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Macedonia (Greece)

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Μακεδονία
Makedonía
Macedonia
File:MacedonianNationalEmblem.jpg
Anthem: Μακεδονία ξακουστή ("Famous Macedonia")
Macedonia's location in south-eastern Europe Macedonia's location in Greece
 
Capital Thessaloniki File:Thessaloniki seal.png
Peripheries West Macedonia
Central Macedonia
East Macedonia
Population 2,625,681 (2005)
Area 34,231 km²
Population density 77/km²

Macedonia (IPA /ˌmæsəˈdoʊ̯nɪə/, Greek: Μακεδονία, Makedonia) is the largest and second most populous region of Greece. Together with the regions of Thrace and Epirus, it is often referred to unofficially as northern Greece. It is located at coordinates 40°45′N 22°54′E / 40.750°N 22.900°E / 40.750; 22.900.

Its territory covers most of the original northern Greek region of ancient Macedonia. Its name was later imparted to a wider Balkan region that became known in modern times as Macedonia of which it forms 52.4% of the land and 52.9% of the population. It was part of the Ottoman Empire until 1912. In 1913, most of the Ottoman lands in Europe were divided between the surrounding countries of Greece, Serbia, Bulgaria, Albania and Montenegro.

Local government

Macedonia is divided into three peripheries comprising thirteen prefectures or nomoi. The prefectures are further divided into demoi (municipalities) or koinotetes (roughly equivalent to British or Australian shires). The geographical region of Macedonia also includes the male-only autonomous monastic republic of Mount Athos, but this is not part of the Macedonia precincts. Indeed, Mount Athos lies outside the jurisdiction of most Greek and European laws. Due to the whole mountain's monastic status, it is inaccessible to women.

The three Macedonian peripheries and their prefectures are:

1. Kastoria
2. Florina
3. Kozani
4. Grevena
5. Pella
6. Imathia
7. Pieria
8. Kilkis
9. Thessaloniki
10. Chalcidice
11. Serres
12. Drama
13. Kavala

These are overseen by the national government's Ministry of Macedonia and Thrace.

Macedonia borders the neighboring peripheries of Thessaly and Epirus.

Geography

Map of Macedonia

Macedonia covers an area of some 34,231 km² (13,217 square miles). High ground makes up much of the region with mountains reaching up to 2,900 m (6,500 ft); extensive fertile plains lie along the Aegean Sea coast. Macedonia is traversed by the valleys of the Aliakmon, Axios, Nestos, and Strymonas rivers, all of which drain into the Aegean. It borders the countries of Albania, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Bulgaria, and the Greek provinces of Epirus, Thessaly and Thrace. The offshore island of Thasos is within the precincts of Macedonia; together with Samothrace, they belong to the region of Eastern Macedonia and Thrace (Ανατολική Μακεδονία και Θράκη)'.[1]

The region has a population of 2,625,681, and its capital and largest city is Thessaloniki, with a population of around 773,180.

Since World War II, Greek Macedonia is sometimes called Aegean Macedonia, a term introduced by Tito in 1945 to lay claim on Greek Macedonia and in the build up to the Greek civil war. Although this term is now used mostly by Macedonian Slavs and occasionally in historical contexts, it is strongly disliked by many Greeks (particularly Macedonians), who remember that after WWII, Tito's communist Yugoslavia began to remove the 'Greek' qualifying term in order to justify territorial claims against Greek Macedonia.

The White Tower of Thessaloniki.
Other major Macedonian towns and cities (Population)
1. Thessaloniki (with an approximate population) 1,000,000
2. Kavala 63,774
3. Serres 56,145
4. Katerini 55,721
5. Drama 55,632
6. Kozani 47,451
7. Veria 47,411
8. Ptolemaida 32,775
9. Giannitsa 26.296
10. Edessa 25,619
11. Kilkis 24,812
12. Naoussa 19,870
13. Nea Moudania 17,032
14. Florina 16,711
15. Kastoria 16,218
16. Grevena 15,481
17. Alexandria 13,229
18. Polygyros 10,271

The capital

The sea front at Thessaloniki, the capital city of Macedonia, Greece.

Thessaloniki, Thessalonica or Salonica (Greek: Θεσσαλονίκη) is the capital of the Greek region of Macedonia and the second-largest city of Greece. It is also the capital of the Thessaloniki prefecture and the capital of the EU region (or, synonymously, Greek periphery) of Central Macedonia. Today's population of the city's metropolitan area is around 1,000,000.

Thessaloniki is a thriving, vibrant city and its commercial port is of a strategic importance for Greece. It is a major economic, industrial, commercial and cultural center as well as a transportation hub in southeastern Europe. The city hosts a large student population and it is widely renowned for its large number of monuments of Byzantine architecture as well as its eminent nightlife.

Economy and Transport

Philipp II King of Macedon

Despite its rugged terrain, Macedonia possesses some of the richest farmland in Greece in the plain of Drama and the valleys of the Strimon and Axios. A wide variety of foodstuffs and cash crops are grown, including rice, wheat, beans, olives, cotton, tobacco, fruit, grapes, wine and other alcoholic beverages. Food processing and textile weaving constitute the principal manufacturing industries. Tourism is a major industry along the coast, particularly in the Chalcidice peninsula, the island of Thasos and the northern approaches to Mount Olympus. Many tourists originate from Greece's immediate neighbors.

Thessaloniki is a major port city and industrial center; Kavala is the other harbor of Macedonia. Apart from the principal airport at Thessaloniki (Makedonia Airport), airports also exist in Kavala (M.Alexandros Airport), Kozani (Filippos Airport), and Kastoria (Aristotelis Airport). The "Via Egnatia" motorway crosses the full distance of Macedonia, linking its main cities.

