1. The first Macedonians

Macedon or Macedonia (Greek Μακεδονία Makedonía) was the name of a ancient Greek kingdom in the northern-most part of ancient Greece, bordered by the kingdom of Epirus to the west and the region of Thrace to the east.

For a brief period it became the most powerful state in the ancient Near East after Alexander the Great conquered most of the known world, inaugurating the Hellenistic period of Greek history.

This side of tetradrachma was created by Alexander the Great and proves that the Macedonians was Greeks.
If you see in the right side of this coin you will see the name ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ
(Alexander) it's wrote it in Greek language.


That is only 1 of 3000 proves that the Macedonians are totally Greeks.

The first Macedonian state emerged in the 8th or early 7th century BC under the Argead Dynasty, who allegedly migrated to the region from the southern Greek city of Argos (thus the name Argead). Their first king is recorded as Perdiccas I. The kingdom was situated in the fertile alluvial plain, watered by the rivers Haliacmon and Axius, called Lower Macedonia, north of the mountain Olympus.
Around the time of Alexander I of Macedon, the Macedonians started to expand into Eordaia, Bottiaea, Pieria, Mygdonia, and Almopia, mountains regions settled by different tribes, usually called Upper Macedonia. Near the modern city of Veria, Perdiccas I (or, more likely, his son, Argaeus I) built his capital, Aigai (modern Vergina). After a brief period of Persian overlordship under Darius Hystaspes, the state regained its independence under King Alexander I (495–450 BC).

Macedonia at 800-146 BC




The Vergina Sun, the 16-ray star covering what appears to be the royal burial larnax of Philip II of Macedon, discovered in Vergina, Greece.



And here is the Larnax





That is totally prove that the Macedonians was, is and will be
Greeks for ever.

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