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History of the Macedonian People
from Ancient times to the Present
Part 1 - Introduction
by Risto Stefov
rstefov@hotmail.com
April 2003
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All people that have existed on this planet have left their mark
in some form or another. The Macedonians are no exception and will
be the subject of this
series of articles.
To properly reconstruct history, corroborating information
from at least two sources must be obtained. One such source might
be data collected from analyzing
material finds like tombs, artifacts, relics and inscriptions, the type of
information that can be derived from archeological research. Another
source might be a body
of literature derived from stories, legends, myths, folklore, poems, songs,
etc. passed down from generation to generation.
Unfortunately, for obvious reasons upon which I will expand, the reconstruction
of the Macedonian history has been neglected and as a result has not achieved
the desired maturity to be considered adequate.
Scientific interest in the southern Balkan region in general began for the
first time in the early 1800’s alongside political and economic interests. While
German and British scholars were studying findings from the Bronze Age in the
Peloponnesus and Crete, Macedonia was still in the grip of the Ottoman Empire.
Later, after 1912 and 1913, in the hands of the Greek, Bulgarian and Serbian
States, anything to do with Macedonia became politically sensitive. Since the
time that Greece annexed a large part of Macedonia the Greek authorities have
concealed all archeological materials which didn’t agree with their political
agenda. Only materials that strengthened their claims to Macedonia and attracted
tourists are made public.
Without sound archeological data, reconstruction of history is scant at best. “Early
twentieth-century historians continued occasionally to write political biographies
of the pre-eminent fourth-century B.C. kings, and when they did consider Macedonian
affairs they viewed them only as part of general Greek history. What was required
for a deeper understanding of Macedon and its kings were serious source studies
and archeology, but archeological interest remained dormant for decades because
twentieth-century interest in Macedonia sprang from modern politics rather than
from a study of antiquity.” (page 8, Eugene N. Borza, In the Shadow of
Olympus, The Emergence of Macedon).
As for using literature to reconstruct Macedonia’s history, 19th century
Western scholars relied heavily on Greek and Roman sources and neglected to reference
Eastern, Macedonian and other literary sources. Eastern scholars on the other
hand by political motivation or by nonchalance, continued to stagnate.
Unfortunately to this day, Greek and Bulgarian opposition still remains the
biggest obstacle to reconstructing Macedonia’s history. Both states occupy Macedonian
territory and refuse to cooperate on matters of Macedonian interests, especially
archeology. Greece, which occupies the largest and archeologically richest part
of Macedonia, will only cooperate if Macedonian history remains peripheral to
mainstream Greek events and if it is presented from the Greek point of view.
Bulgaria still refuses to recognize a Macedonian nation and is in agreement
with Greece on matters of ancient history.
The academic community to date has been hesitant to become involved in the
reconstruction of a mainstream Macedonian history (outside of the 4th century
B.C.) partly due
to the difficulties in obtaining information from non-Greek sources but mostly
due to Greek pressure to keep Macedonia under the Greek periphery. Whatever
evidence exists today, is fragmented and derived mainly from biased sources. “What
we know about the Macedonians are primarily from Greek sources or from translations
derived from the Greek sources and therefore we have a skewed view of them depending
upon the views of people who were largely their enemies in antiquity”.
These are the words of Dr. Eugene Borza, the “world authority” on
ancient Macedonia. Dr. Borza clearly summarizes the conditions under which mainstream
Macedonian history has been presented.
I want to emphasize that the Ancient Macedonian history taught in schools today
was written during the 19th and early 20th centuries mostly by Western authors
who relied mainly on politically motivated Greek sources for their research.
Even though the Ancient Macedonian people were a unique and separate nation,
their history presented to us always places them together with the people of
the Greek city-states. There is no western text where the Macedonian identity
is treated separately from the Greek identities of the city-states. Also, the
same mainstream history which is taught to our children today, personifies
the ancient Macedonian people as a mere vehicle that united the city-states
and did
nothing more than do their bidding in spreading Hellenic culture throughout
the ancient world. Also, Modern Greek historians made sure that the negativity
of
orators like Demosthenes referring to the Macedonians as “barbarians” and “culturally
backwards”, was well portrayed in the minds of western writers.
The fact that some modern authors ascribe Hellenic affinity to the ancient
Macedonians should come as no great surprise, given the impact of Johan Gustav
Droysen on
early nineteenth-century historians where Macedonia is depicted as a natural "unifier" of
the Greek city-states. The same role was played by Prussia and Savoy in German
and Italian unification in the nineteenth century. "On this false analogy
the whole of Greek history was now boldly reconstructed as a necessary process
of development leading quite naturally to a single goal: unification of the Greek
nation under Macedonian leadership". (Werner Jaeger)
To paraphrase Eugene Borza, it was a dynamic idea in the minds of 19th century
German intellectuals and politicians to see something of themselves, of the
German State unification, conquests, creativity and culture in the Greeks and
Philip
as the embodiment of national will and the unifier of Greece.
