Early There are many theories on the place of origin of the Kelmendi. Before the 20th century, several travellers, historians and clergymen have recorded various oral traditions and presented their own interpretations. In modern times, archival research has provided a more historically grounded approach.
Milan Šufflay was the first to find the first mention of the name Kelmendi in the archives of Ragusa, where the name "Georgius filius Georgii Clementi de Spasso" is mentioned in 1353. The publication of the Ottoman defter of the sanjak of Scutari in 1974 marks the publication of the first historical record about the people of Kelmendi, their anthroponymy, toponymy and social organization. In the early centuries of Kelmendi, in the 15th and 16th centuries the only information that is mentioned about them is their language, ethnic group and religion. As Catholic bishop
Frang Bardhi writes in his correspondence with the
Roman Curia,
they belong to the Albanian nation, speak Albanian, hold our holy Roman Catholic beliefs. The first writing about Kelmendi's area of origin is from Franciscan missionary, Bernardo da Verona who in 1663 wrote that ''it is not easy to make comments about Kelmendi's origin, but it has become customary to say that they came from
Kuči or one of the neighbouring tribes.''. The second commentary about Kelmendi's place of origin comes in 1685 in a letter by Catholic archbishop
Pjetër Bogdani who writes that
according to oral stories the progenitor of Kelmendi came from the Upper Morača. French consul Hyacinte Hecquard (1814–1866), noted that all of the Kelmendi (
Clementi) except the families called
Onos believe that they descend from one ancestor,
Clemens or
Clement (Kelment or Kelmend in Albanian). A Franciscan priest in Shkodra, Gabriel recounted a story about a Clemens who was a Venetian who was a priest in
Venetian Dalmatia and
Herzegovina before taking refuge in Albania. The story went on to say he originated from either of those two provinces, and that he was encountered by a pastor in
Triepshi.
Johann Georg von Hahn recorded the most widely spread oral tradition about Kelmendi's origins in 1850. According it a rich herdsman in the region of Triepshi (which administratively in the past fell within Kuci) employed as a herdsman a young man who came to Triepshi from an unknown region. The young man had an affair with Bumçe, the daughter of the rich herdsman. When she became pregnant, the two were married but because their affair was punishable by customary law they left the area and settled to the south in the present Kelmendi area. Their seven sons are the historical ancestors of the settlements of Kelmendi in Albania and the
Sandžak. Kola, the eldest is the founder of
Selcë. Johan Georg von Hahn placed the settlement of Kelmendi's progenitor in Bestana, southern Kelmend. Yugoslav anthropologist Andrija Jovićević recorded several similar stories about their origin. One story has it that the founder settled from Lajqit e Hotit, in Hoti, and to Hoti from Fundane, the village of Lopare in Kuči; he was upset with the Hoti and Kuči, and therefore left those tribes. When he lived in Lopare, he married a girl from Triepshi, who followed him. His name was Amati, and his wife's name was Bumçe. According to others, his name was Klement, from where the tribe received its name. Another story, which Jovićević had heard in Selce, was that the founder was from Piperi, a poor man that had worked as a servant for a wealthy Kuči, there he sinned with a girl from a noble family, and left via the
Cem. In oral tradition, Bumçe, the wife of Kelmendi came from the Bekaj brotherhood of Triepshi. The first historical record about Kelmendi is the Ottoman
defter of the
sanjak of Scutari 1497, which was a supplementary registry to that of 1485. The defter of households and property was initially carried out in 1485, but Kelmendi doesn't appear in the registry as they resisted the entry of the Ottoman soldiers in their lands. It had 152 households in two villages divided in five pastoral communities (
katund). The katund of Liçeni lived in the village of
Selçisha, while the other four (Leshoviq, Muriq, Gjonoviq, Kolemadi) lived in the village of
Ishpaja. The heads of the five katunds were: Rabjan son Kolë (Liçeni), Marash son of Lazar (Gjonoviq), Stepan son of Ulgash (Muriq), Lulë son Gjergj (Kolemadi).
Ottoman The self-governing rights of northern Albanian tribes like Kelmendi and
Hoti increased when their status changed from
florici to
derbendci, which required mountain communities to maintain and protect land routes, throughout the countryside, which connected regional urban centres. In return they were exempted from extraordinary taxes. The Kelmendi were to guarantee safe passage to passengers in the route from Shkodra to western Kosovo (Altun-ili) and that which passed through
Medun and reached
Plav. In the mid-1580s, the Kelmendi seemed to have stopped paying taxes to the Ottomans. They had by this time gradually come to dominate all of northern
Albania. They were mobile and went raiding in what is today
Kosovo,
Bosnia,
Serbia and even as far as
Plovdiv in
Bulgaria.
