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Arbëreshë people

The Arbëreshë (pronounced [aɾbəˈɾɛʃ]; Albanian: Arbëreshët e Italisë; Italian: Albanesi d'Italia), also known as Albanians of Italy or Italo-Albanians, are an Albanian ethnolinguistic group minority historically settled in Southern and Insular Italy (in the regions of Abruzzo, Apulia, Basilicata, Campania, Molise, mostly concentrated in the region of Calabria and Sicily).[5]

Arbëreshë
Albanians of Italy  · Italo-Albanians
The Albanian settlements of Italy
(numbered list)
Regions with significant populations
 Italy
(Abruzzo, Apulia, Basilicata, Calabria, Campania, Molise, Sicily)
100,000[1][2][3]–260,000[a][4]
Languages
Albanian (Arbëresh language), Italian
Religion
Christianity
Eastern Catholicism (Italo-Albanian Church)
(minority: Latin Catholicism)
Related ethnic groups
Albanians
Albanian diaspora
Arvanites

They are the descendants of Albanian refugees settled in the Kingdom of Naples and Sicily who fled from Albania, Epirus, and later some from the numerous Albanian communities of Attica and Morea, between the 14th and the 18th centuries following the death of the national hero Gjergj Kastrioti Skanderbeg and the gradual conquest of the Balkans by the Ottoman Turks. Their culture is determined by the main features that are found in language, religious rite, traditional costume, art and gastronomy, still zealously preserved, with the awareness of belonging to a specific ethnic group.

Over the centuries, the Arbëreshë have managed to maintain and develop their identities, thanks to their cultural value exercised mainly by the religious communities of the Byzantine Rite.[6] Nowadays, most of the fifty Arbëreshë communities are adherents to the Italo-Albanian Church, an Eastern Catholic Church. They belong to two eparchies, the Lungro, for the Arbëreshë of Continental Italy, the Piana degli Albanesi, for the Arbëreshë of Sicily, and the Monastery of Grottaferrata of Lazio, whose Basilian monks come largely from the Albanian settlements of Italy. The church is the most important organization for maintaining the characteristic religious, ethnic, linguistic and traditional identity of the Arbëreshë community.[7]

The Arbëreshë speak Arbërisht, an old variant of the Albanian language and derives from the Tosk Albanian spoken in central-southern Albania and Epirus.[8] In Italy the Albanian Arbëresh language is protected by law number 482/99, concerning the protection of the historic linguistic minorities.[9]

The Arbëreshë are scattered also in other parts of Italy. They are in great numbers in North and South America, especially in the USA, Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Mexico, Venezuela, Uruguay and Canada, and in the various parts of central-northern Europe. It is estimated that there are about 100,000 Italo-Albanians (400,000 if including those outside of Italy); they constitute one of the oldest and largest minorities in Italy.[10][11] When speaking about their "nation", Arbëresh use the term Arbëria, a loose geographical term for the scattered villages in southern Italy which use Arbëresh language.[10]

In the light of historical events, the secular continuity of the Albanian presence in Italy is exceptional. In 2017, an official application for inclusion of the Arbëresh people has been submitted to the UNESCO as a living human and social immaterial patrimony of humanity by the Government of Albania.[12][13]

Distribution edit

 
The regions of Italy where there is an Albanian minority
 
Villa Badessa (Badhesa) in Abruzzo
 
Barile (Barilli) in Basilicata
 
Civita (Çifti) in Calabria
 
Greci (Katundi) in Campania
 
Ururi (Ruri) in Molise
 
Casalvecchio (or Kazallveqi), in Apulia
 
Piana degli Albanesi (Hora e Arbëreshëvet) in Sicily

The Arbëresh villages maintain two or three names, an Italian one as well as one or two native Arbëresh names by which villagers know the place. The Arbëreshë communities are divided into numerous ethnic islands corresponding to different areas of southern Italy. However, some places have already lost their original characteristics and the language, and others have totally disappeared. Today, Italy has 50 communities of Arbëreshë origin and culture, 41 municipalities and 9 villages, spread across seven regions of southern Italy, forming a population of about 100,000.[1][2] Some cultural islands survive in the metropolitan areas of Milan, Chieri, Turin, Rome, Naples, Bari, Cosenza, Crotone and Palermo. In the rest of the world, following the migrations of the twentieth century to countries such as Canada, Chile, Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and the United States, there are strong communities that keep Arbëreshë traditions alive.

The full list of the Arbëresh Communities in Italy is:[14]

Community of Albanian origin edit

There are also more than thirty ancient Albanian centers that have lost, in different historical periods and for various reasons, the use of the Albanian language and are thus characterized by a lack of historical and cultural heritage of the Arbëresh: for Emilia-Romagna they are Pievetta and Bosco Tosca, hamlets of Castel San Giovanni (PC); for Lazio it is Pianiano (VT), a hamlet of Cellere; for Molise it is Santa Croce di Magliano (CB); for Campania in the province of Caserta it is Alife; for Puglia they are Casalnuovo Monterotaro, Castelluccio dei Sauri, San Paolo di Civitate (FG), Monteparano, San Giorgio Ionico, San Crispieri, Faggiano, Roccaforzata, Monteiasi, Carosino, Montemesola (TA); for Basilicata they are Brindisi Montagna, Rionero in Vulture (PZ); for Calabria are Cervicati (Çervikat), Mongrassano (Mungrasana), Rota Greca (Rrota), San Lorenzo del Vallo (Sullarënxa '), Sartano, Serra d'Aiello (Serrë, CS), Amato, Arietta (Arjèta), fraction of Petronà, Gizzeria (Jacaria) and the hamlets Mortilla (Mortilë) and Gizzeria Lido (Zalli i Jacarisë), Zagarise, Zangarona (Xingarona), fraction of Lamezia Terme, (CZ); for Sicily they are Mezzojuso (Munxifsi), Palazzo Adriano (Pallaci, PA), Sant'Angelo Muxaro (Shënt'Ëngjëlli, AG), Biancavilla (Callìcari), Bronte (Brontë), San Michele di Ganzaria (Shën Mikelli, CT).

The communities of Mezzojuso and Palazzo Adriano, in the province of Palermo, are to be considered a particular case, since, despite having lost the Albanian language and the customs of origin, they have kept the Greek-Byzantine rite, a peculiar pillar - together with language and customs - of the Albanian identity of the diaspora. In this case the identity is preserved in the religious aspect and in the historical memory. The communities of Cervicati, Mongrassano and Rota Greca, in the province of Cosenza, preserve the memory of the original cultural heritage.

The Albanian migrations, since the beginning of the long diaspora, led to the formation of medium-small arbëreshe communities well integrated in numerous existing cities of central-northern Italy (in particular, Venice) and in the Crown of Aragon (Naples, Bari, Altamura, Barletta, Andria, Trani, Foggia, Bovino, San Severo, Lecce, Brindisi, Potenza, Matera, Melfi, Caltagirone and Piazza Armerina), in most cases reality - again for different reasons - assimilated by the surrounding culture.

Cultural islands, migrations and the modern Albanian diaspora edit

Relevant cultural islands survive in the large metropolitan areas of Milan, Turin, Rome, Naples, Bari, Cosenza, Crotone and Palermo. In the rest of the world, following the migrations of the twentieth century in countries such as Canada, the United States, Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Uruguay there are strong communities that they keep the Arbëreshë language and traditions alive.

Since 1990, with the fall of the post-Bolshevik communist regime in Albania, significant communities of shqiptarë (Albanians of Albania) have entered and integrated into the social fabric of the Italian-Albanian towns. With the struggle for the independence of Kosovo (2008) a very recent group of Albanians, victims of the ethnic cleansing of the Yugoslav regime, has also integrated itself into the various Albanian communities of Italy.

History edit

Ethnonym edit

In the Middle Ages, the native Albanians in the area of Albania called their country Arbëri or Arbëni and referred to themselves as Arbëreshë or Arbëneshë.[16][17] In the sixteenth century, the toponym Shqipëria and the demonym Shqiptarë gradually replaced Arbëria and Arbëresh respectively. Nowadays, only the Albanians in Italy, whose ancestors immigrated from the Middle Ages, are called Arbëresh and the language Arbërisht. The term Arbëreshë and its variants are also used as endonyms by the Arbanasi in Croatia and Arvanites in Greece.[citation needed]

Early migrations edit

 
Skanderbeg led 2,500 Albanian soldiers into the Kingdom of Naples in 1458[18]
 
The Battle of Torvioll in 1444 was the first confrontation between Skanderbeg's Albanians and the Ottoman Turks

The invasion of the Balkans by the Ottoman Turks in the 15th century forced many Arbëreshë to emigrate from Albania and Epirus , Attica, Thebes, Peloponnese then called Morea and other Islands to southern Italy. There were several waves of migrations. In 1448, the King of Naples Alfonso V of Aragon appealed to Skanderbeg to help suppress a revolt at Naples. Skanderbeg sent a force under the leadership of Demetrio Reres, and his two sons. Following a request by the Albanian soldiers, King Alfonso granted them land and they were settled in twelve villages in the mountainous area called Catanzaro in 1448. A year later the sons of Demetrio, George and Basil along with other Albanians were settled in four villages in Sicily.[19]

In 1459, the son of Alfonso, king Ferdinand I of Naples again requested the help of Skanderbeg. This time, the legendary leader himself came to Italy with his troops led by one of his generals, Luca Baffa, to end a French-supported insurrection. Skanderbeg was appointed as the leader of the combined Neapolitan-Albanian army and, after winning two decisive battles, the Albanian soldiers effectively defended Naples. This time they were rewarded with land east of Taranto in Apulia, populating 15 other villages. From the history we know that region of Puglia since 4-5 century BC was habituated by the Illyrian tribes such as Messapians , Iapygians , Daunians and Pekeati. Messapic language according to the researchers, its same like Albanian language. "bila" means daughter. In region of Vlorë daughter is called the same as the Mesapians called it :"Bila", in the other regions of Albania is called "Bija". [20]

After the death of Skanderbeg in 1468, the organized Albanian resistance against the Ottomans came to an end. Like much of the Balkans, Albania became subject to the invading Turks. Many of its people under the rule of Luca Baffa and Marco Becci fled to the neighboring countries and settled in a few villages in Calabria. From the time of Skanderbeg's death until 1480 there were constant migrations of Albanians to the Italian coast. Throughout the 16th century, these migrations continued and other Albanian villages were formed on Italian soil.[21] The new immigrants often took up work as mercenaries hired by Italian armies.

According to some albanologists, this historiographic tradition was created AD HOC. Some albanologists believe that the resistance of Skanderbeg against the Turks is not related to the Albanian migration to Italy. It is believed that part of the migration occurred before Skanderbeg's period for economic reasons, and another wave of migrants were Greek-Albanians who fled Peloponnese after the fall of Koroni to the Turks.[22]

Another wave of emigration, between 1500 and 1534, relates to Arbëreshë from central Greece. Employed as mercenaries by Venice, they had to evacuate the colonies of the Peloponnese with the assistance of the troops of Charles V, as the Turks had invaded that region. Charles V established these troops in southern Italy to reinforce defenses against the threat of Turkish invasion. Established in isolated villages (which enabled them to maintain their culture until the 20th century), Arbëreshë were, traditionally, soldiers for the Kingdom of Naples and the Republic of Venice, from the Wars of Religion to the Napoleonic invasion.

Later migrations edit

The wave of migration from southern Italy to the Americas in 1900–1910 and 1920–1940 depopulated approximately half of the Arbëreshë villages, and subjected the population to the risk of cultural disappearance, despite the beginning of a cultural and artistic revival in the 19th century.

Since the end of communism in Albania in 1990, there has been a wave of immigration into Arbëreshë villages by Albanians.[citation needed]

Language edit

 
Arbërisht language classification

Arbëresh derives from the Tosk dialect spoken in southern Albania, and is spoken in Southern Italy in the regions of Calabria, Molise, Apulia, Basilicata, Campania, Abruzzi, and Sicily. All dialects of Arbëresh are closely related to each other.

 
A multingual billboard near Greci, Campania
 
Bilingual road signs (in Italian and Albanian) in Piana degli Albanesi, Sicily

The Arbëresh language retains many archaisms of medieval Albanian from pre-Ottoman Albania in the 15th century. It also retains some Greek language elements, including vocabulary and pronunciation. It has also preserved some conservative features that were lost in mainstream Albanian Tosk. For example, it has preserved certain syllable-initial consonant clusters which have been simplified in Standard Albanian (cf. Arbërisht gluhë /ˈɡluxə/ ('language/tongue'), vs. Standard Albanian gjuhë /ˈɟuhə/). It sounds more archaic than Standard Albanian, but is close enough that it is written using the same Albanian alphabet as Standard Albanian. A Shqiptar (Albanian) listening to or reading Arbërisht is similar to a modern English speaker listening to or reading Shakespearean English. The Arbëresh language is of particular interest to students of the modern Albanian language as it represents the sounds, grammar, and vocabulary of pre-Ottoman Albania.

