“What is now called Macedonia was in earlier times called Emathia. And it took its present name from Macedon, one of its early chieftains. And there was also a city emathia close to the sea. Now a part of this country was taken and held by certain of the Epeirotes and the Illyrians, but most of it by the Bottiaei and the Thracians. The Bottiaei came from Crete originally, so it is said, along with Botton as chieftain. As for the Thracians, the Pieres inhabited Pieria and the region about Olympus; the Paeones, the region on both sides of the Axius River, which on that account is called Amphaxitis; the Edoni and Bisaltae, the rest of the country as far as the Strymon. Of these two peoples the latter are called Bisaltae alone, whereas a part of the Edoni are called Mygdones, a part Edones, and a part Sithones. But of all these tribes the Argeadae, as they are called, established themselves as masters, and also the Chalcidians of Euboea; for the Chalcidians of Euboea also came over to the country of the Sithones and jointly peopled about thirty cities in it, although later on the majority of them were ejected and came together into one city, Olynthus; and they were named the Thracian Chalcidians.”
Book 7, Fragm 11
Geographica, 7 BC
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Strabo 5
Greek geographer, philosopher and historian -64–23 BCRelated quotes
"The Genius of Alexander the Great", p.11, Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd (November 26, 2004)
"A History of Greece to 323 BC", Cambridge University, 1986 (p 516)

Letter to Austen Henry Layard (23 October 1864), quoted in Jasper Ridley, Lord Palmerston (London: Constable, 1970), p. 590.
1860s
"The Ancient Greeks: A Critical History", Harvard University Press, 1983, pgs 605-608

“What chieftain, walking by himself, crying
Most miserable, most victorious,”
Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction (1942), It Must Be Abstract
Context: p>What chieftain, walking by himself, crying
Most miserable, most victorious,Does not see these separate figures one by one,
And yet see only one, in his old coat,
His slouching pantaloons, beyond the town,Looking for what was, where it used to be?</p
"The Penguin Historical Atlas of Ancient Greece", Penguin Publishing USA, January 1997

Podcast Series 2 Episode 3
On Biology

“Now fight me! For today thee House of Hades will be called the saviors of Olympus.”