Albania:
Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Glossary
- bajrak
- A political
union of Geg clans under a single head, the
bajraktar (q.v.). Term literally means
"standard" or "banner".
- bajraktar
- The
hereditary leader of a bajrak (q.v.).
Term literally means "standard bearer".
- Bektashi
- An order of
dervishes of the Shia branch of the Muslim faith founded,
according to tradition, by Hajji Bektash Wali of
Khorasan, in present-day Iran, in the thirteenth century
and given definitive form by Balim, a sultan of the
Ottoman Empire in the sixteenth century. Bektashis
continue to exist in the Balkans, primarily in Albania,
where their chief monastery is at
TiranÎ.
- bey
- ruler of a
province under the Ottoman Empire.
- caliph
- Title of
honor adopted by the Ottoman sultans in the sixteenth
century, after Sultan Selim I conquered Syria and
Palestine, made Egypt a satellite of the Ottoman Empire,
and was recognized as guardian of the holy cities of
Mecca and Medina. Term literally means "successor"; in
this context, the successor of the Prophet
Muhammad.
- Comecon
(Council for Mutual Economic Assistance)
- A
multilateral economic alliance headquartered in Moscow.
Albania was effectively expelled from Comecon in 1962
after the rift in relations between Moscow and
TiranÎ. Members in 1989 were Bulgaria, Cuba,
Czechoslovakia, the German Democratic Republic (East
Germany), Hungary, Mongolia, Poland, Romania, the Soviet
Union, and Vietnam. Comecon was created in 1949,
ostensibly to promote economic development of member
states through cooperation and specialization, but
actually to enforce Soviet economic domination of Eastern
Europe and to provide a counterweight to the Marshall
Plan. Also referred to as CEMA or CMEA.
- Cominform
(Communist Information Bureau)
- An
international organization of communist parties, founded
and controlled by the Soviet Union in 1947 and dissolved
in 1956. The Cominform published propaganda touting
international communist solidarity but was primarily a
tool of Soviet foreign policy. The Communist Party of
Yugoslavia was expelled in June 1948.
- Conference on
Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE)
- Furthers
European security through diplomacy, based on respect for
human rights, and a wide variety of policies and
commitments of its more than fifty Atlantic, European,
and Asian member countries. Founded in August 1975, in
Helsinki, when thirty-five nations signed the Final Act,
a politically binding declaratory understanding of the
democratic principles governing relations among nations,
which is better known as the Helsinki Accords
(q.v.).
- Constantinople
- Originally a
Greek city, Byzantium, it was made the capital of the
Byzantine Empire by Constantine the Great and was soon
renamed Constantinople in his honor. The city was
captured by the Turks in 1453 and became the capital of
the Ottoman Empire. The Turks called the city Istanbul,
but most of the non-Muslim world knew it as
Constantinople until about 1930.
- cult of
personality
- A term coined
by Nikita Khrushchev at the Twentieth Congress of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1956 to describe
the rule of Joseph Stalin, during which the Soviet people
were compelled to deify the dictator. Other communist
leaders, particularly Albania's Enver Hoxha, followed
Stalin's example and established a cult of personality
around themselves.
- democratic
centralism
- A Leninist
doctrine requiring discussion of issues until a decision
is reached by the party. After a decision is made,
discussion concerns only planning and execution. This
method of decision making directed lower bodies
unconditionally to implement the decisions of higher
bodies.
- European
Community (EC)
- The EC
comprises three communities: the European Coal and Steel
Community (ECSC), the European Economic Community (EEC,
also known as the Common Market), and the European Atomic
Energy Community (Euratom). Each community is a legally
distinct body, but since 1967 they have shared common
governing institutions. The EC forms more than a
framework for free trade and economic cooperation: the
signatories to the treaties governing the communities
have agreed in principle to integrate their economies and
ultimately to form a political union. Belgium, France,
Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and the Federal
Republic of Germany (then West Germany) are charter
members of the EC. Britain, Denmark, and Ireland joined
on January 1, 1973; Greece became a member on january 1,
1981; and Portugal and Spain entered on January 1, 1986.
In late 1991, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland applied
for membership.
- European
Currency Unit (ECU)
- Instituted in
1979, the ECU is the unit of account of the EC
(q.v.). The value of the ECU is determined by
the value of a basket that includes the currencies of all
EC member states. In establishing the value of the
basket, each member's currency receives a share that
reflects the relative strength and importance of the
member's economy. In 1987 one ECU was equivalent to about
one United States dollar.
- European
Economic Community (EEC)
- See
EC.
- GDP (gross
domestic product)
- A measure of
the total value of goods and services produced by the
domestic economy during a given period, usually one year.
Obtained by adding the value contributed by each sector
of the economy in the form of profits, compensation to
employees, and depreciation (consumption of capital).
Only domestic production is included, not income arising
from investments and possessions owned abroad, hence the
use of the word domestic to distinguish GDP from
gross national product (GNP--q.v.). Real GDP is
the value of GDP when inflation has been taken into
account.
