The concept is most commonly applied to
Kosovo. During
censuses in the
former Yugoslavia, many
Bosniaks,
Romani and
Turks were registered as
Albanian, as they identified with Muslim
Albanian culture as opposed to the Orthodox Christian
Serbian culture. Albanisation has also occurred with
Torbesh people, a
Muslim Slavic minority in
North Macedonia, and the
Goran people in southern Kosovo, who often have Albanised surnames.
Orahovac At the end of the 19th century, writer
Branislav Nušić claimed that the
Serb poturice (converts to Islam) of
Orahovac began speaking Albanian and marrying Albanian women. Similar claims were put forward by
Jovan Hadži Vasiljević (1866–1948), who claimed that when he visited Orahovac in
World War I, he could not distinguish
Orthodox from
Islamicized and Albanized Serbs; according to him, they spoke
Serbian, wore the same costumes, but claimed
Serbian,
Albanian or
Turkish ethnicity. Most of the Albanian
starosedeoci (old urban families) were
Slavophone; they did not speak Albanian at home, but a Slavic dialect which they called . An Austrian named Joseph Muller, who visited the area in the 19th century, wrote that the dialect originated from the time of the
First Serbian Uprising against the Ottomans, when Albanians from Shkodër who had resettled around Valjevo and Kraljevo in central Serbia, left after those events for Orahovac; the corpus of Bulgarian terminology in the dialect was unaccounted for by Muller. In the 1921 census, the majority of the Muslim Albanians in Orahovac were registered under the category "Serbs and Croats", based on linguistic criteria. Duijzings (2000), summarizing his own research, stated: "During my own research, some of them told me that their tongue is similar to
Macedonian rather than Serbian. It is likely they are the last remnants of what is now known in Serbian sources as , Islamicised and half-way Albanianised Slavs."
Janjevo In 1922, Henry Baerlein noted that the Austrians had for thirty years tried to Albanianize the
Janjevo population (see also
Janjevci).
Ashkali and Romani The
Ashkali and Balkan Egyptians, who share culture, traditions and the Albanian language, are of Romani origin. The "Ashkali" have been classed as a "new ethnic identity in the Balkans", formed in the 1990s.
Placenames To define Kosovo as an Albanian area, a toponyms commission (1999) led by Kosovan Albanian academics was established to determine new or alternative names for some settlements, streets, squares and organisations with Slavic origins that underwent a process of Albanisation during this period.
Alleged Albanianisation In 1987 Yugoslav communist officials changed the starting grade from the fourth to the first for Kosovo Serb and Albanian students being taught each other's languages with aims of bringing both ethnicities closer. == In North Macedonia ==