Greece and Hellas refer to the same ethnogeography in two different languages. Saying one exists but the other did not is like saying Germany did not exist while Deutschland did. It's a nonsensical self contradictory statement. Greece existed as a disunified series of quarreling city state/territories before Macedonia's conquest no different than how Italy existed before Rome's conquests or how Germania existed in classical antiquity. It was an ethnogeography that consisted of lands which were dominated by a single homogenous ethnic group despite being politically and legally divided. The Greeks to this day still do not refer to themselves or their country with the latin derived English exonym "Greeks/Greece" and yet they still obviously remain Greeks living within their nation of Greece insofar as the English language intends. This is really not something I should have to specify.
Thank you. We are arguing semantics yet saying the same thing. As I wrote above, Dianatomia said "There was no Greece, as in Greek nation state. There certainly was though, a concept of "Greece" referred to as Hellas" and I agreed with him. Whether we refer to it as Hellas or Greece, it really doesn't matter to me. We are simply trying to be consistent when referring to the area.
The "Macedonian Empire" was simply a Greek empire. You are living in a fantasy. Reality is the exact opposite of what you wrote. Hellas/Greece and its language, religion and culture became more dominant in the near east and mediterranean than any other power during the reign of Alexander the Great. This era was the absolute peak of Greek military dominance which bore witness to Greek incursions even as far east as pakistan and India while in contrast Rome was just beginning to expand into Southern Italy. The Greek speaking Macedonians conquered and politically unified Greece and weaponized its populace as a homogenous conquering force in the same way that Rome did with Italy. You will find this is a common theme amongst many nations in many cultures.
In your dreams, Vitruvius. You're the one living a fantasy. The Macedonian Empire had nothing to do with Greece as they were different territories with distinct cultures. King Philip II of Macedonia (NOT Greece, but Macedonia) and Alexander the Great conquered Greece. You yourself just spoke of "Macedonia's conquest" of Greece. There is a winning side and a losing side in wars and Greece lost. They were absorbed into the Macedonian Empire. I know you and other Greeks don't like it, but too bad. Face reality. If Philp had thought he was Greek, he would have called himself Philip of Greece, but he didn't, he was Philip II of Macedonia. That designation alone signifies a conscience understanding in the difference of identity. In fact, one of Philip's biggest desires was to defeat Greece. If I apply your logic to The battle of Marathon, the Athenians would be considered Persian even though they won.
Macedonia wasn't anything like Greece. Greece was populated by city-states like Athens, Sparta, Corinth, Argos, Thebes—the most dominant city-state prior to its destruction by Philip and Alexander. All of these places tended to have thriving middle classes and a well-developed upper-class; they were refined; they governed through councils/democracies mainly (with some exceptions); they had schools (only allowed for boys); their citizens usually made up militia armies of these places.
Things were very different in Macedonia where they really didn't have a thriving middle class, and they didn't have any city-states. They had villages and towns and hamlets. Instead of a thriving middle class, they had a group that tilled the land. I'm not sure if I would call them peasants... you know what, I will call them peasants. You definitely had a nobility that these people owed their allegiance to a King. The idea of having a king to the Greeks was a sign of barbarism. Kings were what the Egyptians had with a pharaoh... kings were what the Persians had with Cyrus the Great. Greek city-states had different governments, but Kings weren't usually a part of it so if you had a king, that was a sure sign that you probably weren't Greek. And if your king was polygamous, that was another sure sign of barbarism. Add to that the fact that Macedonians lived a much more rustic existence than your average Cosmopolitan Greek city-state citizen and one understands they had nothing in common. Even their language was different.
Macedonia was a warrior culture with an amazing King. They held power in their society because they were trained in the application of violence and valued it as a tool to seize power. Greece was more poltroon. You will bring up Sparta and Thebes, but the Peloponnesian War and Leuctra were in the rear view mirror.
Historian Ian Worthington draws this distinction as he compares an Athenian to a Macedonian and compares their cultures and the way they grow up, and the carrots and sticks in their societies and how something like that might actually have an effect on the battlefield when you have to walk up and shove a spear into your adversary. Worthington says "the whole fabric of Macedonian Society was alien to Greeks and so abhorred by them. A Macedonian male was an entirely different animal from his Athenian counterpart, for example, who came of age at 18 was then eligible to attend the assembly which is the body that debates and votes on domestic and foreign policy, served in the Army as and when required, was eligible for jury service when he turned 30 and if he came from a well-to-do family attended symposia to engage in intellectual discussions..." He then says, “Macedonia was utterly different. No one was allowed to wash in warm water except women who had just given birth; no man could recline at a banquet until he had speared and killed one of the ferocious wild bores without using a net to trap it; a soldier had to wear a rope or sack around his waist until he had killed his first man in battle. To achieve these expectations, boys from an early age were taught to fight, ride a horse, and hunt wild boar, foxes, birds, and even lions." He then says that Macedonian Society was rugged and had more in common with the tough love of Viking Society than Classical Greece. According to the ancient writers there are all sorts of other things that the Macedonians have as part of their culture to differentiate them from Greeks. but I'll stop here.