In the
following text we shall present the whole Herodotean testimony on the ancient
Macedonian history. FROM HERODOTUS THE FATHER OF HISTORY. But before proceeding with the presentation we must clarify
the four separate components of the ancient Macedonian history. These
components can be seen as distinctions between the Macedonian Royal House and
the Macedonian population and between Macedonia proper and the land over which
the Macedonian king’s authority extended in various periods. Not all the king’s
subjects were Macedonians and not all the king’s dominion was Macedonia.
Let’s start
with the Macedonian Royal House. From antiquity it is known and well accepted
as the Temenid Royal house because it’s founder Perdikkas I claimed Argive
descent from Temenos, the Dorian conquer of the Peloponnesian Argos. Herodotus
informs us in many passages about that.
In [V.22]
he states: “And that these descendants of Perdikkas are Hellenes, as they
themselves say, I happen to know myself, and not only so, but I will prove in
the succeeding history that they are Hellenes. Moreover the Hellanodicai, who
manage the games at Olympia, decided that they were so: for when Alexander
wished to contend in the games and had descended for this purpose into the
arena, the Hellenes who were to run against him tried to exclude him, saying
that the contest was not for Barbarians to contend in but for Hellenes: since
however Alexander proved that he was of Argos, he was judged to be a Hellene,
and when he entered the contest of the foot-race his lot came out with that of
the first.”
Also in
[VIII.137] he writes about the Macedonian tradition about the arrival of
Perdikkas I and his brothers from the Peloponnesian Argos to Western Pieria,
and this is a text that we shall analyse later. Finally, the other important
passage is the one in [IX.45] here he quotes the words of Alexander I, saying:
“…for I
should not utter them if I did not care greatly for the general safety of
Hellas, seeing that I AM A HELLENE MYSELF BY ANCIENT DESCENT and I should not
wish to see Hellas enslaved instead of free.”
So
Herodotus, who almost certainly has visited the Macedonian palace and met in
person Alexander I, states that he personally knows and the Macedonian kings
themselves admit that they are of Hellenic Argive descent, and that although
some Greeks have questioned their Hellenism the Hellanodicai finally have
recognized them as Greeks, after Alexander I proved his Hellenism. Herodotus´s
statement – “I happen to know myself” – has a particular meaning here because
Herodotus was himself from Halicarnassus, an Argive-Doric colony and so was
familiar with the specific Doric dialect of Argos. NGL Hammond is considered
“the patriarch of Macedonian history” and has always considered the
Temenid-Argive descent as true. In “History of Macedonia” (volume II, “the
language of the Macedonians”) he states that while the general Macedonian
population spoke the distinctive and conservative Macedonian dialect of Greek,
the Royal family inside the palace spoke Argive Doric. So Herodotus could
easily identify by first hand a speaker of Argive Doric – the dialect of his
city’s metropolis – and that is why he “happens to know himself” that the
Macedonian kings were Temenids from Argos.
Now let’s
consider the most specific event, that is Alexander’s I participation in the
Olympics. "Alexander I" was the first KNOWN Macedonian
to do that.
The Macedonian history under the first Temenids. "Perdikkas I" became king of Macedonia around 700 BC. He found the Macedonians as transhumant pastoralists in the Greek mountainous west Pieria. With the Temenids starts the Greek Macedonian Tribes expansion. In their first expansionary phase, they drove away the Other Greek Thracians Tribes from coastal Pieria and the Bottians from south Bottia and founded the capital of their new kingdom in Aegai. In a second expansionary phase later they drove away the remaining Bottians from northern Bottia – conquering the whole central Macedonian plain – and continued by eliminating the Almopians and the Eordeans and adding the territories of Almopia and Eordea into their kingdom. In that way, they formed the so-called Old Macedonian Kingdom, who’s borders were the river Axius in the east, Mt Barnous in the north, Mt Vitsi in the West and the Penius river in the south. If to all this we add Polyaenus’ testimony (a Macedonian himself) in his “Stratagems” (IV.1) where he informs us about a Macedonian-Illyrian conflict during the times of the second Temenid king (Argaeus, around 650 BC), during which Argaeus, due to a lack of male warriors, was compelled to resort in his famous stratagem to a force consisting of young women “dressed as male warriors” (Mimallones and the cult of Dionysus Pseudanor), and we also consider that the neighbouring Paeonians were at the summit of their strength during the period 550-511 BC, when they stretched their military operations from Northern Bottia (which they took from the Macedonians) to Propontis (they sieged the city of Perinthus), then we can make a solid conclusion: From 700 BC till 511 BC the Macedonians were in constant warfare in order to expand or defend their kingdom and the male manpower for these operations was at the limits of sufficiency.
