In
its earliest history, Macedonia was ruled by the Bulgars and
the Byzantines, who began a long tradition of rivalry over
that territory. Slavs invaded and settled Byzantine
Macedonia late in the sixth century, and in A.D. 679 the
Bulgars, a Turkic steppe people, crossed into the Balkans
and directly encountered the Byzantine Empire. The Bulgars
commingled with the more numerous Slavs and eventually
abandoned their Turkic mother tongue in favor of the Slavic
language. The Byzantines and Bulgars ruled Macedonia
alternately from the ninth to the fourteenth century, when
Stefan Dusan of Serbia conquered it and made Skopje his
capital. A local noble, Vukasin, called himself king of
Macedonia after the death of Dusan, but the Turks
annihilated Vukasin's forces in 1371 and assumed control of
Macedonia. The
beginning of Turkish rule meant centuries of subjugation and
cultural deprivation in Macedonia. The Turks destroyed the
Macedonian aristocracy, enserfed the Christian peasants, and
eventually amassed large estates and subjected the Slavic
clergy to the Greek patriarch of Constantinople. The living
conditions of the Macedonian Christians deteriorated in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as Turkish power
declined. Greek influence increased, the Slavic liturgy was
banned, and schools and monasteries taught Greek language
and culture. In 1777 the Ottoman Empire eliminated the
autocephalous Bulgarian Orthodox Church and the
archbishopric of Ohrid. Because of such actions, the Slavic
Macedonians began to despise Greek ecclesiastical domination
as much as Turkish political oppression. In the
nineteenth century, the Bulgars achieved renewed national
self-awareness, which influenced events in Macedonia. The
sultan granted the Bulgars ecclesiastical autonomy in 1870,
creating an independent Bulgarian Orthodox Church.
Nationalist Bulgarian clergymen and teachers soon founded
schools in Macedonia. Bulgarian activities in Macedonia
alarmed the Serbian and Greek governments and churches, and
a bitter rivalry arose over Macedonia among church factions
and advocates of a Greater Bulgaria, Greater Serbia, and
Greater Greece. The 1878 RussoTurkish War drove the Turks
from Bulgarian-populated lands, and the Treaty of San
Stefano (1878) created a large autonomous Bulgaria that
included Macedonia. The subsequent Treaty of Berlin (1878),
however, restored Macedonia to Turkey, and left the
embittered Bulgars with a much-diminished state. The
Bulgarian-Greek-Serbian rivalry for Macedonia escalated in
the 1890s, and nationalistic secret societies proliferated.
Macedonian refugees in Bulgaria founded the Supreme
Committee for Liberation of Macedonia, which favored
Bulgarian annexation and recruited its own military force to
confront Turkish units and rival nationalist groups in
Macedonia. In 1896 Macedonians founded the International
Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO), whose two main
factions divided the region into military districts,
collected taxes, drafted recruits, and used tactics of
propaganda and terrorism. A 1902
uprising in Macedonia provoked Turkish reprisals, and in
1903 IMRO launched a widespread rebellion that the Turks
could not suppress for several months. After that event, the
sultan agreed to a Russian and Austrian reform scheme that
divided Macedonia into five zones and assigned British,
French, Italian, Austrian, and Russian troops to police
them. Pro-Bulgarian and pro-Greek groups continued to clash,
while the Serbs intensified their efforts in northern
Macedonia. In 1908 the Young Turks, a faction of Turkish
officers who promised liberation and equality, deposed the
sultan. The Europeans withdrew their troops when Serbs and
Bulgars established friendly relations with the zealous
Turks. But the nationalist Young Turks began imposing
centralized rule and cultural restrictions, exacerbating
Christian-Muslim friction. Serbia and Bulgaria ended their
differences in 1912 by a treaty that defined their
respective claims in Macedonia. A month later, Bulgaria and
Greece signed a similar agreement. Bosnia
& Hercegovina
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Library of Congress Country StudyMacedonia
Library of Congress Country Study
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