Ancient Macedonian was either an ancient Greek dialect—part of Northwest or Aeolic Greek—or a Hellenic language spoken by the ancient Macedonians during the 1st millennium BC. Spoken originally in the kingdom of Macedon, it gradually fell out of use during the 4th century BC, marginalized by the Macedonian aristocracy's use of Attic Greek, the dialect that became the basis of Koine Greek, the lingua franca of the Hellenistic period. It became extinct during either the Hellenistic or Roman imperial period, and was entirely replaced by Koine Greek.

While the bulk of surviving public and private inscriptions found in ancient Macedonia were written in Attic Greek (and later in Koine Greek), fragmentary documentation of a vernacular local Macedonian variety comes from onomastic evidence, ancient glossaries, and recent epigraphic discoveries in the Greek region of Macedonia, such as the curse tablets from Pella and Pydna.

Ancient Macedon up to the death of Philip II (r. 359 – 336 BC), showing the Upper and Lower divisions

Classification

Scholars have variously proposed that ancient Macedonian was a dialect of Greek, a sister language or an independent Indo-European language, and the disputes have sometimes had modern nationalistic overtones. Research has also considered the extent of influence from Thessalian Aeolic Greek and non-Greek substrata or adstrata, such as Phrygian, Illyrian, and Thracian. There has been some recent scholarly agreement, often expressed as cautious or tentative, that ancient Macedonian is a dialect of the Northwest Greek group. A minority of scholars continues to view the language as a separate Indo-European language related to Greek. Suggested classifications include:

  • A Greek dialect, part of the Northwest Doric group of dialects; pioneered by Friedrich Wilhelm Sturz[de] (1808), and subsequently supported by Olivier Masson (1996), Michael Meier-Brügger (2003), Johannes Engels (2010), Simon Hornblower (2011), J. Méndez Dosuna (2012), Georgios Babiniotis (2014), Joachim Matzinger (2016), Georgios Giannakis (2017), Claude Brixhe (2018), M. B. Hatzopoulos (2017, 2020), Emilio Crespo (2017, 2023), Lucien Van Beek (2022) and Jessica Lamont (2023).
  • A Greek dialect related to, or a version of, Aeolic Greek; suggested by August Fick (1874), Otto Hoffmann (1906), N. G. L. Hammond (1997), Ian Worthington (2012) and Wojciech Sowa (2007, 2018, 2022).
  • A sister language of Greek, according to a scheme in which Macedonian and Greek are the two branches of a Greco-Macedonian subgroup, also called Hellenic (or Helleno-Macedonian) suggested by Georgiev (1966), Joseph (2001) and Hamp (2013).

Among those who support that ancient Macedonian was a Greek dialect, Angelos Boufalis suggests that "several features can be established as local and most of them seem indeed to be shared with the NW Doric and/or the Thessalian dialect", and also that "rather than a monolithic dialect throughout, different local or regional idioms may have had been spoken in this extensive geographical area". Sowa suggests that "it seems also possible that the inhabitants of the Lower Macedonia spoke an Aeolic dialect, and those from Upper Macedonia a north-western Greek dialect". Hammond suggests that in the region of Upper Macedonia, the tribes of Elimiotes, Orestes, Lyncestae, and Pelagones, were all Epirotic tribes speaking the Northwest Greek dialect.

Properties

Because of the fragmentary sources of Ancient Macedonian, only a little is understood about the special features of the language. A notable sound-law is that the voiced aspirates (/bʰ, dʰ, gʰ/) of Proto-Indo-European sometimes appear as voiced stops /b, d, g/, (written β, δ, γ), whereas they were generally unvoiced as /pʰ, tʰ, kʰ/ (φ, θ, χ) elsewhere in most Greek.

  • Macedonian δάνος dánοs ('death', from PIE *dhenh₂- 'to leave'), compared to Attic θάνατος thánatos
  • Macedonian ἀβροῦτες abroûtes or ἀβροῦϝες abroûwes, compared to Attic ὀφρῦς ophrûs for 'eyebrows'
  • Macedonian Βερενίκη Bereníkē, compared to Attic Φερενίκη Phereníkē, 'bearing victory' (Personal name)
  • Macedonian ἄδραια adraia ('bright weather'), compared to Attic αἰθρία aithría, from PIE *h₂aidh-
  • Macedonian βάσκιοι báskioi ('fasces'), compared to Attic φάσκωλος pháskōlos 'leather sack', from PIE *bhasko
  • According to Herodotus 7.73 (c.440 BC), the Macedonians claimed that the Phryges were called Bryges before they migrated from Thrace to Anatolia (around 8th–7th century BC).
  • According to Plutarch, Moralia Macedonians use 'b' instead of 'ph', while Delphians use 'b' in the place of 'p'.
  • Macedonian μάγειρος mágeiros ('butcher') was a loan from Doric into Attic. Vittore Pisani has suggested an ultimately Macedonian origin for the word, which could then be cognate to μάχαιρα mákhaira ('knife', < PIE *magh-, 'to fight')