What
happened immediately after? In 511 BC the Persians managed to subdue the
Paeonians ending in this way their period of strength. The Macedonians
capitalising on the Paeonian impotence regained northern Bottia and brought
again their eastern borders to the river Axius. This is definitely the time
frame of the destruction of the Paeonian city Amydon on the eastern bank of the
Axius by the Argeads that Strabo refers to in [VII.20] (“Amydon a city of
Paeonians. The place was destroyed by the Argeads”). After that the Macedonians
offered “earth and water” to the Persians – that is, voluntarily subdued
themselves to the Persian king. By doing so they solidified their new
re-acquisitions and further more the Persians rewarded them by appointing
Amyntas I and his son Alexander later as general supervisors of a region – for
the first time – much wider than the Old Macedonian Kingdom. So for the first
time, the Macedonian kings expanded their control over non-Macedonian
populations, that is, Paeonians, Thracians, Pelasgian Krestonians and the Greek
Epeirotan tribes (or “Molossian” tribes as Hecataeus names them back in ca. 515
BC) of the later Upper Macedonia, that is, Elimeians, Tymphaeans, Orestae,
Lynkestae and Pelagonians. This new situation explains perfectly the known
Herodotean testimony of Alexander I´s speech to the Persians [V.20]: “report to
the king who sent you that a Hellene, ruler under him of the Macedonians”. Many
use this phrase in order to prove that while the Royal family was of Greek
descent the Macedonians weren’t. Note that Alexander I was hereditary king of
the original Macedonians and “ruler under the Persian king” of the new dominion
that the Persian king rewarded him with. That means that the “Macedonians” in
the above phrase are not the original Macedonians of the Old Kingdom – who
considered Alexander king (βασιλεύς) and not “ruler under a king” (ὕπαρχος) – but the whole new heterogeneous population
posted under Alexander’s authority by the Persians.
So after
the Macedonian vassalisation to the Persians, the two centuries long warfare of
the Macedonians finally ended and FOR THE FIRST TIME the physically qualified
Macedonian men could afford to participate in the Olympics. That is why
Alexander I chose to compete to the Olympics immediately after the Macedonian
annexation to the Persians in 511 BC. Herodotus informs us in [V.20] that in
511 BC when the Persians arrived in Macedonia and king Amyntas I offered them a
welcome-meal, and when Amyntas retired from the table “Alexander took his
place” as a host. This means that Alexander I back in 511 BC was at least 12
years old and this can help us calculate the date of his participation in the
Olympics. Since he contested in running – a tough sport – his participation age
ranged most probably between 18-30 years of age, and so the most probable
Olympiads he would have participated in are the ones that occurred in either
504 BC (19 years old), 500 BC (23 years old), 496 BC (27 years old) and 492 BC
(31 years old). Alexander’s age clearly excludes any participation after the
Greco-Persian wars, that is, after 478 BC. In 478 BC he was around 45 years
old, an improper age for Olympian competitor. So, considering only Alexander’s
age, we can easily reject the theories that make him “a non-Greek that was
granted permission to participate in the Olympics AFTER the Greco-Persian wars
as a reward for his assistance to the Greeks during the wars”.
Shield with
Star of Vergina on it
What about
the Greeks that questioned his participation right? The fact that probably no
Macedonian before Alexander could have participated in the Olympics only due to
the constant two centuries long warfare with various non-Greek tribes, made
Alexander’s participation look odd and unparalleled. After all, the Olympics
were one of these events that reminded and renewed the bond between the various
Greek tribes and so it is more than obvious that some Greeks were surprised
when they saw a participant from a region that never before gave another
Olympic athlete. After all, as the Italian Indro Montanelli brilliantly states
in his book “Storia dei Greci” (page 281) about the Macedonians: “a big part of
the Greeks simply ignored even the existence of their northern most kingdom
named Macedonia”.
