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HISTORY: ORIGINS
The earliest settlers of Albania
The question of the origin of the Albanians is still a matter
of controversy among the ethnologists. A great many theories have been
propounded in solution of the problem relative to the place from which the
original settlers of Albania proceeded to their present home. The existence of
another Albania in the Caucasus, the mystery in which the derivation of the name
"Albania" is enshrouded, and which name, on the other hand, is unknown
to her people, and the fact that history and legend afford no record of the
arrival of the Albanians in the Balkan Peninsula, have rendered the question of
their origin a particularly difficult one.
But, however that may be, it is generally recognized today
that the Albanians are the most ancient race in southesatern Europe. All
indications point to the fact that they are descendants of the earliest Aryan
immigrants who were represented in historical times by the kindred Illyrians,
Macedonians and Epirots. According to the opinion of most ethnologists and
linguists, the Illyrians formed the core of pre-Hellenic, Tyrrhenopelasgian
population, which inhabited the southern portion of the Peninsula and extended
its limits to Thrace and Italy. The Illyrians were also Pelasgians, but in a
wider sense. Moreover it is believed that of these cognate races, which are
described by the ancient Greek writers as "barbarous" and
"non-Hellenic," the Illyrians were the progenitors of the Ghegs, or
Northern Albanians, and the Epirots the progenitors of the Tosks, or Southern
Albanians. This general opinion is borne out the statement of Strabo that the
Via Egnatia or ®gitana, which he describes as forming the boundary between the
Illyrians and the Epirots, practically corresponds with the course of river
Shkumbini, which now seperates the Ghegs from the Tosks. The same geographer
states that Epirots were also called Pelasgians. The Pelasgian Zeus, whose
memory survives even today in the appellation of God as "Zot" by the
modern Albanians, was worshiped at Dodona, where the most famous oracle of
ancient times was situated. According to Herodotus the neighborhood of the
sanctuary was called Pelasgia.
These findings of the ethnologists are, moreover,
strenghthened by the unbroken traditions of the natives, who regard themselves,
and with pride as the descendants of the aboriginal settlers of the Balkan
Peninsula. They, therefore, they think have the best claims on it. It is also on
the strength of these traditions that the Albanian looks upon the other Balkan
nationalities as mere intruders who have expropriated him of much that was
properly his own. Hence the constsant border warfare which has gone on for
centuries between the Albanian and his neighbors.
The Albanian Language
A more concrete evidence of the Illyrian-Pelasgian origin of
the Albanians is supplied by the study of the Albanian language. Notwithstanding
certain points of resemblance in structure and phonetics, the Albanian language
is entirely distinct from the tongues spoken by the neighboring natonalities.
This language is particularly interesting as the only surviving representative
of the so-called Thraco-Illyrian group of languages, which formed the primitive
speech of the inhabitants of the Balkan Peninsula. Its analysis presents,
however, great difficulties, as, owing to the absence of early literary
monuments, no certainty can be arrived at with regard to its earlier forms and
later developments. In the course of time the Albanian language has been
impregnated by a large number of foreign words, mainly of ancient Greek or
Latin, which are younger than the Albanian Language, but there are certain
indications that the primitive Illyrian language exerted a certain degree of
influence on the grammatical development of the languages now spoken in the
Balkan Peninsula.
There is, however, a very striking feature in this whole
matter: that the Albanian language affords the only available means for a
rational explanation of the meaning of the names of the ancient Greek gods as
well as the rest of the mythological creations, so as exactly to correspond with
the characteristics attributed to these deitis by the men of those times. The
explanations are so convincing as to confirm the opinion that the ancient Greek
mythology had been borrowed, in its entirety, from the Illyrian-Pelasgians. As
it was mentioned before, Zeus survives as "Zot" in the Albanian
language. The invocation of his name is the common form of oath among the modern
Albanians. Athena ( the Latin Minerva), the goddess of wisdom as expressed in
speech, would evidently owe its derivation to the Albanian "E Thëna,"
which simply means "speech." Thetis, the goddess of waters and seas,
would seem to be but Albanian "Det" which means "sea." It
would be interesting to note that the word "Ulysses,"whether in its
Latin or Greek form "Odysseus," means "traveler" in the
Albanian language, according as the word "udhë," which stands for
"route" and "travel," is written with "d" or
"l," both forms being in use in Albania. Such examples may be supplied
ad libitum. No such facility is, however, afforded by the ancient Greek
language, unless the explanation be a forced one and distorted one; but in many
instances even such forced and distorted one is not available at all.