In other words, the ancient history written for the modern Greeks by 19th century
German scholars was nothing more than a German vision of the “Glorious” German
unification superimposed on the Greek model.
To Demosthenes and others like him, the Macedonians were an enemy that conquered
and subdued them and embodied everything that was vile and despicable. Ignoring
all signs of a rich and civilized culture beyond imagination, modern Greek
scholars hid the real face of ancient Macedonia under a veil of contemptible
words spoken
by enemies and by bitter politicians.
Modern day Greeks would like to pass off Demosthenes’s castigations of
Philip II as political rhetoric, and yet Demosthenes was twice appointed to lead
the war effort of Athens against Macedonia. He, Demosthenes, said of Philip that, “Philip
was not Greek, nor related to Greeks but comes from Macedonia where a person
could not even buy a decent slave.” Soon after his death the people of
Athens paid him fitting honours by erecting his statue in bronze, and by decreeing
that the eldest member of his family should be maintained in the prytaneum at
public expense. On the base of his statue was carved his famous inscription: “If
only your strength had been equal, Demosthenes, to your wisdom Never would Greece
have been ruled by a Macedonian Ares.” (J.T. Griffith) Greece "ruled" not "united" by
a Macedonian Ares. Also, was it not the Greek philosopher Lycurgus who said, "With
the death of Chaeronea was buried the freedom of Greece?"
The reader should be aware that the word “Greek” is a Latin term
that originated during Roman times and should not be used to refer to a people
that existed hundreds of years earlier. The people of the ancient city-states
could not possibly have been called “Greek” before the word was actually
invented. Also, modern Greek academics are more than willing to interpret ambiguous
evidence when it serves their political interests, and at the same time, to dismiss
the obvious when it doesn’t. If you want to learn more about the differences
between the ancient Greeks and ancient Macedonians please read Josef S. G. Gandeto’s
book, Ancient Macedonians, Differences Between the Ancient Macedonians and the
Ancient Greeks.
“
There is not a single word or fact written by the ancient authors that shows
that the Macedonians are Greek. There is not a single word or fact written where
the Macedonians thought of themselves as Greeks. There is not a single book written
by the ancient authors, including the ancient Greek authors, that has mixed the
lineage and has not shown diverse differences between Macedonians and Greeks.” (Joseph
Gandeto)
Since the emergence of the Republic of Macedonia in the 1990’s, research
in the field of archeology has increased dramatically but mainly inside the Republic
of Macedonia. Also, new Macedonian literature and publications are slowly emerging
and in time should provide an alternative to the vast, biased Greek sources.
On the subject of language, it would be evident from the text of Arrian, Plutarch,
and Curtius Rufus that Alexander's army spoke Macedonian not Greek. Any other
interpretation would be intolerably difficult, if not impossible, to accept.
“
The main evidence for ancient Macedonian existing as a separate language comes
from a handful of late sources describing events in the train of Alexander the
Great, where the Macedonian tongue is mentioned specifically. The evidence suggests
that Macedonian was distinct from ordinary Attic (ancient Athenian) used as a
language of the court and of diplomacy. The handful of surviving genuine Macedonian
words - not loan words from Greek - do not show the changes expected from a Greek
dialect.” (Eugene Borza)
There are many scholars who will argue that there is ample evidence to place
the ancient Macedonians as a distinct nation with a unique culture and language,
separate from the ancient city-states. Unfortunately, until recently there
was little interest and not much incentive to carry the argument beyond discussion.
If the ancient Macedonians were a distinct nation, then where did they come
from? What language did they speak? Has any part of their language survived?
What was
their culture like?
To answer these questions we need to avoid being bogged down by conflicting
arguments. We need to get away from the well-trod mainstream path, free ourselves
from the
biased modern Greek sources and take a fresh look at the old and new evidence,
especially the evidence that has been omitted or intentionally bypassed in
the past.
It has been my belief that the arguments presented by Greek historians are
not only biased and politically motivated, but are designed to bog down the
academic
world and keep it on the defensive thus stifling any chance for real progress.
On the topic of new archeological and linguistic evidence, there have been
numerous projects undertaken since the 1960’s.
A major archeological discovery was made in 1977 in Kutlesh (Vergina) about
30 miles north of Mount Olympus. Archeologists uncovered what appeared to be
the
royal tomb (Golemata Tumba) of Philip II. In addition to yielding much information
about the Macedonians, the find also unearthed much controversy. Some of the
artifacts found, according to Eugene Borza, belonged to a later period of the
4th century B.C., which cast some doubt as to whether it was truly Philip II’s
tomb. What is more important however, is the type of treasure found in the tomb.
The treasure is physical evidence which “proves unmistakably” that
the Macedonians were not a barbarian tribe whose only accomplishment was making
war. Archeologists are finding increasing evidence that the Macedonians were
a far more sophisticated culture than previously thought.
What was most impressive in this find, besides the solid gold casket with the
symbol of the starburst, was the exquisite gold foiled wreath made from 313
gold oak leaves. It is the heaviest and most elegant gold wreath ever discovered.
