yes it is. It is used when referring to the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia, i.e. Phillip of Macedon.
Th great conqueror from the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia in northern Greece was Alexander the Great. Alexandria is the Egyptian city named after him.
Phillip of Macedonia, Alexander the Great's father
Philip II and his son Alexander III (the Great) and their Greek allies met Athens and their Greek allies at the battle of Chaeronea in 338 BC where Macedonia and its allies were victorious and the hegemony of a united Greece transferred to them.
Philip II of Macedon King of Macedonia and Conqueror of Illyria and Thrace was himself a hostage of the Greeks at Thebes, between 368 and 365 BC. Often Greeks were sold as slaves in the part of Phillip 11. That was how he felt about them.
phillip the second or alex. the great
Phillip II, Alexander the Greats dad, unified the Greek states into one nation under Macedonian Hegemony.
when phillip II king of Macedonia-and father of Alexander- conquered most of what we know as Greece in these days there was no actual country or kingdom of Greece but many city-states on the territory we know as Greece today.So, many of these greek cities were actually allies of Macedonia conquering other greek cities -they were that divided!, and found the rule of Phillip II better than the rule of the other Greek city-state.check for similar questions.
His father Phillip Of Macedonia, married Eurydice, niece of the Greek Attalus, forming a unity between the two.
Thessaloniki is the second largest city in Greece and the capital of the periphery of Central Macedonia and located in the Greek region of Macedonia.
Ancient Macedonia was an Greek kingdom on the northern Greek peninsula. Modern Macedonia is a Greek province on the northern Greek peninsula.
Ancient Macedonia was a Greek kingdom on the northern Greek peninsula. Modern Macedonia is a Greek province on the northern Greek peninsula. It's name in northern Greece, was and is, Macedonia.