
Despot S. Badžović was a teacher and an activist of the Serbian national movement in Macedonia. Badzovic was also one of the early Macedonists, who developed some kind of pro-Serbian Slav Macedonian identity.

Ion Dragoumis was a Greek diplomat, philosopher, writer and revolutionary.

Stefanos Dragoumis was a judge, writer and the Prime Minister of Greece from January to October 1910. He was the father of Ion Dragoumis.

Saint Gregory (Orologas) of Kydonies the Ethno-Hieromartyr, also Gregory of Cydoniae, 1864–1922, was a Greek Orthodox metropolitan bishop in the early 20th century in northwest Anatolia, in the Ottoman Empire.

Ioannis Karavitis was a Greek leader in the Macedonian Struggle from Crete.

Lambros Koromilas was a Greek economist and diplomat, and one of the leading figures in the Macedonian Struggle during his tenure as Greek Consul-General to Thessaloniki in 1904–1907. He also served as Finance Minister in 1910–1912 and Foreign Minister before and during the Balkan Wars of 1912–1913.

Theodoros Koukoulakis was a Greek revolutionary and a minor leader of the Macedonian Struggle.

Armen Kouptsios was a Greek Macedonian revolutionist.
Stergios Misios acted as a headman during the Macedonian struggle in Greece. He was born in Agios Germanos in north Greece.

Evangelos Natsis Georgiou also known as Strempeniotis or Kapetan Vangelis, was a Slavophone Greek soldier and revolutionary leader who participated in the Greco-Turkish War of 1897 and the Greek Struggle for Macedonia.

Temko Popov was a pro-Macedonian activist and Serbian national worker in the Ottoman Empire. He espoused in his youth some kind of a vague Macedonian identity turned later into Serbian nationalism.

Ioannis Villioglou, known also as Ioannis Ramnalis was a Greek chieftain from Rafna in Kilkis. He is mostly known for his involvement in the Macedonian Struggle.

Stavros Rigas, also known by his nom de guerre "Kapetan Kavodoros" (Καβοντόρος), was an officer of the Hellenic Army who participated in the Greek Struggle for Macedonia.

Michael Sionidis was a Greek leader of makedonomachoi in the Macedonian Struggle.

Georgios Soulios was a Greek guerrilla fighter of the early 20th century. He participated in the Macedonian Struggle, the Balkan Wars, and in the struggle for the establishment of the Autonomous Republic of Northern Epirus.
Georgios Tombras was a Greek military officer who became a guerrilla leader in the Macedonian Struggle in the early 20th century under the nom de guerre Roupakias (Ρουπακιάς).

Nikolaos Tsipouras was a Hellenic Army officer who fought in the Macedonian Struggle, the Balkan Wars, the North Epirote Struggle, World War I and the Asia Minor Campaign, retiring as a Major General.

Christos Tsolakopoulos was a Hellenic Army officer. Tsolakopoulos was born on 1 January 1868 in Nafplio. He enlisted in the Hellenic Army as a volunteer on 15 August 1886. While a student at the NCO School, he participated in the Greco-Turkish War of 1897. On 9 August 1899 he graduated from the NCO School as an Infantry 2nd Lieutenant. In 1905, during the early stages of the Macedonian Struggle, he led an armed band in the area of Morihovo with the nom de guerre of Kapetan Rembelos.