fbpx
Wikipedia

Macedonians (ethnic group)

Macedonians (Macedonian: Македонци, romanizedMakedonci) are a nation and a South Slavic ethnic group native to the region of Macedonia in Southeast Europe. They speak Macedonian, a South Slavic language. The large majority of Macedonians identify as Eastern Orthodox Christians, who speak a South Slavic language, and share a cultural and historical "Orthodox Byzantine–Slavic heritage" with their neighbours. About two-thirds of all ethnic Macedonians live in North Macedonia and there are also communities in a number of other countries.

Macedonians
Македонци
Makedonci
Map of the Macedonian diaspora in the world
Total population
c. 2 million[dubious ]
Regions with significant populations
North Macedonia 1,073,375[1]
 Australia111,352 (2021 census)–200,000[2][3]
 Germany115,210(2020)[3][4]
 Italy65,347 (2017)[5]
 United States61,753–200,000[6][3]
 Switzerland61,304–63,000[3][7]
 Brazil45,000[8]
 Canada43,110 (2016 census)–200,000[9][10]
 Turkey31,518 (2001 census)[11]
 Argentina30,000[8]
 Greece10,000–30,000[12]
 Serbia22,755 (2011 census)[13]
 Austria20,135[3][14]
 Netherlands10,000–15,000[3]
 United Kingdom9,000 (est.)[3]
 Finland8,963[15]
 Hungary7,253[16]
 Albania5,512 (2011 census)[17]
 Denmark5,392 (2018)[18]
 Slovakia4,600[19]
 Croatia4,138 (2011 census)[20]
 Sweden4,491 (2009)[21]
 Slovenia3,972 (2002 census)[22]
 Belgium3,419 (2002)[23]
 Norway3,045[24]
 France2,300–15,000[25]
 Bosnia and Herzegovina2,278 (2005)[26]
 Czech Republic2,011[27]
 Poland2,000–4,500[28][29]
 Bulgaria1,654 (2011 census)[30]
 Romania1,264 (2011 census)[31]
 Montenegro900 (2011 census)[32]
 New Zealand807–1,500[33][34]
 Russia325 (2010) – 1,000 (est.)[28][35]
Languages
Macedonian
Religion
Predominantly Eastern Orthodox Christianity
(Macedonian Orthodox Church)
Minority Sunni Islam (Torbeši)
Catholicism
(Roman Catholic and Macedonian Greek Catholic)
Related ethnic groups
Other South Slavs, especially Slavic speakers of Greek Macedonia, Bulgarians[a] and Torlak speakers in Serbia

The concept of a Macedonian ethnicity, distinct from their Orthodox Balkan neighbours, is seen to be a comparatively newly emergent one.[b] The earliest manifestations of an incipient Macedonian identity emerged during the second half of the 19th century[45][46][47] among limited circles of Slavic-speaking intellectuals, predominantly outside the region of Macedonia. They arose after the First World War and especially during 1930s, and thus were consolidated by Communist Yugoslavia's governmental policy after the Second World War.[c] The formation of the ethnic Macedonians as a separate community has been shaped by population displacement[53] as well as by language shift,[54][dubious ] both the result of the political developments in the region of Macedonia during the 20th century. Following the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, the decisive point in the ethnogenesis of the South Slavic ethnic group was the creation of the Socialist Republic of Macedonia after World War II, a state in the framework of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. This was followed by the development of a separate Macedonian language and national literature, and the foundation of a distinct Macedonian Orthodox Church and national historiography.

History

Ancient and Roman period

In antiquity, much of central-northern Macedonia (the Vardar basin) was inhabited by Paionians who expanded from the lower Strymon basin. The Pelagonian plain was inhabited by the Pelagones and the Lyncestae, ancient Greek tribes of Upper Macedonia; whilst the western region (Ohrid-Prespa) was said to have been inhabited by Illyrian tribes, such as the Enchelae.[55] During the late Classical Period, having already developed several sophisticated polis-type settlements and a thriving economy based on mining,[56] Paeonia became a constituent province of the ArgeadMacedonian kingdom.[57] In 310 BC, the Celts attacked deep into the south, subduing various local tribes, such as the Dardanians, the Paeonians and the Triballi. Roman conquest brought with it a significant Romanization of the region. During the Dominate period, 'barbarian' foederati were settled on Macedonian soil at times; such as the Sarmatians settled by Constantine the Great (330s AD)[58] or the (10 year) settlement of Alaric I's Goths.[59] In contrast to 'frontier provinces', Macedonia (north and south) continued to be a flourishing Christian, Roman province in Late Antiquity and into the Early Middle Ages.[59][60]

Medieval period

Linguistically, the South Slavic languages from which Macedonian developed are thought to have expanded in the region during the post-Roman period, although the exact mechanisms of this linguistic expansion remains a matter of scholarly discussion.[61] Traditional historiography has equated these changes with the commencement of raids and 'invasions' of Sclaveni and Antes from Wallachia and western Ukraine during the 6th and 7th centuries.[62] However, recent anthropological and archaeological perspectives have viewed the appearance of Slavs in Macedonia, and throughout the Balkans in general, as part of a broad and complex process of transformation of the cultural, political and ethnolinguistic Balkan landscape before the collapse of Roman authority. The exact details and chronology of population shifts remain to be determined.[63][64] What is beyond dispute is that, in contrast to "barbarian" Bulgaria, northern Macedonia remained Roman in its cultural outlook into the 7th century.[60] Yet at the same time, sources attest numerous Slavic tribes in the environs of Thessaloniki and further afield, including the Berziti in Pelagonia.[65] Apart from Slavs and late Byzantines, Kuver's "Bulgars"[66] – a mix of Byzantine Greeks, Bulgars and Pannonian Avars – settled the "Keramissian plain" (Pelagonia) around Bitola in the late 7th century.[d] Later pockets of settlers included "Danubian" Bulgars[71][72] in the 9th century; Magyars (Vardariotai)[73] and Armenians in the 10th–12th centuries,[74] Cumans and Pechenegs in the 11th–13th centuries,[75] and Saxon miners in the 14th and 15th centuries.[76]

Having previously been Byzantine clients, the Sklaviniae of Macedonia probably switched their allegiance to Bulgaria during the reign of Empress Irene,[77][why?] and was gradually incorporated into the Bulgarian Empire before the mid-9th century. Subsequently, the literary and ecclesiastical centre in Ohrid became a second cultural capital of medieval Bulgaria.[78][79] On the other hand, developments of Slavic Orthodox Culture occurred in Byzantine Thessaloniki.[80][81][82]

Ottoman period

After the final Ottoman conquest of the Balkans by the Ottomans in the 14/15th century, all Eastern Orthodox Christians were included in a specific ethno-religious community under Graeco-Byzantine jurisdiction called Rum Millet. Belonging to this religious commonwealth was so important that most of the common people began to identify themselves as Christians.[83] However ethnonyms never disappeared and some form of primary ethnic identity was available.[84] This is confirmed from a Sultan's Firman from 1680 which describes the ethnic groups in the Balkan territories of the Empire as follows: Greeks, Albanians, Serbs, Vlachs and Bulgarians.[85] The rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire in the early 19th century brought opposition to this continued situation. At that time the classical Rum Millet began to degrade. The coordinated actions, carried out by Bulgarian national leaders supported by the majority of the Slavic-speaking population in today Republic of North Macedonia in order to be recognized as a separate ethnic entity, constituted the so-called "Bulgarian Millet", recognized in 1870.[86] At the time of its creation, people living in Vardar Macedonia, were not in the Exarchate. However, as a result of plebiscites held between 1872 and 1875, the Slavic districts in the area voted overwhelmingly (over 2/3) to go over to the new national Church.[87] Referring to the results of the plebiscites, and on the basis of statistical and ethnological indications, the 1876 Conference of Constantinople included most of Macedonia into the Bulgarian ethnic territory.[88] The borders of new Bulgarian state, drawn by the 1878 Treaty of San Stefano, also included Macedonia, but the treaty was never put into effect and the Treaty of Berlin (1878) "returned" Macedonia to the Ottoman Empire.

Throughout the Middle Ages and Ottoman rule up until the early 20th century[51][52][89] the Slavic-speaking population majority in the region of Macedonia were more commonly referred to (both by themselves and outsiders) as Bulgarians.[90][91][92] However, in pre-nationalist times, terms such as "Bulgarian" did not possess a strict ethno-nationalistic meaning, rather, they were loose, often interchangeable terms which could simultaneously denote regional habitation, allegiance to a particular empire, religious orientation, membership in certain social groups.[e] Similarly, a "Byzantine" was a Roman subject of Constantinople, and the term bore no strict ethnic connotations, Greek or otherwise.[97] Overall, in the Middle Ages, "a person's origin was distinctly regional",[98] and in Ottoman era, before the 19th-century rise of nationalism, it was based on the corresponding confessional community. After the rise of nationalism, most of the Slavic-speaking population in the area, joined the Bulgarian community, through voting in its favor on plebiscites held during the 1870s, by a qualified majority (over two-thirds).

Identity

 
Georgi Pulevski is the first known person, who in 1875 put forward the idea on the existence of a separate (Slavic) Macedonian language and ethnicity.[99]

The first expressions of Macedonian nationalism occurred in the second half of the 19th century mainly among intellectuals in Belgrade, Sofia, Thessaloniki and St. Petersburg.[100] Since the 1850s some Slavic intellectuals from the area adopted the Greek designation Macedonian as a regional label, and it began to gain popularity.[101] In the 1860s, according to Petko Slaveykov, some young intellectuals from Macedonia were claiming that they are not Bulgarians, but rather Macedonians, descendants of the Ancient Macedonians.[102] Slaveikov, himself with Macedonian roots,[103] started in 1866 the publication of the newspaper Makedoniya. Its main task was "to educate these misguided [sic] Grecomans there", who he called also Macedonists.[104] In a letter written to the Bulgarian Exarch in February 1874 Petko Slaveykov reports that discontent with the current situation "has given birth among local patriots to the disastrous idea of working independently on the advancement of their own local dialect and what's more, of their own, separate Macedonian church leadership."[105] The activities of these people were also registered by the Serbian politician Stojan Novaković,[106] who promoted the idea to use the Macedonian nationalism in order to oppose the strong pro-Bulgarian sentiments in the area.[107] The nascent Macedonian nationalism, illegal at home in the theocratic Ottoman Empire, and illegitimate internationally, waged a precarious struggle for survival against overwhelming odds: in appearance against the Ottoman Empire, but in fact against the three expansionist Balkan states and their respective patrons among the great powers.[108]

The first known author that overtly speaks of a Macedonian nationality and language was Georgi Pulevski, who in 1875 published in Belgrade a Dictionary of Three languages: Macedonian, Albanian, Turkish, in which he wrote that the Macedonians are a separate nation and the place which is theirs is called Macedonia.[109] In 1880, he published in Sofia a Grammar of the language of the Slavic Macedonian population, a work that is today known as the first attempt at a grammar of Macedonian. However, per some authors, his Macedonian self-identification was inchoate[110][111] and resembled a regional phenomenon.[112] In 1885 Theodosius of Skopje, a priest who have hold a high-ranking positions within the Bulgarian Exarchate was chosen as a bishop of the episcopacy of Skopje. In 1890 he renounced de facto the Bulgarian Exarchate and attempted to restore the Archbishopric of Ohrid as a separate Macedonian Orthodox Church in all eparchies of Macedonia,[113] responsible for the spiritual, cultural and educational life of all Macedonian Orthodox Christians.[108] During this time period Metropolitan Bishop Theodosius of Skopje made a plea to the Greek Patriarchate of Constantinople to allow a separate Macedonian church, and ultimately on 4 December 1891 he sent a letter to the Pope Leo XIII to ask for a recognition and a protection from the Roman Catholic Church, but failed. Soon after, he repented and returned to pro-Bulgarian positions.[114] In the 1880s and 1890s, Isaija Mažovski designated Macedonian Slavs as "Macedonians" and "Old Slavic Macedonian people", and also distinguished them from Bulgarians as follows: "Slavic-Bulgarian" for Mažovski was synonymous with "Macedonian", while only "Bulgarian" was a designation for the Bulgarians in Bulgaria.[115]

In 1890, Austrian researcher of Macedonia Karl Hron reported that the Macedonians constituted a separate ethnic group by history and language. Within the next few years, this concept was also welcomed in Russia by linguists including Leonhard Masing, Pyotr Lavrov, Jan Baudouin de Courtenay, and Pyotr Draganov.[116][117] Draganov, of Bulgarian descent, conducted research in Macedonia and determined that the local language had its own identifying characteristics compared to Bulgarian and Serbian. He wrote in a Saint Petersburg newspaper that the Macedonians should be recognized by Russia in a full national sense.[118]

Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization leader Boris Sarafov in 1901 stated that Macedonians had a unique "national element" and, the following year, he stated "We the Macedonians are neither Serbs nor Bulgarians, but simply Macedonians... Macedonia exists only for the Macedonians." However after the failure of the Ilinden Uprising, Sarafov wanted to keep closer ties with Bulgaria, supporting the Bulgarian aspirations towards the area.[119][120] Gyorche Petrov, another IMRO member, stated Macedonia was a "distinct moral unit" with its own "aspirations",[121] while describing its Slavic population as Bulgarian.[122]

National antagonisms and Macedonian separatism

Macedonian separatism

 
Krste Misirkov in 1903 attempted to codify a standard Macedonian language and appealed for eventual recognition of a separate Macedonian nation when the necessary historical circumstances would arise.

In 1903 Krste Misirkov published in Sofia his book On Macedonian Matters in which he laid down the principles of the modern Macedonian nationhood and language. This book written in the standardized central dialect of Macedonia is considered by ethnic Macedonians as a milestone of the process of Macedonian awakening. Misirkov argued that the dialect of central Macedonia (Veles-Prilep-Bitola-Ohrid) should be taken as a standard Macedonian literary language, in which Macedonians should write, study, and worship; the autocephalous Archbishopric of Ohrid should be restored; and the Slavic people of Macedonia should be identified in their Ottoman identity cards (nofuz) as "Macedonians".

Another major figure of the Macedonian awakening was Dimitrija Čupovski, one of the founders of the Macedonian Literary Society, established in Saint Petersburg in 1902. In 1913, the Macedonian Literary Society submitted the Memorandum of Independence of Macedonia to the British Foreign Secretary and other European ambassadors, and it was printed in many European newspapers. In the period 1913–1918, Čupovski published the newspaper Македонскi Голосъ (Macedonian Voice) in which he and fellow members of the Saint Petersburg Macedonian Colony propagated the existence of a Macedonian people separate from the Greeks, Bulgarians and Serbs, and sought to popularize the idea for an independent Macedonian state.

The "Macedonian Slavs" in cartography

From 1878 until 1918 most independent European observers viewed the Slavs of Macedonia as Bulgarians or as Macedonian Slavs, while their association with Bulgaria was almost universally accepted.[123] Original manuscript versions of population data mentioned "Macedonian Slavs", though the term was changed to "Bulgarians" in the official printing.[124] Western publications usually presented the Slavs of Macedonia as Bulgarians, as happened, partly for political reasons, in Serbian ones.[125] Prompted by the publication of a Serbian map by Spiridon Gopčević claiming the Slavs of Macedonia as Serbs, a version of a Russian map, published in 1891, in a period of deterioration of Bulgarian-Russian relations, first presented Macedonia inhabited not by Bulgarians, but by Macedonian Slavs.[126] Austrian-Hungarian maps followed suit in an effort to delegitimize the ambitions of Russophile Bulgaria, returning to presenting the Macedonian Slavs as Bulgarians when Austria-Bulgaria relations ameliorated, only to renege and employ the designation "Macedonian Slavs" when Bulgaria changed its foreign policy and Austria turned to envisaging an autonomous Macedonia under Austrian influence within the Murzsteg process.[127] The term "Macedonian Slavs" was used either as a middle solution between conflicting Serbian and Bulgarian claims, to denote an intermediary grouping of Slavs, associated with the Bulgarians, or to describe a separate Slavic group with no ethnic, national or political affiliation.[128] The differentiation of ethnographic maps representing rival national views produced to satisfy the curiosity of European audience for the inhabitants of Macedonia, after the Ilinden uprising of 1903, indicated the complexity of the issue.[129] Influenced by the conclusions of the research of young Serb Jovan Cvijić, that Macedonia's culture combined Byzantine influence with Serbian traditions, a map of 1903 by Austrian cartographer Karl Peucker depicted Macedonia as a peculiar area, where zones of linguistic influence overlapped.[130] In his first ethnographic map of 1906, Cvijic presented all Slavs of Serbia and Macedonia merely as "Slavs".[131] In a pamphlet translated and circulated in Europe the same year, he elaborated his ostensibly impartial views and described the Slavs living south of the Babuna and Plačkovica mountains as "Macedo-Slavs" arguing that the appellation "Bugari" meant simply "peasant" to them, that they had no national consciousness and could become Serbs or Bulgarians in the future.[132] Cvijić thus transformed the political character of the IMRO's appeals to "Macedonians" into an ethnic one.[133] Bulgarian cartographer Anastas Ishirkov countered Cvijić's views, pointing to the involvement of Macedonian Slavs in Bulgarian nationalist uprisings and the Macedonian origins of Bulgarian nationalists before 1878. Although Cvijic's arguments attracted the attention of Great Powers, they did not endorse at the time his view on the Macedo-Slavs.[134]

Cvijić further elaborated the idea that had first appeared in Peucker's map and in his map of 1909 he ingeniously mapped the Macedonian Slavs as a third group distinct from Bulgarians and Serbians, and part of them "under Greek influence".[135][136] Envisioning a future agreement with Greece, Cvijic depicted the southern half of the Macedo-Slavs "under Greek unfluence", while leaving the rest to appear as a subset of the Serbo-Croats.[137][138] Cvijić's view was reproduced without acknowledgement by Alfred Stead, with no effect on British opinion,[139][140] but, reflecting the reorientation of Serbian aims towards dividing Macedonia with Greece, Cvijić eliminated the Macedo-Slavs from a subsequent edition of his map.[141] However, in 1913, before the conclusion of the Treaty of Bucharest he published his third ethnographic map distinguishing the Macedo-Slavs between Skopje and Salonica from both Bulgarians and Serbo-Croats, on the basis of the transitional character of their dialect per the linguistic researches of Vatroslav Jagić and Aleksandar Belić, and the Serb features of their customs, such as the zadruga.[142] For Cvijić, the Macedo-Slavs were a transitional population, with any sense of nationality they displayed being weak, superficial, externally imposed and temporary.[143] Despite arguing that they should be considered neutral, he postulated their division into Serbs and Bulgarians based on dialectical and cultural features in anticipation of Serbian demands regarding the delimitation of frontiers.[144]

A Balkan committee of experts rejected Cvijić's concept of the Macedo-Slavs in 1914,[145] However, in 1918 Cvijic published a revised version of his map of 1913, which, now included in a work of his modelling French geographers' standards, was taken as impeccable.[146] This map was reproduced in modified form in French and American journals in 1918 and numerous other maps and atlases, including those produced by the Allies as the Entente approached victory in the First World War, replicated its ideas, especially its depiction of the Macedo-Slavs.[147][148] The prevalence of the Yugoslav point of view, obliged Georgios Sotiriades, a professor of History at the University of Athens, to map the Macedo-Slavs as a distinct group in his work of 1918, that mirrored Greek views of the time and was used as an official document to advocate for Greece's positions in the Paris peace conference.[149][150] After World War I, Cvijić's map became the point of reference for all Balkan ethnographic maps,[151] while his concept of Macedo-Slavs was reproduced in almost all maps,[152] including German maps, that acknowledged a Macedonian nation.[153]

Macedonian Nationalism and Interwar Communism

After the Balkan Wars (1912–1913) and the World War I (1914–1918), following the division of the region of Macedonia amongst the Kingdom of Greece, the Kingdom of Bulgaria and the Kingdom of Serbia, the idea of belonging to a separate Macedonian nation was further spread among the Slavic-speaking population. The suffering during the wars, the endless struggle of the Balkan monarchies for dominance over the population increased the Macedonians' sentiment that the institutionalization of an independent Macedonian nation would put an end to their suffering. On the question of whether they were Serbs or Bulgarians, the people more often started answering: "Neither Bulgar, nor Serb... I am Macedonian only, and I'm sick of war."[154][155][156] By the 1920s, following a negative reaction to the national proselytization of the previous decades, a majority of Christian Slavs inhabiting Greek and Vardar Macedonia used the collective name "Macedonians" to describe themselves, either as a nation or as a distinct ethnicity.[157] The 1928 Greek census recorded 81,844 Slavo-Macedonian speakers, distinct from 16,755 Bulgarian speakers.[158]

 
Dimitar Vlahov played a crucial role in the adoption of the Resolution of the Comintern on the Macedonian question that, for the first time by an international organization, recognized the existence of a separate Macedonian nation, in 1934

The consolidation of an international Communist organization (the Comintern) in the 1920s led to some failed attempts by the Communists to use the Macedonian Question as a political weapon. In the 1920 Yugoslav parliamentary elections, 25% of the total Communist vote came from Macedonia, but participation was low (only 55%), mainly because the pro-Bulgarian IMRO organised a boycott against the elections. In the following years, the communists attempted to enlist the pro-IMRO sympathies of the population in their cause. In the context of this attempt, in 1924 the Comintern organized the filed signing of the so-called May Manifesto, in which independence of partitioned Macedonia was required.[159] In 1925 with the help of the Comintern, the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (United) was created, composed of former left-wing Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) members. This organization promoted for the first time in 1932 the existence of a separate ethnic Macedonian nation.[160][161][162] In 1933 the Communist Party of Greece, in a series of articles published in its official newspaper, the Rizospastis, criticizing Greek minority policy towards Slavic-speakers in Greek Macedonia, recognized the Slavs of the entire region of Macedonia as forming a distinct Macedonian ethnicity and their language as Macedonian.[163] The idea of a Macedonian nation was internationalized and backed by the Comintern which issued in 1934 a resolution supporting the development of the entity.[164] This action was attacked by the IMRO, but was supported by the Balkan communists. The Balkan communist parties supported the national consolidation of the ethnic Macedonian people and created Macedonian sections within the parties, headed by prominent IMRO (United) members.

World War II and Yugoslav nation-state building

The sense of belonging to a separate Macedonian nation gained credence during World War II when ethnic Macedonian communist partisan detachments were formed. In 1943 the Communist Party of Macedonia was established and the resistance movement grew up.[165][166] On the other hand, due to the different trajectories of Macedonian Slavs in the three nation-states that ruled the region, the designation "Macedonian" acquired different meanings for them by the time of the National Liberation War of Macedonia in the 1940s. Those who came from the Bulgarian part and were members of the IMRO (United) practicall felt themselves as Bulgarians, while those who had experienced Serbian rule and had interacted with the Croatian and Slovenian national movements within Yugoslavia had developed a stronger Macedonian consciousness.[167] After the World War II ethnic Macedonian institutions were created in the three parts of the region of Macedonia, then under communist control,[168] including the establishment of the People's Republic of Macedonia within the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRJ).

 

The available data indicates that despite the policy of assimilation, pro-Bulgarian sentiments among the Macedonian Slavs in Yugoslavia were still sizable during the interwar period. However, if the Yugoslavs would recognize the Slavic inhabitants of Vardar Macedonia as Bulgarians, it would mean that the area should be part of Bulgaria. Practically in post-World War II Macedonia, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia's state policy of forced Serbianisation was changed with a new one — of Macedonization. The codification of Macedonian and the recognition of the Macedonian nation had the main goal: finally to ban any Bulgarophilia among the Macedonians and to build a new consciousness, based on identification with Yugoslavia. As a result, Yugoslavia introduced again an abrupt de-Bulgarization of the people in the PR Macedonia, such as it already had conducted in the Vardar Banovina during the Interwar period. Around 100,000 pro-Bulgarian elements were imprisoned for violations of the special Law for the Protection of Macedonian National Honour, and over 1,200 were allegedly killed. In this way generations of students grew up educated in strong anti-Bulgarian sentiment which during the times of Communist Yugoslavia, increased to the level of state policy. Its main agenda was a result from the need to distinguish between the Bulgarians and the new Macedonian nation, because Macedonians could confirm themselves as a separate community with its own history, only through differentiating itself from Bulgaria. This policy has continued in the new Republic of Macedonia after 1990, although with less intensity. Thus, the Bulgarian part of the identity of the Slavic-speaking population in Vardar Macedonia has died out.[f]

Contemporary state of identity and polemics

 
Kiro Gligorov was the first president of the Republic of Macedonia (now North Macedonia) after the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991.