Since the emergence of the Republic of Macedonia new and exciting archeological
discoveries have been made. Rocks with inscriptions never before deciphered
were found in several sites inside the Republic of Macedonia. Similar inscriptions
have also been found in Serbia, Bulgaria, Romania and even Crete, Pil and Knosos.
Unfortunately, up until now archeologists have consistently failed to decipher
them. Thanks to dedicated archeologists like Vasil Ilyov the inscriptions have
now been deciphered.
According to Ilyov’s palaeographic and paleolinguistic research, the signs
on the rocks are actual letters of an old pre Slavic phonetic alphabet that belongs
to the Macedonian language of Aegean Macedonia. In other words, the language
of the Pelazgian and other Macedonian tribes, like the Payonian, Piertian, Brygian
or Phrygian, Venets or Enets, etc., is in fact the language of the ancient Macedonians
which dates back to prehistoric times.
Symbols found on Prevedic solar and cosmographic artifacts that belong to the
Mesolithic, Neolithic and Eneolithic cultures, place the inscriptions somewhere
between 7,000 to 3,000 B.C. (Page 37, October 15, 1999, number 560, Makedonija
magazine).
What is more interesting is that Vasil Ilyov and his team have translated almost
every inscription discovered and so far have identified and tabulated 35 characters
of the ancient alphabet. (Pages 60 and 61, July 1, 2000, number 577, Makedonija
magazine). There is finally proof that a Macedonian written language existed
in prehistoric times. In fact, according to Vasil Ilyov, not one but two phonetic
alphabets have been discovered. One was known as the common alphabet used by
the general public and the other was known as the “secret” alphabet
used for religious and ceremonial purposes. To date, the texts of more than 150
artifacts have been translated and about 6,000 ancient Macedonian words have
been identified.
According to Ilyov, apart from giving us the oldest phonetic alphabet found
to date, the prehistoric Macedonians have also given us clues that they were
gazing
at the skies. The word “cosmos” which the Hellenes borrowed from
the Macedonians, and the modern Greeks without offering adequate etymology pass
off as their own, Iliov says comes from the Macedonians.
In the ancient Macedonian language the base of the noun cosmos comes from the
adjective KOS (winding slanted) and the noun MOS (bridge). “Kosmos” was
the winding bridge that the ancient Macedonian astronomers called the cluster
of stars in the Milky Way galaxy looking like a winding bridge when viewed from
the earth.
Even before Irodot (Herodotus 484-424 B.C.) gave the world the idea of history
as we know it today, the ancient Macedonians were already familiar with the
notion. The West considers Herodotus to be the father of history. As for the
word “history”,
its roots are found in the ancient Macedonian noun “TR” which is
the oldest name given to the god of thunder. In time, the word evolved from “TR” to “TOR”, “TORI” and
in the past tense, “STORI” which in Macedonian means “happened”.
If we apply this action to events that involve people we then come up with the
Macedonian words “TIE I STORIA” which in English translates to “they
did”. So, when Herodotus published his work under the title “HISTORY” by
Herodotus of Halicarnassus, he in fact used a Macedonian word for his title.
If Herodotus, using a similar analogy derived his title from the Atikan dialect,
as modern Greeks claim, he would have had to produce a noun from the verb “KANO” or “EKANA” and
the actions “they did” would translate to “AVTI EKANAN” which
is a far cry from the word HISTORY. (Pages 56 and 57, June 15, 2000, number 576,
Makedonija magazine).
I want to mention here that in spite of Greek claims otherwise, Irodot (Herodotus)
was not Greek and was not from Athens. Herodotus was Karian born in the city
of Halicanassus in Asia Minor.
More evidence that gives credence to the existence of an ancient prehistoric
Macedonian civilization comes to us from ancient literature. One such source
that greatly influenced our impression of the ancients and inspired Alexander
the Great to seek adventure was Homer’s epic poems. About five hundred
years after the Trojan Wars, Homer wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey. Homer’s
work captivated his audience with events that, according to Tashko Belchev, began
and ended in Macedonia. Homer was born in the 8th century B.C. and created true
literary masterpieces that are enjoyed as much today, as they were in the days
of Alexander the Great. Originally, Homer’s stories were folktales told
and retold for millenniums until they were immortalized in print in the 6th century
B.C.
What is most interesting about Homer’s stories, especially the Iliad, is
that they were originally written in the prehistoric Macedonian language. The
first paleolinguist to openly proclaim the similarities between the words of
the Iliad and those of the modern Slavic languages was the German Homerologist
Pasov. Inspired by Pasov and others, researcher Odisej Belchevsky has furthered
the study by clearly illustrating the fundamental relationship between the modern
Macedonian language and the language of Homer.
“
In the Iliad and Odyssey, attributed to Homer, the great multitude of non-Greek
people living around Olympus and further north in Europe were described as being
as, ‘Numerous as the leaves in the forests… with chariots and weapons
decorated with gleaming gold and silver…like gods.’
Unless destroyed by natural disaster, large nations and their languages do
not simply disappear but rather change and evolve over time. This evolution
is influenced
by the conditions of life and interaction with other nations, called ‘symbiosis’ by
Lidija Slaveska in The Ethnological Genesis of the Macedonian People.
