History of Albania
1225 B.C.
Earliest known
Illyrian king, Hyllus, dies.
Fourth Century
B.C.
King Bardhylus
unites Illyria, Molossia (Epirus) and part of Macedonia. The Illyrian kingdom
reaches its peak.
358 B.C.
Illyrians are
defeated by Philip II of Macedonia.
312 B.C.
King Glauk of
Illyria expels Greeks from Durrės.
232 B.C.
King Agron dies,
the Illyrian throne is occupied by Queen Teuta.
165 B.C.
Romans capture
King Gent of Illyria and send him to Rome. Illyria is now under Roman control.
First Century
A.D.
Christianity
comes to Illyrian populated areas.
9 A.D.
Emperor Tiberius
of Rome subjugates the Illyrians and divides present day Albania between
Dalmatia, Epirus, and Macedonia.
395 A.D.
Division of Roman
Empire leaves lands presently inhabited by Albanians under the administration of
the Eastern Empire.
Fourth Century
- Seventh Century
Goths, Huns,
Avars, Serbs, Croats, and Bulgars successively invade Illyrian lands.
Eighth Century
Slav tribes
settle into the territories of present-day Slovenia, Bosnia, Croatia, Montenegro
and Serbia, and assimilate the Illyrian populations of these regions. The
Illyrians in the south avert assimilation.
732
Illyrians are
subordinated to the patriarchate of Constantinople by the Byzantine Emperor, Leo
the Isaurian.
1054
Christianity
divides into Catholic and Orthodox churches. Christians in southern Albania are
left under the ecumenical patriarch of Constantinople and those in the north
under the pope in Rome.
1081
Albania and
Albanians are mentioned for the first time in a historical record, by Byzantine
emperor.
Twelfth
Century
Serbs occupy
parts of northern and eastern Albanian inhabited lands.
1204
Venice wins
control over most of Albania, but Byzantines regain control of the southern
portion and establish the Despotate of Epirus.
1272
Forces of the
King of Naples occupy Durrės and establish the Kingdom of Arbėria, the first
Albanian kingdom since the fall of Illyria.
1385
Albanian ruler of
Durrės invites Ottoman forces to intervene against a rival.
1389
Albanians join
Serbian-led Balkan army that is defeated by Ottoman forces at the Battle of
Kosova.
1403
Gjergj Kastrioti
is born.
1443
After losing a
battle near Nis, Skenderbeg with a group of Albanian warriors defect from the
Ottoman army and return to Kruja.
1444
Albanian
principalities unite at Lezha under Skenderbeg, who is proclaimed chief of
Albanian resistance.
1449
Albanians, under
Skenderbeg, rout Ottoman forces under Sultan Murat II.
1468
Skenderbeg dies.
1478
Kruja falls to
Ottoman Turks; Shkodra falls a year later. Subsequently, many Albanians flee to
southern Italy, Greece, Egypt, and elsewhere; many remaining are forced to
convert to Islam.
Early
Seventeenth Century
Some Albanians
who convert to Islam find careers in Ottoman Empire's government and military.
Seventeenth
Century and Eighteenth Century
About two-thirds
of Albanians convert to Islam.
1822
Albanian leader
Ali Pasha of Tepelena assassinated by Ottoman agents for promoting autonomy.
1830
1000 Albanian
leaders invited to meet with Ottoman general who kills about half of them.
1835
Ottoman Porte
divides Albanian-populated lands into vilayets of Janina, Manastir, Shkodra, and
Kosova with Ottoman administrators.
1861
First school
known to use Albanian language in modern times is open in Shkodra.
1877-78
Treaty of San
Stefano, signed after Russo-Turkish War, assigned Albanian-populated lands to
Bulgaria, Montenegro and Serbia; but Austria-Hungary and Britain block the
treaty's implementation. Albanian leaders meet in Prizren, Kosova, to form the
League of Prizren. The League initially advocated autonomy for Albania. At the
Congress of Berlin, the Great Powers overturn the Treaty of San Stefano and
divide Albanian lands among several states. The League of Prizren begins to
organize resistance to the Treaty of Berlin's provisions that affect Albanians.
1881
Ottoman forces
crush Albanian resistance fighters at Prizren. The League's leaders and families
are arrested and deported.
1897
Ottoman
authorities disband a reactivated League of Prizren, execute its leader and ban
Albanian language books.
1908
Albanian
intellectuals meet in Manastir (Bitolja, Macedonia), at the Congress of Manastir
to standardize the Albanian alphabet using the Latin script. Up to now, Latin,
Cyrillic and Arabic script had been used.
1912
May. Albanians
rise against the Ottoman authorities and seize Shkup (Skopje, Macedonia).
October. First
Balkan War begins, and Albanian leaders affirm Albania as an independent state.
November.
