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Listed 21 sub titles with search on: Biographies  for wider area of: "IMATHIA Prefecture MAKEDONIA CENTRAL" .


Biographies (21)

Doctors

Apostolos Thoma Doxiadis

STENIMACHOS (Village) NAOUSSA
1874 - 1942
1874-1942
  Born in Stenimachos, he was a boarder at the Zarifeia Schools in Philippoupolis before studying medicine in Vienna. He practiced medicine in Stenimachos and became president of the Greek community there as well as of Orpheus, the Greek Philharmonic Association (1903). In 1905 he married Evanthia Mezevyri with whom he had four sons. During the Balkan Wars he served as a medic in the Bulgarian army.
  In 1915 he moved to Athens where he held the following positions: head of paediatrics at the Athens Polyclinic, a post in the Ministry of Relief (which he renamed Ministry of Health and Welfare), becoming in 1928 vice minister of Health. He also served as chairman of the Patriotic Hospital Fund, chairman of the Panthracian Association and of the Irredentist Greek Committee. He wrote many scientific papers in many languages.

This text is cited Apr 2003 from the Thracian Electronic Thesaurus URL below, of Democritus University of Thrace


Dynasties

Perdiccas

EGES (Ancient city) IMATHIA
670 - 652
Perdiccas (Perdikkas), was, according to Herodotus, the founder of the Macedonian monarchy, though Justin, Diodorus, and the later chronographers, Dexippus and Eusebius, represent Caranus as the first king of Macedonia, and make Perdiccas only the fourth. Thucydides, however, seems to follow the same version of the history with Herodotus, since he reckons only eight kings before Archelaus (Thuc. ii. 100. See also Clinton, F. H. vol. ii. p. 221; MΌller's Dorians, App. i.15). According to Herodotus, Perdiccas and his two brothers, Gauanes and Aeopus, were Argives of the race of Temenus, who fled from their native country to Illyria, and from thence into the upper part of Macedonia, where they at first served the king of the country as herdsmlen, but were afterwards dismissed from his service, and settled near Mount Bermius, from whence, he adds, they subdued the rest of Macedonia (Herod. viii. 37, 138). It is clear, however, that the dominions of Perdiccas and his immediate successors, comprised but a very small part of the country subsequently known under that name (See Thuc. ii. 99). According to Eusebius (ed. Arm. p. 152, 153), Perdiccas reigned forty-eight years, but this period is, doubtless, a purely fictitious one. He was succeeded by his son Argaeus (Herod. viii. 139). Front a fragment of Diodorus (Exc. Vat. p. 4), it would appear that Perdiccas was regarded as the founder of Aegae or Edessa, the capital of the early Macedonian monarchs.

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited April 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Argaios I

652 - 621
King of Macedonia, son of Perdiccas I.

Argaeus (Argaios), king of Macedonia was the son and successor of Perdiccas I., who according to Herodotus and Thucydides, was the founder of the dynasty. Thirty-four years are given as the length of his reign by Dexippus (ap. Syncell. p. 494, Dind.), but apparently without any authority (Herod. viii. 139; Justin, vii. 2).
  There was a pretender to the Macedonian crown of this name, who, with the assistance of the Illyrians, expelled Amyntas II. from his dominions (B. C. 393), and kept possession of the throne for two years. Amyntas then, with the aid of the Thessalians, succeeded in expelling Argaeus and recovering at least a part of his dominions. It is probably the same Argaeus who in B. C. 359 again appears as a pretender to the throne. He had induced the Athenians to support his pretensions, but Philip, who had just succeeded to the regency of the kingdom, by his intrigues and promises induced them to remain inactive. Argaeus upon this collected a body of mercenaries, and being accompanied by some Macedonian exiles and some Athenian troops, who were permitted by their general, Manlias, to join him, he made an attempt upon Aegae, but was repulsed. On his retreat to Methone, he was intercepted by Philip, and defeated. What became of him we are not informed (Diod. xiv. 92, xvi. 2, 3; Dem. c. Aristocr.).

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks

Philip I

621 - 588
Philippus I., son of Argaeus, was the third king, according to Herodotus and Thucydides, who, not reckoning Caranus and his two immediate successors (Coenus and Thurimas or Turimmas), look upon Perdiccas I. as the founder of the monarchy. Philip left a son, named Aeropus, who succeeded him.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Aeropus I

588 - 568
King of Macedonia, the son of Philip I., the great-grandson of Perdiccas, the first king, and the father of Alcetas. (Herod. iii. 139)

Alcetas

568 - 540
Alcetas (Alketas), the eighth king of Macedonia, counting from Caranus, and the fifth, counting from Perdiccas, reigned, according to Eusebius, twenty-nine years. He was the father of Amyntas I., who reigned in the latter part of the sixth century B. C. (Herod. viii. 139.)

Amyntas I (c. 540-495 BC).

Amyntas I. A king of Macedonia, who reigned from about B.C. 540 to 500, and was succeeded by his son Alexander I.