If a
Macedonian in general wanted to prove himself as a Greek around 500 BC the only
thing that he had to do was remind the other Greeks of the ALREADY EXISTING
two-century old Hesiodic tradition in which Macedon was “brother” of Magnes and
a Deucalionid by ancient descent. Only that was enough to guarantee him equal
rights to those of the Magnetes and the right to participate in the Olympics.
So Alexander I had no need to invent a Greek genealogy in order to participate in the Olympics and this only strengthens the originality of his Argive(Greek citizen of Argos)descent.
So Alexander I had no need to invent a Greek genealogy in order to participate in the Olympics and this only strengthens the originality of his Argive(Greek citizen of Argos)descent.
Before
closing with the Royal House and passing on to the Macedonian population
there’s one thing left to clarify. Many modern scholars have rejected the
Argive descent of the Temenids and considered it “Royal House propaganda”. At
this point I would like to point out what the eminent British scholar Andrew
Robert Burn says about the large number of examples of Royal Houses with
different origin than that of the tribes that they control. In his book “A
Traveller´s History of Greece” written in Oxford in 1984, in the chapter
“people, idioms and the coming of the Greeks” he states:
“The
expansion of the Hellenes (as the descendants of the proto-Greeks used to refer
to themselves) wasn’t always the result of direct conquests. Sometimes they
were invited, AS THE GREEK LEGENDS NARRATE, by the local kings in order to help
them against their enemies; For Thucydides, this was the mode that the “sons of
Hellen” managed to expand from Thessaly. In the legends, the hero arrives alone
or followed by a few faithful companions. This is of course a poetic
convention. After liberating the territory from enemies or “monsters”, the hero
takes for bride the king’s daughter, “the prefixed price for the job”, to use
the phrase of a modern scholar. Sometimes the hero inherits the Kingdom. IT IS
NOT IMPOSSIBLE THAT SIMILAR THINGS OCCURED IN REALITY, BECAUSE IN THE
PREHISTORICAL AEGEAN (AND IN HISTORICAL TIMES IN SOME TERRITORIES WITH ARCHAIC
CUSTOMS *like Macedonia, personal note*) PARENTAGE WAS DETERMINED AND THE
PROPERTY INHERITED PROBABLY THROUGH THE FEMALE LINE. IN HOMER, MENELAUS (A
MYCENAEAN, BROTHER OF THE POWERFUL MYCENAEAN KING AGAMEMNON) BECOMES KING OF
SPARTA AFTER TAKING FOR BRIDE HELEN, THE DAUGHTER OF THE OLD KING TYNDAREUS,
ALTHOUGH TYNDAREUS HAD LIVING SONS (AS HELEN NARRATES IN THE ILIAD), THE
DIOSCURIDS (KASTOR AND POLYDEYKES)”.
Ruins of
ancient Pella in Greece
This
pattern of a “Hero” invited to fight the old king’s enemies fits perfectly with
the Temenids, because immediately after Perdiccas’ I accession to the
Macedonian throne we have the Macedonian expansion through warfare. Anyway,
Herodotus provides us another example of a king belonging to a different Greek
tribe from the one that he controls. In [V.72] he reminds us that the Spartan
king Cleomenes was an Achaean ruling over Dorians:
” …but the
priestess stood up from her seat before he had passed through the door, and
said, “Lacedemonian stranger, go back and enter not into the temple, for it is
not lawful for Dorians to pass in hither.” He said: “WOMAN, I AM NOT A DORIAN,
BUT AN ACHAEAN”.”
Other
examples of the genre are the Phtiotid Aeakid Royal house of the Molossians,
the Corinthean Bakkhiad Royal house of the Lynkestians, the Pylean “Nestorid”
descent of the Peisistratids and Alcmeonids in Athens and the more historical
examples of Gelon from Gela and the Rhegian Agathocles becoming respectively
successful tyrant and chief-general of the Syracusans in Sicily. In this frame
there is nothing “suspicious” in a Doric-Argive family ruling over the
Macedonians. After all, Thucydides, a more “standard” historian than Herodotus
who rarely concords with the later, in this particular theme is in accord with
him about the Argive descent of the Temenid kings of Macedonia (II,98).