Arbërisht was commonly called Albanese ("Albanian" in Italian) in Italy until the 1990s. Until recently, Arbërisht speakers had only very imprecise notions about how related or unrelated their language was to Albanian. Until the 1980s Arbërisht was exclusively a spoken language, except for its written form used in the Italo-Albanian Church, and Arbëreshë people had no practical affiliation with the Standard Albanian language used in Albania, as they did not use this form in writing or in media. When a large number of immigrants from Albania began to enter Italy in the 1990s, they came into contact with local Arbëreshë communities.

Since the 1980s, some efforts have been organized to preserve the cultural and linguistic heritage of the language. Arbërisht has been under a slow decline in recent decades, but is currently experiencing a revival in many villages in Italy. Figures such as Giuseppe Schirò Di Maggio have done much work on school books and other language learning tools in the language, producing two books Udha e Mbarë and Udhëtimi, both used in schools in the village of Piana degli Albanesi.

Linguists focusing on the language include (Albanian) Eda Derhemi,[23] (diaspora born) Martin Di Maggio[24] as well as (Piana degli Albanesi native) Vito Matranga.[25]

There is no official political, administrative or cultural structure which represents the Arbëresh community. Arbërësh is not one of the group of minority languages that enjoy the special protection of the State under Article 6 of the Italian Constitution. At the regional level, however, Arbërisht is accorded some degree of official recognition in the autonomy statutes of Calabria, Basilicata and Molise.

  • In the case of Calabria, the region is to provide for recognition of the historical culture and artistic heritage of the populations of Arbëresh origin and to promote the teaching of the two languages in the places where they are spoken.
  • Article 5 of the autonomy statute of Basilicata lays down that the regional authorities "shall promote renewed appreciation of the originality of the linguistic and cultural heritage of the local communities".
  • Finally, the autonomy statute of the Molise region stipulates that the region "shall be the guardian of the linguistic and historical heritage and of the popular traditions of the ethnic communities existing in its territory and, by agreement with the interested municipalities, shall promote renewed appreciation of them".

In certain communes the local authorities support cultural and linguistic activities promoted by the Arbëresh communities and have agreed to the erection of bilingual road signs.[26] There are associations that try to protect the culture, particularly in the Province of Cosenza. The Arbëresh language is used in some private radios and publications. The fundamental laws of the areas of Molise, Basilicata and Calabria make reference to the Arbëresh language and culture. Nevertheless, the increase in training in the use of the written language has given some hope for the continuity of this culture.

Literature edit

Early Arbëreshë literature edit

The first work of Italo-Albanian literature was that of Sicilian archpriest Luca Matranga (1567–1619). The book was titled E mbsuama e krështerë (Christian Doctrine) and it was a simple religious translation in Arbëresh language, aiming at bringing Christianity closer to his people is Southern Italy. While during the 17th century there were no Arbëresh writers, in the 18th century there was Giulio Variboba (1724–1788, Jul Variboba), regarded by many Albanians as the first genuine poet in all of Albanian literature.[27] Born in San Giorgio Albanese (Mbuzati) and educated in Corsini Seminary in San Benedetto Ullano, after many polemics with local priest he went to exile in Rome in 1761 and there he published in 1762 his long lyric poem Ghiella e Shën Mëriis Virghiër (The life of Virgin Mary). The poem has been written entirely in dialect of San Giorgio and has about 4717 lines. Variboba is considered unique in Albanian literature for his poetic sensitivities and the variety of rhythmic expression. Another known artistic figure of that time was Nicola Chetta (1740–1803) known in Albanian as Nikollë Keta. As a poet he wrote verses both in Albanian and Greek language and he has also composed the first Albanian sonnet in 1777. Being a poet, lexicographer, linguist, historian, theologian and rector of Greek seminary, his variety and universality of work distinguish him from other writers of the period.[28] The most prominent figure among Arbëresh writers and the foremost figure of the Albanian nationalist movement in 19th-century Italy was that of Girolamo de Rada (Jeronim De Rada). Born the son of a parish priest of Italo-Albanian Catholic Church in Macchia Albanese (Maqi) in the mountains of Cosenza, De Rada attended the college of Saint Adrian in San Demetrio Corone. In October 1834, in accordance with his father's wishes, he registered at the Faculty of Law of the University of Naples, but the main focus of his interests remained folklore and literature. It was in Naples in 1836 that De Rada published the first edition of his best-known Albanian-language poem, the "Songs of Milosao", under the Italian title Poesie albanesi del secolo XV. Canti di Milosao, figlio del despota di Scutari (Albanian poetry from the 15th century. Songs of Milosao, son of the despot of Shkodra). His second work, Canti storici albanesi di Serafina Thopia, moglie del principe Nicola Ducagino, Naples 1839 (Albanian historical songs of Serafina Thopia, wife of prince Nicholas Dukagjini), was seized by the Bourbon authorities because of De Rada's alleged affiliation with conspiratorial groups during the Italian Risorgimento. The work was republished under the title Canti di Serafina Thopia, principessa di Zadrina nel secolo XV, Naples 1843 (Songs of Serafina Thopia, princess of Zadrina in the 15th century) and in later years in a third version as Specchio di umano transito, vita di Serafina Thopia, Principessa di Ducagino, Naples 1897 (Mirror of human transience, life of Serafina Thopia, princess of Dukagjin). His Italian-language historical tragedy I Numidi, Naples 1846 (The Numidians), elaborated half a century later as Sofonisba, dramma storico, Naples 1892 (Sofonisba, historical drama), enjoyed only modest public response. In the revolutionary year 1848, De Rada founded the newspaper L'Albanese d'Italia (The Albanian of Italy) which included articles in Albanian. This bilingual "political, moral and literary journal" with a final circulation of 3,200 copies was the first Albanian-language periodical anywhere.

De Rada was the harbinger and first audible voice of the Romantic movement in Albanian literature, a movement which, inspired by his unfailing energy on behalf of national awakening among Albanians in Italy and in the Balkans, was to evolve into the romantic nationalism characteristic of the Rilindja period in Albania. His journalistic, literary and political activities were instrumental not only in fostering an awareness for the Arbëresh minority in Italy but also in laying the foundations for an Albanian national literature.

