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Ancient Macedonians

The Macedonians (Greek: Μακεδόνες, Makedónes) were an ancient tribe that lived on the alluvial plain around the rivers Haliacmon and lower Axios in the northeastern part of mainland Greece. Essentially an ancient Greek people,[1] they gradually expanded from their homeland along the Haliacmon valley on the northern edge of the Greek world, absorbing or driving out neighbouring non-Greek tribes, primarily Thracian and Illyrian.[2][3] They spoke Ancient Macedonian, which was perhaps a sibling language to Ancient Greek,[note 1] but more commonly thought to have been a dialect of Northwest Doric Greek;[note 2] though, some have also suggested an Aeolic Greek classification.[note 3] However, the prestige language of the region during the Classical era was Attic Greek, replaced by Koine Greek during the Hellenistic era.[5] Their religious beliefs mirrored those of other Greeks, following the main deities of the Greek pantheon, although the Macedonians continued Archaic burial practices that had ceased in other parts of Greece after the 6th century BC. Aside from the monarchy, the core of Macedonian society was its nobility. Similar to the aristocracy of neighboring Thessaly, their wealth was largely built on herding horses and cattle.

Ancient Macedonians
Μακεδόνες
Stag Hunt Mosaic, 4th century BC
Languages
Ancient Macedonian,
then Attic Greek, and later Koine Greek
Religion
ancient Greek religion

Although composed of various clans, the kingdom of Macedonia, established around the 8th century BC, is mostly associated with the Argead dynasty and the tribe named after it. The dynasty was allegedly founded by Perdiccas I, descendant of the legendary Temenus of Argos, while the region of Macedon perhaps derived its name from Makedon, a figure of Greek mythology. Traditionally ruled by independent families, the Macedonians seem to have accepted Argead rule by the time of Alexander I (r. 498 – 454 BC). Under Philip II (r. 359 – 336 BC), the Macedonians are credited with numerous military innovations, which enlarged their territory and increased their control over other areas extending into Thrace. This consolidation of territory allowed for the exploits of Alexander the Great (r. 336 – 323 BC), the conquest of the Achaemenid Empire, the establishment of the diadochi successor states, and the inauguration of the Hellenistic period in West Asia, Greece, and the broader Mediterranean world. The Macedonians were eventually conquered by the Roman Republic, which dismantled the Macedonian monarchy at the end of the Third Macedonian War (171–168 BC) and established the Roman province of Macedonia after the Fourth Macedonian War (150–148 BC).

Authors, historians, and statesmen of the ancient world often expressed ambiguous if not conflicting ideas about the ethnic identity of the Macedonians as either Greeks, semi-Greeks, or even barbarians. This has led to debate among modern academics about the precise ethnic identity of the Macedonians, who nevertheless embraced many aspects of contemporaneous Greek culture such as participation in Greek religious cults and athletic games, including the Ancient Olympic Games. Given the scant linguistic evidence, such as the Pella curse tablet, ancient Macedonian is regarded by most scholars as another Greek dialect, possibly related to Doric Greek or Northwestern Greek.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24]

The ancient Macedonians participated in the production and fostering of Classical and later Hellenistic art. In terms of visual arts, they produced frescoes, mosaics, sculptures, and decorative metalwork. The performing arts of music and Greek theatrical dramas were highly appreciated, while famous playwrights such as Euripides came to live in Macedonia. The kingdom also attracted the presence of renowned philosophers, such as Aristotle, while native Macedonians contributed to the field of ancient Greek literature, especially Greek historiography. Their sport and leisure activities included hunting, foot races, and chariot races, as well as feasting and drinking at aristocratic banquets known as symposia.

Etymology

The ethnonym Μακεδόνες (Makedónes) stems from the Ancient Greek adjective μακεδνός (makednós), meaning "tall, slim", also the name of a people related to the Dorians (Herodotus).[25] It is most likely cognate with the adjective μακρός (makrós), meaning "long" or "tall" in Ancient Greek.[25] The name is believed to have originally meant either "highlanders", "the tall ones", or "high grown men".[note 4]

Origins, consolidation, and expansion

Historical overview

 
The expansion of ancient Macedon up to the death of Philip II of Macedon (r. 359–336 BC– )

The expansion of the Macedonian kingdom has been described as a three-stage process. As a frontier kingdom on the border of the Greek world with barbarian Europe, the Macedonians first subjugated their immediate northern neighbours—various Illyrian and Thracian tribes—before turning against the states of southern and central Greece. Macedonia then led a pan-Hellenic military force against their primary objective—the conquest of Persia—which they achieved with remarkable ease.[26][27][28][29] Following the death of Alexander the Great and the Partition of Babylon in 323 BC, the diadochi successor states such as the Attalid, Ptolemaic and Seleucid Empires were established, ushering in the Hellenistic period of Greece, West Asia and the Hellenized Mediterranean Basin.[30] With Alexander's conquest of the Achaemenid Empire, Macedonians colonized territories as far east as Central Asia.[31]

The Macedonians continued to rule much of Hellenistic Greece (323–146 BC), forming alliances with Greek leagues such as the Cretan League and Epirote League (and prior to this, the Kingdom of Epirus).[32] However, they often fell into conflict with the Achaean League, Aetolian League, the city-state of Sparta, and the Ptolemaic dynasty of Hellenistic Egypt that intervened in wars of the Aegean region and mainland Greece.[33] After Macedonia formed an alliance with Hannibal of Ancient Carthage in 215 BC, the rival Roman Republic responded by fighting a series of wars against Macedonia in conjunction with its Greek allies such as Pergamon and Rhodes.[34] In the aftermath of the Third Macedonian War (171–168 BC), the Romans abolished the Macedonian monarchy under Perseus of Macedon (r. 179–168 BC– ) and replaced the kingdom with four client state republics.[35] A brief revival of the monarchy by the pretender Andriscus led to the Fourth Macedonian War (150–148 BC), after which Rome established the Roman province of Macedonia and subjugated the Macedonians.[36]

Prehistoric homeland

 
The positions of the Balkan tribes prior to the Macedonian expansion, according to Nicholas Hammond

In Greek mythology, Makedon is the eponymous hero of Macedonia and is mentioned in Hesiod's Catalogue of Women.[37] The first historical attestation of the Macedonians occurs in the works of Herodotus during the mid-5th century BC.[38] The Macedonians are absent in Homer's Catalogue of Ships and the term "Macedonia" itself appears late. The Iliad states that upon leaving Mount Olympus, Hera journeyed via Pieria and Emathia before reaching Athos.[39] This is re-iterated by Strabo in his Geography.[40] Nevertheless, archaeological evidence indicates that Mycenaean contact with or penetration into the Macedonian interior possibly started from the early 14th century BC.[41][42]

In his A History of Macedonia, Nicholas Hammond reconstructed the earliest phases of Macedonian history based on his interpretation of later literary accounts and archaeological excavations in the region of Macedonia.[43] According to Hammond, the Macedonians are missing from early Macedonian historical accounts because they had been living in the Orestian highlands since before the Greek Dark Ages, possibly having originated from the same (proto-Greek) population pool that produced other Greek peoples.[44][45] The Macedonian tribes subsequently moved down from Orestis in the upper Haliacmon to the Pierian highlands in the lower Haliacmon because of pressure from the Molossians, a related tribe who had migrated to Orestis from Pelagonia.[46] In their new Pierian home north of Olympus, the Macedonian tribes mingled with the proto-Dorians. This might account for traditions which placed the eponymous founder, Makedon, near Pieria and Olympus.[47] Some traditions placed the Dorian homeland in the Pindus mountain range in western Thessaly, whilst Herodotus pushed this further north to the Macedonian Pindus and claimed that the Greeks were referred to as Makednon (Mακεδνόν) and then as Dorians.[48][49] A different, southern homeland theory also exists in traditional historiography. Arnold J. Toynbee asserted that the Makedones migrated north to Macedonia from central Greece, placing the Dorian homeland in Phthiotis and citing the traditions of fraternity between Makedon and Magnes.[50]

Temenids and Argeads

The Macedonian expansion is said to have been led by the ruling Temenid dynasty, known as "Argeads" or "Argives". Herodotus said that Perdiccas, the dynasty's founder, was descended from the Heraclid Temenus.[51] He left Argos with his two older brothers Aeropus and Gayanes, and travelled via Illyria to Lebaea, a city in Upper Macedonia which certain scholars have tried to connect with the villages Alebea or Velvedos.[52] Here, the brothers served as shepherds for a local ruler. After a vision, the brothers fled to another region in Macedonia near the Midas Gardens by the foot of the Vermio Mountains, and then set about subjugating the rest of Macedonia.[53] Thucydides's account is similar to that of Herodotus, making it probable that the story was disseminated by the Macedonian court,[54] i.e. it accounts for the belief the Macedonians had about the origin of their kingdom, if not an actual memory of this beginning.[55] Later historians modified the dynastic traditions by introducing variously Caranus[56][57][58] or Archelaus, the son of Temenus, as the founding Temenid kings—although there is no doubt that Euripides transformed Caranus to Archelaus meaning "leader of the people" in his play Archelaus, in an attempt to please Archelaus I of Macedon.[59]

 
The route of the Argeads from Argos, Peloponnese to Macedonia

The earliest sources, Herodotus and Thucydides, called the royal family "Temenidae". In later sources (Strabo, Appian, Pausanias) the term "Argeadae" was introduced. However, Appian said that the term Argeadae referred to a leading Macedonian tribe rather than the name of the ruling dynasty.[60][61] The connection of the Argead name to the royal family is uncertain. The words "Argead" and "Argive" derive via Latin Argīvus[62] from Ancient Greek: Ἀργεῖος (Argeios), meaning "of or from Argos",[63][64] and is first attested in Homer, where it was also used as a collective designation for the Greeks ("Ἀργείων Δαναῶν", Argive Danaans).[65] The most common connection to the royal family, as written by Herodotus, is with Peloponnesian Argos.[66] Appian connects it with Orestian Argos.[60] According to another tradition mentioned by Justin, the name was adopted after Caranus moved Macedonia's capital from Edessa to Aegae, thus appropriating the name of the city for its citizens.[67] A figure, Argeas, is mentioned in the Iliad (16.417).[61]

Taking Herodotus's lineage account as the most trustworthy, Appian said that after Perdiccas, six successive heirs ruled: Argeus, Philip, Aeropus, Alcetas, Amyntas and Alexander.[68] Amyntas I (r. 547–498 BC– ) ruled at the time of the Persian invasion of Paeonia and when Macedon became a vassal state of Achaemenid Persia.[69][70] However, Alexander I (r. 498–454 BC– ) is the first truly historic figure. Based on this line of succession and an estimated average rule of 25 to 30 years, the beginnings of the Macedonian dynasty have thus been traditionally dated to 750 BC.[61][71] Hammond supports the traditional view that the Temenidae did arrive from the Peloponnese and took charge of Macedonian leadership, possibly usurping rule from a native "Argead" dynasty with Illyrian help.[53] However, other scholars doubt the veracity of their Peloponnesian origins. For example, Miltiades Hatzopoulos takes Appian's testimony to mean that the royal lineage imposed itself onto the tribes of the Middle Heliacmon from Argos Orestikon,[52] whilst Eugene N. Borza argues that the Argeads were a family of notables hailing from Vergina.[72]

Expansion from the core

 
Expulsion of the Pieres from the region of Olympus to the Pangaion Hills by the Macedonians

Both Strabo and Thucydides said that Emathia and Pieria were mostly occupied by Thracians (Pieres, Paeonians) and Bottiaeans, as well as some Illyrian and Epirote tribes.[73] Herodotus states that the Bryges were cohabitants with the Macedonians before their mass migration to Anatolia.[74] If a group of ethnically definable Macedonian tribes were living in the Pierian highlands prior to their expansion, the first conquest was of the Pierian piedmont and coastal plain, including Vergina.[75] The tribes may have launched their expansion from a base near Mount Bermion, according to Herodotus.[76] Thucydides describes the Macedonian expansion specifically as a process of conquest led by the Argeads:[77]

But the country along the sea which is now called Macedonia, was first acquired and made a kingdom by Alexander [I], father of Perdiccas [II] and his forefathers, who were originally Temenidae from Argos. They defeated and expelled from Pieria the Pierians ... and also expelled the Bottiaeans from Bottiaea ... they acquired as well a narrow strip of Paeonia extending along the Axios river from the interior to Pella and the sea. Beyond the Axios they possess the territory as far as the Strymon called Mygdonia, having driven out the Edoni. Moreover, they expelled from the district now called Eordaea the Eordi ... The Macedonians also made themselves rulers of certain places ... namely Anthemus, Grestonia, and a large part of Macedonia proper.[77]

Thucydides's account gives a geographical overview of Macedonian possessions at the time of Alexander I's rule. To reconstruct a chronology of the expansion by Alexander I's predecessors is more difficult, but generally, three stages have been proposed from Thucydides' reading. The initial and most important conquest was of Pieria and Bottiaea, including the locations of Pydna and Dium. The second stage consolidated rule in Pieria and Bottiaea, captured Methone and Pella, and extended rule over Eordaea and Almopia. According to Hammond, the third stage occurred after 550 BC, when the Macedonians gained control over Mygdonia, Edonis, lower Paeonia, Bisaltia and Crestonia.[78] However, the second stage might have occurred as late as 520 BC;[79] and the third stage probably did not occur until after 479 BC, when the Macedonians capitalized on the weakened Paeonian state after the Persian withdrawal from Macedon and the rest of their mainland European territories.[80] Whatever the case, Thucydides' account of the Macedonian state describes its accumulated territorial extent by the rule of Perdiccas II, Alexander I's son. Hammond has said that the early stages of Macedonian expansion were militaristic, subduing or expunging populations from a large and varied area.[81] Pastoralism and highland living could not support a very concentrated settlement density, forcing pastoralist tribes to search for more arable lowlands suitable for agriculture.[82]

Ethnogenesis scenario

 
The entrance to the "Great Tumulus" Museum at Vergina

Present-day scholars have highlighted several inconsistencies in the traditionalist perspective first set in place by Hammond.[83] An alternative model of state and ethnos formation, promulgated by an alliance of regional elites, which redates the creation of the Macedonian kingdom to the 6th century BC, was proposed in 2010.[84] According to these scholars, direct literary, archaeological, and linguistic evidence to support Hammond's contention that a distinct Macedonian ethnos had existed in the Haliacmon valley since the Aegean civilizations is lacking. Hammond's interpretation has been criticized as a "conjectural reconstruction" from what appears during later, historical times.[85]

Similarly, the historicity of migration, conquest and population expulsion have also been questioned. Thucydides's account of the forced expulsion of the Pierians and Bottiaeans could have been formed on the basis of his perceived similarity of names of the Pierians and Bottiaeans living in the Struma valley with the names of regions in Macedonia; whereas his account of Eordean extermination was formulated because such toponymic correspondences are absent.[80] Likewise, the Argead conquest of Macedonia may be viewed as a commonly used literary topos in classical Macedonian rhetoric. Tales of migration served to create complex genealogical connections between trans-regional ruling elites, while at the same time were used by the ruling dynasty to legitimize their rule, heroicize mythical ancestors and distance themselves from their subjects.[55][86]

Conflict was a historical reality in the early Macedonian kingdom and pastoralist traditions allowed the potential for population mobility. Greek archaeologists have found that some of the passes linking the Macedonian highlands with the valley regions have been used for thousands of years. However, the archaeological evidence does not point to any significant disruptions between the Iron Age and Hellenistic period in Macedonia. The general continuity of material culture,[87] settlement sites,[88] and pre-Greek onomasticon contradict the alleged ethnic cleansing account of early Macedonian expansion.[89]

 
An atrium with a pebble-mosaic paving in Pella, the Macedonian capital

The process of state formation in Macedonia was similar to that of its neighbours in Epirus, Illyria, Thrace and Thessaly, whereby regional elites could mobilize disparate communities for the purpose of organizing land and resources. Local notables were often based in urban-like settlements, although contemporaneous historians often did not recognize them as poleis because they were not self-ruled but under the rule of a "king".[90] From the mid-6th century, there appears a series of exceptionally rich burials throughout the region—in Trebeništa, Vergina, Sindos, Agia Paraskevi, Pella-Archontiko, Aiani, Gevgelija, Amphipolis—sharing a similar burial rite and grave accompaniments, interpreted to represent the rise of a new regional ruling class sharing a common ideology, customs and religious beliefs.[84] A common geography, mode of existence, and defensive interests might have necessitated the creation of a political confederacy among otherwise ethno-linguistically diverse communities, which led to the consolidation of a new Macedonian ethnic identity.[84][91]

The traditional view that Macedonia was populated by rural ethnic groups in constant conflict is slowly changing, bridging the cultural gap between southern Epirus and the north Aegean region. Hatzopoulos's studies on Macedonian institutions have lent support to the hypothesis that Macedonian state formation occurred via an integration of regional elites, which were based in city-like centres, including the Argeadae at Vergina, the Paeonian/Edonian peoples in Sindos, Ichnae and Pella, and the mixed Macedonian-Barbarian colonies in the Thermaic Gulf and western Chalkidiki.[92] The Temenidae became overall leaders of a new Macedonian state because of the diplomatic proficiency of Alexander I and the logistic centrality of Vergina itself. It has been suggested that a breakdown in traditional Balkan tribal traditions associated with adaptation of Aegean socio-political institutions created a climate of institutional flexibility in a vast, resource-rich land.[93] Non-Argead centres increasingly became dependent allies, allowing the Argeads to gradually assert and secure their control over the lower and eastern territories of Macedonia.[92] This control was fully consolidated by Phillip II (r. 359 – 336 BC).[94]

Culture and society

 
The Golden Larnax, at the Museum of Vergina, which contains the remains Philip II of Macedon (r. 359–336 BC– )

Macedonia had a distinct material culture by the Early Iron Age.[95] Typically Balkan burial, ornamental, and ceramic forms were used for most of the Iron Age.[95] These features suggest broad cultural affinities and organizational structures analogous with Thracian, Epirote, and Illyrian regions.[96][97] This did not necessarily symbolize a shared cultural identity, or any political allegiance between these regions.[98] In the late sixth century BC, Macedonia became open to south Greek influences, although a small but detectable amount of interaction with the south had been present since late Mycenaean times.[99] By the 5th century BC, Macedonia was a part of the "Greek cultural milieu" according to Edward M. Anson, possessing many cultural traits typical of the southern Greek city-states.[100] Classical Greek objects and customs were appropriated selectively and used in peculiarly Macedonian ways.[101] In addition, influences from Achaemenid Persia in culture and economy are evident from the 5th century BC onward, such as the inclusion of Persian grave goods at Macedonian burial sites as well as the adoption of royal customs such as a Persian-style throne during the reign of Philip II.[102]

Economy, society, and social class

 
Macedonian coins and medallions depicting Alexander the Great and Philip II

The way of life of the inhabitants of Upper Macedonia differed little from that of their neighbours in Epirus and Illyria, engaging in seasonal transhumance supplemented by agriculture. Young Macedonian men were typically expected to engage in hunting and martial combat as a byproduct of their transhumance lifestyles of herding livestock such as goats and sheep, while horse breeding and raising cattle were other common pursuits.[103] In these mountainous regions, upland sites were important focal points for local communities. In these difficult terrains, competition for resources often precipitated intertribal conflict and raiding forays into the comparatively richer lowland settlements of coastal Macedonia and Thessaly.[104] Despite the remoteness of the upper Macedonian highlands, excavations at Aiani since 1983 have discovered finds attesting to the presence of social organization since the 2nd millennium BC. The finds include the oldest pieces of black-and-white pottery, which is characteristic of the tribes of northwest Greece, discovered so far.[105] Found with Μycenaean sherds, they can be dated with certainty to the 14th century BC.[105][106][107] The finds also include some of the oldest samples of writing in Macedonia, among them inscriptions bearing Greek names like Θέμιδα (Themida). The inscriptions demonstrate that Hellenism in Upper Macedonia was at a high economic, artistic, and cultural level by the sixth century BC—overturning the notion that Upper Macedonia was culturally and socially isolated from the rest of ancient Greece.[105]

By contrast, the alluvial plains of Lower Macedonia and Pelagonia, which had a comparative abundance of natural resources such as timber and minerals, favored the development of a native aristocracy, with a wealth that at times surpassed the classical Greek poleis.[108] Exploitation of minerals helped expedite the introduction of coinage in Macedonia from the 5th century BC, developing under southern Greek, Thracian and Persian influences.[109] Some Macedonians engaged in farming, often with irrigation, land reclamation, and horticulture activities supported by the Macedonian state.[110] However, the bedrock of the Macedonian economy and state finances was the twofold exploitation of the forests with logging and valuable minerals such as copper, iron, gold, and silver with mining.[111] The conversion of these raw materials into finished products and their sale encouraged the growth of urban centers and a gradual shift away from the traditional rustic Macedonian lifestyle during the course of the 5th century BC.[112]

 
Entrance to the tomb of Philip II of Macedon (r. 359–336 BC– ).

Macedonian society was dominated by aristocratic families whose main source of wealth and prestige was their herds of horses and cattle. In this respect, Macedonia was similar to Thessaly and Thrace.[97] These aristocrats were second only to the king in terms of power and privilege, filling the ranks of his administration and serving as commanding officers in the military.[113] It was in the more bureaucratic regimes of the Hellenistic kingdoms succeeding Alexander the Great's empire where greater social mobility for members of society seeking to join the aristocracy could be found, especially in Ptolemaic Egypt.[114] In contrast with classical Greek poleis, the Macedonians held only few slaves.[115][116]

 
Aristotle, a philosopher from the Macedonian town of Stageira, tutoring young Alexander in the Royal Palace of Pella. The Macedonian Kings often sought the best education possible for their heirs. Artwork by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris.

However, unlike Thessaly, Macedonia was ruled by a monarchy from its earliest history until the Roman conquest in 167 BC. The nature of the kingship, however, remains debated. One viewpoint sees it as an autocracy, whereby the king held absolute power and was at the head of both government and society, wielding arguably unlimited authority to handle affairs of state and public policy. He was also the leader of a very personal regime with close relationships or connections to his hetairoi, the core of the Macedonian aristocracy.[117] Any other position of authority, including the army, was appointed at the whim of the king himself. The other, "constitutionalist", position argues that there was an evolution from a society of many minor "kings" – each of equal authority – to a sovereign military state whereby an army of citizen soldiers supported a central king against a rival class of nobility.[118] Kingship was hereditary along the paternal line, yet it is unclear if primogeniture was strictly observed as an established custom.[119]

During the Late Bronze Age (circa 15th-century BC), the ancient Macedonians developed distinct, matt-painted wares that evolved from Middle Helladic pottery traditions originating in central and southern Greece.[107][120] The Macedonians continued to use an individualized form of material culture—albeit showing analogies in ceramic, ornamental and burial forms with the so-called Lausitz culture between 1200 and 900 BC—and that of the Glasinac culture after circa 900 BC.[121] While some of these influences persisted beyond the sixth century BC,[87][122] a more ubiquitous presence of items of an Aegean-Mediterranean character is seen from the latter sixth century BC,[123] as Greece recovered from its Dark Ages. Southern Greek impulses penetrated Macedonia via trade with north Aegean colonies such as Methone and those in the Chalcidice, neighbouring Thessaly, and from the Ionic colonies of Asia Minor. Ionic influences were later supplanted by those of Athenian provenance. Thus, by the latter sixth century, local elites could acquire exotic Aegean items such as Athenian red figure pottery, fine tablewares, olive oil and wine amphorae, fine ceramic perfume flasks, glass, marble and precious metal ornaments—all of which would serve as status symbols.[124] By the 5th century BC, these items became widespread in Macedonia and in much of the central Balkans.[125]

Macedonian settlements have a strong continuity dating from the Bronze Age, maintaining traditional construction techniques for residential architecture. While settlement numbers appeared to drop in central and southern Greece after 1000 BC, there was a dramatic increase of settlements in Macedonia.[126] These settlements seemed to have developed along raised promontories near river flood plains called tells (Greek: τύμβοι). Their ruins are most commonly found in western Macedonia between Florina and Lake Vergoritis, the upper and middle Haliacmon River, and Bottiaea. They can also be found on either side of the Axios and in the Chalcidice in eastern Macedonia.[127]

Religion and funerary practices

 
Ancient Dion was a centre of the worship of Zeus and the most important spiritual sanctuary of the ancient Macedonians.
 