Macedonian shared with Thessalian, Elean, and Epirote, an "oddity" of cases where voiced stops (/bdg/, written ⟨β δ γ⟩) appear to correspond to Proto-Indo-European voiced aspirates, /bʰdʰɡʰ/. In most Greek, the Proto-Indo-European aspirates were devoiced to voiceless aspirates /pʰtʰkʰ/, written ⟨ɸ θ χ⟩ (though these would later become fricatives in Attic Koine around the first century AD). As with Macedonian, this phenomenon is sometimes attributed to non-Greek substrate and adstrate influence, with some linguists attributing such an influence on Epirote to Illyrian. Filos, however, notes, that the attribution of ⟨β⟩, ⟨δ⟩ and ⟨γ⟩ for specifically voiced stops is not secure. Simon Hornblower writes: "Little is known about how Macedonian Greek was spoken, except that for instance 'Philip' was pronounced 'Bilip' (...)."

If γοτάν gotán ('pig') is related to the Proto-Hellenic noun *gʷous, and hence to the PIE noun *gʷṓws ('cattle'), this would indicate that the labiovelars were either intact, or merged with the velars, unlike the usual Greek treatment (Attic βοῦς boûs). Such deviations, however, are not unknown in Greek dialects; compare Laconian Doric (the dialect of Sparta) γλεπ- glep- for common Greek βλεπ- blep-, as well as Doric γλάχων gláchōn and Ionic γλήχων glēchōn for common Greek βλήχων blēchōn. A number of examples suggest that voiced velar stops were devoiced, especially word-initially: κάναδοι kánadoi, 'jaws' (< PIE *genu-); κόμβους kómbous, 'molars' (< PIE *gombh-); within words: ἀρκόν arkón (Attic ἀργός argós); the Macedonian toponym Akesamenai, from the Pierian name Akesamenos (if Akesa- is cognate to Greek agassomai, agamai, "to astonish"; cf. the Thracian name Agassamenos). In Aristophanes' The Birds, the form κεβλήπυρις keblēpyris ('red head', the name of a bird, perhaps the goldfinch or redpoll) is found, showing a Macedonian-style voiced stop in place of a standard Greek unvoiced aspirate: κεβ(α)λή keb(a)lē versus κεφαλή kephalē ('head').

A number of the Macedonian words, particularly in Hesychius of Alexandria's lexicon, are disputed (i.e., some do not consider them actual Macedonian words) and some may have been corrupted in the transmission. Thus abroutes may be read as abrouwes (αβρουϝες), with tau (Τ) replacing a digamma. If so, this word would perhaps be encompassable within a Greek dialect; however, others (e.g. A. Meillet) see the dental as authentic and think that this specific word would perhaps belong to an Indo-European language different from Greek.[citation needed]

Emilio Crespo, a researcher at the Autonomous University of Madrid, concludes that: "the inscriptions from Aigeai, the ancient capital of the Macedonian kingdom, and from the other regions (Pieria, Beroia and Eordaia) that formed the core of the ancient Temenid kingdom show occasional instances... in which ⟨β δ γ⟩ appear instead of ⟨ɸ θ χ⟩ or of ⟨π τ κ⟩, respectively", while "similar examples are also attested in northern Thessaly". Emilio Crespo wrote that "the voicing of voiceless stops and the development of aspirates into voiced fricatives turns out to be the outcome of an internal development of Macedonian as a dialect of Greek", without excluding "the presence of interference from other languages or of any linguistic substrate or adstrate", as also argued by M. Hatzopoulos.