The most popular of his literary works is the above-mentioned Canti di Milosao (Songs of Milosao), known in Albanian as Këngët e Milosaos, a long romantic ballad portraying the love of Milosao, a fictitious young nobleman in fifteenth-century Shkodra (Scutari), who has returned home from Thessalonica. Here, at the village fountain, he encounters and falls in love with Rina, the daughter of the shepherd Kollogre. The difference in social standing between the lovers long impedes their union until an earthquake destroys both the city and all semblance of class distinction. After their marriage abroad, a child is born. But the period of marital bliss does not last long. Milosao's son and wife soon die, and he himself, wounded in battle, perishes on a riverbank within sight of Shkodra.

19th-century Romantic poets edit

Contemporary literature edit

Protection of language edit

Religion edit

The Italo-Albanian Church edit

The Italo-Albanian Catholic Church, particular church sui iuris, includes three ecclesiastical jurisdictions: the Eparchy of Lungro degli Italo-Albanesi for the Albanians of Southern Italy based in Lungro (CS); the Eparchy of Piana degli Albanesi for Albanians of Insular Italy based in Piana degli Albanesi (PA); the Territorial Abbacy of Santa Maria of Grottaferrata, with Basilian monks (O.S.B.I.) come from the Italo-Albanian communities, located in the only abbey and abbey church in Grottaferrata (RM).

The Italo-Albanian Catholic Church being a Byzantine enclave in the Latin West, is secularly inclined to ecumenism between the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church.[clarification needed] It was the only abode of eastern Christianity from the end of the Middle Ages until the twentieth century in Italy.

There are institutions and religious congregations of the Byzantine rite in the territory of the Italo-Albanian Church: the Basilian Order of Grottaferrata, the Collegine Sisters of Sacra Famiglia, Piccole operaie dei Sacri Cuori and the congregation of the Basilian Sisters Daughters of Saint Macrina.

Culture edit

Traditions and folklore edit

Among the Arbëreshë the memory of Skanderbeg and his exploits was maintained and survived through songs, in the form of a Skanderbeg cycle.[29]

Gjitonía edit

"Gjitonia" is a form of neighbourhood typical of Arbëresh communities and widespread throughout the Arbëresh people. It comes from the Greek γειτονιά (geitonía). The Gjitonía functions as a microsystem around which the life of the horë (village) revolves; the Gjitonía is a smaller-scale version of the layout of the village often consisting of a small square towards which the alleys are oriented, surrounded by buildings that have openings towards a larger square (shesh) on diagonal angles. The name is usually taken from the families that live there. The social aspect of the Gjitonía is an ancient and historical structure where values of hospitality and solidarity between the families of the neighbourhood coexisted and where there was no difference of social class. Mainly for the Italian-Albanian communities, it is a world where relationships were so strong that they created real family relationships so much so that the Arbëreshe phrase Gjitoni gjirì ("neighbourhood relatives") is typical.[30]

Costume edit

Cuisine edit

 
Tumacë me tulë, Arbëreshë dish from Barile (Potenza, Basilicata)
 
The liquor "Elisir Borsci" from San Marzano di San Giuseppe, (Taranto, Apulia)
 
Petullat, typical Italo-Albanian sweets, of fried and sweetened yeast dough
 
The wedding cake Kulaçi from San Costantino Albanese, (Potenza, Basilicata)
 
The famous bread ( buka ) typical of Piana degli Albanesi (Palermo, Sicily)

The Arbëreshë cuisine is composed of the cuisines of Albania and Italy. The style of cooking and the food associated with it have evolved over many centuries from their Albanian origins to a mixed cuisine of Sicilian, Calabrian, and Lucanian influences.

These traditional dishes are Piana degli Albanesi (Palermo, Sicily):

  • Strangujët – A form of Gnocchi called Strangujtë made with flour by hand, flavoured with tomato sauce (lënk) and basil. Traditionally this dish was consumed by families seated around a floor level table of wood (zbrilla) on 14 September, the Festa e Kryqit Shejt (Exaltation of the Cross).
  • Grurët – Boiled wheat dish flavored with olive oil, known as cuccìa in the Sicilian language. The tradition is to eat it on Festa e Sënda Lluçisë. Variations are the use of sweetened milk or ricotta with flakes of chocolate, orange peel and almonds.
  • KanojëtCannoli, the universally famous Pianotto sweet pastry. Its culinary secret is waffle (shkorça) of flour, wine, lard and salt and filled with sweetened ricotta, and lastly sprinkled with sieved chocolate.
  • Bukë – Arbëresh bread (bukë) is prepared with local hard grain flour and manufactured to a round and mostly leavened shape with natural methods. It is cooked in antique firewood furnaces (Tandoor). It is eaten warm flavored with olive oil (vaj i ullirit) and dusted with cheese or with fresh ricotta.
  • Panaret – Arbëresh Easter bread shaped either into a circle or into two large braids and sprinkled with sesame seeds. It is adorned with red Easter eggs. The Easter eggs are dyed deep red to represent the blood of Christ, the eggs also represent new life and springtime. It is traditionally eaten during the Resurrection Meal. After 40 days of fasting, as per the Byzantine Catholic tradition, the Easter feast has to begin slowly, with a light meal after the midnight liturgy on Saturday night. The fast is generally broken with panaret.
  • Loshkat and Petullat – Sweetened spherical or crushed shaped fried leavened dough. Eaten on the eve of E Mart e Madh Carnival.
  • Të plotit – A sweet cake in various shaped with fig marmalade filling, one of the oldest Arbëresh dishes.
  • Milanisë – Traditionally eaten on the Saint Joseph's Day (Festa e Shën Zefit) and Good Friday, is a pasta dish made with a sauce (lënk) of wild fennel paste, sardines and pine nuts.
  • Udhose and Gjizë – Homemade cheese and ricotta normally dried outdoors.
  • Likëngë – Pork sausages flavored with salt, pepper and seed of Fennel (farë mbrai).
  • Llapsana – Forest Brussels sprout (llapsana) fried with garlic and oil.
  • Dorëzët – Very thin home-made semolina spaghetti, cooked in milk and eaten on Ascension Day.
  • Groshët – Soup made of fava beans, chickpeas and haricot beans.
  • Verdhët – During Easter a kind of pie is prepared with eggs, lamb, ricotta, sheep cheese and (previously boiled) leaf stalks of golden thistle; in some villages, the young aerial parts of wild fennel are used instead.

