Post Tagged with: "gandeto"

Clarifying Plutarch’s Parallel Lives on Alexander and the Macedonians – Part 1

Miltiades Elia Bolaris The following article is being published simultaneously by the AMERICAN CHRONICLE. Following a brief elegy to the greatness of Plutarch, an ancient Greek writer best known for his “Moralia” and the “Parallel lives”, the Slavomacedonian propagandist going by the Italian sounding pseudonym Gandeto proceeded to develop his main theme: “…to revisit some of (Plutarch’s) references about the […]

Read more ›
The Odd Couple; The Stefov – Gandeto connection

The Odd Couple; The Stefov – Gandeto connection

By Nick Michael Hodges In his article “The little Dictionary had no chance”, which was published in the American Chronicle on April 17, 2011, Risto Stefov says that he is wondering why the Greeks are behaving the way they do and he has obviously found somebody by the name J.S.G. Gandeto who has written a book called “The Theft of […]

Read more ›
The satrapal appointments in Alexander’s empire and FYROM’s Slavomacedonians

The satrapal appointments in Alexander’s empire and FYROM’s Slavomacedonians

By Miltiades Elia Bolaris Josif G., an author better known under the Italian-sounding pseudonym “Gandeto”, wrote an article in the May 2009 American Chronicle about the satrapal appointments of Alexander the Great. Josif G. aka J.S.G. Gandeto has made a name for himself in the Slavomacedonian diaspora of Canada and Australia as the author of the history revisionist book “Ancient […]

Read more ›

Both Ignorance and Forgery (Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia – Greece)

Both Ignorance and Forgery (Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia – Greece)   Australian Macedonian Advisory Council September 10, 2009 It was not my intension to comment Mr. Gandeto´s attempt to respond to my article titled as “Total ignorance or deliberate forgery” http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/116721 since neither the revealing of his ignorance on basic details of ancient Greek history and literature once more, […]

Read more ›
Slavic Propagandists are being ridiculed once more in American Chronicle

Slavic Propagandists are being ridiculed once more in American Chronicle

Total ignorance or deliberate forgery (Greece – Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia) Australian Macedonian Advisory Council August 25, 2009 This article is a rebuttal to Gandeto´s “Macedonia was never a part of the ancient Hellenic city-states” http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/115377 In his last delirium Gandeto reached such levels of Goebelism using audacious lies and blatant distortions of historical sources, that even the aforementioned […]

Read more ›

Ethnic Macedonians II

By Tymphaios Ethnic Macedonians are by definition the most indigenous Macedonians to the area of Macedonia. Three hundred and forty scholars have recently rebutted the current propaganda emanating from Skopje that the ancient Macedonians were Slavs. This has ruffled a few feathers and has caused a spur of activity in certain segments of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM). […]

Read more ›
Ancient Macedonian Culture and Language

Ancient Macedonian Culture and Language

Australian Macedonian Advisory Council May 03, 2009 In his recent article under the title “Satrapal appointments in Alexander’s Empire”. Mr. Gandeto actually thought he discovered America in 2009 AD, when he wrote that out of 52 persons appointed by Alexander the Great as satraps in the conquered regions of the Persian empire, only 5 were southern Greeks, while the rest […]

Read more ›
Truths and lies about Macedonia – Part 1

Truths and lies about Macedonia – Part 1

Australian Macedonian Advisory Council April 22, 2009 I´ve been watching in many articles the desperate attempts of Risto Stefov, Gandeto and Alexandra Aleksovska to prove that their people are the direct descendants of Alexander the Great´s Macedonians. Furthermore, they also try to “prove” that modern Greeks are actually descendants of various ethnicities that settled in Greek soil during the medieval […]

Read more ›