14th century served as the noble residence of the
Kastrioti family.
Skanderbeg's struggle to keep Albania independent became significant to Albanian
national identity and served centuries later in the
Albanian Renaissance as a source of inspiration in their struggle for national unity, freedom and independence. The
Ottomans expanded their control from
Anatolia to the
Balkans in the middle of the 14th century. They entered European territory in 1352, and they defeated a Balkan coalition army led by Serbs, that also included some Albanians and Bosnians in the
Battle of Kosovo in 1389. Ottoman pressure lessened in 1402 when the Mongol leader
Timur (Tamerlane) attacked Anatolia from the east, killed the Sultan, and sparked a civil war. When order was restored, the Ottomans renewed their westward progress. In 1453, Sultan
Mehmed II's forces overran
Constantinople and killed the last Byzantine emperor. The division of the Albanian-populated lands into small, quarreling fiefdoms ruled by independent feudal lords and tribal chiefs made them easy prey for the Ottoman armies. In 1385, the Albanian ruler of
Durrës,
Karl Thopia, appealed to the sultan for support against his rivals, the
Balsha noble family. An Ottoman force quickly marched into Albania along the
Via Egnatia and routed
Balsha II in the
Battle of Savra. Some of the Albanian Principalities soon started to become vassals of the Ottoman Empire after 1420.
Gjirokastra became the
county town of the
Sanjak of Albania in 1420. and then Kruja was established as the center of Sanjak of Albania after Gjergj Arianiti defeated the Ottomans between 1431 and 1435. The Ottomans allowed Albanian clan chiefs to maintain their positions, rule and property, but they had to pay tribute, and sometimes send their sons to the Ottoman court as hostages, and provide the Ottoman army with auxiliary troops. The memory of the mid-15th century resistance under Skanderbeg continues to be important to Albanians, and his family's banner, bearing a black two-headed eagle on a red field, became the
flag under which the Albanian national movement rallied centuries later. 11 years after the death of Skenderbeg and the fall of Krujë, the Ottoman Empire gained control of the ethnic Albanian territories and made many political changes.
16th–17th centuries The Albanian population gradually began to convert to Islam through the teachings of
Bektashism, which offered considerable material advantages in Ottoman trade networks, bureaucracy and army. Many Albanians were recruited initially into the
Janissary and
Devşirme (in many cases sons of Albanian nobles) and later on through becoming Muslims they opened their path for very successful military and political carriers, persuading other Albanians to do so Albanians would enter later on in the 15th and especially 16th and 17th centuries, a period of Islamization. Albanians through converting to Islam would eventually dominate the Ottoman power structures disporportinally to their small population considering the large territory and huge population of the Ottoman Empire. They would become one of the most important and prestigious nations in the Empire playing a stringing role since the 15th century, but especially in the 17th,18th and 19th centuries. For example, 48
Grand Viziers were of Albanian origin who managed the Ottoman state approximately 190 years. Some of the most prominent Albanians during Ottoman rule were:
George Kastrioti Skanderbeg,
Ballaban Badera,
Koca Davud Pasha,
Hamza Kastrioti,
Iljaz Hoxha,
Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha,
Mimar Sinan,
Nezim Frakulla,
Köprülü Mehmed Pasha,
Ali Pasha,
Edhem Pasha,
Omer Vrioni,
Patrona Halil,
Haxhi Shehreti,
Ali Pasha of Gucia,
Ibrahim Pasha of Berat,
Köprülü Fazıl Ahmed,
Muhammad Ali of Egypt,
Kara Mahmud Bushati,
Kara Murad Pasha,
Ahmet Kurt Pasha,
Mustafa Bushati,
Ibrahim Bushati,
Sedefkar Mehmed Agha. Albanians also played a crucial role during the
Ottoman–Venetian War (1499–1503),
Ottoman–Hungarian Wars and
Ottoman–Habsburg wars before gaining Independence. Ottoman Empire would be heavily dependent on Albanian Mercenaries in its warfare between the early 1600s to middle 1800s until the reforms of
Tanzimat.
