{i} officially called the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia; country in southeast Europe (formerly part of Yugoslavia); ancient Balkan kingdom in southeastern Europe (spread across parts of Greece, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia)
The large mountainous district in northern Greece ruled by Philip of Macedon (359-336 b c e ), whose son Alexander the Great (356-323 b c e ) extended the Macedonian Empire over the entire ancient Near East as far as western India, incorporating all of the earlier Persian Empire Conquered by Rome (168 b c e ) and annexed as a province (146 b c e ), Macedonia was the first part of Europe to be Christianized (Acts 16: 10-17: 9; 18: 5; 19: 29; 20: 1-3)
landlocked republic on the Balkan Peninsula; achieved independence from Yugoslavia in 1991
a republic in southern Europe: formerly (1945-92) a constituent republic of Yugoslavia pop 2,300,000; 9928 sq mi (25,713 sq km) Cap : Skopje
the ancient kingdom of Philip II and Alexander the Great in the southeastern Balkans that is now divided among modern Macedonia and Greece and Bulgaria
A provisional designation (pending resolution of a naming dispute with Greece) used by many international organizations of the Republic of Macedonia, a country on the Balkan Peninsula, abbreviated FYROM
The Anti-Fascist Assembly for the People's Liberation of Macedonia (Macedonian: Антифашистичко Собрание на Народното Ослободување на Македонија, Latinic: Antifašističko Sobranie na Narodnoto Osloboduvanje na Makedonija, abbr. ASNOM) was the supreme legislative and executive people's representative body of the Macedonian state from 1944 until the end of World War II
Macedonia, country in southeast Europe (formerly part of Yugoslavia); ancient Balkan kingdom in southeastern Europe (spread across parts of Greece, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia)