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Short history of Macedonia
The rise of the great Macedonian kingdom began in the fourth
century BC when both Athens and Sparta had passed their zenith
and had exhausted themselves with 30 years fighting against each
other. The Greeks regarded the Macedonians as "barbarians", i.e.
people who could not speak proper Greek, and looked down on them
accordingly. Nevertheless, by using a mixture of brilliant diplomacy
and armed force, Philip II and his son, Alexander the Great, brought
the whole of Greece under the control of Macedon.
One secret of their success was the adoption by Philip of the
"phalanx", a squad of heavily-armed soldiers carrying strong pikes
of different lengths and constituting, in effect, a sort of human
tank. At the same time, the Macedonians perfected the employment of
lightly armed troops and cavalry, who could easily outmaneuver
military formations of the time. Once all Greece had been brought
under Macedonian control, Alexander, universally considered one of
greatest military geniuses of all time, then set out upon his
extraordinary conquest of the known world. First he took Asia Minor,
then the mighty Persian Empire of Darius. Pressing ever eastward,
he next subdued Babylon and continued to the Punjab in India before
his homesick troops finally compelled him, much against his will,
to turn back. He himself died at the age of 33 without ever seeing
his native country again. The generals whom he had left in charge of
various provinces seized control for themselves and began to quarrel
with each other. After 175 unsettled years, in 146 BC Macedonia
became a Roman province.
Centuries later, Byzantium tried to check the Slav's infiltration
from the north, but was unable to prevent their settling there, and
in the tenth century the newcomers formed themselves into an independent
state under Car Samuel (Tsar Samuel). After several victories over the
Byzantines, he added other Slav provinces to his kingdom, whose central
portion was what is now Bulgaria. But Byzantium, once fully mobilized,
was too powerful for him.
In a terrible battle in 1014, the Byzantine Emperor, Basil II, took
14,000 prisoners blinded them and sent them back to Samuel. Stunned
by the horror of this monstrous act, Samuel died soon after, and for
a time Byzantine power was assured.
With the expansion of the Serb state under the brilliant Nemanja
dynasty, King Dusan occupied Macedonia in the 14th century, but this
unification of the two Slav countries was not fully achieved before
the Turks made themselves masters of both, staying there for 500 years.
It was a period punctuated by rebellion and especially the activities
of 'hajduk', who formed themselves into bands of outlaws of freedom
fighters. But for most of the population it was a period of hardship
and hopelessness in which the flame of Macedonian culture was kept
flickering only in the monastic centers.
Following the growth of nationalistic sentiment in Serbia early in
the 19th century, Macedonia began to hope that her long subjection was
nearly ended, but her case aroused little support abroad. Her attempts
at a national uprising, such as that of Krusevo, organized by the
Macedonian revolutionary movement known as "VMRO", were mercilessly
suppressed. In 1909 there was a state of open warfare for three months,
but the insurgents, poorly armed and led, were beaten.
The first Balkan War (1912) liberated Macedonia from the Turks, but
the Greeks, Bulgarians and Serbs immediately embarked upon the second
Balkan War of 1913. In World War I this unhappy backward province was
a theater of operations. The Treaty of Neuilly in 1919 again divided it,
the new Yugoslavia being awarded the lion's share, Greece keeping
Thessaloniki and its environs, and Bulgaria a small strip in the
northeast. In 1941 the Germans presented most of Macedonia to Bulgaria,
but the 1919 frontiers were restored in 1945. While the province was
probably better-off in the period between the two world wars than she
had been under the Turks, the kingdom of Yugoslavia was particularly
active in its efforts to bring the region up to date and repair the
damage of its long neglect.
However, after World War II, schools were opened for the first time.
In them instruction is given in the Macedonia language, which is in
many ways different from Serbo-Croat. Macedonia is still in some respect
more backward than the northern region of Yugoslavia, but industrialization
is going ahead fast, agriculture has been drastically reorganized, and
excellent new roads have been built. There remains much to do, but it is
significant now that the people are at last free of foreign rule, and
painters, musicians and writers are very actively asserting the country's
highly individual artistic outlook.
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