The next
component of the ancient Macedonian history is the general population. We’ve
already seen that we must make a distinction between the “Eteomacedonians”
(that is the original Macedonians of the Old Kingdom) and the “Macedonians” who
the Temenids finished up ruling under the Persian kings – that is after the submission
to the Persians the Temenid dominion expanded outside the Eteomacedonians and
the Old Kingdom. Intermarriages with the neighbouring Royal houses took place
in order to solidify the expanded dominion and there is no doubt that non-Greek
populations were eventually assimilated into the Macedonian stock. This can
explain the minority of non-Greek names found in Macedonia (less than 5% of all
the attested names). But if we must speak on the “origin of the ancient
Macedonians”, then the focal point are the “Eteomacedonians”, just like any
research on the early Roman History must be limited to the original Latins of
Latium. NGL Hammond underlines this distinction clearly in his book “The
Macedonian State: Origins, Institutions and History” where in chapter VI in a
discussion about the earliest Macedonian institutions he states: “at this point
we must focus on the real Macedonians and not on the “Molossian” tribes of
Upper Macedonia and the populations east of the river Axius that the
Macedonians managed to subdue”.
So what
does Herodotus’ testimony has to offer for these “Eteomacedonians”? In two
different and independent passages he equates the Macedonians and the Dorians:
In [I.56]
he states:
“for in the
reign of Deucalion this race dwelt in Pthiotis, and in the time of Doros the
son of Hellen in the land lying below Ossa and Olympus, which is called
Histiaiotis; and when it was driven from Histiaiotis by the sons of Cadmos, it
dwelt in Pindos and was called Makednian; and thence it moved afterwards to Dryopis,
and from Dryopis it came finally to Peloponnesus, and began to be called
Dorian.”
It is clear
that in Herodotus’ opinion – a man descended from a Doric colony in Asia minor
– the Dorians used to be called Makednians when they inhabited northern Pindus.
In other words, the Dorians were Makednians that migrated southwards.
Later in
[VIII.43] when he’s presenting the Peloponnesian contribution to the Greek
fleet opposing the Persians he states:
“From
Peloponnese the Lacedemonians furnishing sixteen ships, the Corinthians
furnishing the same complement as at Artemision, the Sikyonians furnishing
fifteen ships, the Epidaurians ten, the Troizenians five, the men of Hermion
three, THESE ALL, except the Hermionians, BEING OF THE RACE CALLED DORIC AND/OR
MAKEDNIAN and having made their last migration from Erineos and Pindos and the
land of Dryopis.”
Again the
Macedonians and the Dorians are being equalised in Herodotus’ opinion. What
does this mean? Instead of equalising the two Greek tribes it would be better
if we considered them as “brother” tribes originating from the same
North-Western Greek stock that used to inhabit the Boion range in northern
Pindus. Boion is a focal point for all the tribes belonging to the so-called
Northern Greek group. The eminent German linguists Porzig & Risch based on
the various isoglosses of the various Greek dialects have proven that Mycenaean
Greek was already a south Greek dialect and wasn’t the precursor of all the
historical Greek dialects, but only of the Attic-Ionic and the Arkado-Cypriot
ones. Aeolic and North-Western Greek on the other hand form a northern Greek
group, and both derived from a common “undifferentiated” precursor. So far we
know that the Dorians and Macedonians originate from the Boion range, the
Aeolophon Boetians took their name from this mountain, meanwhile the Aeolophon
Perrhaebians’ ethnonym literally means “from the source of the Aias/Aous”
(Πέρρας ΑἴFου) situated immediately west of the Boion range.
‘Yauna
Takabara’,(Greeks with sun hats) the Persian name of the Macedonians.
Furthermore
we have Hesiod’s Theogony account that the Macedonians were “brother” tribes with the
Aelophon Magnetes (mythological sons of Zeus and Thyia and by the last
Deucalionids, that is, descendants of Deucalion, the genarch of all Greeks).