Following the collapse of Yugoslavia, the issue of Macedonian identity emerged again. Nationalists and governments alike from neighbouring countries, especially Greece and Bulgaria, espouse the view that the Macedonian ethnicity is a modern, artificial creation. Such views have been seen by Macedonian historians to represent irredentist motives on Macedonian territory.[108] Moreover, some historians point out that all modern nations are recent, politically motivated constructs based on creation "myths",[177] that the creation of Macedonian identity is "no more or less artificial than any other identity",[178] and that, contrary to the claims of Romantic nationalists, modern, territorially bound and mutually exclusive nation-states have little in common with their preceding large territorial or dynastic medieval empires, and any connection between them is tenuous at best.[179] In any event, irrespective of shifting political affiliations, the Macedonian Slavs shared in the fortunes of the Byzantine commonwealth and the Rum millet and they can claim them as their heritage.[108] Loring Danforth states similarly, the ancient heritage of modern Balkan countries is not "the mutually exclusive property of one specific nation" but "the shared inheritance of all Balkan peoples".[180]

A more radical and uncompromising strand of Macedonian nationalism has recently emerged called "ancient Macedonism", or "Antiquisation". Proponents of this view see modern Macedonians as direct descendants of the ancient Macedonians. This view faces criticism by academics as it is not supported by archaeology or other historical disciplines and also could marginalize the Macedonian identity.[181][182] Surveys on the effects of the controversial nation-building project Skopje 2014 and on the perceptions of the population of Skopje revealed a high degree of uncertainty regarding the latter's national identity. A supplementary national poll showed that there was a great discrepancy between the population's sentiment and the narrative the state sought to promote.[183]

Additionally, during the last two decades, tens of thousands of citizens of North Macedonia have applied for Bulgarian citizenship.[184] In the period since 2002 some 97,000 acquired it, while ca. 53,000 applied and are still waiting.[185] Bulgaria has a special ethnic dual-citizenship regime which makes a constitutional distinction between ethnic Bulgarians and Bulgarian citizens. In the case of the Macedonians, merely declaring their national identity as Bulgarian is enough to gain a citizenship.[186] By making the procedure simpler, Bulgaria stimulates more Macedonian citizens (of Slavic origin) to apply for a Bulgarian citizenship.[187] However, many Macedonians who apply for Bulgarian citizenship as Bulgarians by origin,[188] have few ties with Bulgaria.[189] Further, those applying for Bulgarian citizenship usually say they do so to gain access to member states of the European Union rather than to assert Bulgarian identity.[190] This phenomenon is called placebo identity.[191] Some Macedonians view the Bulgarian policy as part of a strategy to destabilize the Macedonian national identity.[192] As a nation engaged in a dispute over its distinctiveness from Bulgarians, Macedonians have always perceived themselves as threatened by their neighbor.[193] Bulgaria insists its neighbor admit the common historical roots of their languages and nations, a view Skopje continues to reject.[194] As a result, Bulgaria blocked the official start of EU accession talks with North Macedonia.[195]

Despite sizable number of Macedonians that have acquired Bulgarian citizenship since 2002 (ca. 9.7% of the Slavic population), only 3,504 citizens of North Macedonia declared themselves as ethnic Bulgarians in the 2021 census (roughly 0.31% from the Slavic population).[196] The Bulgarian side does not accept these results as completely objective, citing as an example the census has counted less than 20,000 people with Bulgarian citizenship in the country, while in fact they are over 100,000.[197]

Ethnonym

The national name derives from the Greek term Makedonía, related to the name of the region, named after the ancient Macedonians and their kingdom. It originates from the ancient Greek adjective makednos, meaning "tall",[198] which shares its roots with the adjective makrós, meaning the same.[199] The name is originally believed to have meant either "highlanders" or "the tall ones", possibly descriptive of these ancient people.[200][201][202] In the Late Middle Ages the name of Macedonia had different meanings for Western Europeans and for the Balkan people. For the Westerners it denoted the historical territory of the Ancient Macedonia, but for the Balkan Christians, it covered the territories of the former Byzantine province of Macedonia, situated around modern Turkish Edirne.[203]

With the conquest of the Balkans by the Ottomans in the late 14th century, the name of Macedonia disappeared as a geographical designation for several centuries. The name was revived just during the early 19th century, after the foundation of the modern Greek state with its Western Europe-derived obsession with Ancient Greece.[204][205] As a result of the rise of nationalism in the Ottoman Empire, massive Greek religious and school propaganda occurred, and a process of Hellenization was implemented among Slavic-speaking population of the area.[206][207] In this way, the name Macedonians was applied to the local Slavs, aiming to stimulate the development of close ties between them and the Greeks, linking both sides to the ancient Macedonians, as a counteract against the growing Bulgarian cultural influence into the region.[208][209]

Although the local intellectuals initially rejected the Macedonian designation as Greek,[210] since 1850s some of them, adopted it as a regional identity, and this name began to gain popularity.[101] Serbian politics then, also encouraged this kind of regionalism to neutralize the Bulgarian influx, thereby promoting Serbian interests there.[211] The local educator Kuzman Shapkarev concluded that since the 1870s this foreign ethnonym began to replace the traditional one Bulgarians.[212] At the dawn of the 20th century the Bulgarian teacher Vasil Kanchov marked that the local Bulgarians and Koutsovlachs call themselves Macedonians, and the surrounding people also call them in the same way.[213] During the interbellum Bulgaria also supported to some extent the Macedonian regional identity, especially in Yugoslavia. Its aim was to prevent the Serbianization of the local Slavic speakers, because the very name Macedonia was prohibited in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.[214][215] Ultimately the designation Macedonian, changed its status in 1944, and went from being predominantly a regional, ethnographic denomination, to a national one.[216]

Population

The vast majority of Macedonians live along the valley of the river Vardar, the central region of the Republic of North Macedonia. They form about 64.18% of the population of North Macedonia (1,297,981 people according to the ). Smaller numbers live in eastern Albania, northern Greece, and southern Serbia, mostly abutting the border areas of the Republic of North Macedonia. A large number of Macedonians have immigrated overseas to Australia, the United States, Canada, New Zealand and to many European countries: Germany, Italy, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and Austria among others.

Balkans

Greece

The existence of an ethnic Macedonian minority in Greece is rejected by the Greek government. The number of people speaking Slavic dialects has been estimated at somewhere between 10,000 and 250,000.[g] Most of these people however do not have an ethnic Macedonian national consciousness, with most choosing to identify as ethnic Greeks[225] or rejecting both ethnic designations and preferring terms such as "natives" instead.[226] In 1999 the Greek Helsinki Monitor estimated that the number of people identifying as ethnic Macedonians numbered somewhere between 10,000 and 30,000,[12][227] Macedonian sources generally claim the number of ethnic Macedonians living in Greece at somewhere between 200,000 and 350,000.[228] The ethnic Macedonians in Greece have faced difficulties from the Greek government in their ability to self-declare as members of a "Macedonian minority" and to refer to their native language as "Macedonian".[226]

Since the late 1980s there has been an ethnic Macedonian revival in Northern Greece, mostly centering on the region of Florina.[229] Since then ethnic Macedonian organisations including the Rainbow political party have been established.[230] Rainbow first opened its offices in Florina on 6 September 1995. The following day, the offices had been broken into and had been ransacked.[231] Later Members of Rainbow had been charged for "causing and inciting mutual hatred among the citizens" because the party had bilingual signs written in both Greek and Macedonian.[232] On 20 October 2005, the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) ordered the Greek government to pay penalties to the Rainbow Party for violations of 2 ECHR articles.[226] Rainbow has seen limited success at a national level, its best result being achieved in the 1994 European elections, with a total of 7,263 votes. Since 2004 it has participated in European Parliament elections and local elections, but not in national elections. A few of its members have been elected in local administrative posts. Rainbow has recently re-established Nova Zora, a newspaper that was first published for a short period in the mid-1990s, with reportedly 20,000 copies being distributed free of charge.[233][234][235]

Serbia

Within Serbia, Macedonians constitute an officially recognised ethnic minority at both a local and national level. Within Vojvodina, Macedonians are recognised under the Statute of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina, along with other ethnic groups. Large Macedonian settlements within Vojvodina can be found in Plandište, Jabuka, Glogonj, Dužine and Kačarevo. These people are mainly the descendants of economic migrants who left the Socialist Republic of Macedonia in the 1950s and 1960s. The Macedonians in Serbia are represented by a national council and in recent years Macedonian has begun to be taught. The most recent census recorded 22,755 Macedonians living in Serbia.[236]

Albania

Macedonians represent the second largest ethnic minority population in Albania. Albania recognises the existence of a Macedonian minority within the Mala Prespa region, most of which is comprised by Pustec Municipality. Macedonians have full minority rights within this region, including the right to education and the provision of other services in Macedonian. There also exist unrecognised Macedonian populations living in the Golo Brdo region, the "Dolno Pole" area near the town of Peshkopi, around Lake Ohrid and Korce as well as in Gora. 4,697 people declared themselves Macedonians in the 1989 census.[237]

Bulgaria

Bulgarians are considered most closely related to the neighboring Macedonians and it is sometimes claimed that there is no clear ethnic difference between them.[238] As regards self-identification, a total of 1,654 people officially declared themselves to be ethnic Macedonians in the last Bulgarian census in 2011 (0,02%) and 561 of them are in Blagoevgrad Province (0,2%).[239] 1,091 of them are Macedonian citizens, who are permanent residents in Bulgaria.[240] Krassimir Kanev, chairman of the non-governmental organization Bulgarian Helsinki Committee, claimed 15,000–25,000 in 1998 (see ). In the same report Macedonian nationalists (Popov et al., 1989) claimed that 200,000 ethnic Macedonians live in Bulgaria. However, Bulgarian Helsinki Committee stated that the vast majority of the Slavic-speaking population in Pirin Macedonia has a Bulgarian national self-consciousness and a regional Macedonian identity similar to the Macedonian regional identity in Greek Macedonia. Finally, according to personal evaluation of a leading local ethnic Macedonian political activist, Stoyko Stoykov, the number of Bulgarian citizens with ethnic Macedonian self-consciousness in 2009 was between 5,000 and 10,000.[241] In 2000, the Bulgarian Constitutional Court banned UMO Ilinden-Pirin, a small Macedonian political party, as a separatist organization. Subsequently, activists attempted to re-establish the party but could not gather the required number of signatures.

Diaspora

 
Macedonian diaspora in the world (includes people with Macedonian ancestry or citizenship).
  North Macedonia
  + 100,000
  + 10,000
  + 1,000

Significant Macedonian communities can also be found in the traditional immigrant-receiving nations, as well as in Western European countries. Census data in many European countries (such as Italy and Germany) does not take into account the ethnicity of émigrés from the Republic of North Macedonia.

Argentina

Most Macedonians can be found in Buenos Aires, the Pampas and Córdoba. An estimated 30,000 Macedonians can be found in Argentina.[242]

Australia

The official number of Macedonians in Australia by birthplace or birthplace of parents is 83,893 (). The main Macedonian communities are found in Melbourne, Geelong, Sydney, Wollongong, Newcastle, Canberra and Perth. The 2006 census recorded 83,983 people of Macedonian ancestry and the 2011 census recorded 93,570 people of Macedonian ancestry.[243]

Brazil

An estimated 45,000 people in Brazil are of Macedonian ancestry.[244] The Macedonians can be primarily found in Porto Alegre, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Curitiba.

Canada

The Canadian census in 2001 records 37,705 individuals claimed wholly or partly Macedonian heritage in Canada,[245] although community spokesmen have claimed that there are actually 100,000–150,000 Macedonians in Canada.[246]

United States

A significant Macedonian community can be found in the United States. The official number of Macedonians in the US is 49,455 (2004). The Macedonian community is located mainly in Michigan, New York, Ohio, Indiana and New Jersey[247]

Germany

There are an estimated 61,000 citizens of North Macedonia in Germany (mostly in the Ruhrgebiet) ().

Italy

There are 74,162 citizens of North Macedonia in Italy (Foreign Citizens in Italy).

Switzerland

In 2006 the Swiss Government recorded 60,362 Macedonian Citizens living in Switzerland.[248]

Romania

Macedonians are an officially recognised minority group in Romania. They have a special reserved seat in the nation's parliament. In 2002, they numbered 731.

Slovenia

Macedonians began relocating to Slovenia in the 1950s when the two regions formed a part of a single country, Yugoslavia.

Other countries

Other significant Macedonian communities can also be found in the other Western European countries such as Austria, France, Luxembourg, Netherlands, United Kingdom, and the whole European Union.[citation needed] Also in Uruguay, with a significant population in Montevideo.[citation needed]

Culture

The culture of the people is characterized with both traditionalist and modernist attributes. It is strongly bound with their native land and the surrounding in which they live. The rich cultural heritage of the Macedonians is accented in the folklore, the picturesque traditional folk costumes, decorations and ornaments in city and village homes, the architecture, the monasteries and churches, iconostasis, wood-carving and so on. The culture of Macedonians can roughly be explained as Balkanic, closely related to that of Bulgarians and Serbs.

Architecture

 
Ottoman architecture in Ohrid.
 
Macedonian girls in traditional folk costumes.

The typical Macedonian village house is influenced by Ottoman Architecture. Presented as a construction with two floors, with a hard facade composed of large stones and a wide balcony on the second floor. In villages with predominantly agricultural economy, the first floor was often used as a storage for the harvest, while in some villages the first floor was used as a cattle-pen.

The stereotype for a traditional Macedonian city house is a two-floor building with white façade, with a forward extended second floor, and black wooden elements around the windows and on the edges.

Cinema and theater

The history of film making in North Macedonia dates back over 110 years. The first film to be produced on the territory of the present-day the country was made in 1895 by Janaki and Milton Manaki in Bitola. In 1995 Before the Rain became the first Macedonian movie to be nominated for an Academy Award.[249]

From 1993 to 1994, 1,596 performances were held in the newly formed republic, and more than 330,000 people attended. The Macedonian National Theater (drama, opera, and ballet companies), the Drama Theater, the Theater of the Nationalities (Albanian and Turkish drama companies) and the other theater companies comprise about 870 professional actors, singers, ballet dancers, directors, playwrights, set and costume designers, etc. There is also a professional theatre for children and three amateur theaters. For the last thirty years a traditional festival of Macedonian professional theaters has been taking place in Prilep in honor of Vojdan Černodrinski, the founder of the modern Macedonian theater. Each year a festival of amateur and experimental Macedonian theater companies is held in Kočani.

Music and art

Macedonian music has many things in common with the music of neighboring Balkan countries, but maintains its own distinctive sound.

The founders of modern Macedonian painting included Lazar Licenovski, Nikola Martinoski, Dimitar Pandilov, and Vangel Kodzoman. They were succeeded by an exceptionally talented and fruitful generation, consisting of Borka Lazeski, Dimitar Kondovski, Petar Mazev who are now deceased, and Rodoljub Anastasov and many others who are still active. Others include: Vasko Taskovski and Vangel Naumovski. In addition to Dimo Todorovski, who is considered to be the founder of modern Macedonian sculpture, the works of Petar Hadzi Boskov, Boro Mitrikeski, Novak Dimitrovski and Tome Serafimovski are also outstanding.

Economy

In the past, the Macedonian population was predominantly involved with agriculture, with a very small portion of the people who were engaged in trade (mainly in the cities). But after the creation of the People's Republic of Macedonia which started a social transformation based on Socialist principles, middle and heavy industries were started.

Language

Macedonian (македонски јазик) is a member of the Eastern group of South Slavic languages. Standard Macedonian was implemented as the official language of the Socialist Republic of Macedonia after being codified in the 1940s, and has accumulated a thriving literary tradition.

The closest relative of Macedonian is Bulgarian,[250] followed by Serbo-Croatian. All the South Slavic languages form a dialect continuum, in which Macedonian and Bulgarian form an Eastern subgroup. The Torlakian dialect group is intermediate between Bulgarian, Macedonian and Serbian, comprising some of the northernmost dialects of Macedonian as well as varieties spoken in southern Serbia and western Bulgaria. Torlakian is often classified as part of the Eastern South Slavic dialects.

The Macedonian alphabet is an adaptation of the Cyrillic script, as well as language-specific conventions of spelling and punctuation. It is rarely Romanized.

Religion

 
One of the well-known monasteries – St. Panteleimon in Ohrid.

Most Macedonians are members of the Macedonian Orthodox Church. The official name of the church is Macedonian Orthodox Church – Ohrid Archbishopric and is the body of Christians who are united under the Archbishop of Ohrid and North Macedonia, exercising jurisdiction over Macedonian Orthodox Christians in the Republic of North Macedonia and in exarchates in the Macedonian diaspora.

The church gained autonomy from the Serbian Orthodox Church in 1959 and declared the restoration of the historic Archbishopric of Ohrid. On 19 July 1967, the Macedonian Orthodox Church declared autocephaly from the Serbian church. Due to protest from the Serbian Orthodox Church, the move was not recognised by any of the churches of the Eastern Orthodox Communion, and since then, the Macedonian Orthodox Church is not in communion with any Orthodox Church.[251] A small number of Macedonians belong to the Roman Catholic and the Protestant churches.

Between the 15th and the 20th centuries, during Ottoman rule, a number of Orthodox Macedonian Slavs converted to Islam. Today in the Republic of North Macedonia, they are regarded as Macedonian Muslims, who constitute the second largest religious community of the country.

Names

Cuisine

 
Tavče Gravče, the national dish of Macedonians.

Macedonian cuisine is a representative of the cuisine of the Balkans—reflecting Mediterranean (Greek) and Middle Eastern (Turkish) influences, and to a lesser extent Italian, German and Eastern European (especially Hungarian) ones. The relatively warm climate in North Macedonia provides excellent growth conditions for a variety of vegetables, herbs and fruits. Thus, Macedonian cuisine is particularly diverse.

Shopska salad, a food from Bulgaria, is an appetizer and side dish which accompanies almost every meal.[citation needed] Macedonian cuisine is also noted for the diversity and quality of its dairy products, wines, and local alcoholic beverages, such as rakija. Tavče Gravče and mastika are considered the national dish and drink of North Macedonia, respectively.

Symbols

Symbols used by members of the ethnic group include:

  • Lion: The lion first appears in the Fojnica Armorial from 17th century, where the coat of arms of Macedonia is included among those of other entities. On the coat of arms is a crown; inside a yellow crowned lion is depicted standing rampant, on a red background. On the bottom enclosed in a red and yellow border is written "Macedonia". The use of the lion to represent Macedonia was continued in foreign heraldic collections throughout the 17th and 18th centuries.[252][253] Nevertheless, during the late 19th century the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization arose, which modeled itself after the earlier Bulgarian revolutionary traditions and adopted their symbols as the lion, etc.[254][255] Modern versions of the historical lion has also been added to the emblem of several political parties, organizations and sports clubs. However, this symbol is not totally accepted while the state coat of arms of Bulgaria is somewhat similar.
 
Flag of the Republic of Macedonia (1992–1995) depicting the Vergina Sun
  • Vergina Sun: (official flag, 1992–1995) The Vergina Sun is used unofficially by various associations and cultural groups in the Macedonian diaspora. The Vergina Sun is believed to have been associated with ancient Greek kings such as Alexander the Great and Philip II, although it was used as an ornamental design in ancient Greek art long before the Macedonian period. The symbol was depicted on a golden larnax found in a 4th-century BC royal tomb belonging to either Philip II or Philip III of Macedon in the Greek region of Macedonia. The Greeks regard the use of the symbol by North Macedonia as a misappropriation of a Hellenic symbol, unrelated to Slavic cultures, and a direct claim on the legacy of Philip II. However, archaeological items depicting the symbol have also been excavated in the territory of North Macedonia.[256] Toni Deskoski, Macedonian professor of International Law, argues that the Vergina Sun is not a Macedonian symbol but it's a Greek symbol that is used by Macedonians in the nationalist context of Macedonism and that the Macedonians need to get rid of it.[257] In 1995, Greece lodged a claim for trademark protection of the Vergina Sun as a state symbol under WIPO.[258] In Greece the symbol against a blue field is used vastly in the area of Macedonia and it has official status.The Vergina sun on a red field was the first flag of the independent Republic of Macedonia, until it was removed from the state flag under an agreement reached between the Republic of Macedonia and Greece in September 1995.[259] On 17 June 2018, Greece and the Republic of Macedonia signed the Prespa Agreement, which stipulates the removal of the Vergina Sun's public use across the latter's territory.[260][261] In a session held on early July 2019, the government of North Macedonia announced the complete removal of the Vergina Sun from all public areas, institutions and monuments in the country, with the deadline for its removal being set to 12 August 2019, in line with the Prespa Agreement.[262][263][264]

Genetics

Anthropologically, Macedonians possess genetic lineages postulated to represent Balkan prehistoric and historic demographic processes.[265] Such lineages are also typically found in neighboring South Slavs such as Bulgarians and Serbs, in addition to Greeks, Albanians, Romanians and Gagauzes.[h]

Y-DNA studies suggest that Macedonians along with neighboring South Slavs are distinct from other Slavic-speaking populations in Europe and near half of their Y-chromosome DNA haplogroups are likely to be inherited from inhabitants of the Balkans that predated sixth-century Slavic migrations.[275] A diverse set of Y-DNA haplogroups are found in Macedonians at significant levels, including I2a1b, E-V13, J2a, R1a1, R1b, G2a, encoding a complex pattern of demographic processes.[276] Similar distributions of the same haplogroups are found in neighboring populations.[277][278] I2a1b and R1a1 are typically found in Slavic-speaking populations across Europe[279][280] while haplogroups such as E-V13 and J2 occur at high frequencies in neighboring non-Slavic populations.[277] On the other hand R1b is the most frequently occurring haplogroup in Western Europe and G2a is most frequently found in Caucasus and the adjacent areas. According to a DNA data for 17 Y-chromosomal STR loci in Macedonians, in comparison to other South Slavs and Kosovo Albanians, the Macedonian population had the lowest genetic (Y-STR) distance against the Bulgarian population while having the largest distance against the Croatian population. However, the observed populations did not have significant differentiation in Y-STR population structure, except partially for Kosovo Albanians.[281] Genetic similarity, irrespective of language and ethnicity, has a strong correspondence to geographic proximity in European populations.[272][273][282]

In regard to population genetics, not all regions of Southeastern Europe had the same ratio of native Byzantine and invading Slavic population, with the territory of the Eastern Balkans (Macedonia, Thrace and Moesia) having a significant percentage of locals compared to Slavs. Considering that the majority of Balkan Slavs came via the Eastern Carpathian route, lower percentage in the east does not imply that the number of the Slavs there was lesser than among the Western South Slavs. Most probably on the territory of Western South Slavs was a state of desolation which produced there a founder effect.[283][284] The region of Macedonia suffered less disruption than frontier provinces closer to the Danube, with towns and forts close to Ohrid, Bitola and along the Via Egnatia. Re-settlements and the cultural links of the Byzantine Era further shaped the demographic processes which the Macedonian ancestry is linked to.[285] Nevertheless, even present-day Peloponnesian Greeks carry a small, but significant amount of Slavic ancestry; the admixture ranged from 0.2% to 14.4%.[286]