The Lion of Amphipolis in Amphipolis, northern Greece, a 4th-century BC marble tomb sculpture[128] erected in honor of Laomedon of Mytilene, a general who served under Alexander the Great

By the 5th century BC the Macedonians and the rest of the Greeks worshiped more or less the same deities of the Greek pantheon.[129] In Macedonia, politics and religion often intertwined. For instance, the head of state for the city of Amphipolis also served as the priest of Asklepios, Greek god of medicine; a similar arrangement existed at Cassandreia, where a cult priest honoring the city's founder Cassander was the nominal municipal leader.[130] Foreign cults from Egypt were fostered by the royal court, such as the temple of Sarapis at Thessaloniki, while Macedonian kings Philip III of Macedon and Alexander IV of Macedon made votive offerings to the internationally esteemed Samothrace temple complex of the Cabeiri mystery cult.[131] This was also the same location where Perseus of Macedon fled and received sanctuary following his defeat by the Romans at the Battle of Pydna in 168 BC.[132] The main sanctuary of Zeus was maintained at Dion, while another at Veria was dedicated to Herakles and received particularly strong patronage from Demetrius II Aetolicus (r. 239 – 229 BC) when he intervened in the affairs of the municipal government at the behest of the cult's main priest.[131]

The ancient Macedonians worshipped the Twelve Olympians, especially Zeus, Artemis, Heracles, and Dionysus. Evidence of this worship exists from the beginning of the 4th century BC onwards, but little evidence of Macedonian religious practices from earlier times exists.[133] From an early period, Zeus was the single most important deity in the Macedonian pantheon.[133] Makedon, the mythical ancestor of the Macedonians, was held to be a son of Zeus, and Zeus features prominently in Macedonian coinage.[133] The most important centre of worship of Zeus was at Dion in Pieria, the spiritual centre of the Macedonians, where beginning in 400 BC King Archelaus established an annual festival, which in honour of Zeus featured lavish sacrifices and athletic contests.[133] Worship of Zeus's son Heracles was also prominent; coins featuring Heracles appear from the 5th century BC onwards.[133] This was in large part because the Argead kings of Macedon traced their lineage to Heracles, making sacrifices to him in the Macedonian capitals of Vergina and Pella.[133] Numerous votive reliefs and dedications also attest to the importance of the worship of Artemis.[134] Artemis was often depicted as a huntress and served as a tutelary goddess for young girls entering the coming-of-age process, much as Heracles Kynagidas (Hunter) did for young men who had completed it.[134] By contrast, some deities popular elsewhere in the Greek world—notably Poseidon and Hephaestus—were largely ignored by the Macedonians.[133]

Other deities worshipped by the ancient Macedonians were part of a local pantheon which included Thaulos (god of war equated with Ares), Gyga (later equated with Athena), Gozoria (goddess of hunting equated with Artemis), Zeirene (goddess of love equated with Aphrodite) and Xandos (god of light).[135] A notable influence on Macedonian religious life and worship was neighbouring Thessaly; the two regions shared many similar cultural institutions.[136] The Macedonians also worshiped non-Greek gods, such as the "Thracian horseman", Orpheus and Bendis, and other figures from Paleo-Balkan mythology.[citation needed] They were tolerant of, and open to, incorporating foreign religious influences such as the sun worship of the Paeonians.[3] By the 4th century BC, there had been a significant fusion of Macedonian and common Greek religious identity,[137] but Macedonia was nevertheless characterized by an unusually diverse religious life.[3] This diversity extended to the belief in magic, as evidenced by curse tablets. It was a significant but secret aspect of Greek cultural practice.[138]

 
Hades abducting Persephone, fresco in the small Macedonian royal tomb at Vergina, Macedonia, Greece, c. 340 BC

A notable feature of Macedonian culture was the ostentatious burials reserved for its rulers.[139] The Macedonian elite built lavish tombs at the time of death rather than constructing temples during life.[139] Such traditions had been practiced throughout Greece and the central-west Balkans since the Bronze Age. Macedonian burials contain items similar to those at Mycenae, such as burial with weapons, gold death masks etc.[101] From the sixth century, Macedonian burials became particularly lavish, displaying a rich variety of Greek imports reflecting the incorporation of Macedonia into a wider economic and political network centred on the Aegean city-states. Burials contained jewellery and ornaments of unprecedented wealth and artistic style. This zenith of Macedonian "warrior burial" style closely parallels those of sites in south-central Illyria and western Thrace, creating a koinon of elite burials.[140] Lavish warrior burials had been discontinued in southern and central Greece from the seventh century onwards, where offerings at sanctuaries and the erection of temples became the norm.[141] From the sixth century BC, cremation replaced the traditional inhumation rite for elite Macedonians.[84] One of the most lavish tombs dating from the 4th century BC, believed to be that of Phillip II, is at Vergina. It contains extravagant grave goods, highly sophisticated artwork depicting hunting scenes and Greek cultic figures, and a vast array of weaponry.[142] This demonstrates a continuing tradition of the warrior society rather than a focus on religious piety and technology of the intellect, which had become paramount facets of central Greek society in the Classical Period.[141] In the three royal tombs at Vergina, professional painters decorated the walls with a mythological scene of Hades abducting Persephone (Tomb 1) and royal hunting scenes (Tomb 2), while lavish grave goods including weapons, armor, drinking vessels and personal items were housed with the dead, whose bones were burned before burial in decorated gold coffins.[143] Some grave goods and decorations were common in other Macedonian tombs, yet some items found at Vergina were distinctly tied to royalty, including a diadem, luxurious goods, and arms and armor.[144] Scholars have debated about the identity of the tomb occupants since the discovery of their remains in 1977–1978,[145] yet recent research and forensic examination have concluded with certainty that at least one of the persons buried was Philip II (Tomb 2).[146] Located near Tomb 1 are the above-ground ruins of a heroon, a shrine for cult worship of the dead.[147] In 2014, the ancient Macedonian Kasta Tomb, the largest ancient tomb found in Greece (as of 2017), was discovered outside of Amphipolis, a city that was incorporated into the Macedonian realm after its capture by Philip II in 357 BC.[148][149][150] The identity of the tomb's occupant is unknown, but archaeologists have speculated that it may be Alexander's close friend Hephaestion.[151]

The deification of Macedonian monarchs perhaps began with the death of Philip II, yet it was his son Alexander the Great who unambiguously claimed to be a living god.[152] As pharaoh of the Egyptians, he was already entitled as Son of Ra and considered the living incarnation of Horus by his Egyptian subjects (a belief that the Ptolemaic successors of Alexander would foster for their own dynasty in Egypt).[153] However, following his visit to the oracle of Didyma in 334 BC that suggested his divinity, he traveled to the Oracle of Zeus Ammon (the Greek equivalent of the Egyptian Amun-Ra) at the Siwa Oasis of the Libyan Desert in 332 BC to confirm his divine status.[154] After the priest there convinced him that Philip II was merely his mortal father and Zeus his actual father, Alexander began styling himself as the 'Son of Zeus', which brought him into contention with some of his Greek subjects who adamantly believed that living men could not be immortals.[155] Although the Seleucid and Ptolemaic diadochi successor states cultivated their own ancestral cults and deification of the rulers as part of state ideology, a similar cult did not exist in the Kingdom of Macedonia.[156]

Visual arts

 
 
Left: Fresco of a Macedonian soldier resting a spear and wearing a cap, from the tomb of Agios Athanasios, Thessaloniki, 4th century BC.
Right: Fresco from the Tomb of Judgement in ancient Mieza (modern-day Lefkadia), Imathia, Central Macedonia, Greece, depicting religious imagery of the afterlife, 4th century BC

By the reign of Archelaus I of Macedon, the Macedonian elite started importing significantly greater customs, artwork, and art traditions from other regions of Greece. However, they still retained more archaic, perhaps Homeric funerary rites connected with the symposium and drinking rites that were typified with items such as decorative metal kraters that held the ashes of deceased Macedonian nobility in their tombs.[157] Among these is the large bronze Derveni Krater from a 4th-century BC tomb of Thessaloniki, decorated with scenes of the Greek god Dionysus and his entourage and belonging to an aristocrat who had a military career.[158] Macedonian metalwork usually followed Athenian styles of vase shapes from the 6th century BC onward, with drinking vessels, jewellery, containers, crowns, diadems, and coins among the many metal objects found in Macedonian tombs.[159]

Surviving Macedonian painted artwork includes frescoes and murals on walls, but also decoration on sculpted artwork such as statues and reliefs. For instance, trace colors still exist on the bas-reliefs of the Alexander Sarcophagus.[160] Macedonian paintings have allowed historians to investigate the clothing fashions as well as military gear worn by ancient Macedonians, such as the brightly-colored tomb paintings of Agios Athanasios, Thessaloniki showing figures wearing headgear ranging from feathered helmets to kausia and petasos caps.[161]

 
Alexander (left), wearing a kausia and fighting an Asiatic lion with his friend Craterus; late 4th century BC mosaic,[162] Archaeological Museum of Pella, Macedonia

Aside from metalwork and painting, mosaics serve as another significant form of surviving Macedonian artwork, especially those discovered at Pella dating to the 4th century BC.[159] The Stag Hunt Mosaic of Pella, with its three dimensional qualities and illusionist style, show clear influence from painted artwork and wider Hellenistic art trends, although the rustic theme of hunting was tailored for Macedonian tastes.[163] The similar Lion Hunt Mosaic of Pella illustrates either a scene of Alexander the Great with his companion Craterus, or simply a conventional illustration of the generic royal diversion of hunting.[163] Mosaics with mythological themes include scenes of Dionysus riding a panther and Helen of Troy being abducted by Theseus, the latter of which employs illusionist qualities and realistic shading similar to Macedonian paintings.[163] Common themes of Macedonian paintings and mosaics include warfare, hunting and aggressive masculine sexuality (i.e. abduction of women for rape or marriage). In some instances these themes are combined within the same work, indicating a metaphorical connection that seems to be affirmed by later Byzantine Greek literature.[164]

Theatre, music and performing arts

Philip II was assassinated by his bodyguard Pausanias of Orestis in 336 BC at the theatre of Aigai, Macedonia amid games and spectacles held inside that celebrated the marriage of his daughter Cleopatra of Macedon.[165] Alexander the Great was allegedly a great admirer of both theatre and music.[166] He was especially fond of the plays by Classical Athenian tragedians Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, whose works formed part of a proper Greek education for his new eastern subjects alongside studies in the Greek language and epics of Homer.[167] While he and his army were stationed at Tyre (in modern-day Lebanon), Alexander had his generals act as judges not only for athletic contests but also stage performances of Greek tragedies.[168] The contemporaneous famous actors Thessalus and Athenodorus performed at the event, despite Athenodorus risking a fine for being absent from the simultaneous Dionysia festival of Athens where he was scheduled to perform (a fine that his patron Alexander agreed to pay).[169]

Music was also appreciated in Macedonia. In addition to the agora, the gymnasium, the theatre, and religious sanctuaries and temples dedicated to Greek gods and goddesses, one of the main markers of a true Greek city in the empire of Alexander the Great was the presence of an odeon for musical performances.[170] This was the case not only for Alexandria in Egypt, but also cities as distant as Ai-Khanoum in what is now modern-day Afghanistan.[170]

Literature, education, philosophy, and patronage

 
Portrait bust of Aristotle; an Imperial Roman (1st or 2nd century AD) copy of a lost bronze sculpture made by Lysippos.

Perdiccas II of Macedon was able to host well-known Classical Greek intellectual visitors at his royal court, such as the lyric poet Melanippides and the renowned medical doctor Hippocrates, while Pindar's enkomion written for Alexander I of Macedon may have been composed at his court.[171] Yet Archelaus I of Macedon received a far greater number of Greek scholars, artists, and celebrities at his court than his predecessors, leading M. B. Hatzopoulos to describe Macedonia under his reign as an "active centre of Hellenic culture."[172] His honored guests included the painter Zeuxis, the architect Callimachus, the poets Choerilus of Samos, Timotheus of Miletus, and Agathon, as well as the famous Athenian playwright Euripides.[173] Although Archelaus was criticized by the philosopher Plato, supposedly hated by Socrates, and the first known Macedonian king to be insulted with the label of a barbarian, the historian Thucydides held the Macedonian king in glowing admiration for his accomplishments, including his engagement in panhellenic sports and fostering of literary culture.[174] The philosopher Aristotle, who studied at the Platonic Academy of Athens and established the Aristotelian school of thought, moved to Macedonia, and is said to have tutored the young Alexander the Great, in addition to serving as an esteemed diplomat for Alexander's father Philip II.[175] Among Alexander's retinue of artists, writers, and philosophers was Pyrrho of Elis, founder of Pyrrhonism, the school of philosophical skepticism.[167] During the Antigonid period, Antigonos Gonatas fostered cordial relationships with Menedemos of Eretria, founder of the Eretrian school of philosophy, and Zenon, the founder of Stoicism.[166]

In terms of early Greek historiography and later Roman historiography, Felix Jacoby identified thirteen possible ancient historians who wrote histories about Macedonia in his Fragmente der griechischen Historiker.[176] Aside from accounts in the works of Herodotus and Thucydides, the works compiled by Jacoby are only fragmentary, whereas other works are completely lost, such as the history of an Illyrian war fought by Perdiccas III of Macedon written by the Macedonian general and statesman Antipater.[177] The Macedonian historians Marsyas of Pella and Marsyas of Philippi wrote histories of Macedonia, while the Ptolemaic king Ptolemy I Soter authored a history about Alexander and Hieronymus of Cardia wrote a history about Alexander's royal successors.[178] Following the Indian campaign of Alexander the Great, the Macedonian military officer Nearchus wrote a work of his voyage from the mouth of the Indus river to the Persian Gulf.[179] The Macedonian historian Craterus published a compilation of decrees made by the popular assembly of the Athenian democracy, ostensibly while attending the school of Aristotle.[179] Philip V of Macedon had manuscripts of the history of Philip II written by Theopompus gathered by his court scholars and disseminated with further copies.[166]

Sports and leisure

 
A fresco showing Hades and Persephone riding in a chariot, from the tomb of Queen Eurydice I of Macedon at Vergina, Greece, 4th century BC

When Alexander I of Macedon petitioned to compete in the foot race of the ancient Olympic Games, the event organizers at first denied his request, explaining that only Greeks were allowed to compete. However, Alexander I produced proof of an Argead royal genealogy showing ancient Argive Temenid lineage, a move that ultimately convinced the Olympic Hellanodikai authorities of his Greek descent and ability to compete, although this did not necessarily apply to common Macedonians outside of his royal dynasty.[180] By the end of the 5th century BC, the Macedonian king Archelaus I was crowned with the olive wreath at both Olympia and Delphi (in the Pythian Games) for winning chariot racing contests.[174] Philip II allegedly heard of the Olympic victory of his horse (in either an individual horse race or chariot race) on the same day his son Alexander the Great was born, on either 19 or 20 July 356 BC.[181] In addition to literary contests, Alexander the Great also staged competitions for music and athletics across his empire.[167] The Macedonians created their own athletic games and, after the late 4th century BC, non-royal Macedonians competed and became victors in the Olympic Games[100] and other athletic events such as the Argive Heraean Games. However, athletics were a less favored pastime compared to hunting.[182]

Dining and cuisine

 
A banquet scene from a Macedonian tomb of Agios Athanasios, Thessaloniki, 4th century BC; six men are shown reclining on couches, with food arranged on nearby tables, a male servant in attendance, and female musicians providing entertainment.[183]

Ancient Macedonia produced very few fine foods or beverages that were highly appreciated elsewhere in the Greek world, namely eels from the Strymonian Gulf and special wine brewed in Chalcidice.[184] The earliest known use of flat bread as a plate for meat was made in Macedonia during the 3rd century BC, which perhaps influenced the later 'trencher' bread of medieval Europe if not Greek pita and Italian pizza.[184] Cattle and goats were consumed, although there was no notice of Macedonian mountain cheeses in literature until the Middle Ages.[184] As exemplified by works such as the plays by the comedic playwright Menander, Macedonian dining habits penetrated Athenian high society; for instance, the introduction of meats into the dessert course of a meal.[185] The Macedonians also most likely introduced mattye to Athenian cuisine, a dish usually made of chicken or other spiced, salted, and sauced meats served during the wine course.[186] This particular dish was derided and connected with licentiousness and drunkenness in a play by the Athenian comic poet Alexis about the declining morals of Athenians in the age of Demetrius I of Macedon.[187]

The symposium (plural: symposia) in the Macedonian and wider Greek realm was a banquet for the nobility and privileged class, an occasion for feasting, drinking, entertainment, and sometimes philosophical discussion.[188] The hetairoi, leading members of the Macedonian aristocracy, were expected to attend such feasts with their king.[113] They were also expected to accompany him on royal hunts for the acquisition of game meat as well as for sport.[113] Symposia had several functions, amongst which was providing relief from the hardship of battle and marching. Symposia were Greek traditions since Homeric times, providing a venue for interaction amongst Macedonian elites. An ethos of egalitarianism surrounded symposia, allowing all male elites to express ideas and concerns, although built-up rivalries and excessive drinking often led to quarrels, fighting and even murder. The degree of extravagance and propensity for violence set Macedonian symposia apart from classical Greek symposia.[189] Like symposia, hunting was another focus of elite activity, and it remained popular throughout Macedonia's history. Young men participating in symposia were only allowed to recline after having killed their first wild boar.[190]

Language

 
The Pella curse tablet (Greek katadesmos): from Prof. Radcliffe G. Edmonds III, Bryn Mawr College.

For administrative and political purposes, Attic Greek seems to have operated as a lingua franca among the ethno-linguistically diverse communities of Macedonia and the north Aegean region, creating a diglossic linguistic area.[191] Attic Greek was standardized as the language of the court, formal discourse and diplomacy from as early as the time of Archelaus at the end of the 5th century BC.[192] Attic was further spread by Macedonia's conquests.[193] Although Macedonian continued to be spoken well into Antigonid times,[194] it became the prevalent oral dialect in Macedonia and throughout the Macedonian-ruled Hellenistic world.[195] However, Macedonian became extinct in either the Hellenistic or the Roman period, and entirely replaced by Koine Greek.[196] For instance, Cleopatra VII Philopator, the last active ruler of the Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt, spoke Koine Greek as a first language and by her reign (51–30 BC) or some time before it the Macedonian language was no longer used.[197]

Attempts to classify Ancient Macedonian are hindered by the lack of surviving Ancient Macedonian texts; it was a mainly oral language and most archaeological inscriptions indicate that in Macedonia there was no dominant written language besides Attic and later Koine Greek.[196] All surviving epigraphical evidence from grave markers and public inscriptions is in Greek.[198] Classification attempts are based on a vocabulary of 150–200 words and 200 personal names assembled mainly from the 5th century lexicon of Hesychius of Alexandria and a few surviving fragmentary inscriptions, coins and occasional passages in ancient sources.[196] Most of the vocabulary is regular Greek, with tendencies toward Doric Greek and Aeolic Greek. There can be found some Illyrian and Thracian elements.[196][199]

The Pella curse tablet, which was found in 1986 at Pella and dates to the mid-4th century BC or slightly earlier,[200] is believed to be the only substantial attested text in Macedonian. The language of the tablet is a distinctly recognizable form of Northwest Greek. The tablet has been used to support the argument that ancient Macedonian was a Northwest Greek dialect and mainly a Doric Greek dialect.[201][202][203][13][204][11] Hatzopoulos's analysis revealed some tendencies toward the Aeolic Greek dialect.[199] Hatzopoulos also states that the native language of the ancient Macedonians also betrays a slight phonetic influence from the languages of the original inhabitants of the region who were assimilated or expelled by the invading Macedonians.[205] He also asserts that little is known about the languages of these original inhabitants aside from Phrygian spoken by the Bryges, who migrated to Anatolia.[205] Hatzopoulos has suggested that the Macedonian dialect of the 4th century BC, as attested in the Pella curse tablet, was a sort of Macedonian ‘koine’ resulting from the encounter of the idiom of the ‘Aeolic’-speaking populations around Mount Olympus and the Pierian Mountains, whose phonetics had been influenced by a non-Greek (possibly Phrygian or Pelasgian) adstratum, with the Northwest Greek-speaking Argead Macedonians hailing from Argos Orestikon, who founded the kingdom of Lower Macedonia.[206] However, according to Hatzopoulos, B. Helly expanded and improved his own earlier suggestion and presented the hypothesis of a (North-)‘Achaean’ substratum extending as far north as the head of the Thermaic Gulf, which had a continuous relation, in prehistoric times both in Thessaly and Macedonia, with the Northwest Greek-speaking populations living on the other side of the Pindus mountain range, and contacts became cohabitation when the Argead Macedonians completed their wandering from Orestis to Lower Macedonia in the 7th c. BC.[206] According to this hypothesis, Hatzopoulos concludes that the Macedonian dialect of the historical period, which is attested in inscriptions, is a sort of koine resulting from the interaction and the influences of various elements, the most important of which are the North-Achaean substratum, the Northwest Greek idiom of the Argead Macedonians, and the Thracian and Phrygian adstrata.[206]

 
An ancient Macedonian funerary stele, with an epigram written at the top, mid 4th century B.C., Vergina, Macedonia, Greece

In Macedonian onomastics, most personal names are recognizably Greek (e.g. Alexandros, Philippos, Dionysios, Apollonios, Demetrios), with some dating back to Homeric (e.g. Ptolemaeos) or Mycenean times and there are also a few non-Greek names (Illyrian or Thracian; e.g. "Bithys"). This material supports the observation that Macedonian personal names have a predominantly Greek character.[196] Macedonian toponyms and hydronyms are mostly of Greek origin (e.g. Aegae, Dion, Pieria, Haliacmon), as are the names of the months of the Macedonian calendar and the names of most of the deities the Macedonians worshiped. Hammond states that these are not late borrowings.[207]

Macedonian has a close structural and lexical affinity with other Greek dialects, especially Northwest Greek and Thessalian.[208][209][210] Most of the words are Greek, although some of these could represent loans or cognate forms.[211][212] Alternatively, a number of phonological, lexical and onomastic features set Macedonian apart.[212][213] These latter features, possibly representing traces of a substrate language, occur in what are considered to be particularly conservative systems of the language.[214]

Several hypotheses have consequently been proposed as to the position of Macedonian, all of which broadly regard it as either a peripheral Greek dialect, a closely related but separate language (see Hellenic languages),[212][215][216] or a hybridized idiom incorporating Brygian, Northwest Greek and Thessalian Greek.[217][218] Drawing on the similarities between Macedonian, Greek and Brygian, Fanula Papazoglu wrote that she formed an Indo-European macro-dialectical group,[219] which, according to Georgiev, split before circa 14th–13th century BC before the appearance of the main Greek dialects.[220] The same data has been analyzed in an alternative manner, which regards the formation of the main Greek dialects as a later convergence of related but distinct groups. According to this theory, Macedonian did not fully participate in this process, making its ultimate position—other than being a contiguous, related 'minor' language—difficult to define.[221] Hatzopoulos, who offers a critical review of recent research on Macedonian speech, argues that all available evidence points to the conclusion that Macedonian is a Greek dialect of the North-West group.[222]

Another source of evidence is metalinguistics and the question of mutual intelligibility. The available literary evidence has no details about the exact nature of Macedonian; however it suggests that Macedonian and Greek were sufficiently different that there were communication difficulties between Greek and Macedonian contingents, necessitating the use of interpreters as late as the time of Alexander the Great.[223][224][225] Based on this evidence, Papazoglou has written that Macedonian could not have been a Greek dialect,[226] however, evidence for non-intelligibility exists for other ancient Greek dialects such as Aetolian[227] and Aeolic Greek.[228] Hornblower suggests that Greeks were intelligible to Macedonians without an interpreter.[229] Moreover, according to the Athenian orator Aeschines,[230] Livy wrote that when Aemilius Paulus called together representatives of the defeated Macedonian communities, his Latin pronouncements were translated for the benefit of the assembled Macedonians into Greek.[231] According to Hatzopoulos, the sole direct attestation of Macedonian speech preserved in an ancient author, is a verse in a non-Attic Greek dialect that the 4th century BC Athenian poet Strattis in his comedy 'The Macedonians' places a character, presumably Macedonian, to give as an answer to the question of an Athenian: – ἡ σφύραινα δ’ ἐστὶ τίς; (‘the sphyraena, what's that?’) – κέστραν μὲν ὔμμες, ὡτικκοί, κικλήσκετε (‘it's what ye in Attica dub cestra’).[232] Georgios Giannakis writes that recent scholarship has established the position of ancient Macedonian within the dialect map of North-West Greek.[222]

Identity

 
The Vergina Sun has been proposed as a symbol of ancient Macedonia or of the Argead dynasty by archeologists.

Nature of sources

Most ancient sources on the Macedonians come from outside Macedonia.[176] According to Eugene N. Borza, most of these sources are either ill-informed, hostile or both, making the Macedonians one of the "silent" peoples of the ancient Mediterranean.[233] Ernst Badian notes that nearly all surviving references to antagonisms and differences between Greeks and Macedonians exist in the written speeches of Arrian, who lived during a period (i.e. the Roman Empire) in which any notion of an ethnic disparity between Macedonians and other Greeks was incomprehensible.[234] Most of the literary evidence comes from later sources focusing on the campaigns of Alexander the Great rather than on Macedonia itself. Most contemporaneous evidence on Philip is Athenian and hostile.[235] Moreover, most ancient sources focus on the deeds of Macedonian kings in connection with political and military events such as the Peloponnesian War. Evidence about the ethnic identity of Macedonians of lower social status from the Archaic to the Hellenistic period is highly fragmentary and unsatisfactory.[236] For information about Macedonia before Philip, historians must rely on archaeological inscriptions and material remains, a few fragments from historians whose work is now lost, occasional passing mentions in Herodotus and Thucydides, and universal histories from the Roman era.[235]

Ancient sources on the Argeads

 
The god Dionysos riding a cheetah, mosaic floor in the "House of Dionysos" at Pella, Greece, c. 330–300 BC

In Homer, the term Argead was used as a collective designation for the Greeks ("Ἀργείων Δαναῶν", Argive Danaans).[65][237] The earliest version of the Temenid foundation myth was circulated by Alexander I via Herodotus during his apparent appearance at the Olympic Games.[238] Despite protests from some competitors, the Hellanodikai ("Judges of the Greeks") accepted Alexander's Greek genealogy, as did Herodotus and later Thucydides. In accepting his Greek credentials, the judges were either moved by the evidence or did so out of political considerations—as a reward for services to Hellas. The historicity of Alexander I's participation in the Olympics has been doubted by some scholars, who see the story as a piece of propaganda engineered by the Argeads and spread by Herodotus. Alexander's name does not appear in any list of Olympic victors.[239] That there were protests from other competitors suggests that the supposed Argive genealogy of the Argeads "was far from mainstream knowledge".[240] According to some, the appellation "Philhellene" was "surely not an appellation that could be given to an actual Greek",[240][241] however, the term "philhellene" (fond of the Greeks) was also used as a title for Greek patriots.[242][243] Whatever the case, according to Hall, "what mattered was that Alexander had played the genealogical game à la grecque and played it well, perhaps even excessively".[244]

The emphasis on the Heraclean ancestry of the Argeads served to heroicize the royal family and to provide a sacred genealogy which established a "divine right to rule" over their subjects.[245] The Macedonian royal family, like those of Epirus, emphasized "blood and kinship in order to construct for themselves a heroic genealogy that sometimes also functioned as a Hellenic genealogy".[246]

 
Gold Macedonian stater of Alexander the Great, struck at the Memphis mint, dated c. 332–323 BC. Obv: Goddess Athena wearing Corinthian helmet. Rev: Goddess Nike standing.