Albanian delegates at Vlora declare the independence of Albania and establish a
provisional government.
December.
Ambassadorial conference opens in London and discusses Albania's fate.
1913
May. Treaty of
London ends First Balkan War, Second Balkan War begins
November. Treaty
of Bucharest ends Second Balkan War. Great Powers recognize an independent
Albanian state. Demographics are ignored, however, and half of the territories
inhabited by Albanians (such as Kosova and Chameria) are divided among
Montenegro, Serbia and Greece.
1914
Prince Wilhelm of
Wied is installed as head of the Albanian state by the International Control
Commission. His rule ended within six months, with the outbreak of World War I.
1918
World War I ends,
with Italian armies occupying most of Albania, and Serbian, Greek and French
armies occupying the remainder. Italian and Yugoslav powers begin struggle for
dominance over Albanians. In December, Albanian leaders meet at Durrės to
discuss Albania's interests at the Paris Peace Conference.
1919
Serbs attack
Albanian cities; Albanians adopt guerilla warfare. Albania is denied official
representation at the Paris Peace Conference; British, French and Greek
negotiators decide to divide Albania among Greece, Italy and Yugoslavia. This
decision is vetoed by American president Wilson.
1920
January. Albanian
leaders meet in Lushnjė and reject the partitioning of Albania by the Treaty of
Paris, warn that Albanians will take up arms in defence of territory, and
creates bicameral parliament.
February.
Albanian government moves to Tirana, which becomes the capital.
September.
Albania forces Italy to withdraw its troops and abandon claims on Albanian
territory.
December. Albania
is admitted to the League of Nations as sovereign and independent state.
1921
November.
Yugoslav troops invade Albania; League of Nations commission forces Yugoslav
withdrawal and reaffirms Albania's 1913 borders.
December. Popular
Party, led by Xhafer Ypi, forms government with Ahmet Zogu as minister of
internal affairs.
1922
August.
Ecumenical patriarch in Constantinople recognizes the Autochephalous Albanian
Orthodox Church.
September. Ahmet
Zogu assumes position as Prime Minister.
1923
Albania's Sunni
Muslims break ties with Constantinople and pledge primary allegiance to native
country.
1924
March. Zogu's
party wins elections for National Assembly, but Zogu steps down after a
financial scandal and a assassination attempt.
July. A
peasant-backed insurgency wins control of Tirana; Fan S. Noli becomes Prime
Minister; Zogu flees to Yugoslavia.
December. Zogu,
backed by Yugoslav army, returns to power and begins to smother parliamentary
democracy; Noli flees to Italy.
1926
Italy and Albania
sign First Treaty of Tirana, which guarantees Zogu's political position and
Albania's boundaries.
1928
Zogu pressures
the parliament to dissolve itself, a new constituent assembly declares Albania a
kingdom and Zogu becomes Zog I, "King of the Albanians."
1931
Zog refuses to
renew the First Treaty of Tirana. Italians continue with political and economic
pressure.
1934
After Albania
signs trade agreements with Greece and Yugoslavia, Italy suspends economic
support, then attempts to threaten Albania.
1935
Mussolini
presents a gift of 3,000,000 gold frances to Albania; other economic aid
follows.
1939
March. Mussolini
delivers ultimatum to Albania.
April.
Mussolini's troops invade and occupy Albania; Albanian parliament votes to unite
Albania with Italy; Zog flees to Greece.
1940
Italian army
attacks Greece through Albania.
1941
April. Germany,
with support of Italy and other allies defeat Greece and Yugoslavia.
October. Josip
Broz Tito, Yugoslav communist leader, directs organizing of Albanian communists.
November.
Albanian Communist Party founded; Enver Hoxha becomes first secretary.
1942
September.
Communist Party organizes National Liberation Movement, a popular front
resistance organization.
October.
Non-communist nationalist groups form to resist the Italian occupation.
1943
August. Italy's
surrender to Allied forces weakens Italian hold on Albania; Albanian resistance
fighters overwhelm five Italian divisions.
September. German
forces invade and occupy Albania.
1944
January.
Communist Partisans, supplied with British weapons, gain control of southern
Albania.
May. Communists
meet to organize an Albanian government; Hoxha becomes chairman of executive
committee and supreme commander of the Army of National Liberation.
July. Communist
forces enter central and northern Albania.
October.
Communists establish provisional government with Hoxha as prime minister.
November. Germans
withdraw from Tirana, communists enter capital.
December.
Communist provisional government adopts laws allowing state regulation of
commercial enterprises, foreign and domestic trade.
1945
January.
Communist provisional government agrees to restore Kosova to Yugoslavia as an
autonomous region; Yugoslav leaders bring Kosova under marshal law. Tribunals
begin in Albania to condemn thousands of "war criminals" and "enemies of the
people" to death or prison. Communist regime begins to nationalize industry,
transportation, forests, pastures.