- glasnost'
- Public
discussion of issues; accessibility of information so
that the public can become familiar with it and discuss
it. The policy in the Soviet Union in the mid- to late
1980's of using the media to make information available
on some controversial issues, in order to provoke public
discussion, challenge government and party bureaucrats,
and mobilize greater support for the policy of
perestroika (q.v.).
- GNP (gross
national product)
- GDP
(q.v.) plus the net income or loss stemming from
transactions with foreign countries. GNP is the broadest
measurement of the output of goods and services by an
economy. It can be calculated at market prices, which
include indirect taxes and subsidies. Because indirect
taxes and subsidies are only transfer payments, GNP is
often calculated at a factor cost, removing indirect
taxes and subsidies.
- Helsinki
Accords
- Signed in
August by all the countries of Europe (except Albania)
plus Canada and the United States at the conclusion of
the first meeting of the Conference on Security and
Cooperation in Europe, the Helsinki Accords endorsed
general principles of international behavior and measures
to enhance security and addressed selected economic,
environmental, and humanitarian issues. In essence, the
Helsinki Accords confirmed existing, post-World War II
national boundaries and obligated signatories to respect
basic principles of human rights. Helsinki Watch groups
were formed in 1976 to monitor compliance. The term
Helsinki Accords is the short form for the Final Act of
the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe and
is also known as the Final Act.
- International
Monetary Fund (IMF)
- Established
along with the World Bank (q.v.) in 1945, the
IMF has regulatory surveillance, and financial functions
that apply to its more than 150 member countries and is
responsible for stabilizing international exchange rates
and payments. Its main function is to provide loans to
its members (including industrialized and developing
countries) when they experience balance of payments
difficulties. These loans frequently have conditions that
require substantial internal economic adjustments by
recipients, most of which are developing countries.
Albania joined the IMF in October 1991.
- janissaries
- Soldiers,
usually of non-Turkish origin, who belonged to an elite
infantry corps of the Ottoman army. Formed a self-
regulating guild, administered by a council of elected
unit commanders. From the Turkish
yeniÁeri; literally, new
troops.
- Kosovo
- A province of
the Serbian Republic of Yugoslavia that shares a border
with Albania and has a population that is about 90
percent Albanian. Serbian nationalists fiercely resist
Albanian control of Kosovo, citing Kosovo's history as
the center of a medieval Serbian Kingdom that ended in a
defeat by the Ottoman Turks at the Battle of Kosovo Polje
in 1389. Residents of Kosovo are known as
Kosovars.
- lek
(L)
- Albanian
national currency unit consisting of 100 qintars. In
early 1991, the official exchange rate was L6.75 to US$1;
in September 1991, it was L25 = US$1; and in January
1992, the exchange rate was L50 = US$1.
- machine
tractor stations
- State
organizations that owned the major equipment needed by
farmers and obtained the agricultural products from
collectivized farms. First developed in the Soviet Union
and adopted by Albania during the regime of Enver
Hoxha.
- Marxism-Leninism/Marxist-Leninist
- The ideology
of communism, developed by Karl Marx and refined and
adapted to social and economic conditions in Russia by
Lenin, which guided the communist parties of many
countries including Albania and the Soviet Union. Marx
talked of the establishment of the dictatorship of the
proletariat after the overthrow of the bourgeoisie as a
transitional socialist phase before the achievement of
communism. Lenin added the idea of a communist party as
the vanguard or leading force in promoting the
proletarian revolution and building communism. Stalin and
subsequent East European leaders, including Enver Hoxha,
contributed their own interpretations of the
ideology.
- most-favored-nation
status
- Under the
provisions of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT), when one country accords another most-favored-
nation status it agrees to extend to that country the
same trade concessions, e.g., lower tariffs or reduced
nontariff barriers, which it grants to any other
recipients having most-favored- nation status. As of
January 1992, Albania had not been a member of GATT and
had not received most-favored-nation status from the
United States.
- net material
product
- The official
measure of the value of goods and services produced in
Albania, and in other countries having a planned economy,
during a given period, usually a year. It approximates
the term gross national product (GNP--q.v.) used
by economists in the United States and in other countries
having a market economy. The measure, developed in the
Soviet Union, was based on constant prices, which do not
fully account for inflation, and excluded
depreciation.
- Ottoman
Empire
- Formed in
thirteenth and fourteenth centuries when Osman I, a
Muslim prince, and his successors, known in the West as
Ottomans, took over the Byzantine territories of western
Anatolia and southeastern Europe and conquered the
eastern Anatolian Turkmen principalities. The Ottoman
Empire disintegrated at the end of World War I; the
center was reorganized as the Republic of Turkey, and the
outlying provinces became separate states.
- pasha
- Title of
honor held by members of the Muslim ruling class in the
Ottoman Empire.
- perestroika
(restructuring)
- Mikhail S.
Gorbachev's campaign in the Soviet Union in the mid- to
late 1980s to revitalize the economy, party, and society
by adjusting economic, political, and social mechanisms.
Announced at the Twenty-Seventh Party Congress in August
1986.
- Shia (from
Shiat Ali, the Party of Ali)
- A member of
the smaller of the two great divisions of Islam. The Shia
supported the claims of Ali and his line to presumptive
right to the caliphate and leadership of the Muslim
community, and on this issue they divided from the Sunni
(q.v.) in the first great schism within Islam.
