a 502,546 Albanian citizens, an additional 43,751
Kosovo Albanians, 260,000
Arbëreshë people and 169,644 Albanians who have acquired the Italian citizenship[8][9][64][65] b Albanians are not recognized as a minority in Turkey. However approximately 500,000 people are reported to profess an Albanian identity. Of those with full or partial Albanian ancestry and others who have adopted
Turkish language, culture and identity their number is estimated at 1,300,000–5,000,000 many whom do not speak Albanian.[58] c The estimation contains
Kosovo Albanians.
The first mention of the ethnonym Albanoi occurred in the 2nd century AD by
Ptolemy describing an
Illyrian tribe who lived around present-day central Albania.[67][68] The first certain reference to Albanians as an ethnic group comes from 11th century chronicler
Michael Attaleiates who describes them as living in the
theme of Dyrrhachium.
The
Albanian diaspora has its roots in migration from the
Middle Ages initially across Southern Europe and eventually across wider Europe and the
New World. Between the 13th and 18th centuries, sizeable numbers migrated to escape various social, economic or political difficulties.[d] One population, the
Arvanites, settled in
Southern Greece between the 13th and 16th centuries. Another population, the
Arbëreshë, settled across
Sicily and
Southern Italy between the 11th and 16th centuries.[70] Smaller populations such as the
Arbanasi settled in
Southern Croatia and pockets of
Southern Ukraine in the 18th century.[73][74]
During the 19th century, cultural developments, widely attributed to Albanians having gathered both spiritual and intellectual strength, conclusively led to the
Albanian Renaissance. In 1912 during the
Balkan Wars, Albanians declared the
independence of their country. The demarcation of the new Albanian state was established following the
Treaty of Bucharest and left about half of the ethnic Albanian population outside of its borders,
partitioned between Greece, Montenegro and Serbia.[79] After the
Second World War up until the
Revolutions of 1991, Albania was governed by a
communist government under
Enver Hoxha where Albania became largely isolated from the rest of Europe. In neighbouring
Yugoslavia, Albanians underwent periods of discrimination and systematic oppression that concluded with the
War of Kosovo and eventually with
Kosovar independence.
The Albanians (
Albanian: Shqiptarët) and their country Albania (
Albanian: Shqipëria) have been identified by many
ethnonyms. The most common native
ethnonym is "Shqiptar", plural "Shqiptarë"; the name "Albanians" (
Byzantine Greek: Albanoi/Arbanitai/Arbanites;
Latin: Albanenses/Arbanenses) was used in medieval documents and gradually entered
European Languages from which other similar derivative names emerged,[80] many of which were or still are in use,[81][82][83] such as English "Albanians"; Italian "Albanesi"; German "Albaner";
Greek "Arvanites", "Alvanitis" (Αλβανίτης) plural: "Alvanites" (Αλβανίτες), "Alvanos" (Αλβανός) plural: "Alvanoi" (Αλβανοί);
Turkish "Arnaut", "Arnavut";
South Slavic languages "Arbanasi" (Арбанаси), "Albanci" (Албанци);
Aromanian "Arbinesh" and so on.[e]
The term "Albanoi" (Αλβανοί) is first encountered on the works of Ptolemy (200-118 BCE)[67] also is encountered twice in the works of Byzantine historian
Michael Attaliates, and the term "Arvanitai" (Αρβανίται) is used once by the same author. He referred to the "Albanoi" as having taken part in a revolt against the
Byzantine Empire in 1043, and to the "Arbanitai" as subjects of the Duke of Dyrrachium (modern
Durrës).[87] These references have been disputed as to whether they refer to the people of Albania.[87][88] Historian E. Vranoussi believes that these "Albanoi" were Normans from Sicily. She also notes that the same term (as "Albani") in medieval Latin meant "foreigners".[89]
The reference to "Arvanitai" from Attaliates regarding the participation of Albanians in a rebellion around 1078 is undisputed.[90] In later Byzantine usage, the terms "Arbanitai" and "Albanoi" with a range of variants were used interchangeably, while sometimes the same groups were also called by the classicising name Illyrians.[91][92][93] The first reference to the Albanian language dates to the latter 13th century (around 1285).[94]
The national ethnonym Albanian and its variants are derived from Albanoi, first mentioned as an
Illyrian tribe in the 2nd century CE by
Ptolemy with their centre at the city of
Albanopolis, located in modern-day central Albania, somewhere in the hinterland of
Durrës.[95][81][96][97][98][99] Linguists believe that the alb part in the root word originates from an Indo-European term for a type of mountainous topography, from which other words such as alps are derived.[100] Through the root word alban and its rhotacized equivalents arban, albar, and arbar, the term in Albanian became rendered as Arbëneshë/Arbëreshë for the people and Arbënia/Arbëria for the country.[80][81] The Albanian language was referred to as Arbnisht and Arbërisht.[96] While the
exonym Albania for the general region inhabited by the Albanians does have connotations to Classical Antiquity, the Albanian language employs a different ethnonym, with modern Albanians referring to themselves as Shqip(ë)tarë and to their country as Shqipëria.[81] Two etymologies have been proposed for this ethnonym: one, derived from the etymology from the Albanian word for eagle (shqipe, var., shqiponjë).[83] In Albanian
folk etymology, this word denotes a bird
totem, dating from the times of Skanderbeg as displayed on the
Albanian flag.[83][101] The other is within scholarship that connects it to the verb 'to speak' (me shqiptue) from the Latin "excipere".[83] In this instance the Albanian endonym like Slavand others would originally have been a term connoting "those who speak [intelligibly, the same language]".[83] The words Shqipëri and Shqiptar are attested from 14th century onward,[102] but it was only at the end of 17th and beginning of the early 18th centuries that the placename Shqipëria and the ethnic demonym Shqiptarë gradually replaced Arbëria and Arbëreshë amongst
Albanian speakers.[81][102] That era brought about religious and other sociopolitical changes.[81] As such a new and generalised response by Albanians based on ethnic and linguistic consciousness to this new and different
Ottoman world emerging around them was a change in ethnonym.[81]
Historical records
Little is known about the Albanian people prior to the 11th century, though a text compiled around the beginning of the 11th century in the
Bulgarian language contains a possible reference to them.[103] It is preserved in a
manuscript written in the
Serbo-Croatian Language traced back to the 17th century but published in the 20th century by Radoslav Grujic. It is a fragment of a once longer text that endeavours to explain the origins of peoples and languages in a question-and-answer form similar to a
catechism.
The fragmented manuscript differentiated the world into 72 languages and three religious categories including Christians, half-believers and non-believers. Grujic dated it to the early 11th century and, if this and the identification of the Arbanasi as Albanians are correct, it would be the earliest written document referring to the Balkan Albanians as a people or language group.[103]
It can be seen that there are various languages on earth. Of them, there are five Orthodox languages:
Bulgarian,
Greek, Syrian, Iberian (
Georgian) and Russian. Three of these have Orthodox alphabets: Greek, Bulgarian and Iberian (
Georgian). There are twelve languages of half-believers: Alamanians,
Franks, Magyars (
Hungarians), Indians, Jacobites,
Armenians,
Saxons, Lechs (
Poles), Arbanasi (Albanians),
Croatians, Hizi and
Germans.
Michael Attaleiates (1022–1080) mentions the term Albanoi twice and the term Arbanitai once. The term Albanoi is used first to describe the groups which rebelled in southern Italy and Sicily against the Byzantines in 1038–40. The second use of the term Albanoi is related to groups which supported the revolt of
George Maniakes in 1042 and marched with him throughout the Balkans against the Byzantine capital,
Constantinople. The term Arvanitai is used to describe a revolt of
Bulgarians (Boulgaroi) and Arbanitai in the theme of
Dyrrhachium in 1078–79. It is generally accepted that Arbanitai refers to the ethnonym of medieval Albanians. As such, it is considered to be the first attestation of Albanians as an ethnic group in Byzantine historiography.[104] The use of the term Albanoi in 1038–49 and 1042 as an ethnonym related to Albanians have been a subject of debate. In what has been termed the "Vranoussi-Ducellier debate", Alain Ducellier proposed that both uses of the term referred to medieval Albanians. Era Vranoussi counter-suggested that the first use referred to
Normans, while the second didn't have an ethnic connotation necessarily and could be a reference to the Normans as "foreigners" (
aubain) in
Epirus which Maniakes and his army traversed.[104] This debate has never been resolved.[105] A newer synthesis about the second use of the term Albanoi by Pëllumb Xhufi suggests that the term Albanoi may have referred to Albanians of the specific district of
Arbanon, while Arbanitai to Albanians in general regardless of the specific region they inhabited.[106]
The majority of the Albanian people speak the
Albanian language which is an independent branch within the
Indo-European family of
languages. It is a
language isolate to any other known living language in Europe and indeed no other language in the world has been conclusively associated to its branch. Its origin remains conclusively unknown but it is believed it has descended from an ancient
Paleo-Balkan language.[107]
There are two principal
dialects of the Albanian language traditionally represented by
Gheg and
Tosk.[115][116] The ethnogeographical dividing line is traditionally considered to be the
Shkumbin river, with Gheg spoken in the north of it and Tosk in the south. Dialects of linguistic minorities spoken in
Croatia (
Arbanasi and
Istrian),
Kosovo,
Montenegro and northwestern
North Macedonia are classified as Gheg, while those spoken in
Greece, southwestern
North Macedonia and Italy as Tosk.
Most of the Albanians in Albania and the
Former Yugoslavia are
polyglot and have the ability to understand, speak, read, or write a
foreign language. As defined by the
Institute of Statistics of Albania, 39.9% of the 25 to 64 years old Albanians in Albania are able to use at least one foreign language including English (40%), Italian (27.8%) and
Greek (22.9%).[123]
The origin of the Albanian language remains a contentious subject that has given rise to numerous
hypotheses. The hypothesis of Albanian being one of the descendant of the
Illyrian languages (
Messapic language) is based on
geography where the languages were spoken however not enough archaeological evidence is left behind to come therefore to a definite conclusion. Another hypothesis associates the Albanian language with the
Thracian language. This theory takes exception to the territory, since the language was spoken in an area distinct from Albania, and no significant population movements have been recorded in the period when the shift from one language to the other is supposed to have occurred.[124]
The
Komani-Kruja culture is an archaeological culture attested from late antiquity to the Middle Ages in central and northern Albania, southern Montenegro and similar sites in the western parts of
North Macedonia. It consists of settlements usually built below hillforts along the
Lezhë (
Praevalitana)-
Dardania and
Via Egnatia road networks which connected the Adriatic coastline with the central Balkan Roman provinces. Its
type site is Komani and its fort on the nearby Dalmace hill in the Drin river valley.