Pre-Hellenistic Greek writers expressed an ambiguity about the Greekness of Macedonians —specifically their monarchic institutions and their background of Persian alliance—often portraying them as a potential barbarian threat to Greece.[247] For example, the late 5th century sophist Thrasymachus of Chalcedon wrote, "we Greeks are enslaved to the barbarian Archelaus" (Fragment 2).[248] This fragment is an adaptation of a verse from Euripides' tragedy Telephos which was destined to become a stock expression. Hatzopoulos states that given the fragment's conventional character, it can hardly be taken literally as ethnological or linguistic evidence.[249] The issue of Macedonian Hellenicity and that of their royal house was particularly pertinent in the 4th century BC regarding the politics of invading Persia. Demosthenes regarded Macedonia's monarchy to be incongruous with an Athenian-led Pan-Hellenic alliance. He castigated Philip II for being "not only no Greek, nor related to the Greeks, but not even a barbarian from any place that can be named with honor, but a pestilent knave from Macedonia, whence it was never yet possible to buy a decent slave".[250]

This was obvious political slander and is regarded as "an insulting speech",[251] but "the orator clearly could not do this, if his audience was likely to regard his claim as nonsense: it could not be said of a Theban, or even a Thessalian",[252] however, he also calls Meidias, an Athenian statesman, "barbarian"[253] and in an event mentioned by Athenaeus, the Boeotians, the Thessalians and the Eleans were labeled "barbarians".[254] Demosthenes regarded only those who had reached the cultural standards of southern Greece as Greek and he did not take ethnological criteria into consideration,[255] and his corpus is considered by Eugene N. Borza as an "oratory designed to sway public opinion at Athens and thereby to formulate public policy."[233] Isocrates believed that only Macedonia was capable of leading a war against Persia; he felt compelled to say that Phillip was a "bona fide" Hellene by discussing his Argead and Heraclean heritage.[256][257] Moreover, Philip, in his letter to the council and people of Athens, mentioned by Demosthenes, places himself "with the rest of the Greeks".[258]

Ancient sources on the Macedonian people

 
 
Ancient frescos of Macedonian soldiers from the tomb of Agios Athanasios, Thessaloniki, Greece, 4th century BC

The earliest reference about Greek attitudes towards the Macedonian ethnos as a whole comes from Hesiod's Catalogue of Women. The text maintains that the Macedonians descended from Makedon, son of Zeus and Thyia (daughter of Deucalion), and was therefore a nephew of Hellen, progenitor of the Greeks.[37] Magnes, brother of the eponymous Makedon, was also said to be a son of Zeus and Thyia.[47] The Magnetes, descendants of Magnes, were an Aeolian tribe; according to Hammond this places the Macedonians among the Greeks.[259] Engels also wrote that Hesiod counted the Macedonians as Greeks, while Hall said that "according to strict genealogical logic, [this] excludes the population that bears [Makedon's] name from the ranks of the Hellenes".[260] Two later writers deny Makedon a lineage from Hellen: Apollodorus (3.8.1) makes him a son of Lycaon, son of earth-born Pelasgus, whilst Pseudo–Scymnos (6.22) makes him born directly from the earth;[261] Apollodorus (3.8.1), however, is technically identifying Makedon with the Greek royalty of Arcadia, thus placing Macedonia within the orbit of the most archaic of Greek myths.[262] At the end of the 5th century BC Hellanicus of Lesbos asserted Macedon was the son of Aeolus, the latter a son of Hellen and ancestor of the Aeolians, one of the major tribes of the Greeks.[37] Hellanicus modified Hesiod's genealogy by making Makedon the son of Aeolus, firmly placing the Macedonians in the Aeolic Greek-speaking family.[263] In addition to belonging to tribal groups such as the Aeolians, Dorians, Achaeans, and Ionians, Anson also stresses the fact that some Greeks even distinguished their ethnic identities based on the polis (i.e. city-state) they originally came from.[264]

These early writers and their formulation of genealogical relationships demonstrate that before the 5th century, Greekness was defined on an ethnic basis and was legitimized by tracing descent from eponymous Hellen.[265] Subsequently, cultural considerations assumed greater importance.

 
Fresco of an ancient Makedonian soldier (thorakitai) wearing chainmail armor and bearing a thureos shield, 3rd century BC

Thucydides and Herodotus regarded the Macedonians as either northern Greeks, barbarians or an intermediate group between "pure" Greeks and barbarians.[266] In the Histories (5.20.4) Herodotus calls king Alexander I an anēr Hellēn Makedonōn huparchos, or "a Greek who ruled over Macedonians".[267] In 7.130.3, he says that the Thessalians were the "first of the Greeks" to submit to Xerxes.[268] In the first book of the Histories, Herodotus recalls a reliable tradition according to which the Greek ethnos, in its wandering, was called "Macedonian" when it settled around Pindus and "Dorian" when it came to the Peloponnese,[269] and in the eighth book he groups several Greek tribes under "Macedonians" and "Dorians", implying that the Macedonians were Greeks.[270][271]

In parts of his work, Thucydides placed the Macedonians on his cultural continuum closer to barbarians than Hellenes,[272] or an intermediate category between Greeks and non–Greeks.[273] In other parts, he distinguishes between three groups fighting in the Peloponnesian War: The Greeks (including Peloponnesians), the Macedonians and the barbarian Illyrians.[273] Recounting Brasidas's expedition to Lyncus, Thucydides considers Macedonians separate from the barbarians; he says, "In all there were about three thousand Hellenic heavy infantry, accompanied by all the Macedonian cavalry with the Chalcidians, near one thousand strong, besides an immense crowd of barbarians",[274] and "night coming on, the Macedonians and the barbarian crowd took fright in a moment in one of those mysterious panics to which great armies are liable".[275] More explicit is his recounting of Brasidas's speech where he tells his Peloponnesian troops to dispel fear of fighting against "barbarians: because they had already fought against Macedonians".[276] Euripides, in his work Archelaus, tells us that the Macedonians were Greeks.[277]

Ancient geographers differed in their views on the size of Macedonia and on the ethnicity of the Macedonians.[278] Most ancient geographers did not include the core territories of the Macedonian kingdom in their definition of Greece, the reasons for which are unknown. For example, Strabo says that while "Macedonia is of course part of Greece, yet now, since I am following the nature and shape of the places geographically, I have chosen to classify it apart from the rest of Greece".[278][279] Strabo supports the Greek ethnicity of the Macedonian people and wrote of the "Macedonians and the other Greeks",[280] as does Pausanias, the latter of which did not include Macedonia in Hellas as indicated in Book 10 of his Description of Greece.[278] Pausanias said that the Macedonians took part in the Amphictyonic League[281] and that Caranus of Macedon—the mythical founder of the Argead dynasty—set up a trophy after the Argive fashion for a victory against Cisseus.[282]

 
Macedonian terracotta figurine, 3rd century BC; the Persians referred to the Macedonians as "Yaunã Takabara" ("Greeks with hats that look like shields").[283]

Isocrates defended Philip's Greek origins but did not think the same of his people. He wrote, "He (Perdiccas I) left the Greek world alone completely, but he desired to hold the kingship in Macedonia; for he understood that Greeks are not accustomed to submit themselves to monarchy whereas others are incapable of living their lives without domination of this sort ... for he alone of the Greeks deemed it fit to rule over an ethnically unrelated population".[284] On the other hand, Michael Cosmopoulos reports that Isocrates clearly states that the Macedonians were Greeks.[277] Nevertheless, Philip named the federation of Greek states he created with Macedon at its head—nowadays referred to as the League of Corinth—as simply "The Hellenes" (i.e. Greeks). The Macedonians were granted two seats in the exclusively Greek Great Amphictyonic League in 346 BC when the Phocians were expelled. Badian sees it as a personal honour awarded to Phillip and not to the Macedonian people as a whole.[285] Aeschines said that Phillip's father Amyntas III joined other Greeks in the Panhellenic congress of the Lacedaemonian allies, also known as the "Congress of Sparta", in a vote to help Athens recover possession of Amphipolis.[286]

With Philip's conquest of Greece, Greeks and Macedonians enjoyed privileges at the royal court, and there was no social distinction among his court hetairoi, although Philip's armies were only ever led by Macedonians. The process of Greek and Macedonian syncretism culminated during the reign of Alexander the Great, and he allowed Greeks to command his armies. There was also some persisting antagonism between Macedonians and Greeks lasting into Antigonid times.[287] Some Greeks continued to rebel against their Macedonian overlords throughout the Hellenistic era.[288] They rejoiced on the death of Phillip II[289] and they revolted against Alexander's Antigonid successors. The Greeks called this conflict the Hellenic War.[290] However, Pan-Hellenic sloganeering was used by Greeks against Antigonid dominance; it was also used by Macedonians to corral popular support throughout Greece. Those who considered Macedonia as a political enemy, such as Hypereides and Chremonides, likened the Lamian War and Chremonidean War, respectively, to the earlier Greco-Persian Wars and efforts to liberate Greeks from tyranny.[291] Yet even those who considered Macedonia an ally, such as Isocrates, were keen to stress the differences between their kingdom and the Greek city states, to assuage fears about the extension of Macedonian-style monarchism into the governance of their poleis.[292]

After the 3rd century BC, and especially in Roman times, the Macedonians were consistently regarded as Greeks.[293] To begin with, Polybius considers the Macedonians as Greeks and sets them apart from their neighboring non-Greek tribes.[277] For example, in his Histories, the Acarnanian character Lyciscus tells the Spartans that they are "of the same tribe" as the Achaeans and the Macedonians,[294] who should be honoured because "throughout nearly their whole lives are ceaselessly engaged in a struggle with the barbarians for the safety of the Greeks".[295] Polybius also used the phrase "Macedonia and the rest of Greece",[296] and says that Philip V of Macedon associates himself with "the rest of the Greeks".[297] In his text History of Rome, Livy states that the Macedonians, Aetolians and Acarnanians were "all men of the same language".[298] Similar opinions are shared by Arrian,[299] Strabo[300] and Plutarch, who wrote of Aristotle advising Alexander "to have regard for the Greeks as for friends and kindred".[301] M. B. Hatzopoulos points out that passages in Arrian's text also reveal that the terms "Greeks" and "Macedonians" were at times synonymous. For instance, when Alexander the Great held a feast accompanied by Macedonians and Persians, with religious rituals performed by Persian magi and "Greek seers", the latter of whom were Macedonians.[302] Any preconceived ethnic differences between Greeks and Macedonians faded soon after the Roman conquest of Macedonia by 148 BC and then the rest of Greece with the defeat of the Achaean League by the Roman Republic at the Battle of Corinth (146 BC).[303]

 
 
The "Ionians with shield-hats" (Old Persian cuneiform: 𐎹𐎢𐎴𐎠𐏐𐎫𐎣𐎲𐎼𐎠, Yaunā takabarā)[304] depicted on the tomb of Xerxes I at Naqsh-e Rustam, were probably Macedonian soldiers in the service of the Achaemenid army, wearing their characteristic kausia, c.480 BC.[305]

The Persians referred to both Greeks and Macedonians as Yauna ("Ionians", their term for "Greeks"), though they distinguished the "Yauna by the sea and across the sea" from the Yaunã Takabara or "Greeks with hats that look like shields", possibly referring to the Macedonian kausia hat.[306] According to another interpretation, the Persians used such terms in a geographical rather than an ethnic sense. Yauna and its various attributes possibly referred to regions to the north and west of Asia Minor, which could have included Phrygians, Mysians, Aeolians, Thracians, and Paionians in addition to Greeks.[307] Overall, Persian inscriptions indicate that the Persians considered the Macedonians to be Greeks.[308] In Hellenistic times, most Egyptians and Syrians included the Macedonians among the larger category of Greeks, as the Persians had done earlier.[306]

Modern discourse

Modern scholarly discourse has produced several hypotheses about the Macedonians' place within the Greek world. Considering material remains of Greek-style monuments, buildings, inscriptions dating from the 5th century and the predominance of Greek personal names, one school of thought says that the Macedonians were "truly Greeks" who had retained a more archaic lifestyle than those living in southern Greece. This cultural discrepancy was used during the political struggles in Athens and Macedonia in the 4th century.[266] This has been the predominant viewpoint since the 20th century. Worthington wrote, "... not much need to be said about the Greekness of ancient Macedonia: it is undeniable".[309] Hatzopoulos argues that there was no real ethnic difference between Macedonians and Greeks, only a political distinction contrived after the creation of the League of Corinth in 337 BC (which was led by Macedonia through the league's elected hegemon Philip II, despite him not being a member of the league itself).[310] Hatzopoulos stresses the fact that Macedonians and other peoples such as the Epirotes and Cypriots, despite speaking a Greek dialect, worshiping in Greek cults, engaging in panhellenic games, and upholding traditional Greek institutions, nevertheless occasionally had their territories excluded from contemporary geographic definitions of "Hellas" and were even considered non-Greek barbarians by some.[311] Other academics who concur that the difference between the Macedonians and Greeks was a political rather than a true ethnic discrepancy include Michael B. Sakellariou,[312] Robert Malcolm Errington,[313] and Craige B. Champion.[314]

 
A mosaic of the Kasta Tomb in Amphipolis depicting the abduction of Persephone by Pluto, 4th century BC

Another perspective interprets the literary evidence and the archaeological-cultural differences between Macedonia and central-southern Greece before the 6th century and beyond as evidence that the Macedonians were originally non-Greek tribes who underwent a process of Hellenization.[315][316] Accepting that political factors played a part, they highlight the degree of antipathy between Macedonians and Greeks, which was of a different quality to that seen among other Greek states—even those with a long-term history of mutual animosity (e.g. Sparta and Athens).[317] According to these scholars, the Macedonians came to be regarded as "northern Greeks" only with the ongoing Hellenization of Macedonia and the emergence of Rome as a common enemy in the west. This coincides with the period during which ancient authors such as Polybius and Strabo called the ancient Macedonians "Greeks".[315] By this point, as described by Isocrates, to have been a Greek could have defined a quality of culture and intelligence rather than a racial or ethnic affinity.[318][319] In the context of ethnic origins of the companions of the Antigonid kings, James L. O'Neil distinguishes Macedonians and Greeks as separate ethnic groups, the latter becoming more prominent in Macedonian affairs and the royal court after Alexander the Great's reign.[320]

Others have adopted both views. According to Sansone, "there is no question that, in the fifth and fourth centuries, there were noticeable difference between the Greeks and the Macedonians," yet the issue of Macedonian Hellenicity was ultimately a "political one".[321] Hall adds, "to ask whether the Macedonians 'really were' Greek or not in antiquity is ultimately a redundant question given the shifting semantics of Greekness between the 6th and 4th centuries BC. What cannot be denied, however, is that the cultural commodification of Hellenic identity that emerged in the 4th century might have remained a provincial artifact, confined to the Balkan peninsula, had it not been for the Macedonians."[322] Eugene Borza emphasized the Macedonians "made their mark in antiquity as Macedonians, not as a tribe of some other people"[323] but argued that "the 'highlanders' or 'Makedones' of the mountainous regions of western Macedonia are derived from northwest Greek stock."[324] Worthington concludes that "there is still more than enough evidence and reasoned theory to suggest that the Macedonians were racially Greek."[325] Edward M. Anson argues that some Hellenic authors expressed complex if not ever-changing and ambiguous ideas about the exact ethnic identity of the Macedonians, who were considered by some such as Aristotle in his Politics as barbarians, and by others as semi-Greek or fully Greek.[326] Panagiotis Filos notes that the term “barbarian” was often used by ancient Greek authors in a very broad sense, referring not only to non-Greek populations, but also to Greek populations on the fringe of the Greek world with dialectal differences, such as the Macedonians.[327] Roger D. Woodard asserts that in addition to persisting uncertainty in modern times about the proper classification of the Macedonian language and its relation to Greek, ancient authors also presented conflicting ideas, such as Demosthenes when labeling Philip II of Macedon inaccurately as a "barbarian",[328] whereas Polybius called Achaeans and Macedonians as homophylos (i.e. part of the same race or kin).[329][330] Carol J. King elaborates that finding the reason why "ancient Greeks themselves differentiated between Greeks and Macedonians" is limited by the fact that "if one seeks historical truth about an ancient people who have left no definitive record, one may have to let go of the hope for a definitive answer" especially considering that ancient Macedonia was composed of Greeks, people akin to Greeks and non-Greeks.[331] Simon Hornblower supports the Greek identity of the Macedonians, taking into consideration their origin, language, cults and customs.[332]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Suggested by Georgiev (1966),[4] Joseph (2001)[5] and Hamp (2013).[6]
  2. ^ Pioneered by Friedrich Wilhelm Sturz (1808),[7] and subsequently supported by Olivier Masson (1996),[8] Michael Meier-Brügger (2003),[9] Johannes Engels (2010),[10] J. Méndez Dosuna (2012),[11] Joachim Matzinger (2016),[12] Emilio Crespo (2017),[13] Claude Brixhe (2018)[14] and M. B. Hatzopoulos (2020).[7]
  3. ^ Suggested by August Fick (1874),[8] Otto Hoffmann (1906),[8] N. G. L. Hammond (1997)[15] and Ian Worthington (2012).[16]
  4. ^ Engels 2010, p. 89; Borza 1995, p. 114; Eugene N. Borza writes that the "highlanders" or "Makedones" of the mountainous regions of western Macedonia are derived from northwest Greek stock; they were akin to those who at an earlier time may have migrated south to become the historical "Dorians".