History

Map of the Macedonian Empire.
Main articles: Macedonia (region), Kingdom of Macedon and the rise of Macedon

The history of Greek Macedonia is very long, from ancient to modern Greece. It started with the Kingdom of Macedonia, (that was reorganised by Philip II), through the empire of Alexander the Great, continues within the Roman and Byzantine empires, the domination of the Ottomans (from 14th century until 1912) and the Balkan Wars.

Modern History

Main articles: History of Modern Greece, History of Modern Macedonia, Macedonian Struggle, Balkan Wars, Greek Civil War and the Macedonian Question

Etymology

Main article: Etymology of the name of Macedonia
Ancient Macedon's regions and towns, prior to the 4th century BC

There are three theories for the etymology of the name Macedonia:

  1. According to ancient Greek mythology, Macedon was the name of the first phylarch (tribal chief) of the tribe that initially settled western, southern and central Macedonia and founded the kingdom of Macedon.
  2. Αccording to Herodotus, the Makednoí were a tribe of the Dorians. The name probably derives from the Doric adjective μακεδνός makednós, meaning "tall" since both the Macedonians (Makedónes) and their Makednoí tribal ancestors were regarded as tall people. The adjective is used by Homer in Odyssey (7.105f), to describe a tall poplar tree, and by Aristophanes in his comedy the Birds, to describe a wall built around their imaginary city.
  3. An unattested hypothesis suggests that the name Makedónes may mean "highlanders", from a hypothetical Macedonian bahuvrihi *μακι-κεδόνες *maki-kedónes "of the high earth". However, there is serious argumentation against this hypothesis.

Macedonian cuisine

Main article: Greek Macedonian cuisine. See also: Macedonian salad


Demographics

File:Ac alexanderstatue.jpg
The statue of Alexander the Great in Thessaloniki sea front.
Kastoria, one of the most picturesque towns in Macedonia.
Edessa waterfalls in Macedonia

The inhabitants are overwhelmingly ethnic Greeks (Greek Macedonians) and most are members of the Greek Orthodox Church. From the Middle Ages to the early 20th century, the ethnic composition of the region of Macedonia is characterized by uncertainty both about numbers and identification. The 1904 Ottoman census of Hilmi Pasha recorded 373,227 Greeks and 204,317 Bulgarians in the vilayet of Selânik (Thessaloniki) alone, while it makes no mention of a Macedonian Slav ethnicity (which at the time was regarded as Bulgarian). According to the same census, Greeks were also dominant in the vilayet of Manastır (Bitola), counting 261,283 Greeks and 178,412 Bulgarians. Hugh Poulton, in his Who Are the Macedonians, notes that "assessing population figures is problematic" [2] for the territory of Greek Macedonia before its incorporation into the Greek state in 1913 [2]. The area's remaining population was principally composed of Ottoman Turks and also some Jews, and at much smaller numbers of Roma, Albanians and Vlachs.

During the first half of the twentieth century, major demographic shifts took place, which resulted in the region's population becoming overwhelmingly ethnic Greek. In 1919, Bulgaria and Greece signed the Treaty of Neuilly, which called for an exchange of populations between the two countries. According to the treaty, Bulgaria was considered to be the parent state of all ethnic Slavs living in Greece. Most ethnic Greeks from Bulgaria were resettled in Greek Macedonia; most Slavs were resettled in Bulgaria but a number, remained, most of them by changing or adapting their surnames and declaring themselves to be Greek so as to be exempt from the exchange. In 1923 Greece and Turkey signed the Treaty of Lausanne, and hundreds of thousands of Greeks from Anatolia were resettled in the region replacing Macedonian Turks and other Muslims (of Albanian, Greek, Roma, Slavic and Vlach ethnicity) under similar terms.

Macedonian cities during Ottoman rule were often known by multiple names (Greek, Slavic or Turkish by the respective populations). After the partition of Ottoman Europe, cities in Greece became officially known only by their Greek names, and cities in Bulgaria and the Kingdom of Yugoslavia became likewise officially known only in the languages of their respective states. After the population exchanges, many locations were renamed to the languages of their new occupants.

The population was badly affected by the Second World War through starvation, executions, massacres and deportations. Nazi-aligned Bulgaria's occupation forces persecuted the local Greek population and settled Bulgarian colonists in their occupation zone in eastern Macedonia and western Thrace, deporting all Jews from the region. Total civilian deaths in Macedonia are estimated at over 400,000, including 55,000 Greek Jews. Further heavy fighting affected the region during the Greek Civil War which, combined with post-war poverty, drove many inhabitants of rural Macedonia to emigrate either to the towns and cities, or abroad. Even today, many parts of Macedonia are fairly sparsely inhabited.

Greek is by far the most widely spoken and the only official language of public life and education in Macedonia. There are also some smaller linguistic communities, including speakers of Macedonian Greek, Pontian Greek, Aromanian, Megleno-Romanian, Arvanitic, Armenian, Slavic, Turkish, Russian, Ladino and Romani.

Since the fall of communism throughout Eastern Europe in the late 1980s and early 1990s, a large number of economic refugees and immigrants from Greece's neighboring countries, Albania, Bulgaria, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Romania and Serbia, as well as from more distant countries such as Russia, the Ukraine, Armenia and Georgia, have arrived in Greece (including Macedonia) to seek employment.

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ EUROPA - The EU at a glance - Maps - Greece - Anatoliki Makedonia ke Thraki
  2. ^ a b Poulton, Hugh (2000). "Greece". In Second (ed.). Who Are the Macedonians?. Indiana University Press. pp. 85–86. ISBN 0-253-21359-2.