Physical appearance edit

A study from 1918 included 59 Arbëreshë men from Cosenza, Calabria, the result showed that fair hair was present in 27% of them. The same study also showed that the frequencies of light eyes and white skin, were 47% and 67% respectively. The Arbëreshë, from this survey, are found to be overall less pigmented than the Calabrians. They are also taller (m. 1.64) and less dolichocephalic (cephalic index 80.6).[31]

Genetics edit

According to Sarno et al. 2015 there are many Y-DNA haplogroups present among Arbëreshë. Those haplogroups are also shared with their Italian and Balkan neighbours.[32] Arbereshe appear as slightly differentiated from native Southern Italians, and instead overlap with the other Southern Balkan populations of Albania and Kosovo.[33]

Notable Arbëreshë people edit

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notelist edit

  1. ^ Projected ethnic population.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Fiorenzo Toso (2006). Baldini & Castoldi (ed.). Lingue d'Europa. La pluralità linguistica dei Paesi europei fra passato e presente. Roma. p. 90. ISBN 9788884908841. Retrieved 6 July 2015.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ a b P. Bruni, ed. (2004). Arbëreshë: cultura e civiltà di un popolo. Istituto poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato, Libreria dello Stato. ISBN 9788824020091.
  3. ^ "Currently there are about fifty Albanian-speaking centres in Italy, with a population estimated to be around 100,000, though there are no precise figures for the actual numbers of Italo-Albanians. The most recent precise figure is given in the census for 1921; the number of Albanian speakers was 80,282, far fewer than the 197 thousand mentioned in the study of A. Frega of 1997."

    Amelia De Lucia; Giorgio Gruppioni; Rosalina Grumo; Gjergj Vinjahu (eds.). (PDF). Dipartimento di Scienze Statistiche, Università degli Studi di Bari, Italia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 December 2016. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  4. ^ "Ethnologue: Albanian, Arbëreshë". Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  5. ^ Minni, C. Dino; Ciampolini, Anna Foschi (1990). Writers in transition: the proceedings of the First National Conference of Italian-Canadian Writers. Guernica Editions. pp. 63–4. ISBN 978-0-920717-26-4. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
  6. ^ The Greek College in Rome (1583), established for the training of the Greek-Catholic clergy of the Albanians of Italy; the Basilian A. Reres Monastery of Mezzojuso (1609), important for the Catholic missions in Albania; the Oratory of S. Filippo Neri (Rritiri) of Piana degli Albanesi (1716), for celibate priests; the College of Maria of Piana degli Albanesi (1731), for young Italo-Albanian girls; and in particular by the two national seminars, also attracting many Albanians from the Balkans for the, based in Calabria, the Corsini College in 1732, then Sant'Adriano Italo-Albanian College of San Benedetto Ullano in 1794, and the Italo-Albanian Seminary of Palermo in 1735, which was then transferred to Piana degli Albanesi in 1950.
  7. ^ Shkodra, arbëreshët dhe lidhjet italo-shqiptare. Universiteti i Shkodrës "Luigj Gurakuqi". 2013. ISBN 978-9928-4135-3-6.
  8. ^ It is of particular interest as it retains speech sounds, morphosyntactic and vocabulary elements of the language spoken in pre-Ottoman Albania.
  9. ^ . Camera.it. Archived from the original on 12 May 2015. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
  10. ^ a b Essays on Politics and Society Author Hasan Jashari Publisher lulu.com, 2015 ISBN 1-84511-031-5, ISBN 978-1-326-27184-8 p. 64.
  11. ^ Fiorenzo Toso, Lingue d'Europa. La pluralità linguistica dei Paesi europei fra passato e presente, Roma, Baldini & Castoldi, 2006, p. 90.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 August 2017. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  13. ^ Arbëreshët kërkojnë të anëtarësohen në UNESCO
  14. ^ "Comunità albanesi d' Italia" (in Italian). Arbitalia. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  15. ^ "RIONERO IN VULTURE (Basilicata / Lucania) – Fotografie". lucania1.altervista.org. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  16. ^ Casanova. . Archived from the original on 2 April 2010. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  17. ^ Kristo Frasheri. History of Albania (A Brief Overview). Tirana, 1964.
  18. ^ Elsie, Robert (2010). Historical dictionary of Albania. Lanham.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  19. ^ The Italo-Albanian villages of southern Italy Issue 25 of Foreign field research program, report, National Research Council (U.S.) Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of Publication (National Research Council (U.S.)) Foreign field research program, sponsored by Office of Naval research, report ; no.25 Issue 25 of Report, National Research Council (U.S.). Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of (National Academy of Sciences. National Research Council. Publication) Author George Nicholas Nasse Publisher National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council, 1964 page 24-25 link [1]
  20. ^ The Italo-Albanian villages of southern Italy Issue 25 of Foreign field research program, report, National Research Council (U.S.). Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of Publication (National Research Council (U.S.))) Foreign field research program, sponsored by Office of Naval research, report ; no.25 Issue 25 of Report, National Research Council (U.S.). Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of (National Academy of Sciences. National Research Council. Publication) Author George Nicholas Nasse Publisher National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council, 1964 page 25 link [2]
  21. ^ The Italo-Albanian villages of southern Italy Issue 25 of Foreign field research program, report, National Research Council (U.S.). Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of Publication (National Research Council (U.S.))) Foreign field research program, sponsored by Office of Naval research, report ; no.25 Issue 25 of Report, National Research Council (U.S.). Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of (National Academy of Sciences. National Research Council. Publication) Author George Nicholas Nasse Publisher National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council, 1964 page 26 link [3]
  22. ^ Ardian Muhaj "Le origini economiche e demografiche dell'insediamento degli arbëreshë in Italia. Dal medioevo alla prima età moderna", Basiliscos, Rivista specialistica annuale dell' Istituto di Studi Storici per la Basilicata Meridionale, 3 (2016), pp. 26-29
  23. ^ Derhemi, Eda (2006). "Features of dysfunctional attrition in the Arbresh of Piana degli Albanesi". International Journal of the Sociology of Language. 2006 (178). doi:10.1515/IJSL.2006.014. S2CID 144957661.
  24. ^ Maggio, Martin Di. "Arbëresh: Language mixing, translanguaging and possible solutions to issue of maintenance".
  25. ^ Matranga, Vito; Milano, Emma (2019). "Strategies for conservation of a minority language". The Intricacy of Languages. IVITRA Research in Linguistics and Literature. Vol. 20. pp. 228–241. doi:10.1075/ivitra.20.13mat. ISBN 978-90-272-0442-4. S2CID 210532463.
  26. ^ Euromosaic. Albanian in Italy.
  27. ^ Albanian literature: a short history Authors Robert Elsie, Centre for Albanian Studies (London, England) Publisher I.B. Tauris, 2005 ISBN 1-84511-031-5, ISBN 978-1-84511-031-4 p. 45
  28. ^ Albanian literature: a short history Authors Robert Elsie, Centre for Albanian Studies (London, England) Publisher I.B.Tauris, 2005 ISBN 1-84511-031-5, ISBN 978-1-84511-031-4 p. 46-47
  29. ^ Skendi, Stavro (1968). "Skenderbeg and Albanian Consciousness". Südost Forschungen. 27: 83–84. "The memory of the Albanian national hero was maintained vividly among the Albanians of Italy, those who emigrated to Calabria and Sicily, following his death.... Living compactly in Christian territory, though in separate communities, the Italo-Albanians have preserved the songs about Skenderbeg and his exploits which their ancestors had brought from the mother country. Today one may even speak of the existence of a Skenderbeg cycle among them, if one takes into account also the songs on other Albanian heroes who surrounded him."
  30. ^ MASCI, L.F. Gli insediamenti Albanesi in Italia (Morfologia e Architettura), Nuclei Urbani della Calabria Citra. Comune di S. Sofia D'Epiro 2004
  31. ^ A SKETCH OF THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF ITALY.By V. GlUFFRIDA-RUGGERI, PROFESSOR OF ANTHROPOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF NAPLES.
  32. ^ Sarno, Stefania (16 May 2017). "Ancient and recent admixture layers in Sicily and Southern Italy trace multiple migration routes along the Mediterranean". Scientific Reports. 7 (1): 1984. Bibcode:2017NatSR...7.1984S. doi:10.1038/s41598-017-01802-4. PMC 5434004. PMID 28512355. S2CID 669567.
  33. ^ Sarno, Stefania (16 May 2017). "Ancient and recent admixture layers in Sicily and Southern Italy trace multiple migration routes along the Mediterranean". Scientific Reports. 7 (1): 1984. Bibcode:2017NatSR...7.1984S. doi:10.1038/s41598-017-01802-4. PMC 5434004. PMID 28512355. S2CID 669567.

