The
Ottoman Turks expanded their empire from Anatolia to the
Balkans in the fourteenth century. They crossed the Bosporus
in 1352, and in 1389 they crushed a Serb-led army that
included Albanian forces at Kosovo Polje, located in the
southern part of present-day Yugoslavia. Europe gained a
brief respite from Ottoman pressure in 1402 when the Mongol
leader, Tamerlane, attacked Anatolia from the east, killed
the Turks' absolute ruler, the sultan, and sparked a civil
war. When order was restored, the Ottomans renewed their
westward progress. In 1453 Sultan Mehmed II's forces overran
Constantinople and killed the last Byzantine
emperor. The
division of the Albanian-populated lands into small,
quarreling fiefdoms ruled by independent feudal lords and
tribal chiefs made them easy prey for the Ottoman armies. In
1385 the Albanian ruler of DurrÎs, Karl Thopia,
appealed to the sultan for support against his rivals, the
Balsha family. An Ottoman force quickly marched into Albania
along the Via Egnatia and routed the Balshas. The principal
Albanian clans soon swore fealty to the Turks. Sultan Murad
II launched the major Ottoman onslaught in the Balkans in
1423, and the Turks took Janina in 1431 and Arta on the
Ionian coast, in 1449. The Turks allowed conquered Albanian
clan chiefs to maintain their positions and property, but
they had to pay tribute, send their sons to the Turkish
court as hostages, and provide the Ottoman army with
auxiliary troops. The
Albanians' resistance to the Turks in the mid-fifteenth
century won them acclaim all over Europe. Gjon Kastrioti of
KrujÎ was one of the Albanian clan leaders who
submitted to Turkish suzerainty. He was compelled to send
his four sons to the Ottoman capital to be trained for
military service. The youngest, Gjergj Kastrioti (1403-68),
who would become the Albanians' greatest national hero,
captured the sultan's attention. Renamed Iskander when he
converted to Islam, the young man participated in military
expeditions to Asia Minor and Europe. When appointed to
administer a Balkan district, Iskander became known as
Skanderbeg. After Ottoman forces under Skanderbeg's command
suffered defeat in a battle near Nis, in present-day Serbia,
in 1443, the Albanian rushed to KrujÎ and tricked a
Turkish pasha into surrendering him the Kastrioti family
fortress. Skanderbeg then reembraced Roman Catholicism and
declared a holy war against the Turks. On March
1, 1444, Albanian chieftains gathered in the cathedral of
LezhÎ with the prince of Montenegro and delegates from
Venice and proclaimed Skanderbeg commander of the Albanian
resistance. All of Albania, including most of Epirus,
accepted his leadership against the Ottoman Turks, but local
leaders kept control of their own districts. Under a red
flag bearing Skanderbeg's heraldic emblem, an Albanian force
of about 30,000 men held off brutal Ottoman campaigns
against their lands for twenty-four years. Twice the
Albanians overcame sieges of KrujÎ. In 1449 the
Albanians routed Sultan Murad II himself. Later, they
repulsed attacks led by Sultan Mehmed II. In 1461 Skanderbeg
went to the aid of his suzerain, King Alfonso I of Naples,
against the kings of Sicily. The government under Skanderbeg
was unstable, however, and at times local Albanian rulers
cooperated with the Ottoman Turks against him. When
Skanderbeg died at LezhÎ, the sultan reportedly cried
out, "Asia and Europe are mine at last. Woe to Christendom!
She has lost her sword and shield." With
support from Naples and the Vatican, resistance to the
Ottoman Empire continued mostly in Albania's highlands,
where the chieftains even opposed the construction of roads
out of fear that they would bring Ottoman soldiers and tax
collectors. The Albanians' fractured leadership, however,
failed to halt the Ottoman onslaught. KrujÎ fell to
the Ottoman Turks in 1478; ShkodÎr succumbed in 1479
after a fifteen-month siege; and the Venetians evacuated
DurrÎs in 1501. The defeats triggered a great Albanian
exodus to southern Italy, especially to the kingdom of
Naples, as well as to Sicily, Greece, Romania, and Egypt.
Most of the Albanian refugees belonged to the Orthodox
Church. Some of the èmigrès to Italy converted
to Roman Catholicism, and the rest established a
Uniate
Church.
The Albanians of Italy significantly influenced the Albanian
national movement in future centuries, and Albanian
Franciscan priests, most of whom were descended from
èmigrès to Italy, played a significant role in
the preservation of Catholicism in Albania's northern
regions.
Library of Congress Country StudyThe
Ottoman Conquest of Albania
Library of Congress Country Study
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