In addition, we should not forget the fact that Zeus was a
Pelasgian god, par excellence , his original place of worship being Dodona. It
is estimated that of the actual stock of the Albanian language, more than one
third is of undisputed Ilyrian origin, and the rest are Illyrian-Pelasgian,
ancient Greek and Latin, with a small admixture of Slavic, Italian (dating from
the Venetian occupation of the seaboard), Turkish and some Celtic words, too.
DID YOU KNOW THAT...
-the Albanian language, as one of the original 9 Indo-European languages, is
one of Europe's oldest languages and is not derived from any other
language. The other 8 Indo-European languages are Armenian, Balto-Slavic,
Germanic, Hellenic, Indian, Iranian, Italic, and Keltic!
- in 2000 BC, the Illyrians, from whom the Albanians are the
direct descendents, held vast territories covering all of the western Balkans,
approximately the territories of today's Albania , northern Greece, and former
Yugoslavia!
-the name "Albania" is derived from the ancient
Illyrian tribe called the Albanoi who inhabited the provinces of Durres
and Dibra in today's Albania in 200 AD!
-the earliest known king of the Illyrians was named "Hyllus"
who died in 1225 BC. His name remains in the Albanian language today as "yll"
meaning "star."
-the emperors that Albania contributed to the Roman Empire
were Diocletian, Julian, Probus, Claudius Probus, Constantine the Great, and
one of its most famous emperors, Justinian the First!
-the Byzantine Emperor, Anastasius (491-518 AD), was an
Albanian who was a native of Durres on the Albanian coast!
-the Grand Viziers who ruled the Ottoman Empire during the
entire 17th century were all Albanians and came from just one family named Koprulu!
Indeed, some 26 Grand Viziers or Prime Ministers of Albanian blood directed
the affairs of the Ottoman Empire since the 1500s!
-the Governors of Romania throughout the entire 19th century
came from one Albanian family named Gjika!
-Pope Clement VII of Rome (his reign: 1700-1721) was an
Albanian as were numerous cardinals!
-the chief builder of the incomparable Taj Mahal in India
was an Albanian, Mehmet Isa! And that another Albanian, Sadefqar Mehmeti, is
the architect credited with the design of the famous Blue Mosque in Istanbul!
-Pashko Vaso, an ardent Albanian nationalist in Albania's
drive to independence from the Turks in 1878, was once the Governor of
Lebanon!
-Karl Von Ghega, the builder of the famous Semmering railway
in Austria that became the model for all of Europe was an Albanian (his last
name, of course, stems from the Albanian word "Gheg" signifying
someone from the northern part of Albania. People of the southern part are
called "Tosks")!
-Sir William Woodthorpe Tarn, a Fellow of the British
Academy, regarded worldwide by historians as having written the definitive
work on Alexander the Great, states in the opening paragraph of his book Alexander
the Great that Alexander certainly had from his father (Philip II) and
probably from his mother (Olymbia) Illyrian, or Albanian, blood!
-the Albanians protected their own Jews during the Holocaust
while also offering shelter to other Jews who had escaped into Albania from
Austria, Serbia and Greece! And that the names of Muslim and Christian
Albanian rescuers of Jews are commemorated as Righteous Among the Nations
at the Yad Vashem Memorial in Jerusalem and are enscribed on the famous
Rescuers Wall at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC!
-the world's only living saint is an Albanian - Mother
Theresa. Her real name is Agnes Bojaxhiu. "Bojaxhi" in the Albanian
language means "painter!"
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