Kruja and Lezha represent significant sites of the culture. The population of Komani-Kruja represents a local, western Balkan people which was linked to the Roman Justinianic military system of forts. The development of Komani-Kruja is significant for the study of the transition between the
classical antiquity population of Albania to the medieval Albanians who were attested in historical records in the 11th century. Winnifrith (2020) recently described this population as the survival of a "Latin-Illyrian" culture which emerged later in historical records as Albanians and
Vlachs (
Eastern Romance-speaking people). In Winnifrith's narrative, the geographical conditions of northern Albania favored the continuation of the Albanian language in hilly and mountainous areas as opposed to lowland valleys.[125][need quotation to verify]
The Albanian people maintain a very chequered and tumultuous history behind them, a fact explained by their geographical position in the
Southeast of Europe at the cultural and political crossroad between the east and west. The issue surrounding the
origin of the Albanian people has long been debated by historians and
linguists for centuries. Many scholars consider the Albanians, in terms of
linguistic evidences, the descendants of ancient populations of the
Balkan Peninsula, either the
Illyrians,
Thracians or another
Paleo-Balkan group.[126]
The first certain attestation of medieval Albanians as an ethnic group is in Byzantine historiography in the work of
Michael Attaleiates (1022–1080).[104] Attaleiates mentions the term Albanoi twice and the term Arbanitai once. The term Albanoi is used first to describe the groups which rebelled in southern Italy and Sicily against the Byzantines in 1038–40. The second use of the term Albanoi is related to groups which supported the revolt of
George Maniakes in 1042 and marched with him throughout the Balkans against the Byzantine capital,
Constantinople. The term Arvanitai is used to describe a revolt of
Bulgarians (Boulgaroi) and Arbanitai in the theme of
Dyrrhachium in 1078–79. It is generally accepted that Arbanitai refers to the ethnonym of medieval Albanians. The use of the term Albanoi in 1038–49 and 1042 as an ethnonym related to Albanians have been a subject of debate. In what has been termed the "Ducellier-Vrannousi" debate, Alain Ducellier proposed that both uses of the term referred to medieval Albanians. Era Vrannousi counter-suggested that the first use referred to
Normans, while the second didn't have an ethnic connotation necessarily and could be a reference to the Normans as "foreigners" (
aubain) in
Epirus which Maniakes and his army traversed.[104] The debate has never been resolved.[105] A newer synthesis about the second use of the term Albanoi by Pëllumb Xhufi suggests that the term Albanoi may have referred to Albanians of the specific district of
Arbanon, while Arbanitai to Albanians in general regardless of the specific region they inhabited.[106] The name reflects the Albanian endonym Arbër/n + esh which itself derives from the same root as the name of the
Albanoi[127]
In 1272 the
Kingdom of Albania was created after a delegation of Albanian noblemen from Durrës signed a treaty declaring union with the Kingdom of Sicily under Charles.[135] Charles soon imposed military rule, new taxes, took sons of Albanian noblemen hostage to ensure loyalty, and confiscated lands for
Angevin nobles. This led to discontent among Albanian noblemen, several of whom turned to Byzantine Emperor
Michael VIII. In late 1274, Byzantine forces helped by local Albanian noblemen capture Berat and Butrint.[136] Charles' attempt to advance towards Constantinople failed at the
Siege of Berat (1280–1281). A Byzantine counteroffensive ensued, which drove the Angevins out of the interior by 1281. The
Sicilian Vespers rebellion further weakened the position of Charles, who died in 1285. By the end of the 13th century, most of Albania was under Byzantine Emperor
Andronikos II Palaiologos. In 1296 Serbian king
Stephen Milutin captured Durrës. In 1299 Andronikos II married his daughter Simonis to Milutin and the lands he had conquered were considered as
dowry. In 1302,
Philip I, Prince of Taranto, grandson of Charles, claimed his rights on the Albanian kingdom and gained the support of local Albanian Catholics who preferred him over the Orthodox Serbs and Greeks, as well as the support of
Pope Benedict XI. In the summer of 1304, the Serbs were expelled from the city of Durrës by the locals who submitted themselves to Angevin rule.[137]
Prominent Albanian leaders during this time were the
Thopia family, ruling in an area between the Mat and Shkumbin rivers,[138] and the
Muzaka family in the territory between the Shkumbin and Vlorë.[139] In 1279, Gjon I Muzaka, who remained loyal to the Byzantines and resisted Angevin conquest of Albania, was captured by the forces of Charles but later released following pressure from Albanian nobles. The Muzaka family continued to remain loyal to the Byzantines and resisted the expansion of the
Serbian Kingdom. In 1335 the head of the family, Andrea II Muzaka, gained the title of
Despot and other Muzakas pursued careers in the Byzantine government in Constantinople. Andrea II soon endorsed an anti-Byzantine revolt in his domains between 1335–1341 and formed an alliance with
Robert, Prince of Taranto in 1336.[140] In 1336, Serbian king
Stefan Dušan captured Durrës, including the territory under the control of the Muzaka family. Although Angevins managed to recapture Durazzo, Dušan continued his expansion, and in the period of 1337–45 he had captured
Kanina and
Valona in southern Albania.[141] Around 1340 forces of Andrea II defeated the Serbian army at the
Pelister mountain.[141] After the death of Stefan Dušan in 1355 the
Serbian Empire disintegrated, and
Karl Thopia captured Durrës while the Muzaka family of Berat regained control over parts of southeastern Albania and over
Kastoria[140][142] that Andrea II captured from
Prince Marko after the
Battle of Marica in 1371.[143][73]
The kingdom reinforced the influence of Catholicism and the conversion to its rite, not only in the region of Durrës but in other parts of the country.[144] A new wave of Catholic dioceses, churches and monasteries were founded, papal missionaries and a number of different religious orders began spreading into the country. Those who were not Catholic in central and northern Albania converted and a great number of Albanian clerics and monks were present in the Dalmatian Catholic institutions.[145]
Around 1230 the two main centers of Albanian settlements were around
Devoll river in what is now central Albania[146] and the other around the region known as Arbanon.[147] Albanian presence in Croatia can be traced back to the beginning of the
Late Middle Ages.[148] In this period, there was a significant Albanian community in
Ragusa with a number of families of Albanian origin inclusively the
Sorgo family who came from the
Cape of Rodon in central Albania, across
Kotor in eastern Montenegro, to
Dalmatia.[149] By the 13th century, Albanian merchants were trading directly with the peoples of the
Republic of Ragusa in Dalmatia which increased familiarity between Albanians and Ragusans.[150] The upcoming invasion of Albania by the
Ottoman Empire and the death of
Skanderbeg caused many Christian Albanians to flee to Dalmatia and surrounding countries.[151]
Albanians were recruited all over Europe as a light cavalry known as stratioti. The stratioti were pioneers of light cavalry tactics during the 15th century. In the early 16th century heavy cavalry in the European armies was principally remodeled after Albanian stradioti of the Venetian army, Hungarian
hussars and German mercenary cavalry units (Schwarzreitern).[152]
Under the leadership of
Gjergj Kastrioti Skanderbeg, a former governor of the Ottoman
Sanjak of Dibra, a prosperous and longstanding revolution erupted with the formation of the
League of Lezhë in 1444 up until the
Siege of Shkodër ending in 1479, multiple times defeating the mightiest power of the time led by
SultansMurad II and
Mehmed II. Skanderbeg managed to gather several of the Albanian principals, amongst them the
Arianitis,
Dukagjinis,
Zaharias and
Thopias, and establish a centralised authority over most of the non-conquered territories and proclaiming himself the Lord of Albania (Dominus Albaniae in Latin).[153] Skanderbeg consistently pursued the aim relentlessly but rather unsuccessfully to create a European coalition against the Ottomans. His unequal fight against them won the esteem of Europe and financial and military aid from the
Papacy and
Naples,
Venice and
Ragusa.[154][155][156]
The Albanians, then predominantly Christian, were initially considered as an
inferior class of people and as such were subjected to heavy
taxes such as the Devshirme system that allowed the state to collect a requisite percentage of Christian adolescents from the
Balkans and elsewhere to compose the
Janissary.[157] Since the Albanians were seen as strategically important, they made up a significant proportion of the
Ottoman military and bureaucracy. They were therefore to be found within the imperial services as vital military and administrative retainers from
Egypt to
Algeria and the rest of the
Maghreb.[158]
In the late 18th century,
Ali Pasha Tepelena created the autonomous region of the
Pashalik of Yanina within the
Ottoman Empire which was never recognised as such by the
High Porte. The territory he properly governed incorporated most of southern
Albania,
Epirus,
Thessaly and southwestern
Macedonia. During his rule, the town of
Janina blossomed into a cultural, political and economic hub for both Albanians and Greeks.
The ultimate goal of Ali Pasha Tepelena seems to have been the establishment of an independent rule in Albania and Epirus.[159] Thus, he obtained control of
Arta and took control over the ports of
Butrint,
Preveza and
Vonitsa. He also gained control of the
pashaliks of
Elbasan,
Delvina,
Berat and
Vlorë. His relations with the High Porte were always tense though he developed and maintained relations with the
British,
French and
Russians and formed alliances with them at various times.[160]
In the 19th century, the Albanian
wālīMuhammad Ali established a
dynasty that ruled over
Egypt and
Sudan until the middle of the 20th century.[161] After a brief
French invasion led by
Napoleon Bonaparte and the Ottomans and
Mameluks competing for power there, he managed collectively with his Albanian troops to become the Ottoman viceroy in Egypt.[162] As he revolutionised the military and economic spheres of Egypt, his empire attracted Albanian people contributing to the emergence of the
Albanian diaspora in Egypt initially formed by Albanian soldiers and mercenaries.
Islam arrived in the lands of the Albanian people gradually and grew widespread between at least the 17th and 18th centuries.[76] The new religion brought many transformations into Albanian society and henceforth offered them equal opportunities and advancement within the
Ottoman Empire.
With the advent of increasing suppression on
Catholicism, the Ottomans initially focused their conversions on the Catholic Albanians of the north in the 17th century and followed suit in the 18th century on the Orthodox Albanians of the south.[163][164] At this point, the urban centers of
central and
southern Albania had largely adopted the religion of the growing Muslim Albanian elite. Many mosques and
tekkes were constructed throughout those urban centers and cities such as
Berat,
Gjirokastër,
Korçë and
Shkodër started to flourish.[165] In the far
north, the spread of Islam was slower due to Catholic Albanian resistance and the inaccessible and rather remote mountainous terrain.[166]
Muhammad Ali of Egypt was the governor of Egypt, Sudan, the Levant and Hejaz in the 19th century.