Amyntas (Amuntas) I., king of Macedonia, son of Alcetas, and fifth in descent from Perdiccas, the founder of the dynasty (Herod. viii. 139 ; comp. Thuc. ii. 100; Just. vii. 1, xxxiii. 2 ; Paus. ix. 40).
  It was under him that Macedonia became tributary to the Persians. Megabazus, whom Darius on his return from his Scythian expedition had left at the head of 80,000 men in Europe (Herod. iv. 143), sent after the conquest of Paeonia to require earth and water of Amyntas, who immediately complied with his demand. The Persian envoys on this occasion behaved with much insolence at the banquet to which Amyntas invited them, and were murdered by his son Alexander. After this we find nothing recorded of Amyntas, except his offer to the Pisistratidae of Anthemus in Chalcidice, when Hippias had just been disappointed in his hope of a restoration to Athens by the power of the Spartan confederac. (Herod. v. 94). Amyntas died about 498 B. C. leaving the kingdom to Alexander. Herodotus (viii. 136) speaks of a soil of Bubares and Gygaea, called Amyntas after his grandfather.

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Alexander I the Philhellene (495-442 BC).

  Alexander I the Philhellene (?-circa 442 BC) succeeded Amyntas I in the Macedonian throne. Though subjected to the Persians, he assisted the southern Greeks in the Persian Wars; for this he received from the Athenians the honours of "citizenship and exemption" (from taxes). After the Persians were put to rout, Alexander extended his realm as far as the Strymon, and contributed to his kingdom's cultural and economic development as well as its general modernization. He took part in the Olympic Games (perhaps in 496 BC) in the 'stadion' race. Poets such as Pindar, Bacchylides and Simonides lived at his court.

This text is cited Oct 2003 from the Macedonian Heritage URL below.


Alexander I. (Alexandros), the tenth king of Macedonia, was the son of Amyntas I. When Megabazus sent to Macedonia, about B. C. 507, to demand earth and water, as a token of submission to Darius, Amyntas was still reigning. At a banquet given to the Persian envoys, the latter demanded the presence of the ladies of the court, and Amyntas, through fear of his guests, ordered them to attend. But when the Persians proceeded to offer indignities to them, Alexander caused them to retire, under pretence of arraying them more beautifully, and introduced in their stead some Macedonian youths, dressed in female attire, who slew the Persians. As the Persians did not return, Megabazus sent Bubares with some troops into Macedonia; but Alexander escaped the danger by giving his sister Gygaea in marriage to the Persian general. According to Justin, Alexander succeeded his father in the kingdom soon after these events (Herod. v. 17-21, viii. 136 ; Justin, vii. 2-4). In B. C. 492, Macedonia was obliged to submit to the Persian general Mardonius (Herod. vi. 44); and in Xerxes' invasion of Greece (B. C. 480), Alexander accompanied the Persian army. He gained the confidence of Mardonius, and was sent by him to Athens after the battle of Salamis, to propose peace to the Athenians, which he strongly recommended, under the conviction that it was impossible to contend with the Persians. He was unsuccessful in his mission; but though he continued in the Persian army, he was always secretly inclined to the cause of the Greeks, and informed them the night before the battle of Plataeae of the intention of Mardonius to fight on the following day (viii. 136, 140-143, ix. 44, 45). He was alive in B. C. 463, when Cimon recovered Thasos (Plut. Cim. 14). He was succeeded by Perdiccas II.
  Alexander was the first member of the royal family of Macedonia, who presented himself as a competitor at the Olympic games, and was admitted to them after proving his Greek descent (Herod. v. 22; Justin, vii. 2). In his reign Macedonia received a considerable accession of territor. (Thuc. ii. 99).

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Perdiccas II

435 - 413
Perdiccas II. The son and successor of Alexander I. of Macedonia, reigning from B.C. 454 to 413. Shortly before the Peloponnesian War, Perdiccas was at war with the Athenians, who sent a force to support his brother Philip, and Derdas, a Macedonian chieftain, against the king, while the latter espoused the cause of Potidaea, which had shaken off the Athenian yoke, B.C. 432. In the following year peace was concluded between Perdiccas and the Athenians, but it did not last long, and he was during the greater part of his reign on hostile terms with the Athenians. In B.C. 429 his dominions were invaded by Sitalces, king of the powerful Thracian tribe of the Odrysians, but the enemy was compelled, by want of provisions, to return home. It was in great part at his instigation that Brasidas in B.C. 424 set out on his celebrated expedition to Macedonia and Thrace. In the following year (B.C. 423), however, a misunderstanding arose between him and Brasidas; in consequence of which he abandoned the Spartan alliance, and concluded peace with Athens. Subsequently we find him at one time in alliance with the Spartans and at another time with the Athenians; and it is evident that he joined one or other of the belligerent parties according to the dictates of his own interest at the moment.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Famous families

Vikelas Family

VERIA (Town) IMATHIA
Though Dimitrios Vikelas, a major factor of the revival of the Olympic Games in 1896, was born in Σύρο, his family came from Veria town.

