Culture
> GJERGJ KASTRIOTI - SKENDERBEG (1405-1468)
Gjergj
(Albanian: George) Kastrioti was born in Kruja
from Gjon Kastrioti, lord of Middle Albania, who was
obliged by the Ottomans to pay tribute to the Empire.
To assure the fidelity of local rulers the Sultan used
to take their sons as hostage and bring them up in his
court. Gjergj Kastrioti attended military school in
the Ottoman Empire and was named Iskander Bey which
in Turkish means Lord Alexandre.
He
was distinguished as one of the best officers in several
Ottoman campaigns both in Asia Minor and in Europe,
and the Sultan appointed him General. He even fought
against Greeks, Serbs and Hungarians, and some sources
says that he used to maintain secret links with Raguse,
Venice, Vladislas of Hungary et Alphonse V of Naples.
Sultan Murat II gave him the title Vali which
made him the General Governor of some provinces in central
Albania. He was respected everywhere but he missed his
country.
In
1443, during the battle against the Hungarians of Hunyadi
in Nish (in present day Serbia), he abandoned the Ottoman
Army and captured Kruja, his father's seat in middle
Albania. Above the castle he rose the Albanian flag,
a red flag with the black double-headed eagle, the present-day
Albanian flag, and pronounced to his countrymen the
famous words: "I have not brought you liberty,
I found it here, among you". He managed to unite
all Albanian princes at the town of Lezha (League of
Lezha, 1444) and united them under his command to fight
against the Turks.
During
the next 25 years he fought, with forces rarely exceeding
20,000 against the most powerful army of that time and
defeated it for 25 years. In 1450 the Turkish army was
led by the Sultan Murad II in person, who died after
his defeat in the way back. Two other times, in 1466
and 1467, Mehmed II, the conqueror of Constantinople,
led the Turkish army himself against Skenderbeg and
failed too. The Ottoman Empire attempted to conquer
Kruja 24 times and failed all 24 of them.
Skenderbeg's
military successes evoked a good deal of interest and
admiration of the Papal state, Venice and Naples, themselves
threatened by the growing Ottoman power across the Adriatic.
The Albanian warrior played his hand with a good deal
of political and diplomatic skill in his dealings with
the three Italian states. Hoping to strengthen and expand
the last Christian bridgehead in the Balkans, they provided
Skenderbeg with money, supplies and occasionally with
troops. One of his most powerful and consistent supporters
was Alfonso the Magnanimous (1416-1458), the Aragone
king of Naples, who decided to take Skenderbeg under
his protection as vassal in 1451, shortly after the
latter had scored his second victory against Murad II.
In addition to financial assistance, the King of Naples
undertook to supply the Albanian leader with troops,
military equipment as well as with sanctuary for himself
and his family if such a need should arise. As an active
defender of the Christian cause in the Balkans, Skenderbeg
was also closely involved with the politics of four
Popes, one of them being Pius II (1458-1464) or Aeneas
Sylvius Piccolomini, the Renaissance humanist, writer
and diplomat.
Profoundly
shaken by the fall of Constantinople in 1453, Pius II
tried to organise a new crusade against the Turks; consequently
he did his best to come to Skenderbeg's aid, as two
of his predecessors Nicholas V and Calixtus III, had
done before him. This policy was continued by his successor,
Paul II,(1464-1473).They gave him the title Athleta
Christi.
For
a quarter of a century he and his country prevented
Turks from invading Catholic Western Europe.
After
his death from natural causes in 1468 in Lezha, his
soldiers resisted the Turks for the next 12 years. In
1480 Albania was finally conquered by the Ottoman Empire.
When the Turks found the grave of Skenderbeg in Saint
Nicholas church of Lezha, they opened it and held his
bones like talismans for luck. In 1480 the Turks invaded
Italy and conquered the City of Otranto.
Skenderbeg's
posthumous renown was by no means confined to his own
country. Voltaire thought the Byzantine Empire would
have survived had it possesed a leader of his quality.
A number of poets and composers have also drawn inspiration
from his military career. The French sixteenth-century
poet Ronsard wrote a poem about him and so did the nineteenth-century
American poet Longfellow. Antonio Vivaldi, too, composed
an opera entitled Scanderbeg.
Skenderbeg
today is the National Hero of Albania. Many museums
and monuments are raised in his honour around Albania,
and among them the Museum of Skenderbeg in his famous
castle in Kruja.
Bibliography:
Noli,
Fan S.: George Castrioti Scanderbeg, New York,
1947
Logoreci,
Anton: The Albanians, London, 1977.
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