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Ali Pasha of Gusinje – Albanian military commander and one of the leaders of the League of Prizren [5] Mujo Ulqinaku – officer in the Royal Albanian Army and People's Hero of Albania [6] Pretash Zekaj Ulaj – Albanian tribal leader; Sulejman Pačariz – Islamic cleric and commander of the detachment of Muslim militia
Albanians in Montenegro are concentrated along the Albania-Montenegro border in areas that were incorporated in Montenegro after the Congress of Berlin (1878) and the Balkan Wars (1912-13). Coastally, they live in the Ulcinj (Ulqin) and Bar (Tivar) municipalities which formed part of Venetian Albania.
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BALFIN is a diversified group active in real estate, wholesale and retail, banking, asset management, tourism, education, and logistics. The Group employs approximately 5,000 people, and is a major player [ 3 ] in the Albanian [ 4 ] and international markets operating in ten countries.
Gruda is an Albanian historical tribal region within Montenegro, along the mountainous border with Albania, east of Podgorica. [1] It borders to the historical tribal regions of Hoti and Kelmendi to the south and east (in Southern Montenegro and Northern Albania), and Slavic regions to the north.
Albanian bayraks as of 1918. Hoti and Gruda on the far left side. Hoti is a historical Albanian tribe (fis) and sub-region of Malësia, a divided area located in northern Albania and southern Montenegro. Its geography is mostly mountainous, but some of its villages are on flat terrain near the banks of Lake of Shkodër.
This is a list of populated places in Montenegro, sorted by municipality. Places with more than 1,000 residents are shown in italics . For each settlement with a significant Albanian population, the Albanian name for the settlement is given after a forward-slash (/).
The border between Albania and Montenegro is viewed by many economic migrants as a route into the prosperous economies of Central and Western Europe.. In 2018 entrepreneurial smugglers began to offer a new route into the European Union, running from Greece through Albania, Montenegro and Bosnia to Croatia, a member state of the European Union.