Hatzopoulos supports the hypothesis of a (North-)'Achaean' substratum extending as far north as the head of the Thermaic Gulf, which had a continuous relation, in prehistoric times, both in Thessaly and Macedonia, with the Northwest Greek-speaking populations living on the other side of the Pindus mountain range, and contacts became cohabitation when the Argead Macedonians completed their wandering from Orestis to Lower Macedonia in the 7th c. BC. According to this hypothesis, Hatzopoulos concludes that the Ancient Macedonian dialect of the historical period, attested in inscriptions such as Pella curse tablet, is a sort of koine resulting from the interaction and the influences of various elements, the most important of which are the North-Achaean substratum, the Northwest Greek dialect of the Argead Macedonians, and the Thracian and Phrygian adstrata. Claude Brixhe espoused the hypothesis "of a sporadic secondary voicing of unvoiced consonants within the history of Greek", in agreement with Hatzopoulos.

A. Panayotou summarizes some features generally identified through ancient texts and epigraphy:

Phonology

  • Occasional development of voiced aspirates (*bh, *dh, *gh) into voiced stops (b, d, g) (e.g. Βερενίκα, Attic Φερενίκη)
  • Retention of */aː/ (e.g. Μαχάτας), also present in Epirotic
  • [aː] as a result of contraction between [aː] and [ɔː]
  • Apocope of short vowels in prepositions in synthesis (παρκαττίθεμαι, Attic παρακατατίθεμαι)
  • Syncope (hyphairesis) and diphthongization are used to avoid hiatus (e.g. Θετίμα, Attic Θεοτίμη; compare with Epirotic Λαγέτα, Doric Λαογἐτα).
  • Occasional retention of the pronunciation [u] of /u(ː)/ in local cult epithets or nicknames (Κουναγίδας = Κυναγίδας)
  • Raising of /ɔː/ to /uː/ in proximity to nasal (e.g. Κάνουν, Attic Κανών)
  • Simplification of the sequence /ign/ to /iːn/ (γίνομαι, Attic γίγνομαι)
  • Loss of aspiration of the consonant cluster /sth/ (> /st/) (γενέσται, Attic γενέσθαι)

Morphology

Ancient Macedonian morphology is shared with ancient Epirus, including some of the oldest inscriptions from Dodona. The morphology of the first declension nouns with an -ας ending is also shared with Thessalian (e.g. Epitaph for Pyrrhiadas, Kierion).

  • First-declension masculine and feminine in -ας and -α respectively (e.g. Πευκέστας, Λαομάγα)
  • First-declension masculine genitive singular in -α (e.g. Μαχάτα)
  • First-declension genitive plural in -ᾶν
  • First person personal pronoun dative singular ἐμίν
  • Temporal conjunction ὁπόκα
  • Possibly, a non-sigmatic nominative masculine singular in the first declension (ἱππότα, Attic ἱππότης)

Onomastics

Anthroponymy

M. Hatzopoulos and Johannes Engels summarize the Macedonian anthroponymy (that is names borne by people from Macedonia before the expansion beyond the Axios or people undoubtedly hailing from this area after the expansion) as follows:

  • Epichoric (local) Greek names that either differ from the phonology of the introduced Attic or that remained almost confined to Macedonians throughout antiquity
  • Panhellenic (common) Greek names
  • Identifiable non-Greek (Thracian and Illyrian) names
  • Names without a clear Greek etymology that can't however be ascribed to any identifiable non-Greek linguistic group.

Common in the creation of ethnics is the use of -έστης, -εστός especially when derived from sigmatic nouns (ὄρος > Ὀρέστης but also Δῖον > Διασταί).

Per Engels, the above material supports that Macedonian anthroponymy was predominantly Greek in character.

Toponymy

The toponyms of Macedonia proper are generally Greek, though some of them show a particular phonology and a few others are non-Greek.

Calendar

The Macedonian calendar's origins go back to Greek prehistory. The names of the Macedonian months, just like most of the names of Greek months, are derived from feasts and related celebrations in honor of the Greek gods. Most of them combine a Macedonian dialectal form with a clear Greek etymology (e.g Δῐός from Zeus; Περίτιος from Heracles Peritas ("Guardian") ; Ξανδικός/Ξανθικός from Xanthos, "the blond" (probably a reference to Heracles); Άρτεμίσιος from Artemis etc.) with the possible exception of one, which is attested in other Greek calendars as well. According to Martin P. Nilsson, the Macedonian calendar is formed like a regular Greek one and the names of the months attest the Greek nationality of the Macedonians.

Epigraphy

Macedonian onomastics: the earliest epigraphical documents attesting substantial numbers of Macedonian proper names are the second Athenian alliance decree with Perdiccas II (~417–413 BC), the decree of Kalindoia (~335–300 BC) and seven curse tablets of the 4th century BC bearing mostly names.

