In 1907,
Franz Nopcsa von Felső-Szilvás recorded an oral tradition of the Toplana which maintained that they were descended from the younger brother of
Can Gabeti who was the forefather of the nearby
Shllaku. As such they were also related to a part of the
Gashi tribe from the
Gjakova Highlands (Albanian:
Malësia e Gjakovës), who were descended from another unnamed brother of Can Gabeti. However, the alleged connection with Toplana and Shllaku is not supported by genetic results, which indicate that the Toplana and Shllaku are related to one another but do not have blood ties with the Gashi. It is claimed that the brothers arrived from the tribal territory occupied by the
Vasojevići in the highlands of north-eastern
Montenegro; tradition holds that they were pushed out of the region following the arrival and expansion of the aforementioned tribe. The Toplana could trace their ancestry 13 generations back and thus Nopcsa argued that their forefather left Shllaku in ca. 1524 or earlier. The
anas (indigenous) population was driven out and reduced to a single settlement called
Gjuraj. Nopcsa also reported that, during the eighteenth century, a branch of the Toplana under a certain
Pep Marku migrated from their native homeland to the village of
Iballë and expelled the local Gruda
fis to Koprat. On the other hand,
Giuseppe Valentini maintained that only a part of the Toplana stemmed from the territory of Vasojevići and that, according to his estimations, their ancestors had arrived by ca. 1450. According to him, the majority of Toplana traces its patrilineal ancestry back to the
Bardhaj fis who had also arrived earlier from Montenegro, as well as to other patrilineages or brotherhoods who had arrived from outside of Toplana. Valentini also tells that a branch of the Toplana under
Frrok Kola had migrated from Koprati to Iballë in the year 1600. The Toplana and Shllaku do not intermarry due to shared patrilineal kinship. The related Koprati
fis, which is mentioned in the legends of the Toplana, was among the
anas of the
Shala Valley that were expelled by the expanding Shala tribe. Valentini also considers them to be from the Bardhaj. ==History==