Prehistory
Macedonia lies at the crossroads of human development
between the Aegean and the Balkans. The earliest signs of human habitation date
back to the palaeolithic period, notably with the Petralona cave in which was
found the oldest European humanoid, Archanthropus europaeus petraloniensis. In
the Late Neolithic period (c. 4500 to 3500 BC), trade took place from quite
distant regions, indicate rapid socio-economic changes. One of the most
important changes was the start of copper working.
Ancient
History
According to Herodotus, the history of Macedonia began
with the Makednoi tribe, among the first to use the name, migrating to the
region from Histiaeotis in the south. There they lived near Thracian tribes
such as the Bryges who would later leave Macedonia for Asia Minor and become
known as Phrygians. Macedonia was named after the Makednoi. Accounts of other
toponyms such as Emathia are attested to have been in use before that.
Herodotus claims that a branch of the Macedonians invaded Southern Greece
towards the end of the second millennium B.C. Upon reaching the Peloponnese the
invaders were renamed Dorians, triggering the accounts of the Dorian invasion.
For centuries the Macedonian tribes were organized in independent kingdoms, in
what is now Central Macedonia, and their role in internal Hellenic politics was
minimal, even before the rise of Athens. The Macedonians claimed to be Dorian
Greeks (Argive Greeks) and there were many Ionians in the coastal regions. The
rest of the region was inhabited by various Thracian and Illyrian tribes as
well as mostly coastal colonies of other Greek states such as Amphipolis,
Olynthos, Potidea, Stageira and many others, and to the north another tribe
dwelt, called the Paeonians. During the late 6th and early 5th century BC, the
region came under Persian rule until the destruction of Xerxes at Plataea.
During the Peloponnesian War, Macedonia became the theatre of many military
actions by the Peloponnesian League and the Athenians, and saw incursions of
Thracians and Illyrians, as attested by Thucidydes. Many Macedonian cities were
allied to the Spartans (both the Spartans and the Macedonians were Dorian,
while the Athenians were Ionian), but Athens maintained the colony of
Amphipolis under her control for many years. The kingdom of Macedon, was reorganised
by Philip II and achieved the union of Greek states by forming the League of
Corinth. After his assassination, his son Alexander succeeded to the throne of
Macedon and carrying the title of Hegemon of League of Corinth started his long
campaign towards the east.
Roman
period
Macedonia remained an important and powerful kingdom until
the Battle of Pydna (June 22, 168 BC), in which the Roman general Aemilius
Paulus defeated King Perseus of Macedon, ending the reign of the Antigonid
dynasty over Macedonia. For a brief period a Macedonian republic called the
“Koinon of the Macedonians” was established. It was divided into four
administrative districts. That period ended in 148 BC, when Macedonia was fully
annexed by the Romans. The northern boundary at that time ended at Lake Ohrid
and Bylazora, a Paeonian city near the modern city of Veles. Strabo, writing in
the first century AD places the border of Macedonia on that part at Lychnidos,
Byzantine Achris and presently Ochrid. Therefore ancient Macedonia did not
significantly extend beyond its current borders (in Greece). To the east,
Macedonia ended according to Strabo at the river Strymon, although he mentions
that other writers placed Macedonia’s border with Thrace at the river Nestos,
which is also the present geographical boundary between the two administrative
districts of Greece.
The Acts of the Apostles (Acts 16:9-10) records a vision
in which the apostle Paul is said to have seen a 'man of Macedonia' pleading
with him, saying, “Come over to Macedonia and help us”. The passage reports
that Paul and his companions responded immediately to the invitation.
Subsequently the provinces of Epirus and Thessaly as well
as other regions to the north were incorporated into a new Provincia Macedonia,
but in 297 AD under a Diocletian reform many of these regions were removed and
two new provinces were created: Macedonia Prima and Macedonia Salutaris (from
479-482 AD Macedonia Secunda). Macedonia Prima coincided approximately with
Strabo’s definition of Macedonia and with the modern administrative district of
Greece and had Thessalonica as its capital, while Macedonia Secunda had the
Paeonian city of Stobi (near Gradsko) as its capital. This subdivision is
mentioned in Hierocles’ Synecdemon (527-528) and remained through the reign of
emperor Justinian.
The Slavic, Avar, Bulgarian and Magyar invasions in the
6-7th centuries devastated both provinces with only parts of Macedonia Prima in
the coastal areas and nearer Thrace remaining in Byzantine hands, while most of
the hinterland was disputed between the Byzantium and Bulgaria. The Macedonian
regions under Byzantine control passed under the tourma of Macedonia to the
province of Thrace.
A new system of administration came into place in 789-802
AD, following the Byzantine empire’s recovery from these invasions. The new
system was based on administrative divisions called Themata. The region of
Macedonia Prima (the territory of modern Greek administrative district of
Macedonia) was divided between the Thema of Thessalonica and the Thema of
Strymon, so that only the region of the area from Nestos eastwards continued to
carry the name Macedonia, referred to as the Thema of Macedonia or the Thema of
“Macedonia in Thrace”. The Thema of Macedonia in Thrace had its capital in Adrianople.