Raktavan Dimitrios

1827 - 1893

Raktavan Constantinos

1865 - 1935
Son of Raktavan Dimitrios

Fighters of the 1821 revolution

Karatassos Tsamis

DOVRA (Municipality) IMATHIA
1798 - 1861

Historic figures

Peucestas, satrap of Persis

MIEZA (Ancient city) NAOUSSA
  Macedonian officer in the army of Alexander the Great, satrap of Persis.
  Peucestas was born in the Macedonian town Mieza (modern Naousa) as the son of an otherwise unknown Alexander. The stages of his early career are unknown to us and it is possible that he joined Alexander at a later stage of his campaign. However this may be, Peucestas was present during the return from the Punjab, which started in the summer of 326.
  In a valuable document, he is mentioned as one of the thirty-three trierarchs of the fleet that Alexander had built to ship his men to the Indian Ocean. The word 'trierarch' means 'captain' but it seems that something more important was meant in the present case, because all members of Alexander's inner circle are mentioned as trierarchs. This makes it clear that Peucestas was an important member of the royal court, and since he did nothing special during the earlier campaigns, we may assume that he was a member of the highest Macedonian nobility. Perhaps he was a younger youth friend of the Macedonian crown prince.
  The nations along the Indus offered resistance against Alexander's navy and army. In January 325, the Macedonians had to fight themselves a way through the country of the Mallians (Indian Malava). During the siege of their capital, modern Multan, Alexander was seriously wounded. He owed his survival to Leonnatus, Abreas and Peucestas, who protected the king with a sacred shield that Alexander had taken away from Troy.
  One year later, Peucestas was rewarded with a golden diadem. This was an exceptionally high honor, because only three others received this sign of esteem. He was also appointed satrap of the heartland of the former Achaemenid empire, Persis. In this quality, he commanded a company of Persian soldiers that were to replace the Macedonian veterans (early 323).
  Peucestas was still one of the members of Alexander inner when the great conqueror died: he was present at the drinking party of Medius that was to be Alexander's last supper, and he slept in the temple of Serapis, hoping to receive in his dreams instructions about the cure of the king.
  In the confused period of the Diadochi, which began with the death of Alexander (June 11, 323), Peucestas remained satrap of Persis. Both Perdiccas and Antipater, who served as regents for Alexander's brother Arridaeus, reinvested him in his function (at the settlements of Babylon in June 323 and Triparadisus). It must have been difficult to ignore him, because he was the only Macedonian who had taken the trouble to learn the Persian language.
  In 317, one of Alexander's successors, Peithon the satrap of Media, tried to subdue the leaders of the eastern provinces. Peucestas and the other satraps united and offered resistance. Their common army was still at Susa when Eumenes arrived, the former secretary of Alexander. The regent Polyperchon had appointed him as commander of an army in Asia that had to resist Antigonus Monophthalmus, a general with plans identical to Peithon's.
  Peucestas wanted to remain neutral, but was forced to join Eumenes' army. After all, Eumenes was still fighting for the sake of the Macedonian royal house. Antigonus and Eumenes joined battle in Paraetacene (near modern Esfahan), but the engagement remained undecided. In the spring of 316, a second battle was fought in the district of Gabiene (near Susa). Peucestas, who was an unwilling ally of Eumenes, deliberately retreated from the battle field, which gave Antigonus an opportunity to defeat his enemy.
  After the battle, Peucestas surrendered to Antigonus, but he was not reinstated. Peucestas' later career is unknown, but is seems that he survived Antigonus and was one of the favorites of his son Demetrius.
  Peucestas is not to be confused with his namesake, a military commander of Egypt.

Jona Lendering, ed.
This text is cited July 2003 from the Livius Ancient History Website URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks.


Related to the place

Bubares & Gygaea

EGES (Ancient city) IMATHIA
Bubares (Boubares), the son of Megabazus, a Persian, was sent into Macedonia to make inquiries after the missing Persian envoys, whom Alexander, the son of Amyntas I., had caused to be murdered at his father's court, about B. C. 507. Alexander induced Bubares to pass the matter over in silence, by giving him great presents and also his sister Gygaea in marriage. By this Gygaea Bubares had a son, who was called Amyntas after his grandfather. (Herod. v. 21, viii. 136.) In conjunction with Artachaees, Bubares superintended the construction of the canal which Xerxes made across the isthmus of Athos. (Herod. vii. 22.)

Gygaea (Gugaie), daughter of Amyntas and sister of Alexander I. of Macedonia, was given by her brother in marriage to Bubares, in order to hush up the inquiry which the latter had been sent by Dareius Hystaspis to institute into the fate of the Persian envoys, whom Alexander had caused to be murdered. Herodotus mentions a son of Bubares and Gygaea, called Amyntas after his grandfather. (Herod. v. 21, viii. 136; Just. vii. 3.)

Scholars

Kottounios Ioannis

VERIA (Town) IMATHIA
1572 - 1657
He teached Ancient Greek Philology and Philosophy.

Mitrofanis Kritopoulos

1589 - 1639
Patriarch of Alexandria (1636 - 1639)

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