Citations

  1. ^ Worthington 2014a, p. 10; Hornblower 2008, pp. 55–58; Joint Association of Classical Teachers 1984, pp. 50–51; Errington 1990; Fine 1983, pp. 607–608; Hall 2000, p. 64; Hammond 2001, p. 11; Jones 2001, p. 21; Osborne 2004, p. 127; Hammond 1989, pp. 12–13; Hammond 1993, p. 97; Starr 1991, pp. 260, 367; Toynbee 1981, p. 67; Worthington 2008, pp. 8, 219; Chamoux 2002, p. 8; Cawkwell 1978, p. 22; Perlman 1973, p. 78; Hamilton 1974, Chapter 2: The Macedonian Homeland, p. 23; Bryant 1996, p. 306; O'Brien 1994, p. 25.
  2. ^ Trudgill 2002, p. 125; Theodossiev 2000, pp. 175–209.
  3. ^ a b c Christesen & Murray 2010, p. 428.
  4. ^ Vladimir Georgiev, "The Genesis of the Balkan Peoples", The Slavonic and East European Review 44:103:285-297 (July 1966)
  5. ^ a b Joseph, Brian D. (2001). "Ancient Greek". In Garry, Jane; Rubino, Carl; Bodomo, Adams B.; Faber, Alice; French, Robert (eds.). Facts about the World's Languages: An Encyclopedia of the World's Major Languages, Past and Present. H. W. Wilson Company. p. 256. ISBN 9780824209704.
  6. ^ Eric Hamp & Douglas Adams (2013) "The Expansion of the Indo-European Languages", Sino-Platonic Papers, vol 239.
  7. ^ a b Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. (2020). "The speech of the ancient Macedonians". Ancient Macedonia. De Gruyter. pp. 64, 77. ISBN 978-3-11-071876-8.
  8. ^ a b c Masson, Olivier (2003). "[Ancient] Macedonian language". In Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony (eds.). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (revised 3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 905–906. ISBN 978-0-19-860641-3.
  9. ^ Michael Meier-Brügger, Indo-European linguistics, Walter de Gruyter, 2003, p.28,on Google books
  10. ^ Roisman, Worthington, 2010, "A Companion to Ancient Macedonia", Chapter 5: Johannes Engels, "Macedonians and Greeks", p. 95
  11. ^ a b Dosuna, J. Méndez (2012). "Ancient Macedonian as a Greek dialect: A critical survey on recent work (Greek, English, French, German text)". In Giannakis, Georgios K. (ed.). Ancient Macedonia: Language, History, Culture. Centre for Greek Language. p. 145. ISBN 978-960-7779-52-6.
  12. ^ Matzinger, Joachim (2016). Die Altbalkanischen Sprachen (PDF) (Speech) (in German). Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.
  13. ^ a b Crespo, Emilio (2017). "The Softening of Obstruent Consonants in the Macedonian Dialect". In Giannakis, Georgios K.; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Walter de Gruyter. p. 329. ISBN 978-3-11-053081-0.
  14. ^ Brixhe, Claude (2018). "Macedonian". In Klein, Jared; Joseph, Brian; Fritz, Matthias (eds.). Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics. Vol. 3. De Gruyter. pp. 1862–1867. ISBN 978-3-11-054243-1.
  15. ^ Hammond, N.G.L (1997). Collected Studies: Further studies on various topics. A.M. Hakkert. p. 79.
  16. ^ Worthington 2012, p. 71.
  17. ^ Hammond 1989, p. [page needed].
  18. ^ Masson, Olivier (2003) [1996]. "[Ancient] Macedonian language". In Hornblower, S.; Spawforth A. (eds.). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (revised 3rd ed.). USA: Oxford University Press. pp. 905–906. ISBN 0-19-860641-9.
  19. ^ Meier-Brügger, Michael; Fritz, Matthias; Mayrhofer, Manfred (2003). Indo-European Linguistics. Walter de Gruyter. p. 28. ISBN 978-3-11-017433-5.
  20. ^ Roisman, Worthington, 2010, "A Companion to Ancient Macedonia", Chapter 5: Johannes Engels, "Macedonians and Greeks", p. 95: "This (i.e. Pella curse tablet) has been judged to be the most important ancient testimony to substantiate that Macedonian was a north-western Greek and mainly a Doric dialect".
  21. ^ "[W]e may tentatively conclude that Macedonian is a dialect related to North-West Greek.", Olivier Masson, French linguist, “Oxford Classical Dictionary: Macedonian Language”, 1996.
  22. ^ Masson & Dubois 2000, p. 292: "..."Macedonian Language" de l'Oxford Classical Dictionary, 1996, p. 906: "Macedonian may be seen as a Greek dialect, characterized by its marginal position and by local pronunciation (like Βερενίκα for Φερενίκα etc.)."
  23. ^ Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. (2017). "Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect: Consolidation and New Perspectives". In Giannakis, Georgios K.; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Walter de Gruyter. p. 299. ISBN 978-3-11-053081-0.
  24. ^ Crespo, Emilio (2017). "The Softening of Obstruent Consonants in the Macedonian Dialect". In Giannakis, Georgios K.; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Walter de Gruyter. p. 329. ISBN 978-3-11-053081-0.
  25. ^ a b Beekes 2009, p. 894.
  26. ^ Harle 1998, p. 24.
  27. ^ Hanson 2012, Ian Worthington, "5. Alexander the Great, Nation Building, and the Creation and Maintenance of Empire", p. 119.
  28. ^ Kristinsson 2010, p. 79.
  29. ^ Kinzl 2010, p. 553.
  30. ^ Adams 2010, pp. 208–211, 216–217; Errington 1990, pp. 117–120, 129, 145–147; Bringmann 2007, p. 61; for a discussion about the Hellenistic period in both the Eastern and Western Mediterranean regions in antiquity, see Prag & Quinn 2013, pp. 1–13.
  31. ^ Olbrycht 2010, pp. 365–367.
  32. ^ Adams 2010, p. 223; Errington 1990, pp. 174, 242; Greenwalt 2010, pp. 289–304.
  33. ^ Adams 2010, pp. 221–224; Errington 1990, pp. 167–174, 179–185;
  34. ^ Errington 1990, pp. 191–216; Eckstein 2010, pp. 231–245; Greenwalt 2010, p. 302; Bringmann 2007, pp. 79–88, 97–99.
  35. ^ Errington 1990, pp. 216–217; Eckstein 2010, p. 245; Greenwalt 2010, p. 304; Bringmann 2007, pp. 99–100.
  36. ^ Errington 1990, pp. 216–217; Eckstein 2010, pp. 246–248; Bringmann 2007, pp. 104–105.
  37. ^ a b c Anson 2010, p. 16; Rhodes 2010, p. 24.
  38. ^ Anson 2010, p. 7 Asirvatham 2010, pp. 101–102, 123.
  39. ^ Homer. Iliad, 14.226.
  40. ^ Strabo. Geography, Book 7 (Fragment 2.
  41. ^ Best & de Vries 1989, R. F. Hoddinott, "Thracians, Mycenaeans and 'The Trojan Question'", p. 64.
  42. ^ Borza 1992, p. 64.
  43. ^ Errington 1990, pp. 7–9; Borza 1982, p. 8.
  44. ^ Borza 1992, p. 84
  45. ^ Vanderpool 1982, Eugene N. Borza, "Athenians, Macedonians, and the Origins of the Macedonian Royal House", p. 7.
  46. ^ On pages 433–434 of "The Position of the Macedonian Dialect", A. Panayotou describes the geographical delimitations of ancient Macedon as encompassing the region from Mount Pindus to the Nestos River, and from Thessaly to Paeonia (the area occupied by the kingdom of Philip II, which preceded the much larger Roman province of the same name).
  47. ^ a b Hesiod. Catalogue of Women, Fragment 7.
  48. ^ Herodotus. Histories, 1.56.3: "For these were the most eminent races in ancient time, the second being a Pelasgian and the first a Hellenic race: and the one never migrated from its place in any direction, while the other was very exceedingly given to wanderings; for in the reign of Deucalion this [Hellenic] race dwelt in Pthiotis, and in the time of Doros the son of Hellen in the land lying below Ossa and Olympos, which is called Histiaiotis; and when it was driven from Histiaiotis by the sons of Cadmos, it dwelt in Pindos and was called Makedonian; and thence it moved afterwards to Dryopis, and from Dryopis it came finally to Peloponnesus, and began to be called Dorian"., 8.43.1; Hammond & Griffith 1972, pp. 430–440.
  49. ^ This was but one of several traditions regarding the "Dorian homeland" variously placing it in Phthiotis, Dryopis, Erineos, etc. For the formation of Dorian ethnicity, and its traditions, see chapters 3 and 4 of Johnathan Hall's Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity.
  50. ^ Toynbee 1969, Chapter 3: "What was the Ancestral Language of the Makedones?", pp. 66–77.
  51. ^ Herodotus. Histories, 8.137.8.
  52. ^ a b Hatzopoulos 1999.
  53. ^ a b Hammond & Griffith 1972, pp. 433–434.
  54. ^ Sprawski 2010, pp. 127–128.
  55. ^ a b Sprawski 2010, p. 129.
  56. ^ Titus Livius, "The History of Rome", 45.9: "This was the end of the war between the Romans and Perseus, after four years of steady campaigning, and also the end of a kingdom famed over a large part of Europe and all of Asia. They reckoned Perseus as the twentieth after Caranus, who founded the kingdom."
  57. ^ Marcus Velleius Paterculus, "History of Rome", 1.6: "In this period, sixty-five years before the founding of Rome, Carthage was established by the Tyrian Elissa, by some authors called Dido. About this time also Caranus, a man of royal race, eleventh in descent from Hercules, set out from Argos and seized the kingship of Macedonia. From him Alexander the Great was descended in the seventeenth generation, and could boast that, on his mother's side, he was descended from Achilles, and, on his father's side, from Hercules".
  58. ^ Plutarch, "Alexander", 2.1: "As for the lineage of Alexander, on his father's side he was a descendant of Heracles through Caranus, and on his mother's side a descendant of Aeacus through Neoptolemus; this is accepted without any question."
  59. ^ Gagarin 2010, "Argeads", p. 229.
  60. ^ a b Appian. Roman History, 11.63.333.
  61. ^ a b c Sprawski2010, p. 130.
  62. ^ Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short. A Latin Dictionary, Argīvus.
  63. ^ Henry George Liddell and Robert Scott. A Greek-English Lexicon, Ἀργεῖος.
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  67. ^ Justin, Historiarum Philippicarum, 7.1.7–10: "But Caranus, accompanied by a great multitude of Greeks, having been directed by an oracle to seek a settlement in Macedonia, and having come into Emathia, and followed a flock of goats that were fleeing from a tempest, possessed himself of the city of Edessa, before the inhabitants, on account of the thickness of the rain and mist, were aware of his approach; and being reminded of the oracle, by which he had been ordered 'to seek a kingdom with goats for his guides,' he made this city the seat of his government, and afterwards religiously took care, whithersoever he led his troops, to keep the same goats before his standards, that he might have those animals as leaders in his enterprises which he had had as guides to the site of his kingdom. He changed the name of the city, in commemoration of his good fortune, from Edessa to Aegeae, and called the inhabitants Aegeatae."
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  70. ^ Herodotus. Histories, 5.17.1–2.
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  89. ^ Hornblower, Matthews & Fraser 2000, Miltiade Hatzopoulos, ""L'histoire par les noms" in Macedonia", p. 112.
  90. ^ Brock & Hodkinson 2000, Chapter 12: Zosia Halina Archibald, "Space, Hierarchy, and Community in Archaic and Classical Macedonia, Thessaly, and Thrace", p. 215.
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  94. ^ Butler 2008, p. 223.
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  98. ^ Whitley 2007, p. 233.
  99. ^ Lemos 2002, p. 207.
  100. ^ a b Anson 2010, p. 19.
  101. ^ a b Whitley 2007, p. 254.
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  107. ^ a b Karamitrou-Mentessidi 2007.
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  109. ^ Anson 2010, p. 8.
  110. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011a, pp. 47–48; for a specific example of land reclamation near Amphipolis during the reign of Alexander the Great, see Hammond & Walbank 2001, p. 31.
  111. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011a, p. 48; Errington 1990, pp. 7–8, 222–223.
  112. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011a, p. 48.
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  114. ^ Anson 2010, pp. 10–11.
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  116. ^ Hammond & Walbank 2001, pp. 12–13.
  117. ^ Anson 2010, pp. 9–10.
  118. ^ King 2010, pp. 374–375.
  119. ^ King 2010, pp. 376–377.
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  144. ^ Borza 1992, pp. 259–260; see also Hammond & Walbank 2001, pp. 5–6 for further details.
  145. ^ Borza 1992, pp. 257, 260–261.
  146. ^ Sansone 2017, p. 224; Hammond & Walbank 2001, p. 6;
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  147. ^ Borza 1992, p. 257.
  148. ^ Sansone 2017, pp. 224–225.
  149. ^ Kate Müser (9 September 2014). "Greece's largest ancient tomb: Amphipolis". www.dw.de. Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 10 September 2014..
  150. ^ Andrew Marszal (7 September 2014). "Marble female figurines unearthed in vast Alexander the Great-era Greek tomb". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022..
  151. ^ Papapostolou, Anastasios. (30 September 2015). "Hephaestion's Monogram Found at Amphipolis Tomb." Greek Reporter. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  152. ^ Worthington 2012, p. 319.
  153. ^ Worthington 2014b, p. 180; Sansone 2017, p. 228.
  154. ^ Worthington 2014b, pp. 180–183.
  155. ^ Worthington 2012, p. 319; Worthington 2014b, pp. 182–183.
  156. ^ Errington 1990, pp. 219–220.
  157. ^ Hardiman 2010, p. 515.
  158. ^ Hardiman 2010, pp. 515–517.
  159. ^ a b Hardiman 2010, p. 517.
  160. ^ Head 2016, pp. 12–13; Piening 2013, pp. 1182.
  161. ^ Head 2016, p. 13; Aldrete, Bartell & Aldrete 2013, p. 49.
  162. ^ Olga Palagia (2000). "Hephaestion's Pyre and the Royal Hunt of Alexander," in A.B. Bosworth and E.J. Baynham (eds), Alexander the Great in Fact and Fiction. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-815287-3, p. 185.
  163. ^ a b c Hardiman 2010, p. 518.
  164. ^ Cohen 2010, pp. 13–34.
  165. ^ Müller 2010, p. 182.
  166. ^ a b c Errington 1990, p. 224.
  167. ^ a b c Worthington 2014b, p. 186.
  168. ^ Worthington 2014b, p. 185.
  169. ^ Worthington 2014b, pp. 185–186.
  170. ^ a b Worthington 2014b, pp. 183, 186.
  171. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011b, p. 58; Roisman 2010, p. 154; Errington 1990, pp. 223–224.
  172. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011b, pp. 58–59; see also Errington 1990, p. 224 for further details.
  173. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011b, pp. 59; Sansone 2017, p. 223; Roisman 2010, p. 157.
  174. ^ a b Hatzopoulos 2011b, pp. 59.
  175. ^ Chroust 2016, p. 137.
  176. ^ a b Rhodes 2010, p. 23.
  177. ^ Rhodes 2010, pp. 23–25; see also Errington 1990, p. 224 for further details.
  178. ^ Errington 1990, pp. 224–225;
    For Marsyas of Pella, see also Hammond & Walbank 2001, p. 27 for further details.
  179. ^ a b Errington 1990, p. 225.
  180. ^ Badian 1982, p. 34, Anson 2010, p. 16; Sansone 2017, pp. 222–223.
  181. ^ Nawotka 2010, p. 2.
  182. ^ Sawada 2010, p. 403.
  183. ^ Cohen 2010, p. 28.
  184. ^ a b c Dalby 1997, p. 157.
  185. ^ Dalby 1997, pp. 155–156.
  186. ^ Dalby 1997, p. 156.
  187. ^ Dalby 1997, pp. 156–157.
  188. ^ Anson 2010, p. 10; Cohen 2010, p. 28.
  189. ^ Sawada 2010, pp. 392–408.
  190. ^ Sawada 2010, p. 394.
  191. ^ There were Dorian and Euboean colonies, as well as tribal ethne speaking Greek, Illyrian, Thracian, Paeonian, Brygian, etc.
  192. ^ Borza 1992, p. 92.
  193. ^ Christidēs, Arapopoulou & Chritē 2007, Chapter 6: A. Panayotou, "The Position of the Macedonian Dialect", p. 433.
  194. ^ Engels 2010, p. 96.
  195. ^ Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", p. 161.
  196. ^ a b c d e Engels 2010, p. 94.
  197. ^ Jones 2006, pp. 33–34.
  198. ^ Anson 2010, p. 20.
  199. ^ a b Borza 1992, p. 93.
  200. ^ Voutiras 1998, p. 25.
  201. ^ Engels 2010, p. 95.
  202. ^ Masson & Dubois 2000, p. 292: "... "Macedonian Language" de l'Oxford Classical Dictionary, 1996, p. 906.
  203. ^ Masson 1996, "Macedonian Language", pp. 905–906.
  204. ^ Masson, Olivier (2003) [1996]. "[Ancient] Macedonian language". In Hornblower, S.; Spawforth A. (eds.). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (revised 3rd ed.). USA: Oxford University Press. pp. 905–906. ISBN 0-19-860641-9.
  205. ^ a b Hatzopoulos 2011a, pp. 43–45.
  206. ^ a b c Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. (2017). "Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect: Consolidation and New Perspectives". In Giannakis, Georgios K.; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 321–322. ISBN 978-3-11-053081-0.
  207. ^ Worthington 2003, p. 20.
  208. ^ Christidēs, Arapopoulou & Chritē 2007, Chapter 6: A. Panayotou, "The Position of the Macedonian Dialect", pp. 431–433.
  209. ^ Hornblower, Matthews & Fraser 2000, Miltiade Hatzopoulos, ""L'histoire par les noms" in Macedonia", p. 111.
  210. ^ It is difficult to distinguish between words which are truly common between Macedonian and Greek from cognates and loanwords.
  211. ^ Boardman 1982, Chapter 20c: R. A. Crossland, "Linguistic Problems of the Balkan Areya in Late Prehistoric and Early Classical Periods", p. 846.
  212. ^ a b c Woodard 2008b, p. 11.
  213. ^ Boardman 1982, Chapter 20c: R. A. Crossland, "Linguistic Problems of the Balkan Area in Late Prehistoric and Early Classical Periods", pp. 846–847.
  214. ^ Personal names, names of gods and months, and phonological features. Refer to: Christidēs, Arapopoulou & Chritē 2007, Chapter 6: A. Panayotou, "The Position of the Macedonian Dialect", pp. 438–439.
  215. ^ Finkelberg 2005, p. 121.
  216. ^ Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", pp. 163–165.
  217. ^ Hornblower, Matthews & Fraser 2000, Miltiade Hatzopoulos, ""L'histoire par les noms" in Macedonia", p. 115.
  218. ^ Christidēs, Arapopoulou & Chritē 2007, Chapter 6: A. Panayotou, "The Position of the Macedonian Dialect", p. 439.
  219. ^ Papazoglou 1977, pp. 65–83.
  220. ^ Georgiev 1981, pp. 170, 360.
  221. ^ Garrett 1999, pp. 146–156.
  222. ^ a b Giannakis, Georgios (2017). "From Central Greece to the Black Sea: Introductory Remarks". In Giannakis, Georgios; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects. Emilio Crespo, Panagiotis Filos. De Gruyter. p. 18. doi:10.1515/9783110532135. ISBN 978-3-11-053213-5. Recent scholarship has established the position of (ancient) Macedonian within the dialect map of North-West Greek (see, among others, Méndez Dosuna 2012, 2014, 2015; Crespo 2012, 2015). Here belongs the study by M. Hatzopoulos, who offers a critical review of recent research on the Macedonian dialect, arguing that all available evidence points to the conclusion that this is a Greek dialect of the North-West group.
  223. ^ Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", pp. 161–163.
  224. ^ Borza 1999, pp. 42–43.
  225. ^ Barr-Sharrar & Borza 1982, E. Badian, "Greeks and Macedonians", p. 41.
  226. ^ Papazoglou 2000, pp. 771–777.
  227. ^ Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War, 3.94.
  228. ^ Plato. Protagoras, 341c.
  229. ^ Hornblower, Simon (2002). "Macedon, Thessaly and Boiotia". The Greek World, 479–323 BC (Third ed.). Routledge. p. 90. ISBN 0-415-16326-9.
  230. ^ Aeschines. Against Ctesiphon, 3.72.
  231. ^ Livy. The History of Rome, 45.29.3.
  232. ^ Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. (2017). "Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect: Consolidation and New Perspectives". In Giannakis, Georgios K.; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Walter de Gruyter. p. 309. ISBN 978-3-11-053081-0.
  233. ^ a b Borza 1992, p. 5.
  234. ^ Badian 1982, p. 51, n. 72; Johannes Engels comes to a similar conclusion. See: Engels 2010, p. 82.
  235. ^ a b Anson 2010, p. 7.
  236. ^ Engels 2010, p. 85.
  237. ^ Cartledge 2011, Chapter 4: Argos, p. 23..
  238. ^ Herodotus. Histories, 5.22; Engels 2010, pp. 92–93.
  239. ^ Asirvatham 2010, p. 101.
  240. ^ a b Barr-Sharrar & Borza 1982, E. Badian, "Greeks and Macedonians", p. 34.
  241. ^ Engels 2010, p. 93.
  242. ^ Henry George Liddell and Robert Scott. A Greek-English Lexicon, φιλέλλην.
  243. ^ cf. Plato. Republic, 5.470e; Xenophon. Agesilaus, 7.4 (in Greek).
  244. ^ Hall 2002, p. 156.
  245. ^ Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", p. 169; Engels 2010, p. 91.
  246. ^ Malkin 1998, p. 140.
  247. ^ Asirvatham 2010, p. 103.
  248. ^ Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", p. 160.
  249. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011b, pp. 60.
  250. ^ Demosthenes Third Philippic, 9.31
  251. ^ Hammond 1991.
  252. ^ Barr-Sharrar & Borza 1982, E. Badian, "Greeks and Macedonians", p. 42.
  253. ^ Demosthenes, Against Meidias, Speeches, 21.150: "And yet, though he has thus become the possessor of privileges to which he has no claim, and has found a fatherland which is reputed to be of all states the most firmly based upon its laws, he seems utterly unable to submit to those laws or abide by them. His true, native barbarism and hatred of religion drive him on by force and betray the fact that he treats his present rights as if they were not his own—as indeed they are not."
  254. ^ Athenaeus, The Deipnosophists, 8.42: "And when he was asked again, according to the account given by Hegesander, which were the greatest barbarians, the Boeotians or the Thessalians, he said, 'the Eleans'.".
  255. ^ MacDowell 2009, 13: War and Defeat.
  256. ^ Isocrates. Philippus, 32–34 and 76–77; Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", pp. 159–160.
  257. ^ Isocrates. To Philip, 5.127: "Therefore, since the others are so lacking in spirit, I think it is opportune for you to head the war against the King; and, while it is only natural for the other descendants of Heracles, and for men who are under the bonds of their polities and laws, to cleave fondly to that state in which they happen to dwell, it is your privilege, as one who has been blessed with untrammelled freedom, to consider all Hellas your fatherland, as did the founder of your race, and to be as ready to brave perils for her sake as for the things about which you are personally most concerned."
  258. ^ Demosthenes, Philip's Letter to Athenians, Speeches, 12.6: "This is the most amazing exploit of all; for, before the king reduced Egypt and Phoenicia, you passed a decree calling on me to make common cause with the rest of the Greeks against him, in case he attempted to interfere with us".
  259. ^ Worthington 2003, Chapter 2: N.G.L. Hammond, "The Language of the Macedonians", p. 20.
  260. ^ Hall 2002, p. 165; Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", p. 169.
  261. ^ Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", p. 169.
  262. ^ Daskalakis 1965, pp. 12–13.
  263. ^ Hall 2002, p. 165.
  264. ^ Anson 2010, p. 15.
  265. ^ Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", p. 170.
  266. ^ a b Engels 2010, p. 84.
  267. ^ Herodotus. The Histories, 5.20.4.
  268. ^ Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", p. 171.
  269. ^ Herodotus. Histories, 1.56.2–3.
  270. ^ Herodotus. Histories, 8.43.
  271. ^ Hammond & Griffith 1972, pp. 429–430. Hammond states that Pelagonia might have been initially called Argestia.
  272. ^ Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", pp. 171–172.
  273. ^ a b Engels 2010, p. 85.
  274. ^ Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War, 4.124.1.
  275. ^ Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War, 4.125.1.
  276. ^ Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War, 4.126.3; Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", p. 160.
  277. ^ a b c Cosmopoulos 1992, p. 13
  278. ^ a b c Engels 2010, p. 88.
  279. ^ Strabo. Geography, Book 7, Fragment 9.
  280. ^ Strabo. Geography, 10.2.23.
  281. ^ Pausanias. Description of Greece, 10.8.2–4.
  282. ^ Pausanias. Description of Greece, 9.40.8–9: "The Macedonians say that Caranus, king of Macedonia, overcame in battle Cisseus, a chieftain in a bordering country. For his victory Caranus set up a trophy after the Argive fashion, but it is said to have been upset by a lion from Olympus, which then vanished. Caranus, they assert, realized that it was a mistaken policy to incur the undying hatred of the non-Greeks dwelling around, and so, they say, the rule was adopted that no king of Macedonia, neither Caranus himself nor any of his successors, should set up trophies, if they were ever to gain the good-will of their neighbors. This story is confirmed by the fact that Alexander set up no trophies, neither for his victory over Dareius nor for those he won in India."
  283. ^ Engels 2010, p. 87; Olbrycht 2010, pp. 343–344.
  284. ^ Isocrates. Philippos, 107–108; Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", p. 169.
  285. ^ Barr-Sharrar & Borza 1982, E. Badian, "Greeks and Macedonians", p. 34.
  286. ^ Aeschines. On the Embassy, 2.32.
  287. ^ Barr-Sharrar & Borza 1982, E. Badian, "Greeks and Macedonians", p. 43.
  288. ^ Asirvatham 2010, p. 104.
  289. ^ Diodorus Siculus. Historical Library, 17.3.
  290. ^ IG 2 448.58-50, SIG 317.6–19.
  291. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011b, pp. 69–70.
  292. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011b, pp. 68–69, 73.
  293. ^ Anson 2010, p. 18.
  294. ^ Polybius. Histories, 9.37.
  295. ^ Polybius. Histories, 9.35.
  296. ^ Polybius. Histories, 7.9.
  297. ^ Polybius. Histories, 18.4.8.
  298. ^ Livy. History of Rome, 31.29.15.
  299. ^ Arrian. Anabasis Alexandri, 1.16.7, 2.7.4, 2.14.4.
  300. ^ Strabo. Geography, 7.7.1.
  301. ^ Plutarch. Moralia: On the Fortune of Alexander, I, 329b.
  302. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011b, pp. 70–71.
  303. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011b, p. 74.
  304. ^ Darius I, DNa inscription, Line 29
  305. ^ Adams 2010, pp. 343–344
  306. ^ a b Engels 2010, p. 87.
  307. ^ Kinzl 2010, Robert Rollinger, "The Eastern Mediterranean and Beyond", p. 205.
  308. ^ Cosmopoulos 1992, p. 14
  309. ^ Worthington 2008.
  310. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011b, pp. 69–71.
  311. ^ Hatzopoulos 2011b, pp. 52, 71–72; Johannes Engels comes to a similar conclusion about the comparison between Macedonians and Epirotes, saying that the "Greekness" of the Epirotes, despite them not being considered as refined as southern Greeks, never came into question. Engels suggests this perhaps because the Epirotes did not try to dominate the Greek world as Philip II of Macedon had done. See: Engels 2010, pp. 83–84.
  312. ^ Sakellariou 1983, pp. 52.
  313. ^ Errington 1990, pp. 3–4.
  314. ^ Champion 2004, p. 41.
  315. ^ a b Danforth 1997, p. 169.
  316. ^ Barr-Sharrar & Borza 1982, E. Badian, "Greeks and Macedonians", p. 47.
  317. ^ Borza 1992, p. 96.
  318. ^ Badian, Wallace & Harris 1996, Peter Green, "The Metamorphosis of the Barbarian: Athenian Panhellenism in a Changing World", p. 24.
  319. ^ Isaac 2004, p. 113.
  320. ^ O'Neil 2003, pp. 510–522.
  321. ^ Sansone 2017, Chapter 11: "The Transformation of the Greek World in the Fourth Century" (Section: "Philip II of Macedon and the Conquest of Greece").
  322. ^ Malkin 2001, Chapter 6: Jonathan M. Hall, "Contested Ethnicities: Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity", p. 172.
  323. ^ Borza 1992, p. 306.
  324. ^ Borza 1992, p. 78.
  325. ^ Worthington 2014a, p. 10.
  326. ^ Anson 2010, pp. 14–17.
  327. ^ Filos, Panagiotis (2017). "The Dialectal Variety of Epirus". Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects. De Gruyter. p. 218. doi:10.1515/9783110532135-013. ISBN 978-3-11-053213-5. In general, the term ‘barbarian’ has often been used by Greek authors in a very broad sense referring not only to clearly non-Greek populations, but also to Greek populations on the fringe of the Greek world and/or with a particular linguistic character that may have partly arisen due to some substratum/adstratum interference (e.g Macedonia, Pamphylia).
  328. ^ Boardman, John; Griffin, Jasper; Murray, Oswyn, eds. (2001). The Oxford Illustrated History of Greece and the Hellenistic World. Oxford University Press. p. 148.
  329. ^ Polybius, Histories, 9.37.7: "τότε μὲν γὰρ ὑπὲρ ἡγεμονίας καὶ δόξης ἐφιλοτιμεῖσθε πρὸς Ἀχαιοὺς καὶ Μακεδόνας ὁμοφύλους καὶ τὸν τούτων ἡγεμόνα Φίλιππον."
  330. ^ Woodard 2010, pp. 9–10; Johannes Engels also discusses this ambiguity in ancient sources. See: Engels 2010, pp. 83–89.
  331. ^ King, Carol J. (28 July 2017). Ancient Macedonia. Routledge. ISBN 9780415827287. Allowing that there were living in ancient Macedonia throughout the Archaic, Classical, and Hellenistic periods people who were Greek, people who were akin to Greeks, and people who were not Greek, if one seeks historical truth about an ancient people who have left no definitive record, one may have to let go of the hope for a definitive answer. The ancient Greeks themselves differentiated between “Greeks” and “Macedonians,” and if the difference was not one of written language, then it ought to be constructive to consider what factors did differentiate the Macedonians—in the opinion of ancient Greeks.
  332. ^ Hornblower 2008, p. 58. "The question "Were the Macedonians Greeks?" perhaps needs to be chopped up further. The Macedonian kings emerge as Greeks by criterion one, namely shared blood, and personal names indicate that Macedonians generally moved north from Greece. The kings, the elite, and the generality of the Macedonians were Greeks by criteria two and three, that is, religion and language. Macedonian customs (criterion four) were in certain respects unlike those of a normal apart, perhaps, from the institutions which I have characterized as feudal. The crude one-word answer to the question has to be "yes."

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Further reading

  • Anson, Edward M. (1984). "The Meaning of the Term Macedones". Ancient World. 10: 67–68.
  • Baldry, H. C. (1959). Greek Literature for the Modern Reader. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Baracchi, Claudia, ed. (2014). The Bloomsbury Companion to Aristotle. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-4411-4854-4.
  • Buckley, Terry (2010). Aspects of Greek History: A Source-Based Approach. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-28184-7.
  • Castelnuovo, Luisa Moscati (2002). Identità e Prassi Storica nel Mediterraneo Greco. Milan, Italy: Et. ISBN 88-86752-20-2.
  • Crossland, R. A.; Birchall, Ann (1974). Bronze Age Migrations in the Aegean: Archaeological and Linguistic Problems in Greek Prehistory. Park Ridge, NJ: Noyes Press. ISBN 0-8155-5022-7.
  • Dunstan, William E. (2000). Ancient Greece. Fort Worth, Texas: Harcourt College Publishers. ISBN 0-15-507383-4.
  • Green, Peter (1992). Alexander of Macedon 356-323 B.C.: A Historical Biography. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-07166-2.
  • Hatzopoulos, Miltiades (2002). "Perception of the Self and the Other: The Case of Macedon". Proceedings of the Seventh International Symposion on Ancient Macedonia.
  • Pan-Montojo, Juan; Pedersen, Frederik, eds. (2007). Communities in European History: Representations, Jurisdictions, Conflicts. Pisa, Italy: Edizioni Plus – Pisa University Press. ISBN 978-88-8492-462-9.

External links

  • Ancient Macedonia at Livius Ancient History'
  • Demetrius C. Evangelides – "The Yaunã Takabara and the Ancient Macedonians"
  • Heracles to Alexander The Great: Treasures From The Royal Capital of Macedon, A Hellenic Kingdom in the Age of Democracy (Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology, University of Oxford)