The motives for
conversion to Islam are subject to differing interpretations according to scholars depending on the context though the lack of sources does not help when investigating such issues.[76] Reasons included the incentive to escape high
taxes levied on non-Muslims subjects,
ecclesiastical decay, coercion by Ottoman authorities in times of war, and the privileged legal and social position Muslims within the Ottoman administrative and political machinery had over that of non-Muslims.[167][168][169][170][171][172][173]
Areas such as Albania, western Macedonia, southern Serbia, Kosovo, parts of northern Greece and southern Montenegro in Ottoman sources were referred to as Arnavudluk or Albania.[176][177][178]
The
Albanian Renaissance characterised a period wherein the Albanian people gathered both
spiritual and intellectual strength to establish their rights for an independent political and social life, culture and education. By the late 18th century and the early 19th century, its foundation arose within the
Albanian communities in
Italy and
Romania and was frequently linked to the influences of the
Romanticism and
Enlightenment principles.[180]
Albania was under the rule of the
Ottoman Empire for almost five centuries and the Ottoman authorities suppressed any expression of unity or national conscience by the Albanian people. A number of thoroughly intellectual Albanians, among them
Naum Veqilharxhi,
Girolamo de Rada,
Dora d'Istria,
Thimi Mitko,
Naim and
Sami Frashëri, made a conscious effort to awaken feelings of pride and unity among their people by working to develop
Albanian literature that would call to mind the rich history and hopes for a more decent future.[181]
The Albanians had poor or often no schools or other institutions in place to protect and preserve their
cultural heritage. The need for schools was preached initially by the increasing number of Albanians educated abroad. The Albanian communities in Italy and elsewhere were particularly active in promoting the Albanian cause, especially in education which finally resulted with the foundation of the
Mësonjëtorja in
Korçë, the first secular school in the
Albanian language.
The
Turkish yoke had become fixed in the nationalist mythologies and psyches of the people in the
Balkans, and their march toward independence quickened. Due to the more substantial of Islamic influence, the Albanians internal social divisions, and the fear that they would lose their Albanian territories to the emerging neighbouring states,
Serbia,
Montenegro,
Bulgaria and
Greece, were among the last peoples in the Balkans to desire division from the Ottoman Empire.[182]
The national awakening as a coherent political movement emerged after the
Treaty of San Stefano, according to which Albanian-inhabited territories were to be ceded to the neighbouring states, and focused on preventing that partition.[183][184] It was the impetus for the nation-building movement, which was based more on fear of partition than national identity.[184] Even after the
declaration of independence, national identity was fragmented and possibly non-existent in much of the newly proposed country.[184] The state of disunity and fragmentation would remain until the communist period following
Second World War, when the communist nation-building project would achieve greater success in nation-building and reach more people than any previous regime, thus creating Albanian national communist identity.[184]
Enver Hoxha of the Communist
Party of Labour took power in
Albania in 1946. Albania established an alliance with the
Eastern Bloc which provided Albania with many advantages in the form of economic assistance and military protection from the
Western Bloc during the
Cold War.
The Albanians experienced a period of several beneficial political and economic changes. The
government defended the territorial
integrity and
sovereignty of Albania, diversified the economy through a programme of industrialisation which led to a higher
standard of living and followed improvements in areas such as health, education and infrastructure.[185]
It subsequently followed a period wherein the Albanians lived within an extreme isolation from the rest of the world for the next four decades. By 1967, the established government had officially proclaimed Albania to be the first
atheistic state in the world as they beforehand confiscated
churches,
monasteries and mosques, and any religious expression instantly became grounds for imprisonment.[186]
Protests coinciding with the emerging
revolutions of 1989 began to break out in various cities throughout Albania including
Shkodër and
Tirana which eventually lead to the
fall of communism. Significant internal and external migration waves of Albanians to such countries as
Greece and Italy followed.
Bunkerisation is arguably the most visible and memorable legacy of communism in Albania. Nearly 175,000 reinforced concrete
bunkers were built on strategic locations across
Albania's territory including near borders, within towns, on the seashores or mountains.[187] These bunkers were never used for their intended purpose or for sheltered the population from attacks or an invasion by a neighbor. However, they were abandoned after the breakup of communism and have been sometimes reused for a variety of purposes.
The overwhelming majority of Kosovo's population is ethnically Albanian with nearly 1.7 million people.[188] Their presence as well as in the adjacent regions of
Toplica and
Morava is recorded since the
Middle Ages.[189] As the Serbs expelled many Albanians from the wider Toplica and Morava regions in Southern Serbia, which the 1878
Congress of Berlin had given to the
Principality of Serbia, many of them settled in Kosovo.[190][191][192]
After being an integral section of the
Kingdom of Yugoslavia, Kosovo including its Albanian population went through a period of discrimination, economic and political persecution.[citation needed] Rights to use the
Albanian language were guaranteed by the constitution of the later formed
Socialist Yugoslavia and was widely used in Macedonia and Montenegro prior to the
dissolution of Yugoslavia.[193] In 1989, Kosovo lost its status as a federal entity of Yugoslavia with rights similar to those of the six other republics and eventually became part of
Serbia and Montenegro.
In 1998, tensions between the
Albanian and
Serb population of Kosovo culminated in the
Kosovo War, which led to the external and internal displacement of hundreds of thousands of Kosovo Albanians. Serbian paramilitary forces committed war crimes in Kosovo, although the
government of Serbia claims that the army was only going after suspected Albanian terrorists.
NATO launched a
78-day air campaign in 1999, which eventually led to an end to the war.[194]
Approximately five million Albanians are geographically distributed across the
Balkan Peninsula with about half this number living in
Albania,
Kosovo,
North Macedonia and
Montenegro as well as to a more lesser extent in
Croatia and
Serbia. There are also significant Albanian populations in
Greece.
Approximately 1.8 million Albanians are concentrated in the partially recognised
Republic of Kosovo. They are geographically distributed south of the
municipality of
North Mitrovica and constitute the overall majority ethnic group of the territory.
In
Serbia, the Albanians are an officially recognised ethnic minority group with a population of around 70,000.[200] They are significantly concentrated in the
municipalities of
Bujanovac and
Preševo in the
Pčinja District. In
Romania, the number of Albanians is unofficially estimated from 500 to 10,000 mainly distributed in
Bucharest. They are recognised as an ethnic minority group and are respectively represented in
Parliament of Romania.[201][202]
After 1991, a mass migration of Albanians towards Italy occurred.[210] Between 2015 and 2016, the number of Albanian migrants who held legal permits of residence in Italy was numbered to be around 480,000 and 500,000.[210][211]Tuscany, Lombardy and
Emilia-Romagna represent the
regions with the strongest presence of the modern Albanian population in Italy.[210] As of 2022, 433,000 Albanian migrants who held legal permits of residence lived in Italy and were the second largest migrant community in Italy after Romanians.[212] As of 2018, an additional ca. 200,000 Albanian migrants have obtained Italian citizenship (children born in Italy not included).[213]
The
Arvanites and
Albanians of Western Thrace are a group descended from
Tosks who migrated to southern and central Greece between the 13th and 16th centuries.[71] They are Greek Orthodox Christians, and though they traditionally speak a dialect of
Tosk Albanian known as
Arvanitika, they have fully assimilated into the Greek nation and do not identify as Albanians.[72][215][216] Arvanitika is in a state of attrition due to language shift towards Greek and large-scale internal migration to the cities and subsequent intermingling of the population during the 20th century.
The
Cham Albanians were a group that formerly inhabited a region of
Epirus known as
Chameria, nowadays
Thesprotia in northwestern Greece. Many Cham Albanians converted to Islam during the Ottoman era. Muslim Chams were
expelled from Greece during
World War II, by an
anti-communist resistance group (EDES). The causes of the expulsion were multifaceted and remain a matter of debate among historians. Different narratives in historiography argue that the causes involved pre-existing Greek policies which targeted the minority and sought its elimination, the Cham
collaboration with the Axis forces and local property disputes which were instrumentalized after WWII.[217][218] The estimated number of Cham Albanians expelled from Epirus to Albania and
Turkey varies: figures include 14,000, 19,000, 20,000, 25,000 and 30,000.[219][220][221][222][223] According to Cham reports this number should be raised to c. 35,000.[224]
Large-scale migration from Albania to Greece occurred after 1991. During this period, at least 500,000 Albanians have migrated and relocated to Greece. Despite the lack of exact statistics, it is estimated that at least 700,000 Albanians have moved to Greece during the last 25 years. The Albanian government estimates 500,000 Albanians in Greece at the very least without accounting for their children.[12] The 2011 Greece census indicated that Albanians consisted the biggest group of migrants in Greece, numbered roughly 480,000, but taking into consideration the current population of Greece (11 million) and the fact that the census failed to account for illegal foreigners, it was estimated that Albanians consist of 5% of the population (at least 550,000).[13] By 2005, around 600,000 Albanians lived in Greece, forming the largest immigrant community in the country.[225] They are economic migrants whose migration began in 1991, following the collapse of the
Socialist People's Republic of Albania. As of 2022[update], in total, there might have been more than 500,000 Albanian-born migrants and their children who received Greek citizenship over the years.[226] In recent years, many Albanian workers and their families have left Greece in search of better opportunities elsewhere in Europe.[226] As of 2022, there c. 292,000 Albanian immigrants are holders of legal permits to live and work in Greece, down from c. 423,000 in 2021.[227]
Albanians in Greece have a long history of
Hellenisation, assimilation and integration.[228][229] Many ethnic Albanians have been naturalised as Greek nationals, others have self-declared as Greek since arrival and a considerable number live and work across both countries seasonally hence the number of Albanians in the country has often fluctuated.[230]
Diaspora based Albanians may self identify as Albanian, use hybrid identification or identify with their nationality, often creating an obstacle in establishing a total figure of the population.[231]
During the end of the 20th and the beginning of the 21st centuries, the
conflicts in the Balkans and the
Kosovo War set in motion large population movements of Albanians to
Central,
Western and Northern Europe.[232] The gradual
collapse of communism in Albania triggered as well a new wave of migration and contributed to the emergence of a new diaspora, mainly in Southern Europe, in such countries as
Greece and Italy.[233][234][235]
In
Western Europe, the Albanian population of approximately 10,000 people living in the
Benelux countries is in comparison to other regions relatively limited. There are more than 6,000 Albanian people living in
Belgium and 2,800 in the nearby
Netherlands. The most lesser number of Albanian people in the Benelux region is to be found in
Luxembourg with a population of 2,100.[239][45][48]
Within Northern Europe, Sweden possesses the most sizeable population of Albanians in
Scandinavia however there is no exact answer to their number in the country. The populations also tend to be lower in
Norway,
Finland and
Denmark with more than 18,000, 10,000 and 8,000 Albanians respectively.[27][28][30] The population of Albanians in the
United Kingdom is officially estimated to be around 39,000 whiles in Ireland there are less than 2,500 Albanians.[240][32]
The Albanian diaspora in Africa and Asia, in such countries as
Egypt,
Syria or
Turkey, was predominantly formed during the Ottoman period through economic
migration and early years of the
Republic of Turkey through migration due to sociopolitical discrimination and violence experienced by Albanians in
Balkans.[241]
In
Turkey, the exact numbers of the Albanian population of the country are difficult to correctly estimate. According to a 2008 report, there were approximately 1.300,000 people of Albanian descent living in Turkey.[242] As of that report, more than 500,000 Albanian descendants still recognise their
ancestry and or their language, culture and traditions.[243]
There are also other estimates that range from being 3 to 4 million people up to a total of 5 million in number, although most of these are Turkish citizens of either full or partial Albanian ancestry being no longer fluent in Albanian, comparable to the
German Americans.[243][244][58] This was due to various degrees of either linguistic and or
cultural assimilation occurring amongst the Albanian diaspora in Turkey.[58] Albanians are active in the civic life of Turkey.[243][245]
In
Egypt there are 18,000 Albanians, mostly
Tosk speakers.[58] Many are descendants of the
Janissaries of
Muhammad Ali Pasha, an Albanian who became
Wāli, and self-declared
Khedive of Egypt and
Sudan.[58] In addition to the
dynasty that he established, a large part of the former Egyptian and Sudanese
aristocracy was of Albanian origin.[58] Albanian Sunnis, Bektashis and Orthodox Christians were all represented in this diaspora, whose members at some point included major
Renaissance figures (Rilindasit), including Thimi Mitko, Spiro Dine, Andon Zako Çajupi, Milo Duçi, Fan Noli and others who lived in Egypt for a time.[246] With the ascension of
Gamal Abdel Nasser in Egypt and rise of
Arab nationalism, the last remnants of Albanian community there were forced to leave.[247] Albanians have been present in
Arab countries such as Syria, Lebanon,[246] Iraq, Jordan, and for about five centuries as a legacy of
Ottoman Turkish rule.