A tremendous number of words from everyday life as well as the names of a number
of places, rivers, mountains, kings, gods, common people, and numerous tribes
can be found in the Homeric poems. The majority of these words have survived
until today. This is not a strange phenomenon. What attracts our attention
is that these words have retained their basic meaning and can be easily recognized
especially by the speakers of the contemporary Slavic languages. This linguistic
material clearly shows the existence and strong influence of a language, which
surely was neither Greek nor Latin.
After extensive research taking over twelve years, I (Oddisej Belchevski) have
studied, analyzed and resolved a large number of linguistic problems through
the evidence of that archaic language which profoundly influenced the Greek,
Latin, and Germanic languages in their historic development since ancient times.
The question of what constituted ancient Macedonian has been studied by many
scholars over many centuries. There have been many attempts to reconstruct
it as a “Greek dialect.” My research indicates the following:
1. 1. Not a single linguist nor scholar in any other field has ever conducted
a comparative study of this ancient language with the largest linguistic group
in Europe and Asia--the Slavic languages--in use today! The question is: Why?
It seems that the truth has been hidden in darkness and altered by western
scholars and politicians for almost two hundred years. It is easy to suppose
that this
has been done for nationalistic, political interests and gains.
2. 2. The Macedonian words identified in Homer (1000-800 BC) are a part of
the basic everyday life of the Macedonian people today. When compared to the
contemporary
Macedonian language, there is an incredible similarity and in many cases there
are complete cognates.
3. 3. Moreover, those Homeric words which belong to that base are found in
the roots of many words in the modern Macedonian language. They form huge families
of words--a series of words that are interrelated on a functional basis or
are
simply built according to the Law Of Functional Etymology.
4. 4. Some of these words have been adopted in the Greek language, but have
been assimilated beyond recognition. Others again “stand alone” in the
Greek language, without Greek roots or functional relationships. But most of
these words are absolutely not related to modern Greek.
Many western scholars think that kinship terms from 1500-1000 BC disappeared
long ago. My research proves that they exist today in the largest language
group of nations in Europe and Asia, including the modern Macedonian nation.
These
specific terms were of utmost importance as they were the basis for preserving
large family units --clans, tribes, and the prevention of marriages between
family members. All this resulted in forming of great nations.
The Pelazgian people are clearly described in Homeric poems as non-Greek, with
their own language and traditions totally different from Greek. They inhabited
the Balkan Peninsula (known by the names Macedonians, Thracians, Illyrians,
etc.) and they spread throughout south-eastern Europe (under the common name
Scythians).
Later, they migrated to the east in Asia Minor (Lydians, Brigians-Frigians
etc.) and to the west into central and northern Italy (Etruscans, Veneti etc).
Their name, Pelazgians, most logically could be interpreted as the ‘dwellers
of the flat lands’. They cultivated the fertile valleys and became a part
of the landscape their fecundity only paralleled by the far Eastern nations.
In the Iliad, they are identified as Trojans and as the inhabitants of Crete.
According to Greek writers, they are credited with building the Acropolis and
as those natives that the ‘Greek’ tribes met when they arrived in
Southern Europe. How could it have happened that so great a number of Pelazgian
tribes disappeared without leaving traces of their language? It should be pointed
out that there is forgotten evidence revealed in the linguistic inscriptions
on stones in Delphi (Greece) and Asia Minor (Turkey). These are written in Greek
and in ‘another language’, which western scholars identify as Etruscan.
In his study ‘The Language of the Etruscans’, L. Bonafonte identifies
the ‘other language’ as Etruscan. My study of the Etruscan and Lydian
languages reveals that these languages were closely related to the ancient and
modern Macedonian language. Other apparent lexical correspondences between the
Homeric and modern Macedonian are, for example: paimiti(s)-pamti; veido, veiden-vide;
ischare-izgara, skara; idri-itar; kotule-katle; okkos-oko; steno-stenka; pliscios-seli,
preseli; oditis-odi od odenje. There are a great many examples like this in the
1800 dictionary compiled by the German linguist Ludwig Franz Passoff on the basis
of the most ancient extant manuscripts of Homer’s Iliad. The English edition
was prepared by Henry George (New York, 1850). Not knowing the Macedonian language,
Passoff concentrated on the most contrasting preserved words, unknown in Greek
and Latin with the Czech and Slovak languages of that time. So these words were
identified, in fact, as Slavic words. Hence, in my opinion the golden rule for
analyzing a language is the aforementioned Functional Etymology. Since the functional
relations of words are the fundamental building blocks of word forms, I name
this rule the ‘GOLDEN RULE OF FUNCTIONAL ETYMOLOGY.’
In studies of the ancient and modern Macedonian language at the Canadian-Macedonian
Historical Society in Toronto the priority project based on an earlier understanding
is the question of ‘Studying The Macedonian Language--Ancient and Modern’.