ancient, macedonians, this, article, about, native, inhabitants, historical, kingdom, macedonia, modern, ethnic, greek, people, from, macedonia, greece, macedonians, greeks, other, uses, ancient, macedonian, disambiguation, macedonian, disambiguation, macedoni. This article is about the native inhabitants of the historical kingdom of Macedonia For the modern ethnic Greek people from Macedonia Greece see Macedonians Greeks For other uses see Ancient Macedonian disambiguation and Macedonian disambiguation The Macedonians Greek Makedones Makedones were an ancient tribe that lived on the alluvial plain around the rivers Haliacmon and lower Axios in the northeastern part of mainland Greece Essentially an ancient Greek people 1 they gradually expanded from their homeland along the Haliacmon valley on the northern edge of the Greek world absorbing or driving out neighbouring non Greek tribes primarily Thracian and Illyrian 2 3 They spoke Ancient Macedonian which was perhaps a sibling language to Ancient Greek note 1 but more commonly thought to have been a dialect of Northwest Doric Greek note 2 though some have also suggested an Aeolic Greek classification note 3 However the prestige language of the region during the Classical era was Attic Greek replaced by Koine Greek during the Hellenistic era 5 Their religious beliefs mirrored those of other Greeks following the main deities of the Greek pantheon although the Macedonians continued Archaic burial practices that had ceased in other parts of Greece after the 6th century BC Aside from the monarchy the core of Macedonian society was its nobility Similar to the aristocracy of neighboring Thessaly their wealth was largely built on herding horses and cattle Ancient MacedoniansMakedonesStag Hunt Mosaic 4th century BCLanguagesAncient Macedonian then Attic Greek and later Koine GreekReligionancient Greek religionAlthough composed of various clans the kingdom of Macedonia established around the 8th century BC is mostly associated with the Argead dynasty and the tribe named after it The dynasty was allegedly founded by Perdiccas I descendant of the legendary Temenus of Argos while the region of Macedon perhaps derived its name from Makedon a figure of Greek mythology Traditionally ruled by independent families the Macedonians seem to have accepted Argead rule by the time of Alexander I r 498 454 BC Under Philip II r 359 336 BC the Macedonians are credited with numerous military innovations which enlarged their territory and increased their control over other areas extending into Thrace This consolidation of territory allowed for the exploits of Alexander the Great r 336 323 BC the conquest of the Achaemenid Empire the establishment of the diadochi successor states and the inauguration of the Hellenistic period in West Asia Greece and the broader Mediterranean world The Macedonians were eventually conquered by the Roman Republic which dismantled the Macedonian monarchy at the end of the Third Macedonian War 171 168 BC and established the Roman province of Macedonia after the Fourth Macedonian War 150 148 BC Authors historians and statesmen of the ancient world often expressed ambiguous if not conflicting ideas about the ethnic identity of the Macedonians as either Greeks semi Greeks or even barbarians This has led to debate among modern academics about the precise ethnic identity of the Macedonians who nevertheless embraced many aspects of contemporaneous Greek culture such as participation in Greek religious cults and athletic games including the Ancient Olympic Games Given the scant linguistic evidence such as the Pella curse tablet ancient Macedonian is regarded by most scholars as another Greek dialect possibly related to Doric Greek or Northwestern Greek 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 The ancient Macedonians participated in the production and fostering of Classical and later Hellenistic art In terms of visual arts they produced frescoes mosaics sculptures and decorative metalwork The performing arts of music and Greek theatrical dramas were highly appreciated while famous playwrights such as Euripides came to live in Macedonia The kingdom also attracted the presence of renowned philosophers such as Aristotle while native Macedonians contributed to the field of ancient Greek literature especially Greek historiography Their sport and leisure activities included hunting foot races and chariot races as well as feasting and drinking at aristocratic banquets known as symposia Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins consolidation and expansion 2 1 Historical overview 2 2 Prehistoric homeland 2 3 Temenids and Argeads 2 4 Expansion from the core 2 5 Ethnogenesis scenario 3 Culture and society 3 1 Economy society and social class 3 2 Religion and funerary practices 3 3 Visual arts 3 4 Theatre music and performing arts 3 5 Literature education philosophy and patronage 3 6 Sports and leisure 3 7 Dining and cuisine 3 8 Language 4 Identity 4 1 Nature of sources 4 2 Ancient sources on the Argeads 4 3 Ancient sources on the Macedonian people 4 4 Modern discourse 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksEtymologyThe ethnonym Makedones Makedones stems from the Ancient Greek adjective makednos makednos meaning tall slim also the name of a people related to the Dorians Herodotus 25 It is most likely cognate with the adjective makros makros meaning long or tall in Ancient Greek 25 The name is believed to have originally meant either highlanders the tall ones or high grown men note 4 Origins consolidation and expansionFurther information History of Macedonia ancient kingdom and Demographic history of Macedonia Historical overview Further information Argead dynasty Antipatrid dynasty and Antigonid dynasty The expansion of ancient Macedon up to the death of Philip II of Macedon r 359 336 BC The expansion of the Macedonian kingdom has been described as a three stage process As a frontier kingdom on the border of the Greek world with barbarian Europe the Macedonians first subjugated their immediate northern neighbours various Illyrian and Thracian tribes before turning against the states of southern and central Greece Macedonia then led a pan Hellenic military force against their primary objective the conquest of Persia which they achieved with remarkable ease 26 27 28 29 Following the death of Alexander the Great and the Partition of Babylon in 323 BC the diadochi successor states such as the Attalid Ptolemaic and Seleucid Empires were established ushering in the Hellenistic period of Greece West Asia and the Hellenized Mediterranean Basin 30 With Alexander s conquest of the Achaemenid Empire Macedonians colonized territories as far east as Central Asia 31 The Macedonians continued to rule much of Hellenistic Greece 323 146 BC forming alliances with Greek leagues such as the Cretan League and Epirote League and prior to this the Kingdom of Epirus 32 However they often fell into conflict with the Achaean League Aetolian League the city state of Sparta and the Ptolemaic dynasty of Hellenistic Egypt that intervened in wars of the Aegean region and mainland Greece 33 After Macedonia formed an alliance with Hannibal of Ancient Carthage in 215 BC the rival Roman Republic responded by fighting a series of wars against Macedonia in conjunction with its Greek allies such as Pergamon and Rhodes 34 In the aftermath of the Third Macedonian War 171 168 BC the Romans abolished the Macedonian monarchy under Perseus of Macedon r 179 168 BC and replaced the kingdom with four client state republics 35 A brief revival of the monarchy by the pretender Andriscus led to the Fourth Macedonian War 150 148 BC after which Rome established the Roman province of Macedonia and subjugated the Macedonians 36 Prehistoric homeland The positions of the Balkan tribes prior to the Macedonian expansion according to Nicholas Hammond In Greek mythology Makedon is the eponymous hero of Macedonia and is mentioned in Hesiod s Catalogue of Women 37 The first historical attestation of the Macedonians occurs in the works of Herodotus during the mid 5th century BC 38 The Macedonians are absent in Homer s Catalogue of Ships and the term Macedonia itself appears late The Iliad states that upon leaving Mount Olympus Hera journeyed via Pieria and Emathia before reaching Athos 39 This is re iterated by Strabo in his Geography 40 Nevertheless archaeological evidence indicates that Mycenaean contact with or penetration into the Macedonian interior possibly started from the early 14th century BC 41 42 In his A History of Macedonia Nicholas Hammond reconstructed the earliest phases of Macedonian history based on his interpretation of later literary accounts and archaeological excavations in the region of Macedonia 43 According to Hammond the Macedonians are missing from early Macedonian historical accounts because they had been living in the Orestian highlands since before the Greek Dark Ages possibly having originated from the same proto Greek population pool that produced other Greek peoples 44 45 The Macedonian tribes subsequently moved down from Orestis in the upper Haliacmon to the Pierian highlands in the lower Haliacmon because of pressure from the Molossians a related tribe who had migrated to Orestis from Pelagonia 46 In their new Pierian home north of Olympus the Macedonian tribes mingled with the proto Dorians This might account for traditions which placed the eponymous founder Makedon near Pieria and Olympus 47 Some traditions placed the Dorian homeland in the Pindus mountain range in western Thessaly whilst Herodotus pushed this further north to the Macedonian Pindus and claimed that the Greeks were referred to as Makednon Makednon and then as Dorians 48 49 A different southern homeland theory also exists in traditional historiography Arnold J Toynbee asserted that the Makedones migrated north to Macedonia from central Greece placing the Dorian homeland in Phthiotis and citing the traditions of fraternity between Makedon and Magnes 50 Temenids and Argeads The Macedonian expansion is said to have been led by the ruling Temenid dynasty known as Argeads or Argives Herodotus said that Perdiccas the dynasty s founder was descended from the Heraclid Temenus 51 He left Argos with his two older brothers Aeropus and Gayanes and travelled via Illyria to Lebaea a city in Upper Macedonia which certain scholars have tried to connect with the villages Alebea or Velvedos 52 Here the brothers served as shepherds for a local ruler After a vision the brothers fled to another region in Macedonia near the Midas Gardens by the foot of the Vermio Mountains and then set about subjugating the rest of Macedonia 53 Thucydides s account is similar to that of Herodotus making it probable that the story was disseminated by the Macedonian court 54 i e it accounts for the belief the Macedonians had about the origin of their kingdom if not an actual memory of this beginning 55 Later historians modified the dynastic traditions by introducing variously Caranus 56 57 58 or Archelaus the son of Temenus as the founding Temenid kings although there is no doubt that Euripides transformed Caranus to Archelaus meaning leader of the people in his play Archelaus in an attempt to please Archelaus I of Macedon 59 The route of the Argeads from Argos Peloponnese to Macedonia The earliest sources Herodotus and Thucydides called the royal family Temenidae In later sources Strabo Appian Pausanias the term Argeadae was introduced However Appian said that the term Argeadae referred to a leading Macedonian tribe rather than the name of the ruling dynasty 60 61 The connection of the Argead name to the royal family is uncertain The words Argead and Argive derive via Latin Argivus 62 from Ancient Greek Ἀrgeῖos Argeios meaning of or from Argos 63 64 and is first attested in Homer where it was also used as a collective designation for the Greeks Ἀrgeiwn Danaῶn Argive Danaans 65 The most common connection to the royal family as written by Herodotus is with Peloponnesian Argos 66 Appian connects it with Orestian Argos 60 According to another tradition mentioned by Justin the name was adopted after Caranus moved Macedonia s capital from Edessa to Aegae thus appropriating the name of the city for its citizens 67 A figure Argeas is mentioned in the Iliad 16 417 61 Taking Herodotus s lineage account as the most trustworthy Appian said that after Perdiccas six successive heirs ruled Argeus Philip Aeropus Alcetas Amyntas and Alexander 68 Amyntas I r 547 498 BC ruled at the time of the Persian invasion of Paeonia and when Macedon became a vassal state of Achaemenid Persia 69 70 However Alexander I r 498 454 BC is the first truly historic figure Based on this line of succession and an estimated average rule of 25 to 30 years the beginnings of the Macedonian dynasty have thus been traditionally dated to 750 BC 61 71 Hammond supports the traditional view that the Temenidae did arrive from the Peloponnese and took charge of Macedonian leadership possibly usurping rule from a native Argead dynasty with Illyrian help 53 However other scholars doubt the veracity of their Peloponnesian origins For example Miltiades Hatzopoulos takes Appian s testimony to mean that the royal lineage imposed itself onto the tribes of the Middle Heliacmon from Argos Orestikon 52 whilst Eugene N Borza argues that the Argeads were a family of notables hailing from Vergina 72 Expansion from the core Further information Rise of Macedon and Colonies in antiquity Expulsion of the Pieres from the region of Olympus to the Pangaion Hills by the Macedonians Both Strabo and Thucydides said that Emathia and Pieria were mostly occupied by Thracians Pieres Paeonians and Bottiaeans as well as some Illyrian and Epirote tribes 73 Herodotus states that the Bryges were cohabitants with the Macedonians before their mass migration to Anatolia 74 If a group of ethnically definable Macedonian tribes were living in the Pierian highlands prior to their expansion the first conquest was of the Pierian piedmont and coastal plain including Vergina 75 The tribes may have launched their expansion from a base near Mount Bermion according to Herodotus 76 Thucydides describes the Macedonian expansion specifically as a process of conquest led by the Argeads 77 But the country along the sea which is now called Macedonia was first acquired and made a kingdom by Alexander I father of Perdiccas II and his forefathers who were originally Temenidae from Argos They defeated and expelled from Pieria the Pierians and also expelled the Bottiaeans from Bottiaea they acquired as well a narrow strip of Paeonia extending along the Axios river from the interior to Pella and the sea Beyond the Axios they possess the territory as far as the Strymon called Mygdonia having driven out the Edoni Moreover they expelled from the district now called Eordaea the Eordi The Macedonians also made themselves rulers of certain places namely Anthemus Grestonia and a large part of Macedonia proper 77 Regions of Mygdonia Edonia Bisaltia Crestonia and Bottiaea Thucydides s account gives a geographical overview of Macedonian possessions at the time of Alexander I s rule To reconstruct a chronology of the expansion by Alexander I s predecessors is more difficult but generally three stages have been proposed from Thucydides reading The initial and most important conquest was of Pieria and Bottiaea including the locations of Pydna and Dium The second stage consolidated rule in Pieria and Bottiaea captured Methone and Pella and extended rule over Eordaea and Almopia According to Hammond the third stage occurred after 550 BC when the Macedonians gained control over Mygdonia Edonis lower Paeonia Bisaltia and Crestonia 78 However the second stage might have occurred as late as 520 BC 79 and the third stage probably did not occur until after 479 BC when the Macedonians capitalized on the weakened Paeonian state after the Persian withdrawal from Macedon and the rest of their mainland European territories 80 Whatever the case Thucydides account of the Macedonian state describes its accumulated territorial extent by the rule of Perdiccas II Alexander I s son Hammond has said that the early stages of Macedonian expansion were militaristic subduing or expunging populations from a large and varied area 81 Pastoralism and highland living could not support a very concentrated settlement density forcing pastoralist tribes to search for more arable lowlands suitable for agriculture 82 Ethnogenesis scenario The entrance to the Great Tumulus Museum at Vergina Present day scholars have highlighted several inconsistencies in the traditionalist perspective first set in place by Hammond 83 An alternative model of state and ethnos formation promulgated by an alliance of regional elites which redates the creation of the Macedonian kingdom to the 6th century BC was proposed in 2010 84 According to these scholars direct literary archaeological and linguistic evidence to support Hammond s contention that a distinct Macedonian ethnos had existed in the Haliacmon valley since the Aegean civilizations is lacking Hammond s interpretation has been criticized as a conjectural reconstruction from what appears during later historical times 85 Similarly the historicity of migration conquest and population expulsion have also been questioned Thucydides s account of the forced expulsion of the Pierians and Bottiaeans could have been formed on the basis of his perceived similarity of names of the Pierians and Bottiaeans living in the Struma valley with the names of regions in Macedonia whereas his account of Eordean extermination was formulated because such toponymic correspondences are absent 80 Likewise the Argead conquest of Macedonia may be viewed as a commonly used literary topos in classical Macedonian rhetoric Tales of migration served to create complex genealogical connections between trans regional ruling elites while at the same time were used by the ruling dynasty to legitimize their rule heroicize mythical ancestors and distance themselves from their subjects 55 86 Conflict was a historical reality in the early Macedonian kingdom and pastoralist traditions allowed the potential for population mobility Greek archaeologists have found that some of the passes linking the Macedonian highlands with the valley regions have been used for thousands of years However the archaeological evidence does not point to any significant disruptions between the Iron Age and Hellenistic period in Macedonia The general continuity of material culture 87 settlement sites 88 and pre Greek onomasticon contradict the alleged ethnic cleansing account of early Macedonian expansion 89 An atrium with a pebble mosaic paving in Pella the Macedonian capital The process of state formation in Macedonia was similar to that of its neighbours in Epirus Illyria Thrace and Thessaly whereby regional elites could mobilize disparate communities for the purpose of organizing land and resources Local notables were often based in urban like settlements although contemporaneous historians often did not recognize them as poleis because they were not self ruled but under the rule of a king 90 From the mid 6th century there appears a series of exceptionally rich burials throughout the region in Trebenista Vergina Sindos Agia Paraskevi Pella Archontiko Aiani Gevgelija Amphipolis sharing a similar burial rite and grave accompaniments interpreted to represent the rise of a new regional ruling class sharing a common ideology customs and religious beliefs 84 A common geography mode of existence and defensive interests might have necessitated the creation of a political confederacy among otherwise ethno linguistically diverse communities which led to the consolidation of a new Macedonian ethnic identity 84 91 The traditional view that Macedonia was populated by rural ethnic groups in constant conflict is slowly changing bridging the cultural gap between southern Epirus and the north Aegean region Hatzopoulos s studies on Macedonian institutions have lent support to the hypothesis that Macedonian state formation occurred via an integration of regional elites which were based in city like centres including the Argeadae at Vergina the Paeonian Edonian peoples in Sindos Ichnae and Pella and the mixed Macedonian Barbarian colonies in the Thermaic Gulf and western Chalkidiki 92 The Temenidae became overall leaders of a new Macedonian state because of the diplomatic proficiency of Alexander I and the logistic centrality of Vergina itself It has been suggested that a breakdown in traditional Balkan tribal traditions associated with adaptation of Aegean socio political institutions created a climate of institutional flexibility in a vast resource rich land 93 Non Argead centres increasingly became dependent allies allowing the Argeads to gradually assert and secure their control over the lower and eastern territories of Macedonia 92 This control was fully consolidated by Phillip II r 359 336 BC 94 Culture and societyFurther information Culture of Greece The Golden Larnax at the Museum of Vergina which contains the remains Philip II of Macedon r 359 336 BC Macedonia had a distinct material culture by the Early Iron Age 95 Typically Balkan burial ornamental and ceramic forms were used for most of the Iron Age 95 These features suggest broad cultural affinities and organizational structures analogous with Thracian Epirote and Illyrian regions 96 97 This did not necessarily symbolize a shared cultural identity or any political allegiance between these regions 98 In the late sixth century BC Macedonia became open to south Greek influences although a small but detectable amount of interaction with the south had been present since late Mycenaean times 99 By the 5th century BC Macedonia was a part of the Greek cultural milieu according to Edward M Anson possessing many cultural traits typical of the southern Greek city states 100 Classical Greek objects and customs were appropriated selectively and used in peculiarly Macedonian ways 101 In addition influences from Achaemenid Persia in culture and economy are evident from the 5th century BC onward such as the inclusion of Persian grave goods at Macedonian burial sites as well as the adoption of royal customs such as a Persian style throne during the reign of Philip II 102 Economy society and social class Main articles Economy of ancient Greece and Government of Macedonia ancient kingdom Further information Slavery in ancient Greece Prostitution in ancient Greece and Pederasty in ancient Greece Macedonian coins and medallions depicting Alexander the Great and Philip II The way of life of the inhabitants of Upper Macedonia differed little from that of their neighbours in Epirus and Illyria engaging in seasonal transhumance supplemented by agriculture Young Macedonian men were typically expected to engage in hunting and martial combat as a byproduct of their transhumance lifestyles of herding livestock such as goats and sheep while horse breeding and raising cattle were other common pursuits 103 In these mountainous regions upland sites were important focal points for local communities In these difficult terrains competition for resources often precipitated intertribal conflict and raiding forays into the comparatively richer lowland settlements of coastal Macedonia and Thessaly 104 Despite the remoteness of the upper Macedonian highlands excavations at Aiani since 1983 have discovered finds attesting to the presence of social organization since the 2nd millennium BC The finds include the oldest pieces of black and white pottery which is characteristic of the tribes of northwest Greece discovered so far 105 Found with Mycenaean sherds they can be dated with certainty to the 14th century BC 105 106 107 The finds also include some of the oldest samples of writing in Macedonia among them inscriptions bearing Greek names like 8emida Themida The inscriptions demonstrate that Hellenism in Upper Macedonia was at a high economic artistic and cultural level by the sixth century BC overturning the notion that Upper Macedonia was culturally and socially isolated from the rest of ancient Greece 105 By contrast the alluvial plains of Lower Macedonia and Pelagonia which had a comparative abundance of natural resources such as timber and minerals favored the development of a native aristocracy with a wealth that at times surpassed the classical Greek poleis 108 Exploitation of minerals helped expedite the introduction of coinage in Macedonia from the 5th century BC developing under southern Greek Thracian and Persian influences 109 Some Macedonians engaged in farming often with irrigation land reclamation and horticulture activities supported by the Macedonian state 110 However the bedrock of the Macedonian economy and state finances was the twofold exploitation of the forests with logging and valuable minerals such as copper iron gold and silver with mining 111 The conversion of these raw materials into finished products and their sale encouraged the growth of urban centers and a gradual shift away from the traditional rustic Macedonian lifestyle during the course of the 5th century BC 112 Entrance to the tomb of Philip II of Macedon r 359 336 BC Macedonian society was dominated by aristocratic families whose main source of wealth and prestige was their herds of horses and cattle In this respect Macedonia was similar to Thessaly and Thrace 97 These aristocrats were second only to the king in terms of power and privilege filling the ranks of his administration and serving as commanding officers in the military 113 It was in the more bureaucratic regimes of the Hellenistic kingdoms succeeding Alexander the Great s empire where greater social mobility for members of society seeking to join the aristocracy could be found especially in Ptolemaic Egypt 114 In contrast with classical Greek poleis the Macedonians held only few slaves 115 116 Aristotle a philosopher from the Macedonian town of Stageira tutoring young Alexander in the Royal Palace of Pella The Macedonian Kings often sought the best education possible for their heirs Artwork by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris However unlike Thessaly Macedonia was ruled by a monarchy from its earliest history until the Roman conquest in 167 BC The nature of the kingship however remains debated One viewpoint sees it as an autocracy whereby the king held absolute power and was at the head of both government and society wielding arguably unlimited authority to handle affairs of state and public policy He was also the leader of a very personal regime with close relationships or connections to his hetairoi the core of the Macedonian aristocracy 117 Any other position of authority including the army was appointed at the whim of the king himself The other constitutionalist position argues that there was an evolution from a society of many minor kings each of equal authority to a sovereign military state whereby an army of citizen soldiers supported a central king against a rival class of nobility 118 Kingship was hereditary along the paternal line yet it is unclear if primogeniture was strictly observed as an established custom 119 During the Late Bronze Age circa 15th century BC the ancient Macedonians developed distinct matt painted wares that evolved from Middle Helladic pottery traditions originating in central and southern Greece 107 120 The Macedonians continued to use an individualized form of material culture albeit showing analogies in ceramic ornamental and burial forms with the so called Lausitz culture between 1200 and 900 BC and that of the Glasinac culture after circa 900 BC 121 While some of these influences persisted beyond the sixth century BC 87 122 a more ubiquitous presence of items of an Aegean Mediterranean character is seen from the latter sixth century BC 123 as Greece recovered from its Dark Ages Southern Greek impulses penetrated Macedonia via trade with north Aegean colonies such as Methone and those in the Chalcidice neighbouring Thessaly and from the Ionic colonies of Asia Minor Ionic influences were later supplanted by those of Athenian provenance Thus by the latter sixth century local elites could acquire exotic Aegean items such as Athenian red figure pottery fine tablewares olive oil and wine amphorae fine ceramic perfume flasks glass marble and precious metal ornaments all of which would serve as status symbols 124 By the 5th century BC these items became widespread in Macedonia and in much of the central Balkans 125 Macedonian settlements have a strong continuity dating from the Bronze Age maintaining traditional construction techniques for residential architecture While settlement numbers appeared to drop in central and southern Greece after 1000 BC there was a dramatic increase of settlements in Macedonia 126 These settlements seemed to have developed along raised promontories near river flood plains called tells Greek tymboi Their ruins are most commonly found in western Macedonia between Florina and Lake Vergoritis the upper and middle Haliacmon River and Bottiaea They can also be found on either side of the Axios and in the Chalcidice in eastern Macedonia 127 Religion and funerary practices Further information Ancient Greek religion Greek mythology Hellenistic religion Ancient Greek temple Greek hero cult Greco Roman mysteries Oracle of Delphi Lion of Amphipolis Lion of Chaeronea and Pella curse tablet Ancient Dion was a centre of the worship of Zeus and the most important spiritual sanctuary of the ancient Macedonians The Lion of Amphipolis in Amphipolis northern Greece a 4th century BC marble tomb sculpture 128 erected in honor of Laomedon of Mytilene a general who served under Alexander the Great By the 5th century BC the Macedonians and the rest of the Greeks worshiped more or less the same deities of the Greek pantheon 129 In Macedonia politics and religion often intertwined For instance the head of state for the city of Amphipolis also served as the priest of Asklepios Greek god of medicine a similar arrangement existed at Cassandreia where a cult priest honoring the city s founder Cassander was the nominal municipal leader 130 Foreign cults from Egypt were fostered by the royal court such as the temple of Sarapis at Thessaloniki while Macedonian kings Philip III of Macedon and Alexander IV of Macedon made votive offerings to the internationally esteemed Samothrace temple complex of the Cabeiri mystery cult 131 This was also the same location where Perseus of Macedon fled and received sanctuary following his defeat by the Romans at the Battle of Pydna in 168 BC 132 The main sanctuary of Zeus was maintained at Dion while another at Veria was dedicated to Herakles and received particularly strong patronage from Demetrius II Aetolicus r 239 229 BC when he intervened in the affairs of the municipal government at the behest of the cult s main priest 131 The ancient Macedonians worshipped the Twelve Olympians especially Zeus Artemis Heracles and Dionysus Evidence of this worship exists from the beginning of the 4th century BC onwards but little evidence of Macedonian religious practices from earlier times exists 133 From an early period Zeus was the single most important deity in the Macedonian pantheon 133 Makedon the mythical ancestor of the Macedonians was held to be a son of Zeus and Zeus features prominently in Macedonian coinage 133 The most important centre of worship of Zeus was at Dion in Pieria the spiritual centre of the Macedonians where beginning in 400 BC King Archelaus established an annual festival which in honour of Zeus featured lavish sacrifices and athletic contests 133 Worship of Zeus s son Heracles was also prominent coins featuring Heracles appear from the 5th century BC onwards 133 This was in large part because the Argead kings of Macedon traced their lineage to Heracles making sacrifices to him in the Macedonian capitals of Vergina and Pella 133 Numerous votive reliefs and dedications