The most sizeable Albanian population in the Americas is predominantly to be found in the United States.
New York metropolitan area in the
State of New York is home to the most sizeable Albanian population of the United States.[252] As of 2017, there are approximately 205,000 Albanians in the country with the main concentration in the
states of New York,
Michigan,
Massachusetts and
Illinois.[253][49] The number could be higher counting the
Arbëreshë people as well; they are often distinguishable from other Albanian Americans with regard to their
Italianized names, nationality and a common
religion.[254]
In Canada, there are approximately 39,000 Albanians in the country, including 36,185 Albanians from
Albania and 2,870 Albanians from
Kosovo, predominantly distributed in a multitude of
provinces such as
Ontario, Quebec,
Alberta and
British Columbia.[51] Canada's largest cities such as
Toronto, Montreal and
Edmonton were besides the United States a major centre of Albanian migration to North America. Toronto is home to around 17,000 Albanians.[255]
Albanian immigration to Australia began in the late 19th century and most took place during the 20th century.[256]
People who planned to immigrate chose Australia after the US introduced immigration quotas on southern Europeans.[256] Most were from southern Albania, of Muslim and Orthodox backgrounds and tended to live in
Victoria and
Queensland, with smaller numbers in
Western and Northern Australia.[256][257]
Italy's
annexation of Albania marked a difficult time for Albanian Australians as many were thought by Australian authorities to pose a fascist threat.[258] Post-war, the numbers of Albanian immigrants slowed due to immigration restrictions placed by the
communist government in Albania.[259]
Albanians from southwestern Yugoslavia (modern North Macedonia) arrived and settled in Melbourne in the 1960s-1970s.[260][261] Other Albanian immigrants from Yugoslavia came from
Montenegro and
Serbia. The immigrants were mostly Muslims, but also Catholics among them including the relatives of the renowned Albanian nun and missionary
Mother Teresa.[256] Albanian refugees from Kosovo settled in Australia following the aftermath of the Kosovo conflict.[256][262]
In the early twenty first century, Victoria has the highest concentration of Albanians and smaller Albanian communities exist in Western Australia, South Australia, Queensland, New South Wales and the Northern Territory.[263][264] In 2016, approximately 4,041 persons resident in Australia identified themselves as having been born in
Albania and
Kosovo, while 15,901 persons identified themselves as having Albanian ancestry, either alone or in combination with another ancestry.[265]
Albanian migration to New Zealand occurred mid twentieth century following the
Second World War.[266][267][268] A small group of Albanian refugees originating mainly from Albania and the rest from Yugoslavian Kosovo and Macedonia settled in Auckland.[268][269][270] During the
Kosovo crisis (1999), up to 400 Kosovo Albanian refugees settled in New Zealand.[271][272][273] In the twenty first century, Albanian New Zealanders number 400-500 people and are mainly concentrated in
Auckland.[274][270]
The
Albanian tribes (
Albanian: fiset shqiptare) form a historical mode of social organization (farefisní) in
Albania and the southwestern
Balkans characterized by a common
culture, often common patrilineal kinship ties tracing back to one progenitor and shared
social ties. The fis (
Albaniandefinite form: fisi; commonly translated as "tribe", also as "clan" or "kin" community) stands at the center of Albanian organization based on
kinship relations, a concept which can be found among southern Albanians also with the term farë (
Albaniandefinite form: fara). Inherited from ancient
Illyrian social structures, Albanian tribal society emerged in the early Middle Ages as the dominant form of social organization among Albanians.[275][276] It also remained in a less developed system in
southern Albania[277] where large feudal estates and later trade and urban centres began to develop at the expense of tribal organization. One of the most particular elements of the Albanian tribal structure is its dependence on the Kanun, a code of Albanian oral
customary laws.[275] Most tribes engaged in warfare against external forces like the Ottoman Empire. Some also engaged in limited inter-tribal struggle for the control of resources.[277]
Until the early years of the 20th century, the Albanian tribal society remained largely intact until the rise to power of
communist regime in 1944, and is considered as the only example of a tribal social system structured with tribal chiefs and councils,
blood feuds and
oral customary laws, surviving in
Europe until the middle of the 20th century.[277][278][279] Members of the tribes of northern Albania believe their history is based on the notions of resistance and isolationism.[280] Some scholars connect this belief with the concept of "negotiated peripherality". Throughout history the territory northern Albanian tribes occupy has been contested and peripheral so northern Albanian tribes often exploited their position and negotiated their peripherality in profitable ways. This peripheral position also affected their national program which significance and challenges are different from those in southern Albania.[281]
Kanun
The
Kanun is a set of Albanian traditional
customary laws, which has directed all the aspects of the
Albanian tribal society.[282][283] For at least the last five centuries and until today, Albanian customary laws have been kept alive only orally by the tribal elders. The success in preserving them exclusively through
oral systems highlights their universal resilience and provides evidence of their likely ancient origins.[284] Strong pre-Christian motifs mixed with motifs from the Christian era reflect the stratification of the Albanian customary law across various historical ages.[285] Over time, Albanian customary laws have undergone their historical development, they have been changed and supplemented with new
norms, in accordance with certain requirements of socio-economic development.[286]Besa and nderi (
honour) are of major importance in Albanian customary law as the cornerstone of personal and social conduct.[287] The Kanun is based on four pillars – Honour (
Albanian: Nderi), Hospitality (
Albanian: Mikpritja), Right Conduct (
Albanian: Sjellja) and Kin Loyalty (
Albanian: Fis).
Besa
An Albanian who says besa once cannot in any way break [his] promise and cannot be unfaithful [to it].
Besa (pledge of honor)[289] is an Albanian cultural
precept, usually translated as "
faith" or "
oath", that means "to keep the promise" and "word of honor".[290] The concept is based upon faithfulness toward one's word in the form of loyalty or as an allegiance guarantee.[291] Besa contains mores toward obligations to the family and a friend, the demand to have internal commitment, loyalty and solidarity when conducting oneself with others and secrecy in relation to outsiders.[291] The besa is also the main element within the concept of the ancestor's will or pledge (amanet) where a demand for faithfulness to a cause is expected in situations that relate to unity, national liberation and independence that transcend a person and generations.[291]
The concept of besa is included in the
Kanun, the
customary law of the Albanian people.[291] The besa was an important institution within the tribal society of the
Albanian tribes,[292] who swore oaths to jointly fight against invaders, and in this aspect the besa served to uphold tribal autonomy.[292] The besa was used toward regulating tribal affairs between and within the Albanian tribes.[293]
The traditional
cuisine of the Albanians is diverse and has been greatly influenced by traditions and their varied
environment in the
Balkans and turbulent history throughout the course of the centuries.[296] There is a considerable diversity between the
Mediterranean and
Balkan-influenced cuisines of Albanians in the Western Balkan nations and the
Italian and
Greek-influenced cuisines of the
Arbëreshës and
Chams. The enjoyment of food has a high priority in the lives of Albanian peoples especially when celebrating
religious festivals such as
Ramadan,
Eid, Christmas, Easter,
Hanukkah or
Novruz
Ingredients include many varieties of fruits such as
lemons, oranges,
figs and
olives, herbs such as
basil,
lavender,
mint,
oregano,
rosemary and
thyme and vegetables such as garlic, onion,
peppers, potatoes and tomatoes. Albanian peoples who live closer to the
Mediterranean Sea,
Prespa Lake and
Ohrid Lake are able to complement their diet with fish,
shellfish and other seafood. Otherwise,
lamb is often considered the traditional meat for different
religious festivals. Poultry, beef and pork are also in plentiful supply.
Tavë Kosi is a national dish in Albania consisting of garlic lamb and rice baked under a thick, tart veil of
yogurt. Fërgesë is another national dish and is made with peppers, tomatoes and
cottage cheese. Pite is a baked pastry with a filling of a mixture of
spinach and
gjizë or
mish. Desserts include
Flia, consisting of multiple crepe-like layers brushed with crea; petulla, a traditionally fried dough, and Krofne, similar to
Berliner.
The earliest preserved relics of visual arts of the Albanian people are
sacred in nature and represented by numerous
frescoes,
murals and
icons which has been created with an admirable use of color and gold. They reveal a wealth of various influences and traditions that converged in the historical lands of the Albanian people throughout the course of the centuries.[297]
The rise of the
Byzantines and
Ottomans during the
Middle Ages was accompanied by a corresponding growth in
Christian and
Islamic art often apparent in examples of architecture and mosaics throughout Albania.[298] The
Albanian Renaissance proved crucial to the emancipation of the modern Albanian culture and saw unprecedented developments in all fields of literature and arts whereas artists sought to return to the ideals of
Impressionism and
Romanticism.[299][300]
In 1856,
Pjetër Marubi arrived in
Shkodër and established the first photography museum in Albania and probably the entire
Balkans, the
Marubi Museum. The collection of 150,000 photographs, captured by the Albanian-Italian Marubi dynasty, offers an ensemble of photographs depicting social rituals, traditional costumes, portraits of Albanian history.
The Kulla, a traditional Albanian
dwelling constructed completely from natural materials, is a cultural relic from the medieval period particularly widespread in the southwestern region of
Kosovo and northern region of
Albania. The rectangular shape of a Kulla is produced with irregular
stone ashlars, river pebbles and
chestnut woods, however, the size and number of floors depends on the size of the family and their financial resources.