External links edit

  • Arbitalia Shtëpia e Arbëreshëvet të Italisë / The Home of Albanians of Italy
  • Jemi.it the Arbëresh web portal managed by the Eparchy of Lungro
  • Jeta Arbëreshe Bilingual magazine
  • Arberiaguzzardi Maps of the Albanians of Italy
  • Mondoarberesco.it Web Jeta Arbresh
  • Museoetnicoarbresh.org Albanian Ethnic Museum of Civita
  • Vatrarberesh.it The Albanian Fire
  • Arbelmo.it The Italo-Albanian sociocultural blog
  • Scesci i Pasionatit.it
  • Katundiyne.com Magazine Katundi Yne - Paese Nostro
  • E-biblía Digital library on the faith and knowledge of the Italo-Albanian people
  • Unibesa.it BESA - Union of Albanian Municipalities of Sicily
  • Unical.it Università della Calabria - Laboratorio di Albanologia
  • Treccani.it La comunità albanese d'Italia su Enciclopedia Treccani
  • Albanian, Arbëreshë in Ethnologue Languages of the World
  • "Shared language, diverging genetic histories: high-resolution analysis of Y-chromosome variability in Calabrian and Sicilian Arbereshe". European Journal of Human Genetics. 2016.

arbëreshë, people, other, uses, arbëreshë, disambiguation, confused, with, arbanasi, people, albanians, italy, arbëreshë, pronounced, aɾbəˈɾɛʃ, albanian, arbëreshët, italisë, italian, albanesi, italia, also, known, albanians, italy, italo, albanians, albanian,. For other uses see Arbereshe disambiguation Not to be confused with Arbanasi people or Albanians in Italy The Arbereshe pronounced aɾbeˈɾɛʃ Albanian Arbereshet e Italise Italian Albanesi d Italia also known as Albanians of Italy or Italo Albanians are an Albanian ethnolinguistic group minority historically settled in Southern and Insular Italy in the regions of Abruzzo Apulia Basilicata Campania Molise mostly concentrated in the region of Calabria and Sicily 5 ArberesheAlbanians of Italy Italo AlbaniansThe Albanian settlements of Italy numbered list Regions with significant populations Italy Abruzzo Apulia Basilicata Calabria Campania Molise Sicily 100 000 1 2 3 260 000 a 4 LanguagesAlbanian Arberesh language ItalianReligionChristianity Eastern Catholicism Italo Albanian Church minority Latin Catholicism Related ethnic groupsAlbaniansAlbanian diasporaArvanitesThey are the descendants of Albanian refugees settled in the Kingdom of Naples and Sicily who fled from Albania Epirus and later some from the numerous Albanian communities of Attica and Morea between the 14th and the 18th centuries following the death of the national hero Gjergj Kastrioti Skanderbeg and the gradual conquest of the Balkans by the Ottoman Turks Their culture is determined by the main features that are found in language religious rite traditional costume art and gastronomy still zealously preserved with the awareness of belonging to a specific ethnic group Over the centuries the Arbereshe have managed to maintain and develop their identities thanks to their cultural value exercised mainly by the religious communities of the Byzantine Rite 6 Nowadays most of the fifty Arbereshe communities are adherents to the Italo Albanian Church an Eastern Catholic Church They belong to two eparchies the Lungro for the Arbereshe of Continental Italy the Piana degli Albanesi for the Arbereshe of Sicily and the Monastery of Grottaferrata of Lazio whose Basilian monks come largely from the Albanian settlements of Italy The church is the most important organization for maintaining the characteristic religious ethnic linguistic and traditional identity of the Arbereshe community 7 The Arbereshe speak Arberisht an old variant of the Albanian language and derives from the Tosk Albanian spoken in central southern Albania and Epirus 8 In Italy the Albanian Arberesh language is protected by law number 482 99 concerning the protection of the historic linguistic minorities 9 The Arbereshe are scattered also in other parts of Italy They are in great numbers in North and South America especially in the USA Brazil Chile Argentina Mexico Venezuela Uruguay and Canada and in the various parts of central northern Europe It is estimated that there are about 100 000 Italo Albanians 400 000 if including those outside of Italy they constitute one of the oldest and largest minorities in Italy 10 11 When speaking about their nation Arberesh use the term Arberia a loose geographical term for the scattered villages in southern Italy which use Arberesh language 10 In the light of historical events the secular continuity of the Albanian presence in Italy is exceptional In 2017 an official application for inclusion of the Arberesh people has been submitted to the UNESCO as a living human and social immaterial patrimony of humanity by the Government of Albania 12 13 Contents 1 Distribution 1 1 Community of Albanian origin 1 2 Cultural islands migrations and the modern Albanian diaspora 2 History 2 1 Ethnonym 2 2 Early migrations 2 3 Later migrations 3 Language 3 1 Literature 3 1 1 Early Arbereshe literature 3 1 2 19th century Romantic poets 3 1 3 Contemporary literature 3 2 Protection of language 4 Religion 4 1 The Italo Albanian Church 5 Culture 5 1 Traditions and folklore 5 2 Gjitonia 5 3 Costume 5 4 Cuisine 6 Physical appearance 7 Genetics 8 Notable Arbereshe people 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 Notelist 12 References 13 External linksDistribution edit nbsp The regions of Italy where there is an Albanian minority nbsp Villa Badessa Badhesa in Abruzzo nbsp Barile Barilli in Basilicata nbsp Civita Cifti in Calabria nbsp Greci Katundi in Campania nbsp Ururi Ruri in Molise nbsp Casalvecchio or Kazallveqi in Apulia nbsp Piana degli Albanesi Hora e Arbereshevet in SicilyThe Arberesh villages maintain two or three names an Italian one as well as one or two native Arberesh names by which villagers know the place The Arbereshe communities are divided into numerous ethnic islands corresponding to different areas of southern Italy However some places have already lost their original characteristics and the language and others have totally disappeared Today Italy has 50 communities of Arbereshe origin and culture 41 municipalities and 9 villages spread across seven regions of southern Italy forming a population of about 