About 99% of the roughly 6,300 inscriptions discovered by archaeologists within the confines of ancient Macedonia were written in the Greek language, using the Greek alphabet. The legends in all currently discovered coins are also in Greek. The Pella curse tablet, a text written in a distinct Doric Greek dialect, found in 1986 and dated to between mid to early 4th century BC, has been forwarded as an argument that ancient Macedonian was a dialect of North-Western Greek, part of the Doric dialect group.

Hesychius' glossary

A body of idiomatic words has been assembled from ancient sources, mainly from coin inscriptions, and from the 5th century lexicon of Hesychius of Alexandria, amounting to about 150 words and 200 proper names, though the number of considered words sometimes differs from scholar to scholar. The majority of these words can be confidently assigned to Greek albeit some words would appear to reflect a dialectal form of Greek. However, some words are not easily identifiable as Greek and reveal, for example, voiced stops where Greek shows voiceless aspirates.

⟨†⟩ marked words which have been corrupted.

  • ἄβαγνα 'roses amaranta (unwithered)' (Attic ῥόδα rhoda, Aeolic βρόδα broda roses). (LSJ: unfading. Amaranth flower. (Aeolic ἄβα 'youthful prime' + ἁγνός hagnos 'pure, chaste, unsullied) or epithet aphagna from 'purify'. If abagnon is the proper name for rhodon rose, then it is cognate to Persian باغ bāġ, 'garden', Gothic 𐌱𐌰𐌲𐌼𐍃 bagms 'tree' and Greek 'cabbage-seed'. Finally, a Phrygian borrowing is highly possible if we think of the famous Gardens of Midas, where roses grow of themselves (see Herodotus 8.138.2, Athenaeus 15.683)
  • ἀβαρκνᾷ κομᾷ † τὲ Μακεδόνες (? ἄβαρκνα abarkna hunger, famine).
  • ἀβαρύ 'oregano' (Hes. ὀρίγανον origanon) (LSJ: βαρύ perfume used in incense, Attic βαρύ barú 'heavy') (LSJ: sweet Origanum Majorana) (Hes. for origanon ἀγριβρόξ agribrox, ἄβρομον abromon, ἄρτιφος artiphos, κεβλήνη keblênê)
  • ἀβλόη, ἀλογεῖ abloē, alogei Text Corrupted †ἀβλόη σπένδε Μακεδόνες [ἀλογεῖ σπεῖσον Μακεδόνες] )
  • ἀβροῦτες or ἀβροῦϜες abroûtes or abroûwes 'eyebrows' (Hes. Attic ὀφρῦς ophrûs acc. pl., ὀφρύες nom., PIE *bʰru-) (Serbian obrve, Lithuanian bruvis, Persian ابرو abru) (Koine Greek , Modern Greek φρύδια frydia)
  • ἀγκαλίς Attic 'weight, burden, load' Macedonian 'sickle' (Hes. Attic ἄχθος ákhthos, δρέπανον drépanon, LSJ Attic ἀγκαλίς ankalís 'bundle', or in pl. ἀγκάλαι ankálai 'arms' (body parts), ἄγκαλος ánkalos 'armful, bundle', ἀγκάλη ankálē 'the bent arm' or 'anything closely enfolding', as the arms of the sea, PIE *ank 'to bend') (ἀγκυλίς 'barb' Oppianus.C.1.155.)
  • ἄδδαι addai poles of a chariot or car, logs (Attic rhumoi) (Aeolic , Attic ozoi, branches, twigs) PIE *H₂ó-sd-o-, branch
  • ἀδῆ adē 'clear sky' or 'the upper air' (Hes. οὐρανός ouranós 'sky', LSJ and Pokorny Attic αἰθήρ aithēr 'ether, the upper, purer air', hence 'clear sky, heaven')
  • ἄδισκον potion, cocktail (Attic )
  • ἄδραια 'fine weather, open sky' (Hes. Attic αἰθρία aithría, Epirotan ἀδρία, PIE *aidh-)
  • Ἀέροπες Aeropes tribe (wind-faced) ( +( opos, Boeotian name for the bird merops)
  • ἀκόντιον akontion spine or backbone, anything ridged like the backbone: ridge of a hill or mountain (Attic ) (Attic spear, javelin) (Aeolic akontion part of troops)