18th–19th centuries and the Albanian Pashaliks played an instrumental role in late Ottoman-Albanian history. At its peak, his rule extended within the Ottoman Empire over most of central and southern Albania, as well as most of
Epirus, western
Macedonia,
Thessaly, and parts of northern Peloponnese in Greece. The weakening of Ottoman central authority and the
timar system brought anarchy to the Albanian-populated lands. In the 18th century, two Albanian centers of power emerged:
Shkodër, under the Bushati family; and
Ioannina, under
Ali Pasha of Tepelenë. When it suited their goals, both places cooperated with the
Sublime Porte, and when it was expedient to defy the central government, each acted independently. , 1855. The Bushati family initially dominated the Shkodër region through a network of alliances with various highland tribes and later expanded in huge areas in today's
Montenegro,
Northern Albania,
Kosovo,
Macedonia,
southern Serbia.
Kara Mahmud Bushati attempted to establish a de juro independent principality and expand the lands under his control by playing off Austria and Russia against the Sublime Porte. In 1785, Kara Mahmud's forces attacked and conquered
Montenegrin territory, and Austria offered to recognize him as the ruler of all Albania if he would ally himself with
Vienna against the Sublime Porte. Seizing an opportunity, Kara Mahmud sent the sultan the heads of an Austrian delegation in 1788, and the Ottomans appointed him governor of Shkodër. When he attempted to wrest the final lands from the last free tribes in Montenegro in 1796, however, he was killed by an ambush in northern Montenegro. Kara Mahmud's brother,
Ibrahim Bushati, cooperated with the Sublime Porte until his death in 1810, but his successor,
Mustafa Pasha Bushati, proved to be recalcitrant despite important participation in Ottoman military campaigns against
Greek revolutionaries and rebel pashas. He cooperated with the mountain tribes and brought a large area in Balkans under his control like Kara Mahmud Bushati. Large numbers of Tosks emigrated to join sizable Albanian émigré communities in Romania, Egypt,
Bulgaria, Constantinople, southern Italy, and later the United States. In 1906, opposition groups in the Ottoman Empire emerged, one of which evolved into the Committee of Union and Progress, more commonly known as the
Young Turks, which proposed restoring constitutional government in Constantinople, by revolution if necessary. In July 1908, a month after a Young Turk rebellion in Macedonia supported by an Albanian uprising in
Kosovo and
Vardar Macedonia escalated into widespread insurrection and mutiny within the imperial army, Sultan Abdül Hamid II agreed to demands by the Young Turks to restore constitutional rule. Many Albanians participated in the Young Turks uprising, hoping that it would gain their people autonomy within the empire. The Young Turks lifted the Ottoman ban on Albanian-language schools and on writing the Albanian language. As a consequence, Albanian intellectuals meeting in
Manastir (present day town of
Bitola) in 1908 chose the Latin alphabet as a standard script. The Young Turks, however, were set on maintaining the empire and not interested in making concessions to the myriad nationalist groups within its borders. After securing the abdication of Abdül Hamid II in April 1909, the new authorities levied taxes, outlawed guerrilla groups and nationalist societies, and attempted to extend Constantinople's control over the northern Albanian mountain men. In addition, the Young Turks legalized the
bastinado, or beating with a stick, even for misdemeanors, banned carrying rifles, and denied the existence of an Albanian nationality. The new government also appealed for Islamic solidarity to break the Albanians' unity and used the Muslim clergy to try to impose the Arabic alphabet, while also banning the
Albanian national flag. The Albanians refused to submit to the Young Turks' campaign to "Ottomanize" them by force.
New Albanian uprisings began in Kosovo and the northern mountains in early April 1910. Ottoman forces quashed these rebellions after three months, outlawed Albanian organizations, disarmed entire regions, and closed down schools and publications. Montenegro, preparing to grab Albanian-populated lands for itself, supported a 1911 uprising by the mountain tribes against the Young Turks regime that grew into a widespread revolt. Unable to control the Albanians by force, the Ottoman government granted concessions on schools, military recruitment, and taxation and sanctioned the use of the Latin script for the Albanian language. The government refused, however, to unite the four Albanian-inhabited vilayets into one,
Albanian vilayet. == Governance ==