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Pashko Vasa (17 September 1825 – 29 June 1892), known as Vaso Pasha or Wassa Pasha (Arabic: واصه باشا, Albanian: Vaso pashë Shkodrani), was an Albanian writer, poet and publicist of the Albanian National Awakening, and Ottoman mutasarrif of Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate from 1882 until his death.
Pashko Vasa in 1878. O Moj Shqypni (English: "Oh Albania, poor Albania") is a poem written by Pashko Vasa, a political figure, poet, novelist, and patriot known for his role during the Albanian National Awakening, known as Rilindja. It was written between 1878, an important year for the League of Prizren and 1880. [1]
Pashko Vasa (born 1825–1892), also known as Vaso Pasha, Wasa Pasha or Vaso Pashë Shkodrani – writer, poet and publicist of the Albanian National Awakening, and Governor of Lebanon from 1882 until his death; Marenglen Verli (born 1951) Eqrem Vlora (1885–1964) Mihal Zallari (1896–1976) Tajar Zavalani (1903–1966)
When Midhat Frashëri formed the Balli Kombëtar, it was based on his nationalist ideas and the old ideologies of his father Abdyl Frashëri, Ymer Prizreni and Pashko Vasa, and the natural progression of the Albanian Vilayet. The works of Franz Nopcsa, Johann Georg von Hahn and Milan Šufflay, helped strengthen the nationalists' cause.
This page was last edited on 19 October 2023, at 21:25 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Sami Frashëri, Koto Hoxhi, Pashko Vasa and Jani Vreto created an alphabet. [citation needed] This was based on the principle of "one sound one letter" (although the revision of 1908 replaced the letter ρ with the rr digraph to avoid confusion with p). This was called the "Istanbul alphabet" (also "Frashëri alphabet").
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Group photo of some Prizren League delegates (1878) Some authors argue that Albanian nationalism, unlike its Greek and Serbian counterparts has its origins in a different historical context that did not emerge from an anti-Ottoman struggle and instead dates to the period of the Eastern Crisis (1878) and threat of territorial partition by Serbs and Greeks, [11] while others hold views that ...