  • ἀκρέα girl (Attic κόρη korê, Ionic kourê, Doric/Aeolic kora, Arcadian korwa, Laconian kyrsanis (Ἀκρέα, epithet of Aphrodite in Cyprus, instead of Akraia, of the heights). Epithet of a goddess from an archaic Corcyraic inscription (ορϝος hιαρος τας Ακριας).
  • ἀκρουνοί 'boundary stones' nom. pl. (Hes. ὃροι hóroi, LSJ Attic ἄκρον ákron 'at the end or extremity', from ἀκή akē 'point, edge', PIE *ak 'summit, point' or 'sharp')
  • ἀλίη 'boar or boarfish' (Attic kapros) (PIE *ol-/*el- "red, brown" (in animal and tree names) (Homeric fawn, Attic elaphos 'deer', elk)
  • ἄλιζα (also alixa) 'White Poplar' (Attic λεύκη leúkē, Epirotan ἄλυζα, Thessalian alphinia, LSJ: globularia alypum) (Pokorny Attic ἐλάτη elátē 'fir, spruce', PIE *ol-, *el-, P.Gmc. and Span. aliso 'alder')
  • ἄξος 'timber' (Hes. Attic ὓλη ) (Cretan Doric Attic alsos 'grove' little forest. (PIE *os- ash tree (OE. æsc ash tree), (Greek οξυά oxya, Albanian ah, beech), (Armenian հացի hac'i ash tree)
  • ἀορτής , 'swordsman' (Hes. ξιφιστής; Homer áor 'sword'; Attic aortēr 'swordstrap', Modern Greek αορτήρ aortír 'riflestrap'; hence aorta) (According to Suidas: Many now say the knapsack ἀβερτὴ instead of . Both the object and the word [are] Macedonian.
  • Ἀράντιδες Αrantides Erinyes (in dative ἐρινύσι) (Arae name for Erinyes, accursed, invoke, curse, pray or sprinkle, purify.
  • ἄργελλα argella 'bathing hut'. Cimmerian ἄργιλλα or argila 'subterranean dwelling' (Ephorus in Strb. 5.4.5) PIE *areg-; borrowed into Balkan Latin and gave Romanian argea (pl. argele), "wooden hut", dialectal (Banat) arghela "stud farm"); cf. Sanskrit argalā 'latch, bolt', Old English reced "building, house", Albanian argësh "harrow, crude bridge of crossbars, crude raft supported by skin bladders"
  • ἀργι(ό)πους 'eagle' (LSJ Attic ἀργίπους argípous 'swift- or white-footed', PIE *hrg'i-pods < PIE *arg + PIE *ped)
  • Ἄρητος Arētos epithet or alternative of Herakles (Ares-like)
  • ἀρκόν 'leisure, idleness' (LSJ Attic ἀργός argós 'lazy, idle' nom. sing., ἀργόν acc.)
  • ἀρφύς (Attic himas strap, rope), ( harpedôn cord, yarn; ἁρπεδόνα Rhodes, Lindos II 2.37).
  • ἄσπιλος 'torrent' (Hes. χείμαῤῥος kheímarrhos, Attic ἄσπιλος áspilos 'without stain, spotless, pure')
  • βαβρήν lees of olive-oil (LSJ: βάβρηκες babrêkes gums, or food in the teeth, βαβύας babuas mud)
  • βαθάρα pukliê (Macedonian), purlos (Athamanian) (unattested; maybe food, porridge, wheat)
  • βίῤῥοξ dense, thick (LSJ: )
  • γάρκα rod (Attic ) (EM: axle-pin) (LSJ: rod)
  • γόλα gola or bowels, intestines (Homeric ) PIE: *ghel-ond-, *ghol-n•d- stomach; bowels
  • γοτάν 'pig' acc. sing. (PIE *gʷou- 'cattle', (Attic βοτόν botón ' beast', in plural βοτά botá 'grazing animals') (Laconian 'sow' female pig, and pl. grônades) (LSJ: , to imitate the sound of pigs) ( sheep or pig)
  • γυλλάς kind of glass ( a Megarian cup)
  • γῶψ pl. gopes macherel (Attic koloios) (LSJ: a fish) (Modern Greek gopa 'bogue' fish pl. gopes)
  • δαίτας daitas caterer waiter (Attic
  • δάνος 'death', (Hes. Attic thánatos θάνατος 'death', from root θαν- than-), PIE *dʰenh₂- 'to leave, δανoτής danotês (disaster, pain) Sophocles Lacaenae fr.338
  • δανῶν danōn 'murderer' (Attic θανών thanōn dead, past participle)
  • δάρυλλος 'oak' (Hes. Attic δρῦς drûs, PIE *doru-)
  • δρῆες drêes or δρῆγες small birds (Attic strouthoi) (Elean , strouthos, Nicander.Fr.123.) (LSJ: strouthoi, strouthos)
  • δώραξ spleen, (Attic θώραξ chest, corslet
  • ἐπιδειπνίς Macedonian dessert
  • Ζειρηνίς Zeirênis epithet or alternative for Aphrodite ( Siren-like)