Venetian documents from 1609 mention the Kelmendi, the tribes of the
Dukagjin highlands and others as being in a conflict with the Ottomans for 4 consecutive years. The local Ottomans were unable to counter them and were thus forced to ask the Bosnian Pasha for help. Kelmendi was very well known in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries because of it constant rebellion against the Ottomans. This caused the name of Kelmendi to be used as a synonym for all Albanian and Montenegrin tribes of the Ottoman borderlands as they were the best known community of that region to outsiders. Thus,
Marino Bizzi (1570–1624), the
Archbishop of Bar writes in 1610 that
the Kelmendi peoples, who are almost entirely Latin, speak Albanian and Dalmatian and are divided in ten katuns: Kelmendi, Gruda, Hoti, Kastrati, Shkreli, Tuzi all Latins and Bjelopavlici, Piperi, Bratonosici, these are Dalmatians and Kuci of whom half are schismatics and half Latin. In 1613, the Ottomans launched a campaign against the rebel tribes of Montenegro. In response, the tribes of the Vasojevići, Kuči, Bjelopavlići, Piperi, Kastrati, Kelmendi, Shkreli and Hoti formed a political and military union known as “The Union of the Mountains” or “The Albanian Mountains”. The leaders swore an oath of
besa to resist with all their might any upcoming Ottoman expeditions, thereby protecting their self-government and disallowing the establishment of the authority of the Ottoman Spahis in the northern highlands. Their uprising had a liberating character. With the aim of getting rid of the Ottomans from the Albanian territories Bizzi reported an incident in 1613 in which an Ottoman commander, Arslan Pasha, raided the villages of the Kelmendi and started taking prisoners, until an agreement was reached with the Kelmendi clans. According to the agreement, the Kelmendi would surrender fifteen of their members as slaves, and pay a tribute of 1,000 ducats to the Ottomans. However, as Arslan Pasha waited for the payment of the tribute, the Kelmendi ambushed part of his troops and killed about thirty cavalrymen. After this incident the Ottoman troops retreated to
Herceg Novi (Castelnuovo).
Mariano Bolizza recorded the "Climenti" in his 1614 report as being a
Roman rite village, describing them as "an untiring, valorous and extremely rapacious people", with 178 houses, and 650
men in arms commanded by Smail Prentashev and Peda Suka. In 1614, they, along with the tribes of
Kuči,
Piperi and
Bjelopavlići, sent a letter to the kings of
Spain and
France claiming they were independent from Ottoman rule and did not pay tribute to the empire. Clashes with the Ottomans continued through the 1630 and culminate in 1637-38 where the tribe would repel an army of 12,000 (according to some sources 30,000) commanded by Vutsi Pasha of the
Bosnia Eyalet. According to Albanian bishop
Frang Bardhi writing in 1638, the Kelmendi tribe grew very rich by attacking and stealing merchandise from Christian merchants in Albania, Bosnia and Serbia, killing those who resisted them. After merchants travelled to Constantinople, and representative of the local population of Novi Pazar and northern Kosovo sent a petition, to complain about Klemendi raids and ask for protection, the Sultan ordered Vučo Pasha, the Pasha of Bosnia, to lead the
1638 Ottoman expedition against Kelmendi. According to Bardhi after being ambushed by the tribe in the mountains and suffering heavy casualties the Ottoman force returned to Bosnia. According to French historian
Ernest Lavisse and to
François Lenormant, in 1638
Sultan Mourad IV asked Doudjé-Pasha, the governor of Bosnia, to lead a punitive expedition, in the heart of winter, against the Kelmendi. The tribe weakened by famine and lacking ammunition, put up a desperate defense, rolling huge blocks of rock from the tops of the mountains onto the Turkish army. The death of their knèze Vokodoud, killed in a fight, and a few days after that of the Voivode Hotasch, whom the Pasha himself surprised by climbing an inaccessible peak with crampons, deprived the Clementi of their best chiefs and determined their submission, the other Kelmendi leaders were decapitated by the Ottomans and their heads sent to the Sultan. In the
Cretan War the Kelmendi played a tactical role between the Ottomans and the Venetians. In 1664,
Evliya Çelebi mentioned Kelmendi Albanians among the "infidel warriors" he saw manning Venetian ships in the harbour of
Split. The Kelmendi promised support to whichever side would fulfil their requests. in 1666, for instance some of the Kelmendi supported the Ottomans on condition that they be exempted from paying tribute for five years. Some of them also converted to
Islam. In 1651, they aided the army of
Ali-paša Čengić, which attacked
Kotor; the army raided and destroyed many monasteries in the region. In 1658, the seven tribes of
Kuči,
Vasojevići,
Bratonožići,
Piperi, Kelmendi,
Hoti and
Gruda allied themselves with the
Republic of Venice, establishing the so-called "Seven-fold barjak" or "alaj-barjak", against the Ottomans. The Kelmendi appear in a report of 1671 written by the
apostolic visitor Stefano Gaspari. According to the report, the Kelmendi had constructed a church dedicated to
Saint Clement in the settlement of
Speia di Clementi (Ishpaja) 20 years earlier in 1651, that was used by the entire tribal community to attend
mass and receive the
holy sacrament. Gaspari also reports that the Kelmendi were primarily concentrated in the following villages:
Morichi (Muriqi) with six households and 40 inhabitants;
Genovich (Gjonoviq or Gjenoviq) with seven households and 60 inhabitants;
Lesovich (Leshoviq) with 15 households and 120 inhabitants;
Melossi with seven households and 40 inhabitants;
Vucli (Vukël) with 32 households and 200 inhabitants;
Rvesti with six households and 30 inhabitants;
Zecca (Zeka) with seven households and 40 inhabitants;
Selza di Clementi (Selcë) with 28 households and 250 inhabitants; and the villages of
Rabiena and
Radenina which, together, had 60 households and 400 inhabitants. However, it is also reported that the Kelmendi had come to occupy and absorb the plateau of
Nixi (Nikç) and
Roiochi, which collectively had 112 households and 660 inhabitants, following a series of incursions and attacks on the local population. In 1685,
Süleyman, sanjak-bey of Scutari, annihilated the bands of
Bajo Pivljanin that supported Venice at the
Battle on Vrtijeljka. Süleyman was said to have been aided by the
Brđani (including the Kelmendi The Kelmendi lived off of plundering.