Some have questioned the Macedonians´ Hellenicity because of their
“co-laterality” to the mythological Hellen – that is, Thyia was Hellen’s sister
and so her children were not Hellenes. This argument – at the degree that we
can argue over mythology – is definitely shallow because there are other
Greek-speaking tribes that do not descent from Hellen directly, but do descent
from Deucalion. In the myth Deucalion had three children: Hellen, Thyia and
Pandora junior. From Hellen derived Dorus, Aeolus and Xouthus, and from Xouthus
Ion and Achaean. From Thyia and Zeus originated the two brothers “Magnes and
Macedon rejoicing in horses and dwelling in Pieria around Olympus”, while from
Zeus and Pandora originated Graecus, the genarch of the Epeirotans and the other
north-western Greeks except the Dorians. Since no historian ever rejected the
Greekness of the Magnetes, and since the vast majority of historians accept the
Greekness of the Epeirotans, it is logical to include the Macedonians also in
the bulk of the Greek-speaking population. After all, independently of the
Hesiodic myth, and based on historical conclusions, the vast majority of the
modern NON-GREEK scholars like Hammond, Burn, Bengtson, Brixhe, Masson – to
mention some of them – accept the Greekness of the Macedonians. Furthermore,
there are some important common usances specifically between Macedonians and
Magnetes that seem to enhance the Hesiodic Theogony. Both (and only the Macedonians
and Magnetes) had the cult of Zeus Akraeus and the festival of the Heretideia
(although the Magnetes had for a very long time ceased to have a king and
hetairoi), and both of them and the Aenians had a dance simulating livestock
theft that the Macedonians named “Karpea”, and the Magnetes and Aenians
“Karpaea”, from the Greek verb “karpeuein”, meaning “to gain”.
Now lets to
return to the Boion and the bulk of the northern Greeks. It was the Phrygian
descent into the region at the beginning of the Early Iron Age or the end of
the Late Bronze Age that prompted the so called “Great Aegean Migration” that
we know better as the “Dorian Descent”. The Phrygians pushed out this
northern-Greek bulk and caused it’s dispersion and fragmentation into smaller
tribes. The Dorians and Epeans ended up in the Peloponnese, the Thessalians moved
to “Pelasgian Argos” and renamed it Thessaly, the majority of the Epeirotans
moved south of the Aous and the Macedonians, the Magnetes and the Perrhaebians
ended up around mount Olympus in Pieria and Perrhaebia.
What caused
the migration of the Magnetes south of the river Penius in historical Magnesia?
Herodotus gives us the answer in [VII.20.2] “…nor that of the Mysians and
Teucrians, before the Trojan war, who passed over into Europe by the Bosphorus
and not only subdued all the Thracians, but came down also as far as the Ionian
Sea and marched southwards to the river Peneios.”
He informs
us that Teucrians (Trojans) and their allies (Thracians, Paeonians, Mysians,
Luwians, etc) had undertaken a vast military operation in the Balkans that
reached to the Ionian Sea and the river Penius. This is definitely the best
known reason for the departure of the Magnetes from Pieria southwards, for the
isolation of the Macedonians in mountainous Western Pieria and for the arrival
of the Thracian Cicones in coastal Pieria. Do we have any proof that this
operation indeed occurred? Of course! During the Late Helladic IIIB period (ca.
1250 BC) we have massive fortifications constructed in the Mycenaean centres of
Gla, Orkhomenos, Athens, Mycenae and Tiryns, but not in Messenia and Laconia.
What does this mean? It means that the feared enemy of the Mycenaeans at that
time was coming from the North-north East and it wasn’t only a naval force, but
a terrestrial one also since Orkhomenos, far from the Aegean coast, was fortified
also in this period.