also attest to the importance of the worship of Artemis 134 Artemis was often depicted as a huntress and served as a tutelary goddess for young girls entering the coming of age process much as Heracles Kynagidas Hunter did for young men who had completed it 134 By contrast some deities popular elsewhere in the Greek world notably Poseidon and Hephaestus were largely ignored by the Macedonians 133 Other deities worshipped by the ancient Macedonians were part of a local pantheon which included Thaulos god of war equated with Ares Gyga later equated with Athena Gozoria goddess of hunting equated with Artemis Zeirene goddess of love equated with Aphrodite and Xandos god of light 135 A notable influence on Macedonian religious life and worship was neighbouring Thessaly the two regions shared many similar cultural institutions 136 The Macedonians also worshiped non Greek gods such as the Thracian horseman Orpheus and Bendis and other figures from Paleo Balkan mythology citation needed They were tolerant of and open to incorporating foreign religious influences such as the sun worship of the Paeonians 3 By the 4th century BC there had been a significant fusion of Macedonian and common Greek religious identity 137 but Macedonia was nevertheless characterized by an unusually diverse religious life 3 This diversity extended to the belief in magic as evidenced by curse tablets It was a significant but secret aspect of Greek cultural practice 138 Hades abducting Persephone fresco in the small Macedonian royal tomb at Vergina Macedonia Greece c 340 BC A notable feature of Macedonian culture was the ostentatious burials reserved for its rulers 139 The Macedonian elite built lavish tombs at the time of death rather than constructing temples during life 139 Such traditions had been practiced throughout Greece and the central west Balkans since the Bronze Age Macedonian burials contain items similar to those at Mycenae such as burial with weapons gold death masks etc 101 From the sixth century Macedonian burials became particularly lavish displaying a rich variety of Greek imports reflecting the incorporation of Macedonia into a wider economic and political network centred on the Aegean city states Burials contained jewellery and ornaments of unprecedented wealth and artistic style This zenith of Macedonian warrior burial style closely parallels those of sites in south central Illyria and western Thrace creating a koinon of elite burials 140 Lavish warrior burials had been discontinued in southern and central Greece from the seventh century onwards where offerings at sanctuaries and the erection of temples became the norm 141 From the sixth century BC cremation replaced the traditional inhumation rite for elite Macedonians 84 One of the most lavish tombs dating from the 4th century BC believed to be that of Phillip II is at Vergina It contains extravagant grave goods highly sophisticated artwork depicting hunting scenes and Greek cultic figures and a vast array of weaponry 142 This demonstrates a continuing tradition of the warrior society rather than a focus on religious piety and technology of the intellect which had become paramount facets of central Greek society in the Classical Period 141 In the three royal tombs at Vergina professional painters decorated the walls with a mythological scene of Hades abducting Persephone Tomb 1 and royal hunting scenes Tomb 2 while lavish grave goods including weapons armor drinking vessels and personal items were housed with the dead whose bones were burned before burial in decorated gold coffins 143 Some grave goods and decorations were common in other Macedonian tombs yet some items found at Vergina were distinctly tied to royalty including a diadem luxurious goods and arms and armor 144 Scholars have debated about the identity of the tomb occupants since the discovery of their remains in 1977 1978 145 yet recent research and forensic examination have concluded with certainty that at least one of the persons buried was Philip II Tomb 2 146 Located near Tomb 1 are the above ground ruins of a heroon a shrine for cult worship of the dead 147 In 2014 the ancient Macedonian Kasta Tomb the largest ancient tomb found in Greece as of 2017 was discovered outside of Amphipolis a city that was incorporated into the Macedonian realm after its capture by Philip II in 357 BC 148 149 150 The identity of the tomb s occupant is unknown but archaeologists have speculated that it may be Alexander s close friend Hephaestion 151 The deification of Macedonian monarchs perhaps began with the death of Philip II yet it was his son Alexander the Great who unambiguously claimed to be a living god 152 As pharaoh of the Egyptians he was already entitled as Son of Ra and considered the living incarnation of Horus by his Egyptian subjects a belief that the Ptolemaic successors of Alexander would foster for their own dynasty in Egypt 153 However following his visit to the oracle of Didyma in 334 BC that suggested his divinity he traveled to the Oracle of Zeus Ammon the Greek equivalent of the Egyptian Amun Ra at the Siwa Oasis of the Libyan Desert in 332 BC to confirm his divine status 154 After the priest there convinced him that Philip II was merely his mortal father and Zeus his actual father Alexander began styling himself as the Son of Zeus which brought him into contention with some of his Greek subjects who adamantly believed that living men could not be immortals 155 Although the Seleucid and Ptolemaic diadochi successor states cultivated their own ancestral cults and deification of the rulers as part of state ideology a similar cult did not exist in the Kingdom of Macedonia 156 Visual arts Main article Ancient Greek art Further information Hellenistic art Music in ancient Greece Pottery of ancient Greece and Ancient Greek sculpture Left Fresco of a Macedonian soldier resting a spear and wearing a cap from the tomb of Agios Athanasios Thessaloniki 4th century BC Right Fresco from the Tomb of Judgement in ancient Mieza modern day Lefkadia Imathia Central Macedonia Greece depicting religious imagery of the afterlife 4th century BC By the reign of Archelaus I of Macedon the Macedonian elite started importing significantly greater customs artwork and art traditions from other regions of Greece However they still retained more archaic perhaps Homeric funerary rites connected with the symposium and drinking rites that were typified with items such as decorative metal kraters that held the ashes of deceased Macedonian nobility in their tombs 157 Among these is the large bronze Derveni Krater from a 4th century BC tomb of Thessaloniki decorated with scenes of the Greek god Dionysus and his entourage and belonging to an aristocrat who had a military career 158 Macedonian metalwork usually followed Athenian styles of vase shapes from the 6th century BC onward with drinking vessels jewellery containers crowns diadems and coins among the many metal objects found in Macedonian tombs 159 Surviving Macedonian painted artwork includes frescoes and murals on walls but also decoration on sculpted artwork such as statues and reliefs For instance trace colors still exist on the bas reliefs of the Alexander Sarcophagus 160 Macedonian paintings have allowed historians to investigate the clothing fashions as well as military gear worn by ancient Macedonians such as the brightly colored tomb paintings of Agios Athanasios Thessaloniki showing figures wearing headgear ranging from feathered helmets to kausia and petasos caps 161 Alexander left wearing a kausia and fighting an Asiatic lion with his friend Craterus late 4th century BC mosaic 162 Archaeological Museum of Pella Macedonia Aside from metalwork and painting mosaics serve as another significant form of surviving Macedonian artwork especially those discovered at Pella dating to the 4th century BC 159 The Stag Hunt Mosaic of Pella with its three dimensional qualities and illusionist style show clear influence from painted artwork and wider Hellenistic art trends although the rustic theme of hunting was tailored for Macedonian tastes 163 The similar Lion Hunt Mosaic of Pella illustrates either a scene of Alexander the Great with his companion Craterus or simply a conventional illustration of the generic royal diversion of hunting 163 Mosaics with mythological themes include scenes of Dionysus riding a panther and Helen of Troy being abducted by Theseus the latter of which employs illusionist qualities and realistic shading similar to Macedonian paintings 163 Common themes of Macedonian paintings and mosaics include warfare hunting and aggressive masculine sexuality i e abduction of women for rape or marriage In some instances these themes are combined within the same work indicating a metaphorical connection that seems to be affirmed by later Byzantine Greek literature 164 Theatre music and performing arts Further information Theatre in ancient Greece and Music in ancient Greece Philip II was assassinated by his bodyguard Pausanias of Orestis in 336 BC at the theatre of Aigai Macedonia amid games and spectacles held inside that celebrated the marriage of his daughter Cleopatra of Macedon 165 Alexander the Great was allegedly a great admirer of both theatre and music 166 He was especially fond of the plays by Classical Athenian tragedians Aeschylus Sophocles and Euripides whose works formed part of a proper Greek education for his new eastern subjects alongside studies in the Greek language and epics of Homer 167 While he and his army were stationed at Tyre in modern day Lebanon Alexander had his generals act as judges not only for athletic contests but also stage performances of Greek tragedies 168 The contemporaneous famous actors Thessalus and Athenodorus performed at the event despite Athenodorus risking a fine for being absent from the simultaneous Dionysia festival of Athens where he was scheduled to perform a fine that his patron Alexander agreed to pay 169 Music was also appreciated in Macedonia In addition to the agora the gymnasium the theatre and religious sanctuaries and temples dedicated to Greek gods and goddesses one of the main markers of a true Greek city in the empire of Alexander the Great was the presence of an odeon for musical performances 170 This was the case not only for Alexandria in Egypt but also cities as distant as Ai Khanoum in what is now modern day Afghanistan 170 Literature education philosophy and patronage Further information Literature in ancient Greece Education in ancient Greece Philosophy in ancient Greece Ancient Greek medicine and Ancient Macedonian calendar Portrait bust of Aristotle an Imperial Roman 1st or 2nd century AD copy of a lost bronze sculpture made by Lysippos Perdiccas II of Macedon was able to host well known Classical Greek intellectual visitors at his royal court such as the lyric poet Melanippides and the renowned medical doctor Hippocrates while Pindar s enkomion written for Alexander I of Macedon may have been composed at his court 171 Yet Archelaus I of Macedon received a far greater number of Greek scholars artists and celebrities at his court than his predecessors leading M B Hatzopoulos to describe Macedonia under his reign as an active centre of Hellenic culture 172 His honored guests included the painter Zeuxis the architect Callimachus the poets Choerilus of Samos Timotheus of Miletus and Agathon as well as the famous Athenian playwright Euripides 173 Although Archelaus was criticized by the philosopher Plato supposedly hated by Socrates and the first known Macedonian king to be insulted with the label of a barbarian the historian Thucydides held the Macedonian king in glowing admiration for his accomplishments including his engagement in panhellenic sports and fostering of literary culture 174 The philosopher Aristotle who studied at the Platonic Academy of Athens and established the Aristotelian school of thought moved to Macedonia and is said to have tutored the young Alexander the Great in addition to serving as an esteemed diplomat for Alexander s father Philip II 175 Among Alexander s retinue of artists writers and philosophers was Pyrrho of Elis founder of Pyrrhonism the school of philosophical skepticism 167 During the Antigonid period Antigonos Gonatas fostered cordial relationships with Menedemos of Eretria founder of the Eretrian school of philosophy and Zenon the founder of Stoicism 166 In terms of early Greek historiography and later Roman historiography Felix Jacoby identified thirteen possible ancient historians who wrote histories about Macedonia in his Fragmente der griechischen Historiker 176 Aside from accounts in the works of Herodotus and Thucydides the works compiled by Jacoby are only fragmentary whereas other works are completely lost such as the history of an Illyrian war fought by Perdiccas III of Macedon written by the Macedonian general and statesman Antipater 177 The Macedonian historians Marsyas of Pella and Marsyas of Philippi wrote histories of Macedonia while the Ptolemaic king Ptolemy I Soter authored a history about Alexander and Hieronymus of Cardia wrote a history about Alexander s royal successors 178 Following the Indian campaign of Alexander the Great the Macedonian military officer Nearchus wrote a work of his voyage from the mouth of the Indus river to the Persian Gulf 179 The Macedonian historian Craterus published a compilation of decrees made by the popular assembly of the Athenian democracy ostensibly while attending the school of Aristotle 179 Philip V of Macedon had manuscripts of the history of Philip II written by Theopompus gathered by his court scholars and disseminated with further copies 166 Sports and leisure Further information History of sport Ancient Greece Gymnasium ancient Greece Ancient Olympic Games and Music in ancient Greece A fresco showing Hades and Persephone riding in a chariot from the tomb of Queen Eurydice I of Macedon at Vergina Greece 4th century BC When Alexander I of Macedon petitioned to compete in the foot race of the ancient Olympic Games the event organizers at first denied his request explaining that only Greeks were allowed to compete However Alexander I produced proof of an Argead royal genealogy showing ancient Argive Temenid lineage a move that ultimately convinced the Olympic Hellanodikai authorities of his Greek descent and ability to compete although this did not necessarily apply to common Macedonians outside of his royal dynasty 180 By the end of the 5th century BC the Macedonian king Archelaus I was crowned with the olive wreath at both Olympia and Delphi in the Pythian Games for winning chariot racing contests 174 Philip II allegedly heard of the Olympic victory of his horse in either an individual horse race or chariot race on the same day his son Alexander the Great was born on either 19 or 20 July 356 BC 181 In addition to literary contests Alexander the Great also staged competitions for music and athletics across his empire 167 The Macedonians created their own athletic games and after the late 4th century BC non royal Macedonians competed and became victors in the Olympic Games 100 and other athletic events such as the Argive Heraean Games However athletics were a less favored pastime compared to hunting 182 Dining and cuisine Further information Ancient Greek cuisine and Wine in ancient Greece A banquet scene from a Macedonian tomb of Agios Athanasios Thessaloniki 4th century BC six men are shown reclining on couches with food arranged on nearby tables a male servant in attendance and female musicians providing entertainment 183 Ancient Macedonia produced very few fine foods or beverages that were highly appreciated elsewhere in the Greek world namely eels from the Strymonian Gulf and special wine brewed in Chalcidice 184 The earliest known use of flat bread as a plate for meat was made in Macedonia during the 3rd century BC which perhaps influenced the later trencher bread of medieval Europe if not Greek pita and Italian pizza 184 Cattle and goats were consumed although there was no notice of Macedonian mountain cheeses in literature until the Middle Ages 184 As exemplified by works such as the plays by the comedic playwright Menander Macedonian dining habits penetrated Athenian high society for instance the introduction of meats into the dessert course of a meal 185 The Macedonians also most likely introduced mattye to Athenian cuisine a dish usually made of chicken or other spiced salted and sauced meats served during the wine course 186 This particular dish was derided and connected with licentiousness and drunkenness in a play by the Athenian comic poet Alexis about the declining morals of Athenians in the age of Demetrius I of Macedon 187 The symposium plural symposia in the Macedonian and wider Greek realm was a banquet for the nobility and privileged class an occasion for feasting drinking entertainment and sometimes philosophical discussion 188 The hetairoi leading members of the Macedonian aristocracy were expected to attend such feasts with their king 113 They were also expected to accompany him on royal hunts for the acquisition of game meat as well as for sport 113 Symposia had several functions amongst which was providing relief from the hardship of battle and marching Symposia were Greek traditions since Homeric times providing a venue for interaction amongst Macedonian elites An ethos of egalitarianism surrounded symposia allowing all male elites to express ideas and concerns although built up rivalries and excessive drinking often led to quarrels fighting and even murder The degree of extravagance and propensity for violence set Macedonian symposia apart from classical Greek symposia 189 Like symposia hunting was another focus of elite activity and it remained popular throughout Macedonia s history Young men participating in symposia were only allowed to recline after having killed their first wild boar 190 Language Main article Ancient Macedonian language The Pella curse tablet Greek katadesmos from Prof Radcliffe G Edmonds III Bryn Mawr College For administrative and political purposes Attic Greek seems to have operated as a lingua franca among the ethno linguistically diverse communities of Macedonia and the north Aegean region creating a diglossic linguistic area 191 Attic Greek was standardized as the language of the court formal discourse and diplomacy from as early as the time of Archelaus at the end of the 5th century BC 192 Attic was further spread by Macedonia s conquests 193 Although Macedonian continued to be spoken well into Antigonid times 194 it became the prevalent oral dialect in Macedonia and throughout the Macedonian ruled Hellenistic world 195 However Macedonian became extinct in either the Hellenistic or the Roman period and entirely replaced by Koine Greek 196 For instance Cleopatra VII Philopator the last active ruler of the Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt spoke Koine Greek as a first language and by her reign 51 30 BC or some time before it the Macedonian language was no longer used 197 Attempts to classify Ancient Macedonian are hindered by the lack of surviving Ancient Macedonian texts it was a mainly oral language and most archaeological inscriptions indicate that in Macedonia there was no dominant written language besides Attic and later Koine Greek 196 All surviving epigraphical evidence from grave markers and public inscriptions is in Greek 198 Classification attempts are based on a vocabulary of 150 200 words and 200 personal names assembled mainly from the 5th century lexicon of Hesychius of Alexandria and a few surviving fragmentary inscriptions coins and occasional passages in ancient sources 196 Most of the vocabulary is regular Greek with tendencies toward Doric Greek and Aeolic Greek There can be found some Illyrian and Thracian elements 196 199 The Pella curse tablet which was found in 1986 at Pella and dates to the mid 4th century BC or slightly earlier 200 is believed to be the only substantial attested text in Macedonian The language of the tablet is a distinctly recognizable form of Northwest Greek The tablet has been used to support the argument that ancient Macedonian was a Northwest Greek dialect and mainly a Doric Greek dialect 201 202 203 13 204 11 Hatzopoulos s analysis revealed some tendencies toward the Aeolic Greek dialect 199 Hatzopoulos also states that the native language of the ancient Macedonians also betrays a slight phonetic influence from the languages of the original inhabitants of the region who were assimilated or expelled by the invading Macedonians 205 He also asserts that little is known about the languages of these original inhabitants aside from Phrygian spoken by the Bryges who migrated to Anatolia 205 Hatzopoulos has suggested that the Macedonian dialect of the 4th century BC as attested in the Pella curse tablet was a sort of Macedonian koine resulting from the encounter of the idiom of the Aeolic speaking populations around Mount Olympus and the Pierian Mountains whose phonetics had been influenced by a non Greek possibly Phrygian or Pelasgian adstratum with the Northwest Greek speaking Argead Macedonians hailing from Argos Orestikon who founded the kingdom of Lower Macedonia 206 However according to Hatzopoulos B Helly expanded and improved his own earlier suggestion and presented the hypothesis of a North Achaean substratum extending as far north as the head of the Thermaic Gulf which had a continuous relation in prehistoric times both in Thessaly and Macedonia with the Northwest Greek speaking populations living on the other side of the Pindus mountain range and contacts became cohabitation when the Argead Macedonians completed their wandering from Orestis to Lower Macedonia in the 7th c BC 206 According to this hypothesis Hatzopoulos concludes that the Macedonian dialect of the historical period which is attested in inscriptions is a sort of koine resulting from the interaction and the influences of various elements the most important of which are the North Achaean substratum the Northwest Greek idiom of the Argead Macedonians and the Thracian and Phrygian adstrata 206 An ancient Macedonian funerary stele with an epigram written at the top mid 4th century B C Vergina Macedonia Greece In Macedonian onomastics most personal names are recognizably Greek e g Alexandros Philippos Dionysios Apollonios Demetrios with some dating back to Homeric e g Ptolemaeos or Mycenean times and there are also a few non Greek names Illyrian or Thracian e g Bithys This material supports the observation that Macedonian personal names have a predominantly Greek character 196 Macedonian toponyms and hydronyms are mostly of Greek origin e g Aegae Dion Pieria Haliacmon as are the names of the months of the Macedonian calendar and the names of most of the deities the Macedonians worshiped Hammond states that these are not late borrowings 207 Macedonian has a close structural and lexical affinity with other Greek dialects especially Northwest Greek and Thessalian 208 209 210 Most of the words are Greek although some of these could represent loans or cognate forms 211 212 Alternatively a number of phonological lexical and onomastic features set Macedonian apart 212 213 These latter features possibly representing traces of a substrate language occur in what are considered to be particularly conservative systems of the language 214 Several hypotheses have consequently been proposed as to the position of Macedonian all of which broadly regard it as either a peripheral Greek dialect a closely related but separate language see Hellenic languages 212 215 216 or a hybridized idiom incorporating Brygian Northwest Greek and Thessalian Greek 217 218 Drawing on the similarities between Macedonian Greek and Brygian Fanula Papazoglu wrote that she formed an Indo European macro dialectical group 219 which according to Georgiev split before circa 14th 13th century BC before the appearance of the main Greek dialects 220 The same data has been analyzed in an alternative manner which regards the formation of the main Greek dialects as a later convergence of related but distinct groups According to this theory Macedonian did not fully participate in this process making its ultimate position other than being a contiguous related minor language difficult to define 221 Hatzopoulos who offers a critical review of recent research on Macedonian speech argues that all available evidence points to the conclusion that Macedonian is a Greek dialect of the North West group 222 Another source of evidence is metalinguistics and the question of mutual intelligibility The available literary evidence has no details about the exact nature of Macedonian however it suggests that Macedonian and Greek were sufficiently different that there were communication difficulties between Greek and Macedonian contingents necessitating the use of interpreters as late as the time of Alexander the Great 223 224 225 Based on this evidence Papazoglou has written that Macedonian could not have been a Greek dialect 226 however evidence for non intelligibility exists for other ancient Greek dialects such as Aetolian 227 and Aeolic Greek 228 Hornblower suggests that Greeks were intelligible to Macedonians without an interpreter 229 Moreover according to the Athenian orator Aeschines 230 Livy wrote that when Aemilius Paulus called together representatives of the defeated Macedonian communities his Latin pronouncements were translated for the benefit of the assembled Macedonians into Greek 231 According to Hatzopoulos the sole direct attestation of Macedonian speech preserved in an ancient author is a verse in a non Attic Greek dialect that the 4th century BC Athenian poet Strattis in his comedy The Macedonians places a character presumably Macedonian to give as an answer to the question of an Athenian ἡ sfyraina d ἐstὶ tis the sphyraena what s that kestran mὲn ὔmmes ὡtikkoi kiklhskete it s what ye in Attica dub cestra 232 Georgios Giannakis writes that recent scholarship has established the position of ancient Macedonian within the dialect map of North West Greek 222 Identity The Vergina Sun has been proposed as a symbol of ancient Macedonia or of the Argead dynasty by archeologists See also Macedonia terminology Macedonians Greeks Ethnography and Cultural anthropology Nature of sources Further information Greek historiography Most ancient sources on the Macedonians come from outside Macedonia 176 According to Eugene N Borza most of these sources are either ill informed hostile or both making the Macedonians one of the silent peoples of the ancient Mediterranean 233 Ernst Badian notes that nearly all surviving references to antagonisms and differences between Greeks and Macedonians exist in the written speeches of Arrian who lived during a period i e the Roman Empire in which any notion of an ethnic disparity between Macedonians and other Greeks was incomprehensible 234 Most of the literary evidence comes from later sources focusing on the campaigns of Alexander the Great rather than on Macedonia itself Most contemporaneous evidence on Philip is Athenian and hostile 235 Moreover most ancient sources focus on the deeds of Macedonian kings in connection with political and military events such as the Peloponnesian War Evidence about the ethnic identity of Macedonians of lower social status from the Archaic to the Hellenistic period is highly fragmentary and unsatisfactory 236 For information about Macedonia before Philip historians must rely on archaeological inscriptions and material remains a few fragments from historians whose work is now lost occasional passing mentions in Herodotus and Thucydides and universal histories from the Roman era 235 Ancient sources on the Argeads The god Dionysos riding a cheetah mosaic floor in the House of Dionysos at Pella Greece c 330 300 BC In Homer the term Argead was used as a collective designation for the Greeks Ἀrgeiwn Danaῶn Argive Danaans 65 237 The earliest version of the Temenid foundation myth was circulated by Alexander I via Herodotus during his apparent appearance at the Olympic Games 238 Despite protests from some competitors the Hellanodikai Judges of the Greeks accepted Alexander s Greek genealogy as did Herodotus and later Thucydides In accepting his Greek credentials the judges were either moved by the evidence or did so out of political considerations as a reward for services to Hellas The historicity of Alexander I s participation in the Olympics has been doubted by some scholars who see the story as a piece of propaganda engineered by the Argeads and spread by Herodotus Alexander s name does not appear in any list of Olympic victors 239 That there were protests from other competitors suggests that the supposed Argive genealogy of the Argeads was far from mainstream knowledge 240 According to some the appellation Philhellene was surely not an appellation that could be given to an actual Greek 240 241 however the term philhellene fond of the Greeks was also used as a title for Greek patriots 242 243 Whatever the case according to Hall what mattered was that Alexander had played the genealogical game a la grecque and played it well perhaps even excessively 244 The emphasis on the Heraclean ancestry of the Argeads served to heroicize the royal family and to provide a sacred genealogy which established a divine right to rule over their subjects 245 The Macedonian royal family like those of Epirus emphasized blood and kinship in order to construct for themselves a heroic genealogy that sometimes also functioned as a Hellenic genealogy 246 Gold Macedonian stater of Alexander the Great struck at the Memphis mint dated c 332 323 BC Obv Goddess Athena wearing Corinthian helmet Rev Goddess Nike standing Pre Hellenistic Greek writers expressed an ambiguity about the Greekness of Macedonians specifically their monarchic institutions and their background of Persian alliance often portraying them as a potential barbarian threat to Greece 247 For example the late 5th century sophist Thrasymachus of Chalcedon wrote we Greeks are enslaved to the barbarian Archelaus Fragment 2 248 This fragment is an adaptation of a verse from Euripides tragedy Telephos which was destined to become a stock expression Hatzopoulos states that given the fragment s conventional character it can hardly be taken literally as ethnological or linguistic evidence 249 The issue of Macedonian Hellenicity and that of their royal house was particularly pertinent in the 4th century BC regarding the politics of invading Persia Demosthenes regarded Macedonia s monarchy to be incongruous with an Athenian led Pan Hellenic alliance He castigated Philip II for being not only no Greek nor related to the Greeks but not even a barbarian from any place that can be named with honor but a pestilent knave from Macedonia whence it was never yet possible to buy a decent slave 250 This was obvious political slander and is regarded as an insulting speech 251 but the orator clearly could not do this if his audience was likely to regard his claim as nonsense it could not be said of a Theban or even a Thessalian 252 however he also calls Meidias an Athenian statesman barbarian 253 and in an event mentioned by Athenaeus the Boeotians the Thessalians and the Eleans were labeled barbarians 254 Demosthenes regarded only those who had reached the cultural standards of southern Greece as Greek and he did not take ethnological criteria into consideration 255 and his corpus is considered by Eugene N Borza as an oratory designed to sway public opinion at Athens and thereby to formulate public policy 233 Isocrates believed that only Macedonia was capable of leading a war against Persia he felt compelled to say that Phillip was a bona fide Hellene by discussing his Argead and Heraclean heritage 256 257 Moreover Philip in his letter to the council and people of Athens mentioned by Demosthenes places himself with the rest of the Greeks 258 Ancient sources on the Macedonian people Ancient frescos of Macedonian