Macedonian StruggleW
Macedonian Struggle

The Macedonian Struggle or the Greek struggle for Macedonia, or according to the Bulgarian and ethnic Macedonian point of view Greek armed propaganda in Macedonia was a series of social, political, cultural and military conflicts that were mainly fought between Greek and Bulgarian subjects who lived in Ottoman Macedonia between 1893 and 1908. The conflict was part of a wider rebel war in which revolutionary organizations of Greeks, Bulgarians and Serbs all fought over Macedonia. Gradually the Greek and Bulgarian bands gained the upper hand, but the conflict was ended by the Young Turk Revolution in 1908.

Captain Kottas MuseumW
Captain Kottas Museum

The Captain Kottas Museum is located in the village of Kottas, the birthplace of the Slav-speaking Captain Kottas, one of the earliest protagonists of the Greek Struggle for Macedonia.

Folklore Museum of GiannitsaW
Folklore Museum of Giannitsa

The Folklore Museum of Giannitsa is housed in a prefabricated structure in center of the town of Giannitsa, Macedonia, Greece. It was established recently by the "Philippos" History and Folklore Association with the aim of promoting local history and tradition.

Macedonian CommitteeW
Macedonian Committee

The Macedonian Committee, formally the Hellenic Macedonian Committee, was a Greek irredentist organization with the aim of liberating Macedonia from the Ottoman Empire. It formed in 1903 under the leadership of wealthy publisher Dimitrios Kalapothakis; its members included Ion Dragoumis and Pavlos Melas. The committee organized the sending of guerrilla fighters to Macedonia—the so-called Makedonomachoi—during the Macedonian Struggle (1904–1908).

Macedonian StruggleW
Macedonian Struggle

The Macedonian Struggle or the Greek struggle for Macedonia, or according to the Bulgarian and ethnic Macedonian point of view Greek armed propaganda in Macedonia was a series of social, political, cultural and military conflicts that were mainly fought between Greek and Bulgarian subjects who lived in Ottoman Macedonia between 1893 and 1908. The conflict was part of a wider rebel war in which revolutionary organizations of Greeks, Bulgarians and Serbs all fought over Macedonia. Gradually the Greek and Bulgarian bands gained the upper hand, but the conflict was ended by the Young Turk Revolution in 1908.

Miss Stone AffairW
Miss Stone Affair

The Miss Stone Affair was the kidnapping of American Protestant missionary Ellen Maria Stone and her pregnant Bulgarian fellow missionary and friend Katerina Cilka by the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization.

Museum for the Macedonian Struggle (Thessaloniki)W
Museum for the Macedonian Struggle (Thessaloniki)

The Museum for the Macedonian Struggle is located in the centre of the city Thessaloniki in Central Macedonia, Greece. It occupies a neo-classical building designed by the renowned architect Ernst Ziller and built in 1893. In its six ground-floor rooms the museum graphically illustrates the modern and contemporary history of Greek Macedonia. It presents the social, economic, political and military developments that shaped the presence of Hellenism in the region. This approach enables the visitor to form a global picture, not only of the revolutionary movements in the area, but also of the rapidly changing society of the southern Balkans and its agonizing struggles to balance between tradition and modernization.

Museum of the Macedonian Struggle (Chromio)W
Museum of the Macedonian Struggle (Chromio)

The Museum of the Macedonian Struggle near Chromio, Kozani regional unit, Greece is an open-air museum created and landscaped over an area of 7 hectares presenting the struggles of the Greeks in Macedonia until it was united to Greece in 1912–13.

Museum of the Macedonian Struggle (Kastoria)W
Museum of the Macedonian Struggle (Kastoria)

The Museum of the Macedonian Struggle in Kastoria, Greece is housed in a traditional old mansion that belonged to the teacher and fighter Anastasios Pehion (1836-1913). It was inaugurated on 23 May 2010, a project of the "Friends of the Museum of the Macedonian Struggle” that was founded in 1993 in the Municipality of Kastoria.

Museum of the Macedonian Struggle (Skopje)W
Museum of the Macedonian Struggle (Skopje)

The Museum of the Macedonian Struggle is a national museum of North Macedonia located in the capital city of Skopje. Construction of the museum began on 11 June 2008 and it was opened to the public on the 20th anniversary of the declaration of independence on 8 September 2011. The building is located between the Museum of Archaeology, the Holocaust Museum of Macedonia, the Stone Bridge and the Vardar River.

Pavlos Melas MuseumW
Pavlos Melas Museum

The Pavlos Melas Museum is located in the village of Melas, in the north part of the regional unit of Kastoria, Western Macedonia, Greece.

Serbian Chetnik OrganizationW
Serbian Chetnik Organization

The Serbian Revolutionary Organization or Serbian Chetnik Organization was a revolutionary organization with the aim of liberation of Old Serbia from the Ottoman Empire. Its Central Committee was established in 1902, while the Serbian Committee was established in September 1903 in Belgrade, by the combined Central Boards of Belgrade, Vranje, Skopje and Bitola. Its armed wing was activated in 1904. Among the architects were members of the Saint Sava society, Army Staff and Ministry of Foreign Affairs. It operated during the Struggle for Macedonia, a series of social, political, cultural and military conflicts in the region of Macedonia; its operations are known as Serb Action in Macedonia.