Lets return
now to the Macedonians gathered in western Pieria. We have a Mycenaean Greek
presence archaeologically documented in this area with the necropolis near the
modern village of Agios Demetrios. Being a necropolis – that is, a cemetery –
one can exclude immediately influence from the south since the burial
modalities of all cultures tend to remain conservative and adhering to the
proper tradition. As NGL Hammond has argued many times, ALL THE TOPONYMS AND
HYDRONYMS IN WESTERN PIERIA ARE OF GREEK ETYMOLOGY. IF THE MACEDONIANS DID NOT
SPEAK GREEK FROM THE BEGINNING, THEN THEIR EARLY HOMELAND SHOULD HAVE CONTAINED
NON-GREEK NAMES. Pieria, Leibethron, Lebaea, Aison, Aigai, Aegidion, Pimpleia,
Haliakmon, Balla, Phylake, Akasamenae are examples of some of these topyonyms
and hydronyms, and all have a purely Greek etymology. A classical example is
that of the Thracians, who although massively Hellenized in late antiquity,
kept toponyms and hydronyms indicating their early non-Greek background. Cities
ending in “-bria” (Thracian word for “city”), “-diza” (Thracian word for
“walls”, that is, walled city), and “-para” (Thracian word for “village”) can
be found till today, while Hadrianople’s Thracian name “Uscudama” had survived
until the Roman Emperor Hadrian changed it in the 2nd AD century.
ANCIENT
RUINS ARGOS ORESTIKON GREECE
Gathered in
mountainous Pieria, from ca. 1200 BC until 700 BC when the Temenids arrived,
the Macedonians practiced transhumant pastoralism between the southern part of
the Emathian plain in the winter (another Greek word meaning “sandy place” and
used many times by Homer in the form “emathoen” = sandy) and the Pierian
highlands in the summer. During this period they came into strong contact with
the Phrygians who were living in the central Macedonian plain and having their
capital in Edessa, the town where later the Macedonians founded Aegai in modern
Vergina. The name Edessa and the nearby river Ascordus are the only non-Greek
toponyms in northern Pieria-South Emathia and are unquestionably of Phrygian
origin (“Vedy” in Phrygian means “water”). The Phrygian presence in the area is
archaeologically documented by their characteristic “Lausitz” culture that the
Phrygians brought with them from the north.
Around 700
BC as we have seen, Perdikkas I becomes king and the Macedonian expansion
begins. What does Herodotus have to say about the Macedonians living in Western
Pieria and their contact with the Phrygians?
In
[VII.127] he states that the northern limit of Macedonia was the union of the
rivers Haliakmon and Ludias, north of which started Bottia:
“as far as
the river Lydias and the Haliacmon, which form the boundary between the lands
of Bottiaia and Macedonia, mingling their waters together in one and the same
stream”.
Herodotus
wrote his histories around 450 BC, and so Hammond is convinced that Herodotus
has borrowed this quote from the Milesian geographer Hecataeus who wrote around
515 BC, a time when indeed – as we have seen above – Ludias was the northern
limit of Macedonia.
In [7.131]
he names the Pierian mountains the “Macedonian mountain”, and that is in
agreement with the fact that Western Pieria was the homeland of the
Macedonians:
“…in the
region of Pieria many days, for the road over the Macedonian mountain…”
In
[VIII.137] He says that Perdikkas I found the Macedonians in Lebaea in Upper
Macedonia.
“Now of
this Alexander the seventh ancestor was that Perdikkas who first became despot
of the Macedonians, and that in the manner which here follows: From Argos there
fled to the Illyrians three brothers of the descendents of Temenos, Gauanes,
Aëropos, and Perdiccas; and passing over from the Illyrians into the upper
parts of Macedonia they came to the city of Lebaia”.
Where was
Lebaea? Before presenting Hammond’s conclusions based on later epigraphy let’s
try to find out for ourselves. Herodotus says in Upper Macedonia near Illyria,
so one´s mind goes to the LATER Upper Macedonia which bordered the HISTORICAL
Illyria. But Perdikkas was the first king, the one who started the expansion so
it is impossible to find Macedonians in Upper Macedonia (which Greek Molossian
tribes inhabited) near historical Illyria.
Where was this Illyria and where was
this “Upper Macedonia” in Pediccas’ times? Herodotus helps us find the second
one, since in [VII.128] he makes reference to Xerxes’ army having passed from
the pass of Petra in western mountainous Pieria “from the Macedonians who dwell
in the highland”:
“because he
was meaning to march by the upper road, through the land of the Macedonians who
dwell in the highland, until he came to the Perraibians, passing by the city of
Gonnos.”
