@AmorPatriaeNostra : who gives a shit mongoloid, I repeat my joke for you:
"Kurdish people are christians!" cause I'm sure that you didn't get it the
first time. Your race isn't so smart I suppose, so I'll repet it again:
"Kurdish people are christians!" Now, have a great ..kurdish night and stay
far from turks, you never know ;)
Greek traditional Music from Macedonia, with ZOURNAS that is like the Ancient Greek "AVLOS" or "OXYAVLOS" (sharp avlos), one of the oldest instruments of ...
Greek Folk Music - Macedonia: Synkathistos Dance 9/8, Bagpipes
Greek Folk Music, Macedonia: Synkathistos Dance 9/8, Bagpipes. Ttraditional synkathistos dance from Macedonia, Greece, in 9/8 time signature. Yiannis ...
“No nation should steal the history and symbols of another nation. For all of us who love history, and know history, Macedonia is as Greek as the Acropolis.” (Michael David Rann, Eleftherotypia newspaper, May 05, 2007)
+Mile Kitich Of course you don't read, TRUTH HURTS YOU! I am kind enough to politely trying to educate you but because you are a FYROMian nationalist idiot you are in denial, you don't read and you only swear, unable to have a reasoned conversation! What a loser! Do me a favour and get lost from my channel, I can't waste more time on you and your childish comments, FYROMian moron! Just remember these words by T.J. Winnifrith, British academic: "FYROM was also an attempt at a multicultural society. Here the fragments are just about holding together, although the cement that binds them is an unreliable mixture of propaganda and myth. The 'Macedonian' language has been created, some rather misty history involving Tsar Samuel, probably a Bulgarian, and Alexander the Great, almost certainly a Greek, has been invented, and the name Macedonia has been adopted. Do we destroy these myths or live with them? Apparently these radical Slavic factions [FYROMians] decided to live with their myths and lies for the constant amusement of the rest of the world!"("Shattered Eagles, Balkan Fragments", Duckworth)Cheers and thanks for the laughs!
+Macedonian Always Greek I don't even read your stupid copy paste comments you turk ! It doesn't hurt to be a Macedonian! So get you fat arse out and get a fucking love you moron !
+Mile Kitich Haha, truth hurts, huh? Barry Wood, TheHuffingtonPost , 10/24/2013: “The Slavmacedonians (FYROMians) have only a connection of geography [FYROM corresponds to ancient Paeonia, not to Macedonia, but borders with Macedonia proper, Greece] to the ancient Macedonians, whose most famous son, Alexander the Great, died hundreds of years before Slavs even arrived in the Balkans. It's an insult that the Republic of Macedonia names the airport of its capital city 'Alexander the Great'. Pursuing a fraudulent identity, Skopje has built statues to a Hellenic-speaking tribe with which it has no lineage. Only an accident of history resulted in the southern part of Yugoslavia (FYROM) having the same name.”
+Mile Kitich By resorting to name calling, you're just admitting your lack of arguments... :) Here, enjoy a passage from “Encyclopedia of European Peoples”, 2006, p.507: “The cultural identity of the people of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) has been an issue of contention and confusion. From the start the new republic aroused antagonism in Greece, which objected to its use of the name 'Macedonia', a Greek word, since the people of the FYROM are ethnically and linguistically Slavic. Slavomacedonian nationalists of the FYROM regularly claim as part of their cultural identity architectural and artistic artifacts [and the history] of the classical Greek period and earlier.”And as Denko Maleski, professor at the University Sts. Cyril and Methodius in Skopje, FYROM (International Politics and Contemporary Political Systems) and former Minister of foreign affairs of the FYROM said:"Liberal minds living within our side of the border, would certainly not feel ashamed of their own Slavic language, or the fact that their basic identity, just like the language, is Slavic, instead of establishing a variety of racist theories about antiquity and some super-humans from which we [FYROMians] originate".(Radio Free Europe, 31/3/2013)
+Mile Kitich Now I got it, you are a FYROMian, hence a Slav (Bulgarian or Serbian, and judging by your surname you are a Serbian). And you are not just another FYROMian, you are also one of those FYROMian moronic nationalists posting idiotic nonsense because you have no arguments... :) Anyway, since you are a Slav you can't be a Macedonian because real Macedonians were, are, and will always be Greek, simple as that. :) Rene Guerdan, French historian: "The Macedonians are and have always been Greeks, and the creation of a Socialist Republic of Macedonia [FYROM] with Skopje as its capital is only a sad farce."Cheers!
+Mile Kitich I'm sorry, I don't understand you... Anyway, to sum up (and since you are obviously ignorant), here is a passage from Herodotus quoting Alexander I of Macedon, king of Macedon from 498 BCE to 454 BCE, speaking about his own ethnicity:"Men of Athens [...] In truth I would not tell it to you if I did not care so much for all Hellas [Greece] ; I myself am by ancient descent a Greek, and I would not willingly see Hellas [Greece] change her freedom for slavery."(Herodotus, "Histories", 9.45.1-2 //www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Hdt.+9.45&fromdoc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0126)
+Mile Kitich Of course they are pure Macedonian, bagpipes are attested in Greece since antiquity under the names askos (ασκός) and askaulos (άσκαυλος) and the bagpiper was called ασκαυλητής: //www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3Da%29skau%2FlhsYou must not confuse Macedonia proper (Greece) with the modern Slavic/Albanian state of the FYROM. Macedonia was and is a part of Greece, while FYROM lies in ancient Paeonia, not in ancient Macedonia. :)
+Mile Kitich Sure. :) Though we must keep in mind that "Macedonia was - and still is - a territory of northern Greece. The Ancient Macedonians were of Greek origin and spoke a broader rougher dialect of Greek." (Stephen Batchelor, “The Ancient Greeks for Dummies”, 2008)