100 000 1 2 Some cultural islands survive in the metropolitan areas of Milan Chieri Turin Rome Naples Bari Cosenza Crotone and Palermo In the rest of the world following the migrations of the twentieth century to countries such as Canada Chile Brazil Argentina Uruguay and the United States there are strong communities that keep Arbereshe traditions alive The full list of the Arberesh Communities in Italy is 14 Abruzzo Province of Pescara Villa Badessa frazione of Rosciano Badhesa Molise Province of Campobasso Campomarino Kemarini Montecilfone Munxhufuni Portocannone Portkanuni Ururi Ruri Campania Province of Avellino Greci Katundi Apulia Province of Foggia Casalvecchio di Puglia Kazallveqi Chieuti Qefti Provincia di Taranto San Marzano di San Giuseppe Shen Marcani Basilicata Province of Potenza Barile Barilli Ginestra Zhura Maschito Mashqiti Rionero in Vulture 15 A Rionero San Costantino Albanese Shen Kostandini Arberesh San Paolo Albanese Shen Pali Arberesh Calabria Province of Catanzaro Andali Andalli Caraffa di Catanzaro Garafa Marcedusa Marcedhuza Vena di Maida frazione of Maida Vina Zagarise Zagari Province of Cosenza Acquaformosa Firmoza Cantinella frazione of Corigliano Rossano Kantinela Cerzeto in the commune of Cerzeto Qana Castroregio Kasternexhi Cavallerizzo frazione of Cerzeto Kajverici Civita Cifti Eianina frazione of Frascineto Purcill Falconara Albanese Fullkunara Farneta frazione of Castroregio Farneta Firmo Ferma Frascineto Frasnita Lungro Ungra Macchia Albanese frazione of San Demetrio Corone Maqi Malito Marri frazione of San Benedetto Ulolano Allimarri Mongrassano Mungrasana Plataci Pllateni San Basile Shen Vasili San Benedetto Ullano Shen Benedhiti Santa Caterina Albanese Picilia San Cosmo Albanese Strihari San Demetrio Corone Shen Mitri San Giorgio Albanese Mbuzati San Giacomo di Cerzeto frazione of Cerzeto Shen Japku San Martino di Finita Shen Mertiri Santa Sofia d Epiro Shen Sofia Spezzano Albanese Spixana Vaccarizzo Albanese Vakarici Province of Crotone Carfizzi Karfici Pallagorio Puheriu San Nicola dell Alto Shen Kolli Sicily Province of Catania Biancavilla Callicari Province of Palermo Contessa Entellina Kuntisa Piana degli Albanesi Hora e Arbereshevet Santa Cristina Gela SendahstinaCommunity of Albanian origin edit There are also more than thirty ancient Albanian centers that have lost in different historical periods and for various reasons the use of the Albanian language and are thus characterized by a lack of historical and cultural heritage of the Arberesh for Emilia Romagna they are Pievetta and Bosco Tosca hamlets of Castel San Giovanni PC for Lazio it is Pianiano VT a hamlet of Cellere for Molise it is Santa Croce di Magliano CB for Campania in the province of Caserta it is Alife for Puglia they are Casalnuovo Monterotaro Castelluccio dei Sauri San Paolo di Civitate FG Monteparano San Giorgio Ionico San Crispieri Faggiano Roccaforzata Monteiasi Carosino Montemesola TA for Basilicata they are Brindisi Montagna Rionero in Vulture PZ for Calabria are Cervicati Cervikat Mongrassano Mungrasana Rota Greca Rrota San Lorenzo del Vallo Sullarenxa Sartano Serra d Aiello Serre CS Amato Arietta Arjeta fraction of Petrona Gizzeria Jacaria and the hamlets Mortilla Mortile and Gizzeria Lido Zalli i Jacarise Zagarise Zangarona Xingarona fraction of Lamezia Terme CZ for Sicily they are Mezzojuso Munxifsi Palazzo Adriano Pallaci PA Sant Angelo Muxaro Shent Engjelli AG Biancavilla Callicari Bronte Bronte San Michele di Ganzaria Shen Mikelli CT The communities of Mezzojuso and Palazzo Adriano in the province of Palermo are to be considered a particular case since despite having lost the Albanian language and the customs of origin they have kept the Greek Byzantine rite a peculiar pillar together with language and customs of the Albanian identity of the diaspora In this case the identity is preserved in the religious aspect and in the historical memory The communities of Cervicati Mongrassano and Rota Greca in the province of Cosenza preserve the memory of the original cultural heritage The Albanian migrations since the beginning of the long diaspora led to the formation of medium small arbereshe communities well integrated in numerous existing cities of central northern Italy in particular Venice and in the Crown of Aragon Naples Bari Altamura Barletta Andria Trani Foggia Bovino San Severo Lecce Brindisi Potenza Matera Melfi Caltagirone and Piazza Armerina in most cases reality again for different reasons assimilated by the surrounding culture Cultural islands migrations and the modern Albanian diaspora edit Relevant cultural islands survive in the large metropolitan areas of Milan Turin Rome Naples Bari Cosenza Crotone and Palermo In the rest of the world following the migrations of the twentieth century in countries such as Canada the United States Argentina Brazil Chile and Uruguay there are strong communities that they keep the Arbereshe language and traditions alive Since 1990 with the fall of the post Bolshevik communist regime in Albania significant communities of shqiptare Albanians of Albania have entered and integrated into the social fabric of the Italian Albanian towns With the struggle for the independence of Kosovo 2008 a very recent group of Albanians victims of the ethnic cleansing of the Yugoslav regime has also integrated itself into the various Albanian communities of Italy History editEthnonym edit Main article Names of the Albanians and Albania In the Middle Ages the native Albanians in the area of Albania called their country Arberi or Arbeni and referred to themselves as Arbereshe or Arbeneshe 16 17 In the sixteenth century the toponym Shqiperia and the demonym Shqiptare gradually replaced Arberia and Arberesh respectively Nowadays only the Albanians in Italy whose ancestors immigrated from the Middle Ages are called Arberesh and the language Arberisht The term Arbereshe and its variants are also used as endonyms by the Arbanasi in Croatia and Arvanites in Greece citation needed Early migrations edit nbsp Skanderbeg led 2 500 Albanian soldiers into the Kingdom of Naples in 1458 18 nbsp The Battle of Torvioll in 1444 was the