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Endlosschleife Part 2: Mazedonier vs. Griechen

The untold history of Greek collaboration with Nazi Germany (1941-1944)​


Vallianatos, Markos




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Es ist ganz einfach:

Slawische Mazedonier (mazedonisch Македонци, transkribiert Makedonci) sind eine südslawische Ethnie. Sie bilden die Mehrheitsbevölkerung und die Titularnation Nordmazedoniens.[2] Die slawischen Mazedonier sind nicht mit den antiken Makedonen zu verwechseln. Teilweise beanspruchten sie eine Verwandtschaft mit ihnen – durch das Prespa-Abkommen wurden, zumindest aus rechtlicher Sicht, derartige Ansprüche aufgegeben –, dies ist aber weder wissenschaftlich belegbar noch aus ethnologischer Sicht nachvollziehbar
 
The Pella curse tablet is a text written in a distinct Doric Greek idiom, found in Pella, the ancient capital of Macedon, in 1986.[1] Ιt contains a curse or magic spell (Ancient Greek: κατάδεσμος, katadesmos) inscribed on a lead scroll, dated to the first half of the 4th century BC (circa 375–350 BC). It was published in the Hellenic Dialectology Journal in 1993. It is one of four known texts that may represent a local dialectal form of ancient Greek in Macedonia, all of them identifiable as Doric.[2] These suggest that a Doric Greek dialect was spoken in Macedonia, as was previously proposed based on the West Greek forms of names found in Macedonia. As a result, the Pella curse tablet has been forwarded as an argument that the Ancient Macedonian language was a dialect of North-Western Greek, and one of the Doric dialects



Wenn ihr des Lesen könnt seit ihr Makedonen :

Sie haben keine Berechtigung Anhänge anzusehen. Anhänge sind ausgeblendet.
 

Anhänge

    Sie haben keine Berechtigung Anhänge anzusehen. Anhänge sind ausgeblendet.
Was Historiker darüber denken:

The discovery of the Pella curse tablet, according to Olivier Masson, substantiates the view that the ancient Macedonian language was a form of North-West Greek:[11]


"Yet in contrast with earlier views which made of it {i.e. Macedonian} an Aeolic dialect (O. Hoffmann compared Thessalian) we must by now think of a link with North-West Greek (Locrian, Aetolian, Phocidian, Epirote). This view is supported by the recent discovery at Pella of a curse tablet (4th cent. BC), which may well be the first 'Macedonian' text attested (provisional publication by E. Voutyras; cf. the Bulletin Epigraphique in Rev. Et. Grec. 1994, no. 413); the text includes an adverb "opoka" which is not Thessalian."


Professor Johannes Engels of the University of Cologne argues that the Pella curse tablet provides evidence to support that Macedonian was a North-West Greek dialect:[5]

"Another very important testimony comes from the so-called Pella curse tablet. This is a text written in Doric Greek and found in 1986 [...] This has been judged to be the most important ancient testimony to substantiate that Macedonian was a north-western Greek and mainly a Doric dialect."
 
Ausstellung im Britischen Museum, dagegen können wir net mit Shea mithalten:


Alexander the Great was a king of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon, located in northern Greece and adjacent countries.
 
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