, unless he had
believed, probably in the seventh century, that
the Macedones were a Greek speaking people.
The next evidence comes from
Persia. At the turn of the sixth century the Persians described the
tribute-paying peoples of their province in Europe, and one of them was the `yauna
takabara',
which meant `Greeks wearing the hat'. There were Greeks in Greek city-states here and there in the
province, but they
were of various origins and not distinguished by a common hat. However, the
Macedonians wore a distinctive hat, the kausia. We conclude that the Persians
believed the
Macedonians to be speakers of Greek. Finally, in the latter part
of the fifth century a Greek historian,
Hellanicus, visited Macedonia and
modified Hesiod's genealogy by making Macedon not a cousin,
but a son of Aeolus, thus bringing Macedon and his descendants firmly into the Aeolic
branch of the
Greek-speaking family. Hesiod, Persia, and Hellanicus had
no motive for making a false statement
about the language of the Macedonians,
who were then an obscure and not a powerful people.
Their independent
testimonies should be accepted as conclusive (N.G.L. Hammond, The
Macedonian State, p.12-13).
The evidence above shows
that the ancient Macedonians were one of the Hellenic groups of tribes
speaking a
Greek dialect and having the same institutions as the Spartans and
especially the Greeks of the Western group
of nations. Thus, the fallacies
emanated from the FYROM and its diaspora are strongly repudiated.
Marcus A. Templar