Albanian League

Balkan history
Also known as: League for the Defense of the Rights of the Albanian Nation, League of Prizren
Quick Facts
In full:
League for the Defense of the Rights of the Albanian Nation
Also called:
League of Prizren
Date:
July 1, 1878 - 1881
Areas Of Involvement:
nationalism
home rule

Albanian League, first Albanian nationalist organization. Formed at Prizren (now in Kosovo) on July 1, 1878, the league, initially supported by the Ottoman Turks, tried to influence the Congress of Berlin, which was formulating a peace settlement following the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78 and which threatened to partition Albania (then part of the Ottoman Empire) and transfer some of its districts to Montenegro, Serbia, and Greece. Unsuccessful in its appeals to the congress, the league used military force to prevent Montenegro from annexing the northern Albanian districts assigned to it (February 1879 and April 1880); the league also forced the area acquired by Greece to be reduced (1881).

The league, however, was compelled to give up the district of Ulcinj (Dulcigno) to Montenegro (November 1880) and then was crushed by a Turkish army (by May 1881) that had been sent into Albania when the sultan’s government became annoyed with the league’s demands for political autonomy. Despite its defeat, the league engaged in activities between 1878 and 1881 that not only demonstrated the existence of a genuine nationalist movement in Albania but also gave impetus to that movement, which in 1912 brought about the declaration of the independence of Albania.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Heather Campbell.
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Quick Facts
Date:
November 28, 1912

Vlorë proclamation, (Nov. 28, 1912), declaration of Albanian independence from Ottoman rule. After the Turkish government adopted a policy of administrative centralization for the Ottoman Empire (1908), Albanian nationalist leaders led a series of revolts (1909–12) demanding the unification of the empire’s Albanian districts and political and cultural autonomy within them. While the Albanians, after a successful uprising in 1912, were negotiating with the Turks, however, a coalition of Balkan states declared war on the Ottoman Empire (October 1912).

Because one of the Balkan states’ goals was to divide the Albanian districts of the empire among themselves and because their armies swiftly overcame the Turkish forces, the Albanian leaders abandoned their goal of creating an autonomous province within the empire. Instead, on Nov. 28, 1912, while their lands were being occupied by Serbian, Montenegrin, and Greek troops, 83 delegates from all parts of Albania met at Vlorë (Valona), where their leader, Ismail Qemal, proclaimed Albania an independent state.

Although the Balkan allies continued to seize Albanian territory, the major European powers, influenced primarily by Austria-Hungary and Italy, approved the formation of a sovereign Albanian state (December 1912). Confirming their position in the Treaty of London (May 30, 1913), which ended the 1912 Balkan War, the powers next determined Albania’s borders with Serbia, Montenegro, and Greece; obtained the withdrawal of foreign troops from Albania; and on July 29, 1913, formally recognized Albania as an independent principality, guaranteed its status, and named as its sovereign Wilhelm zu Wied, a prince from the German Rhineland.

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