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The huge equestrian statue of Alexander the Great, king of ancient Macedon, on the waterfront at Thessaloniki, capital of Greek Macedonia
Macedonia is a geographical and historical region of the Balkan peninsula in south-eastern Europe with an area of around 67,000 square kilometres and a population of 4.65 million. The territory corresponds to the basins of (from west to east) the Aliákmon, Vardar/ Axios and Strymon rivers (of which the Vardar drains by far the largest area) and the plains around Thessaloniki and Serrai (also known as Salonika and Serres, respectively).
The region is divided between Greece, with roughly half of the area and population, split between the three provinces of Macedonia Central, Macedonia West, and Macedonia East; the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, with around 40%; and BulgariaThe Republic of Bulgaria is a republic in the southeast of Europe. It borders the Black Sea to the east, Greece and Turkey to the south, Serbia and Montenegro and the Republic of Macedonia to the west, and Romania to the north along the river Danube., with less than a tenth, in Blagoevgrad provinceBlagoevgrad is a region of south western Bulgaria. It borders Greece and R. of Macedonia and lies on the Strouma river, which is the natural link between Greece and Bulgaria. The area is part of the wider Macedonian region, also known as Pirin Macedonia .. The Greek part is sometimes referred to (by non-Greeks only) as Greek MacedoniaThe region called Macedonia (or Makedonia in Greece is a large section of the north-northwestern part of the country which collectivally with Thrace, is forming Northern Greece''. Subsequently it is a part of a larger Balkan region widely known in modern or "Aegean Macedonia," the Republic of Macedonia as Vardar Macedonia and the Bulgarian part as Pirin Macedonia.
As a frontier region between several very different cultures, Macedonia has an extremely diverse demographic profile. GreeksSee The Greeks for the financial term for the set of measures derived from the Black-Scholes option pricing formula, named for the use of the Greek alphabet to denote parameters. Greeks in Ancient History In Latin literature, Graeci (or Greeks in English) form the majority of its population, living almost entirely in Greece. Macedonian SlavsThe Macedonian Slavs are an ethnic group which inhabits the wider Macedonian region and speaks the Macedonian language. They are generally associated with the Macedonian Orthodox Church and are said to be the descendents of ancient Macedonian, Thracian, I are the second largest group in the region, forming the majority of the population in the Republic of Macedonia.
They consider themselves to be a distinct ethnic group, a claim controversial as many BulgariansBulgarians are a Slavic people that today lives mainly in the Republic of Bulgaria and Macedonia, but also in Greece, the Ukraine, Moldova, USA and other countries. Bulgarians are descendants of two peoples Southern Slavs, who settled on the Balkan penins and GreeksSee The Greeks for the financial term for the set of measures derived from the Black-Scholes option pricing formula, named for the use of the Greek alphabet to denote parameters. Greeks in Ancient History In Latin literature, Graeci (or Greeks in English) believe that they are merely a subset of another people, usually the Bulgarians. They call themselves and are sometimes called by others "ethnic Macedonians" (e.g. in the former Yugoslav countries) but this term is vehemently opposed by Greeks when used to describe the Slav majority of Republic of Macedonia or a Slavic minority in northern Greece. Greece argues that this usage is inaccurate as Macedonia is in fact inhabited by a number of different peoples, none of whom has a historically exclusive claim to the term with the exception of the native Macedonians who have inhabited the region since the days of ancient Macedonia. (The question of whether the ancient Macedonians were in fact Greek is controversial, as the ancient Greeks themselves explicitly regarded the Macedonians as non-Greek barbarians; see the article on Macedonians for more information.) The term is often used by Slavs of the region to mean the Slav inhabitants of both the Republic of Macedonia and of northern Greece.
There is a small 3,000-strong Macedonian Slav minority in the Bulgarian region of Blagoevgrad, which is otherwise known as Pirin Macedonia. The question about the number of the Macedonian Slavs in Greek Macedonia, however, is and has been the subject of much speculation as Greece's censuses have not included the criteria of nationality and mother tongue since the 1950s. However, according to conservative estimates, Macedonian Slavs in Greece may number around 10,000.
The other two major ethnic groups in the region are the Bulgarians, who represent the bulk of the population of Pirin Macedonia and form a small minority of 5,000 people in the Republic of Macedonia, and the Albanians, who are the majority inhabitants of the western and southwestern parts of the Republic of Macedonia.
Small numbers of Turks, Bosniaks, Roma, Serbs and Vlachs may also be found in Macedonia.
Most of the inhabitants of the regions are Christians of the Eastern Orthodox rite (principally the Greek Orthodox, Macedonian Orthodox and Serb Orthodox Churches). There is, however, a substantial Muslim minority - principally among the Albanians, Bosniaks and Turks.