See also

References

  1. ^ State Statistical Office
  2. ^ "Cultural diversity: Census". Australian Bureau of Statistics. 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Republic of Macedonia MFA estimate 26 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ 2006 figures 19 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  5. ^ Foreign Citizens in Italy, 2017 6 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. ^ 2020 Community Survey
  7. ^ 2005 Figures 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine.
  8. ^ a b Nasevski, Boško; Angelova, Dora; Gerovska, Dragica (1995). Македонски Иселенички Алманах '95. Skopje: Матица на Иселениците на Македонија. pp. 52–53.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 January 2012. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  10. ^ 2006 census 25 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine.
  11. ^ 2001 census 15 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ a b Report about Compliance with the Principles of the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities (Greece) – GREEK HELSINKI MONITOR (GHM) 23 May 2003 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "Попис у Србији 2011". Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  14. ^ Tabelle 13: Ausländer nach Staatsangehörigkeit (ausgewählte Staaten), Altersgruppen und Geschlecht — p. 74.
  15. ^ "United Nations Population Division | Department of Economic and Social Affairs". un.org. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  16. ^ 1996 estimate 5 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  17. ^ minorityrights.org
  18. ^ Population by country of origin
  19. ^ OECD Statistics.
  20. ^ "Population by Ethnicity, by Towns/Municipalities, 2011 Census". Census of Population, Households and Dwellings 2011. Zagreb: Croatian Bureau of Statistics. December 2012.
  21. ^ Population by country of birth 2009.
  22. ^ 2002 census (stat.si).
  23. ^ "Belgium population statistics". dofi.fgov.be. Retrieved 9 June 2008.
  24. ^ 2008 figures 12 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  25. ^ 2003 census 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine,Population Estimate from the MFA 26 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  26. ^ 2005 census 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine.
  27. ^ czso.cz
  28. ^ a b Makedonci vo Svetot 26 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  29. ^ Polands Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947, p. 260.
  30. ^ Bulgaria 2011 census
  31. ^ (in Romanian). National Institute of Statistics (Romania). 5 July 2013. Archived from the original on 18 January 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  32. ^ Montenegro 2011 census.
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 November 2007. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  34. ^ Population Estimate from the MFA 30 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ . Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 September 2018. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  36. ^ "Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States", p. 517 The Macedonians are a Southern Slav people, closely related to Bulgarians.
  37. ^ "Ethnic groups worldwide: a ready reference handbook", p. 54 Macedonians are a Slavic people closely related to the neighboring Bulgarians.
  38. ^ Day, Alan John; East, Roger; Thomas, Richard (2002). Political and economic dictionary of Eastern Europe. Routledge. p. 96. ISBN 9780203403747.
  39. ^ Krste Misirkov, On the Macedonian Matters (Za Makedonckite Raboti), Sofia, 1903: "And, anyway, what sort of new Macedonian nation can this be when we and our fathers and grandfathers and great-grandfathers have always been called Bulgarians?"
  40. ^ Sperling, James; Kay, Sean; Papacosma, S. Victor (2003). Limiting institutions?: the challenge of Eurasian security governance. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-7190-6605-4. Macedonian nationalism Is a new phenomenon. In the early twentieth century, there was no separate Slavic Macedonian identity
  41. ^ Titchener, Frances B.; Moorton, Richard F. (1999). The eye expanded: life and the arts in Greco-Roman antiquity. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 259. ISBN 978-0-520-21029-5. On the other hand, the Macedonians are a newly emergent people in search of a past to help legitimize their precarious present as they attempt to establish their singular identity in a Slavic world dominated historically by Serbs and Bulgarians. ... The twentieth-century development of a Macedonian ethnicity, and its recent evolution into independent statehood following the collapse of the Yugoslav state in 1991, has followed a rocky road. In order to survive the vicissitudes of Balkan history and politics, the Macedonians, who have had no history, need one.
  42. ^ Kaufman, Stuart J. (2001). Modern hatreds: the symbolic politics of ethnic war. New York: Cornell University Press. p. 193. ISBN 0-8014-8736-6. The key fact about Macedonian nationalism is that it is new: in the early twentieth century, Macedonian villagers defined their identity religiously—they were either "Bulgarian," "Serbian," or "Greek" depending on the affiliation of the village priest. ... According to the new Macedonian mythology, modern Macedonians are the direct descendants of Alexander the Great's subjects. They trace their cultural identity to the ninth-century Saints Cyril and Methodius, who converted the Slavs to Christianity and invented the first Slavic alphabet, and whose disciples maintained a centre of Christian learning in western Macedonia. A more modern national hero is Gotse Delchev, leader of the turn-of-the-century Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO), which was actually a largely pro-Bulgarian organization but is claimed as the founding Macedonian national movement.
  43. ^ Rae, Heather (2002). State identities and the homogenisation of peoples. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 278. ISBN 0-521-79708-X. Despite the recent development of Macedonian identity, as Loring Danforth notes, it is no more or less artificial than any other identity. It merely has a more recent ethnogenesis – one that can therefore more easily be traced through the recent historical record.
  44. ^ Zielonka, Jan; Pravda, Alex (2001). Democratic consolidation in Eastern Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 422. ISBN 978-0-19-924409-6. Unlike the Slovene and Croatian identities, which existed independently for a long period before the emergence of SFRY Macedonian identity and language were themselves a product federal Yugoslavia, and took shape only after 1944. Again unlike Slovenia and Croatia, the very existence of a separate Macedonian identity was questioned—albeit to a different degree—by both the governments and the public of all the neighboring nations (Greece being the most intransigent)
  45. ^ Bonner, Raymond (14 May 1995). . The New York Times. New York. Archived from the original on 29 January 2019. Retrieved 29 January 2019. Macedonian nationalism did not arise until the end of the last century.
  46. ^ Rossos, Andrew (2008). (PDF). Hoover Institution Press. p. 269. ISBN 978-0817948832. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 January 2019. Retrieved 28 January 2019. They were also insisting that the Macedonians sacrifice their national name, under which, as we have seen throughout this work, their national identity and their nation formed in the nineteenth century.
  47. ^ Rossos, Andrew (2008). (PDF). Hoover Institution Press. p. 284. ISBN 978-0817948832. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 January 2019. Retrieved 28 January 2019. Under very trying circumstances, most ethnic Macedonians chose a Macedonian identity. That identity began to form with the Slav awakening in Macedonia in the first half of the nineteenth century.
  48. ^ Loring M. Danforth, The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World, 1995, Princeton University Press, p.65, ISBN 0-691-04356-6
  49. ^ Stephen Palmer, Robert King, Yugoslav Communism and the Macedonian question, Hamden, Connecticut Archon Books, 1971, p.p.199-200
  50. ^ Livanios, Dimitris (17 April 2008). The Macedonian Question: Britain and the Southern Balkans 1939–1949. ISBN 9780191528729. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  51. ^ a b Woodhouse, Christopher M. (2002). The Struggle for Greece, 1941–1949. ISBN 9781850654926. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  52. ^ a b Poulton, Hugh (1995). Who are the Macedonians?. ISBN 9781850652380. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  53. ^ James Horncastle, The Macedonian Slavs in the Greek Civil War, 1944–1949; Rowman & Littlefield, 2019, ISBN 1498585051, p. 130.
  54. ^ Stern, Dieter and Christian Voss (eds). 2006. "Towards the peculiarities of language shift in Northern Greece". In: "Marginal Linguistic Identities: Studies in Slavic Contact and Borderland Varieties." Eurolinguistische Arbeiten. Wiesbaden, Germany: Harrassowitz Verlag; ISBN 9783447053549, pp. 87–101.
  55. ^ A J Toynbee. Some Problems of Greek History, Pp 80; 99–103
  56. ^ The Problem of the Discontinuity in Classical and Hellenistic Eastern Macedonia, Marjan Jovanonv. УДК 904:711.424(497.73)
  57. ^ A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Wiley -Blackwell, 2011. Map 2
  58. ^ Peter Heather, Goths and Romans 332–489. p. 129
  59. ^ a b Macedonia in Late Antiquity p. 551. In A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Wiley -Blackwell, 2011
  60. ^ a b Curta, Florin (2012). "Were there any Slavs in seventh-century Macedonia?". Journal of History. 47: 73.
  61. ^ Curta (2004, p. 148)
  62. ^ Fine (1991, p. 29)
  63. ^ T E Gregory, A History of Byzantium. Wiley- Blackwell, 2010. p. 169
  64. ^ Curta (2001, pp. 335–345)
  65. ^ Florin Curta. Were there any Slavs in seventh-century Macedonia? 2013
  66. ^ The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia, Denis Sinor, Cambridge University Press, 1990, ISBN 0521243041, pp. 215–216.
  67. ^ The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century, John Van Antwerp Fine, University of Michigan Press, 1991, ISBN 0472081497, p. 72.
  68. ^ Во некрополата "Млака" пред тврдината во Дебреште, Прилеп, откопани се гробови со наоди од доцниот 7. и 8. век. Тие се делумно или целосно кремирани и не се ниту ромеjски, ниту словенски. Станува збор наjвероjатно, за Кутригурите. Ова протобугарско племе, под водство на Кубер, а како потчинето на аварскиот каган во Панониjа, околу 680 г. се одметнало од Аварите и тргнало кон Солун. Кубер ги повел со себе и Сермесиjаните, (околу 70.000 на број), во нивната стара татковина. Сермесиjаните биле Ромеи, жители на балканските провинции што Аварите ги заробиле еден век порано и ги населиле во Западна Панониjа, да работат за нив. На Кубер му била доверена управата врз нив. In English: In the necropolis 'Malaka' in the fortress of Debreshte, near Prilep, graves were dug with findings from the late 7th and early 8th century. They are partially or completely cremated and neither Roman nor Slavic. The graves are probably remains from the Kutrigurs. This Bulgar tribe was led by Kuber... Средновековни градови и тврдини во Македонија. Иван Микулчиќ (Скопје, Македонска цивилизација, 1996) стр. 32–33.
  69. ^ "The" Other Europe in the Middle Ages: Avars, Bulgars, Khazars and Cumans, East Central and Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 450 – 1450, Florin Curta, Roman Kovalev, BRILL, 2008, ISBN 9004163891, p. 460.
  70. ^ W Pohl. The Avars (History) in Regna and Gentes. The Relationship Between Late Antique and Early Medieval Peoples and Kingdoms in the Transformation of the Roman World. pp. 581, 587
  71. ^ They spread from the original heartland in north-east Bulgaria to the Drina in the west, and to Macedonia in the south-west.; На целиот тој простор, во маса метални производи (делови од воената опрема, облека и накит), меѓу стандардните форми користени од словенското население, одвреме-навреме се појавуваат специфични предмети врзани за бугарско болјарство како носители на новата државна управа. See: Средновековни градови и тврдини во Македонија. Иван Микулчиќ (Скопје, Македонска цивилизација, 1996) стр. 35; 364–365.
  72. ^ Dejan Bulić, The Fortifications of the Late Antiquity and the Early Byzantine Period on the Later Territory of the South-Slavic Principalities, and Their Re-occupation in Tibor Živković et al., The World of the Slavs: Studies of the East, West and South Slavs: Civitas, Oppidas, Villas and Archeological Evidence (7th to 11th Centuries AD) with Srđan Rudić as ed. Istorijski institut, 2013, Belgrade; ISBN 8677431047, pp. 186–187.
  73. ^ Florin Curta. 'The Edinburgh History of the Greeks, C. 500 to 1050: The Early Middle Ages. pp. 259, 281
  74. ^ Studies on the Internal Diaspora of the Byzantine Empire edited by Hélène Ahrweiler, Angeliki E. Laiou. p. 58. Many were apparently based in Bitola, Stumnitsa and Moglena
  75. ^ Cumans and Tatars: Oriental Military in the Pre-Ottoman Balkans, 1185–1365. Istvan Varsary. p. 67
  76. ^ Stoianovich, Traian (September 1994). Balkan Worlds. ISBN 9780765638519. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  77. ^ J V A Fine. The Early Medieval Balkans. Pp 110–11
  78. ^ Alexander Schenker. The Dawn of Slavic. pp. 188–190. Schenker argues that Ohrid was 'innovative' and 'native Slavic' whilst Preslav very much relied on Greek modelling.
  79. ^ Per Curta, Preslav was the center from which the scriptorial innovation associated with the introduction of Cyrillic spread to other regions of Bulgaria. Florin Curta (2006) Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250, Cambridge University Press, p. 221, ISBN 9780521894524.
  80. ^ Fine (1991, pp. 113, 196) Two brothers ... Constantine and Methodius were fluent in the dialect of Slavic in the environs of Thessaloniki. They devised an alphabet to convey Slavic phonetics.
  81. ^ Francis Dvornik. The Slavs p. 167
  82. ^ Ostrogorsky, History of the Byzantine State p. 310
  83. ^ Detrez, Raymond; Segaert, Barbara (2008). Europe and the Historical Legacies in the Balkans. ISBN 9789052013749. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  84. ^ Balkan cultural commonality and ethnic diversity. Raymond Detrez (Ghent University, Belgium).
  85. ^ История на българите. Късно средновековие и Възраждане, том 2, Георги Бакалов, TRUD Publishers, 2004, ISBN 9545284676, стр. 23. (Bg.)
  86. ^ The A to Z of the Ottoman Empire, Selcuk Aksin Somel, Scarecrow Press, 2010, ISBN 1461731763, p. 168.
  87. ^ The Politics of Terror: The Macedonian Liberation Movements, 1893–1903, Duncan M. Perry, Duke University Press, 1988, ISBN 0822308134, p. 15.
  88. ^ The A to Z of Bulgaria, Raymond Detrez, Scarecrow Press, 2010, ISBN 0810872021, p. 271.
  89. ^ Center for Documentation and Information on Minorities in Europe, Southeast Europe (CEDIME-SE) – "Macedonians of Bulgaria", p. 14. 23 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  90. ^ Poulton, Hugh (2000). Who are the Macedonians?. ISBN 9781850655343. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  91. ^ "Средновековни градови и тврдини во Македонија, Иван Микулчиќ, Македонска академија на науките и уметностите – Скопје, 1996, стр. 72". Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  92. ^ Academician Dimitŭr Simeonov Angelov (1978). "Formation of the Bulgarian nation (summary)". Sofia-Press. pp. 413–415. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  93. ^ When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans. J V A Fine. pp. 3–5.
  94. ^ Relexification Hypothesis in Rumanian. Paul Wexler. p. 170
  95. ^ Cumans and Tartars: Oriental military in the pre-Ottoman Balkans. Istvan Vasary. p. 18
  96. ^ Byzantium's Balkan Frontier. Paul Stephenson. p. 78–79
  97. ^ The Edinburgh History of the Greeks; 500–1250: The Middle Ages. Florin Curta. 2013. p. 294 (echoing Anthony D Smith and Anthony Kaldellis) "no clear notion exists that the Greek nation survived into Byzantine times...the ethnic identity of those who lived in Greece during the Middle Ages is best described as Roman."
  98. ^ Mats Roslund. Guests in the House: Cultural Transmission Between Slavs and Scandinavians; 2008. p. 79
  99. ^ Roumen Daskalov, Alexander Vezenkov as ed., Entangled Histories of the Balkans – Volume Three: Shared Pasts, Disputed Legacies; Balkan Studies Library, BRILL, 2015; ISBN 9004290362, p. 454.
  100. ^ Loring M. Danforth, The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World, 1995, Princeton University Press, p. 56, ISBN 0-691-04356-6
  101. ^ a b Roumen Daskalov, Tchavdar Marinov, Entangled Histories of the Balkans, Volume One: National Ideologies and Language Policies, BRILL, 2013, ISBN 900425076X, pp. 283–285.
  102. ^ The Macedonian Question an article from 1871 by Slaveykov published in the newspaper Macedonia in Carigrad he wrote: "We have many times heard from the Macedonists that they are not Bulgarians, but they are rather Macedonians, descendants of the Ancient Macedonians and we have always waited to hear some proofs of this, but we have never heard them."
  103. ^ Соня Баева, Петко Славейков: живот и творчество, 1827–1870, Изд-во на Българската академия на науките, 1968, стр. 10.
  104. ^ Речник на българската литература, том 2 Е-О. София, Издателство на Българската академия на науките, 1977. с. 324.
  105. ^ A letter from Slaveykov to the Bulgarian Exarch written in Solun in February 1874
  106. ^ Балканска питања и мање историјско-политичке белешке о Балканском полуострву 1886–1905. Стојан Новаковић, Београд, 1906.
  107. ^ "Since the Bulgarian idea, as it is well-known, is deeply rooted in Macedonia, I think it is almost impossible to shake it completely by opposing it merely with the Serbian idea. This idea, we fear, would be incapable, as opposition pure and simple, of suppressing the Bulgarian idea. That is why the Serbian idea will need an ally that could stand in direct opposition to Bulgarianism and would contain in itself the elements which could attract the people and their feelings and thus sever them from Bulgarianism. This ally I see in Macedonism...." except from the report of S. Novakovic to the Minister of Education in Belgrade in Cultural and Public Relations of the Macedonians with Serbia in the XIXth c., Skopje, 1960, p. 178.
  108. ^ a b c d Rossos, Andrew (2008). (PDF). Hoover Institution Press. ISBN 978-0817948832. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 January 2019. Retrieved 28 January 2019.
  109. ^ Rečnik od tri jezika: s. makedonski, arbanski i turski [Dictionary of Three languages: Macedonian, Albanian, Turkish], U državnoj štampariji, 1875, p. 48f.
  110. ^ Raymond Detrez (2014). Historical Dictionary of Bulgaria, Rowman & Littlefield, 2014, p. 67. ISBN 1442241802.
  111. ^ Chris Kostov (2010). Contested Ethnic Identity: The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto, 1900–1996. Peter Lang. p. 67. ISBN 978-3-0343-0196-1.
  112. ^ Daskalov, Rumen; Marinov, Tchavdar (2013). Entangled Histories of the Balkans: Volume One: National Ideologies and Language Policies. BRILL. p. 213, ISBN 978-90-04-25076-5.
  113. ^ Theodosius of Skopje Centralen D'rzhaven istoricheski archiv (Sofia) 176, op. 1. arh.ed. 595, l.5–42 – Razgledi, X/8 (1968), pp. 996–1000.
  114. ^ Писмо на Теодосий до вестника на Българската екзархия "Новини" от 04.02.1892 г.
  115. ^ Блаже Конески, Македонскиот XIX век. том 6, Составиле: Анастасија Ѓурчинова, Лидија Капушевска-ДракулевскаЫ Бобан Карапејовски, белешки и коментари: Георги Сталев, МАНУ, Скопје, 2020, стр. 72.
  116. ^ Alexis Heraclides (2020). The Macedonian Question and the Macedonians. Taylor & Francis. p. 152. ISBN 9781000289404.
  117. ^ Duncan Perry (1988). The Politics of Terror. Duke University Press. p. 20. ISBN 9780822308133.
  118. ^ Marco Dogo (1985). Lingua e nazionalità in Macedonia. Jaca Book. p. 50. ISBN 9788816950115. In quella data aveva appunto fatto ritorno da una missione in Macedonia il filologo Draganov, di origine bulgaro-bassarabiana, i cui contributi scientifici avrebbero introdotto il pubblico colto della capitale russa all'esistenza di un'area linguistica slava, in quella regione dei Balcani, dotata di caratteri individuanti propri e non assimilabili a quelli serbi e bulgari; ancora in tempi recentissimi Draganov era intervenuto a sostenere, sulle colonne di un autorevole giornale di Petroburgo, il buon diritto degli Slavi macedoni - o meglio Macedoni nel pieno sneso nazionale, e non piu solo geografico, della parola - al riconoscimento da parte russa quale nazionalita a se stante ed anzi maggioritaria in casa propria, in Macedonia.
  119. ^ The Past in Question: Modern Macedonia and the Uncertainties of Nation, Keith Brown, Princeton University Press, 2003, ISBN 0691099952, p. 175
  120. ^ Mercia MacDermott, Freedom or Death, The Life of Gotsé Delchev, Journeyman Press, London & West Nyack, 1978, p. 379.
  121. ^ Alexis Heraclides (2020). The Macedonian Question and the Macedonians. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781000289404.
  122. ^ Information from a book by Gyorche Petrov on the ethnic composition of the population in Macedonia: The Macedonian population consists of Bulgarians, Turks, Albanians, Wallachians, Jews The total number of the population and that of each nationality cannot be defined exactly as there are no statistics... Bulgarians constitute the bulk of the population in the vilayet I am describing. In spite of all distortions in the official statistics, they again figure as more than half of the population. I could not personally collect any data about the number of the population, that is why I am not quoting figures. I made a description of the Bulgarian population in the section on Topography, that is why it is not necessary to repeat the same again or go into detail... (G. Petrov, Materials on the Study of Macedonia), Sofia, 1896, pp. 724-725, 731; the original is in Bulgarian. Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Institute of History, Bulgarian Language Institute, Macedonia. Documents and materials, Sofia 1978, Document # 40.]
  123. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 114.
  124. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 199.
  125. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 95.
  126. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 96, 93.
  127. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 96, 105.
  128. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 114.
  129. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 133-4.
  130. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 134-5.
  131. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 146-88.
  132. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 148-50.
  133. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 151.
  134. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 152-3.
  135. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 118.
  136. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 135, 164.
  137. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 164-5.
  138. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 118.
  139. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 121.
  140. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 166.
  141. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 119.
  142. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 172, 175, 177.
  143. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 177-8.
  144. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 178-9.
  145. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 203.
  146. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 202.
  147. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 181-2.
  148. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 129-30.
  149. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 192-3.
  150. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 122.
  151. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 172.
  152. ^ Wilkinson 1951, p. 203.
  153. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 130.
  154. ^ Историја на македонската нација. Блаже Ристовски, 1999, Скопје.
  155. ^ "On the Monastir Road". Herbert Corey, National Geographic, May 1917 (p. 388.)
  156. ^ When narrating, in his autobiographical anti-war novel Life in Tomb, his convalescence in the house of a family of farmers in Velušina, a Slav-speaking patriarchist village near Bitola/Monastir, during his participation in the Macedonian front of World War I, Greek novelist Stratis Myrivilis wrote of its inhabitants that they "do not want to be 'Bulgar', neither 'Srrp', nor 'Grrc'. Only 'Makedon Ortodox'". See: Μυριβήλης, Στράτης (25 September 1923). Ἡ Ζωὴ ἐν τάφῳ. Κεφάλαιο ιζ΄ (PDF). Καμπάνα. Retrieved 11 July 2022. Μανδαμαδιώτου, Μαρία. Στράτης Μυριβήλης: Από το Βλάντοβο στη Βελουσίνα, 1924-1955. Λεσβιακό Ημερολόγιο 2019, Σελ. 93-104. Tasos Kostopoulos (2009). "Naming the Other: From "Greek Bulgarians" to "Local Macedonians"". In Alexandra Ioannidou; Christian Voß (eds.). Spotlights on Russian and Balkan Slavic Cultural History. Munich/Berlin: Verlag Otto Sagner. p. 108. Mackridge, Peter (2009). Language and National Identity in Greece, 1776-1796. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 303. ISBN 978-0-19-921442-6. On Velusina's population, see also: Brancoff, D.M. (1905). La Macédoine et sa Population Chrétienne. Παρίσι. pp. 168–9.
  157. ^ Boškovska, Nada (2017). Yugoslavia and Macedonia Before Tito: Between Repression and Integration. London / New York: I. B. Tauris. pp. 5–10.
  158. ^ Mavrogordatos, George. Stillborn Republic: Social Coalitions and Party Strategies in Greece, 1922–1936. University of California Press, 1983. ISBN 9780520043589, p. 227, 247
  159. ^ Victor Roudometof, Nationalism, Globalization, and Orthodoxy: The Social Origins of Ethnic Conflict in the Balkans (Contributions to the Study of World History), Praeger, 2001, p.187
  160. ^ The Situation in Macedonia and the Tasks of IMRO (United) – published in the official newspaper of IMRO (United), "Македонско дело", N.185, April 1934.
  161. ^ Произходът на македонската нация - Стенограма от заседание на Македонския Научен Институт в София през 1947 г.
  162. ^ ...Да, тоа е точно. И не само Димитар Влахов. Павел Шатев, Панко Брашнаров, Ризо Ризов и др. Меѓутоа, овде тезата е погрешно поставена. Не е работата во тоа дали левицата се определуваше за Србија, а десницата за Бугарија. Тука се мешаат поимите. Практично, ни левицата ни десницата не ја доведуваа во прашање својата бугарска провениенција. Тоа ќе го доведе дури и Димитар Влахов во 1948 година на седница на Политбирото, кога говореше за постоењето на македонска нација, да рече дека во 1931-1932 година е направена грешка. Сите тие ветерани останаа само на нивото на политички, а не и на национален сепаратизам... Акад. Иван Катарџиев. "Верувам во националниот имунитет на македонецот". мега-интервју за списание "Форум", архива број 329, Скопје, 22.07.2000.
  163. ^ Κωστόπουλος, Τάσος (2009). ""Η Μακεδονία κάτω από το ζυγό της ελληνικής κεφαλαιοκρατίας". Ένα ρεπορτάζ του Ριζοσπάστη στις σλαβόφωνες περιοχές (1933)". Αρχειοτάξιο (in Greek). 11: 12–13.
  164. ^ Резолюция о македонской нации (принятой Балканском секретариате Коминтерна — Февраль 1934 г, Москва.
  165. ^ Nation, R.C. (1996). A Balkan Union? Southeastern Europe in Soviet Security Policy, 1944–8. In: Gori, F., Pons, S. (eds) The Soviet Union and Europe in the Cold War, 1943–53. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 125–143.
  166. ^ Marinov, Tchavdar & Vezenkov, Alexander. (2014). 6. Communism and Nationalism in the Balkans: Marriage of Convenience or Mutual Attraction?. in R. Daskalov, D. Mishkova, Tch. Marinov, A. Vezenkov, Entangled Histories of the Balkans. Vol. 4: Concepts, Approaches, and (Self-)Representations (Brill, 2017), pp. 440-593.
  167. ^ ... Поделбата на Македонија 1913 година одигра извонредно штетна улога во свеста на Македонецот. Зошто? Затоа што ја прекина нормалната комуникација-политичка, културна, економска - меѓу Македонците. Го прекина процесот на создавање на единствена македонска историја на целиот македонски простор. Македонските прогресивни сили ги врза за прогресивните сили на земјите во коишто опстојуваа. Тие почнаа да ја прифаќаат политичката определба и филозофија на земјите меѓу кои Македонија беше поделена. Така, во текот на НОБ, кога дојде времето за поврзување, постоеше огромен јаз во свеста на Македонецот од трите дела на земјата. Сите велеа дека се Македонци, ама сите на тој поим му даваа поинаква содржина. Кои доаѓаа од Бугарија, тие сметаа дека треба да дојдат на чело и да ја водат Македонија, особено ветераните како Шатев и Влахов. Тие, практично, се чувствуваа како Бугари. ВМРО (Об.) не мрдна од обичниот политички македонски сепаратизам. Во Вардарска Македонија, пак, благодарејќи на српското ропство, тече процес на самоизразување низ литературата. Треба да се признае фактот дека постоењето на хрватско и на словенечко движење во Кралска Југославија придонесе македонското национално движење да се осознава многу подлабоко. Оттаму, појавувањето на весници како Луч во 1937 година, во кои доаѓа до израз теоријата за македонската национална самобитност... Акад. Иван Катарџиев. "Верувам во националниот имунитет на македонецот". мега-интервју за списание "Форум", архива број 329, Скопје, 22.07.2000 г.
  168. ^ History of the Balkans, Vol. 2: Twentieth Century. Barbara Jelavich, 1983.
