The expanding
Ottoman Empire overpowered the Balkan Peninsula in the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. At first, the feuding
Albanian clans proved no match for the armies of the sultan.
In the fifteenth century, however, Skanderbeg united the
Albanian tribes in a defensive alliance that held up the
Ottoman advance for more than two decades. His family's
banner, bearing a black two-headed eagle on a red field,
became the flag under which the Albanian national movement
rallied centuries later. Five centuries of
Ottoman rule left the Albanian people fractured along
religious, regional, and tribal lines. The first Albanians
to convert to Islam were young boys forcibly conscripted
into the sultan's military and administration. In the early
seventeenth century, however, Albanians converted to Islam
in great numbers. Within a century, the Albanian Islamic
community was split between Sunni Muslims and adherents to
the Bektashi sect. The Albanian people also became divided
into two distinct tribal and dialectal groupings, the Gegs
and Tosks. In the rugged northern mountains, Geg shepherds
lived in a tribal society often completely independent of
Ottoman rule. In the south, peasant Muslim and Orthodox
Tosks worked the land for Muslim beys, provincial rulers who
frequently revolted against the sultan's authority. In the
nineteenth century, the Ottoman sultans tried in vain to
shore up their collapsing empire by introducing a series of
reforms aimed at reining in recalcitrant local officials and
dousing the fires of nationalism among its myriad peoples.
The power of nationalism, however, proved too strong to
counteract. The
Barbarian Invasions
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Conquest of Albania
Library of Congress Country Study
Ottoman Domination,
1385-1876
Library of Congress Country Study
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