The Star of
Vergina the symbol of Greek Macedonia
So
Perdikkas’ “Upper Macedonia” is nothing else but the Macedonian homeland in
western Pieria. What about Illyria? When Perdikkas became king around 700 BC
the central plain was still under Illyrian control. One must consider that the
Illyrian expansion lasted from ca.1000 BC to 650 BC and was the basic reason
that caused the Phrygian migration in Asia minor sometime around 900-800 BC.
Professor Andronikos in Vergina (Aegai) has found three different and
independent cemeteries: the oldest was Phrygian (Lausitz culture) dating from
ca.1100 BC to 900 BC, the second one was Illyrian (Glasinac culture) dating
from ca. 900 BC to 700 BC, and the last one was Macedonian, in which in
historical times the inscriptions survived and the discovered graves have Greek
names and patronymics dating from ca. 480 BC. If to all that we add Polyaenus’
testimony about an early Macedonian-Illyrian conflict around king Argaeus’
times (ca. 650 BC), then it becomes clear that Illyria in Herodotus’ [VIII.137]
is nothing else but the Central Plain and it’s western highlands under Illyrian
control. This “Illyria” is indeed bordering “Upper Macedonia” as we defined it
from [VII.128], that is, Western Pieria.
So we can
be pretty sure that Perdikkas had found the Macedonians grazing their stock in
the highland of Pieria near the city of Lebaea. And finally, here is what
Hammond has to say about Lebaea on page 5 of “The Macedonian State”:
“Where was
Lebaea? An answer was provided recently by the discovery of an inscription
which recorded the dedication of a liberated slave to “The autochthonous Mother
of the Gods at Alebea, a village (attached) to Elimea”, a city of which we know
the location. If Lebaea and Alebea are the same place, which is probable, we
can put Lebaea in the western part of Pieria. This is consistent with our
knowledge that the early home of the Macedonians was around Pieria and
Olympus.”
It is more
than obvious that Lebaea was a pre-Temenid settlement somewhere in the Pierian
mountains. But where? In the archaeological site of Paleogratsiano in the
southwestern slopes of the Pierian mountains, archaeologists have found an
ancient settlement dating from the Early Iron Age which satisfies all the above
pre-requirements and additionally explains the name Lebaea. Immediately west of
the Pierian mountains today, the Haliakmon forms an artificial lake due to the
presence of a dam. Immediately after the dam, the river enters Emathia and in
the border between the modern provinces of Kozani and Emathia it forms a number
of little natural lakes. It is more than probable that before the construction
of the dam this pattern of small lakes created by the river was present in all
its Pierian course. Now Lebaea in Greek literally means “water deposit”, hence
both ancient and modern Greek word “Lebetas” meaning the same thing. All this
indicates that the Macedonians spoke Greek long before the Temenids arrived and
that is why all the Pierian toponyms and hydronyms are of Greek etymology.
After all, the Temenids had nothing to do with the name of Lebaea as they had
nothing to do with the Mycenaean findings near Agios Demetrios.
Returning
to Herodotus, what has he to say about the relation of the Phrygians and the
Macedonians? In [VII.73] he states:
“Now the
Phrygians, as the Macedonians say, used to be called Brigians during the time
that they were natives of Europe and dwelt with the Macedonians; but after they
had changed into Asia, with their country they changed also their name and were
called Phrygians”.
He reminds
us that the Macedonians had lived nearby the Phrygians. This is definitely the
period when the Phrygians were inhabiting the central Macedonian plain and the
Macedonians the Pierian Highland. Furthermore, the fact that they had inhabited
nearby helps us to verify the arrival of the Macedonians in Pieria. We know
that the Phrygians had migrated to Asia Minor sometime between 900 and 800 BC
due to Illyrian harassment. We also know that the Macedonians were heavily
influenced by the Phrygians in both tradition, religion, and language. The
eminent linguist Claude Brixhe (and an expert in the Phrygian language) in his
model of “phonological osmosis” has argued that the Macedonian dialect is
nothing else than a north-western Greek dialect heavily influenced
phonologically by the Phrygians and that explains perfectly it’s
“unorthodoxies” in respect to the other Greek dialects. The same tendencies of
voicing and deaspiration of the standard Greek unvoiced aspirates are not only
found in the Macedonian dialect, but also in some rare dialectic forms of the
Dorian and Aeolic dialects (which descent from the same northern-Greek
precursor as the Macedonian) and also in the Pamphylian Greek dialect in
southern Anatolia where the Pamphylians were neighboring the Luwian speakers of
Lycia and Cilicia. Even there the same unorthodoxies can be found (Aspendos and
andropos instead of “standard” Greek Aspenthos and anthropos) and that means
that what happened to the Macedonians is nothing more than what has happened in
every Greek dialect spoken in the borders of the Greek-speaking world.