The earliest known use of written Albanian is a
baptismal formula (1462) written by the Archbishop of Durrës
Paulus Angelus.[302] In 1555, a Catholic clergyman
Gjon Buzuku from the Shestan region published the earliest known book written in Albanian titled Meshari (The Missal) regarding Catholic prayers and rites containing archaic medieval language, lexemes and expressions obsolete in contemporary Albanian.[303] Other Christian clergy such as
Luca Matranga in the Arbëresh diaspora published (1592) in the Tosk dialect while other notable authors were from northern Albanian lands and included
Pjetër Budi,
Frang Bardhi, and
Pjetër Bogdani.[304]
The
Bejtexhinj in the 18th century emerged as the result of the influences of
Islam and particularly
Sufism orders moving towards
Orientalism.[306] Individuals such as
Nezim Frakulla,
Hasan Zyko Kamberi,
Shahin and
Dalip Frashëri compiled literature infused with expressions, language and themes on the circumstances of the time, the insecurities of the future and their discontent at the conditions of the feudal system.[306]
The Albanian Renaissance in the 19th century is remarkable both for its valuable poetic achievement and for its variety within the Albanian literature. It drew on the ideas of
Romanticism and
Enlightenment characterised by its emphasis on emotion and individualism as well as the interaction between nature and mankind.
Dora d'Istria,
Girolamo de Rada,
Naim Frashëri,
Naum Veqilharxhi,
Sami Frashëri and
Pashko Vasa maintained this movement and are remembered today for composing series of prominent works.
After World War II, Albania emerged as a communist state and Socialist realism became part of the literary scene.[308] Authors and poets emerged such as
Sejfulla Malëshova,
Dritero Agolli and
Ismail Kadare who has become an internationally acclaimed novelist and others who challenged the regime through various sociopolitical and historic themes in their works.[308]Martin Camaj wrote in the diaspora while in neighbouring Yugoslavia, the emergence of Albanian cultural expression resulted in sociopolitical and poetic literature by notable authors like
Adem Demaçi,
Rexhep Qosja,
Jusuf Buxhovi.[309] The literary scene of the 21st century remains vibrant producing new novelists, authors, poets and other writers.[310]
The Albanian people have incorporated various natural materials from their local agriculture and livestock as a source of
attire, clothing and fabrics. Their
traditional apparel was primarily influenced by
nature, the
lifestyle and has continuously changed since ancient times.[311] Different regions possesses their own exceptional clothing traditions and peculiarities varied occasionally in colour, material and shape.
The
traditional costume of Albanian men includes a white
skirt called
Fustanella, a white shirt with wide
sleeves, and a thin black jacket or vest such as the
Xhamadan or Xhurdia. In winter, they add a warm
woolen or
fur coat known as Flokata or Dollama made from
sheepskin or goat fur. Another authentic piece is called Tirq which is a tight pair of felt
trousers mostly white, sometimes dark brown or black.
The Albanian women's costumes are much more elaborate, colorful and richer in ornamentation. In all the Albanian regions the women's clothing often has been decorated with
filigreeironwork, colorful embroidery, a lot of symbols and vivid accessories. A unique and ancient dress is called
Xhubleta, a bell shaped skirt reaching down to the calves and worn from the shoulders with two shoulder straps at the upper part.[312][313]
Different traditional handmade shoes and socks were worn by the Albanian people.
Opinga, leather shoes made from rough animal skin, were worn with
Çorape, knitted woolen or cotton socks.
Headdresses remain a contrasting and recognisable feature of Albanian traditional clothing. Albanian men wore hats of various designs, shape and size. A common headgear is a
Plis and Qylafë, in contrast, Albanian women wore a Kapica adorned with jewels or embroidery on the forehead, and a Lëvere or Kryqe which usually covers the head, shoulders and neck. Wealthy Albanian women wore headdresses embellished with gems, gold or silver.
For the Albanian people,
music is a vital component to their
culture and characterised by its own peculiar features and diverse melodic pattern reflecting the
history,
language and
way of life.[316] It rather varies from region to another with two essential stylistic differences between the music of the
Ghegs and
Tosks. Hence, their geographic position in Southeast Europe in combination with cultural, political and social issues is frequently expressed through music along with the accompanying
instruments and dances.
Albanian folk music is contrasted by the heroic tone of the Ghegs and the relaxed sounds of the Tosks.[317] Traditional
iso-polyphony perhaps represents the most noble and essential genre of the Tosks which was proclaimed a
Masterpiece of the Intangible Heritage of Humanity by
UNESCO.[318] Ghegs in contrast have a reputation for a distinctive variety of sung
epic poetry often about the tumultuous history of the Albanian people.
Many different
spiritual traditions, religious
faiths and
beliefs are practised by the Albanian people who historically have succeeded to coexist peacefully over the centuries in Southeast Europe.[citation needed] They are traditionally both Christians and
Muslims—
Catholics and
Orthodox,
Sunnis and
Bektashis and—but also to a lesser extent
Evangelicals,
Protestants and
Jews, constituting one of the most religiously diverse peoples of Europe.[319]
Christianity in Albania was under the jurisdiction of the
Bishop of Rome until the 8th century. Then, dioceses in Albania were transferred to the
patriarchate of Constantinople. In 1054 after the schism, the north became identified with the
Roman Catholic Church.[320] Since that time all churches north of the Shkumbin river were Catholic and under the jurisdiction of the Pope.[321] Various reasons have been put forward for the spread of Catholicism among northern Albanians. Traditional affiliation with the
Latin Church and Catholic missions in central Albania in the 12th century fortified the Catholic Church against Orthodoxy, while local leaders found an ally in Catholicism against Slavic Orthodox states.[322][321][323] After the
Ottoman conquest of the Balkans, Christianity began to be overtaken by Islam, and Catholicism and Orthodoxy continued to be practiced with less frequency.
During the
modern era, the monarchy and
communism in Albania as well as the
socialism in Kosovo, historically part of
Yugoslavia, followed a systematic
secularisation of its people. This policy was chiefly applied within the borders of both territories and produced a secular majority of its population.
All forms of Christianity,
Islam and other religious practices were prohibited except for old non-institutional
pagan practices in the rural areas, which were seen as identifying with the national culture. The current Albanian state has revived some pagan festivals, such as the
Spring festival (
Albanian: Dita e Verës) held yearly on 14 March in the city of
Elbasan. It is a national holiday.[324]
The communist regime which ruled Albania after World War II persecuted and suppressed religious observance and institutions, and entirely banned religion to the point where Albania was officially declared to be the world's first
atheist state. Religious freedom returned to Albania following the regime's change in 1992. Albanian Sunni Muslims are found throughout the country,
Albanian Orthodox Christians as well as
Bektashis are concentrated in the south, while Roman Catholics are found primarily in the north of the country.[325]
According to the 2011 Census, which has been recognised as unreliable by the
Council of Europe,[326] in Albania, 58.79% of the population adheres to Islam, making it the largest religion in the country. Christianity is practiced by 16.99% of the population, making it the second largest religion in the country. The remaining population is either
irreligious or belongs to other religious groups.[327] Before World War II, there was given a distribution of 70% Muslims, 20% Eastern Orthodox, and 10% Roman Catholics.[328] Today, Gallup Global Reports 2010 shows that religion plays a role in the lives of only 39% of Albanians, and ranks Albania the thirteenth least religious country in the world.[329]
For part of its history,
Albania has also had a Jewish community. Members of the Jewish community were saved by a group of Albanians during the Nazi occupation.[330] Many left for Israel
c. 1990–1992 when the borders were opened after the fall of the communist regime, but about 200 Jews still live in Albania.
^Sunni Islam is the largest denomination of the Albanian people in Albania, Kosovo, Montenegro and North Macedonia.
^Roman Catholicism (both Latin and Greek-Byzantine rites) is the largest Christian denomination of the Albanian people in northern Albania,
Croatia and
Italy.
^Eastern Orthodoxy is the largest Christian denomination of the Albanian people in southern Albania, North Macedonia and Greece.
^Widely fluctuating numbers for groups in Albania are due to various overlapping definitions based on how groups can be defined, as religion can be defined in Albania either by family background, belief or practice
^Julie Vullnetari (2012).
Albania on the Move: Links Between Internal and International Migration(PDF). Amsterdam University Press, 2012. p. 73.
ISBN9789089643551. To this, weneed to add an estimate of irregular migrants; some Greek researchers haveargued that Albanians have a rate of 30 per cent irregularity in Greece, butthis is contested as rather high by others (see Maroukis 2009: 62). If we accept a more conservative share than that–e.g. 20 per cent–we come toa total of around 670,000 for all Albanian migrants in Greece in 2010, which is rather lower than that supplied by NID (Table 3.2). In a countrywith a total population of around eleven million, this is nevertheless a con-siderable presence: around 6 per cent of the total population
^
abcdefghSaunders 2011, p. 98. "In addition to the recent emigrants, there are older diasporic communities around the world. There are upwards of 5 million ethnic Albanians in the Turkish Republic; however, the vast majority of this population is assimilated and no longer possesses fluency in the language, though a vibrant Albanian community maintains its distinct identity in Istanbul to this day. Egypt also lays claim to some 18,000 Albanians, supposedly lingering remnants of Mohammad Ali's army."
^Yenigun, Cuneyt (2009).
"GCC Model: Conflict Management for the "Greater Albania""(PDF). SDU Faculty of Arts and Sciences Journal of Social Sciences. 2: 175–185. Archived from
the original(PDF) on 27 September 2015.. Page 184: "Turkey contains 5–6 million Albanians (more
than in the Balkan area)"
^Riehl 2010, p. 238. "Other interesting groups in the context of European migration include the Albanians who from the thirteenth century immigrated to Greece (i.e., the so-called "Arvanites", see Sasse 1998) and to Southern Italy (Calabria, Sicily, cf Breu 2005)."
^
abGogonas 2010, p. 3. "Arvanites originate from Albanian settlers who moved south at different times between the 14th and the 16th centuries from areas in what is today southern Albania The reasons for this migration are not entirely clear and may be manifold. In many instances the Arvanites were invited by the Byzantine and Latin rulers of the time. They were employed to resettle areas that had been largely depopulated through wars, epidemics and other reasons, and they were employed as soldiers. Some later movements are also believed to have been motivated to evade Islamisation after the Ottoman conquest. The main waves of the Arvanite migration into southern Greece started around 1300, reached a peak some time during the 14th century, and ended around 1600. Arvanites first reached Thessaly, then Attica and finally the Peloponnese (Clogg. 2002). Regarding the number of Arvanites in Greece, the 1951 census (the last census in Greece that included a question about language) gives a figure of 23,000 Arvaiithka speakers. Sociohinguistic research in the 1970s in the villages of Attica and Biotia alone indicated a figure of at least 30,000 speakers (Trudgill and Tzavaras 1977), while Lunden (1993) suggests 50,000 for Greece as a whole."