  169. ^ "Within Greece, and also within the new kingdom of Yugoslavia, which Serbia had joined in 1918, the ejection of the Bulgarian church, the closure of Bulgarian schools, and the banning of publication in Bulgarian, together with the expulsion or flight to Bulgaria of a large proportion of the Macedonian Slav intelligentsia, served as the prelude to campaigns of forcible cultural and linguistic assimilation...In both countries, these policies of de-bulgarization and assimilation were pursued, with fluctuating degrees of vigor, right through to 1941, when the Second World War engulfed the Balkan peninsula. The degree of these policies' success, however, remains open to question. The available evidence suggests that Bulgarian national sentiment among the Macedonian Slavs of Yugoslavia and Greece remained strong throughout the interwar period, though they lacked the means to offer more than passive resistance to official policies." For more see: F. A. K. Yasamee, Nationality in the Balkans: The case of the Macedonians. Balkans: A Mirror of the New World Order, Istanbul: Eren Publishing, 1995; pp. 121–132.
  170. ^ "As in Kosovo, the restoration of Serbian rule in 1918, to which the Strumica district and several other Bulgarian frontier salients accrued in 1919 (Bulgaria also having lost all its Aegean coastline to Greece), marked the replay of the first Serbian occupation (1913–1915). Once again, the Exarchist clergy and Bulgarian teachers were expelled, all Bulgarian-language signs and books removed, and all Bulgarian clubs, societies, and organizations dissolved, The Serbianization of family surnames proceeded as before the war, with Stankov becoming Stankovic and Atanasov entered in the books by Atanackovic... Thousands of Macedonians left for Bulgaria. Though there were fewer killings of "Bulgarians" (a pro-Bulgarian source claimed 342 such instances and 47 additional disappearances in 1918 – 1924), the conventional forms of repression (jailings, internments etc.) were applied more systematically and with greater effect than before (the same source lists 2,900 political arrests in the same period)... Like Kosovo, Macedonia was slated for Serb settlements and internal colonization. The authorities projected the settlement of 50,000 families in Macedonia, though only 4,200 families had been placed in 280 colonies by 1940." For more see: Ivo Banac, "The National Question in Yugoslavia. Origins, History, Politics" The Macedoine, Cornell University Press, 1984; ISBN 0801416752, pp. 307–328.
  171. ^ Yugoslav Communists recognized the existence of a Macedonian nationality during WWII to quiet fears of the Macedonian population that a communist Yugoslavia would continue to follow the former Yugoslav policy of forced Serbianization. Hence, for them to recognize the inhabitants of Macedonia as Bulgarians would be tantamount to admitting that they should be part of the Bulgarian state. For that the Yugoslav Communists were most anxious to mold Macedonian history to fit their conception of Macedonian consciousness. The treatment of Macedonian history in Communist Yugoslavia had the same primary goal as the creation of the Macedonian language: to de-Bulgarize the Macedonian Slavs, and to create an national consciousness that would inspire identification with Yugoslavia. For more see: Stephen E. Palmer, Robert R. King, Yugoslav communism and the Macedonian question, Archon Books, 1971, ISBN 0208008217, Chapter 9: The encouragement of Macedonian culture.
  172. ^ The Serbianization of the Vardar region ended and Yugoslavization was not introduced either; rather, a policy of cultural, linguistic, and "historical" Macedonization by de-Bulgarianization was implemented, with immediate success. For more see: Irina Livezeanu and Arpad von KlimoThe Routledge as ed. History of East Central Europe since 1700, Routledge, 2017, ISBN 1351863428, p. 490.
  173. ^ In Macedonia, post-WWII generations grew up "overdosed" with strong anti-Bulgarian sentiment, leading to the creation of mainly negative stereotypes for Bulgaria and its nation. The anti-Bulgariansim (or Bulgarophobia) increased almost to the level of state ideology during the ideological monopoly of the League of Communists of Macedonia, and still continues to do so today, although with less ferocity... However, it is more important to say openly that a great deal of these anti-Bulgarian sentiments result from the need to distinguish between the Bulgarian and the Macedonian nations. Macedonia could confirm itself as a state with its own past, present and future only through differentiating itself from Bulgaria. For more see: Mirjana Maleska. With the eyes of the "other" (about Macedonian-Bulgarian relations and the Macedonian national identity). In New Balkan Politics, Issue 6, pp. 9–11. Peace and Democracy Center: "Ian Collins", Skopje, Macedonia, 2003. ISSN 1409-9454.
  174. ^ After WWII in Macedonia the past was systematically falsified to conceal the fact that many prominent 'Macedonians' had supposed themselves to be Bulgarians, and generations of students were taught the pseudo-history of the Macedonian nation. The mass media and education were the key to this process of national acculturation, speaking to people in a language that they came to regard as their Macedonian mother tongue, even if it was perfectly understood in Sofia. For more see: Michael L. Benson, Yugoslavia: A Concise History, Edition 2, Springer, 2003, ISBN 1403997209, p. 89.
  175. ^ Once specifically Macedonian interests came to the fore under the Yugoslav communist umbrella and in direct confrontation with the Bulgarian occupation authorities (during WWII), the Bulgarian part of the identity of Vardar Macedonians was destined to die out – in a process similar to the triumph of Austrian over German-Austrian identity in post-war years. Drezov K. (1999) Macedonian identity: an overview of the major claims. In: Pettifer J. (eds) The New Macedonian Question. St Antony's Series. Palgrave Macmillan, London; ISBN 978-0-333-92066-4, p. 51.
  176. ^ Additionally, some 100,000 people were imprisoned in the post-1944 period for violations of the law for the "protection of Macedonian national honor," and some 1,260 Bulgarian sympathizers were allegedly killed. (Troebst, 1997: 248–50, 255–57; 1994: 116–22; Poulton, 2000: 118–19). For more see: Roudometof, Victor, Collective Memory, National Identity, and Ethnic Conflict: Greece, Bulgaria, and the Macedonian Question, Praeger Publishers, 2002. ISBN 0-275-97648-3, p. 104.
  177. ^ Smith A.D. The Antiquity of Nations. 2004, p. 47
  178. ^ Rae, Heather (2002). State identities and the homogenisation of peoples. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 278. ISBN 0-521-79708-X.
  179. ^ Danforth, L. The Macedonian Conflict. Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World. p. 25
  180. ^ Ancient Macedonia: National Symbols. L Danforth in A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Wiley –Blackwell 2010. p. 597-8
  181. ^ The Handbook of Political Change in Eastern Europe, Sten Berglund, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2013, ISBN 1782545883,p. 622.
  182. ^ Transforming National Holidays: Identity Discourse in the West and South Slavic Countries, 1985–2010, Ljiljana Šarić, Karen Gammelgaard, Kjetil Rå Hauge, John Benjamins Publishing, 2012, ISBN 9027206384, pp. 207–208.
  183. ^ Muhić, Maja; Takovski, Aleksandar (2014). "Redefining National Identity in Macedonia. Analyzing Competing Origins Myths and Interpretations through Hegemonic Representations". Etnološka Tribina. 44 (37): 144. doi:10.15378/1848-9540.2014.
  184. ^ Sinisa Jakov Marusic, More Macedonians Apply for Bulgarian Citizenship. Aug 5, 2014, Balkans Inside.
  185. ^ Предоставяне на българско гражданство, Справка за преиода 22.01.2002–15.01.2012 г. (Bulgarian citizenship Information for the period 22.01.2002–15.01.2012 year); Доклад за дейността на КБГБЧ за 2012–2013 година (Report on the activities of the CBCBA for 2012–2013 year), p. 7 Доклад за дейността на КБГБЧ за периода 23.01.2013 – 22.01.2014 година (Report on the activities of the CBCBA for the period 23.01.2013–22.01.2014 year), p. 6; Годишен доклад за дейността на КБГБЧ за периода 01.01.2014–31.12.2014 година (Annual report on the activities of the CBCBA for the period 01.01.2014–31.12.2014 year), p. 5; Годишен доклад за дейността на КБГБЧ за периода 01.01.2015–31.12.2015 година (Annual report on the activities of the CBCBA for the period 01.01.2015–31.12.2015 year), p. 6; Годишен доклад за дейността на КБГБЧ за периода 01.01.2016–31.12.2016 година (Annual report on the activities of the CBCBA for the period 01.01.2016–31.12.2016 year), p. 6; Доклад за дейността на комисията по българско гражданство за периода 14 януари – 31 декември 2017 г. (Activity Report of the Bulgarian Citizenship Commission for the period 14 January – 31 December 2017); Доклад за дейността на комисията по българско гражданство за периода 01 януари – 31 декември 2018 г. (Activity Report of the Bulgarian Citizenship Commission for the period 01 January – 31 December 2018); Доклад за дейността на комисията по българско гражданство за периода 01 януари – 31 декември 2019 г. (Activity Report of the Bulgarian Citizenship Commission for the period 01 January – 31 December 2019). Доклад за дейността на комисията по българско гражданство за периода 01 януари – 31 декември 2020 г. (Activity Report of the Bulgarian Citizenship Commission for the period 01 January – 31 December 2020).
  186. ^ Bulgaria which has an ethnic citizenship regime and has a liberal dual citizenship regime makes a constitutional distinction between Bulgarians and Bulgarian citizens, whereas the former category reflects an ethnic (blood) belonging and the later the civic (territorial) belonging. In line with this definition, naturalization in Bulgaria is facilitated for those individuals who can prove that they belong to the Bulgarian nation...The birth certificates of parents and grandparents, their mother tongue, membership in Bulgarian institutions as the Bulgarian Church, former Bulgarian citizenship of the parents and so on are relevant criteria for the establishment of the ethnic origin of the applicant. In the case of Macedonian citizens, declaring their national identity as Bulgarian suffices to obtain Bulgarian citizenship, without the requirement for permanent residence in Bulgaria, or the language examination etc. For more see: Jelena Džankić, Citizenship in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia and Montenegro: Effects of Statehood and Identity Challenges, Southeast European Studies, Ashgate Publishing, 2015, ISBN 1472446410, p. 126.
  187. ^ Raymond Detrez, Historical Dictionary of Bulgaria, Historical Dictionaries of Europe, Rowman & Littlefield, 2014, ISBN 1442241802, p. 318.
  188. ^ Jo Shaw and Igor Štiks as ed., Citizenship after Yugoslavia, Routledge, 2013, ISBN 1317967070, p. 106.
  189. ^ Rainer Bauböck, Debating Transformations of National Citizenship, IMISCOE Research Series, Springer, 2018, ISBN 3319927191, pp. 47–48.
  190. ^ Michael Palairet, Macedonia: A Voyage through History (Vol. 2, From the Fifteenth Century to the Present), Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2016, ISBN 1443888494, p. 347.
  191. ^ Mina Hristova, In-between Spaces: Dual Citizenship and Placebo Identity at the Triple Border between Serbia, Macedonia and Bulgaria in New Diversities; Volume 21, No. 1, 2019, pp. 37–55.
  192. ^ Risteski, L. (2016). "Bulgarian passports" – Possibilities for greater mobility of Macedonians and/or strategies for identity manipulation? EthnoAnthropoZoom/ЕтноАнтропоЗум, (10), 80–107. https://doi.org/10.37620/EAZ14100081r
  193. ^ Ljubica Spaskovska, Country report on Macedonia, November 2012. EUDO Citizenship Observatory, Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, p.20.
  194. ^ Bulgaria asks EU to stop 'fake' Macedonian identity. Deutsche Welle, 23.09.2020.
  195. ^ Bulgaria blocks EU accession talks with North Macedonia. Nov 17, 2020, National post.
  196. ^ "Address by the Director of the State Statistical Office on the completion of the Census 2021".
  197. ^ Лилия Чалева, Скопие преброи 19 645 души с двойно гражданство 29 април 2022, Dir.bg.
  198. ^ μακεδνός, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus
  199. ^ μακρός, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus
  200. ^ Macedonia, Online Etymology Dictionary
  201. ^ Eugene N. Borza, Makedonika, Regina Books, ISBN 0-941690-65-2, p.114: The "highlanders" or "Makedones" of the mountainous regions of western Macedonia are derived from northwest Greek stock; they were akin both to those who at an earlier time may have migrated south to become the historical "Dorians".
  202. ^ Nigel Guy Wilson, Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece, Routledge, 2009, p.439: The latest archaeological findings have confirmed that Macedonia took its name from a tribe of tall, Greek-speaking people, the Makednoi.
  203. ^ Drezov K. (1999) Macedonian identity: an overview of the major claims. In: Pettifer J. (eds) The New Macedonian Question. St Antony's Series. Palgrave Macmillan, London, ISBN 0230535798, pp. 50–51.
  204. ^ Jelavich Barbara, History of the Balkans, Vol. 2: Twentieth Century, 1983, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521274591, page 91.
  205. ^ John S. Koliopoulos, Thanos M. Veremis, Modern Greece: A History since 1821. A New History of Modern Europe, John Wiley & Sons, 2009, ISBN 1444314831, p. 48.
  206. ^ Richard Clogg, Minorities in Greece: Aspects of a Plural Society. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, 2002, ISBN 1850657068, p. 160.
  207. ^ Dimitar Bechev, Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia, Scarecrow Press, 2009, ISBN 0810862956, Introduction, pp. VII-VIII.
  208. ^ J. Pettifer, The New Macedonian Question, St Antony's group, Springer, 1999, ISBN 0230535798, pp. 49–51.
  209. ^ Anastas Vangeli, Nation-building ancient Macedonian style: the origins and the effects of the so-called antiquization in Macedonia. Nationalities Papers, the Journal of Nationalism and Ethnicity, Volume 39, 2011 pp. 13–32.
  210. ^ As the Macedonian historian Taskovski claims, the Macedonian Slavs initially rejected the Macedonian designation as Greek. For more see: Tchavdar Marinov, Famous Macedonia, the Land of Alexander: Macedonian identity at the crossroads of Greek, Bulgarian and Serbian nationalism, p. 285; in Entangled Histories of the Balkans – Volume One: National Ideologies and Language Policies with Roumen Daskalov and Tchavdar Marinov as ed., BRILL, 2013, ISBN 900425076X, pp. 273–330.
  211. ^ Chris Kostov, Contested Ethnic Identity: The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto, 1900–1996, Peter Lang, 2010, ISBN 3034301960, p. 65.
  212. ^ In a letter to Prof. Marin Drinov of May 25, 1888 Kuzman Shapkarev writes: "But even stranger is the name Macedonians, which was imposed on us only 10–15 years ago by outsiders, and not as some think by our own intellectuals.... Yet the people in Macedonia know nothing of that ancient name, reintroduced today with a cunning aim on the one hand and a stupid one on the other. They know the older word: "Bugari", although mispronounced: they have even adopted it as peculiarly theirs, inapplicable to other Bulgarians. You can find more about this in the introduction to the booklets I am sending you. They call their own Macedono-Bulgarian dialect the "Bugarski language", while the rest of the Bulgarian dialects they refer to as the "Shopski language". (Makedonski pregled, IX, 2, 1934, p. 55; the original letter is kept in the Marin Drinov Museum in Sofia, and it is available for examination and study)
  213. ^ E. Damianopoulos, The Macedonians: Their Past and Present, Springer, 2012, ISBN 1137011904, p. 185.
  214. ^ Donald Bloxham, The Final Solution: A Genocide, OUP Oxford, 2009, ISBN 0199550336, p. 65.
  215. ^ Chris Kostov, Contested Ethnic Identity: The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto, Peter Lang, 2010, ISBN 3034301960, p. 76.
  216. ^ Raymond Detrez, Pieter Plas, Developing cultural identity in the Balkans: convergence vs divergence, Volume 34 of Multiple Europesq Peter Lang, 2005, ISBN 9052012970, p. 173.
  217. ^ Katsikas, Stefanos (15 June 2010). Bulgaria and Europe. ISBN 9781843318286. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  218. ^ "Ethnologue report for Greece". Ethnologue. Retrieved 13 February 2009.
  219. ^ UCLA Language Materials Project: Language Profile 9 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  220. ^ UCLA Language Materials Project: Language Profile 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  221. ^ L. M. Danforth, The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World 1995, Princeton University Press.
  222. ^ Jacques Bacid, PhD Macedonia Through the Ages. Columbia University, 1983.
  223. ^ Hill, P. (1999) "Macedonians in Greece and Albania: A Comparative study of recent developments". Nationalities Papers Volume 27, 1 March 1999, p. 44(14).
  224. ^ Poulton, H.(2000), "Who are the Macedonians?", C. Hurst & Co. Publishers.
  225. ^ Danforth, Loring M. (6 April 1997). The Macedonian Conflict. ISBN 0691043566. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  226. ^ a b c "Greece". Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  227. ^ Cowan, Jane K.; Dembour, Marie-Bénédicte; Wilson, Richard A. (29 November 2001). Culture and Rights. ISBN 9780521797351. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  228. ^ L. M. Danforth, The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World 1995, Princeton University Press, p. 45
  229. ^ Detrez, Raymond; Plas, Pieter (2005), Developing cultural identity in the Balkans: convergence vs divergence, Peter Lang, pp. 50
  230. ^ "Втор весник на Македонците во Грција...Весникот се вика "Задруга"...За нецел месец во Грција излезе уште еден весник на Македонците/A Second Macedonian Newspaper in greece...The Newspaper is Called "Zadruga/Koinothta"...Barely a month ago in Greece another newspaper for the Macedonians was released."
  231. ^ Greek Helsinki Monitor & Minority Rights Group- Greece; Greece against its Macedonian minority 2006-12-09 at the Wayback Machine
  232. ^ Amnesty International; Greece: Charges against members of the "Rainbow" party should be dropped
  233. ^ Македонците во Грција треба да си ги бараат правата 23 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine""Нова зора"...печати во 20.000 примероци/Nova Zora...is printed in 20,000 copies"
  234. ^ "Нова зора" – прв весник на македонски јазик во Грција 9 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine""Нова зора" – прв весник на македонски јазик во Грција...При печатењето на тиражот од 20.000 примероци се појавиле само мали технички проблеми/Nova Zora – the first Macedonian-language newspaper in Greece...There were only small technical problems with the printing of the circulation of 20,000"
  235. ^ Нема печатница за македонски во Грција[permanent dead link]"Весникот е наречен "Нова зора" и треба да се печати во 20.000 примероци/The Newspaper is called Nova Zora and 20,000 copies are printed."
  236. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 August 2014. Retrieved 2015-06-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  237. ^ Artan Hoxha and Alma Gurraj, Local Self-Government and Decentralization: Case of Albania. History, Reforms and Challenges. In: Local Self Government and Decentralization in South — East Europe. Proceedings of the workshop held in Zagreb, Croatia 6 April 2001. Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, Zagreb Office, Zagreb 2001, pp. 194–224 (PDF).
  238. ^ Day, Alan John; East, Roger; Thomas, Richard (2002). Political and economic dictionary of Eastern Europe. Routledge. p. 94. ISBN 1-85743-063-8.
  239. ^ (in Bulgarian) Official census data[permanent dead link]
  240. ^ Население с чуждо гражданство по страни 4 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  241. ^ "FOCUS Information Agency". focus-fen.net. Retrieved 14 March 2009.
  242. ^ Nasevski, Boško; Angelova, Dora. Gerovska, Dragica (1995). Македонски Иселенички Алманах '95. Skopje: Матица на Иселениците на Македонија.
  243. ^ (PDF). Australian Government. 2014. p. 58. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 April 2017. Retrieved 23 September 2016.
  244. ^ Nasevski, Boško; Angelova, Dora; Gerovska, Dragica (1995). Македонски Иселенички Алманах '95. Skopje: Матица на Иселениците на Македонија. pp. 52 & 53.
  245. ^ "U.S. Census website". Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  246. ^ "Archived copy". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 20 July 2012. Retrieved 7 March 2006.
  247. ^ Euroamericans.net 19 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  248. ^
  249. ^ "The 67th Academy Awards | 1995". Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 27 August 2019.
  250. ^ Levinson & O'Leary (1992:239)
  251. ^ The encyclopedia of Christianity, Volume 3. By Erwin Fahlbusch, Geoffrey William Bromiley. p. 381
  252. ^ Matkovski, Aleksandar, Grbovite na Makedonija, Skopje, 1970.
  253. ^ Александар Матковски (1990) Грбовите на Македонија, Мисла, Skopje, Macedonia — ISBN 86-15-00160-X
  254. ^ Duncan M. Perry, The Politics of Terror: The Macedonian Liberation Movements, 1893–1903, Duke University Press, 1988, pp. 39–40.
  255. ^ J. Pettifer as ed., The New Macedonian Question, Springer, 1999 ISBN 0230535798, p. 236.
  256. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 June 2020. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
  257. ^ Deskoski: Vergina Sun flag is not Macedonian, we need to get rid of this Greek symbol, Republica.mk: "The Vergina Sun flag was a national flag for only three years and that was one of the biggest mistakes. Neither the Ilinden fighters nor the partisans in the National Liberation War knew that symbol. That flag is the biggest hoax of Macedonianism. We need to unanimously reject and get rid of this Greek symbol. Let the Greeks glorify their symbols."
  258. ^ http://www.wipo.int/cgi-6te/guest/ifetch5?ENG+6TER+15+1151315-REVERSE+0+0+1055+F+125+431+101+25+SEP-0/HITNUM,B+KIND%2fEmblem+ at the Wayback Machine (archived 29 March 2006)
  259. ^ Floudas, Demetrius Andreas; . 24 (1996) Journal of Political and Military Sociology, 285. 1996. Archived from the original on 27 January 2006. Retrieved 24 January 2007.
  260. ^ "Final Agreement for the Settlement of the Differences as Described in the United Nations Security Council Resolutions 817 (1993) and 845 (1993), The Termination of the Interim Accord of 1995, and the Establishment of a Strategic Partnership Between the Parties" (PDF). eKathimerini. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  261. ^ . Crash Online. 14 June 2018. Archived from the original on 30 September 2020. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  262. ^ "North Macedonia to remove the Star of Vergina from all public spaces". GCT.com. 14 July 2019. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  263. ^ "North Macedonia: Zaev removes from anywhere the Vergina Sun (original title: "Βόρεια Μακεδονία: Ο Ζάεφ αποσύρει από παντού τον Ήλιο της Βεργίνας")". News247. 14 July 2019. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  264. ^ "Kutlesh star no longer to be seen in public use". Republika.mk. 12 July 2019. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  265. ^ Peričić, Marijana; et al. (October 2005). "High-Resolution Phylogenetic Analysis of Southeastern Europe Traces Major Episodes of Paternal Gene Flow Among Slavic Populations". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 22 (10): 1964–1975. doi:10.1093/molbev/msi185. PMID 15944443.
  266. ^ Jakovski, Zlatko; Nikolova, Ksenija; Jankova-Ajanovska, Renata; Marjanovic, Damir; Pojskic, Naris; Janeska, Biljana (2011). "Genetic data for 17 Y-chromosomal STR loci in Macedonians in the Republic of Macedonia". Forensic Science International: Genetics. 5 (4): e108–e111. doi:10.1016/j.fsigen.2011.04.005. PMID 21549657. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  267. ^ Petlichkovski A, Efinska-Mladenovska O, Trajkov D, Arsov T, Strezova A, Spiroski M (2004). "High-resolution typing of HLA-DRB1 locus in the Macedonian population". Tissue Antigens. 64 (4): 486–91. doi:10.1111/j.1399-0039.2004.00273.x. PMID 15361127.
  268. ^ Barać, Lovorka; Peričić, Marijana; Klarić, Irena Martinović; Rootsi, Siiri; Janićijević, Branka; Kivisild, Toomas; Parik, Jüri; Rudan, Igor; Villems, Richard; Rudan, Pavao (2003). "European Journal of Human Genetics – Y chromosomal heritage of Croatian population and its island isolates". European Journal of Human Genetics. 11 (7): 535–542. doi:10.1038/sj.ejhg.5200992. PMID 12825075.
  269. ^ Semino, Ornella; Passarino, G; Oefner, PJ; Lin, AA; Arbuzova, S; Beckman, LE; De Benedictis, G; Francalacci, P; et al. (2000). (PDF). Science. 290 (5494): 1155–59. Bibcode:2000Sci...290.1155S. doi:10.1126/science.290.5494.1155. PMID 11073453. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 November 2003.
  270. ^ Hristova-Dimceva, A.; Verduijn, W.; Schipper, R.F.; Schreuder, G.M.tH. (January 2000). "HLA-DRB and -DQB1 polymorphism in the Macedonian population". Tissue Antigens. 55 (1): 53–56. doi:10.1034/j.1399-0039.2000.550109.x. PMID 10703609. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  271. ^ Rebala, K; et al. (2007). "Y-STR variation among Slavs: evidence for the Slavic homeland in the middle Dnieper basin". Journal of Human Genetics. 52 (5): 406–14. doi:10.1007/s10038-007-0125-6. PMID 17364156.
  272. ^ a b Kushniarevich, Alena; et al. (2015). "Genetic heritage of the Balto-Slavic speaking populations: a synthesis of autosomal, mitochondrial and Y-chromosomal data". PLOS ONE. 10 (9): e0135820. Bibcode:2015PLoSO..1035820K. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0135820. PMC 4558026. PMID 26332464.
  273. ^ a b Novembre, John; et al. (2008). "Genes mirror geography within Europe". Nature. 456 (7218): 98–101. Bibcode:2008Natur.456...98N. doi:10.1038/nature07331. PMC 2735096. PMID 18758442.
  274. ^ P. Ralph; et al. (2013). "The Geography of Recent Genetic Ancestry across Europe". PLOS Biology. 11 (5): e105090. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001555. PMC 3646727. PMID 23667324. Furthermore, our Greek and Macedonian samples share much higher numbers of common ancestors with Albanian speakers than with other neighbors, possibly a result of historical migrations, or else perhaps smaller effects of the Slavic expansion in these populations
  275. ^ Rębała, Krzysztof; Mikulich, Alexei I.; Tsybovsky, Iosif S.; Siváková, Daniela; Džupinková, Zuzana; Szczerkowska-Dobosz, Aneta; Szczerkowska, Zofia (16 March 2007). "Y-STR variation among Slavs: evidence for the Slavic homeland in the middle Dnieper basin". Journal of Human Genetics. 52 (5): 406–414. doi:10.1007/s10038-007-0125-6. ISSN 1434-5161. PMID 17364156.
  276. ^ Renata Jankova et al., Y-chromosome diversity of the three major ethno-linguistic groups in the Republic of North Macedonia; Forensic Science International: Genetics; Volume 42, September 2019, Pages 165–170.
  277. ^ a b Trombetta B. "Phylogeographic Refinement and Large Scale Genotyping of Human Y Chromosome Haplogroup E Provide New Insights into the Dispersal of Early Pastoralists in the African Continent" http://gbe.oxfordjournals.org/content/7/7/1940.long
  278. ^ Spiroski, Mirko; Arsov, Todor; Krüger, Carmen; Willuweit, Sascha; Roewer, Lutz (2005). "Y-chromosomal STR haplotypes in Macedonian population samples". Forensic Science International. 148 (1): 69–74. doi:10.1016/j.forsciint.2004.04.067. PMID 15607593.
  279. ^ Anatole Klyosov, DNA Genealogy; Scientific Research Publishing, Inc. USA, 2018; ISBN 1618966197, p. 211.
  280. ^ Underhill, Peter A.; Poznik, G. David; Rootsi, Siiri; Järve, Mari; Lin, Alice A.; Wang, Jianbin; Passarelli, Ben; et al. (2015). "The phylogenetic and geographic structure of Y-chromosome haplogroup R1a". European Journal of Human Genetics. 23 (1): 124–31. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2014.50. PMC 4266736. PMID 24667786. (Supplementary Table 4)
  281. ^ Jakovski; et al. (2011). "Genetic data for 17 Y-chromosomal STR loci in Macedonians in the Republic of Macedonia". Forensic Sci. Int. Genet. 5 (4): e108–e111. doi:10.1016/j.fsigen.2011.04.005. PMID 21549657.
  282. ^ Lao O, Lu TT, Nothnagel M, et al. (August 2008), "Correlation between genetic and geographic structure in Europe", Curr. Biol., 18 (16): 1241–8, doi:10.1016/j.cub.2008.07.049, PMID 18691889, S2CID 16945780
  283. ^ Florin Curta's An ironic smile: the Carpathian Mountains and the migration of the Slavs, Studia mediaevalia Europaea et orientalia. Miscellanea in honorem professoris emeriti Victor Spinei oblata, edited by George Bilavschi and Dan Aparaschivei, 47–72. Bucharest: Editura Academiei Române, 2018.
  284. ^ A. Zupan et al. The paternal perspective of the Slovenian population and its relationship with other populations;  Annals of Human Biology 40 (6) July 2013.
  285. ^ Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages: 500–1250. Florin Curta, 2006 https://www.google.com.au/books/edition/Southeastern_Europe_in_the_Middle_Ages_5/YIAYMNOOe0YC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=southeastern+europe,+curta&printsec=frontcover
  286. ^ Stamatoyannopoulos, George; Bose, Aritra; Teodosiadis, Athanasios; Tsetsos, Fotis; Plantinga, Anna; Psatha, Nikoletta; Zogas, Nikos; Yannaki, Evangelia; Zalloua, Pierre; Kidd, Kenneth K.; Browning, Brian L.; Stamatoyannopoulos, John; Paschou, Peristera; Drineas, Petros (2017). "Genetics of the peloponnesean populations and the theory of extinction of the medieval peloponnesean Greeks". European Journal of Human Genetics. 25 (5): 637–645. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2017.18. ISSN 1476-5438. PMC 5437898. PMID 28272534.