Medieval
history
Familiarity with the Slavic element in the area led two
brothers from Thessaloniki, Saints Cyril and Methodius, to be chosen to convert
the Slavs to Christianity. Following the campaigns of Basil II, all of
Macedonia returned to the Byzantine state. Following the Fourth Crusade
1203–1204, a short-lived Crusader realm, the Kingdom of Thessalonica, was
established in the region. It was subdued by the co-founder of the Greek
Despotate of Epirus, Theodore Komnenos Doukas in 1224, when Greek Macedonia and
the city of Thessalonica were at the heart of the short-lived Empire of
Thessalonica. Returning to the restored Byzantine Empire shortly thereafter,
Greek Macedonia remained in Byzantine hands until the 1340s, when all of
Macedonia (except Thessaloniki, and possibly Veria) was conquered by the
Serbian ruler Stefan Dušan. Divided between Serbia and Bulgaria after Dušan's
death, the region fell quickly to the advancing Ottomans, with Thessaloniki
alone holding out until 1387. After a brief Byzantine interval in 1403–1430
(during the last seven years of which the city was handed over to the
Venetians), Thessalonica and its immediate surrounding area returned to the
Ottomans.
The capture of Thessalonica threw the Greek world into
consternation, being regarded as the prelude to the fall of Constantinople
itself. The memory of the event has survived through folk traditions containing
fact and myths. Apostolos Vacalopoulos records the following Turkish tradition
connected with the capture of Thessalonica.
While Murad was asleep in his palace at Yenitsa, the story
has it that, God appeared to him in a dream and gave him a lovely rose to
smell, full of perfume. The sultan was so amazed by its beauty that he begged
God to give it to him. God replied, "This rose, Murad, is Thessalonica.
Know that it is to you granted by heaven to enjoy it. Do not waste time; go and
take it". Complying with this exhortation from , Murad marched against
Thessalonica and, as it has been written, captured it.
Ottoman
Rule
Thessaloniki became a centre of Ottoman administration in
the Balkans. While most of Macedonia was ruled by the Ottomans, in Mount Athos
the monastic community continued to exist in a state of autonomy. The remainder
of the Chalkidiki peninsula also enjoyed an autonomous status: the “Koinon of
Mademochoria” was governed by a locally appointed council due to privileges
obtained on account of its wealth, coming from the gold and silver mines in the
area.
There were several uprisings in Macedonia during Ottoman
rule, including an uprising after the Battle of Lepanto that ended in massacres
of the Greek population, the uprising in Naousa of the armatolos Zisis
Karademos in 1705, a rebellion in the area of Grevena by a Klepht called Ziakas
(1730–1810) and the Greek Declaration of Independence in Macedonia by Emmanuel
Pappas in 1821, during the Greek War of Independence. In 1854 Theodoros Ziakas,
the son of the klepht Ziakas, together with Tsamis Karatasos, who had been
among the captains at the siege of Naousa in 1821, led another uprising in
Western Macedonia that has been profusely commemorated in Greek folk song.
Modern
history
Greece gained the southern parts of region with
Thessaloniki from the Ottoman Empire after the First Balkan War, and expanded
its share in the Second Balkan War against Bulgaria. The boundaries of Greek
Macedonia were finalized in the Treaty of Bucharest. In World War I, Macedonia
became a battlefield. The Greek Prime Minister, Eleftherios Venizelos, favoured
entering the war on the side of the Entente, while the Germanophile King
Constantine I favoured neutrality. Invited by Venizelos, in autumn 1915, the
Allies landed forces in Thessaloniki to aid Serbia in its war against
Austria-Hungary and Bulgaria, but their intervention came too late to prevent
the Serbian collapse. The Macedonian Front was established, with Thessaloniki
at its heart, while in summer 1916 the Bulgarians took over Greek eastern
Macedonia without opposition. This provoked a military uprising among
pro-Venizelist officers in Thessaloniki, resulting in the establishment of a
"Provisional Government of National Defence" in the city, headed by
Venizelos, which entered the war alongside the Allies. After intense diplomatic
negotiations and an armed confrontation in Athens between Entente and royalist
forces the King abdicated, and his second son Alexander took his place.
Venizelos returned to Athens in June 1917 and Greece, now unified, officially
joined the war on the side of the Allies.
In World War II Macedonia was occupied by the Axis
(1941–44), with Germany taking western and central Macedonia with Thessaloniki
and Bulgaria occupying and annexing eastern Macedonia.
From the 1870s, Slavic speaking communities of northern
Greece split into two hostile and opposed groups with two different national
identities - Greek and Bulgarian. By the Second World War and following the
defeat of Bulgaria, another further split between the Slavic group occurred.
Conservatives departed with the occupying Bulgarian Army to Bulgaria. Leftists
began identifying as Macedonians (Slavic), joining the communist-dominated
rebel Democratic Army of Greece. At the conclusion of the Greek Civil War
(1946–49), most Macedonians of Slavic background left Greece and settled in the
Yugoslav Socialist Republic of Macedonia. Some also migrated to Canada or
Australia.