Another interesting topic is the problem of the ‘Lost Words in the Indo-European
Language Exist Today in the Modern Macedonian Language’. In order to illustrate
my argument in this respect, I focus on some examples of the genetic relationships
between ancient and modern Macedonian language, through the Macedonian word daver,
dever ‘brother in law’. When a young woman marries, the brother of her husband (usually
the youngest) becomes a ‘dever’. This is an ancient
tradition done to ensure that the young male is entrusted with
the care of the family in case the husband dies or is killed.
In such circumstances the youngest brother becomes the new husband
and takes over the family. This was necessary to protect the children
and keep accrued wealth and property within the same family. The
meaning of the word in Macedonian, according to functional etymology
could be extracted as follows: vera-verba-doverba-doveri-dever ‘to
be entrusted’. This word belongs to a large cluster of Macedonian
words containing the root (-verba-).
In ancient Macedonian (1000 BC), according to Homer (p.305 L.L.)
there is da-DAVER; dao(s), where the digama stands for/v/ and the
word means ‘brother in law’. In the word daver-daer
we note the missing consonant /v/ in inter vocalic position. This
indicates that the rule of the speech economy has been in force
for a long time in the language. Dropping consonants has been a
rule quite often occurring in Macedonian as in the examples: to
private >to praoite; covekot ojde > coekon ojde, etc. Yet
in Greek ‘brother in law’ ginaika delfos ‘ginaika
delfoos’, could obviously not be related to the Homeric daver-davero(s).”(
Odisej K. Belchevski, Pages 29, 30, 31 and 32, Number 503, III
1995, Makedonija magazine).
If you didn’t know who Homer was and happened to be reading
his stories about the customs of the Trojans, you would think that
he was talking about modern Macedonia. After three millenium, we
find the same customs, crafts, hunting techniques, agricultural
methods, etc. being practiced today. Be it spinning, weaving, dowry,
hospitality, nature, or house design, everything else described
in Homer’s epics, says Angelina Markus, is unchanged and
present all around us today. (Page 56 and 57, July 1, 2000, number
575, Makedonija magazene.
Another archeological source that provides evidence for the Macedonians
is the work of German Toponimist Max Fasmer. Fasmer in his book “The
Slavs in Greece” examines the origins of 334 prehistoric
Phoenician toponyms in Epirus and concludes that they are of Slavic
origin. Through his studies, Fasmer has discovered that there is
a relationship between the ancient Phoenicians and the medieval
Slavs. He also clearly emphasizes that that “Slavs” inhabited
Epirus. What is also interesting is that in German, the words “Slaven” and “Vinden” are
synonymous. Tashko Belchev furthers the idea that the Slavs inhabited
the Balkans long before previously thought by connecting the Vindi,
Veneti and Phoenician to a single family of people with common
origins. (Page 68, February 1, 2001, number 591, Makedonija magazine).
According to the writings of G. S. Grinevich, dealing with the
subject of pre-Slavic literacy, the decoding and linguistic coding
results show that pre-Slavic literacy existed much before the creation
of the letters and coding of the Slavic language by the brothers
St. Cyril and St. Methodi. This is more evidence that the proto-Slavs
originated in Macedonia and according to Grinevich, the language
spoken by the Aegean Pelasti is the same as that spoken by the
pre-Slavs (p. 175). Grinevich has also stated that the pre-Slavic
written language is very close to the Old Slavic written literary
language of all Slavs. (Genadij Stanistavlovich Grinevich, World
History Department, Russian Physical Society, Moscow, 1994)
According to Alexander Donski, “There are many indications
that the ancient Macedonians were of Venetic origin (the term "Slavic" came
into use much later), and there is evidence in favor of this.
Historical Evidence We can see from several ancient documentary
sources that Macedonians and Hellenes were two different peoples.
Some Greek, as well as Roman historians, have explored this view,
and have left evidence collected from earlier periods, clearly
showing that ancient Macedonians were of Venetic origin.
Linguistic Evidence Although the surviving vocabulary of the
ancient Macedonians is relatively small, it gives a good indication
in favor of our thesis; which is, that the modern Macedonian
language is at least in part the continuation of the language
spoken by Alexander the Great and his contemporaries.
Onomastic Evidence There is considerable heritage from the area
of burial customs and archaeological remains. They contain many
examples of sameness or similarity between the ancient and modern
Macedonian, and other Slavic languages. There are also some narrative,
oral testimonies pointing in the same direction.”
Alexander Donski has recently published a book on this subject,
which will be available in English soon.
A recently published book "Veneti: First Builders of European
Community", considered to be one of the most comprehensive
works on the early history of Slovenes, presents the Proto-Slavic
Veneti as the first known nation of central Europe and the Slovenes
as their most direct descendants. The Veneti (not to be confused
with Venetians) settled in the alpine area in Slovenia, northern
Italy, eastern Switzerland and Austria during the Bronze Age
around 1200 B.C. In their original settlement area there are
to this day countless Slovene place-names.
These facts presented in the book are not new and have already
been studied and reported by earlier researchers but for unknown
reasons, have not been taken seriously.