soldiers from the tomb of Agios Athanasios Thessaloniki Greece 4th century BC The earliest reference about Greek attitudes towards the Macedonian ethnos as a whole comes from Hesiod s Catalogue of Women The text maintains that the Macedonians descended from Makedon son of Zeus and Thyia daughter of Deucalion and was therefore a nephew of Hellen progenitor of the Greeks 37 Magnes brother of the eponymous Makedon was also said to be a son of Zeus and Thyia 47 The Magnetes descendants of Magnes were an Aeolian tribe according to Hammond this places the Macedonians among the Greeks 259 Engels also wrote that Hesiod counted the Macedonians as Greeks while Hall said that according to strict genealogical logic this excludes the population that bears Makedon s name from the ranks of the Hellenes 260 Two later writers deny Makedon a lineage from Hellen Apollodorus 3 8 1 makes him a son of Lycaon son of earth born Pelasgus whilst Pseudo Scymnos 6 22 makes him born directly from the earth 261 Apollodorus 3 8 1 however is technically identifying Makedon with the Greek royalty of Arcadia thus placing Macedonia within the orbit of the most archaic of Greek myths 262 At the end of the 5th century BC Hellanicus of Lesbos asserted Macedon was the son of Aeolus the latter a son of Hellen and ancestor of the Aeolians one of the major tribes of the Greeks 37 Hellanicus modified Hesiod s genealogy by making Makedon the son of Aeolus firmly placing the Macedonians in the Aeolic Greek speaking family 263 In addition to belonging to tribal groups such as the Aeolians Dorians Achaeans and Ionians Anson also stresses the fact that some Greeks even distinguished their ethnic identities based on the polis i e city state they originally came from 264 These early writers and their formulation of genealogical relationships demonstrate that before the 5th century Greekness was defined on an ethnic basis and was legitimized by tracing descent from eponymous Hellen 265 Subsequently cultural considerations assumed greater importance Fresco of an ancient Makedonian soldier thorakitai wearing chainmail armor and bearing a thureos shield 3rd century BC Thucydides and Herodotus regarded the Macedonians as either northern Greeks barbarians or an intermediate group between pure Greeks and barbarians 266 In the Histories 5 20 4 Herodotus calls king Alexander I an aner Hellen Makedonōn huparchos or a Greek who ruled over Macedonians 267 In 7 130 3 he says that the Thessalians were the first of the Greeks to submit to Xerxes 268 In the first book of the Histories Herodotus recalls a reliable tradition according to which the Greek ethnos in its wandering was called Macedonian when it settled around Pindus and Dorian when it came to the Peloponnese 269 and in the eighth book he groups several Greek tribes under Macedonians and Dorians implying that the Macedonians were Greeks 270 271 In parts of his work Thucydides placed the Macedonians on his cultural continuum closer to barbarians than Hellenes 272 or an intermediate category between Greeks and non Greeks 273 In other parts he distinguishes between three groups fighting in the Peloponnesian War The Greeks including Peloponnesians the Macedonians and the barbarian Illyrians 273 Recounting Brasidas s expedition to Lyncus Thucydides considers Macedonians separate from the barbarians he says In all there were about three thousand Hellenic heavy infantry accompanied by all the Macedonian cavalry with the Chalcidians near one thousand strong besides an immense crowd of barbarians 274 and night coming on the Macedonians and the barbarian crowd took fright in a moment in one of those mysterious panics to which great armies are liable 275 More explicit is his recounting of Brasidas s speech where he tells his Peloponnesian troops to dispel fear of fighting against barbarians because they had already fought against Macedonians 276 Euripides in his work Archelaus tells us that the Macedonians were Greeks 277 Ancient geographers differed in their views on the size of Macedonia and on the ethnicity of the Macedonians 278 Most ancient geographers did not include the core territories of the Macedonian kingdom in their definition of Greece the reasons for which are unknown For example Strabo says that while Macedonia is of course part of Greece yet now since I am following the nature and shape of the places geographically I have chosen to classify it apart from the rest of Greece 278 279 Strabo supports the Greek ethnicity of the Macedonian people and wrote of the Macedonians and the other Greeks 280 as does Pausanias the latter of which did not include Macedonia in Hellas as indicated in Book 10 of his Description of Greece 278 Pausanias said that the Macedonians took part in the Amphictyonic League 281 and that Caranus of Macedon the mythical founder of the Argead dynasty set up a trophy after the Argive fashion for a victory against Cisseus 282 Macedonian terracotta figurine 3rd century BC the Persians referred to the Macedonians as Yauna Takabara Greeks with hats that look like shields 283 Isocrates defended Philip s Greek origins but did not think the same of his people He wrote He Perdiccas I left the Greek world alone completely but he desired to hold the kingship in Macedonia for he understood that Greeks are not accustomed to submit themselves to monarchy whereas others are incapable of living their lives without domination of this sort for he alone of the Greeks deemed it fit to rule over an ethnically unrelated population 284 On the other hand Michael Cosmopoulos reports that Isocrates clearly states that the Macedonians were Greeks 277 Nevertheless Philip named the federation of Greek states he created with Macedon at its head nowadays referred to as the League of Corinth as simply The Hellenes i e Greeks The Macedonians were granted two seats in the exclusively Greek Great Amphictyonic League in 346 BC when the Phocians were expelled Badian sees it as a personal honour awarded to Phillip and not to the Macedonian people as a whole 285 Aeschines said that Phillip s father Amyntas III joined other Greeks in the Panhellenic congress of the Lacedaemonian allies also known as the Congress of Sparta in a vote to help Athens recover possession of Amphipolis 286 With Philip s conquest of Greece Greeks and Macedonians enjoyed privileges at the royal court and there was no social distinction among his court hetairoi although Philip s armies were only ever led by Macedonians The process of Greek and Macedonian syncretism culminated during the reign of Alexander the Great and he allowed Greeks to command his armies There was also some persisting antagonism between Macedonians and Greeks lasting into Antigonid times 287 Some Greeks continued to rebel against their Macedonian overlords throughout the Hellenistic era 288 They rejoiced on the death of Phillip II 289 and they revolted against Alexander s Antigonid successors The Greeks called this conflict the Hellenic War 290 However Pan Hellenic sloganeering was used by Greeks against Antigonid dominance it was also used by Macedonians to corral popular support throughout Greece Those who considered Macedonia as a political enemy such as Hypereides and Chremonides likened the Lamian War and Chremonidean War respectively to the earlier Greco Persian Wars and efforts to liberate Greeks from tyranny 291 Yet even those who considered Macedonia an ally such as Isocrates were keen to stress the differences between their kingdom and the Greek city states to assuage fears about the extension of Macedonian style monarchism into the governance of their poleis 292 After the 3rd century BC and especially in Roman times the Macedonians were consistently regarded as Greeks 293 To begin with Polybius considers the Macedonians as Greeks and sets them apart from their neighboring non Greek tribes 277 For example in his Histories the Acarnanian character Lyciscus tells the Spartans that they are of the same tribe as the Achaeans and the Macedonians 294 who should be honoured because throughout nearly their whole lives are ceaselessly engaged in a struggle with the barbarians for the safety of the Greeks 295 Polybius also used the phrase Macedonia and the rest of Greece 296 and says that Philip V of Macedon associates himself with the rest of the Greeks 297 In his text History of Rome Livy states that the Macedonians Aetolians and Acarnanians were all men of the same language 298 Similar opinions are shared by Arrian 299 Strabo 300 and Plutarch who wrote of Aristotle advising Alexander to have regard for the Greeks as for friends and kindred 301 M B Hatzopoulos points out that passages in Arrian s text also reveal that the terms Greeks and Macedonians were at times synonymous For instance when Alexander the Great held a feast accompanied by Macedonians and Persians with religious rituals performed by Persian magi and Greek seers the latter of whom were Macedonians 302 Any preconceived ethnic differences between Greeks and Macedonians faded soon after the Roman conquest of Macedonia by 148 BC and then the rest of Greece with the defeat of the Achaean League by the Roman Republic at the Battle of Corinth 146 BC 303 The Ionians with shield hats Old Persian cuneiform 𐎹𐎢𐎴𐎠 𐎫𐎣𐎲𐎼𐎠 Yauna takabara 304 depicted on the tomb of Xerxes I at Naqsh e Rustam were probably Macedonian soldiers in the service of the Achaemenid army wearing their characteristic kausia c 480 BC 305 The Persians referred to both Greeks and Macedonians as Yauna Ionians their term for Greeks though they distinguished the Yauna by the sea and across the sea from the Yauna Takabara or Greeks with hats that look like shields possibly referring to the Macedonian kausia hat 306 According to another interpretation the Persians used such terms in a geographical rather than an ethnic sense Yauna and its various attributes possibly referred to regions to the north and west of Asia Minor which could have included Phrygians Mysians Aeolians Thracians and Paionians in addition to Greeks 307 Overall Persian inscriptions indicate that the Persians considered the Macedonians to be Greeks 308 In Hellenistic times most Egyptians and Syrians included the Macedonians among the larger category of Greeks as the Persians had done earlier 306 Modern discourse Modern scholarly discourse has produced several hypotheses about the Macedonians place within the Greek world Considering material remains of Greek style monuments buildings inscriptions dating from the 5th century and the predominance of Greek personal names one school of thought says that the Macedonians were truly Greeks who had retained a more archaic lifestyle than those living in southern Greece This cultural discrepancy was used during the political struggles in Athens and Macedonia in the 4th century 266 This has been the predominant viewpoint since the 20th century Worthington wrote not much need to be said about the Greekness of ancient Macedonia it is undeniable 309 Hatzopoulos argues that there was no real ethnic difference between Macedonians and Greeks only a political distinction contrived after the creation of the League of Corinth in 337 BC which was led by Macedonia through the league s elected hegemon Philip II despite him not being a member of the league itself 310 Hatzopoulos stresses the fact that Macedonians and other peoples such as the Epirotes and Cypriots despite speaking a Greek dialect worshiping in Greek cults engaging in panhellenic games and upholding traditional Greek institutions nevertheless occasionally had their territories excluded from contemporary geographic definitions of Hellas and were even considered non Greek barbarians by some 311 Other academics who concur that the difference between the Macedonians and Greeks was a political rather than a true ethnic discrepancy include Michael B Sakellariou 312 Robert Malcolm Errington 313 and Craige B Champion 314 A mosaic of the Kasta Tomb in Amphipolis depicting the abduction of Persephone by Pluto 4th century BC Another perspective interprets the literary evidence and the archaeological cultural differences between Macedonia and central southern Greece before the 6th century and beyond as evidence that the Macedonians were originally non Greek tribes who underwent a process of Hellenization 315 316 Accepting that political factors played a part they highlight the degree of antipathy between Macedonians and Greeks which was of a different quality to that seen among other Greek states even those with a long term history of mutual animosity e g Sparta and Athens 317 According to these scholars the Macedonians came to be regarded as northern Greeks only with the ongoing Hellenization of Macedonia and the emergence of Rome as a common enemy in the west This coincides with the period during which ancient authors such as Polybius and Strabo called the ancient Macedonians Greeks 315 By this point as described by Isocrates to have been a Greek could have defined a quality of culture and intelligence rather than a racial or ethnic affinity 318 319 In the context of ethnic origins of the companions of the Antigonid kings James L O Neil distinguishes Macedonians and Greeks as separate ethnic groups the latter becoming more prominent in Macedonian affairs and the royal court after Alexander the Great s reign 320 Others have adopted both views According to Sansone there is no question that in the fifth and fourth centuries there were noticeable difference between the Greeks and the Macedonians yet the issue of Macedonian Hellenicity was ultimately a political one 321 Hall adds to ask whether the Macedonians really were Greek or not in antiquity is ultimately a redundant question given the shifting semantics of Greekness between the 6th and 4th centuries BC What cannot be denied however is that the cultural commodification of Hellenic identity that emerged in the 4th century might have remained a provincial artifact confined to the Balkan peninsula had it not been for the Macedonians 322 Eugene Borza emphasized the Macedonians made their mark in antiquity as Macedonians not as a tribe of some other people 323 but argued that the highlanders or Makedones of the mountainous regions of western Macedonia are derived from northwest Greek stock 324 Worthington concludes that there is still more than enough evidence and reasoned theory to suggest that the Macedonians were racially Greek 325 Edward M Anson argues that some Hellenic authors expressed complex if not ever changing and ambiguous ideas about the exact ethnic identity of the Macedonians who were considered by some such as Aristotle in his Politics as barbarians and by others as semi Greek or fully Greek 326 Panagiotis Filos notes that the term barbarian was often used by ancient Greek authors in a very broad sense referring not only to non Greek populations but also to Greek populations on the fringe of the Greek world with dialectal differences such as the Macedonians 327 Roger D Woodard asserts that in addition to persisting uncertainty in modern times about the proper classification of the Macedonian language and its relation to Greek ancient authors also presented conflicting ideas such as Demosthenes when labeling Philip II of Macedon inaccurately as a barbarian 328 whereas Polybius called Achaeans and Macedonians as homophylos i e part of the same race or kin 329 330 Carol J King elaborates that finding the reason why ancient Greeks themselves differentiated between Greeks and Macedonians is limited by the fact that if one seeks historical truth about an ancient people who have left no definitive record one may have to let go of the hope for a definitive answer especially considering that ancient Macedonia was composed of Greeks people akin to Greeks and non Greeks 331 Simon Hornblower supports the Greek identity of the Macedonians taking into consideration their origin language cults and customs 332 See alsoDemographic history of Macedonia Government of Macedonia ancient kingdom Political history topic History of Macedonia ancient kingdom Aspect of history surrounding ancient Macedonia Macedonians Greeks Greek regional and historical population group MacednonReferencesFootnotes Suggested by Georgiev 1966 4 Joseph 2001 5 and Hamp 2013 6 Pioneered by Friedrich Wilhelm Sturz 1808 7 and subsequently supported by Olivier Masson 1996 8 Michael Meier Brugger 2003 9 Johannes Engels 2010 10 J Mendez Dosuna 2012 11 Joachim Matzinger 2016 12 Emilio Crespo 2017 13 Claude Brixhe 2018 14 and M B Hatzopoulos 2020 7 Suggested by August Fick 1874 8 Otto Hoffmann 1906 8 N G L Hammond 1997 15 and Ian Worthington 2012 16 Engels 2010 p 89 Borza 1995 p 114 Eugene N Borza writes that the highlanders or Makedones of the mountainous regions of western Macedonia are derived from northwest Greek stock they were akin to those who at an earlier time may have migrated south to become the historical Dorians Citations Worthington 2014a p 10 Hornblower 2008 pp 55 58 Joint Association of Classical Teachers 1984 pp 50 51 Errington 1990 Fine 1983 pp 607 608 Hall 2000 p 64 Hammond 2001 p 11 Jones 2001 p 21 Osborne 2004 p 127 Hammond 1989 pp 12 13 Hammond 1993 p 97 Starr 1991 pp 260 367 Toynbee 1981 p 67 Worthington 2008 pp 8 219 Chamoux 2002 p 8 Cawkwell 1978 p 22 Perlman 1973 p 78 Hamilton 1974 Chapter 2 The Macedonian Homeland p 23 Bryant 1996 p 306 O Brien 1994 p 25 Trudgill 2002 p 125 Theodossiev 2000 pp 175 209 a b c Christesen amp Murray 2010 p 428 Vladimir Georgiev The Genesis of the Balkan Peoples The Slavonic and East European Review 44 103 285 297 July 1966 a b Joseph Brian D 2001 Ancient Greek In Garry Jane Rubino Carl Bodomo Adams B Faber Alice French Robert eds Facts about the World s Languages An Encyclopedia of the World s Major Languages Past and Present H W Wilson Company p 256 ISBN 9780824209704 Eric Hamp amp Douglas Adams 2013 The Expansion of the Indo European Languages Sino Platonic Papers vol 239 a b Hatzopoulos Miltiades B 2020 The speech of the ancient Macedonians Ancient Macedonia De Gruyter pp 64 77 ISBN 978 3 11 071876 8 a b c Masson Olivier 2003 Ancient Macedonian language In Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds The Oxford Classical Dictionary revised 3rd ed Oxford University Press pp 905 906 ISBN 978 0 19 860641 3 Michael Meier Brugger Indo European linguistics Walter de Gruyter 2003 p 28 on Google books Roisman Worthington 2010 A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Chapter 5 Johannes Engels Macedonians and Greeks p 95 a b Dosuna J Mendez 2012 Ancient Macedonian as a Greek dialect A critical survey on recent work Greek English French German text In Giannakis Georgios K ed Ancient Macedonia Language History Culture Centre for Greek Language p 145 ISBN 978 960 7779 52 6 Matzinger Joachim 2016 Die Altbalkanischen Sprachen PDF Speech in German Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich a b Crespo Emilio 2017 The Softening of Obstruent Consonants in the Macedonian Dialect In Giannakis Georgios K Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter p 329 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 Brixhe Claude 2018 Macedonian In Klein Jared Joseph Brian Fritz Matthias eds Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics Vol 3 De Gruyter pp 1862 1867 ISBN 978 3 11 054243 1 Hammond N G L 1997 Collected Studies Further studies on various topics A M Hakkert p 79 Worthington 2012 p 71 Hammond 1989 p page needed Masson Olivier 2003 1996 Ancient Macedonian language In Hornblower S Spawforth A eds The Oxford Classical Dictionary revised 3rd ed USA Oxford University Press pp 905 906 ISBN 0 19 860641 9 Meier Brugger Michael Fritz Matthias Mayrhofer Manfred 2003 Indo European Linguistics Walter de Gruyter p 28 ISBN 978 3 11 017433 5 Roisman Worthington 2010 A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Chapter 5 Johannes Engels Macedonians and Greeks p 95 This i e Pella curse tablet has been judged to be the most important ancient testimony to substantiate that Macedonian was a north western Greek and mainly a Doric dialect W e may tentatively conclude that Macedonian is a dialect related to North West Greek Olivier Masson French linguist Oxford Classical Dictionary Macedonian Language 1996 Masson amp Dubois 2000 p 292 Macedonian Language de l Oxford Classical Dictionary 1996 p 906 Macedonian may be seen as a Greek dialect characterized by its marginal position and by local pronunciation like Berenika for Ferenika etc Hatzopoulos Miltiades B 2017 Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect Consolidation and New Perspectives In Giannakis Georgios K Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter p 299 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 Crespo Emilio 2017 The Softening of Obstruent Consonants in the Macedonian Dialect In Giannakis Georgios K Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter p 329 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 a b Beekes 2009 p 894 Harle 1998 p 24 Hanson 2012 Ian Worthington 5 Alexander the Great Nation Building and the Creation and Maintenance of Empire p 119 Kristinsson 2010 p 79 Kinzl 2010 p 553 Adams 2010 pp 208 211 216 217 Errington 1990 pp 117 120 129 145 147 Bringmann 2007 p 61 for a discussion about the Hellenistic period in both the Eastern and Western Mediterranean regions in antiquity see Prag amp Quinn 2013 pp 1 13 Olbrycht 2010 pp 365 367 Adams 2010 p 223 Errington 1990 pp 174 242 Greenwalt 2010 pp 289 304 Adams 2010 pp 221 224 Errington 1990 pp 167 174 179 185 Errington 1990 pp 191 216 Eckstein 2010 pp 231 245 Greenwalt 2010 p 302 Bringmann 2007 pp 79 88 97 99 Errington 1990 pp 216 217 Eckstein 2010 p 245 Greenwalt 2010 p 304 Bringmann 2007 pp 99 100 Errington 1990 pp 216 217 Eckstein 2010 pp 246 248 Bringmann 2007 pp 104 105 a b c Anson 2010 p 16 Rhodes 2010 p 24 Anson 2010 p 7 Asirvatham 2010 pp 101 102 123 Homer Iliad 14 226 Strabo Geography Book 7 Fragment 2 Best amp de Vries 1989 R F Hoddinott Thracians Mycenaeans and The Trojan Question p 64 Borza 1992 p 64 Errington 1990 pp 7 9 Borza 1982 p 8 Borza 1992 p 84 Vanderpool 1982 Eugene N Borza Athenians Macedonians and the Origins of the Macedonian Royal House p 7 On pages 433 434 of The Position of the Macedonian Dialect A Panayotou describes the geographical delimitations of ancient Macedon as encompassing the region from Mount Pindus to the Nestos River and from Thessaly to Paeonia the area occupied by the kingdom of Philip II which preceded the much larger Roman province of the same name a b Hesiod Catalogue of Women Fragment 7 Herodotus Histories 1 56 3 For these were the most eminent races in ancient time the second being a Pelasgian and the first a Hellenic race and the one never migrated from its place in any direction while the other was very exceedingly given to wanderings for in the reign of Deucalion this Hellenic race dwelt in Pthiotis and in the time of Doros the son of Hellen in the land lying below Ossa and Olympos which is called Histiaiotis and when it was driven from Histiaiotis by the sons of Cadmos it dwelt in Pindos and was called Makedonian and thence it moved afterwards to Dryopis and from Dryopis it came finally to Peloponnesus and began to be called Dorian 8 43 1 Hammond amp Griffith 1972 pp 430 440 This was but one of several traditions regarding the Dorian homeland variously placing it in Phthiotis Dryopis Erineos etc For the formation of Dorian ethnicity and its traditions see chapters 3 and 4 of Johnathan Hall s Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity Toynbee 1969 Chapter 3 What was the Ancestral Language of the Makedones pp 66 77 Herodotus Histories 8 137 8 a b Hatzopoulos 1999 a b Hammond amp Griffith 1972 pp 433 434 Sprawski 2010 pp 127 128 a b Sprawski 2010 p 129 Titus Livius The History of Rome 45 9 This was the end of the war between the Romans and Perseus after four years of steady campaigning and also the end of a kingdom famed over a large part of Europe and all of Asia They reckoned Perseus as the twentieth after Caranus who founded the kingdom Marcus Velleius Paterculus History of Rome 1 6 In this period sixty five years before the founding of Rome Carthage was established by the Tyrian Elissa by some authors called Dido About this time also Caranus a man of royal race eleventh in descent from Hercules set out from Argos and seized the kingship of Macedonia From him Alexander the Great was descended in the seventeenth generation and could boast that on his mother s side he was descended from Achilles and on his father s side from Hercules Plutarch Alexander 2 1 As for the lineage of Alexander on his father s side he was a descendant of Heracles through Caranus and on his mother s side a descendant of Aeacus through Neoptolemus this is accepted without any question Gagarin 2010 Argeads p 229 a b Appian Roman History 11 63 333 a b c Sprawski2010 p 130 Charlton T Lewis and Charles Short A Latin Dictionary Argivus Henry George Liddell and Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon Ἀrgeῖos Argive Oxford Dictionaries a b Homer Iliad 2 155 175 4 8 Odyssey 8 578 4 6 Herodotus Histories 5 22 Justin Historiarum Philippicarum 7 1 7 10 But Caranus accompanied by a great multitude of Greeks having been directed by an oracle to seek a settlement in Macedonia and having come into Emathia and followed a flock of goats that were fleeing from a tempest possessed himself of the city of Edessa before the inhabitants on account of the thickness of the rain and mist were aware of his approach and being reminded of the oracle by which he had been ordered to seek a kingdom with goats for his guides he made this city the seat of his government and afterwards religiously took care whithersoever he led his troops to keep the same goats before his standards that he might have those animals as leaders in his enterprises which he had had as guides to the site of his kingdom He changed the name of the city in commemoration of his good fortune from Edessa to Aegeae and called the inhabitants Aegeatae Herodotus Histories 8 139 Olbrycht 2010 pp 343 345 Herodotus Histories 5 17 1 2 Hammond amp Griffith 1972 p 433 Borza 1992 p 82 Hammond amp Griffith 1979 p 434 Herodotus Histories 7 73 8 138 Hatzopoulos 2011a p 43 Hammond amp Griffith 1972 p 434 Borza 1992 p 78 Hammond amp Griffith 1972 p 434 a b Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian War 2 99 Hammond amp Griffith 1972 pp 437 438 Borza 1992 p 87 a b Sprawski 2010 p 133 Hammond amp Griffith 1979 p 438 Borza 1992 pp 79 80 Archibald 2010 p 329 a b c d Sprawski 2010 p 134 Borza 1992 p 70 Hall 2002 pp 70 73 a b Snodgrass 2000 p 163 Brock amp Hodkinson 2000 Chapter 12 Zosia Halina Archibald Space Hierarchy and Community in Archaic and Classical Macedonia Thessaly and Thrace pp 222 224 Hornblower Matthews amp Fraser 2000 Miltiade Hatzopoulos L histoire par les noms in Macedonia p 112 Brock amp Hodkinson 2000 Chapter 12 Zosia Halina Archibald Space Hierarchy and Community in Archaic and Classical Macedonia Thessaly and Thrace p 215 Thomas 2010 p 74 a b Hatzopoulos 1999 p 464 Butler 2008 pp 222 223 Butler 2008 p 223 a b Whitley 2007 p 253 Brock amp Hodkinson 2000 Chapter 13 J K Davies A Wholly Non Aristotelian Universe The Molossians as Ethnos State and Monarchy p 251 a b Brock amp Hodkinson 2000 Chapter 12 Zosia Halina Archibald Space Hierarchy and Community in Archaic and Classical Macedonia Thessaly and Thrace p 213 Whitley 2007 p 233 Lemos 2002 p 207 a b Anson 2010 p 19 a b Whitley 2007 p 254 Olbrycht 2010 p 345 Hatzopoulos 2011a pp 47 48 Errington 1990 p 7 Boardman 1982 Part III The Balkans and the Aegean Chapter 15 N G L Hammond Illyris Epirus and Macedonia in the Early Iron Age pp 621 624 a b c Encyclopaedia Britannica Hellenism in Macedonia Iordanidis Garcia Guinea amp Karamitrou Mentessidi 2007 pp 1796 1807 a b Karamitrou Mentessidi 2007 Brock amp Hodkinson 2000 Chapter 12 Zosia Halina Archibald Space Hierarchy and Community in Archaic and Classical Macedonia Thessaly and Thrace p 212 Anson 2010 p 8 Hatzopoulos 2011a pp 47 48 for a specific example of land reclamation near Amphipolis during the reign of Alexander the Great see Hammond amp Walbank 2001 p 31 Hatzopoulos 2011a p 48 Errington 1990 pp 7 8 222 223 Hatzopoulos 2011a p 48 a b c Anson 2010 p 10 Anson 2010 pp 10 11 Engels 2010 p 92 Hammond amp Walbank 2001 pp 12 13 Anson 2010 pp 9 10 King 2010 pp 374 375 King 2010 pp 376 377 Horejs 2007 Hammond amp Griffith 1972 pp 420 426 Snodgrass 2000 p 257 Snodgrass 2000 p 253 Boardman 1982 Part III The Balkans and the Aegean Chapter 15 N G L Hammond Illyris Epirus and Macedonia in the Early Iron Age pp 644 650 Brock amp Hodkinson 2000 Chapter 12 Zosia Halina Archibald Space Hierarchy and Community in Archaic and Classical Macedonia Thessaly and Thrace p 217 Wilkes 1995 pp 104 107 Whitley 2007 p 243 Brock amp Hodkinson 2000 Chapter 12 Zosia Halina Archibald Space Hierarchy and Community in Archaic and Classical Macedonia Thessaly and Thrace pp 223 224 Sansone 2017 p 223 Anson 2010 pp 17 18 Errington 1990 pp 225 226 a b Errington 1990 p 226 Errington 1990 pp 226 227 a b c d e f g Christesen amp Murray 2010 p 430 a b Christesen amp Murray 2010 p 431 Cook Adcock amp Charlesworth 1928 pp 197 198 Sakellariou 1992 p 60 Graninger 2010 pp 323 324 Engels 2010 p 97 Christesen amp Murray 2010 p 434 a b Christesen amp Murray 2010 p 429 Fisher amp Wees 1998 p 51 Archibald 2010 p 340 a b Whitley 2007 pp 254 255 Christesen amp Murray 2010 pp 439 440 Borza 1992 pp 257 260 see also Hammond amp Walbank 2001 pp 5 7 for further details Borza 1992 pp 259 260 see also Hammond amp Walbank 2001 pp 5 6 for further details Borza 1992 pp 257 260 261 Sansone 2017 p 224 Hammond amp Walbank 2001 p 6 Rosella Lorenzi 10 October 2014 Remains of Alexander the Great s Father Confirmed Found King Philip II s bones are buried in a tomb along with a mysterious woman warrior Seeker Retrieved 17 January 2017 Borza 1992 p 257 Sansone 2017 pp 224 225 Kate Muser 9 September 2014 Greece s largest ancient tomb Amphipolis www dw de Deutsche Welle Retrieved 10 September 2014 Andrew Marszal 7 September 2014 Marble female figurines unearthed in vast Alexander the Great era Greek tomb The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Papapostolou Anastasios 30 September 2015 Hephaestion s Monogram Found at Amphipolis Tomb Greek Reporter Retrieved 31 March 2017 Worthington 2012 p 319 Worthington 2014b p 180 Sansone 2017 p 228 Worthington 2014b pp 180 183 Worthington 2012 p 319 Worthington 2014b pp 182 183 Errington 1990 pp 219 220 Hardiman 2010 p 515 Hardiman 2010 pp 515 517 a b Hardiman 2010 p 517 Head 2016 pp 12 13 Piening 2013 pp 1182 Head 2016 p 13 Aldrete Bartell amp Aldrete 2013 p 49 Olga Palagia 2000 Hephaestion s Pyre and the Royal Hunt of Alexander in A B Bosworth and E J Baynham eds Alexander the Great in Fact and Fiction Oxford amp New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 815287 3 p 185 a b c Hardiman 2010 p 518 Cohen 2010 pp 13 34 Muller 2010 p 182 a b c Errington 1990 p 224 a b c Worthington 2014b p 186 Worthington 2014b p 185 Worthington 2014b pp 185 186 a b Worthington 2014b pp 183 186 Hatzopoulos 2011b p 58 Roisman 2010 p 154 Errington 1990 pp 223 224 Hatzopoulos 2011b pp 58 59 see also Errington 1990 p 224 for further details Hatzopoulos 2011b pp 59 Sansone 2017 p 223 Roisman 2010 p 157 a b Hatzopoulos 2011b pp 59 Chroust 2016 p 137 a b Rhodes 2010 p 23 Rhodes 2010 pp 23 25 see also Errington 1990 p 224 for further details Errington 1990 pp 224 225 For Marsyas of Pella see also Hammond amp Walbank 2001 p 27 for further details a b Errington 1990 p 225 Badian 1982 p 34 Anson 2010 p 16 Sansone 2017 pp 222 223 Nawotka 2010 p 2 Sawada 2010 p 403 Cohen 2010 p 28 a b c Dalby 1997 p 157 Dalby 1997 pp 155 156 Dalby 1997 p 156 Dalby 1997 pp 156 157 Anson 2010 p 10 Cohen 2010 p 28 Sawada 2010 pp 392 408 Sawada 2010 p 394 There were Dorian and Euboean colonies as well as tribal ethne speaking Greek Illyrian Thracian Paeonian Brygian etc Borza 1992 p 92 Christides Arapopoulou amp