(seated, left) with
Haxhi Zeka (seated, middle) and some other members of the
Prizren League Failing to win their claims on a diplomatic level, Albanians embarked on the route of military conflict with their Balkan neighbors. The Prizren League had 30,000 armed members under its control, who launched a revolution against the Ottoman Empire after the debacle at the Congress of Berlin and the official dissolution of the League ordered by the Ottomans who feared the League would seek total independence from the empire. The first military operation of the league was the
attack against Mehmed Ali Pasha, the Ottoman marshal who would oversee the transfer of Plav-Gucia area to Montenegro. On December 4, 1879, members of the league participated in the
Battle of Novšiće and defeated Montenegrin forces who tried to take control over
Plav and
Gusinje. After the breakout of open war the League took over control from the Ottomans in the Kosovo towns of
Vushtrri,
Peja,
Mitrovica,
Prizren and
Gjakova. In 1880, northeastern Albanian delegates proposed creating an autonomous Albanian province, with Monastir or Ohrid as its capital, locally appointed officials, and partial revenue allocation to the Ottoman central government. This proposal, presented by the Prizren League to the sultan, was echoed in an October 1880 assembly in Dibra, which called for Albania's unification. Prominent figures, including Xhemal Bey, Abdul Bey Frashëri, and Dervish Mustafa Efendi, worked to rally support and foster unity across northern and southern Albania. In January 1881,
Sulejman Vokshi of Gjakova led League troops in the capture of Skopje and Prishtina. In February, the League's forces captured Dibra and forced the Ottoman administration to withdraw. Guided by the autonomous movement, the League rejected Ottoman authority and sought complete secession from the Porte. The congress also directed Greece and the Ottoman Empire to negotiate a solution to their border dispute. The Albanians' successful resistance to the treaty forced the Great Powers to return
Gusinje and
Plav to the Ottoman Empire and grant Montenegro the mostly Albanian-populated coastal town of
Ulcinj. There the Albanians refused to surrender. Finally, the Great Powers blockaded Ulcinj by sea and pressured the Ottoman authorities to bring the Albanians under control. Albanian diplomatic and military efforts were successful in wresting control of
Epirus, however some lands were still ceded to Greece by 1881. The Great Powers decided in 1881 to cede Greece
Thessaly and the district of
Arta. In areas like Kastoria, Prilep, Bitola and Veles where an Albanian population was present, the local Bulgarian movement of the day was defeated when armed Bulgarian groups were repelled by the League of Prizren who opposed Bulgarian geopolitical aims. The Ottoman Empire sought to suppress the League and they dispatched an army led by Ottoman commander Dervish Pasha, that by April 1881 had captured Prizren and crushed the resistance at the
Battle of Ulcinj. The leaders of the league and their families were either killed or arrested and deported. == End of the league ==