Besides important historical data, the authors of this book have
presented numerous Slovene toponyms in the alpine region and to
the west and north where the Veneti once lived. Also, the book
reveals many similarities between the modern Slovene and the Venetic
languages. Research done on the Venetic inscriptions has proven
that not only was the ancient Venetic language (contrary to official
linguistics) Proto-Slavic, but also that the modern Slovene language
is a continuation of it.
The first known nation of central Europe, according to the authors
of this book, were the Proto-Slavic Veneti and the original language
of central Europe before the arrival of the Indo-Europeans around
2,000 B.C. was Slavic.
The book "Veneti: First Builders of European Community" is
a first step towards the gradual correction of the “distorted
history” which was “written for us” by foreigners.
Until recently, no one had been able to decipher the Venetic script
on the urns unearthed from archeological digs because no one ever
thought of using the ancient Slavic language as a basis to try
and solve this ancient mystery. So they say!
Matej Bor, a Slovenian linguist, seems to have cracked the Venetic
script using the Slovenian language. (Jozko Šavli, Matej Bor,
Ivan Tomazic, “VENETI: First Builders of European Community”)
Soon perhaps, Macedonian researchers will compare notes with
Slovenian researchers and shed some new light on this ancient
mystery.
In the article “Who is Afraid of Ancient Macedonian Culture,
and Why?” Tashko Belchev talks about Deyan Medakovic, President
of the Serbian Academy of Science and his attempts to cover up
certain archeological facts that do not agree with mainstream
Serbian history.
On March 4, 1987 Academic, Vladimir Dediyer, President of the
research board of the Serbian Academy, sent a letter to Deyan Madakovic
complaining about his involvement in stopping the symposium devoted
to the Vincha world which existed 6,000 – 3,000 years B.C.
The symposium was organized by the Serbian Academy of Science and
Art, the Historical Science Department and the Center for Scientific
Research at the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade. Among other
things, the letter chastised Medakovic with the words, “Damn
you Deyan Medakovic, for your petty ambitions to be President of
the Serbian Academy of Science. You are a sycophant to the authorities,
breaking all human principles of behaviour. (L. Klyakic, ‘Beginning
of the Road’, p. 56.)” (Page 69, August 1, 2000, number
579, Makedonija magazine).
On the subject of the Vincha Group, Vasil Iliov, in an article
in the Makedonija Magazine, talks about a discovery of a rather
imposing monument containing an ancient script found in Sitovo
cave, located near the city of Plovdiv in Bulgaria. The monument
has two lines of inscriptions about 3.4 meters long and the text
is about 40 centimeters high, written from right to left. According
to Ilyov, the text can be dated back to 4,500 B.C. and is written
in the ancient, prehistoric Macedonian phonetic language. The
text, although not deciphered at the time, was published in 1950
and again in 1971. With Ilyov’s assistance, the text was
finally deciphered in 1995. In a crude attempt, here is what
it says in English “and the father-in-law ran in (flew
in) and in the flight horrors have haunted him and there the
house psalms (in the house they sing psalms) and in roast you
are a guest of the ducks-go dream!” (Page 71, December
15, 1999, number 564-565, Makedonija magazine) You can decide
for yourself what the ancient scribe wants to say. More importantly,
it is not what the message says but rather that it has been deciphered
and translated. Perhaps it is not a message meant for us. In
any case here is Iliov’s interpretation. The duck in this
message refers to an ancient swamp bird, which rises from a deceased
person and carries his/her spirit to the blue sky. Ilyov has
based his interpretation on an artifact in the shape of an anthropomorphic
figure standing on a chariot drawn by harnessed swamp birds.
The central figure is decorated with symbols of the sun and planets.
Yet another source of archeological data in support of a Macedonian
civilization comes from Bronze Age research. According to Vangel
Bozhinovski (page 61, June 1, 2000, number 575, Makedonija magazine)
the Neolithic civilization in Macedonia appeared 3,000 years
before it appeared in Western Europe. Similarly the Bronze Age
appeared in Macedonia 1,200 years earlier and the Iron Age 200
years earlier. The tragedy of the Bronze Age is reflected in
the death and destruction it brought to Macedonia after it was
introduced to Western Europe. In the hands of the Europeans to
the North and to the West, the metal that once shaped art in
Macedonia became a weapon of death and destruction. Was it mankind’s
nature to crave war above peace? If we examine our behaviour
by the amount of money we spend on our military budgets today,
I would say yes.
Almost all of the valuable artifacts made between 1,200 and 800
B.C. were discovered in cemeteries. Macedonia dubbed “the
culture of the fields of urns” has an abundance of cemeteries.
It seems that no matter how many are unearthed or destroyed there
are plenty more to be found. It is in mankind’s nature to
be this way says Vangel Bozhinovski, just look at the textbooks
from which our children learn in school today and you will realize
that civilization is nothing but an endless war. War is a western
invention which was imported to Macedonia during the Bronze Age
and has become our way of life ever since.