  • Ἠμαθία ex-name of Macedonia, region of Emathia from mythological Emathus (Homeric , river-sandy land, PIE *samadh. Generally the coastal Lower Macedonia in contrast to mountainous Upper Macedonia. For meadow land (mē-2, m-e-t- to reap), see Pokorny.
  • Θαῦλος Thaulos epithet or alternative of Ares (Θαύλια Thaulia 'festival in Doric Tarentum, θαυλίζειν thaulizein 'to celebrate like Dorians', Thessalian Ζεὺς Θαύλιος Zeus Thaulios, the only attested in epigraphy ten times, Athenian Ζεὺς Θαύλων Zeus Thaulôn, Athenian family Θαυλωνίδαι Thaulônidai
  • Θούριδες Nymphs Muses (Homeric rushing, impetuous.
  • ἰζέλα wish, good luck (Attic agathêi tychêi) (Doric , , Arcadian ) (Cretan agathon) or Thracian wine.
  • ἴλαξ ílax 'the holm-oak, evergreen or scarlet oak' (Hes. Attic πρῖνος prînos, Latin ilex)
  • ἰν δέᾳ midday (Attic , mesêmbria) (Arcadian also in instead of Attic en)
  • κἄγχαρμον having the lance up τὸ τὴν λόγχην ἄνω ἔχον (Hes. ἄγχαρμον ἀνωφερῆ τὴν αἰχμήν ἔχων Ibyc? Stes?) having upwards the point of a spear)
  • κἄ, Crasis and, together, simultaneously + up ( hortatory password
  • κάραβος Macedonian 'gate, door' (Cf. any small dry body,piece of wood (Hes. Attic 'meat roasted over coals'; Attic karabos 'stag-beetle'; 'crayfish'; 'light ship'; hence modern Greek καράβι karávi) 'the worms in dry wood' (Attic 'stag-beetle, horned beetle; crayfish') 'a sea creature' (Attic 'crayfish, prickly crustacean; stag-beetle')
  • καρπαία Thessalo-Macedonian mimic military dance (see also Carpaea) Homeric swift (for foot) eager, ravenous.
  • κίκεῤῥοι kíkerroi 'chick-peas' (Hes. Attic ὦχροι ōkhroi, PIE *k̂ik̂er- 'pea') (LSJ: land crocodile)
  • κομμάραι kommarai or komarai crawfishes (Attic karides) (LSJ: a kind of lobster, Epicharmus.60, Sophron.26, Rhinthon.18:-- also kammaris, idos Galen.6.735.) ( a fish Epicharmus.47.)
  • κόμβοι 'molars' (Attic γομφίοι gomphioi, dim. of γόμφος 'a large, wedge-shaped bolt or nail; any bond or fastening', PIE *gombh-)
  • κυνοῦπες or kynoutos bear (Hesychius kynoupeus, knoupeus, knôpeus) ( dog-faced) ( beast esp. serpent instead of kinôpeton, blind acc. Zonar (from dark) (if kynoutos beast)
  • λακεδάμα ὕδωρ ἁλμυρὸν ἄλικι ἐπικεχυμένον salty water with , rice-wheat or fish-sauce.(Cf. 'sauce or pickle composed of brine and garlic'). According to Albrecht von Blumenthal, -ama corresponds to Attic ἁλμυρός halmurós 'salty'; Cretan Doric for Attic halmē; laked- is cognate to Proto-Germanic *lauka leek, possibly related is Λακεδαίμων Laked-aímōn, the name of the Spartan land.
  • λείβηθρον leíbēthron 'stream' (Hes. Attic ῥεῖθρον rheîthron, also λιβάδιον libádion, 'a small stream', dim. of λιβάς libás; PIE *lei, 'to flow'); typical Greek productive suffix -θρον (-thron) (Macedonian toponym, Pierian Leibethra place/tomb of Orpheus)
  • ματτύης kind of bird (ματτύη mattuê a meat-dessert of Macedonian or Thessalian origin) (verb mattuazo to prepare the mattue) (Athenaeus)
  • παραός eagle or kind of eagle (Attic aetos, Pamphylian aibetos) (PIE *por- 'going, passage' + *awi- 'bird') (Greek para- 'beside' + Hes. wind) (It may exist as food in Lopado...pterygon)
  • περιπέτεια peripeteia or περίτια Macedonian festival in month Peritios. (Hesychius text περί[πε]τ[ε]ια)
  • ῥάματα bunch of grapes (Ionic rhagmata, rhages Koine rhôgmata, rhôges, )
  • ῥοῦτο this (neut.) (Attic τοῦτο )
  • ταγόναγα tagonaga Macedonian institution, administration (Thessalian ταγὸς commander + ἄγω lead)

