Home

About

Macedonians

The Slavs

FYROM Lies

Links

Thanks

The Real Macedonian History

 

All modern (and ancient) historians describe the Ancient Macedonians as part of the great Greek Peoples who inhabited the Balcan Penninsula as early as the 8th centure B.C. They also place Alexander the Great, the greatest conqueror and civilizer of all times as part of the Greek History and Heritage. Even the greatest of all Roman Emperors, Gaius Augustus Octavianus, founder of the biggest Roman Empire ever, and honored for having established Pax Romana (Roman Peace), felt depressed at times, saying that his deeds could not yet be compared with those of Alexander's. 

For the unbiased reader, who wants to know more about Greek History, we display these historical information, mostly taken from modern American Encyclopedias.

 

  • Ancient Macedonia and its People

Macedonia, historic region of the Balkan Peninsula. The region occupied parts of what are now the Greek province of Macedonia, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Bulgaria.

 

After 3000 BC, a Greek-speaking tribe settled in the region. King Philip II, who ruled from 359 to 336 BC, conquered the Greeks and created a Macedonian empire. Philip's son, Alexander the Great, took command following Philip's assassination and created a vast empire that stretched into Egypt and across Persia to northwestern India. Alexander died in 323 BC, and the vacuum created by his death led to the dissolution of the empire. In 148 BC Macedonia became a Roman province, and in AD 395 it became part of the Byzantine Empire. Slavic peoples settled in Macedonia in the 6th century, and the region was later occupied by Goths, Huns, Slavs, Bulgars, and Turks. The Ottoman Empire ruled the region from 1371 to 1912, until the Balkan Wars (1912-1913) divided the region among Greece, Bulgaria, and Serbia.

 

  • Alexander the Great 

Alexander the Great (356-323 BC), king of Macedonia, conqueror of the Persian Empire. Born in Pella, the ancient capital of Macedonia, Alexander was the son of Philip II, king of Macedonia. Greek philosopher Aristotle was Alexander's tutor, instructing him in rhetoric and literature and stimulating his interest in science, medicine, and philosophy.

 

In 336 BC Philip was assassinated, and Alexander ascended to the throne. He quickly solidified his rule at home and then attacked Thessaly to restore Macedonian rule there. In 335 BC he defeated the Thracians, penetrating to the Danube River. On his return he crushed the Illyrians before hastening to Thebes, which had revolted. He razed the city, sparing only temples and the house of Pindar, a Greek lyric poet of the 5th century BC. Other Greek states promptly submitted to Alexander's rule.

 

Alexander began his war against Persia in the spring of 334 BC, defeating a Persian army near the ancient city of Troy. Subsequently, all the states of Asia Minor submitted to him. Advancing southward, Alexander defeated the main Persian army, commanded by King Darius III, at Issus, in northeastern Syria in 333 BC. He then took Tyre in 332 BC. Alexander next captured Gaza and traveled into Egypt. He secured control of the entire eastern Mediterranean coastline and founded, at the mouth of the Nile River, the city of Alexandria, which later became the literary, scientific, and commercial center of the Greek world.

 

Alexander next reorganized his forces and started for Babylon. In 331 BC he again defeated Darius, and Babylon surrendered. Alexander then forced his way to Persepolis, the Persian capital, and plundered it. By 327 BC his domain extended along and beyond the southern shores of the Caspian Sea, into much of central Asia.

 

In 326 BC Alexander invaded the Punjab. At this point the Macedonians rebelled and refused to go farther. Alexander spent about a year organizing his dominions and completing a survey of the Persian Gulf in preparation for further conquests. He arrived in Babylon in the spring of 323 BC, but then he contracted a fever and died.

 

Alexander was noted as a brilliant military tactician and troop leader. He founded a number of cities, most of them named Alexandria. These cities were well located and settled by Greek veterans from his army. Thus, Greek culture was spread and the Greek language became widely known.

 

  • Seleucids

Seleucids, dynasty of Macedonian kings that reigned in the Middle East from the 4th to the 1st century BC, established when the empire of Alexander the Great was partitioned among his followers. The Seleucid kingdom had capitals in Antioch, in Syria; and Seleucia, in Mesopotamia. The Seleucids were Greek in language and culture and were frequently involved in wars with the ruling Ptolemies of Egypt. After 250 BC the Seleucids lost land, and were eventually expelled from Asia Minor.

 Source: Microsoft's Encyclopedia (Bookshelf 98)

Conclusion: The brief extracts above take us to the bottom line that:

 

  • The Ancient Macedonian people were Greeks and inhabited the Northern Greek region as early as 3000 B.C.

  • The Ancient Macedonian royal dynasty and Alexander the Great himself, were all Greeks and spoke the Greek language.

  • The descendants of Alexander the Great, the Seleucids, were also Greek and tried to spread the Greek Culture after Alexander's death. 

  • There no relation of these great Greek people and their times with the modern Slavs of FYROM (Former Yugoslavian Republic of Macedonia) who came into the Balcan region about 10 centuries later (7th century A.D.) and speak a Slav language which they call "Macedonian".