Chrite 2007 Chapter 6 A Panayotou The Position of the Macedonian Dialect p 433 Engels 2010 p 96 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity p 161 a b c d e Engels 2010 p 94 Jones 2006 pp 33 34 Anson 2010 p 20 a b Borza 1992 p 93 Voutiras 1998 p 25 Engels 2010 p 95 Masson amp Dubois 2000 p 292 Macedonian Language de l Oxford Classical Dictionary 1996 p 906 Masson 1996 Macedonian Language pp 905 906 Masson Olivier 2003 1996 Ancient Macedonian language In Hornblower S Spawforth A eds The Oxford Classical Dictionary revised 3rd ed USA Oxford University Press pp 905 906 ISBN 0 19 860641 9 a b Hatzopoulos 2011a pp 43 45 a b c Hatzopoulos Miltiades B 2017 Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect Consolidation and New Perspectives In Giannakis Georgios K Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter pp 321 322 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 Worthington 2003 p 20 Christides Arapopoulou amp Chrite 2007 Chapter 6 A Panayotou The Position of the Macedonian Dialect pp 431 433 Hornblower Matthews amp Fraser 2000 Miltiade Hatzopoulos L histoire par les noms in Macedonia p 111 It is difficult to distinguish between words which are truly common between Macedonian and Greek from cognates and loanwords Boardman 1982 Chapter 20c R A Crossland Linguistic Problems of the Balkan Areya in Late Prehistoric and Early Classical Periods p 846 a b c Woodard 2008b p 11 Boardman 1982 Chapter 20c R A Crossland Linguistic Problems of the Balkan Area in Late Prehistoric and Early Classical Periods pp 846 847 Personal names names of gods and months and phonological features Refer to Christides Arapopoulou amp Chrite 2007 Chapter 6 A Panayotou The Position of the Macedonian Dialect pp 438 439 Finkelberg 2005 p 121 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity pp 163 165 Hornblower Matthews amp Fraser 2000 Miltiade Hatzopoulos L histoire par les noms in Macedonia p 115 Christides Arapopoulou amp Chrite 2007 Chapter 6 A Panayotou The Position of the Macedonian Dialect p 439 Papazoglou 1977 pp 65 83 Georgiev 1981 pp 170 360 Garrett 1999 pp 146 156 a b Giannakis Georgios 2017 From Central Greece to the Black Sea Introductory Remarks In Giannakis Georgios Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects Emilio Crespo Panagiotis Filos De Gruyter p 18 doi 10 1515 9783110532135 ISBN 978 3 11 053213 5 Recent scholarship has established the position of ancient Macedonian within the dialect map of North West Greek see among others Mendez Dosuna 2012 2014 2015 Crespo 2012 2015 Here belongs the study by M Hatzopoulos who offers a critical review of recent research on the Macedonian dialect arguing that all available evidence points to the conclusion that this is a Greek dialect of the North West group Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity pp 161 163 Borza 1999 pp 42 43 Barr Sharrar amp Borza 1982 E Badian Greeks and Macedonians p 41 Papazoglou 2000 pp 771 777 Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian War 3 94 Plato Protagoras 341c Hornblower Simon 2002 Macedon Thessaly and Boiotia The Greek World 479 323 BC Third ed Routledge p 90 ISBN 0 415 16326 9 Aeschines Against Ctesiphon 3 72 Livy The History of Rome 45 29 3 Hatzopoulos Miltiades B 2017 Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect Consolidation and New Perspectives In Giannakis Georgios K Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter p 309 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 a b Borza 1992 p 5 Badian 1982 p 51 n 72 Johannes Engels comes to a similar conclusion See Engels 2010 p 82 a b Anson 2010 p 7 Engels 2010 p 85 Cartledge 2011 Chapter 4 Argos p 23 Herodotus Histories 5 22 Engels 2010 pp 92 93 Asirvatham 2010 p 101 a b Barr Sharrar amp Borza 1982 E Badian Greeks and Macedonians p 34 Engels 2010 p 93 Henry George Liddell and Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon filellhn cf Plato Republic 5 470e Xenophon Agesilaus 7 4 in Greek Hall 2002 p 156 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity p 169 Engels 2010 p 91 Malkin 1998 p 140 Asirvatham 2010 p 103 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity p 160 Hatzopoulos 2011b pp 60 Demosthenes Third Philippic 9 31 Hammond 1991 Barr Sharrar amp Borza 1982 E Badian Greeks and Macedonians p 42 Demosthenes Against Meidias Speeches 21 150 And yet though he has thus become the possessor of privileges to which he has no claim and has found a fatherland which is reputed to be of all states the most firmly based upon its laws he seems utterly unable to submit to those laws or abide by them His true native barbarism and hatred of religion drive him on by force and betray the fact that he treats his present rights as if they were not his own as indeed they are not Athenaeus The Deipnosophists 8 42 And when he was asked again according to the account given by Hegesander which were the greatest barbarians the Boeotians or the Thessalians he said the Eleans MacDowell 2009 13 War and Defeat Isocrates Philippus 32 34 and 76 77 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity pp 159 160 Isocrates To Philip 5 127 Therefore since the others are so lacking in spirit I think it is opportune for you to head the war against the King and while it is only natural for the other descendants of Heracles and for men who are under the bonds of their polities and laws to cleave fondly to that state in which they happen to dwell it is your privilege as one who has been blessed with untrammelled freedom to consider all Hellas your fatherland as did the founder of your race and to be as ready to brave perils for her sake as for the things about which you are personally most concerned Demosthenes Philip s Letter to Athenians Speeches 12 6 This is the most amazing exploit of all for before the king reduced Egypt and Phoenicia you passed a decree calling on me to make common cause with the rest of the Greeks against him in case he attempted to interfere with us Worthington 2003 Chapter 2 N G L Hammond The Language of the Macedonians p 20 Hall 2002 p 165 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity p 169 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity p 169 Daskalakis 1965 pp 12 13 Hall 2002 p 165 Anson 2010 p 15 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity p 170 a b Engels 2010 p 84 Herodotus The Histories 5 20 4 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity p 171 Herodotus Histories 1 56 2 3 Herodotus Histories 8 43 Hammond amp Griffith 1972 pp 429 430 Hammond states that Pelagonia might have been initially called Argestia Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity pp 171 172 a b Engels 2010 p 85 Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian War 4 124 1 Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian War 4 125 1 Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian War 4 126 3 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity p 160 a b c Cosmopoulos 1992 p 13 a b c Engels 2010 p 88 Strabo Geography Book 7 Fragment 9 Strabo Geography 10 2 23 Pausanias Description of Greece 10 8 2 4 Pausanias Description of Greece 9 40 8 9 The Macedonians say that Caranus king of Macedonia overcame in battle Cisseus a chieftain in a bordering country For his victory Caranus set up a trophy after the Argive fashion but it is said to have been upset by a lion from Olympus which then vanished Caranus they assert realized that it was a mistaken policy to incur the undying hatred of the non Greeks dwelling around and so they say the rule was adopted that no king of Macedonia neither Caranus himself nor any of his successors should set up trophies if they were ever to gain the good will of their neighbors This story is confirmed by the fact that Alexander set up no trophies neither for his victory over Dareius nor for those he won in India Engels 2010 p 87 Olbrycht 2010 pp 343 344 Isocrates Philippos 107 108 Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity p 169 Barr Sharrar amp Borza 1982 E Badian Greeks and Macedonians p 34 Aeschines On the Embassy 2 32 Barr Sharrar amp Borza 1982 E Badian Greeks and Macedonians p 43 Asirvatham 2010 p 104 Diodorus Siculus Historical Library 17 3 IG 2 448 58 50 SIG 317 6 19 Hatzopoulos 2011b pp 69 70 Hatzopoulos 2011b pp 68 69 73 Anson 2010 p 18 Polybius Histories 9 37 Polybius Histories 9 35 Polybius Histories 7 9 Polybius Histories 18 4 8 Livy History of Rome 31 29 15 Arrian Anabasis Alexandri 1 16 7 2 7 4 2 14 4 Strabo Geography 7 7 1 Plutarch Moralia On the Fortune of Alexander I 329b Hatzopoulos 2011b pp 70 71 Hatzopoulos 2011b p 74 Darius I DNa inscription Line 29 Adams 2010 pp 343 344 a b Engels 2010 p 87 Kinzl 2010 Robert Rollinger The Eastern Mediterranean and Beyond p 205 Cosmopoulos 1992 p 14 Worthington 2008 Hatzopoulos 2011b pp 69 71 Hatzopoulos 2011b pp 52 71 72 Johannes Engels comes to a similar conclusion about the comparison between Macedonians and Epirotes saying that the Greekness of the Epirotes despite them not being considered as refined as southern Greeks never came into question Engels suggests this perhaps because the Epirotes did not try to dominate the Greek world as Philip II of Macedon had done See Engels 2010 pp 83 84 Sakellariou 1983 pp 52 Errington 1990 pp 3 4 Champion 2004 p 41 a b Danforth 1997 p 169 Barr Sharrar amp Borza 1982 E Badian Greeks and Macedonians p 47 Borza 1992 p 96 Badian Wallace amp Harris 1996 Peter Green The Metamorphosis of the Barbarian Athenian Panhellenism in a Changing World p 24 Isaac 2004 p 113 O Neil 2003 pp 510 522 Sansone 2017 Chapter 11 The Transformation of the Greek World in the Fourth Century Section Philip II of Macedon and the Conquest of Greece Malkin 2001 Chapter 6 Jonathan M Hall Contested Ethnicities Perceptions of Macedonia within Evolving Definitions of Greek Identity p 172 Borza 1992 p 306 Borza 1992 p 78 Worthington 2014a p 10 Anson 2010 pp 14 17 Filos Panagiotis 2017 The Dialectal Variety of Epirus Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects De Gruyter p 218 doi 10 1515 9783110532135 013 ISBN 978 3 11 053213 5 In general the term barbarian has often been used by Greek authors in a very broad sense referring not only to clearly non Greek populations but also to Greek populations on the fringe of the Greek world and or with a particular linguistic character that may have partly arisen due to some substratum adstratum interference e g Macedonia Pamphylia Boardman John Griffin Jasper Murray Oswyn eds 2001 The Oxford Illustrated History of Greece and the Hellenistic World Oxford University Press p 148 Polybius Histories 9 37 7 tote mὲn gὰr ὑpὲr ἡgemonias kaὶ do3hs ἐfilotimeῖs8e prὸs Ἀxaioὺs kaὶ Makedonas ὁmofyloys kaὶ tὸn toytwn ἡgemona Filippon Woodard 2010 pp 9 10 Johannes Engels also discusses this ambiguity in ancient sources See Engels 2010 pp 83 89 King Carol J 28 July 2017 Ancient Macedonia Routledge ISBN 9780415827287 Allowing that there were living in ancient Macedonia throughout the Archaic Classical and Hellenistic periods people who were Greek people who were akin to Greeks and people who were not Greek if one seeks historical truth about an ancient people who have left no definitive record one may have to let go of the hope for a definitive answer The ancient Greeks themselves differentiated between Greeks and Macedonians and if the difference was not one of written language then it ought to be constructive to consider what factors did differentiate the Macedonians in the opinion of ancient Greeks Hornblower 2008 p 58 The question Were the Macedonians Greeks perhaps needs to be chopped up further The Macedonian kings emerge as Greeks by criterion one namely shared blood and personal names indicate that Macedonians generally moved north from Greece The kings the elite and the generality of the Macedonians were Greeks by criteria two and three that is religion and language Macedonian customs criterion four were in certain respects unlike those of a normal apart perhaps from the institutions which I have characterized as feudal The crude one word answer to the question has to be yes Bibliography Adams Winthrop Lindsay 2010 Alexander s Successors to 221 BC In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 208 224 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Aldrete Gregory S Bartell Scott Aldrete Alicia 2013 Reconstructing Ancient Linen Body Armor Unraveling the Linothorax Mystery Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 1 4214 0819 4 Anson Edward M 2010 Why Study Ancient Macedonia and What This Companion is About In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 3 20 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Archibald Zosia 2010 Macedonia and Thrace In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 326 341 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Asirvatham Sulochana R 2010 Perspectives on the Macedonians from Greece Rome and Beyond In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 99 124 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Badian Ernst 1982 Greeks and Macedonians Studies in the History of Art SYMPOSIUM SERIES I National Gallery of Art 10 33 51 JSTOR 42617918 Badian Ernst Wallace Robert W Harris Edward Monroe 1996 Transitions to Empire Essays in Greco Roman History 360 146 B C in Honor of E Badian Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 8061 2863 1 Barr Sharrar Beryl Borza Eugene N 1982 Macedonia and Greece in Late Classical and Early Hellenistic Times National Gallery of Art ISBN 0 89468 005 6 Beekes Robert S P 2009 Etymological Dictionary of Greek Brill ISBN 978 90 04 32186 1 Best Jan de Vries Nanny 1989 Thracians and Mycenaeans Proceedings of the Fourth International Congress of Thracology Rotterdam 24 26 September 1984 Leiden The Netherlands E J Brill ISBN 90 04 08864 4 Boardman John 1982 The Cambridge Ancient History Volume 3 Part 1 The Prehistory of the Balkans and the Middle East and the Aegean World Tenth to Eighth Centuries B C Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 22496 9 Borza Eugene N 1982 Athenians Macedonians and the Origins of the Macedonian Royal House Studies in Attic Epigraphy History and Topography 19 Borza Eugene N 1992 In the Shadow of Olympus The Emergence of Macedon Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00880 9 Borza Eugene N 1995 Makedonika Claremont CA Regina Books ISBN 978 0 941690 64 5 Borza Eugene N 1999 Before Alexander Constructing Early Macedonia Claremont CA Regina Books ISBN 0 941690 96 2 Bringmann Klaus 2007 2002 A History of the Roman Republic Translated by Smyth W J Cambridge amp Malden Polity Press ISBN 978 0 7456 3371 8 Brock Roger Hodkinson Stephen 2000 Alternatives to Athens Varieties of Political Organization and Community in Ancient Greece Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 815220 5 Bryant Joseph M 1996 Moral Codes and Social Structure in Ancient Greece A Sociology of Greek Ethics from Homer to the Epicureans and Stoics Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 3042 1 Butler Margaret Erwin 2008 Of Swords and Strigils Social Change in Ancient Macedon Stanford CA Stanford University Cartledge Paul 2011 Ancient Greece A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 960134 9 Cawkwell George 1978 Philip of Macedon London UK Faber amp Faber ISBN 0 571 10958 6 Chamoux Francois 2002 Hellenistic Civilization Oxford UK Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 22241 3 Champion Craige B 2004 Cultural Politics in Polybius s Histories University of California Press ISBN 0 520 23764 1 Christesen Paul Murray Sarah C 2010 Macedonian Religion In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 428 445 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Christides Anastasios Phoivos Arapopoulou Maria Chrite Maria 2007 A History of Ancient Greek From the Beginnings to Late Antiquity Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83307 3 Chroust Anton Hermann 2016 1977 Aristotle New Light on His Life and on Some of His Lost Works Volume 1 Some Novel Interpretations of the Man and His Life London amp New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 93706 2 Cohen Ada 2010 Art in the Era of Alexander the Great Paradigms of Manhood and Their Cultural Traditions Cambridge amp New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 76904 4 Cook Stanley Arthur Adcock Frank E Charlesworth Martin Percival eds 1928 The Cambridge Ancient History The Hellenistic Monarchies and the Rise of Rome Vol VII Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521233477 Dalby Andrew 1997 1996 Siren Feasts a History of Food and Gastronomy in Greece London amp New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 15657 2 Danforth Loring M 1997 The Macedonian Conflict Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 04356 6 Daskalakis A 1965 The Hellenism of Ancient Macedonia Hidryma Meletōn Chersonesou Tou Haimou Thessaloniki Institute for Balkan Studies 74 Eckstein Arthur M 2010 Macedonia and Rome 221 146 BC In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 225 250 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Engels Johannes 2010 Macedonians and Greeks In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 81 98 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Errington Robert Malcolm 1990 A History of Macedonia Berkeley and Los Angeles CA University of California Press ISBN 0 520 06319 8 Fine John Van Antwerp 1983 The Ancient Greeks A Critical History Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 03314 0 Finkelberg Margalit 2005 Greeks and Pre Greeks Aegean Prehistory and Greek Heroic Tradition Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 85216 1 Fisher Nicholas Ralph Edmund Wees Hans van eds 1998 Archaic Greece New Approaches and New Evidence London UK Duckworth ISBN 0 7156 2809 7 Gagarin Michael ed 2010 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome Vol 1 New York and Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 517072 6 Garrett Andrew 1999 A New Model of Indo European Subgrouping and Dispersal PDF Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society 25 146 156 doi 10 3765 bls v25i1 1180 Georgiev Vladimir Ivanov 1981 Introduction to the History of the Indo European Languages Sofia Bulgaria Publishing House of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences ISBN 9789535172611 Graninger Denver 2010 Macedonia and Thessaly In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 306 325 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Greenwalt William S 2010 Macedonia Illyria and Epirus In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 279 305 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Hall Jonathan M 2002 Hellenicity Between Ethnicity and Culture Chicago Illinois and London UK The University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 31329 8 Hall Jonathan M 2000 Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 78999 0 Hamilton J R 1974 1973 Alexander the Great Pittsburgh Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 0 8229 6084 2 Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 2001 Collected Studies Further Studies on Various Topics Amsterdam The Netherlands Hakkert Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 1993 Studies concerning Epirus and Macedonia before Alexander Amsterdam The Netherlands Hakkert ISBN 9789025610500 Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 1991 The Miracle that was Macedonia New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 283 99910 1 Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 1989 The Macedonian State Origins Institutions and History Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 814883 6 Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere Griffith Guy Thompson 1979 A History of Macedonia 550 336 B C Vol II Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 814814 3 Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere Griffith Guy Thompson 1972 A History of Macedonia Historical Geography and Prehistory Vol I Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 9780198142942 Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere Walbank Frank William 1988 A History of Macedonia Volume III 336 167 B C Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 814815 1 Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere Walbank Frank William 2001 A History of Macedonia Volume III 336 167 B C reprint ed Oxford amp New York Clarendon Press of the Oxford University Press Hanson Victor Davis ed 2012 Makers of Ancient Strategy From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 15636 1 Hardiman Craig I 2010 Classical Art to 221 BC In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 505 521 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Harle Vilho 1998 Ideas of Social Order in the Ancient World Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 30582 5 Hatzopoulos M B 2011a Macedonia and Macedonians In Lane Fox Robin J ed Brill s Companion to Ancient Macedon Studies in the Archaeology and History of Macedon 650 BC 300 AD Leiden Brill pp 43 50 ISBN 978 90 04 20650 2 Hatzopoulos M B 2011b Macedonians and Other Greeks In Lane Fox Robin J ed Brill s Companion to Ancient Macedon Studies in the Archaeology and History of Macedon 650 BC 300 AD Leiden Brill pp 51 78 ISBN 978 90 04 20650 2 Hatzopoulos Miltiades 1999 The Speech of the Ancient Macedonians in the Light of Recent Epigraphic Discoveries Proceedings of the Sixth International Symposion on Ancient Macedonia Head Duncan 2016 1982 Armies of the Macedonian and Punic Wars 359 BC to 146 BC reprint ed Wargames Research Group Ltd ISBN 978 1 326 25656 2 Horejs Barbara 3 October 2007 The Phenomenon of Mattpainted Pottery in the Northern Aegean Introduction Overview and Theories Aegeo Balkan Prehistory Archived from the original on 3 September 2011 Hornblower Simon Matthews Elaine Fraser Peter Marshall 2000 Greek Personal Names Their Value as Evidence Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 726216 3 Hornblower Simon 2 Greek Identity in the Archaic and Classical Periods In Zacharia 2008 Isaac Benjamin H 2004 The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 12598 8 Joint Association of Classical Teachers 1984 The World of Athens An Introduction to Classical Athenian Culture Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 27389 7 Jones Archer 2001 The Art of War in the Western World Champaign Illinois University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 06966 8 Jones Prudence J 2006 Cleopatra a sourcebook Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 9780806137414 Iordanidis A Garcia Guinea J Karamitrou Mentessidi Georgia May 2007 Characterisation of Mycenaean and Matt Painted Pottery from Aiani Ancient Upper Macedonia Greece Bulletin of the Geological Society of Greece Athens Greece Proceedings of the 11th International Congress 40 4 1796 1807 doi 10 12681 bgsg 17141 Karamitrou Mentessidi Georgia 16 March 2007 The Late Bronze Age in Aiani Aegeo Balkan Prehistory Archived from the original on 15 October 2007 King Carol J 2010 Macedonian Kingship and Other Political Institutions In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 373 391 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Kinzl Konrad H 2010 A Companion to the Classical Greek World West Sussex UK John Wiley and Sons Limited ISBN 978 1 4443 3412 8 Cosmopoulos Michael B 1992 Macedonia An Introduction to Its Political History Manitoba Studies in Classical Civilization ISBN 978 0 9696691 0 4 Kristinsson Axel 2010 Expansions Competition and Conquest in Europe since the Bronze Age Reykjavik Iceland ReykjavikurAkademian ISBN 978 9979 9922 1 9 Lemos Irene S 2002 The Protogeometric Aegean The Archaeology of the Late Eleventh and Tenth Centuries BC Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 925344 7 MacDowell Douglas M 2009 Demosthenes the Orator New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 160873 5 Malkin Irad 1998 The Returns of Odysseus Colonization and Ethnicity Berkeley and Los Angeles California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 21185 8 Malkin Irad 2001 Ancient Perceptions of Greek Ethnicity Center for Hellenic Studies Trustees for Harvard University ISBN 0 674 00662 3 Masson Olivier Dubois Laurent 2000 Onomastica Graeca Selecta Geneva Switzerland Librairie Droz ISBN 2 600 00435 1 Masson Olivier 1996 Oxford Classical Dictionary Oxford UK Oxford University Press Muller Sabine 2010 Philip II In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 166 185 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Nawotka Krzysztof 2010 Alexander the Great Newcastle Upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 1743 1 O Brien John Maxwell 1994 1992 Alexander the Great The Invisible Enemy A Biography New York New York and London UK Routledge Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 415 10617 6 O Neil James L 2003 The Ethnic Origins of the Friends of the Antigonid Kings of Macedon The Classical Quarterly 10 2 510 522 doi 10 1093 cq 53 2 510 JSTOR 3556219 Olbrycht Marck Jan 2010 Macedonia and Persia In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 342 370 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Osborne Robin 2004 Greek History New York New York and London UK Routledge ISBN 0 415 31717 7 Papazoglou Fanoula 2000 Le Language Macedoniene Antique Juznoslovenski Filolog 56 3 4 771 777 Papazoglou Fanoula 1977 Sur le Structure Ethnique de l Ancienne Macedonie Balcanica 8 65 82 Perlman Samuel 1973 Philip and Athens Cambridge UK Heffer ISBN 0 85270 076 8 Piening H 2013 Mobile UV VIS Absorption Spectrometry Investigations in the Alexander Sarcophagus in Istanbul In Buyukozturk Oral Ali Tasdemir Mehmet eds Nondestructive Testing of Materials and Structures Proceedings of NDTMS 2011 Istanbul Turkey May 15 18 2011 Part 1 Heidelberg New York amp London RILEM amp Springer pp 1179 1186 ISBN 978 94 007 0722 1 Prag Johnathan R W Quinn Josephine Crawley 2013 Introduction In Prag Johnathan R W Quinn Josephine Crawley eds The Hellenistic West Rethinking the Ancient Mediterranean Cambridge amp New York Cambridge University Press pp 1 13 ISBN 978 1 107 03242 2 Rhodes P J 2010 The Literary and Epigraphic Evidence to the Roman Conquest In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 23 40 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Roisman Joseph 2010 Classical Macedonia to Perdiccas III In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 145 165 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Sakellariou Michael B 1983 Inhabitants In Michael B Sakellariou ed Macedonia 4000 Years of Greek History and Civilization Athens Ekdotike Athenon S A pp 44 63 Sakellariou M V 1992 Macedonia 4000 years of Greek History and Civilization Athens Greece Ekdotike Athenon Sansone David 2017 Ancient Greek Civilization 3rd ed Malden Oxford Chichester Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 119 09815 7 Sawada Noriko 2010 Social Customs and Institutions Aspects of Macedonian Elite Society In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 392 408 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Snodgrass Anthony M 2000 The Dark Age of Greece An Archaeological Survey of the Eleventh to the Eighth Centuries BC New York New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 93635 7 Sprawski Slawomir 2010 The Early Temenid Kings to Alexander I In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 127 144 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Starr Chester G 1991 A History of the Ancient World New York New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 506628 6 Theodossiev Nikola May 2000 The Dead with Golden Faces II Other Evidence and Connections Oxford Journal of Archaeology 19 2 175 209 doi 10 1111 1468 0092 00106 Thomas Carol G 2010 The Physical Kingdom In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 65 80 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Toynbee Arnold Joseph 1969 Some Problems of Greek History Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 215249 7 Toynbee Arnold Joseph 1981 The Greeks and Their Heritages Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192152565 Trudgill Peter 2002 Sociolinguistic Variation and Change Edinburgh UK Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1515 6 Vanderpool Eugene 1982 Studies in Attic Epigraphy History and Topography Princeton NJ American School of Classical Studies at Athens ISBN 0 87661 519 1 Voutiras Emmanuel 1998 DIONYSOFWNTOS GAMOI Marital Life and Magic in Fourth Century Pella Amsterdam The Netherlands J C Gieben ISBN 90 5063 407 9 Whitley James 2007 The Archaeology of Ancient Greece Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 62733 7 Wilkes John J 1995 The Illyrians Oxford UK Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 19807 5 Woodard Roger D 2008a The Ancient Languages of Asia Minor Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 68496 5 Woodard Roger D 2010 2008 Language in Ancient Europe an Introduction In Woodard Roger D ed The Ancient Languages of Europe Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 13 ISBN 978 0 521 68495 8 Woodard Roger D 2008b The Ancient Languages of Europe Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 68495 8 Worthington Ian 2014a 2004 Alexander the Great Man and God New York NY Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 86644 2 Worthington Ian 2003 Alexander the Great A Reader London UK Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 29187 3 Worthington Ian 2008 Philip II of Macedonia New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 12079 0 Worthington Ian 2012 Alexander the Great a Reader 2nd ed London amp New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 66742 5 Worthington Ian 2014b By the Spear Philip II Alexander the Great and the Rise and Fall of the Macedonian Empire Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 992986 3 Zacharia Katerina 2008 Hellenisms Culture Identity and Ethnicity from Antiquity to Modernity Hampshire England Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 6525 0 Further readingAnson Edward M 1984 The Meaning of the Term Macedones Ancient World 10 67 68 Baldry H C 1959 Greek Literature for the Modern Reader Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Baracchi Claudia ed 2014 The Bloomsbury Companion to Aristotle London and New York Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 4411 4854 4 Buckley Terry 2010 Aspects of Greek History A Source Based Approach London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 28184 7 Castelnuovo Luisa Moscati 2002 Identita e Prassi Storica nel Mediterraneo Greco Milan Italy Et ISBN 88 86752 20 2 Crossland R A Birchall Ann 1974 Bronze Age Migrations in the Aegean Archaeological and Linguistic Problems in Greek Prehistory Park Ridge NJ Noyes Press ISBN 0 8155 5022 7 Dunstan William E 2000 Ancient Greece Fort Worth Texas Harcourt College Publishers ISBN 0 15 507383 4 Green Peter 1992 Alexander of Macedon 356 323 B C A Historical Biography Berkeley and Los Angeles California University of California Press ISBN 0 520 07166 2 Hatzopoulos Miltiades 2002 Perception of the Self and the Other The Case of Macedon Proceedings of the Seventh International Symposion on Ancient Macedonia Pan Montojo Juan Pedersen Frederik eds 2007 Communities in European History Representations Jurisdictions Conflicts Pisa Italy Edizioni Plus Pisa University Press ISBN 978 88 8492 462 9 External linksAncient Macedonia at Livius Ancient History Demetrius C Evangelides The Yauna Takabara and the Ancient Macedonians Heracles to Alexander The Great Treasures From The Royal Capital of Macedon A Hellenic Kingdom in the Age of Democracy Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology University of Oxford Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ancient Macedonians amp oldid 1127301864, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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