G
Gast3013
Guest
Also kein irredentistischeR Inhalt?
Kennt man ja von dir, immer Schwanz einziehen.
Pozdrav
Das ist eigentlich deine Aufgabe bisher immer gewesen, Lattenheinrich. Wissen auch die meisten hier ...
Wie bspw. hier, als du uns von dir zusammengewürfelte Zitate aus Eugene N. Borza präsentieren wolltest:
http://www.balkanforum.info/f90/mac...ian-phonology-231053/index31.html#post3954043
Dabei scheinst du gekonnt eine wichtige Aussage deines Lieblings zu ignorieren - wie ein Dummschwätzer eben.
Modern Slavs, both Bulgarians and Macedonians, cannot establish a link with antiquity, as the Slavs entered the Balkans centuries after the demise of the ancient Macedonian kingdom. Only the most radical Slavic factions—mostly émigrés in the United States, Canada, and Australia—even attempt to establish a connection to antiquity [...] The twentieth-century development of a Macedonian ethnicity, and its recent evolution into independent statehood following the collapse of the Yugoslav state in 1991, has followed a rocky road. In order to survive the vicissitudes of Balkan history and politics, the Macedonians, who have had no history, need one. They reside in a territory once part of a famous ancient kingdom, which has borne the Macedonian name as a region ever since and was called ”Macedonia” for nearly half a century as part of Yugoslavia. And they speak a language now recognized by most linguists outside Bulgaria, Serbia, and Greece as a south Slavic language separate from Slovenian, Serbo-Croatian, and Bulgarian. Their own so-called Macedonian ethnicity had evolved for more than a century, and thus it seemed natural and appropriate for them to call the new nation “Macedonia” and to attempt to provide some cultural references to bolster ethnic survival..
"Macedonia Redux", in "The Eye Expanded: life and the arts in Greco-Roman Antiquity", ed. Frances B Tichener & Richard F. Moorton, University of California Press, 1999