December.
Elections are held for the People's Assembly. Only members of the Democratic
Front are permitted to participate.
1946
People's Assembly
proclaims Albania a "people's republic"; purges of non-communists from
government positions begins. People's Assembly adopts new constitution. Enver
Hoxha becomes prime minister, defense minister, foreign minister and
commander-in-chief.
July. Treaty of
friendship signed with Yugoslavia; Yugoslav advisors and grain begin pouring
into Albania.
October. British
destroyers hit mines off Albania's coast. The United Nations and the
International Court of Justice condemn Albania.
1948
Albanian
Communist Party leaders vote to merge Albanian and Yugoslav economies and
militaries.
June. Cominform
expels Yugoslavia; Albanian leaders launch anti-Yugoslav propaganda campaign,
cut economic ties, and force Yugoslav advisors to leave. Later on the treaty of
friendship with Yugoslavia is abrogated; Hoxha begins purging high-ranking party
members accused of "Titoism"; Soviet Union begins economic aid to Albania.
November.
Communist Party of Albania renames itself the Party of Labor of Albania.
1950
Britain and
United States insert anti-communist guerillas into Albania; all are
unsuccessful.
1955
Albania becomes a
founding member of the Warsaw Pact.
1960
Albania sides
with China on Sino-Soviet ideological dispute; consequently Soviet economic
support is curtailed and Chinese aid is increased.
1961
Soviet Union
breaks diplomatic relations, Albania looks towards China for support.
1967
Hoxha regime
conducts violent campaign to extinguish religious life in Albania; by year's end
over two thousand religious buildings were closed or converted to other uses.
Albania is declared "the world's first atheist country," religious leaders are
imprisoned and executed.
1968
Albania condemns
Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia, subsequently Albania withdraws from
Warsaw Pact.
1974
New constitution
adopted in Yugoslavia. Autonomous units, including Kosova, become constituent
members of the federation.
1976
New constitution
adopted. Albania becomes a "people's socialist republic."
1978
China terminates
all economic and military aid to Albania.
1981
Massive
demonstrations occur in Kosova. Demonstrators demand Kosova become a republic in
Yugoslavia. Yugoslav police and army presence is increased in Kosova.
1985
Enver Hoxha dies.
Ramiz Alia is his successor.
1989
Alia, addressing
the Eighth Plenum of the Central Committee, signals that radical changes to the
economic system are necessary.
In Yugoslavia, a
new constitution is adopted in Serbia, which limits the autonomy of Kosova. The
constitution passes without the approval of the parliament of Kosova.
1990
January.
Demonstrations at Shkodra force authorities to declare a state of emergency.
July. Young
people demonstrate against regime in Tirana, 5,000 citizens seek refuge in
foreign embassies. Albanian delegates of the parliament of Kosova declare the
independence of Kosova from Serbia. Subsequently Serbia abolishes the parliament
and government of Kosova, closes down the only Albanian daily, and takes over
the state-owned television and radio.
August.
Government abandons its monopoly on foreign commerce and begins to open Albania
to foreign trade.
December.
University students demonstrate in streets and call for dictatorship to end;
Alia meets with students; multiparty system introduced; the Democratic Party,
the first opposition party is established; regime authorizes political
pluralism.
1991
January. First
opposition newspaper Rilindja Demokratike begins publishing.
March-April.
First multiparty elections held since the 1920s; Labor Party wins over 67
percent of votes, Democratic Party wins around 30 percent.
April. Alia
reelected to President. Assembly passes law on Major Constitutional Provisions
which provides for fundamental human rights and separation of powers and
invalidates the 1976 constitution.
June. Prime
Minister Fatos Nano and rest of cabinet resign after trade unions call for
general strike to protest worsening economic conditions and killing of
opposition demonstrators in Shkodra. Party of Labor renamed to Socialist Party
of Albania. Albania accepted as a full member of the CSCE.
August. 18,000
Albanians cross the Adriatic to seek asylum in Italy; most are returned.
People's Assembly passes law allowing private ownership, foreign investment and
private employment of workers.
September. A
referendum is held in Kosova. Over 90 percent of voters vote for independence.
December.
Democratic Party withdraws ministers after accusing communists of blocking
reform. Alia sets up new government headed by Vilson Ahmeti and sets March 1992
for new elections.
1992
March. Democratic
Party scores decisive election victory over the Socialist Party in the midst of
economic freefall and social chaos. Elections are held in Kosova; the Democratic
League of Kosova wins the majority of votes; the elections are called illegal by
the Serbian regime.
April. Sali
Berisha, leader of the Democratic Party, becomes first democratically elected
president.
September. Former
President Alia and eighteen other former communist officials, including Nexhmije
Hoxha, wife of late dictator Hoxha, arrested and charged with corruption and
other offenses.
|