^
abHall 1997, pp. 28–29. "The permeability of ethnic boundaries is also demonstrated in many of the Greek villages of Attiki and Viotia (ancient Attika and Boiotia), where Arvanites often form a majority. These Arvanites are descended from Albanians who first entered Greece between the eleventh and fifteenth centuries (though there was a subsequent wave of immigration in the second half of the eighteenth century). Although still regarded as ethnically distinct in the nineteenth century, their participation in the Greek War of Independence and the Civil War has led to increasing assimilation: in a survey conducted in the 1970s, 97 per crnt of Arvanite informants despite regularly speaking in Arvanitika, considered themselves to be Greek. A similar concern with being identified as Greek is exhibited by the bilingual Arvanites of the Eastern Argolid."
"Možemo reći da svi na neki način pripadamo nekoj vrsti etničke kategorije, a često i više nego jednoj. Kao primjer navodim slučaj zadarskih Arbanasa. Da bismo shvatili Arbanase i problem njihova etnojezičnog (etničkog i jezičnog) identiteta, potrebno je ići u povijest njihova doseljenja koje seže u početak 18. st., tj. točnije: razdoblje od prve seobe 1726., razdoblje druge seobe od 1733., pa sve do 1754. godine koja se smatra završnom godinom njihova doseljenja. Svi su se doselili iz tri sela s područja Skadarskog jezera – Briske, Šestana i Livara. Bježeći od Turaka, kuge i ostalih nevolja, generalni providur Nicola Erizzo II dozvolio im je da se nasele u područje današnjih Arbanasa i Zemunika. Jedan dio stanovništva u Zemuniku se asimilirao s ondašnjim stanovništvom zaboravivši svoj jezik. To su npr. današnji Prenđe, Šestani, Ćurkovići, Paleke itd. Drugi dio stanovništva je nastojao zadržati svoj etnički i jezični identitet tijekom ovih 280 godina. Dana 10. svibnja 2006. godine obilježena je 280. obljetnica njihova dolaska u predgrađe grada Zadra. Nije bilo lako, osobito u samom početku, jer nisu imali svoju crkvu, škole itd., pa je jedini način održavanja njihova identiteta i jezika bio usmenim putem."
"We can say that all in some way belong to a kind of ethnic category, and often more than one. As an example, I cite the case of Zadar Arbanasi. To understand the problem of the Albanians and their ethnolinguistic (ethnic and linguistic) identity, it is necessary to go into the history of their immigration that goes back to the beginning of the 18th century., etc more precisely: the period from the first migration of 1726, the period of the second migration of 1733, and until 1754, which is considered to be the final year of their immigration. All they moved from three villages from the area of Lake Scutari – Briska, Šestan and Livara. Fleeing from the Ottomans, plague and other troubles, the general provider Nicola Erizzo II allowed them to settle in the area of today's Arbanasa and Zemunik. One part of the population in Zemunik became assimilated with the local population, forgetting their language. These are for example, today's Prenda, Šestani, Ćurkovići, Paleke etc. The second part of the population tried to maintain their ethnic and linguistic identity during these 280 years. On 10 May 2006 marked the 280th anniversary of their arrival in the suburb of Zadar. It was not easy, especially in the beginning, because they did not have their own church, school, etc., and is the only way to maintain their identity and language was verbally."
^
abNovik 2015, pp. 261–262. "Historical Facts. Four villages with Albanian population are located in the Ukraine: Karakurt (Zhovtnevoe) set up in 1811 (Odessa region), Tyushki (Georgievka), Dzhandran (Gammovka) and Taz (Devninskoe) set up in 1862 (Zaporizh’a region). Before migrating to the territory of the Russian empire, Albanians had moved from the south-east of the present day Albania into Bulgaria (Varna region) because of the Osmanli invasion (Державин, 1914, 1926, 1933, 1948, pp. 156–169). Three hundred years later they had moved from Bulgaria to the Russian empire on account of Turkish-Russian opposition in the Balkan Peninsula. Ethnic Albanians also live in Moldova, Odessa and St. Petersburg. Present Day Situation. Nowadays, in the Ukraine and Russia there are an estimated 5000 ethnic Albanians. They live mainly in villages situated in the Odessa and Zaporizh’a regions. The language and many elements of traditional culture are still preserved and maintained in four Albanian villages (Будина, 2000, pp. 239–255; Иванова, 2000, pp. 40–53). From the ethnolinguistic and linguistic point of view these Albanian villages are of particular interest and value since they are excellent examples of a "melting pot" (Иванова, 1995, 1999). Bulgarians and Gagauzes live side by side with Albanians in Karakurt; Russians and Ukrainians share the same space with Albanians in the Azov Sea region. It is worth mentioning that in these multi-lingual environments, the Albanian patois retains original Balkan features."
^
abElsie 2005, pp. 3–4. "Their traditional designation, based on a root *alban- and its rhotacized variants *arban-, *albar-, and *arbar-, appears from the eleventh century onwards in Byzantine chronicles (Albanoi, Arbanitai, Arbanites), and from the fourteenth century onwards in Latin and other Western documents (Albanenses, Arbanenses)."
^
abcdefghLloshi 1999, p. 277. "The Albanians of today call themselves shqiptarë, their country Shqipëri, and their language shqipe. These terms came into use between the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th centuries. Foreigners call them albanesi (Italian), Albaner (German), Albanians (English), Alvanos (Greek), and Arbanasi (old Serbian), the country Albania, Albanie, Albanien, Alvania, and Albanija, and the language Albanese, Albanisch, Albanian, Alvaniki, and Arbanashki respectively. All these words are derived from the name Albanoi of an Illyrian tribe and their center Albanopolis, noted by the astronomer of Alexandria, Ptolemy, in the 2nd century AD. Alban could be a plural of alb- arb-, denoting the inhabitants of the plains (ÇABEJ 1976). The name passed over the boundaries of the Illyrian tribe in central Albania, and was generalised for all the Albanians. They called themselves arbënesh, arbëresh, the country Arbëni, Arbëri, and the language arbëneshe, arbëreshe. In the foreign languages, the Middle Ages denominations of these names survived, but for the Albanians they were substituted by shqiptarë, Shqipëri and shqipe. The primary root is the adverb shqip, meaning "clearly, intelligibly". There is a very close semantic parallel to this in the German noun Deutsche, "the Germans" and "the German language" (Lloshi 1984) Shqip spread out from the north to the south, and Shqipni/Shqipëri is probably a collective noun, following the common pattern of Arbëni, Arbëri. The change happened after the Ottoman conquest because of the conflict in the whole line of the political, social, economic, religious, and cultural spheres with a totally alien world of the Oriental type. A new and more generalised ethnic and linguistic consciousness of all these people responded to this."
^
abDemiraj 2010, p. 534. "The ethnic name shqiptar has always been discussed together with the ethnic complex: (tosk) arbëresh, arbëror, arbër — (gheg) arbënesh, arbënu(e)r, arbën; i.e. [arbën/r(—)]. p.536. Among the neighbouring peoples and elsewhere the denomination of the Albanians is based upon the root arb/alb, cp. Greek 'Αλβανός, Αρβανός "Albanian", Αρβανίτης "Arbëresh of Greece", Serbian Albanac, Arbanas, Bulg., Mac. албанец, Arom. arbinés (Papahagi 1963 135), Turk. arnaut, Ital. albanese, German Albaner etc. This basis is in use among the Arbëreshs of Italy and Greece as well; cp. arvanit, more rarely arbëror by the arbëreshs of Greece, as against arbëresh, arbëresh, bri(e)sh (beside gjegj — Altimari 1994 (1992) 53 s.). (Italy) (Kr. ?) árbanas, (Mandr.) allbanc, (Ukr.) allbanc(er) (Musliu – Dauti 1996) etj. For the various forms and uses of this or that variant see, inter alia, also Çabej SE II 6lss.; Demiraj 1999 175 ss. etj.
^
abcdefKamusella 2009, p. 241. "Prior to the emergence of the modern self-ethnonym Shqiptarë in the mid-16th century (for the first time it was recorded in 1555 by the Catholic Gheg, Gjon Buzuku, in his missal), North Albanians (Ghegs) referred to themselves as Arbën, and South Albanians (Tosks) Arbër. Hence, the self-ethnonym Arbëreshë of the present-day Italo-Albanians (numbering about 100,000) in southern Italy and Sicily, whose ancestors, in the wake of the Ottoman wars, emigrated from their homeland in the 14th century. These self-ethnonyms perhaps influenced the Byzantine Greek Arvanites for 'Albanians,’ which was followed by similar ones in Bulgarian and Serbian (Arbanasi), Ottoman (Arnaut), Romanian (Arbănas), and Aromanian (Arbineş). It is clear that scholars and Albanians themselves agree that they do not agree on any single etymology of the ethnonym 'Albanian.' A similar predicament is faced by the self-ethnonym Shqiptarë. The most popular scholarly explanation is that it was formed by analogy to 'Slavs' (*Slovene), believed to be derived from slovo ('word'), and by extension, from *sluti ('to speak clearly.') The last explanation semantically contrasts with Slavic Niemiec ('mute,’'stammering,’'babbling'), and Greek 'barbarian' (from barbaros 'those who stammer, babble'). Hence, Shqiptarë could be derived from Albanian shqipoi (from Latin excipere) for 'to speak clearly, to understand.' The Albanian public favors the belief that their self-ethnonym stems from shqipe ('eagle') found on the Albanian national flag."
^Liotta 2001, p. 198. "Among Greeks, the term "Alvanitis"—or "Arvanitis"—means a Christian of Albanian ancestry, one who speaks both Greek and Albanian, but possesses Greek "consciousness." Numerous "Arvanites" live in Greece today, although the ability to speak both languages is shrinking as the differences (due to technology and information access and vastly different economic bases) between Greece and Albania increase. The Greek communities of Elefsis, Marousi, Koropi, Keratea, and Markopoulo (all in the Attikan peninsula) once held significant Arvanite communities. "Arvanitis" is not necessarily a pejorative term; a recent Pan Hellenic socialist foreign minister spoke both Albanian and Greek (but not English). A former Greek foreign minister, Theodoros Pangalos, was an "Arvanite" from Elefsis."
emri etnik a nacional e shqiptarëve, përkundër trajtës së drejtë sllave Albanci, tash del të shqiptohet si Šiptari e Šipci me një konotacion përbuzës negativ, ashtu siç është përdorur në krye të herës te serbët edhe në kohën e Jugosllavisë së Vjetër bashkë dhe me formën Šiftari e Arnauti me po të njëtat konotacione pejorative.
"ethnic name or the national one of Albanians, despite the right Slavic term Albanci, now appears to be pronounced as Šiptari of Šipci with a connotation that is contemptuously negative, as it is used in the very beginning of the Serbs era at the time of the old Yugoslavia together and the form Šiftari and Arnauti which have the same pejorative connotations."
^Koukoudis 2003, p. 34. "The Vlachs call the Albanian-speaking Orthodox Christians Arbinéši, and it was under this name that the ancestors of the modern Albanians first appeared in the Middle Ages."
^
abMadgearu & Gordon 2008, p. 25. "It is still disputed by scholars that those Albanoi from 1042 were Normans from Sicily, [Southern Italy], or if they are in fact the Albanoi [a large clan of that belongs to the many clans of Albanians] found in Albanian lands during this time frame."