Bibliography

  • Demeter, Gábor; Bottlik, Zsolt (2021). Maps in the Service of the Nation: The Role of Ethnic Mapping in Nation-Building and Its Influence on Political Decision-Making Across the Balkan Peninsula (1840–1914). Berlin: Frank & Timme.
  • Wilkinson, Henry Robert (1951). Maps and politics: a review of the ethnographic cartography of Macedonia. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.

Further reading

  • Brown, Keith, The Past in Question: Modern Macedonia and the Uncertainties of Nation, Princeton University Press, 2003. ISBN 0-691-09995-2.
  • Brunnbauer, Ulf (September 2004). "Fertility, families and ethnic conflict: Macedonians and Albanians in the Republic of Macedonia, 1944–2002". Nationalities Papers. 32 (3): 565–598. doi:10.1080/0090599042000246406. S2CID 128830053.
  • Cowan, Jane K. (ed.), Macedonia: The Politics of Identity and Difference, Pluto Press, 2000. A collection of articles.
  • Curta, Florin (2001). The Making of the Slavs: History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region, c. 500–700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139428880.
  • Curta, Florin (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521815390.
  • Curta, Florin (2004). . East Central Europe. 31 (1): 125–148. doi:10.1163/187633004x00134. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 August 2012. Retrieved 24 July 2009.
  • Curta, Florin (2011). The Edinburgh History of the Greeks, c. 500 to 1050: The Early Middle Ages. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9780748644896.
  • Danforth, Loring M., The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World, Princeton University Press, 1995. ISBN 0-691-04356-6.
  • Fine, John V A Jr. (1991). The Early medieval Balkans. A Critical Survey from the 6th to the late 12th Century. University Michigan Press. ISBN 9780472081493.
  • Karakasidou, Anastasia N., Fields of Wheat, Hills of Blood: Passages to Nationhood in Greek Macedonia, 1870–1990, University of Chicago Press, 1997, ISBN 0-226-42494-4. Reviewed in Journal of Modern Greek Studies 18:2 (2000), p465.
  • Mackridge, Peter, Eleni Yannakakis (eds.), Ourselves and Others: The Development of a Greek Macedonian Cultural Identity since 1912, Berg Publishers, 1997, ISBN 1-85973-138-4.
  • Poulton, Hugh, Who Are the Macedonians?, Indiana University Press, 2nd ed., 2000. ISBN 0-253-21359-2.
  • Roudometof, Victor, Collective Memory, National Identity, and Ethnic Conflict: Greece, Bulgaria, and the Macedonian Question, Praeger Publishers, 2002. ISBN 0-275-97648-3.
  • Κωστόπουλος, Τάσος, Η απαγορευμένη γλώσσα: Η κρατική καταστολή των σλαβικών διαλέκτων στην ελληνική Μακεδονία σε όλη τη διάρκεια του 20ού αιώνα (εκδ. Μαύρη Λίστα, Αθήνα 2000). [Tasos Kostopoulos, The forbidden language: state suppression of the Slavic dialects in Greek Macedonia through the 20th century, Athens: Black List, 2000]
  • The Silent People Speak, by Robert St. John, 1948, xii, 293, 301–313 and 385.
  • Karatsareas, Petros. "Greece's Macedonian Slavic heritage was wiped out by linguistic oppression – here's how". The Conversation. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  • Margaronis, Maria (24 February 2019). "Greece's invisible minority – the Macedonian Slavs". BBC News. Retrieved 24 February 2019.

