There have been many misconceptions that a "Macedonian" (Slavonic) language did exist prior to 1910 as an official language. Many Bulgarian documents as a result were tweaked by Skopje and re-written in the new "Macedonian" language after its formation in the mid to late 1940s. These documents have been considered, "authentic Macedonian" documents, yet if ...
Archive for March 13th, 2007
Mar
13
2007
Paidomazoma – Communist children abductions in the Greek civil warPosted by Admin in Modern Macedonian History![]() Georgios Manoukas was the General Inspector of the Child Gathering and also a former member of KKE (Greek communist Party). He returned in Greece in 1961. The author examines Comitern intentions behind its policy towards the children and concludes that from the beginning of the Yugoslav government (Tito) falsified the numbers of these children, integrated them into the ...
Mar
13
2007
Four of the best Historians, describe Balkans in 1915Posted by Admin in Modern Macedonian History"A history of Bulgaria, Serbia, Greece, Rumania, Turkey" by Nevil Forbes, Arnold J. Toynbee, D. Mitrany, D.G. Hogarth, Oxford University Press 1915 Quote: The whole of what may be called the trunk or massif of the Balkan peninsula, bounded on the north by the rivers Save and Danube, on the west by the Adriatic, on the east ...
Mar
13
2007
The final capture of Thessalonica by the Turks (1430)Posted by Admin in Medieval Macedonian HistoryLife in the small Venetian-held enclave of the Thermaïc Gulf had become far from pleasant either for the Venetians or for the Greeks. The situation in Thessalonica had reached such a pass that by March 1430 the Venetian Senate, in a bid to ensure an undisturbed occupation of the city, decided to agree to the ...
Mar
13
2007
Macedonia in the years preceeding the Turkish OccupationPosted by Admin in Medieval Macedonian HistoryPart 1 When Stephen Dušan ascended the Serbian throne in 1331, the boundary between Byzantium and Serbia in the region of Macedonia lay further north than Sérres, Melnik, Strumica, Prilep and Ohrid ; that is to say, beyond the present Greek frontier. Dušan was able to take over large portions first of Macedonia and later of ... |





















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