^Madgearu & Gordon 2008, p. 25. "It was supposed that those Albanoi from 1042 were Normans from Sicily, called by an archaic name (the Albanoi were an independent tribe from Southern Italy). The following instance is indisputable. It comes from the same Attaliates, who wrote that the Albanians (Arbanitai) were involved in the 1078; rebellion of..."
^Malcolm 1998, p. 29: "Nor is there any mystery about the origin of this name. In the second century Ptolemy referred to a tribe called the 'Albanoi', and located their town, 'Albanopolis', somewhere to the east of Durres."
^
abMëniku & Campos 2012, p. 2. "Albanian is an Indo-European language, but like modern Greek and Armenian, it does not have any other closely related living language. Within the Indo-European family, it forms a group of its own. In Albanian, the language is called shqip. Albania is called Shqipëri, and the Albanians call themselves shqiptarë. Until the fifteenth century the language was known as Arbërisht or Arbnisht, which is still the name used for the language in Italy and Greece. The Greeks refer to all the varieties of Albanian spoken in Greece as Arvanitika. In the second century AD, Ptolemy, the Alexandrian mathematician, astronomer and geographer, used the name Albanoi to refer to an Illyrian tribe that used to live in what is now central Albania. During the Middle Ages the population of that area was referred to as Arbanori or Albanon. It is clear that the words Arbëresh, Arvanitika, and even Albanian and Albania are all related to the older name of the language."
^Malcolm 1998, p. 29. "Linguists believe that the 'Alb-’ element comes from the Indo-European word for a type of mountainous terrain, from which the word 'Alps' is also derived."
^"Constitution of the Republic of Kosovo"(PDF). kryeministri-ks.net. Kryeministria e Kosovës. p. 8. Archived from
the original(PDF) on 27 November 2019. Retrieved 23 December 2018. The official languages in the Republic of Kosovo are Albanian and Serbian.
^Robert Elsie.
"Geographical location". albanianlanguage. The Albanian language is divided into two basic dialect groups: Gheg in the north of the country and Tosk in the south. The Shkumbin River in central Albania, flowing past Elbasan into the Adriatic, forms the approximate boundary between the two dialect regions.
^Handbook of ethnotherapies (Christine E. Gottschalk-Batschkus; Joy C. Green ed.). BoD – Books on Demand, 2002. 2002. p. 110.
ISBN978-3-8311-4184-5.
^Sarah G. Thomason (23 April 2015). Endangered Languages Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics. Cambridge University Press, 2015. p. 28.
ISBN978-0-521-86573-9.
^Winnifrith, Tom J. (28 October 1995). "Southern Albania, Northern Epirus: Survey of a Disputed Ethnological Boundary". The Newsletter of the Society Farsharotu. Vol. IX, no. 2. Society Farsharotu. I tried unsuccessfully in 1994 to find Albanian speakers in Filiates, Paramithia and Margariti. The coastal villages near Igoumenitsa have been turned into tourist resorts. There may be Albanian speakers in villages inland, but as in the case with the Albanian speakers in Attica and Boeotia the language is dying fast. It receives no kind of encouragement.
^Vickers, Miranda (2007). The Cham Issue – Where to Now?. Conflict Studies Research Centre. p. 2.
ISBN978-1-905962-01-3. Whereas in Albania and the diaspora Cham communities have managed to preserve their dialect, traditions and folk songs, in Greece itself those Orthodox Chams, now numbering around 40,000, who were allowed to remain in Greece, have suffered from assimilation and the public suppression of their Albanian heritage and language.... There are roughly 14,000 Chams or their descendants living in the southern Albanian town of Saranda and the villages north of the Albanian-Greek border.
^Elsie, Robert; Destani, Bejtullah; Jasini, Rudina, eds. (2013). The Cham Albanians of Greece: A Documentary History. I.B. Tauris. p. XXIX.
ISBN978-1-780760-00-1. Chameria is a mountainous region of the southwestern Balkan Peninsula that now straddles the Greek-Albanian border. Most of Chameria is in the Greek Province of Epirus, corresponding largely to the prefectures of Thesprotia and Preveza, but it also includes the southernmost part of Albania, the area around Konispol. It is approximately 10,000 square kilometres in size and has a current, mostly Greek-speaking population of about 150,000.... The core or central region of Chameria, known in Greek as Thesprotia, could be said to be the basins of the Kalamas and Acheron Rivers.
^Nicol 1986, p. 160. "The geographical location of the mysterious 'Arbanon' has at last no doubt been settled by the researches of Alain Ducellier. In the 11th century at least it was the name given to the mountainous area to the west of Lake Ohrid and the upper valley of the river Shkumbin..."
^Gillian Gloyer (1 June 2010).
Albania (in Spanish). Alhena Media. p. 103.
ISBN978-84-92963-50-8. Tras la muerte de Stefan Dušan en 1355, el área que se corresponde con el sureste de la actual Albania y hasta Kastoria (que hoy en día pertenece a Grecia) cayó en manos de la familia Muzaka de Berati, uno de los poderosos clanes
^Ducellier 1999, pp. 780–781 "the Albanians dominated the central regions of what is now the Albanian republic, in the areas which are drained by the Devollit river"
^Rob Pickard (2008). Analysis and Reform of Cultural Heritage Policies in South-East Europe (Europarat ed.). Council of Europe. p. 16.
ISBN978-92-871-6265-6.
^Barletius, Marinus. De obsidione Scodrensi. Venice: Bernardino de Vitabilus, 1504.
^Licursi, Emiddio Pietro (2011). Empire of Nations: The Consolidation of Albanian and Turkish National Identities in theLate Ottoman Empire, 1878–1913. New York: Columbia University. p. 19.
^Findley, Carter V. (2012). Modern Türkiye Tarihi İslam, Milliyetçilik ve Modernlik 1789–2007. İstanbul: Timaş Yayınları. p. 30.
ISBN978-605-114-693-5.
^Peirce, Leslie P. (1993). The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire. New York: Oxford University Press, Inc. p. 94.
ISBN0-19-507673-7.
"Pra, këtu në vazhdim, pas dëbimit të tyre me 1877–1878 do të shënohen vetëm disa patronime (mbiemra) të shqiptarëve të Toplicës dhe viseve tjera shqiptare të Sanxhakut të Nishit. Kjo do të thotë se, shqiptaret e dëbuar pas shpërnguljes, marrin atributin muhaxhirë (refugjatë), në vend që për mbiemër familjar të marrin emrin e gjyshit, fisit, ose ndonjë tjetër, ato për mbiemër familjar marrin emrin e fshatit të Sanxhakut të Nishit, nga janë dëbuar."
"So here next, after their expulsion 1877–1878 will be noted with only some patronymic (surnames) of the Albanians of Toplica and other Albanian areas of Sanjak of Nis. This means that the Albanians expelled after moving, attained the appellation muhaxhirë (refugees), which instead for the family surname to take the name of his grandfather, clan, or any other, they for their family surname take the name of the village of the Sanjak of Nis from where they were expelled from."; pp. 53–54.
^"THE CONSTITUTION OF MONTENEGRO"(PDF). wipo.int. p. 1. The determination that we, as free and equal citizens, members of peoples and national minorities who live in Montenegro: Montenegrins, Serbs, Bosniacs, Albanians, Muslims, Croats and the others, are committed to democratic and civic Montenegro
^Mijo Čurković (1922). Povijest Arbanasa kod Zadra. E. Vitaliani.
^"Constitution of Romania"(PDF). wipo.int/. p. 2.
Archived(PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. The State recognizes and guarantees the right of persons belonging to national minorities to the preservation, development and expression of their ethnic, cultural, linguistic and religious identity.
^
abc"The Albanian Community"(PDF). integrazionemigranti.gov.it. 2016. pp. 2–7. Archived from
the original(PDF) on 30 November 2018. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
^Bintliff 2003, pp. 137–138. "First, we can explain the astonishing persistence of Albanian village culture from the fourteenth to the nineteenth centuries through the ethnic and religious tolerance characteristic of Islamic empires and so lacking in their Christian equivalents. Ottoman control rested upon allowing local communities to keep their religion, language, local laws, and representatives, provided that taxes were paid (the millet system). There was no pressure for Greeks and Albanians to conform to each other's language or other behavior.
Clear signs of change are revealed in the travel diaries of the German scholar Ludwig Ross (1851), when he accompanied the Bavarian Otto, whom the Allies had foisted as king upon the newly freed Greek nation in the aftermath of the War of Independence in the 1830s. Ross praises the well-built Greek villages of central Greece with their healthy, happy, dancing inhabitants, and contrasts them specifically with the hovels and sickly inhabitants of Albanian villages. In fact, recent scholarship has underlined how far it was the West that built modem Greece in its own fanciful image as the land of a long-oppressed people who were the direct descendants of Pericles. Thus from the late nineteenth century onward the children of the inhabitants of the new "nation-state" were taught in Greek, history confined itself to the episodes of pure Greekness, and the tolerant Ottoman attitude to cultural diversity yielded to a deliberate policy of total Hellenization of the populace—effective enough to fool the casual observer. One is rather amazed at the persistence today of such dual-speaking populations in much of the Albanian colonization zone. However, apart from the provinciality of this essentially agricultural province, a high rate of illiteracy until well into this century has also helped to preserve Arvanitika in the Boeotian villagers (Meijs 1993)."; p. 140. "In contrast therefore to the more openly problematic issue of Slav speakers in northern Greece, Arvanitic speakers in central Greece lack any signs of an assertive ethnicity. I would like to suggest that they possess what we might term a passive ethnicity. As a result of a number of historical factors, much of the rural population in central Greece was Albanian-speaking by the time of the creation of the modern Greek state in the 1830s. Until this century, most of these people were illiterate and unschooled, yet there existed sufficient knowledge of Greek to communicate with officials and townspeople, itinerant traders, and so on, to limit the need to transform rural language usage. Life was extremely provincial, with just one major carriage-road passing through the center of the large province of Boeotia even in the 1930s (beyond which horseback and cart took over; van Effenterre 1989). Even in the 1960s, Arvanitic village children could be figures of fun for their Greek peers in the schools of Thebes (One of the two regional towns) (K. Sarri, personal communication, 2000). It was not a matter of cultural resistance but simple conservatism and provinciality, the extreme narrowness of rural life, that allowed Arvanitic language and local historic memories to survive so effectively to the very recent period."