External links

  • Macedonians in the UK
  • House of Immigrants

macedonians, ethnic, group, population, north, macedonia, demographics, north, macedonia, ancient, people, ancient, macedonians, other, uses, macedonian, disambiguation, macedonian, slavs, disambiguation, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summar. For the population of North Macedonia see Demographics of North Macedonia For the ancient people see Ancient Macedonians For other uses see Macedonian disambiguation and Macedonian Slavs disambiguation This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article March 2022 Macedonians Macedonian Makedonci romanized Makedonci are a nation and a South Slavic ethnic group native to the region of Macedonia in Southeast Europe They speak Macedonian a South Slavic language The large majority of Macedonians identify as Eastern Orthodox Christians who speak a South Slavic language and share a cultural and historical Orthodox Byzantine Slavic heritage with their neighbours About two thirds of all ethnic Macedonians live in North Macedonia and there are also communities in a number of other countries MacedoniansMakedonciMakedonciMap of the Macedonian diaspora in the worldTotal populationc 2 million dubious discuss Regions with significant populationsNorth Macedonia 1 073 375 1 Australia111 352 2021 census 200 000 2 3 Germany115 210 2020 3 4 Italy65 347 2017 5 United States61 753 200 000 6 3 Switzerland61 304 63 000 3 7 Brazil45 000 8 Canada43 110 2016 census 200 000 9 10 Turkey31 518 2001 census 11 Argentina30 000 8 Greece10 000 30 000 12 Serbia22 755 2011 census 13 Austria20 135 3 14 Netherlands10 000 15 000 3 United Kingdom9 000 est 3 Finland8 963 15 Hungary7 253 16 Albania5 512 2011 census 17 Denmark5 392 2018 18 Slovakia4 600 19 Croatia4 138 2011 census 20 Sweden4 491 2009 21 Slovenia3 972 2002 census 22 Belgium3 419 2002 23 Norway3 045 24 France2 300 15 000 25 Bosnia and Herzegovina2 278 2005 26 Czech Republic2 011 27 Poland2 000 4 500 28 29 Bulgaria1 654 2011 census 30 Romania1 264 2011 census 31 Montenegro900 2011 census 32 New Zealand807 1 500 33 34 Russia325 2010 1 000 est 28 35 LanguagesMacedonianReligionPredominantly Eastern Orthodox Christianity Macedonian Orthodox Church Minority Sunni Islam Torbesi Catholicism Roman Catholic and Macedonian Greek Catholic Related ethnic groupsOther South Slavs especially Slavic speakers of Greek Macedonia Bulgarians a and Torlak speakers in SerbiaThe concept of a Macedonian ethnicity distinct from their Orthodox Balkan neighbours is seen to be a comparatively newly emergent one b The earliest manifestations of an incipient Macedonian identity emerged during the second half of the 19th century 45 46 47 among limited circles of Slavic speaking intellectuals predominantly outside the region of Macedonia They arose after the First World War and especially during 1930s and thus were consolidated by Communist Yugoslavia s governmental policy after the Second World War c The formation of the ethnic Macedonians as a separate community has been shaped by population displacement 53 as well as by language shift 54 dubious discuss both the result of the political developments in the region of Macedonia during the 20th century Following the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire the decisive point in the ethnogenesis of the South Slavic ethnic group was the creation of the Socialist Republic of Macedonia after World War II a state in the framework of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia This was followed by the development of a separate Macedonian language and national literature and the foundation of a distinct Macedonian Orthodox Church and national historiography Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient and Roman period 1 2 Medieval period 1 3 Ottoman period 1 4 Identity 1 5 National antagonisms and Macedonian separatism 1 5 1 Macedonian separatism 1 5 2 The Macedonian Slavs in cartography 1 6 Macedonian Nationalism and Interwar Communism 1 7 World War II and Yugoslav nation state building 1 8 Contemporary state of identity and polemics 2 Ethnonym 3 Population 3 1 Balkans 3 1 1 Greece 3 1 2 Serbia 3 1 3 Albania 3 1 4 Bulgaria 3 2 Diaspora 3 2 1 Argentina 3 2 2 Australia 3 2 3 Brazil 3 2 4 Canada 3 2 5 United States 3 2 6 Germany 3 2 7 Italy 3 2 8 Switzerland 3 2 9 Romania 3 2 10 Slovenia 3 2 11 Other countries 4 Culture 4 1 Architecture 4 2 Cinema and theater 4 3 Music and art 4 4 Economy 4 5 Language 4 6 Religion 4 7 Names 4 8 Cuisine 5 Symbols 6 Genetics 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistoryMain article History of the Macedonians ethnic group See also Macedonian historiography and Macedonian nationalism Ancient and Roman period In antiquity much of central northern Macedonia the Vardar basin was inhabited by Paionians who expanded from the lower Strymon basin The Pelagonian plain was inhabited by the Pelagones and the Lyncestae ancient Greek tribes of Upper Macedonia whilst the western region Ohrid Prespa was said to have been inhabited by Illyrian tribes such as the Enchelae 55 During the late Classical Period having already developed several sophisticated polis type settlements and a thriving economy based on mining 56 Paeonia became a constituent province of the Argead Macedonian kingdom 57 In 310 BC the Celts attacked deep into the south subduing various local tribes such as the Dardanians the Paeonians and the Triballi Roman conquest brought with it a significant Romanization of the region During the Dominate period barbarian foederati were settled on Macedonian soil at times such as the Sarmatians settled by Constantine the Great 330s AD 58 or the 10 year settlement of Alaric I s Goths 59 In contrast to frontier provinces Macedonia north and south continued to be a flourishing Christian Roman province in Late Antiquity and into the Early Middle Ages 59 60 Medieval period Linguistically the South Slavic languages from which Macedonian developed are thought to have expanded in the region during the post Roman period although the exact mechanisms of this linguistic expansion remains a matter of scholarly discussion 61 Traditional historiography has equated these changes with the commencement of raids and invasions of Sclaveni and Antes from Wallachia and western Ukraine during the 6th and 7th centuries 62 However recent anthropological and archaeological perspectives have viewed the appearance of Slavs in Macedonia and throughout the Balkans in general as part of a broad and complex process of transformation of the cultural political and ethnolinguistic Balkan landscape before the collapse of Roman authority The exact details and chronology of population shifts remain to be determined 63 64 What is beyond dispute is that in contrast to barbarian Bulgaria northern Macedonia remained Roman in its cultural outlook into the 7th century 60 Yet at the same time sources attest numerous Slavic tribes in the environs of Thessaloniki and further afield including the Berziti in Pelagonia 65 Apart from Slavs and late Byzantines Kuver s Bulgars 66 a mix of Byzantine Greeks Bulgars and Pannonian Avars settled the Keramissian plain Pelagonia around Bitola in the late 7th century d Later pockets of settlers included Danubian Bulgars 71 72 in the 9th century Magyars Vardariotai 73 and Armenians in the 10th 12th centuries 74 Cumans and Pechenegs in the 11th 13th centuries 75 and Saxon miners in the 14th and 15th centuries 76 Having previously been Byzantine clients the Sklaviniae of Macedonia probably switched their allegiance to Bulgaria during the reign of Empress Irene 77 why and was gradually incorporated into the Bulgarian Empire before the mid 9th century Subsequently the literary and ecclesiastical centre in Ohrid became a second cultural capital of medieval Bulgaria 78 79 On the other hand developments of Slavic Orthodox Culture occurred in Byzantine Thessaloniki 80 81 82 Ottoman period See also Macedonians Bulgarians and Slavic speakers in Ottoman Macedonia After the final Ottoman conquest of the Balkans by the Ottomans in the 14 15th century all Eastern Orthodox Christians were included in a specific ethno religious community under Graeco Byzantine jurisdiction called Rum Millet Belonging to this religious commonwealth was so important that most of the common people began to identify themselves as Christians 83 However ethnonyms never disappeared and some form of primary ethnic identity was available 84 This is confirmed from a Sultan s Firman from 1680 which describes the ethnic groups in the Balkan territories of the Empire as follows Greeks Albanians Serbs Vlachs and Bulgarians 85 The rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire in the early 19th century brought opposition to this continued situation At that time the classical Rum Millet began to degrade The coordinated actions carried out by Bulgarian national leaders supported by the majority of the Slavic speaking population in today Republic of North Macedonia in order to be recognized as a separate ethnic entity constituted the so called Bulgarian Millet recognized in 1870 86 At the time of its creation people living in Vardar Macedonia were not in the Exarchate However as a result of plebiscites held between 1872 and 1875 the Slavic districts in the area voted overwhelmingly over 2 3 to go over to the new national Church 87 Referring to the results of the plebiscites and on the basis of statistical and ethnological indications the 1876 Conference of Constantinople included most of Macedonia into the Bulgarian ethnic territory 88 The borders of new Bulgarian state drawn by the 1878 Treaty of San Stefano also included Macedonia but the treaty was never put into effect and the Treaty of Berlin 1878 returned Macedonia to the Ottoman Empire Throughout the Middle Ages and Ottoman rule up until the early 20th century 51 52 89 the Slavic speaking population majority in the region of Macedonia were more commonly referred to both by themselves and outsiders as Bulgarians 90 91 92 However in pre nationalist times terms such as Bulgarian did not possess a strict ethno nationalistic meaning rather they were loose often interchangeable terms which could simultaneously denote regional habitation allegiance to a particular empire religious orientation membership in certain social groups e Similarly a Byzantine was a Roman subject of Constantinople and the term bore no strict ethnic connotations Greek or otherwise 97 Overall in the Middle Ages a person s origin was distinctly regional 98 and in Ottoman era before the 19th century rise of nationalism it was based on the corresponding confessional community After the rise of nationalism most of the Slavic speaking population in the area joined the Bulgarian community through voting in its favor on plebiscites held during the 1870s by a qualified majority over two thirds Identity Georgi Pulevski is the first known person who in 1875 put forward the idea on the existence of a separate Slavic Macedonian language and ethnicity 99 The first expressions of Macedonian nationalism occurred in the second half of the 19th century mainly among intellectuals in Belgrade Sofia Thessaloniki and St Petersburg 100 Since the 1850s some Slavic intellectuals from the area adopted the Greek designation Macedonian as a regional label and it began to gain popularity 101 In the 1860s according to Petko Slaveykov some young intellectuals from Macedonia were claiming that they are not Bulgarians but rather Macedonians descendants of the Ancient Macedonians 102 Slaveikov himself with Macedonian roots 103 started in 1866 the publication of the newspaper Makedoniya Its main task was to educate these misguided sic Grecomans there who he called also Macedonists 104 In a letter written to the Bulgarian Exarch in February 1874 Petko Slaveykov reports that discontent with the current situation has given birth among local patriots to the disastrous idea of working independently on the advancement of their own local dialect and what s more of their own separate Macedonian church leadership 105 The activities of these people were also registered by the Serbian politician Stojan Novakovic 106 who promoted the idea to use the Macedonian nationalism in order to oppose the strong pro Bulgarian sentiments in the area 107 The nascent Macedonian nationalism illegal at home in the theocratic Ottoman Empire and illegitimate internationally waged a precarious struggle for survival against overwhelming odds in appearance against the Ottoman Empire but in fact against the three expansionist Balkan states and their respective patrons among the great powers 108 The first known author that overtly speaks of a Macedonian nationality and language was Georgi Pulevski who in 1875 published in Belgrade a Dictionary of Three languages Macedonian Albanian Turkish in which he wrote that the Macedonians are a separate nation and the place which is theirs is called Macedonia 109 In 1880 he published in Sofia a Grammar of the language of the Slavic Macedonian population a work that is today known as the first attempt at a grammar of Macedonian However per some authors his Macedonian self identification was inchoate 110 111 and resembled a regional phenomenon 112 In 1885 Theodosius of Skopje a priest who have hold a high ranking positions within the Bulgarian Exarchate was chosen as a bishop of the episcopacy of Skopje In 1890 he renounced de facto the Bulgarian Exarchate and attempted to restore the Archbishopric of Ohrid as a separate Macedonian Orthodox Church in all eparchies of Macedonia 113 responsible for the spiritual cultural and educational life of all Macedonian Orthodox Christians 108 During this time period Metropolitan Bishop Theodosius of Skopje made a plea to the Greek Patriarchate of Constantinople to allow a separate Macedonian church and ultimately on 4 December 1891 he sent a letter to the Pope Leo XIII to ask for a recognition and a protection from the Roman Catholic Church but failed Soon after he repented and returned to pro Bulgarian positions 114 In the 1880s and 1890s Isaija Mazovski designated Macedonian Slavs as Macedonians and Old Slavic Macedonian people and also distinguished them from Bulgarians as follows Slavic Bulgarian for Mazovski was synonymous with Macedonian while only Bulgarian was a designation for the Bulgarians in Bulgaria 115 In 1890 Austrian researcher of Macedonia Karl Hron reported that the Macedonians constituted a separate ethnic group by history and language Within the next few years this concept was also welcomed in Russia by linguists including Leonhard Masing Pyotr Lavrov Jan Baudouin de Courtenay and Pyotr Draganov 116 117 Draganov of Bulgarian descent conducted research in Macedonia and determined that the local language had its own identifying characteristics compared to Bulgarian and Serbian He wrote in a Saint Petersburg newspaper that the Macedonians should be recognized by Russia in a full national sense 118 Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization leader Boris Sarafov in 1901 stated that Macedonians had a unique national element and the following year he stated We the Macedonians are neither Serbs nor Bulgarians but simply Macedonians Macedonia exists only for the Macedonians However after the failure of the Ilinden Uprising Sarafov wanted to keep closer ties with Bulgaria supporting the Bulgarian aspirations towards the area 119 120 Gyorche Petrov another IMRO member stated Macedonia was a distinct moral unit with its own aspirations 121 while describing its Slavic population as Bulgarian 122 National antagonisms and Macedonian separatism See also Macedonian Question Macedonian separatism Krste Misirkov in 1903 attempted to codify a standard Macedonian language and appealed for eventual recognition of a separate Macedonian nation when the necessary historical circumstances would arise In 1903 Krste Misirkov published in Sofia his book On Macedonian Matters in which he laid down the principles of the modern Macedonian nationhood and language This book written in the standardized central dialect of Macedonia is considered by ethnic Macedonians as a milestone of the process of Macedonian awakening Misirkov argued that the dialect of central Macedonia Veles Prilep Bitola Ohrid should be taken as a standard Macedonian literary language in which Macedonians should write study and worship the autocephalous Archbishopric of Ohrid should be restored and the Slavic people of Macedonia should be identified in their Ottoman identity cards nofuz as Macedonians Another major figure of the Macedonian awakening was Dimitrija Cupovski one of the founders of the Macedonian Literary Society established in Saint Petersburg in 1902 In 1913 the Macedonian Literary Society submitted the Memorandum of Independence of Macedonia to the British Foreign Secretary and other European ambassadors and it was printed in many European newspapers In the period 1913 1918 Cupovski published the newspaper Makedonski Golos Macedonian Voice in which he and fellow members of the Saint Petersburg Macedonian Colony propagated the existence of a Macedonian people separate from the Greeks Bulgarians and Serbs and sought to popularize the idea for an independent Macedonian state The Macedonian Slavs in cartography From 1878 until 1918 most independent European observers viewed the Slavs of Macedonia as Bulgarians or as Macedonian Slavs while their association with Bulgaria was almost universally accepted 123 Original manuscript versions of population data mentioned Macedonian Slavs though the term was changed to Bulgarians in the official printing 124 Western publications usually presented the Slavs of Macedonia as Bulgarians as happened partly for political reasons in Serbian ones 125 Prompted by the publication of a Serbian map by Spiridon Gopcevic claiming the Slavs of Macedonia as Serbs a version of a Russian map published in 1891 in a period of deterioration of Bulgarian Russian relations first presented Macedonia inhabited not by Bulgarians but by Macedonian Slavs 126 Austrian Hungarian maps followed suit in an effort to delegitimize the ambitions of Russophile Bulgaria returning to presenting the Macedonian Slavs as Bulgarians when Austria Bulgaria relations ameliorated only to renege and employ the designation Macedonian Slavs when Bulgaria changed its foreign policy and Austria turned to envisaging an autonomous Macedonia under Austrian influence within the Murzsteg process 127 The term Macedonian Slavs was used either as a middle solution between conflicting Serbian and Bulgarian claims to denote an intermediary grouping of Slavs associated with the Bulgarians or to describe a separate Slavic group with no ethnic national or political affiliation 128 The differentiation of ethnographic maps representing rival national views produced to satisfy the curiosity of European audience for the inhabitants of Macedonia after the Ilinden uprising of 1903 indicated the complexity of the issue 129 Influenced by the conclusions of the research of young Serb Jovan Cvijic that Macedonia s culture combined Byzantine influence with Serbian traditions a map of 1903 by Austrian cartographer Karl Peucker depicted Macedonia as a peculiar area where zones of linguistic influence overlapped 130 In his first ethnographic map of 1906 Cvijic presented all Slavs of Serbia and Macedonia merely as Slavs 131 In a pamphlet translated and circulated in Europe the same year he elaborated his ostensibly impartial views and described the Slavs living south of the Babuna and Plackovica mountains as Macedo Slavs arguing that the appellation Bugari meant simply peasant to them that they had no national consciousness and could become Serbs or Bulgarians in the future 132 Cvijic thus transformed the political character of the IMRO s appeals to Macedonians into an ethnic one 133 Bulgarian cartographer Anastas Ishirkov countered Cvijic s views pointing to the involvement of Macedonian Slavs in Bulgarian nationalist uprisings and the Macedonian origins of Bulgarian nationalists before 1878 Although Cvijic s arguments attracted the attention of Great Powers they did not endorse at the time his view on the Macedo Slavs 134 Austrian ethnographic map of the vilayets of Kosovo Saloniki Scutari Janina and Monastir ca 1900 Ethnographic map of the Balkans from the Serbian author Jovan Cvijic 1918 Greek map by Georgios Sotiriadis submitted to the Paris Peace Conference 1919 Ethnographic map of the Balkans in the New Larned History 1922 Cvijic further elaborated the idea that had first appeared in Peucker s map and in his map of 1909 he ingeniously mapped the Macedonian Slavs as a third group distinct from Bulgarians and Serbians and part of them under Greek influence 135 136 Envisioning a future agreement with Greece Cvijic depicted the southern half of the Macedo Slavs under Greek unfluence while leaving the rest to appear as a subset of the Serbo Croats 137 138 Cvijic s view was reproduced without acknowledgement by Alfred Stead with no effect on British opinion 139 140 but reflecting the reorientation of Serbian aims towards dividing Macedonia with Greece Cvijic eliminated the Macedo Slavs from a subsequent edition of his map 141 However in 1913 before the conclusion of the Treaty of Bucharest he published his third ethnographic map distinguishing the Macedo Slavs between Skopje and Salonica from both Bulgarians and Serbo Croats on the basis of the transitional character of their dialect per the linguistic researches of Vatroslav Jagic and Aleksandar Belic and the Serb features of their customs such as the zadruga 142 For Cvijic the Macedo Slavs were a transitional population with any sense of nationality they displayed being weak superficial externally imposed and temporary 143 Despite arguing that they should be considered neutral he postulated their division into Serbs and Bulgarians based on dialectical and cultural features in anticipation of Serbian demands regarding the delimitation of frontiers 144 A Balkan committee of experts rejected Cvijic s concept of the Macedo Slavs in 1914 145 However in 1918 Cvijic published a revised version of his map of 1913 which now included in a work of his modelling French geographers standards was taken as impeccable 146 This map was reproduced in modified form in French and American journals in 1918 and numerous other maps and atlases including those produced by the Allies as the Entente approached victory in the First World War replicated its ideas especially its depiction of the Macedo Slavs 147 148 The prevalence of the Yugoslav point of view obliged Georgios Sotiriades a professor of History at the University of Athens to map the Macedo Slavs as a distinct group in his work of 1918 that mirrored Greek views of the time and was used as an official document to advocate for Greece s positions in the Paris peace conference 149 150 After World War I Cvijic s map became the point of reference for all Balkan ethnographic maps 151 while his concept of Macedo Slavs was reproduced in almost all maps 152 including German maps that acknowledged a Macedonian nation 153 Macedonian Nationalism and Interwar Communism After the Balkan Wars 1912 1913 and the World War I 1914 1918 following the division of the region of Macedonia amongst the Kingdom of Greece the Kingdom of Bulgaria and the Kingdom of Serbia the idea of belonging to a separate Macedonian nation was further spread among the Slavic speaking population The suffering during the wars the endless struggle of the Balkan monarchies for dominance over the population increased the Macedonians sentiment that the institutionalization of an independent Macedonian nation would put an end to their suffering On the question of whether they were Serbs or Bulgarians the people more often started answering Neither Bulgar nor Serb I am Macedonian only and I m sick of war 154 155 156 By the 1920s following a negative reaction to the national proselytization of the previous decades a majority of Christian Slavs inhabiting Greek and Vardar Macedonia used the collective name Macedonians to describe themselves either as a nation or as a distinct ethnicity 157 The 1928 Greek census recorded 81 844 Slavo Macedonian speakers distinct from 16 755 Bulgarian speakers 158 Dimitar Vlahov played a crucial role in the adoption of the Resolution of the Comintern on the Macedonian question that for the first time by an international organization recognized the existence of a separate Macedonian nation in 1934 The consolidation of an international Communist organization the Comintern in the 1920s led to some failed attempts by the Communists to use the Macedonian Question as a political weapon In the 1920 Yugoslav parliamentary elections 25 of the total Communist vote came from Macedonia but participation was low only 55 mainly because the pro Bulgarian IMRO organised a boycott against the elections In the following years the communists attempted to enlist the pro IMRO sympathies of the population in their cause In the context of this attempt in 1924 the Comintern organized the filed signing of the so called May Manifesto in which independence of partitioned Macedonia was required 159 In 1925 with the help of the Comintern the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization United was created composed of former left wing Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization IMRO members This organization promoted for the first time in 1932 the existence of a separate ethnic Macedonian nation 160 161 162 In 1933 the Communist Party of Greece in a series of articles published in its official newspaper the Rizospastis criticizing Greek minority policy towards Slavic speakers in Greek Macedonia recognized the Slavs of the entire region of Macedonia as forming a distinct Macedonian ethnicity and their language as Macedonian 163 The idea of a Macedonian nation was internationalized and backed by the Comintern which issued in 1934 a resolution supporting the development of the entity 164 This action was attacked by the IMRO but was supported by the Balkan communists The Balkan communist parties supported the national consolidation of the ethnic Macedonian people and created Macedonian sections within the parties headed by prominent IMRO United members World War II and Yugoslav nation state building The sense of belonging to a separate Macedonian nation gained credence during World War II when ethnic Macedonian communist partisan detachments were formed In 1943 the Communist Party of Macedonia was established and the resistance movement grew up 165 166 On the other hand due to the different trajectories of Macedonian Slavs in the three nation states that ruled the region the designation Macedonian acquired different meanings for them by the time of the National Liberation War of Macedonia in the 1940s Those who came from the Bulgarian part and were members of the IMRO United practicall felt themselves as Bulgarians while those who had experienced Serbian rule and had interacted with the Croatian and Slovenian national movements within Yugoslavia had developed a stronger Macedonian consciousness 167 After the World War II ethnic Macedonian institutions were created in the three parts of the region of Macedonia then under communist control 168 including the establishment of the People s Republic of Macedonia within the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia SFRJ Metodija Andonov Cento was the first president of the Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia after the Second World War The available data indicates that despite the policy of assimilation pro Bulgarian sentiments among the Macedonian Slavs in Yugoslavia were still sizable during the interwar period However if the Yugoslavs would recognize the Slavic inhabitants of Vardar Macedonia as Bulgarians it would mean that the area should be part of Bulgaria Practically in post World War II Macedonia the Kingdom of Yugoslavia s state policy of forced Serbianisation was changed with a new one of Macedonization The codification of Macedonian and the recognition of the Macedonian nation had the main goal finally to ban any Bulgarophilia among the Macedonians and to build a new consciousness based on identification with Yugoslavia As a result Yugoslavia introduced again an abrupt de Bulgarization of the people in the PR Macedonia such as it already had conducted in the Vardar Banovina during the Interwar period Around 100 000 pro Bulgarian elements were imprisoned for violations of the special Law for the Protection of Macedonian National Honour and over 1 200 were allegedly killed In this way generations of students grew up educated in strong anti Bulgarian sentiment which during the times of Communist Yugoslavia increased to the level of state policy Its main agenda was a result from the need to distinguish between the Bulgarians and the new Macedonian nation because Macedonians could confirm themselves as a separate community with its own history only through differentiating itself from Bulgaria This policy has continued in the new Republic of Macedonia after 1990 although with less intensity Thus the Bulgarian part of the identity of the Slavic speaking population in Vardar Macedonia has died out f Contemporary state of identity and polemics Kiro Gligorov was the first president of the Republic of Macedonia now North Macedonia after the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991 Following the collapse of Yugoslavia the issue of Macedonian identity emerged again Nationalists and governments alike from neighbouring countries especially Greece and Bulgaria espouse the view that the Macedonian ethnicity is a modern artificial creation Such views have been seen by Macedonian historians to represent irredentist motives on Macedonian territory 108 Moreover some historians point out that all modern nations are recent politically motivated constructs based on creation myths 177 that the creation of Macedonian identity is no more or less artificial than any other identity 178 and that contrary to the claims of Romantic nationalists modern territorially bound and mutually exclusive nation states have little in common with their preceding large territorial or dynastic medieval empires and any connection between them is tenuous at best 179 In any event irrespective of shifting political affiliations the Macedonian Slavs shared in the fortunes of the Byzantine commonwealth and the Rum millet and they can claim them as their heritage 108 Loring Danforth states similarly the ancient heritage of modern Balkan countries is not the mutually exclusive property of one specific nation but the shared inheritance of all Balkan peoples 180 A more radical and uncompromising strand of Macedonian nationalism has recently emerged called ancient Macedonism or Antiquisation Proponents of this view see modern Macedonians as direct descendants of the ancient Macedonians This view faces criticism by academics as it is not supported by archaeology or other historical disciplines and also could marginalize the Macedonian identity 181 182 Surveys on the effects of the controversial nation building project Skopje 2014 and on the perceptions of the population of Skopje revealed a high degree of uncertainty regarding the latter s national identity A supplementary national poll showed that there was a great discrepancy between the population s sentiment and the narrative the state sought to promote 183 Additionally during the last two decades tens of thousands of citizens of North Macedonia have applied for Bulgarian citizenship 184 In the period since 2002 some 97 000 acquired it while ca 53 000 applied and are still waiting 185 Bulgaria has a special ethnic dual citizenship regime which makes a constitutional distinction between ethnic Bulgarians and Bulgarian citizens In the case of the Macedonians merely declaring their national identity as Bulgarian is enough to gain a citizenship 186 By making the procedure simpler Bulgaria stimulates more Macedonian citizens of Slavic origin to apply for a Bulgarian citizenship 187 However many Macedonians who apply for Bulgarian citizenship as Bulgarians by origin 188 have few ties with Bulgaria 189 Further those applying for Bulgarian citizenship usually say they do so to gain access to member states of the European Union rather than to assert Bulgarian identity 190 This phenomenon is called placebo identity 191 Some Macedonians view the Bulgarian policy as part of a strategy to destabilize the Macedonian national identity 192 As a nation engaged in a dispute over its distinctiveness from Bulgarians Macedonians have always perceived themselves as threatened by their neighbor 193 Bulgaria insists its neighbor admit the common historical roots of their languages and nations a view Skopje continues to reject 194 As a result Bulgaria blocked the official start of EU accession talks with North Macedonia 195 Despite sizable number of Macedonians that have acquired Bulgarian citizenship since 2002 ca 9 7 of the Slavic population only 3 504 citizens of North Macedonia declared themselves as ethnic Bulgarians in the 2021 census roughly 0 31 from the Slavic population 196 The Bulgarian side does not accept these results as completely objective citing as an example the census has counted less than 20 000 people with Bulgarian citizenship in the country while in fact they are over 100 000 197 EthnonymSee also Macedonians obsolete terminology The national name derives from the Greek term Makedonia related to the name of the region named after the ancient Macedonians and their kingdom It originates from the ancient Greek adjective makednos meaning tall 198 which shares its roots with the adjective makros meaning the same 199 The name is originally believed to have meant either highlanders or the tall ones possibly descriptive of these ancient people 200 201 202 In the Late Middle Ages the name of Macedonia had different meanings for Western Europeans and for the Balkan people For the Westerners it denoted the historical territory of the Ancient Macedonia but for the Balkan Christians it covered the territories of the former Byzantine province of Macedonia situated around modern Turkish Edirne 203 With the conquest of the Balkans by the Ottomans in the late 14th century the name of Macedonia disappeared as a geographical designation for several centuries The name was revived just during the early 19th century after the foundation of the modern Greek state with its Western Europe derived obsession with Ancient Greece 204 205 As a result of the rise of nationalism in the Ottoman Empire massive Greek religious and school propaganda occurred and a process of Hellenization was implemented among Slavic speaking population of the area 206 207 In this way the name Macedonians was applied to the local Slavs aiming to stimulate the development of close ties between them and the Greeks linking both sides to the ancient Macedonians as a counteract against the growing Bulgarian cultural influence into the region 208 209 Although the local intellectuals initially rejected the Macedonian designation as Greek 210 since 1850s some of them adopted it as a regional identity and this name began to gain popularity 101 Serbian politics then also encouraged this kind of regionalism to neutralize the Bulgarian influx thereby promoting Serbian interests there 211 The local educator Kuzman Shapkarev concluded that since the 1870s this foreign ethnonym began to replace the traditional one Bulgarians 212 At the dawn of the 20th century the Bulgarian teacher Vasil Kanchov marked that the local Bulgarians and Koutsovlachs call themselves Macedonians and the surrounding people also call them in the same way 213 During the interbellum Bulgaria also supported to some extent the Macedonian regional identity especially in Yugoslavia Its aim was to prevent the Serbianization of the local Slavic speakers because the very name Macedonia was prohibited in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia 214 215 Ultimately the designation Macedonian changed its status in 1944 and went from being predominantly a regional ethnographic denomination to a national one 216 PopulationThe vast majority of Macedonians live along the valley of the river Vardar the central region of the Republic of North Macedonia They form about 64 18 of the population of North Macedonia 1 297 981 people according to the 2002 census Smaller numbers live in eastern Albania northern Greece and southern Serbia mostly abutting the border areas of the Republic of North Macedonia A large number of Macedonians have immigrated overseas to Australia the United States Canada New Zealand and to many European countries Germany Italy Sweden the United Kingdom and Austria among others Balkans Greece See also Slavic speakers of Greek Macedonia The existence of an ethnic Macedonian minority in Greece is rejected by the Greek government The number of people speaking Slavic dialects has been estimated at somewhere between 10 000 and 250 000 g Most of these people however do not have an ethnic Macedonian national consciousness with most choosing to identify as ethnic Greeks 225 or rejecting both ethnic designations and preferring terms such as natives instead 226 In 1999 the Greek Helsinki Monitor estimated that the number of people identifying as ethnic Macedonians numbered somewhere between 10 000 and 30 000 12 227 Macedonian sources generally claim the number of ethnic Macedonians living in Greece at somewhere between 200 000 and 350 000 228 The ethnic Macedonians in Greece have faced difficulties from the Greek government in their ability to self declare as members of a Macedonian minority and to refer to their native language as Macedonian 226 Since the late 1980s there has been an ethnic Macedonian revival in Northern Greece mostly centering on the region of Florina 229 Since then ethnic Macedonian organisations including the Rainbow political party have been established 230 Rainbow first opened its offices in Florina on 6 September 1995 The following day the offices had been broken into and had been ransacked 231 Later Members of Rainbow had been charged for causing and inciting mutual hatred among the citizens because the party had bilingual signs written in both Greek and Macedonian 232 On 20 October 2005 the European Convention on Human Rights ECHR ordered the Greek government to pay penalties to the Rainbow Party for violations of 2 ECHR articles 226 Rainbow has seen limited success at a national level its best result being achieved in the 1994 European elections with a total of 7 263 votes Since 2004 it has participated in European Parliament elections and local