The fact
that the Macedonians were heavily influenced in both culture and language by
the Phrygians means that they had inhabited nearby for a very long time. The
Phrygians stayed in Macedonia from ca 1150 BC to ca 850 BC and since an
influence of that measure needs at least two centuries of neighbouring, this
means that the Macedonians were in the Pierian mountains all the time that the
Phrygians were in the plain. After all, it was the Phrygian descent in the
first place around 1200 BC that prompted the whole “migrating” phenomenon that
caused the dispersion of the Northern Greek tribes from the Boion range to the
rest of the peninsula, bringing the Dorians in the Peloponnese and the
Macedonians in Pieria. In this time frame the Mycenaean findings in Western
Pieria dated around 1200 -1100 BC (that is, after the so called “Trojan
Balkanian Operation” that Herodotus mentions, which caused the migration of the
Magnetes south of the Penius and the massive fortifications of the south Greek
Mycenaean centres around 1250 BC (LH IIIB)) must be attributed to the
Macedonians, the “Highlanders” of Pieria.
After all
that, the conclusion is that Herodotus is a valuable historical source when one
knows what to accept and what to reject. Everything he said about the
Macedonians, their kinship with the Dorians, their gathering in mountainous
Pieria from where they started their expansion and their neighbouring with the
Phrygians are things that linguists and archaeologists have confirmed directly
or indirectly.
In a
general discusion about Herodotus’ credibility in the introduction of the
Italian edition of his “Histories” (the one translated by Fulvio Barberis and
edited by Garzanti) , Luciano Canfora states : certainly like every mortal
Herodotus wasn’t infallible , but when we must discuss about his ability to
discriminate between true and false and his willingness to express the first ,
Herodotus speaks by himself:
In
[III,124] he states : ” For Polycrates was the first of the Hellenes of whom we
have any knowledge, who set his mind upon having command of the sea, excepting
Minos the Cnossian (or Knossian) and any other who may have had command of the sea before his
time. Of that which we call mortal race Polycrates was the first”.
And this is
a proof that he can distinguish between myth (Minos the Cnossian ,a
mythological figure) and reality (Polykrates of Samos , a person of the “mortal
race” that is a historical person) although Thucydides -who is generally
considered more standard and less “naif”- failed to make this distinction in
[I.4].
About his
willingness to speak the truth in [VII.139] he states: “And here I am compelled
by necessity to declare an opinion which in the eyes of most men would seem to
be invidious, but nevertheless I will not abstain from saying that which I see
evidently to be the truth”.
THE NAME MACEDONIAN IN Hellenic (Greek) LANGUAGE
For the History however, Mythology says that Macedonia (Makedonia) was named after Makedon, who was the founder of the people of the Macedonians, who, in a
sense, was the son of Zeus and Thyia, while in another son of the King of
Arcadia Lycaona. Herodotus says that the Macedonians are descendants of the
Thomenaeans - Iraklidon from Argos, who left the princes Gavani, Aero and
Perdiccas, and settled in this northern region of Greece.
Also for
the history, the names Makedonia and Macedonian originate from the Doric word "makos" (meaning length) and state that Makedonia (Macedonia) is the country with the tall,
long humans.
Strabo the
father of Geography has describe:
“There
remain of Europe, first, Macedonia and the parts of Thrace that are contiguous
to it and extend as far as Byzantium; secondly, Greece; and thirdly, the
islands that are close by. Macedonia, of course, is a part of Greece, yet now,
since I am following the nature and shape of the places geographically, I have decided
to classify it apart from the rest of Greece and to join it with that part of
Thrace which borders on it and extends as far as the mouth of the Euxine and
the Propontis. Then, a little further on, Strabo mentions Cypsela and the
Hebrus River, and also describes a sort of parallelogram in which the whole of
Macedonia lies.”
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