^Veremis & Kolipoulos 2003, pp. 24–25. "For the time being, the Greeks of free Greece could indulge in defining their brethren of unredeemed Greece, primarily the Slav Macedonians and secondarily the Orthodox Albanians and the Vlachs. Primary school students were taught, in the 1880s, that 'Greeks [are] our kinsmen, of common descent, speaking the language we speak and professing the religion we profess'." But this definition, it seems, was reserved for small children who could not possibly understand the intricate arguments of their parents on the question of Greek identity. What was essential to understand at that tender age was that modern Greeks descended from the ancient Greeks. Grown up children, however, must have been no less confused than adults on the criteria for defining modern Greek identity. Did the Greeks constitute a 'race' apart from the Albanians, the Slavs and the Vlachs? Yes and no. High school students were told that the 'other races', i.e. the Slavs, the Albanians and the Vlachs, 'having been Hellenized with the years in terms of mores and customs, are now being assimilated into the Greeks'. On the Slavs of Macedonia there seems to have been no consensus. Were they Bulgars, Slavicized Greeks or early Slavs? They 'were' Bulgars until the 1870s and Slavicized Greeks, or Hellenized Slavs subsequently, according to the needs of the dominant theory. There was no consensus, either, on the Vlachs. Were they Latinized Greek mountaineers of late immigrants from Vlachia? As in the case of the Slavs of Macedonia, Vlach descent shifted from the southern Balkans to the Danube, until the Romanians claimed the Vlachs for their brethren; which made the latter irrevocably indigenous to the southern Balkan mountains. The Albanians or 'Arvanites', were readily 'adopted' as brethren of common descent for at least three reasons. Firstly, the Albanians had been living in southern Greece, as far south as the Peloponnese, in considerable numbers. Secondly, Christian Albanians had fought with distinction and in considerable numbers in the War of Independence. Thirdly, credible Albanian claims for the establishment of an Albanian nation state materialized too Late for Greek national theorists to abandon well-entrenched positions. Commenting on a geography textbook for primary schools in 1901, a state committee found it inadequate and misleading. One of its principal shortcomings concerned the Albanians, who were described as 'close kinsmen of the Greeks'. 'These are unacceptable from the point of view of our national claims and as far as historical truth is concerned', commented the committee. 'it must have been maintained that they are of common descent with the Greeks (Pelasgians), that they speak a language akin to that of the Greeks and that they participated in all struggles for national liberation of the common fatherland.'"
^M. Mazower (ed.), After The War Was Over: Reconstructing the Family, Nation and State in Greece, 1943–1960, Princeton University Press, 1960,
ISBN9780691058412, p. 25.
^Victor Roudometof, Collective Memory, National Identity, and Ethnic Conflict.
ISBN0-275-97648-3. p. 158
^Close, David H. (1995).
The Origins of the Greek Civil War. Longman. p. 248.
ISBN978-0-582-06471-3. Retrieved 29 March 2008. p. 161 "EDES gangs massacred 200–300 of the Cham population, who during the occupation totalled about 19,000 and forced all the rest to flee to Albania"
^Vickers, Miranda. The Cham Issue – Albanian National & Property Claims in Greece. Paper prepared for the British MoD, Defence Academy, 2002.
ISBN1-903584-76-0
^
ab"Albanian Residents Leaving Greece for Wealthier Countries". In total, there could potentially be more than half a million Albanian-born individuals in Greece who along with their children have been granted Greek citizenship over the years.
^"Ulet numri i emigrantëve shqiptarë në punët sezonale të Greqisë, pronarët rrisin pagat" [The number of Albanian immigrants in seasonal jobs in Greece decreases, the owners increase wages]. politiko.al (in Albanian). Retrieved 25 April 2023. [The official data published by the Greek government for September of this year [2022] show that there are 291 thousand 868 Albanian emigrants with valid residence permits in Greece, which make up about 61.4 per cent of the legal migrants. The data on the number of Albanians with legal residence permits for this year's September, show a significantly lower number compared to last year's [2021] September, where 425 thousand and 740 Albanians were in Greece with valid legal residences, which constituted about 63 per cent of foreigners in this country.]
^Gogonas, Nikos. "Language shift in second generation Albanian immigrants in Greece." Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 30, no. 2 (2009): 95-110.
^Lazaridis, Gabriella, and Iordanis Psimmenos. "Migrant flows from Albania to Greece: economic, social and spatial exclusion." In Eldorado or Fortress? Migration in Southern Europe, pp. 170-185. Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2000.
^Labrianidis, Lois, and Antigone Lyberaki. "Back and forth and in between: returning Albanian migrants from Greece and Italy." Journal of International Migration and Integration/Revue de l'integration et de la migration internationale 5, no. 1 (2004): 77-106.
^Mai, Nicola, and Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers. "Albanian migration and new transnationalisms." Journal of ethnic and migration studies 29, no. 6 (2003): 939-948.
^"Die kosovarische Bevölkerung in der Schweiz"(PDF). sem.admin.ch (in German). p. 25. Der grösste Teil der kosovarischen Bevölkerung lebt in der Deutschschweiz, vor allem in den städtischen Agglomerationen Zürich, Basel und Luzern, aber auch in den Kantonen Aargau, St. Gallen, Bern und Waadt.
^Elsie 2010, pp. 125–126. "With the advent of Gamal Abdel Nasser and the Arab nationalization of Egypt, not only the royal family but also the entire Albanian community- some 4,000 families- were forced to leave the country, thus bringing the chapter of Albanians on the Nile to a swift close".
^"Name Statistics". Name Statistics Italia. Archived from
the original on 12 April 2018. Retrieved 11 April 2018. This archived page of Name Statistics Italia shows the common name of most Italians. So, it is supposed to be reliable source.
^Pratt, Douglas (2011). "Antipodean Ummah: Islam and Muslims in Australia and New Zealand". Religion Compass. 5 (12): 744.
doi:
10.1111/j.1749-8171.2011.00322.x.
^Galaty 2011, pp. 119–120:... northern Albanians' belief about their own history, based on notions of isolationism and resistance
^Galaty 2011, pp. 119–120:... "negotiated peripherality"... the idea that people living in peripheral regions exploit their... position in important, often profitable ways... The implications and challenges of their national program.... in the Albanian Alps .. are very different from those that obtain in the south
^Ramet, Sabrina P. (1989).
Religion and Nationalism in Soviet and East European Politics. Duke University Press. p.
381.
ISBN0-8223-0891-6. Albanian Christianity lay within the orbit of the bishop of Rome from the first century to the eighth. But in the eighth century Albanian Christians were transferred to the jurisdiction of the patriarch of Constantinople. With the schism of 1054, however, Albania was divided between a Catholic north and an Orthodox south. [..] Prior to the Turkish conquest, the ghegs (the chief tribal group in northern Albania) had found in Roman Catholicism a means of resisting the Slavs, and though Albanian Orthodoxy remained important among the tosks (the chief tribal group in southern Albania)
^
abMurzaku, Ines (2015).
Monasticism in Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Republics. Routledge. p. 352.
ISBN978-1-317-39104-3. Retrieved 14 March 2020. The Albanian church north of Shkumbin River was entirely Latin and under the pope's jurisdiction. During the twelfth century, the Catholic church in Albania intensified efforts to strengthen its position in middle and southern Albania. The Catholic Church was organized in 20 dioceses.
^Leften Stavros Stavrianos (January 2000).
The Balkans Since 1453. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. p. 498.
ISBN978-1-85065-551-0. Religious differences also existed before the coming of the Turks. Originally, all Albanians had belonged to the Eastern Orthodox Church... Then the Ghegs in the North adopted in order to better resist the pressure of Orthodox Serbs.
^
abcd"Instantanés d'Albaníe, un autre regard sur les Balkans"(PDF). 2005. Archived from
the original(PDF) on 14 June 2007. Retrieved 20 July 2017. Etudiants en Tourisme et Actions Patrimoniales. (plus de 72% irréligieux ou non-pratiquants. 28% se répartissent en 21% musulmans, 6% orthodoxes, 3% catholiques. )
Demiraj, Shaban (1998).
"Albanian". In Ramat, Anna Giacalone; Ramat, Paolo (eds.). The Indo-European languages. London: Routledge. pp. 480–501.
ISBN978-0-415-06449-1.
Demiraj, Bardhyl (2010).
"Shqiptar–The generalization of this ethnic name in the XVIII century". In Demiraj, Bardhyl (ed.). Wir sind die Deinen: Studien zur albanischen Sprache, Literatur und Kulturgeschichte, dem Gedenken an Martin Camaj (1925–1992) gewidmet [We are his people: Studies on the Albanian language, literature and cultural history, dedicated to the memory of Martin Camaj (1925–1992)]. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. pp. 533–565.
ISBN978-3-447-06221-3.
Devere, Heather; McDermott, Keryn; Verbitsky, Jane (2006).
""Just a refugee": Rights and Status of Refugees in New Zealand". In Crépeau, François; Nakache, Delphine; Collyer, Michael; Goetz, Nathaniel H.; Hansen, Art (eds.). Forced Migration and Global Processes: A View from Forced Migration Studies. Lexington Books. pp. 357, 359–360.
ISBN978-0-7391-5505-9.
Galaty, Michael L. (2002). "Modeling the Formation and Evolution of an Illyrian Tribal System: Ethnographic and Archaeological Analogs". In William A. Parkinson (ed.).
The Archaeology of Tribal Societies. Berghahn Books.
ISBN1-78920-171-3.
Geniş, Şerife; Maynard, Kelly Lynne (2009). "Formation of a Diasporic Community: The history of migration and resettlement of Muslim Albanians in the Black Sea Region of Turkey". Middle Eastern Studies. 45 (4): 553–569.
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10.1080/00263200903009619.
S2CID143742189.
Koti, Dhori (2010). Monografi për Vithkuqin dhe Naum Veqilharxhin [A monograph of Vithkuq and Naum Veqilharxhi]. Pogradec: DIJA Poradeci.
ISBN978-99956-826-8-2.
Lloshi, Xhevat (1999).
"Albanian". In Hinrichs, Uwe; Büttner, Uwe (eds.). Handbuch der Südosteuropa-Linguistik. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. pp. 272–299.
ISBN978-3-447-03939-0.
Pritsak, Omeljan (1991). "Albanians". In Kazhdan, Alexander P. (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
ISBN978-0-19-504652-6.
OCLC311413460.
Riehl, Claudia Maria (2010).
"Discontinious language spaces (Sprachinseln)". In Auer, Peter; Schmidt, Jürgen Erich (eds.). Language and Space: An International Handbook of Linguistic Variation. Theories and Methods. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. pp. 332–354.
ISBN978-3-11-022027-8.
Trnavci, Genc (2010). "The Interaction of Customary Law with the Modern Rule of Law in Albania and Kosova". In Sellers, Mortimer; Tomaszewski, Tadeusz (eds.).
The Rule of Law in Comparative Perspective. Ius Gentium: Comparative Perspectives on Law and Justice. Vol. 3. Springer Verlag. pp. 201–215.
ISBN978-90-481-3748-0.
Tsitselikis, Konstantinos (2012). Old and New Islam in Greece: From historical minorities to immigrant newcomers. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. p. 311.
ISBN9789004221529.
Books about Albania and the Albanian people (scribd.com)—Reference of books (and some journal articles) about Albania and the Albanian people; their history, language, origin, culture, literature, and so on public domain books, fully accessible online.