In 1944, when the communists assumed power in Albania,
about 25 percent of the country's Muslims belonged to an
offshoot of the Shia branch known as Bektashi
(q.v.).
- Stalinism/Stalinist
- The
authoritarian practices, including mass terror, and
bureaucratic applications of the principles of
Marxism-Leninism (q.v.) in the Soviet Union
under Joseph Stalin and in East European communist
countries.
- Sublime Porte
(or Porte)
- The palace
entrance that provided access to the chief minister of
the Ottoman Empire, who represented the government and
the sultan (q.v.). Term came to mean the Ottoman
government.
- sultan
- The supreme
ruler of the Ottoman Empire. Officially called the
padishah (Persian for high king or emperor), the
sultan was at the apex of the empire's political,
military, judicial, social, and religious
hierarchy.
- Sunni (from
Sunna, meaning "custom," having connotations of orthodoxy
in theory and practice)
- A member of
the larger of the two great divisions within Islam. The
Sunnis supported the traditional (consensual) method of
election to the caliphate and accepted the Umayyad line.
On this issue, they divided from the Shia (q.v.)
in the first great schism within Islam. In 1944, when the
communists assumed power in Albania, about 75 percent of
the country's Muslims were Sunnis.
- Titoist
- A follower of
the political, economic, and social policies associated
with Josip Broz Tito, Yugoslav prime minister from 1943
and later president until his death in 1980, whose
nationalistic policies and practices were independent of
and often in opposition to those of the Soviet
Union.
- Treaty of San
Stefano
- A treaty
signed by Russia and the Ottoman Empire on March 3, 1878,
concluding the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78. If
implemented, would have greatly reduced Ottoman holdings
in Europe and created a large, independent Bulgarian
state under Russian protection. Assigned
Albanian-populated lands to Serbia, Montenegro, and
Bulgaria. Substantially revised at Congress of Berlin
(q.v.), after strong opposition from Great
Britain and Austria-Hungary.
- Uniate
Church
- Any Eastern
Christian church that recognizes the supremacy of the
pope but preserves the Eastern Rite. Members of the
Albanian Uniate Church are concentrated in Sicily and
southern Italy, and are descendants of Orthodox Albanians
who fled the Ottoman invasions, particularly after the
death of Skanderbeg in 1468.
- Warsaw Treaty
Organization
- Formal name
for Warsaw Pact. Political-military alliance founded by
the Soviet Union in 1955 as a counterweight to the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization. Albania, an original
member, stopped participating in Warsaw Pact activities
in 1962 and withdrew in 1968. Members in 1991 included
Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland,
Romania, and the Soviet Union. Before it was formally
dissolved in April 1991, the Warsaw Pact served as the
Soviet Union's primary mechanism for keeping political
and military control over Eastern Europe.
- World
Bank
- Name used to
designate a group of four affiliated international
institutions that provide advice on long-term finance and
policy issues to developing countries: the International
Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), the
International Development Association (IDA), the
International Finance Corporation (IFC), and the
Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA). The
IBRD, established in 1945, has the primary purpose of
providing loans to developing countries for productive
projects. The IDA, a legally separate loan fund
administered by the staff of the IBRD, was set up in 1960
to furnish credits to the poorest developing countries on
much easier terms than those of conventional IBRD loans.
The IFC, founded in 1956, supplements the activities of
the IBRD through loans and assistance designed
specifically to encourage the growth of productive
private enterprises in less developed countries. The
president and certain senior officers of the IBRD hold
the same positions in the IFC. The MIGA, which began
operating in June 1988, insures private foreign
investment in developing countries against such
non-commercial risks as expropriation, curl strife, and
inconvertibility. The four institutions are owned by the
governments of the countries that subscribe their
capital. To participate in the World Bank group, member
states must first belong to the IMF
(q.v.).
- Young
Turks
- A Turkish
revolutionary nationalist reform party, officially known
as the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), whose
leaders led a rebellion against the Ottoman sultan and
effectively ruled the Ottoman Empire from 1908 until
shortly before World War I.
- Yugoslavia
- Established
in 1918 as the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and
Slovenes. The kingdom included the territory of
present-day Bosnia and Hercegovina, Macedonia,
Montenegro, Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia. Between 1929
and 1945, the country was called the kingdom of
Yugoslavia (land of the South Slavs). In 1945 Yugoslavia
became a federation of six republics under the leadership
of Josip Broz Tito. In 1991 Yugoslavia broke apart
because of long-standing internal disputes among its
republics and weak central government. The secession of
Croatia and Slovenia in mid-1991 led to a bloody war
between Serbia and Croatia. In the fall of 1991, Bosnia
and Hercegovina and Macedonia also seceded from the
federation, leaving Serbia (with its provinces, Kosovo
and Vojvodina) and Montenegro as the constituent parts of
the federation. Under the leadership of President
Slobodan Milosevic, however, Serbia retained substantial
territorial claims in Bosnia and Hercegovina and Croatia
at the beginning of 1992.
-
Albania:
Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Bibliography
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