History
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THE
RISE
OF NATIONALISM
By the mid-19th century Turkey was in the throes of
the "Eastern Question," as the peoples of the Balkans,
including Albanians, sought to realize their national
aspirations. To defend and promote their national interests,
Albanians met in Prizren,
a town in Kosova, in 1878 and founded the Albanian League
of Prizren. The league had two main goals, one political
and the other cultural. First, it strove (unsuccessfully)
to unify all Albanian territories--at the time divided
among the four vilayets, or provinces, of Kosova, Shkodra,
Monastir, and Janina--into one autonomous state within
the framework of the Ottoman Empire. Second, it spearheaded
a movement to develop Albanian language, literature,
education, and culture. In line with the second program,
in 1908 Albanian leaders met in the town of Monastir
(now Bitola, Macedonia) and adopted a national alphabet.
Based mostly on the Latin script, this supplanted several
other alphabets, including Arabic and Greek, that were
in use until then. The Albanian League was suppressed
by the Turks in 1881, in part because they were alarmed
by its strong nationalistic orientation. By then, however,
the league had become a powerful symbol of Albania's
national awakening, and its ideas and objectives fueled
the drive that culminated later in national independence.
When the Young Turks, who seized power in Istanbul in
1908, ignored their commitments to Albanians to institute
democratic reforms and to grant autonomy, Albanians
embarked on an armed struggle, which, at the end of
three years (1910-12), forced the Turks to agree, in
effect, to grant their demands. Alarmed at the prospect
of Albanian autonomy, Albania's Balkan neighbours, who
had already made plans to partition the region, declared
war on Turkey in October 1912, and Greek, Serbian, and
Montenegrin armies advanced into Albanian territories.
To prevent the annihilation of the country, Albanian
national delegates met at a congress in Vlor'. They
were led by Ismail Qemal, an Albanian who had held several
high positions in the Ottoman government. On Nov. 28,
1912, the congress issued the Vlor' proclamation, which
declared Albania's independence.
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