Other sources

  • αἰγίποψ eagle (EM 28.19) (error for argipous? maybe goat-eater? + digestion) (Cf.eagle turtle-eater)
  • ἀργυρὰσπιδες (wiki Argyraspides) and (golden and bronze-shielded)
  • δράμις a Macedonian bread (Thessalian bread )(Athamanian bread dramix. (Athenaeus)
  • καυσία felt hat used by Macedonians, forming part of the regalia of the kings.
  • κοῖος number (Athenaeus when talking about Koios, the Titan of intelligence; and the Macedonians use koios as synonymous with (LSJ: mark, perceive, hear pledge, Hes. compose s.v. κοίασον, σύνθες) (Laocoön, thyoskoos observer of sacrifices, akouô hear) (All from PIE root *keu to notice, observe, feel; to hear).
  • πεζέταιροι (wiki Pezhetairoi), Hetairidia, Macedonian religious festival (Attic ,) (Aeolic )
  • Πύδνα Púdna, Pydna toponym (Pokorny Attic πυθμήν puthmēn 'bottom, sole, base of a vessel'; PIE *bʰudʰnā; Attic pýndax 'bottom of vessel') (Cretan,Pytna Hierapytna, Sacred Pytna)
  • σίγυνος spear (Cypriotic sigynon) (Illyrian ) (Origin: Illyrian acc. to Fest.p. 453 L., citing Ennius) (Cyprian acc. to Herodotus and Aristotle Il. cc., Scythian acc. to Sch.Par.A.R.4.320 (cf. 111)
  • σφύραινα , hammer-fish sphyraena (Strattis, Makedones (fr. 28) – (Attic. κέστρα, ) (cestra, needle-fish (modern Greek fish σφυρίδα, sfyrida)
  • ὐετής of the same year Marsyas (Attic autoetês, Poetic oietês)
  • χάρων lion (Attic/Poetic fierce, for lion, eagle instead of , bright-eyed)

Proposed

A number of Hesychius words are listed orphan; some of them have been proposed as Macedonian.

  • ἀγέρδα wild pear-tree (Attic ἄχερδος ).
  • ἀδαλός adalos charcoal dust (Attic αἴθαλος aithalos, ἄσβολος asbolos)
  • ἄδδεε addee imp. hurry up ἐπείγου (Attic thee of run)
  • ἄδις 'hearth' (Hes. ἐσχάρα eskhára, LSJ Attic αἶθος aîthos 'fire, burning heat')
  • αἰδῶσσα aidôssa (Attic portico, corridor, verandah, a loggia leading from aulê yard to prodomos)
  • βάσκιοι 'fasces' (Hes. Attic δεσμοὶ φρῡγάνων desmoì phrūgánōn, Pokorny βασκευταί baskeutaí, Attic φασκίδες phaskídes, Attic φάσκωλος pháskōlos 'leather sack', PIE *bʰasko-)
  • βίξ sphinx (Boeotian phix), (Attic )
  • δαλάγχα sea (Attic thalatta) (Ionic thalassa)
  • δεδάλαι dedalai package, bundle (Attic dethla, desmai)
  • ἐσκόροδος eskorodos tenon (Attic tormos σκόρθος tornos slice, lathe)
  • Εὐδαλαγῖνες Eudalagines Graces Χάριτες (Attic Εὐθαλγῖνες Euthalgines)
  • κάναδοι 'jaws' nom. pl. (Attic γνάθοι gnathoi, PIE *genu, 'jaw') (Laconian καναδόκα kanadoka notch (V) of an arrow χηλὴ ὀϊστοῦ)
  • λαίβα shield (Doric λαία laia, λαῖφα laipha) (Attic aspis)
  • λάλαβις storm (Attic lailaps)
  • ὁμοδάλιον isoetes plant ( bloom)
  • ῥουβοτός potion (Attic rhophema) rhopheo suck, absorb suck with noise.