elections but not in national elections A few of its members have been elected in local administrative posts Rainbow has recently re established Nova Zora a newspaper that was first published for a short period in the mid 1990s with reportedly 20 000 copies being distributed free of charge 233 234 235 Serbia Main article Macedonians in Serbia Within Serbia Macedonians constitute an officially recognised ethnic minority at both a local and national level Within Vojvodina Macedonians are recognised under the Statute of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina along with other ethnic groups Large Macedonian settlements within Vojvodina can be found in Plandiste Jabuka Glogonj Duzine and Kacarevo These people are mainly the descendants of economic migrants who left the Socialist Republic of Macedonia in the 1950s and 1960s The Macedonians in Serbia are represented by a national council and in recent years Macedonian has begun to be taught The most recent census recorded 22 755 Macedonians living in Serbia 236 Albania Main article Macedonians of Albania Macedonians represent the second largest ethnic minority population in Albania Albania recognises the existence of a Macedonian minority within the Mala Prespa region most of which is comprised by Pustec Municipality Macedonians have full minority rights within this region including the right to education and the provision of other services in Macedonian There also exist unrecognised Macedonian populations living in the Golo Brdo region the Dolno Pole area near the town of Peshkopi around Lake Ohrid and Korce as well as in Gora 4 697 people declared themselves Macedonians in the 1989 census 237 Bulgaria Main article Ethnic Macedonians in Bulgaria Bulgarians are considered most closely related to the neighboring Macedonians and it is sometimes claimed that there is no clear ethnic difference between them 238 As regards self identification a total of 1 654 people officially declared themselves to be ethnic Macedonians in the last Bulgarian census in 2011 0 02 and 561 of them are in Blagoevgrad Province 0 2 239 1 091 of them are Macedonian citizens who are permanent residents in Bulgaria 240 Krassimir Kanev chairman of the non governmental organization Bulgarian Helsinki Committee claimed 15 000 25 000 in 1998 see here In the same report Macedonian nationalists Popov et al 1989 claimed that 200 000 ethnic Macedonians live in Bulgaria However Bulgarian Helsinki Committee stated that the vast majority of the Slavic speaking population in Pirin Macedonia has a Bulgarian national self consciousness and a regional Macedonian identity similar to the Macedonian regional identity in Greek Macedonia Finally according to personal evaluation of a leading local ethnic Macedonian political activist Stoyko Stoykov the number of Bulgarian citizens with ethnic Macedonian self consciousness in 2009 was between 5 000 and 10 000 241 In 2000 the Bulgarian Constitutional Court banned UMO Ilinden Pirin a small Macedonian political party as a separatist organization Subsequently activists attempted to re establish the party but could not gather the required number of signatures Macedonians in North Macedonia according to the 2002 census Concentration of Macedonians in Serbia Regions where Macedonians live within Albania Macedonian Muslims in North MacedoniaDiaspora Further information Macedonian diaspora Macedonian diaspora in the world includes people with Macedonian ancestry or citizenship North Macedonia 100 000 10 000 1 000 Significant Macedonian communities can also be found in the traditional immigrant receiving nations as well as in Western European countries Census data in many European countries such as Italy and Germany does not take into account the ethnicity of emigres from the Republic of North Macedonia Argentina Most Macedonians can be found in Buenos Aires the Pampas and Cordoba An estimated 30 000 Macedonians can be found in Argentina 242 Australia Further information Macedonian Australians The official number of Macedonians in Australia by birthplace or birthplace of parents is 83 893 2001 The main Macedonian communities are found in Melbourne Geelong Sydney Wollongong Newcastle Canberra and Perth The 2006 census recorded 83 983 people of Macedonian ancestry and the 2011 census recorded 93 570 people of Macedonian ancestry 243 Brazil An estimated 45 000 people in Brazil are of Macedonian ancestry 244 The Macedonians can be primarily found in Porto Alegre Rio de Janeiro Sao Paulo and Curitiba Canada Further information Macedonian Canadians The Canadian census in 2001 records 37 705 individuals claimed wholly or partly Macedonian heritage in Canada 245 although community spokesmen have claimed that there are actually 100 000 150 000 Macedonians in Canada 246 United States Further information Macedonian Americans A significant Macedonian community can be found in the United States The official number of Macedonians in the US is 49 455 2004 The Macedonian community is located mainly in Michigan New York Ohio Indiana and New Jersey 247 Germany Further information Macedonians in Germany There are an estimated 61 000 citizens of North Macedonia in Germany mostly in the Ruhrgebiet 2001 Italy There are 74 162 citizens of North Macedonia in Italy Foreign Citizens in Italy Switzerland Further information Macedonians in Switzerland In 2006 the Swiss Government recorded 60 362 Macedonian Citizens living in Switzerland 248 Romania Further information Macedonians in Romania Macedonians are an officially recognised minority group in Romania They have a special reserved seat in the nation s parliament In 2002 they numbered 731 Slovenia Further information Macedonians in Slovenia Macedonians began relocating to Slovenia in the 1950s when the two regions formed a part of a single country Yugoslavia Other countries Other significant Macedonian communities can also be found in the other Western European countries such as Austria France Luxembourg Netherlands United Kingdom and the whole European Union citation needed Also in Uruguay with a significant population in Montevideo citation needed CultureMain article Culture of North Macedonia This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Macedonians ethnic group news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The culture of the people is characterized with both traditionalist and modernist attributes It is strongly bound with their native land and the surrounding in which they live The rich cultural heritage of the Macedonians is accented in the folklore the picturesque traditional folk costumes decorations and ornaments in city and village homes the architecture the monasteries and churches iconostasis wood carving and so on The culture of Macedonians can roughly be explained as Balkanic closely related to that of Bulgarians and Serbs Architecture Ottoman architecture in Ohrid Macedonian girls in traditional folk costumes The typical Macedonian village house is influenced by Ottoman Architecture Presented as a construction with two floors with a hard facade composed of large stones and a wide balcony on the second floor In villages with predominantly agricultural economy the first floor was often used as a storage for the harvest while in some villages the first floor was used as a cattle pen The stereotype for a traditional Macedonian city house is a two floor building with white facade with a forward extended second floor and black wooden elements around the windows and on the edges Cinema and theater Main article Cinema of North Macedonia The history of film making in North Macedonia dates back over 110 years The first film to be produced on the territory of the present day the country was made in 1895 by Janaki and Milton Manaki in Bitola In 1995 Before the Rain became the first Macedonian movie to be nominated for an Academy Award 249 From 1993 to 1994 1 596 performances were held in the newly formed republic and more than 330 000 people attended The Macedonian National Theater drama opera and ballet companies the Drama Theater the Theater of the Nationalities Albanian and Turkish drama companies and the other theater companies comprise about 870 professional actors singers ballet dancers directors playwrights set and costume designers etc There is also a professional theatre for children and three amateur theaters For the last thirty years a traditional festival of Macedonian professional theaters has been taking place in Prilep in honor of Vojdan Cernodrinski the founder of the modern Macedonian theater Each year a festival of amateur and experimental Macedonian theater companies is held in Kocani Music and art Main article Music of North Macedonia Macedonian music has many things in common with the music of neighboring Balkan countries but maintains its own distinctive sound The founders of modern Macedonian painting included Lazar Licenovski Nikola Martinoski Dimitar Pandilov and Vangel Kodzoman They were succeeded by an exceptionally talented and fruitful generation consisting of Borka Lazeski Dimitar Kondovski Petar Mazev who are now deceased and Rodoljub Anastasov and many others who are still active Others include Vasko Taskovski and Vangel Naumovski In addition to Dimo Todorovski who is considered to be the founder of modern Macedonian sculpture the works of Petar Hadzi Boskov Boro Mitrikeski Novak Dimitrovski and Tome Serafimovski are also outstanding Economy In the past the Macedonian population was predominantly involved with agriculture with a very small portion of the people who were engaged in trade mainly in the cities But after the creation of the People s Republic of Macedonia which started a social transformation based on Socialist principles middle and heavy industries were started Language Main article Macedonian language Macedonian makedonski јazik is a member of the Eastern group of South Slavic languages Standard Macedonian was implemented as the official language of the Socialist Republic of Macedonia after being codified in the 1940s and has accumulated a thriving literary tradition The closest relative of Macedonian is Bulgarian 250 followed by Serbo Croatian All the South Slavic languages form a dialect continuum in which Macedonian and Bulgarian form an Eastern subgroup The Torlakian dialect group is intermediate between Bulgarian Macedonian and Serbian comprising some of the northernmost dialects of Macedonian as well as varieties spoken in southern Serbia and western Bulgaria Torlakian is often classified as part of the Eastern South Slavic dialects The Macedonian alphabet is an adaptation of the Cyrillic script as well as language specific conventions of spelling and punctuation It is rarely Romanized Religion Main articles Macedonian Orthodox Church Ohrid Archbishopric Macedonian Orthodox Church Roman Catholicism in North Macedonia Macedonian Greek Catholic Church Protestantism in North Macedonia and Islam in North Macedonia One of the well known monasteries St Panteleimon in Ohrid Most Macedonians are members of the Macedonian Orthodox Church The official name of the church is Macedonian Orthodox Church Ohrid Archbishopric and is the body of Christians who are united under the Archbishop of Ohrid and North Macedonia exercising jurisdiction over Macedonian Orthodox Christians in the Republic of North Macedonia and in exarchates in the Macedonian diaspora The church gained autonomy from the Serbian Orthodox Church in 1959 and declared the restoration of the historic Archbishopric of Ohrid On 19 July 1967 the Macedonian Orthodox Church declared autocephaly from the Serbian church Due to protest from the Serbian Orthodox Church the move was not recognised by any of the churches of the Eastern Orthodox Communion and since then the Macedonian Orthodox Church is not in communion with any Orthodox Church 251 A small number of Macedonians belong to the Roman Catholic and the Protestant churches Between the 15th and the 20th centuries during Ottoman rule a number of Orthodox Macedonian Slavs converted to Islam Today in the Republic of North Macedonia they are regarded as Macedonian Muslims who constitute the second largest religious community of the country Names Main article Macedonian names Cuisine Main article Macedonian cuisine Tavce Gravce the national dish of Macedonians Macedonian cuisine is a representative of the cuisine of the Balkans reflecting Mediterranean Greek and Middle Eastern Turkish influences and to a lesser extent Italian German and Eastern European especially Hungarian ones The relatively warm climate in North Macedonia provides excellent growth conditions for a variety of vegetables herbs and fruits Thus Macedonian cuisine is particularly diverse Shopska salad a food from Bulgaria is an appetizer and side dish which accompanies almost every meal citation needed Macedonian cuisine is also noted for the diversity and quality of its dairy products wines and local alcoholic beverages such as rakija Tavce Gravce and mastika are considered the national dish and drink of North Macedonia respectively SymbolsSee also Flags of North Macedonia National symbols of North Macedonia and Proposed coat of arms of North Macedonia Symbols used by members of the ethnic group include Lion The lion first appears in the Fojnica Armorial from 17th century where the coat of arms of Macedonia is included among those of other entities On the coat of arms is a crown inside a yellow crowned lion is depicted standing rampant on a red background On the bottom enclosed in a red and yellow border is written Macedonia The use of the lion to represent Macedonia was continued in foreign heraldic collections throughout the 17th and 18th centuries 252 253 Nevertheless during the late 19th century the Internal Macedonian Adrianople Revolutionary Organization arose which modeled itself after the earlier Bulgarian revolutionary traditions and adopted their symbols as the lion etc 254 255 Modern versions of the historical lion has also been added to the emblem of several political parties organizations and sports clubs However this symbol is not totally accepted while the state coat of arms of Bulgaria is somewhat similar Flag of the Republic of Macedonia 1992 1995 depicting the Vergina Sun Vergina Sun official flag 1992 1995 The Vergina Sun is used unofficially by various associations and cultural groups in the Macedonian diaspora The Vergina Sun is believed to have been associated with ancient Greek kings such as Alexander the Great and Philip II although it was used as an ornamental design in ancient Greek art long before the Macedonian period The symbol was depicted on a golden larnax found in a 4th century BC royal tomb belonging to either Philip II or Philip III of Macedon in the Greek region of Macedonia The Greeks regard the use of the symbol by North Macedonia as a misappropriation of a Hellenic symbol unrelated to Slavic cultures and a direct claim on the legacy of Philip II However archaeological items depicting the symbol have also been excavated in the territory of North Macedonia 256 Toni Deskoski Macedonian professor of International Law argues that the Vergina Sun is not a Macedonian symbol but it s a Greek symbol that is used by Macedonians in the nationalist context of Macedonism and that the Macedonians need to get rid of it 257 In 1995 Greece lodged a claim for trademark protection of the Vergina Sun as a state symbol under WIPO 258 In Greece the symbol against a blue field is used vastly in the area of Macedonia and it has official status The Vergina sun on a red field was the first flag of the independent Republic of Macedonia until it was removed from the state flag under an agreement reached between the Republic of Macedonia and Greece in September 1995 259 On 17 June 2018 Greece and the Republic of Macedonia signed the Prespa Agreement which stipulates the removal of the Vergina Sun s public use across the latter s territory 260 261 In a session held on early July 2019 the government of North Macedonia announced the complete removal of the Vergina Sun from all public areas institutions and monuments in the country with the deadline for its removal being set to 12 August 2019 in line with the Prespa Agreement 262 263 264 GeneticsAnthropologically Macedonians possess genetic lineages postulated to represent Balkan prehistoric and historic demographic processes 265 Such lineages are also typically found in neighboring South Slavs such as Bulgarians and Serbs in addition to Greeks Albanians Romanians and Gagauzes h Y DNA studies suggest that Macedonians along with neighboring South Slavs are distinct from other Slavic speaking populations in Europe and near half of their Y chromosome DNA haplogroups are likely to be inherited from inhabitants of the Balkans that predated sixth century Slavic migrations 275 A diverse set of Y DNA haplogroups are found in Macedonians at significant levels including I2a1b E V13 J2a R1a1 R1b G2a encoding a complex pattern of demographic processes 276 Similar distributions of the same haplogroups are found in neighboring populations 277 278 I2a1b and R1a1 are typically found in Slavic speaking populations across Europe 279 280 while haplogroups such as E V13 and J2 occur at high frequencies in neighboring non Slavic populations 277 On the other hand R1b is the most frequently occurring haplogroup in Western Europe and G2a is most frequently found in Caucasus and the adjacent areas According to a DNA data for 17 Y chromosomal STR loci in Macedonians in comparison to other South Slavs and Kosovo Albanians the Macedonian population had the lowest genetic Y STR distance against the Bulgarian population while having the largest distance against the Croatian population However the observed populations did not have significant differentiation in Y STR population structure except partially for Kosovo Albanians 281 Genetic similarity irrespective of language and ethnicity has a strong correspondence to geographic proximity in European populations 272 273 282 In regard to population genetics not all regions of Southeastern Europe had the same ratio of native Byzantine and invading Slavic population with the territory of the Eastern Balkans Macedonia Thrace and Moesia having a significant percentage of locals compared to Slavs Considering that the majority of Balkan Slavs came via the Eastern Carpathian route lower percentage in the east does not imply that the number of the Slavs there was lesser than among the Western South Slavs Most probably on the territory of Western South Slavs was a state of desolation which produced there a founder effect 283 284 The region of Macedonia suffered less disruption than frontier provinces closer to the Danube with towns and forts close to Ohrid Bitola and along the Via Egnatia Re settlements and the cultural links of the Byzantine Era further shaped the demographic processes which the Macedonian ancestry is linked to 285 Nevertheless even present day Peloponnesian Greeks carry a small but significant amount of Slavic ancestry the admixture ranged from 0 2 to 14 4 286 See also North Macedonia portalDemographic history of North Macedonia List of Macedonians Demographics of the Republic of North Macedonia Macedonian language Ethnogenesis South Slavs Macedonians Greeks Macedonians Bulgarians References See 36 37 38 See 39 40 41 42 43 44 See 48 49 50 51 52 See 67 68 69 70 See 93 94 95 96 See 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 See 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 See 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 State Statistical Office Cultural diversity Census Australian Bureau of Statistics 2022 a b c d e f g Republic of Macedonia MFA estimate Archived 26 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine 2006 figures Archived 19 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Foreign Citizens in Italy 2017 Archived 6 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine 2020 Community Survey 2005 Figures Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine a b Nasevski Bosko Angelova Dora Gerovska Dragica 1995 Makedonski Iselenichki Almanah 95 Skopje Matica na Iselenicite na Makedoniјa pp 52 53 My Info Agent Archived from the original on 18 January 2012 Retrieved 18 March 2015 2006 census Archived 25 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine 2001 census Archived 15 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b Report about Compliance with the Principles of the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities Greece GREEK HELSINKI MONITOR GHM Archived 23 May 2003 at the Wayback Machine Popis u Srbiјi 2011 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Tabelle 13 Auslander nach Staatsangehorigkeit ausgewahlte Staaten Altersgruppen und Geschlecht p 74 United Nations Population Division Department of Economic and Social Affairs un org Retrieved 29 June 2018 1996 estimate Archived 5 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine minorityrights org Population by country of origin OECD Statistics Population by Ethnicity by Towns Municipalities 2011 Census Census of Population Households and Dwellings 2011 Zagreb Croatian Bureau of Statistics December 2012 Population by country of birth 2009 2002 census stat si Belgium population statistics dofi fgov be Retrieved 9 June 2008 2008 figures Archived 12 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine 2003 census Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine Population Estimate from the MFA Archived 26 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine 2005 census Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine czso cz a b Makedonci vo Svetot Archived 26 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine Polands Holocaust Ethnic Strife Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic 1918 1947 p 260 Bulgaria 2011 census Rezultatele finale ale Recensămantului din 2011 Tab8 Populaţia stabilă după etnie judeţe municipii orase comune in Romanian National Institute of Statistics Romania 5 July 2013 Archived from the original on 18 January 2016 Retrieved 18 December 2013 Montenegro 2011 census 2006 census Archived from the original on 27 November 2007 Retrieved 2 October 2018 Population Estimate from the MFA Archived 30 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Russia 2010 census Archived from the original PDF on 6 September 2018 Retrieved 25 June 2015 Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States p 517 The Macedonians are a Southern Slav people closely related to Bulgarians Ethnic groups worldwide a ready reference handbook p 54 Macedonians are a Slavic people closely related to the neighboring Bulgarians Day Alan John East Roger Thomas Richard 2002 Political and economic dictionary of Eastern Europe Routledge p 96 ISBN 9780203403747 Krste Misirkov On the Macedonian Matters Za Makedonckite Raboti Sofia 1903 And anyway what sort of new Macedonian nation can this be when we and our fathers and grandfathers and great grandfathers have always been called Bulgarians Sperling James Kay Sean Papacosma S Victor 2003 Limiting institutions the challenge of Eurasian security governance Manchester UK Manchester University Press p 57 ISBN 978 0 7190 6605 4 Macedonian nationalism Is a new phenomenon In the early twentieth century there was no separate Slavic Macedonian identity Titchener Frances B Moorton Richard F 1999 The eye expanded life and the arts in Greco Roman antiquity Berkeley University of California Press p 259 ISBN 978 0 520 21029 5 On the other hand the Macedonians are a newly emergent people in search of a past to help legitimize their precarious present as they attempt to establish their singular identity in a Slavic world dominated historically by Serbs and Bulgarians The twentieth century development of a Macedonian ethnicity and its recent evolution into independent statehood following the collapse of the Yugoslav state in 1991 has followed a rocky road In order to survive the vicissitudes of Balkan history and politics the Macedonians who have had no history need one Kaufman Stuart J 2001 Modern hatreds the symbolic politics of ethnic war New York Cornell University Press p 193 ISBN 0 8014 8736 6 The key fact about Macedonian nationalism is that it is new in the early twentieth century Macedonian villagers defined their identity religiously they were either Bulgarian Serbian or Greek depending on the affiliation of the village priest According to the new Macedonian mythology modern Macedonians are the direct descendants of Alexander the Great s subjects They trace their cultural identity to the ninth century Saints Cyril and Methodius who converted the Slavs to Christianity and invented the first Slavic alphabet and whose disciples maintained a centre of Christian learning in western Macedonia A more modern national hero is Gotse Delchev leader of the turn of the century Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization IMRO which was actually a largely pro Bulgarian organization but is claimed as the founding Macedonian national movement Rae Heather 2002 State identities and the homogenisation of peoples Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 278 ISBN 0 521 79708 X Despite the recent development of Macedonian identity as Loring Danforth notes it is no more or less artificial than any other identity It merely has a more recent ethnogenesis one that can therefore more easily be traced through the recent historical record Zielonka Jan Pravda Alex 2001 Democratic consolidation in Eastern Europe Oxford Oxford University Press p 422 ISBN 978 0 19 924409 6 Unlike the Slovene and Croatian identities which existed independently for a long period before the emergence of SFRY Macedonian identity and language were themselves a product federal Yugoslavia and took shape only after 1944 Again unlike Slovenia and Croatia the very existence of a separate Macedonian identity was questioned albeit to a different degree by both the governments and the public of all the neighboring nations Greece being the most intransigent Bonner Raymond 14 May 1995 The World The Land That Can t Be Named The New York Times New York Archived from the original on 29 January 2019 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Macedonian nationalism did not arise until the end of the last century Rossos Andrew 2008 Macedonia and the Macedonians A History PDF Hoover Institution Press p 269 ISBN 978 0817948832 Archived from the original PDF on 28 January 2019 Retrieved 28 January 2019 They were also insisting that the Macedonians sacrifice their national name under which as we have seen throughout this work their national identity and their nation formed in the nineteenth century Rossos Andrew 2008 Macedonia and the Macedonians A History PDF Hoover Institution Press p 284 ISBN 978 0817948832 Archived from the original PDF on 28 January 2019 Retrieved 28 January 2019 Under very trying circumstances most ethnic Macedonians chose a Macedonian identity That identity began to form with the Slav awakening in Macedonia in the first half of the nineteenth century Loring M Danforth The Macedonian Conflict Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World 1995 Princeton University Press p 65 ISBN 0 691 04356 6 Stephen Palmer Robert King Yugoslav Communism and the Macedonian question Hamden Connecticut Archon Books 1971 p p 199 200 Livanios Dimitris 17 April 2008 The Macedonian Question Britain and the Southern Balkans 1939 1949 ISBN 9780191528729 Retrieved 18 March 2015 a b Woodhouse Christopher M 2002 The Struggle for Greece 1941 1949 ISBN 9781850654926 Retrieved 18 March 2015 a b Poulton Hugh 1995 Who are the Macedonians ISBN 9781850652380 Retrieved 18 March 2015 James Horncastle The Macedonian Slavs in the Greek Civil War 1944 1949 Rowman amp Littlefield 2019 ISBN 1498585051 p 130 Stern Dieter and Christian Voss eds 2006 Towards the peculiarities of language shift in Northern Greece In Marginal Linguistic Identities Studies in Slavic Contact and Borderland Varieties Eurolinguistische Arbeiten Wiesbaden Germany Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 9783447053549 pp 87 101 A J Toynbee Some Problems of Greek History Pp 80 99 103 The Problem of the Discontinuity in Classical and Hellenistic Eastern Macedonia Marjan Jovanonv UDK 904 711 424 497 73 A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Wiley Blackwell 2011 Map 2 Peter Heather Goths and Romans 332 489 p 129 a b Macedonia in Late Antiquity p 551 In A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Wiley Blackwell 2011 a b Curta Florin 2012 Were there any Slavs in seventh century Macedonia Journal of History 47 73 Curta 2004 p 148 Fine 1991 p 29 T E Gregory A History of Byzantium Wiley Blackwell 2010 p 169 Curta 2001 pp 335 345 Florin Curta Were there any Slavs in seventh century Macedonia 2013 The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia Denis Sinor Cambridge University Press 1990 ISBN 0521243041 pp 215 216 The Early Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century John Van Antwerp Fine University of Michigan Press 1991 ISBN 0472081497 p 72 Vo nekropolata Mlaka pred tvrdinata vo Debreshte Prilep otkopani se grobovi so naodi od docniot 7 i 8 vek Tie se delumno ili celosno kremirani i ne se nitu romejski nitu slovenski Stanuva zbor najverojatno za Kutrigurite Ova protobugarsko pleme pod vodstvo na Kuber a kako potchineto na avarskiot kagan vo Panonija okolu 680 g se odmetnalo od Avarite i trgnalo kon Solun Kuber gi povel so sebe i Sermesijanite okolu 70 000 na broј vo nivnata stara tatkovina Sermesijanite bile Romei zhiteli na balkanskite provincii shto Avarite gi zarobile eden vek porano i gi naselile vo Zapadna Panonija da rabotat za niv Na Kuber mu bila doverena upravata vrz niv In English In the necropolis Malaka in the fortress of Debreshte near Prilep graves were dug with findings from the late 7th and early 8th century They are partially or completely cremated and neither Roman nor Slavic The graves are probably remains from the Kutrigurs This Bulgar tribe was led by Kuber Srednovekovni gradovi i tvrdini vo Makedoniјa Ivan Mikulchiќ Skopјe Makedonska civilizaciјa 1996 str 32 33 The Other Europe in the Middle Ages Avars Bulgars Khazars and Cumans East Central and Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages 450 1450 Florin Curta Roman Kovalev BRILL 2008 ISBN 9004163891 p 460 W Pohl The Avars History in Regna and Gentes The Relationship Between Late Antique and Early Medieval Peoples and Kingdoms in the Transformation of the Roman World pp 581 587 They spread from the original heartland in north east Bulgaria to the Drina in the west and to Macedonia in the south west Na celiot toј prostor vo masa metalni proizvodi delovi od voenata oprema obleka i nakit meѓu standardnite formi koristeni od slovenskoto naselenie odvreme navreme se poјavuvaat specifichni predmeti vrzani za bugarsko bolјarstvo kako nositeli na novata drzhavna uprava See Srednovekovni gradovi i tvrdini vo Makedoniјa Ivan Mikulchiќ Skopјe Makedonska civilizaciјa 1996 str 35 364 365 Dejan Bulic The Fortifications of the Late Antiquity and the Early Byzantine Period on the Later Territory of the South Slavic Principalities and Their Re occupation in Tibor Zivkovic et al The World of the Slavs Studies of the East West and South Slavs Civitas Oppidas Villas and Archeological Evidence 7th to 11th Centuries AD with Srđan Rudic as ed Istorijski institut 2013 Belgrade ISBN 8677431047 pp 186 187 Florin Curta The Edinburgh History of the Greeks C 500 to 1050 The Early Middle Ages pp 259 281 Studies on the Internal Diaspora of the Byzantine Empire edited by Helene Ahrweiler Angeliki E Laiou p 58 Many were apparently based in Bitola Stumnitsa and Moglena Cumans and Tatars Oriental Military in the Pre Ottoman Balkans 1185 1365 Istvan Varsary p 67 Stoianovich Traian September 1994 Balkan Worlds ISBN 9780765638519 Retrieved 18 March 2015 J V A Fine The Early Medieval Balkans Pp 110 11 Alexander Schenker The Dawn of Slavic pp 188 190 Schenker argues that Ohrid was innovative and native Slavic whilst Preslav very much relied on Greek modelling Per Curta Preslav was the center from which the scriptorial innovation associated with the introduction of Cyrillic spread to other regions of Bulgaria Florin Curta 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge University Press p 221 ISBN 9780521894524 Fine 1991 pp 113 196 Two brothers Constantine and Methodius were fluent in the dialect of Slavic in the environs of Thessaloniki They devised an alphabet to convey Slavic phonetics Francis Dvornik The Slavs p 167 Ostrogorsky History of the Byzantine State p 310 Detrez Raymond Segaert Barbara 2008 Europe and the Historical Legacies in the Balkans ISBN 9789052013749 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Balkan cultural commonality and ethnic diversity Raymond Detrez Ghent University Belgium Istoriya na blgarite Ksno srednovekovie i Vzrazhdane tom 2 Georgi Bakalov TRUD Publishers 2004 ISBN 9545284676 str 23 Bg The A to Z of the Ottoman Empire Selcuk Aksin Somel Scarecrow Press 2010 ISBN 1461731763 p 168 The Politics of Terror The Macedonian Liberation Movements 1893 1903 Duncan M Perry Duke University Press 1988 ISBN 0822308134 p 15 The A to Z of Bulgaria Raymond Detrez Scarecrow Press 2010 ISBN 0810872021 p 271 Center for Documentation and Information on Minorities in Europe Southeast Europe CEDIME SE Macedonians of Bulgaria p 14 Archived 23 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine Poulton Hugh 2000 Who are the Macedonians ISBN 9781850655343 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Srednovekovni gradovi i tvrdini vo Makedoniјa Ivan Mikulchiќ Makedonska akademiјa na naukite i umetnostite Skopјe 1996 str 72 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Academician Dimitŭr Simeonov Angelov 1978 Formation of the Bulgarian nation summary Sofia Press pp 413 415 Retrieved 18 March 2015 When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans J V A Fine pp 3 5 Relexification Hypothesis in Rumanian Paul Wexler p 170 Cumans and Tartars Oriental military in the pre Ottoman Balkans Istvan Vasary p 18 Byzantium s Balkan Frontier Paul Stephenson p 78 79 The Edinburgh History of the Greeks 500 1250 The Middle Ages Florin Curta 2013 p 294 echoing Anthony D Smith and Anthony Kaldellis no clear notion exists that the Greek nation survived into Byzantine times the ethnic identity of those who lived in Greece during the Middle Ages is best described as Roman Mats Roslund Guests in the House Cultural Transmission Between Slavs and Scandinavians 2008 p 79 Roumen Daskalov Alexander Vezenkov as ed Entangled Histories of the Balkans Volume Three Shared Pasts Disputed Legacies Balkan Studies Library BRILL 2015 ISBN 9004290362 p 454 Loring M Danforth The Macedonian Conflict Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World 1995 Princeton University Press p 56 ISBN 0 691 04356 6 a b Roumen Daskalov Tchavdar Marinov Entangled Histories of the Balkans Volume One National Ideologies and Language Policies BRILL 2013 ISBN 900425076X pp 283 285 The Macedonian Question an article from 1871 by Slaveykov published in the newspaper Macedonia in Carigrad he wrote We have many times heard from the Macedonists that they are not Bulgarians but they are rather Macedonians descendants of the Ancient Macedonians and we have always waited to hear some proofs of this but we have never heard them Sonya Baeva Petko Slavejkov zhivot i tvorchestvo 1827 1870 Izd vo na Blgarskata akademiya na naukite 1968 str 10 Rechnik na blgarskata literatura tom 2 E O Sofiya Izdatelstvo na Blgarskata akademiya na naukite 1977 s 324 A letter from Slaveykov to the Bulgarian Exarch written in Solun in February 1874 Balkanska pitaњa i maњe istoriјsko politichke beleshke o Balkanskom poluostrvu 1886 1905 Stoјan Novakoviћ Beograd 1906 Since the Bulgarian idea as it is well known is deeply rooted in Macedonia I think it is almost impossible to shake it completely by opposing it merely with the Serbian idea This idea we fear would be incapable as opposition pure and simple of suppressing the Bulgarian idea That is why the Serbian idea will need an ally that could stand in direct opposition to Bulgarianism and would contain in itself the elements which could attract the people and their feelings and thus sever them from Bulgarianism This ally I see in Macedonism except from the report of S Novakovic to the Minister of Education in Belgrade in Cultural and Public Relations of the Macedonians with Serbia in the XIXth c Skopje 1960 p 178 a b c d Rossos Andrew 2008 Macedonia and the Macedonians A History PDF Hoover Institution Press ISBN 978 0817948832 Archived from the original PDF on 28 January 2019 Retrieved 28 January 2019 Recnik od tri jezika s makedonski arbanski i turski Dictionary of Three languages Macedonian Albanian Turkish U drzavnoj stampariji 1875 p 48f Raymond Detrez 2014 Historical Dictionary of Bulgaria Rowman amp Littlefield 2014 p 67 ISBN 1442241802 Chris Kostov 2010 Contested Ethnic Identity The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto 1900 1996 Peter Lang p 67 ISBN 978 3 0343 0196 1 Daskalov Rumen Marinov Tchavdar 2013 Entangled Histories of the Balkans Volume One National Ideologies and Language Policies BRILL p 213 ISBN 978 90 04 25076 5 Theodosius of Skopje Centralen D rzhaven istoricheski archiv Sofia 176 op 1 arh ed 595 l 5 42 Razgledi X 8 1968 pp 996 1000 Pismo na Teodosij do vestnika na Blgarskata ekzarhiya Novini ot 04 02 1892 g Blazhe Koneski Makedonskiot XIX vek tom 6 Sostavile Anastasiјa Ѓurchinova Lidiјa Kapushevska DrakulevskaY Boban Karapeјovski beleshki i komentari Georgi Stalev MANU Skopјe 2020 str 72 Alexis Heraclides 2020 The Macedonian Question and the Macedonians Taylor amp Francis p 152 ISBN 9781000289404 Duncan Perry 1988 The Politics of Terror Duke University Press p 20 ISBN 9780822308133 Marco Dogo 1985 Lingua e nazionalita in Macedonia Jaca Book p 50 ISBN 9788816950115 In quella data aveva appunto fatto ritorno da una missione in Macedonia il filologo Draganov di origine bulgaro bassarabiana i cui contributi scientifici avrebbero introdotto il pubblico colto della capitale russa all esistenza di un area linguistica slava in quella regione dei Balcani dotata di caratteri individuanti propri e non assimilabili a quelli serbi e bulgari ancora in tempi recentissimi Draganov era intervenuto a sostenere sulle colonne di un autorevole giornale di Petroburgo il buon diritto degli Slavi macedoni o meglio Macedoni nel pieno sneso nazionale e non piu solo geografico della parola al riconoscimento da parte russa quale nazionalita a se stante ed anzi maggioritaria in casa propria in Macedonia The Past in Question Modern Macedonia and the