It has been said that thousands of years ago many small tribal
kingdoms occupied the region where the three continents meet
(Europe, Asia and Africa). They lived off the land, traded, and
peacefully co-existed with each other for many centuries. Even
though they were known by many names, the people had a common
ancestry and spoke dialects of the same language.
For a thousand years the masters of the crafts possessed the
secret of the metals with which they made their cities beautiful
with sculptures and decorations.
It was foretold that if the secret of the metal (bronze) was
allowed to escape, the gods of peace would curse the people and
allow disaster to befall them for a thousand years. Unfortunately,
after a thousand years or so of contentment, ignoring the ancient
warnings, the old masters became arrogant and careless and let
the secret of the metal escape. No one could have predicted the
outcome of what was about to happen, especially the gentle tribes
who knew nothing of evil, violence or bloodshed.
When the gods of war who lived to the north and west of the gentle
tribes learned the secret of the metal, they forged mighty weapons.
With promises of power and glory, they bewitched the tribesmen’s
leaders to use the weapons against their enemies. Greed and lust
for power soon blinded the tribesmen who unleashed bloodshed,
death and destruction. When the cities of light turned to dust
the wars ended and the dead were buried in cities of tombs below
the surface of the earth where their bones lay in peace, undisturbed
for all eternity or until archeology unearthed them.
In 800 B.C. when the catastrophic wars were finally over, the
survivors of the small tribal kingdoms were left weak, devastated
and vulnerable. One of those small kingdoms was Macedonia. But
Macedonia’s story does not end with the tribal wars, it
only begins.
There are those who believe that the name “Macedonia” was
first spoken by the child warriors who longed to return home
during the tribal wars. What they affectionately called “Makedon” was
not their kingdom but their wish to return to “mother’s
home”.
“Make” (mother) and “don” (home) or Makedon
as it came to be known to the outside world, was “mother’s
home” to the children of Macedonia.
There are other stories that make reference to the meaning of the
name “Makedon” but this, I believe, is the most realistic
meaning.
One of the oldest sources of evidence written on stone in the ancient
Macedonian phonetic language dates back to the Neolithic period,
to the time of the “Zets”. I want to mention here that
a “Zet” is a “son in law”. From the deciphered
inscriptions, it appears that the Zets of various tribes seemed
to be involved in some sort of conflict with each other.
Perhaps one of the most characteristic documents ever found was
the text engraved on a stone in the shape of a long fish found
in Osinchani, near Skopje. Here the inscription describes a battle
between Zets expressing how one Zet subdued another.
Another description that dates between 2,100 B.C. and 1,200 B.C.,
tells a boastful story of how the Zet Ig’Lal destroyed the
Ege kingdom. (Vasil Ilyov, page 51, August 15, 2000, number 580,
Makedonija magazine).
Yet another Neolithic inscription from the Tsrna Loma or Ilina
Gora locality, near the village Osinchani, conveys the following
message: “taa, rechta, zasega e uteha na majkite, koishto
loshoto voinata, niv gi oshteti”, which in English translates
roughly to, “the word for now is consolation for the mothers,
whom the wicked war damaged”.
Outside of Homer’s epics, nothing has captured the young
imagination more than the adventures of the ancient mythological
gods and heroes.
Were these gods and heroes exclusively Egyptian, Greek and Roman?
Because that is exactly what the modern Greeks would want us to
believe.
Contrary to modern Greek claims, Professor Tashko Belchev believes
that the mythology as we know it today originated in the fertile
minds of much older people than the ancient Greeks, the ancient
Macedonians. The Greeks simply took the mythology and adopted it
for themselves. Even the word “mythology” comes from
the ancient Macedonian words “mit” and “log”.
In modern Macedonian the word “mit” means “telling” or “bribing” (potmiti
go, bribe him) and the word “log” (logika) means “logic” or “science”.
Putting the two words together we come up with “Mitlog” or,
in modern Macedonian, “Mitologija” the science of telling
or the science of “bribing” the young imagination.
(Page 58, June 15, 2000, number 576, Makedonija magazine).
Taking all evidence into consideration, it is not difficult to
piece together a theory of what the pre-Macedonian world looked
like. We already know a lot about the ancient city-states and how
they dealt with overpopulation and expansion. For example, as each
of the ancient city-states grew beyond the city’s ability
to support its population, people were driven out or left voluntarily
to start a new city. New settlements followed the coastline indicative
of the peoples’ desire to pursue a familiar means of livelihood.
The same principle can be applied to the pre-Macedonian inland
dwellers who lived in what we today call geographical Macedonia.
For personal protection and for companionship, the ancient people
built their homes in close proximity similar to those of today’s
modern villages. As the community grew in population beyond the
land’s ability to support it, people moved and started new
communities. This practice continued uninterrupted as long as there
was space to expand. In time, the entire region of Macedonia became
dotted with settlements. Unchecked by war, disease and pestilence,
the populations grew and expanded outwards.
Since the people of the various towns were related to each other,
they maintained close contact through visits, celebrations, etc.
which kept their traditions and language from diverging.