Macedonian in Classical sources

In his comedy The Macedonians, the 5th century BC Athenian poet Strattis has a character speak in a non-Attic dialect, but little has survived.

In his history Ab urbe condita Livy (59 BC – 14 AD) has a Macedonian ambassador in the late 3rd century BC argue that Aetolians, Acarnanians and Macedonians were "men of the same language".

In his Histories of Alexander the Great, Quintus Curtius Rufus (1st century AD) relates an argument between Alexander and Philotas, an accused man, as to whether Philotas should address those assembled in a "foreign tongue" (peregrina lingua) or his "native idiom" (patrius sermo).

In his History of the Diadochi, Arrian (fl.1st century AD) says that in 321 BC the Greek general Eumenes sent a man who spoke Macedonian to convince the opposing Macedonian troops that their position was hopeless.

In his Life of Antony, Plutarch (c. AD 40 – 120s) presents Cleopatra (70/69 – 30 BC) as speaking many foreign languages, in contrast with her royal predecessors, some of whom had even ceased to "Macedonise" (μακεδονίζειν, makedonizein).

Contributions to Koine Greek

As a consequence of the Macedonians' role in the formation of the Koine, Macedonian contributed considerable elements, unsurprisingly including some military terminology (διμοιρίτης, ταξίαρχος, ὑπασπισταί, etc.). Among the many contributions were the general use of the first declension grammar for male and female nouns with an -as ending, attested in the genitive of Macedonian coinage from the early 4th century BC of Amyntas III (ΑΜΥΝΤΑ in the genitive; the Attic form that fell into disuse would be ΑΜΥΝΤΟΥ). There were changes in verb conjugation such as in the Imperative δέξα attested in Macedonian sling stones found in Asiatic battlefields, that became adopted in place of the Attic forms. Koine Greek established a spirantisation of beta, gamma and delta, which has been attributed to the Macedonian influence. The term "Macedonian" ended up meaning the Koine Greek in classical sources.

See also

Notes

Inline

General

  • Giannakis, Georgios K.; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis, eds. (2017). . De Gruyter. doi:. ISBN 978-3-11-053213-5. Giannakis, Georgios K. "". In Giannakis, Crespo & Filos (2017), pp. 1–25. Filos, Panagiotis. "". In Giannakis, Crespo & Filos (2017), pp. 215–247. Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. "". In Giannakis, Crespo & Filos (2017), pp. 299–328. Crespo, Emilio. "". In Giannakis, Crespo & Filos (2017), pp. 329–348.
  • Hammond, N. G. L. (1997). . Collected Studies. Vol. IV. Adolf M. Hakkert.
  • Hammond, N. G. L. (2001). . Collected Studies. Vol. V. Adolf M. Hakkert.
  • Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. (2020). . De Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-071876-8.
  • Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian, eds. (2010). . Blackwell Publishing. doi:. ISBN 978-1-444-32751-9. Anson, Edward M. "". In Roisman & Worthington (2010), pp. 3–20. Engels, Johannes. "". In Roisman & Worthington (2010), pp. 81–98.

Further reading

  • Chadwick, John, The Prehistory of the Greek Language. Cambridge, 1963.
  • Crossland, R. A., "The Language of the Macedonians", Cambridge Ancient History, vol. 3, part 1, Cambridge 1982.
  • Hammond, Nicholas G.L., "Literary Evidence for Macedonian Speech", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, Vol. 43, No. 2. (1994), pp. 131–142.
  • Hatzopoulos, M. B. "Le Macédonien: Nouvelles données et théories nouvelles", Ancient Macedonia, Sixth International Symposium, vol. 1. Institute for Balkan Studies, 1999.
  • Ilievski, Petar Hristov[de]. "". In: Studia Minora Facultatis Philosophicae Universitatis Brunensis (Brown University), E36 (1991). pp. 129–140.
  • Katičić, Radoslav. Ancient Languages of the Balkans. The Hague—Paris: Mouton, 1976.
  • Neroznak, V. Paleo-Balkan languages. Moscow, 1978.
  • Rhomiopoulou, Katerina. An Outline of Macedonian History and Art. Greek Ministry of Culture and Science, 1980.
  • Sowa, Wojciech (19 November 2018), Charalambakis, Christoforos; Montanari, Franco; Rengakos, Antonios (eds.), , Studies in Greek Lexicography, De Gruyter, pp. 187–204, doi:, ISBN 978-3-11-062274-4{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)

External links