Plav,
Gusinje, and the Orthodox population in those regions suffered the most from the Kelmendi's attacks. the Kuči, with help from Kelmendi and
Piperi, destroyed the army of Süleyman twice, took over
Medun and got their hands of large quantities of weapons and equipment. In October 1689,
Arsenije III Čarnojević allied himself with the Habsburgs, gaining the title of
Duke. He met up with
Silvio Piccolomini in November, and put under his wings a large army of Serbs, including some Kelmendi. However, Noel Malcolm does not support this statement at all since he has found sources which confirms that, Arsenje III Čarnojevíc, did not meet with General Piccolomini in Kosovo, but instead Pjeter Bogdani did since he was there in the name of the Kelmendi army, he was then given the name Patriarch of Kelmendi, by the Habsburgs. Yet Noel Malcolm debates it further and comes to the conclusion that the Albanians in kosovo were kosovars, however the Kelmendi did fight at Bijelo Polje when the Austrian troops were going back north and joined their troops to Habsburgs, to raide the ottomans at their weakest the In 1700, the pasha of
Pejë,
Hudaverdi Mahmut Begolli, resolved to take action against the continuing Kelmendi depredations in western
Kosovo. With the help of other mountain tribes, he managed to block the Kelmendi in their homelands, the gorge of the upper
Cem river, from three sides and advanced on them with his own army from
Gusinje, In 1702, having worn them down by starvation, he forced the majority of them to move to the
Peshter plateau. Only the people of
Selcë were allowed to stay in their homes. Their chief had converted to Islam, and promised to convert his people to. A total of 251 Kelmendi households (1,987 people) were resettled in the Pešter area on that occasion. Other were resettled in
Gjilan,
Kosovo. However five years later the exiled Kelmendi managed to fight their way back to their homeland, and in 1711 they sent out a large raiding force to bring back some other from Pešter too. In the 18th century, Hoti and Kelmendi assisted the
Kuči and
Vasojevići in the battles against the Ottomans; after that unsuccessful war, a part of the Kelmendi fled their lands. After the defeat in 1737, under Archbishop
Arsenije IV Jovanović Šakabenta, a significant number of Serbs and Kelmendis retreated into the north, Habsburg territory. Around 1,600 of them settled in the villages of
Nikinci and
Hrtkovci, where they later adopted a Croat identity. In ca. 1897, the Boga would become a fully integrated
bajrak of the Kelmendi tribe.
Modern surrounded by men in
Selcë, 1908. During the
Albanian revolt of 1911 on 23 June Albanian tribesmen and other revolutionaries gathered in Montenegro and drafted the
Greçë Memorandum demanding Albanian sociopolitical and linguistic rights with three of the signatories being from Kelmendi. On May 26, 1913, 130 leaders of
Gruda,
Hoti, Kelmendi,
Kastrati and
Shkreli sent a petition to
Cecil Burney in Shkodër against the incorporation of their territories into Montenegro. Baron
Franz Nopcsa, in 1920, puts the Kelmendi as the first of the Albanian clans, as the most frequently mentioned of all. By the end of the Second World War, the Albanian Communists sent its army to northern Albania to destroy their rivals, the nationalist forces. The communist forces met open resistance in Nikaj-Mertur, Dukagjin and Kelmend, which were anti-communist. Kelmend was headed by
Prek Cali. On January 15, 1945, a battle between the Albanian 1st Brigade and nationalist forces was fought at the Tamara Bridge. Communist forces lost 52 soldiers, while in their retaliation about 150 people in Kelmend people were brutally killed. Their leader Prek Cali was executed. This event was the starting point of other dramas, which took place during Enver Hoxha's dictatorship. Class struggle was strictly applied, human freedom and human rights were denied, Kelmend was isolated both by the border and by lack of roads for other 20 years, agricultural cooperative brought about economic backwardness, life became a physical blowing action etc. Many Kelmendi people fled, some others froze by bullets and ice when trying to pass the border. ==Tradition==