Uncertainties of Nation Keith Brown Princeton University Press 2003 ISBN 0691099952 p 175 Mercia MacDermott Freedom or Death The Life of Gotse Delchev Journeyman Press London amp West Nyack 1978 p 379 Alexis Heraclides 2020 The Macedonian Question and the Macedonians Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781000289404 Information from a book by Gyorche Petrov on the ethnic composition of the population in Macedonia The Macedonian population consists of Bulgarians Turks Albanians Wallachians Jews The total number of the population and that of each nationality cannot be defined exactly as there are no statistics Bulgarians constitute the bulk of the population in the vilayet I am describing In spite of all distortions in the official statistics they again figure as more than half of the population I could not personally collect any data about the number of the population that is why I am not quoting figures I made a description of the Bulgarian population in the section on Topography that is why it is not necessary to repeat the same again or go into detail G Petrov Materials on the Study of Macedonia Sofia 1896 pp 724 725 731 the original is in Bulgarian Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Institute of History Bulgarian Language Institute Macedonia Documents and materials Sofia 1978 Document 40 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 114 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 199 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 95 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 96 93 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 96 105 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 114 Wilkinson 1951 p 133 4 Wilkinson 1951 p 134 5 Wilkinson 1951 p 146 88 Wilkinson 1951 p 148 50 Wilkinson 1951 p 151 Wilkinson 1951 p 152 3 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 118 Wilkinson 1951 p 135 164 Wilkinson 1951 p 164 5 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 118 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 121 Wilkinson 1951 p 166 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 119 Wilkinson 1951 p 172 175 177 Wilkinson 1951 p 177 8 Wilkinson 1951 p 178 9 Wilkinson 1951 p 203 Wilkinson 1951 p 202 Wilkinson 1951 p 181 2 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 129 30 Wilkinson 1951 p 192 3 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 122 Wilkinson 1951 p 172 Wilkinson 1951 p 203 Demeter amp Bottlik 2021 p 130 Istoriјa na makedonskata naciјa Blazhe Ristovski 1999 Skopјe On the Monastir Road Herbert Corey National Geographic May 1917 p 388 When narrating in his autobiographical anti war novel Life in Tomb his convalescence in the house of a family of farmers in Velusina a Slav speaking patriarchist village near Bitola Monastir during his participation in the Macedonian front of World War I Greek novelist Stratis Myrivilis wrote of its inhabitants that they do not want to be Bulgar neither Srrp nor Grrc Only Makedon Ortodox See Myribhlhs Straths 25 September 1923 Ἡ Zwὴ ἐn tafῳ Kefalaio iz PDF Kampana Retrieved 11 July 2022 Mandamadiwtoy Maria Straths Myribhlhs Apo to Blantobo sth Beloysina 1924 1955 Lesbiako Hmerologio 2019 Sel 93 104 Tasos Kostopoulos 2009 Naming the Other From Greek Bulgarians to Local Macedonians In Alexandra Ioannidou Christian Voss eds Spotlights on Russian and Balkan Slavic Cultural History Munich Berlin Verlag Otto Sagner p 108 Mackridge Peter 2009 Language and National Identity in Greece 1776 1796 Oxford Oxford University Press p 303 ISBN 978 0 19 921442 6 On Velusina s population see also Brancoff D M 1905 La Macedoine et sa Population Chretienne Parisi pp 168 9 Boskovska Nada 2017 Yugoslavia and Macedonia Before Tito Between Repression and Integration London New York I B Tauris pp 5 10 Mavrogordatos George Stillborn Republic Social Coalitions and Party Strategies in Greece 1922 1936 University of California Press 1983 ISBN 9780520043589 p 227 247 Victor Roudometof Nationalism Globalization and Orthodoxy The Social Origins of Ethnic Conflict in the Balkans Contributions to the Study of World History Praeger 2001 p 187 The Situation in Macedonia and the Tasks of IMRO United published in the official newspaper of IMRO United Makedonsko delo N 185 April 1934 Proizhodt na makedonskata naciya Stenograma ot zasedanie na Makedonskiya Nauchen Institut v Sofiya prez 1947 g Da toa e tochno I ne samo Dimitar Vlahov Pavel Shatev Panko Brashnarov Rizo Rizov i dr Meѓutoa ovde tezata e pogreshno postavena Ne e rabotata vo toa dali levicata se opredeluvashe za Srbiјa a desnicata za Bugariјa Tuka se meshaat poimite Praktichno ni levicata ni desnicata ne јa doveduvaa vo prashaњe svoјata bugarska provenienciјa Toa ќe go dovede duri i Dimitar Vlahov vo 1948 godina na sednica na Politbiroto koga govoreshe za postoeњeto na makedonska naciјa da reche deka vo 1931 1932 godina e napravena greshka Site tie veterani ostanaa samo na nivoto na politichki a ne i na nacionalen separatizam Akad Ivan Katarџiev Veruvam vo nacionalniot imunitet na makedonecot mega intervјu za spisanie Forum arhiva broј 329 Skopјe 22 07 2000 Kwstopoylos Tasos 2009 H Makedonia katw apo to zygo ths ellhnikhs kefalaiokratias Ena reportaz toy Rizospasth stis slabofwnes perioxes 1933 Arxeiota3io in Greek 11 12 13 Rezolyuciya o makedonskoj nacii prinyatoj Balkanskom sekretariate Kominterna Fevral 1934 g Moskva Nation R C 1996 A Balkan Union Southeastern Europe in Soviet Security Policy 1944 8 In Gori F Pons S eds The Soviet Union and Europe in the Cold War 1943 53 Palgrave Macmillan pp 125 143 Marinov Tchavdar amp Vezenkov Alexander 2014 6 Communism and Nationalism in the Balkans Marriage of Convenience or Mutual Attraction in R Daskalov D Mishkova Tch Marinov A Vezenkov Entangled Histories of the Balkans Vol 4 Concepts Approaches and Self Representations Brill 2017 pp 440 593 Podelbata na Makedoniјa 1913 godina odigra izvonredno shtetna uloga vo svesta na Makedonecot Zoshto Zatoa shto јa prekina normalnata komunikaciјa politichka kulturna ekonomska meѓu Makedoncite Go prekina procesot na sozdavaњe na edinstvena makedonska istoriјa na celiot makedonski prostor Makedonskite progresivni sili gi vrza za progresivnite sili na zemјite vo koishto opstoјuvaa Tie pochnaa da јa prifaќaat politichkata opredelba i filozofiјa na zemјite meѓu koi Makedoniјa beshe podelena Taka vo tekot na NOB koga doјde vremeto za povrzuvaњe postoeshe ogromen јaz vo svesta na Makedonecot od trite dela na zemјata Site velea deka se Makedonci ama site na toј poim mu davaa poinakva sodrzhina Koi doaѓaa od Bugariјa tie smetaa deka treba da doјdat na chelo i da јa vodat Makedoniјa osobeno veteranite kako Shatev i Vlahov Tie praktichno se chuvstvuvaa kako Bugari VMRO Ob ne mrdna od obichniot politichki makedonski separatizam Vo Vardarska Makedoniјa pak blagodareјќi na srpskoto ropstvo teche proces na samoizrazuvaњe niz literaturata Treba da se priznae faktot deka postoeњeto na hrvatsko i na slovenechko dvizheњe vo Kralska Јugoslaviјa pridonese makedonskoto nacionalno dvizheњe da se osoznava mnogu podlaboko Ottamu poјavuvaњeto na vesnici kako Luch vo 1937 godina vo koi doaѓa do izraz teoriјata za makedonskata nacionalna samobitnost Akad Ivan Katarџiev Veruvam vo nacionalniot imunitet na makedonecot mega intervјu za spisanie Forum arhiva broј 329 Skopјe 22 07 2000 g History of the Balkans Vol 2 Twentieth Century Barbara Jelavich 1983 Within Greece and also within the new kingdom of Yugoslavia which Serbia had joined in 1918 the ejection of the Bulgarian church the closure of Bulgarian schools and the banning of publication in Bulgarian together with the expulsion or flight to Bulgaria of a large proportion of the Macedonian Slav intelligentsia served as the prelude to campaigns of forcible cultural and linguistic assimilation In both countries these policies of de bulgarization and assimilation were pursued with fluctuating degrees of vigor right through to 1941 when the Second World War engulfed the Balkan peninsula The degree of these policies success however remains open to question The available evidence suggests that Bulgarian national sentiment among the Macedonian Slavs of Yugoslavia and Greece remained strong throughout the interwar period though they lacked the means to offer more than passive resistance to official policies For more see F A K Yasamee Nationality in the Balkans The case of the Macedonians Balkans A Mirror of the New World Order Istanbul Eren Publishing 1995 pp 121 132 As in Kosovo the restoration of Serbian rule in 1918 to which the Strumica district and several other Bulgarian frontier salients accrued in 1919 Bulgaria also having lost all its Aegean coastline to Greece marked the replay of the first Serbian occupation 1913 1915 Once again the Exarchist clergy and Bulgarian teachers were expelled all Bulgarian language signs and books removed and all Bulgarian clubs societies and organizations dissolved The Serbianization of family surnames proceeded as before the war with Stankov becoming Stankovic and Atanasov entered in the books by Atanackovic Thousands of Macedonians left for Bulgaria Though there were fewer killings of Bulgarians a pro Bulgarian source claimed 342 such instances and 47 additional disappearances in 1918 1924 the conventional forms of repression jailings internments etc were applied more systematically and with greater effect than before the same source lists 2 900 political arrests in the same period Like Kosovo Macedonia was slated for Serb settlements and internal colonization The authorities projected the settlement of 50 000 families in Macedonia though only 4 200 families had been placed in 280 colonies by 1940 For more see Ivo Banac The National Question in Yugoslavia Origins History Politics The Macedoine Cornell University Press 1984 ISBN 0801416752 pp 307 328 Yugoslav Communists recognized the existence of a Macedonian nationality during WWII to quiet fears of the Macedonian population that a communist Yugoslavia would continue to follow the former Yugoslav policy of forced Serbianization Hence for them to recognize the inhabitants of Macedonia as Bulgarians would be tantamount to admitting that they should be part of the Bulgarian state For that the Yugoslav Communists were most anxious to mold Macedonian history to fit their conception of Macedonian consciousness The treatment of Macedonian history in Communist Yugoslavia had the same primary goal as the creation of the Macedonian language to de Bulgarize the Macedonian Slavs and to create an national consciousness that would inspire identification with Yugoslavia For more see Stephen E Palmer Robert R King Yugoslav communism and the Macedonian question Archon Books 1971 ISBN 0208008217 Chapter 9 The encouragement of Macedonian culture The Serbianization of the Vardar region ended and Yugoslavization was not introduced either rather a policy of cultural linguistic and historical Macedonization by de Bulgarianization was implemented with immediate success For more see Irina Livezeanu and Arpad von KlimoThe Routledge as ed History of East Central Europe since 1700 Routledge 2017 ISBN 1351863428 p 490 In Macedonia post WWII generations grew up overdosed with strong anti Bulgarian sentiment leading to the creation of mainly negative stereotypes for Bulgaria and its nation The anti Bulgariansim or Bulgarophobia increased almost to the level of state ideology during the ideological monopoly of the League of Communists of Macedonia and still continues to do so today although with less ferocity However it is more important to say openly that a great deal of these anti Bulgarian sentiments result from the need to distinguish between the Bulgarian and the Macedonian nations Macedonia could confirm itself as a state with its own past present and future only through differentiating itself from Bulgaria For more see Mirjana Maleska With the eyes of the other about Macedonian Bulgarian relations and the Macedonian national identity In New Balkan Politics Issue 6 pp 9 11 Peace and Democracy Center Ian Collins Skopje Macedonia 2003 ISSN 1409 9454 After WWII in Macedonia the past was systematically falsified to conceal the fact that many prominent Macedonians had supposed themselves to be Bulgarians and generations of students were taught the pseudo history of the Macedonian nation The mass media and education were the key to this process of national acculturation speaking to people in a language that they came to regard as their Macedonian mother tongue even if it was perfectly understood in Sofia For more see Michael L Benson Yugoslavia A Concise History Edition 2 Springer 2003 ISBN 1403997209 p 89 Once specifically Macedonian interests came to the fore under the Yugoslav communist umbrella and in direct confrontation with the Bulgarian occupation authorities during WWII the Bulgarian part of the identity of Vardar Macedonians was destined to die out in a process similar to the triumph of Austrian over German Austrian identity in post war years Drezov K 1999 Macedonian identity an overview of the major claims In Pettifer J eds The New Macedonian Question St Antony s Series Palgrave Macmillan London ISBN 978 0 333 92066 4 p 51 Additionally some 100 000 people were imprisoned in the post 1944 period for violations of the law for the protection of Macedonian national honor and some 1 260 Bulgarian sympathizers were allegedly killed Troebst 1997 248 50 255 57 1994 116 22 Poulton 2000 118 19 For more see Roudometof Victor Collective Memory National Identity and Ethnic Conflict Greece Bulgaria and the Macedonian Question Praeger Publishers 2002 ISBN 0 275 97648 3 p 104 Smith A D The Antiquity of Nations 2004 p 47 Rae Heather 2002 State identities and the homogenisation of peoples Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 278 ISBN 0 521 79708 X Danforth L The Macedonian Conflict Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World p 25 Ancient Macedonia National Symbols L Danforth in A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Wiley Blackwell 2010 p 597 8 The Handbook of Political Change in Eastern Europe Sten Berglund Edward Elgar Publishing 2013 ISBN 1782545883 p 622 Transforming National Holidays Identity Discourse in the West and South Slavic Countries 1985 2010 Ljiljana Saric Karen Gammelgaard Kjetil Ra Hauge John Benjamins Publishing 2012 ISBN 9027206384 pp 207 208 Muhic Maja Takovski Aleksandar 2014 Redefining National Identity in Macedonia Analyzing Competing Origins Myths and Interpretations through Hegemonic Representations Etnoloska Tribina 44 37 144 doi 10 15378 1848 9540 2014 Sinisa Jakov Marusic More Macedonians Apply for Bulgarian Citizenship Aug 5 2014 Balkans Inside Predostavyane na blgarsko grazhdanstvo Spravka za preioda 22 01 2002 15 01 2012 g Bulgarian citizenship Information for the period 22 01 2002 15 01 2012 year Doklad za dejnostta na KBGBCh za 2012 2013 godina Report on the activities of the CBCBA for 2012 2013 year p 7 Doklad za dejnostta na KBGBCh za perioda 23 01 2013 22 01 2014 godina Report on the activities of the CBCBA for the period 23 01 2013 22 01 2014 year p 6 Godishen doklad za dejnostta na KBGBCh za perioda 01 01 2014 31 12 2014 godina Annual report on the activities of the CBCBA for the period 01 01 2014 31 12 2014 year p 5 Godishen doklad za dejnostta na KBGBCh za perioda 01 01 2015 31 12 2015 godina Annual report on the activities of the CBCBA for the period 01 01 2015 31 12 2015 year p 6 Godishen doklad za dejnostta na KBGBCh za perioda 01 01 2016 31 12 2016 godina Annual report on the activities of the CBCBA for the period 01 01 2016 31 12 2016 year p 6 Doklad za dejnostta na komisiyata po blgarsko grazhdanstvo za perioda 14 yanuari 31 dekemvri 2017 g Activity Report of the Bulgarian Citizenship Commission for the period 14 January 31 December 2017 Doklad za dejnostta na komisiyata po blgarsko grazhdanstvo za perioda 01 yanuari 31 dekemvri 2018 g Activity Report of the Bulgarian Citizenship Commission for the period 01 January 31 December 2018 Doklad za dejnostta na komisiyata po blgarsko grazhdanstvo za perioda 01 yanuari 31 dekemvri 2019 g Activity Report of the Bulgarian Citizenship Commission for the period 01 January 31 December 2019 Doklad za dejnostta na komisiyata po blgarsko grazhdanstvo za perioda 01 yanuari 31 dekemvri 2020 g Activity Report of the Bulgarian Citizenship Commission for the period 01 January 31 December 2020 Bulgaria which has an ethnic citizenship regime and has a liberal dual citizenship regime makes a constitutional distinction between Bulgarians and Bulgarian citizens whereas the former category reflects an ethnic blood belonging and the later the civic territorial belonging In line with this definition naturalization in Bulgaria is facilitated for those individuals who can prove that they belong to the Bulgarian nation The birth certificates of parents and grandparents their mother tongue membership in Bulgarian institutions as the Bulgarian Church former Bulgarian citizenship of the parents and so on are relevant criteria for the establishment of the ethnic origin of the applicant In the case of Macedonian citizens declaring their national identity as Bulgarian suffices to obtain Bulgarian citizenship without the requirement for permanent residence in Bulgaria or the language examination etc For more see Jelena Dzankic Citizenship in Bosnia and Herzegovina Macedonia and Montenegro Effects of Statehood and Identity Challenges Southeast European Studies Ashgate Publishing 2015 ISBN 1472446410 p 126 Raymond Detrez Historical Dictionary of Bulgaria Historical Dictionaries of Europe Rowman amp Littlefield 2014 ISBN 1442241802 p 318 Jo Shaw and Igor Stiks as ed Citizenship after Yugoslavia Routledge 2013 ISBN 1317967070 p 106 Rainer Baubock Debating Transformations of National Citizenship IMISCOE Research Series Springer 2018 ISBN 3319927191 pp 47 48 Michael Palairet Macedonia A Voyage through History Vol 2 From the Fifteenth Century to the Present Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2016 ISBN 1443888494 p 347 Mina Hristova In between Spaces Dual Citizenship and Placebo Identity at the Triple Border between Serbia Macedonia and Bulgaria in New Diversities Volume 21 No 1 2019 pp 37 55 Risteski L 2016 Bulgarian passports Possibilities for greater mobility of Macedonians and or strategies for identity manipulation EthnoAnthropoZoom EtnoAntropoZum 10 80 107 https doi org 10 37620 EAZ14100081r Ljubica Spaskovska Country report on Macedonia November 2012 EUDO Citizenship Observatory Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies p 20 Bulgaria asks EU to stop fake Macedonian identity Deutsche Welle 23 09 2020 Bulgaria blocks EU accession talks with North Macedonia Nov 17 2020 National post Address by the Director of the State Statistical Office on the completion of the Census 2021 Liliya Chaleva Skopie prebroi 19 645 dushi s dvojno grazhdanstvo 29 april 2022 Dir bg makednos Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus makros Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus Macedonia Online Etymology Dictionary Eugene N Borza Makedonika Regina Books ISBN 0 941690 65 2 p 114 The highlanders or Makedones of the mountainous regions of western Macedonia are derived from northwest Greek stock they were akin both to those who at an earlier time may have migrated south to become the historical Dorians Nigel Guy Wilson Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece Routledge 2009 p 439 The latest archaeological findings have confirmed that Macedonia took its name from a tribe of tall Greek speaking people the Makednoi Drezov K 1999 Macedonian identity an overview of the major claims In Pettifer J eds The New Macedonian Question St Antony s Series Palgrave Macmillan London ISBN 0230535798 pp 50 51 Jelavich Barbara History of the Balkans Vol 2 Twentieth Century 1983 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521274591 page 91 John S Koliopoulos Thanos M Veremis Modern Greece A History since 1821 A New History of Modern Europe John Wiley amp Sons 2009 ISBN 1444314831 p 48 Richard Clogg Minorities in Greece Aspects of a Plural Society C Hurst amp Co Publishers 2002 ISBN 1850657068 p 160 Dimitar Bechev Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia Scarecrow Press 2009 ISBN 0810862956 Introduction pp VII VIII J Pettifer The New Macedonian Question St Antony s group Springer 1999 ISBN 0230535798 pp 49 51 Anastas Vangeli Nation building ancient Macedonian style the origins and the effects of the so called antiquization in Macedonia Nationalities Papers the Journal of Nationalism and Ethnicity Volume 39 2011 pp 13 32 As the Macedonian historian Taskovski claims the Macedonian Slavs initially rejected the Macedonian designation as Greek For more see Tchavdar Marinov Famous Macedonia the Land of Alexander Macedonian identity at the crossroads of Greek Bulgarian and Serbian nationalism p 285 in Entangled Histories of the Balkans Volume One National Ideologies and Language Policies with Roumen Daskalov and Tchavdar Marinov as ed BRILL 2013 ISBN 900425076X pp 273 330 Chris Kostov Contested Ethnic Identity The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto 1900 1996 Peter Lang 2010 ISBN 3034301960 p 65 In a letter to Prof Marin Drinov of May 25 1888 Kuzman Shapkarev writes But even stranger is the name Macedonians which was imposed on us only 10 15 years ago by outsiders and not as some think by our own intellectuals Yet the people in Macedonia know nothing of that ancient name reintroduced today with a cunning aim on the one hand and a stupid one on the other They know the older word Bugari although mispronounced they have even adopted it as peculiarly theirs inapplicable to other Bulgarians You can find more about this in the introduction to the booklets I am sending you They call their own Macedono Bulgarian dialect the Bugarski language while the rest of the Bulgarian dialects they refer to as the Shopski language Makedonski pregled IX 2 1934 p 55 the original letter is kept in the Marin Drinov Museum in Sofia and it is available for examination and study E Damianopoulos The Macedonians Their Past and Present Springer 2012 ISBN 1137011904 p 185 Donald Bloxham The Final Solution A Genocide OUP Oxford 2009 ISBN 0199550336 p 65 Chris Kostov Contested Ethnic Identity The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto Peter Lang 2010 ISBN 3034301960 p 76 Raymond Detrez Pieter Plas Developing cultural identity in the Balkans convergence vs divergence Volume 34 of Multiple Europesq Peter Lang 2005 ISBN 9052012970 p 173 Katsikas Stefanos 15 June 2010 Bulgaria and Europe ISBN 9781843318286 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Ethnologue report for Greece Ethnologue Retrieved 13 February 2009 UCLA Language Materials Project Language Profile Archived 9 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine UCLA Language Materials Project Language Profile Archived 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine L M Danforth The Macedonian Conflict Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World 1995 Princeton University Press Jacques Bacid PhD Macedonia Through the Ages Columbia University 1983 Hill P 1999 Macedonians in Greece and Albania A Comparative study of recent developments Nationalities Papers Volume 27 1 March 1999 p 44 14 Poulton H 2000 Who are the Macedonians C Hurst amp Co Publishers Danforth Loring M 6 April 1997 The Macedonian Conflict ISBN 0691043566 Retrieved 18 March 2015 a b c Greece Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor Retrieved 27 October 2016 Cowan Jane K Dembour Marie Benedicte Wilson Richard A 29 November 2001 Culture and Rights ISBN 9780521797351 Retrieved 18 March 2015 L M Danforth The Macedonian Conflict Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World 1995 Princeton University Press p 45 Detrez Raymond Plas Pieter 2005 Developing cultural identity in the Balkans convergence vs divergence Peter Lang pp 50 Second Macedonian newspaper in Greece Vtor vesnik na Makedoncite vo Grciјa Vesnikot se vika Zadruga Za necel mesec vo Grciјa izleze ushte eden vesnik na Makedoncite A Second Macedonian Newspaper in greece The Newspaper is Called Zadruga Koinothta Barely a month ago in Greece another newspaper for the Macedonians was released Greek Helsinki Monitor amp Minority Rights Group Greece Greece against its Macedonian minority Archived 2006 12 09 at the Wayback Machine Amnesty International Greece Charges against members of the Rainbow party should be dropped Makedoncite vo Grciјa treba da si gi baraat pravata Archived 23 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Nova zora pechati vo 20 000 primeroci Nova Zora is printed in 20 000 copies Nova zora prv vesnik na makedonski јazik vo Grciјa Archived 9 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine Nova zora prv vesnik na makedonski јazik vo Grciјa Pri pechateњeto na tirazhot od 20 000 primeroci se poјavile samo mali tehnichki problemi Nova Zora the first Macedonian language newspaper in Greece There were only small technical problems with the printing of the circulation of 20 000 Nema pechatnica za makedonski vo Grciјa permanent dead link Vesnikot e narechen Nova zora i treba da se pechati vo 20 000 primeroci The Newspaper is called Nova Zora and 20 000 copies are printed Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 11 August 2014 Retrieved 2015 06 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Artan Hoxha and Alma Gurraj Local Self Government and Decentralization Case of Albania History Reforms and Challenges In Local Self Government and Decentralization in South East Europe Proceedings of the workshop held in Zagreb Croatia 6 April 2001 Friedrich Ebert Stiftung Zagreb Office Zagreb 2001 pp 194 224 PDF Day Alan John East Roger Thomas Richard 2002 Political and economic dictionary of Eastern Europe Routledge p 94 ISBN 1 85743 063 8 in Bulgarian Official census data permanent dead link Naselenie s chuzhdo grazhdanstvo po strani Archived 4 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine FOCUS Information Agency focus fen net Retrieved 14 March 2009 Nasevski Bosko Angelova Dora Gerovska Dragica 1995 Makedonski Iselenichki Almanah 95 Skopje Matica na Iselenicite na Makedoniјa The People of Australia Statistics from the 2011 Census PDF Australian Government 2014 p 58 Archived from the original PDF on 17 April 2017 Retrieved 23 September 2016 Nasevski Bosko Angelova Dora Gerovska Dragica 1995 Makedonski Iselenichki Almanah 95 Skopje Matica na Iselenicite na Makedoniјa pp 52 amp 53 U S Census website Retrieved 28 March 2020 Archived copy The Canadian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 20 July 2012 Retrieved 7 March 2006 Euroamericans net Archived 19 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine bfs admin ch The 67th Academy Awards 1995 Oscars org Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved 27 August 2019 Levinson amp O Leary 1992 239 harvcoltxt error no target CITEREFLevinsonO Leary1992 help The encyclopedia of Christianity Volume 3 By Erwin Fahlbusch Geoffrey William Bromiley p 381 Matkovski Aleksandar Grbovite na Makedonija Skopje 1970 Aleksandar Matkovski 1990 Grbovite na Makedoniјa Misla Skopje Macedonia ISBN 86 15 00160 X Duncan M Perry The Politics of Terror The Macedonian Liberation Movements 1893 1903 Duke University Press 1988 pp 39 40 J Pettifer as ed The New Macedonian Question Springer 1999 ISBN 0230535798 p 236 Macedonian Cultural Heritage Ohrid World Heritage Site PDF Archived from the original PDF on 28 June 2020 Retrieved 28 June 2020 Deskoski Vergina Sun flag is not Macedonian we need to get rid of this Greek symbol Republica mk The Vergina Sun flag was a national flag for only three years and that was one of the biggest mistakes Neither the Ilinden fighters nor the partisans in the National Liberation War knew that symbol That flag is the biggest hoax of Macedonianism We need to unanimously reject and get rid of this Greek symbol Let the Greeks glorify their symbols http www wipo int cgi 6te guest ifetch5 ENG 6TER 15 1151315 REVERSE 0 0 1055 F 125 431 101 25 SEP 0 HITNUM B KIND 2fEmblem wipo int at the Wayback Machine archived 29 March 2006 Floudas Demetrius Andreas A Name for a Conflict or a Conflict for a Name An Analysis of Greece s Dispute with FYROM 24 1996 Journal of Political and Military Sociology 285 1996 Archived from the original on 27 January 2006 Retrieved 24 January 2007 Final Agreement for the Settlement of the Differences as Described in the United Nations Security Council Resolutions 817 1993 and 845 1993 The Termination of the Interim Accord of 1995 and the Establishment of a Strategic Partnership Between the Parties PDF eKathimerini Retrieved 13 June 2018 Also the Sun of Vergina is being lost what the agreement original Xanetai kai o Hlios ths Berginas Ti orizei h symfwnia gia to shma Crash Online 14 June 2018 Archived from the original on 30 September 2020 Retrieved 22 June 2018 North Macedonia to remove the Star of Vergina from all public spaces GCT com 14 July 2019 Retrieved 15 July 2019 North Macedonia Zaev removes from anywhere the Vergina Sun original title Boreia Makedonia O Zaef aposyrei apo pantoy ton Hlio ths Berginas News247 14 July 2019 Retrieved 15 July 2019 Kutlesh star no longer to be seen in public use Republika mk 12 July 2019 Retrieved 15 July 2019 Pericic Marijana et al October 2005 High Resolution Phylogenetic Analysis of Southeastern Europe Traces Major Episodes of Paternal Gene Flow Among Slavic Populations Molecular Biology and Evolution 22 10 1964 1975 doi 10 1093 molbev msi185 PMID 15944443 Jakovski Zlatko Nikolova Ksenija Jankova Ajanovska Renata Marjanovic Damir Pojskic Naris Janeska Biljana 2011 Genetic data for 17 Y chromosomal STR loci in Macedonians in the Republic of Macedonia Forensic Science International Genetics 5 4 e108 e111 doi 10 1016 j fsigen 2011 04 005 PMID 21549657 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Petlichkovski A Efinska Mladenovska O Trajkov D Arsov T Strezova A Spiroski M 2004 High resolution typing of HLA DRB1 locus in the Macedonian population Tissue Antigens 64 4 486 91 doi 10 1111 j 1399 0039 2004 00273 x PMID 15361127 Barac Lovorka Pericic Marijana Klaric Irena Martinovic Rootsi Siiri Janicijevic Branka Kivisild Toomas Parik Juri Rudan Igor Villems Richard Rudan Pavao 2003 European Journal of Human Genetics Y chromosomal heritage of Croatian population and its island isolates European Journal of Human Genetics 11 7 535 542 doi 10 1038 sj ejhg 5200992 PMID 12825075 Semino Ornella Passarino G Oefner PJ Lin AA Arbuzova S Beckman LE De Benedictis G Francalacci P et al 2000 The Genetic Legacy of Paleolithic Homo sapiens sapiens in Extant Europeans A Y Chromosome Perspective PDF Science 290 5494 1155 59 Bibcode 2000Sci 290 1155S doi 10 1126 science 290 5494 1155 PMID 11073453 Archived from the original PDF on 25 November 2003 Hristova Dimceva A Verduijn W Schipper R F Schreuder G M tH January 2000 HLA DRB and DQB1 polymorphism in the Macedonian population Tissue Antigens 55 1 53 56 doi 10 1034 j 1399 0039 2000 550109 x PMID 10703609 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Rebala K et al 2007 Y STR variation among Slavs evidence for the Slavic homeland in the middle Dnieper basin Journal of Human Genetics 52 5 406 14 doi 10 1007 s10038 007 0125 6 PMID 17364156 a b Kushniarevich Alena et al 2015 Genetic heritage of the Balto Slavic speaking populations a synthesis of autosomal mitochondrial and Y chromosomal data PLOS ONE 10 9 e0135820 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1035820K doi 10 1371 journal pone 0135820 PMC 4558026 PMID 26332464 a b Novembre John et al 2008 Genes mirror geography within Europe Nature 456 7218 98 101 Bibcode 2008Natur 456 98N doi 10 1038 nature07331 PMC 2735096 PMID 18758442 P Ralph et al 2013 The Geography of Recent Genetic Ancestry across Europe PLOS Biology 11 5 e105090 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1001555 PMC 3646727 PMID 23667324 Furthermore our Greek and Macedonian samples share much higher numbers of common ancestors with Albanian speakers than with other neighbors possibly a result of historical migrations or else perhaps smaller effects of the Slavic expansion in these populations Rebala Krzysztof Mikulich Alexei I Tsybovsky Iosif S Sivakova Daniela Dzupinkova Zuzana Szczerkowska Dobosz Aneta Szczerkowska Zofia 16 March 2007 Y STR variation among Slavs evidence for the Slavic homeland in the middle Dnieper basin Journal of Human Genetics 52 5 406 414 doi 10 1007 s10038 007 0125 6 ISSN 1434 5161 PMID 17364156 Renata Jankova et al Y chromosome diversity of the three major ethno linguistic groups in the Republic of North Macedonia Forensic Science International Genetics Volume 42 September 2019 Pages 165 170 a b Trombetta B Phylogeographic Refinement and Large Scale Genotyping of Human Y Chromosome Haplogroup E Provide New Insights into the Dispersal of Early Pastoralists in the African Continent http gbe oxfordjournals org content 7 7 1940 long Spiroski Mirko Arsov Todor Kruger Carmen Willuweit Sascha Roewer Lutz 2005 Y chromosomal STR haplotypes in Macedonian population samples Forensic Science International 148 1 69 74 doi 10 1016 j forsciint 2004 04 067 PMID 15607593 Anatole Klyosov DNA Genealogy Scientific Research Publishing Inc USA 2018 ISBN 1618966197 p 211 Underhill Peter A Poznik G David Rootsi Siiri Jarve Mari Lin Alice A Wang Jianbin Passarelli Ben et al 2015 The phylogenetic and geographic structure of Y chromosome haplogroup R1a European Journal of Human Genetics 23 1 124 31 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2014 50 PMC 4266736 PMID 24667786 Supplementary Table 4 Jakovski et al 2011 Genetic data for 17 Y chromosomal STR loci in Macedonians in the Republic of Macedonia Forensic Sci Int Genet 5 4 e108 e111 doi 10 1016 j fsigen 2011 04 005 PMID 21549657 Lao O Lu TT Nothnagel M et al August 2008 Correlation between genetic and geographic structure in Europe Curr Biol 18 16 1241 8 doi 10 1016 j cub 2008 07 049 PMID 18691889 S2CID 16945780 Florin Curta s An ironic smile the Carpathian Mountains and the migration of the Slavs Studia mediaevalia Europaea et orientalia Miscellanea in honorem professoris emeriti Victor Spinei oblata edited by George Bilavschi and Dan Aparaschivei 47 72 Bucharest Editura Academiei Romane 2018 A Zupan et al The paternal perspective of the Slovenian population and its relationship with other populations Annals of Human Biology 40 6 July 2013 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Florin Curta 2006 https www google com au books edition Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 5 YIAYMNOOe0YC hl en amp gbpv 1 amp dq southeastern europe curta amp printsec frontcover Stamatoyannopoulos George Bose Aritra Teodosiadis Athanasios Tsetsos Fotis Plantinga Anna Psatha Nikoletta Zogas Nikos Yannaki Evangelia Zalloua Pierre Kidd Kenneth K Browning Brian L Stamatoyannopoulos John Paschou Peristera Drineas Petros 2017 Genetics of the peloponnesean populations and the theory of extinction of the medieval peloponnesean Greeks European Journal of Human Genetics 25 5 637 645 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2017 18 ISSN 1476 5438 PMC 5437898 PMID 28272534 BibliographyDemeter Gabor Bottlik Zsolt 2021 Maps in the Service of the Nation The Role of Ethnic Mapping in Nation Building and Its Influence on Political Decision Making Across the Balkan Peninsula 1840 1914 Berlin Frank amp Timme Wilkinson Henry Robert 1951 Maps and politics a review of the ethnographic cartography of Macedonia Liverpool Liverpool University Press Further readingBrown Keith The Past in Question Modern Macedonia and the Uncertainties of Nation Princeton University Press 2003 ISBN 0 691 09995 2 Brunnbauer Ulf September 2004 Fertility families and ethnic conflict Macedonians and Albanians in the Republic of Macedonia 1944 2002 Nationalities Papers 32 3 565 598 doi 10 1080 0090599042000246406 S2CID 128830053 Cowan Jane K ed Macedonia The Politics of Identity and Difference Pluto Press 2000 A collection of articles Curta Florin 2001 The Making of the Slavs History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region c 500 700 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139428880 Curta Florin 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521815390 Curta Florin 2004 The Slavic Lingua Franca Linguistic Notes of an Archaeologist Turned Historian East Central Europe 31 1 125 148 doi 10 1163 187633004x00134 Archived from the original PDF on 14 August 2012 Retrieved 24 July 2009 Curta Florin 2011 The Edinburgh History of the Greeks c 500 to 1050 The Early Middle Ages Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9780748644896 Danforth Loring M The Macedonian Conflict Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World Princeton University Press 1995 ISBN 0 691 04356 6 Fine John V A Jr 1991 The Early medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the 6th to the late 12th Century University Michigan Press ISBN 9780472081493 Karakasidou Anastasia N Fields of Wheat Hills of Blood Passages to Nationhood in Greek Macedonia 1870 1990 University of Chicago Press 1997 ISBN 0 226 42494 4 Reviewed in Journal of Modern Greek Studies 18 2 2000 p465 Mackridge Peter Eleni Yannakakis eds Ourselves and Others The Development of a Greek Macedonian Cultural Identity since 1912 Berg Publishers 1997 ISBN 1 85973 138 4 Poulton Hugh Who Are the Macedonians Indiana University Press 2nd ed 2000 ISBN 0 253 21359 2 Roudometof Victor Collective Memory National Identity and Ethnic Conflict Greece Bulgaria and the Macedonian Question Praeger Publishers 2002 ISBN 0 275 97648 3 Kwstopoylos Tasos H apagoreymenh glwssa H kratikh katastolh twn slabikwn dialektwn sthn ellhnikh Makedonia se olh th diarkeia toy 20oy aiwna ekd Mayrh Lista A8hna 2000 Tasos Kostopoulos The forbidden language state suppression of the Slavic dialects in Greek Macedonia through the 20th century Athens Black List 2000 The Silent People Speak by Robert St John 1948 xii 293 301 313 and 385 Karatsareas Petros Greece s Macedonian Slavic heritage was wiped out by linguistic oppression here s how The Conversation Retrieved 19 April 2018 Margaronis Maria 24 February 2019 Greece s invisible minority the Macedonian Slavs BBC News Retrieved 24 February 2019 External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Macedonians ethnic group New Balkan Politics Journal of Politics Macedonians in the UK United Macedonian Diaspora World Macedonian Congress House of Immigrants Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Macedonians ethnic group amp oldid 1132090295, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.