
THE MACEDONES; The Highland Warriors
of Hellas
As we move northward from Attica, that
civilization which we know as classical Greece wanes. At Macedon it
becomes a veneer, thin indeed, applied only to the rulers of a nation
composed of various, loosely allied tribal groups living in ways not
dissimilar to the wild tribes to the north of them. By the time we reach
The Danube, the people resemble more closely the hunter gatherers of
pre columbian North America than they do the sophisticated citizens
of Athens to the south.
Macedon is as rich in natural resources
as Attica is poor. Seemingly endless miles of first growth forests provide
such an abundance of timber that there is plenty to export to the sparsely
wooded south. Great flat plains are abundantly watered by the many torrential
rivers which rush down the mountains over roaring falls and flood them
twice a year depositing a mineral rich silt which gives the stoneless
soil its whitish bloom. The plains burst forth with an abundance of
cereals, fruits, and vegetables undreamt of in the poor and dry soil
of southern Attica. Horses, cattle, sheep and goats thrive on the rich
grazing lands. Macedon provides all The Macedones need for sustenance;
it is self sufficient. The people have not changed for hundreds of years
for there has been no need to change.
This bountiful land has been inhabited
for thousands of years by people of various ethnic backgrounds. For
the most part, they live in a state of armed truce with their neighbors
in a society based upon family related clans like the barbarous tribes
north of The Danube.
We know much about the rulers of Macedon,
but little about the common people. They lived in clan groups each with
its own king. Some were transhumanant pastoralists, and some were settled
agriculturists, though they did not live together and there was no intermarriage
between clans. In the autumn, after the crops were gathered, the pastoralists
would come down from the mountains and spend the winter grazing their
flocks on agricultural lands rented for the season. In the spring before
planting, they would have disappeared up into the mists of the mountains
from whence they came. There are still parts of the world where this
ancient social rhythm continues to this day.
The tribes might have differing ethnic
backgrounds, some from as far away as Phrygian in Asia Minor, but over
the years they came to speak a common language based upon Aeolic Greek
which became known as Macedonian. It could be understood by the Attic
speakers of the south, but only with some difficulty such as a London
gentleman might encounter today trying to understand the rural Northumberland
patois, though both in fact, are speaking English.
The religion of the Macedonian commoner,
though nominally Greek, was heavily accented by ancient west Asian beliefs.
Thus, Cybele of Asia Minor becomes Aphrodite Mother Of The Gods in a
transparent attempt to Hellenize her; she remains recognizably a more
ancient Goddess, renamed.
Dionysus, also an imported God from
The East is the other important God of The Macedonians who are famous
for their orgiastic rites performed in his honor by the women of Macedon
and forbidden on pain of death to the men. In the case of the Macedonian
God, Darron, the healer, there is not even an attempt to Hellenize.
The importance of women in religion
is reflected in their everyday social status as well. Even though this
is structurally, a paternalistic society, women here play a much more
important role than elsewhere in Hellas and it is only in Macedon that
the history of classical Greece records regnant queens, a condition
which would be unthinkable even in Sparta.
The government of Macedon is completely
opposed to the democracies and oligarchies of classical Hellas. Here
a king has always ruled the land just as a chief rules the clan and
a father rules the family. The fathers owe their allegiance to their
clan chief and the chiefs to the king.
The main duty of the king is to command
the army and secure the borders of the state. His secondary duty is
to represent the people before the Gods. Each morning the king sacrifices
to the Gods as a religious representative of his subjects. In Macedon,
the Argaed kings were believed to be directly descended form the Gods
and to thus enjoy a special influence upon them. Their ceremonial duties
were of extreme importance in this deeply religious and highly superstitious
land. So important was the kings daily ritual to the well being of the
people that Alexander had himself carried from his death bed to perform
his daily sacrifices. As a direct descendant of the Gods, the king and
his family enjoyed a religious respect which gave them a partially divine
status. Evidence of an organized worship of the dead kings has been
discovered in the royal graves at Aegae.
The king of The Macedones was not a
king as we know them today. By law, he was accessible to all of his
subjects at any time, anywhere. Anyone might address him as an equal.Though
he could judge any law case, he, curiously, could never pass a sentence
of death without a vote of the assembled army. He did not wear purple
robes or a crown but rather, wore the same garments as other upper class
men. He might though, tie a simple cloth ribbon around his head or his
hat in order to identify himself.
The custom of clan leaders and their
sons attending the king in the royal capital created what amounted to
a standing army. The clan leaders, their sons, and retainers were on
hand, armed, and available for instant deployment. Furthermore, the
clan leaders need only order all men of fighting age in their clans
to come to his aid and they would appear in a matter of days. These
armed and trained troops were The Macedones, the only legal voters of
Macedon and they alone could make or depose a king. It was only the
assembled army which chose their king. Being the eldest son of a king
was not enough; the popular vote of the warrior citizens of Macedon
was required.
It was this standing army, combined
with superior and constant training, innovative planning, and advanced
weaponry which made The Macedones, a backwoods people on the rough frontiers
of Hellas, the invincible warriors who conquered the majority of the
then known world.
The ancient ways which saw war as the
very reason for a man's existence created a society of warrior citizens
unlike the citizen warriors of The South The absolute chain of ingrained
loyalties was unbreakable. There is no recorded instance of a Macedone
fighting for an enemy of his country as was so common in the south of
Hellas.
These are The Macedones; they were a people who valued
their Gods, their families, and their country above all else. They were
the greatest nation the world had ever known until, to the west, a little
village on The Tiber, in another backwoods part of the world ,stirred.
