For other places with the same name, see Macedonia (Greece) (disambiguation).
Macedonia (Greek: Μακεδονία) is a geographic and historical region in northern Greece.
Chalkidiki — The No.1 tourist area in northern Greece
Olympos National Park (with Litochoro) — Τhe base for climbing Mt Olympus
Dion (Pieria) 📍 — An ancient city and sanctuary dedicated to Zeus. Philip II and Alexander the Great celebrated victories in Dion.
Vergina 📍 — The ancient Aigai, the first capital of Macedonia and the place where Alexander the Great was proclaimed king, short after Philip's assassination in 336 BC.
Megaplatanos 📍 — A rural village between the Pozar thermal baths (5 km) and the Voras ski resort (40 km).
Pella — Ancient Pella was the birthplace of Alexander the Great. The modern municipality Pella includes the large town Giannitsa.
Macedonia is the largest and second-most-populous Greek region, with a population of about 2.4 million of which alone 1 million live in Thessaloniki. The region is highly mountainous, with most major urban centres such as Thessaloniki and Kavala being concentrated on its southern coastline. Macedonia incorporates most of the territories of ancient Macedon, a kingdom ruled by the Argeads and whose most celebrated members were Alexander the Great and his father Philip II. Although it has very scenic areas and many very interesting cultural sites, it is visited by relatively few tourists, except the Chalkidiki and Olympos region.
When speaking with Greeks about Macedonia it is better not to participate in any discussion or to disagree that the name Macedonia is only Greek if you want to maintain a friendly atmosphere. Greeks are patriots and do not want any historical teachings on this sensitive topic. Although the name issue with the neighboring state of North Macedonia is now politically resolved, many Greeks still find it a betrayal of their history. This was reinforced by the creation of statues of Alexander the Great in Skopje and the use of symbols from Greek excavations by the neighboring state. Many Greeks wonder why the majority-Slavic population of the neighboring state uses purely Greek symbols and national heroes for their nationality awareness. Equally, many ethnic Macedonians (i.e., Greek citizens who speak the Macedonian Slavic language) are at a loss to understand why Greece denies their existence and forbids the promotion and teaching of their native language.
Greek is the official language of Greece and, thus, the majority of the inhabitants of Macedonia speak it as their native language. English is spoken by many people, usually under the age of 40, mostly in big cities like Thessaloniki or in tourist resorts like Chalkidiki. A minority of around 10,000 citizens, including most of the residents of around half the villages in the Florina district, speak the Macedonian language that's also spoken in North Macedonia, though see "Understand" above for why it is better not to mention that in discussions with locals you don't know very well.