The maximum population an ancient town could hold was dependent
upon the land’s ability to support it. If a family could
no longer make a living because it was too large for its land
holdings, it either moved away in whole or split up. Some family
members moved away to a smaller town or started a new community
elsewhere. Newly founded towns usually took the name of the founding
family.
Keeping track of genealogy was very important for several reasons.
Family size usually dictated social status in the community. The
family clan protected its family members and expected certain loyalties
from them in return. Marriages between family members were avoided
by knowing who belonged to which family. It was common practice
in those days for a young man to leave his own family, marry and
become a Zet (son in law) in another family. Based on the ancient
scripts, being a Zet had its privileges, including those of waging
war on other Zets for control over the family.
Because the Balkan terrain could not support uniform population
growth, clusters of settlements developed usually with the larger
towns in the fertile lowlands, surrounded by smaller towns in
the highlands. As the older settlements grew and matured they
began to trade with other settlements and developed transportation
routes, commerce and a written language. They also developed
a central administration, a security force and appointed central
tribal leaders, who in time evolved into tribal kings. With the
expansion of trade beyond the boundaries of the local community,
the ancient people came into contact with other people who had
new ideas and innovations.
With the discovery of metal, powerful weapons were built and
bloodshed and destruction was not too far behind. Even family
squabbles over small matters turned violent and ugly. A society
that valued kinship and family above all else had the tendency
to stick together and interact freely and peacefully. Unfortunately,
at around 1,200 B.C. something went terribly wrong and war erupted
between the various groups (families?), bringing four centuries
of death and devastation to the peace loving people of ancient
Macedonia.
Documented but not well understood are ancient “kinship
and family ties”. Kinship was very important to the ancient
people of Macedonia who ranked it at the top of their value system.
A good example of this is Philip II’s marriages to various
women from his annexed worlds. Marriages were a powerful symbol
for bonding family ties and for forging powerful alliances. This
custom may seem bizarre today but it was common practice in ancient
Macedonia.
From a cultural and linguistic standpoint, the close relationship
between the ancient societies allowed free interaction between
the various peoples and kept their language and culture from
diverging. This could account for the widespread Slav language
commonality we are witnessing today.
Thus far, I have given you a glimpse of the remnants of an old
prehistoric world with a rich culture and language. The sources
of information that I have referenced provide valuable evidence
of the existence of a world never before acknowledged. Also,
the deciphered inscriptions and translated texts not only suggest
that a pre-historic civilization existed, but also that the people
of this old world are the ancestors of the modern Macedonians.
Some of the artifacts, like the stone writings and the “Iliad” translations,
have been discovered and deciphered since the 1990’s but
to this day they have not attracted the attention of mainstream
archeology and paleolinguistics. Why?
I believe there are several reasons for this:
1. There are some who think the work is not serious enough to
warrant their consideration.
2. Others, especially the highly paid administrators, are satisfied
with the status quo and don’t want to rock the boat.
3. Yet others believe that any involvement on their part could
undermine the entire foundation of ancient history as we now
know it.
4. Unfortunately, there are also those, myself included, who
believe that mainstream ancient history as we know it today,
had been fabricated to support the political objectives of the
19th century Great Powers and their allies.
As George Orwell once pointed out, "Who controls the past
controls the future; who controls the present controls the past." History
is written by the victors.
As I mentioned earlier, when the foundation of ancient history
was laid down by the 19th century revisionists, it was done in
aid of political objectives. Modern Greece was created by the
Western Powers expressly to curtail Slavic expansionism. Moreover,
Greece was created to divide the Slavs and stop Imperial Russia
from achieving her long ambition of sailing the waters of the
Mediterranean Sea.
In their zeal to satisfy their own ambitions, the 19th century
Powers, perhaps unbeknownst to them at the time, unleashed a “Balkan
turmoil” that would have long lasting consequences for
the Balkan people.
People that existed together, united for centuries by a common
faith, were divided without their consent and thrown into disarray
by artificially imposed values and ideals.
A century has passed and peace has not been achieved. Why?
When the Western Powers superficially created Greece in 1829,
they launched her on a polemic course, her survival to be made
possible only at the expense of the Macedonian nation.
The problems experienced between Greece and Macedonia today are
nothing new but another stage in a continuous and timeless struggle.
Greece, Bulgaria and Serbia have generated more literature to
disprove the existence of a Macedonian nation than they have
written books about their own histories. This is truly sad and
such a waste of effort.
To be continued…
References:
Josef S. G. Gandeto, Ancient Macedonians, The differences Between
the Ancient Macedonians and the Ancient Greeks
Eugene N. Borza, In the Shadow of Olympus, The Emergence of Macedon
Jozko Šavli, Matej Bor, Ivan Tomazic, VENETI: First Builders
of European Community
George Nakratzas M.D., The Close Racial Kinship Between the Greeks,
Bulgarians and Turks, Macedonia and Thrace
Genadij Stanistavlovich Grinevich, World History Department,
Russian Physical Society, Moscow, 1994
Makedonija Magazine – Ilustrirana Rebija za iselenitsite
od Makedonija, Broj 503, 560 - 591
You can contact the author at rstefov@hotmail.com

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