enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Albanisation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albanisation

    Albanisation is the spread of Albanian culture, people, and language, either by integration or assimilation.Diverse peoples were affected by Albanisation including peoples with different ethnic origins, such as Turks, Serbs, Croats, Circassians, Bosniaks, Greeks, Aromanians, Ashkali and Balkan Egyptians, Romani, Gorani, and Macedonians from all the regions of the Balkans.

  3. Unification of Albania and Kosovo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unification_of_Albania_and...

    However, support for unification declined after Kosovo declared independence - support for unification in Kosovo declined to 54% in 2008, [15] and a later poll by the Albanian Institute for International Studies from 2010 showed that 37% of surveyed Albanians considered unification of Albania with Kosovo as neither positive or negative, while ...

  4. Demographic history of Kosovo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographic_history_of_Kosovo

    In Kosovo, the process of Albanianization, i.e. the continuous migration of Albanians from the tribal areas of northern Albania into Kosovo, coincided with the process of Islamicization. The great majority of Albanians converted to Islam in the course of this process.

  5. Albania–Kosovo relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albania–Kosovo_relations

    Albania and Kosovo have bilateral relations.Albania has an embassy in Pristina and Kosovo has an embassy in Tirana.There are 1.8 million Albanians living in Kosovo – officially 92.93% of Kosovo's entire population – and Albanian is an official language and the national language of Kosovo.

  6. History of Kosovo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Kosovo

    This was when Kosovo was used as the name of the entire territory for the first time. In 1913 the Kosovo Vilayet was incorporated into the Kingdom of Serbia, which in 1918 formed Yugoslavia. Kosovo gained autonomy in 1963 under Josip Broz Tito's direction. This autonomy was significantly extended by Yugoslavia's 1974 Constitution, but was lost ...

  7. Yugoslav colonization of Kosovo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Yugoslav_colonization_of_Kosovo

    Kosovo was part of the Ottoman Empire and following the Balkan Wars (1912–1913), the western area was included in Montenegro and the rest within Serbia. [30] Beginning from 1912, Montenegro initiated its attempts at colonisation and enacted a law on the process during 1914 that aimed at expropriating 55,000 hectares of Albanian land and transferring it to 5,000 Montenegrin settlers. [7]

  8. Albanian nationalism in Kosovo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albanian_nationalism_in_Kosovo

    Kosovo is the birthplace of the Albanian nationalist movement which emerged as a response to the Eastern Crisis of 1878. [1] In the immediate aftermath of the Russo-Ottoman war, the Congress of Berlin proposed partitioning Ottoman Albanian inhabited lands in the Balkans among neighbouring countries. [1]

  9. Kosovo Albanians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosovo_Albanians

    Volunteers and humanitarian aid in trucks, buses and hundreds of cars from Kosovo traveled to Albania to assist in the situation and people were involved in tasks such as the operation of mobile kitchens and gathering financial aid. [59] [60] [61] Many Albanians in Kosovo have opened their homes to people displaced by the earthquake. [62] [60] [61]