first confrontation between Skanderbeg s Albanians and the Ottoman TurksThe invasion of the Balkans by the Ottoman Turks in the 15th century forced many Arbereshe to emigrate from Albania and Epirus Attica Thebes Peloponnese then called Morea and other Islands to southern Italy There were several waves of migrations In 1448 the King of Naples Alfonso V of Aragon appealed to Skanderbeg to help suppress a revolt at Naples Skanderbeg sent a force under the leadership of Demetrio Reres and his two sons Following a request by the Albanian soldiers King Alfonso granted them land and they were settled in twelve villages in the mountainous area called Catanzaro in 1448 A year later the sons of Demetrio George and Basil along with other Albanians were settled in four villages in Sicily 19 In 1459 the son of Alfonso king Ferdinand I of Naples again requested the help of Skanderbeg This time the legendary leader himself came to Italy with his troops led by one of his generals Luca Baffa to end a French supported insurrection Skanderbeg was appointed as the leader of the combined Neapolitan Albanian army and after winning two decisive battles the Albanian soldiers effectively defended Naples This time they were rewarded with land east of Taranto in Apulia populating 15 other villages From the history we know that region of Puglia since 4 5 century BC was habituated by the Illyrian tribes such as Messapians Iapygians Daunians and Pekeati Messapic language according to the researchers its same like Albanian language bila means daughter In region of Vlore daughter is called the same as the Mesapians called it Bila in the other regions of Albania is called Bija 20 After the death of Skanderbeg in 1468 the organized Albanian resistance against the Ottomans came to an end Like much of the Balkans Albania became subject to the invading Turks Many of its people under the rule of Luca Baffa and Marco Becci fled to the neighboring countries and settled in a few villages in Calabria From the time of Skanderbeg s death until 1480 there were constant migrations of Albanians to the Italian coast Throughout the 16th century these migrations continued and other Albanian villages were formed on Italian soil 21 The new immigrants often took up work as mercenaries hired by Italian armies According to some albanologists this historiographic tradition was created AD HOC Some albanologists believe that the resistance of Skanderbeg against the Turks is not related to the Albanian migration to Italy It is believed that part of the migration occurred before Skanderbeg s period for economic reasons and another wave of migrants were Greek Albanians who fled Peloponnese after the fall of Koroni to the Turks 22 Another wave of emigration between 1500 and 1534 relates to Arbereshe from central Greece Employed as mercenaries by Venice they had to evacuate the colonies of the Peloponnese with the assistance of the troops of Charles V as the Turks had invaded that region Charles V established these troops in southern Italy to reinforce defenses against the threat of Turkish invasion Established in isolated villages which enabled them to maintain their culture until the 20th century Arbereshe were traditionally soldiers for the Kingdom of Naples and the Republic of Venice from the Wars of Religion to the Napoleonic invasion Later migrations edit The wave of migration from southern Italy to the Americas in 1900 1910 and 1920 1940 depopulated approximately half of the Arbereshe villages and subjected the population to the risk of cultural disappearance despite the beginning of a cultural and artistic revival in the 19th century Since the end of communism in Albania in 1990 there has been a wave of immigration into Arbereshe villages by Albanians citation needed nbsp Ethnographic map 1859 depicting the Albanian population in green nbsp Albanian ethno linguistic territoriesLanguage editMain articles Albanian language and Arberesh language nbsp Arberisht language classificationArberesh derives from the Tosk dialect spoken in southern Albania and is spoken in Southern Italy in the regions of Calabria Molise Apulia Basilicata Campania Abruzzi and Sicily All dialects of Arberesh are closely related to each other nbsp A multingual billboard near Greci Campania nbsp Bilingual road signs in Italian and Albanian in Piana degli Albanesi SicilyThe Arberesh language retains many archaisms of medieval Albanian from pre Ottoman Albania in the 15th century It also retains some Greek language elements including vocabulary and pronunciation It has also preserved some conservative features that were lost in mainstream Albanian Tosk For example it has preserved certain syllable initial consonant clusters which have been simplified in Standard Albanian cf Arberisht gluhe ˈɡluxe language tongue vs Standard Albanian gjuhe ˈɟuhe It sounds more archaic than Standard Albanian but is close enough that it is written using the same Albanian alphabet as Standard Albanian A Shqiptar Albanian listening to or reading Arberisht is similar to a modern English speaker listening to or reading Shakespearean English The Arberesh language is of particular interest to students of the modern Albanian language as it represents the sounds grammar and vocabulary of pre Ottoman Albania Arberisht was commonly called Albanese Albanian in Italian in Italy until the 1990s Until recently Arberisht speakers had only very imprecise notions about how related or unrelated their language was to Albanian Until the 1980s Arberisht was exclusively a spoken language except for its written form used in the Italo Albanian Church and Arbereshe people had no practical affiliation with the Standard Albanian language used in Albania as they did not use this form in writing or in media When a large number of immigrants from Albania began to enter Italy in the 1990s they came into contact with local Arbereshe communities Since the 1980s some efforts have been organized to preserve the cultural and linguistic heritage of the language Arberisht has been under a slow decline in recent decades but is currently experiencing a revival in many villages in Italy Figures such as Giuseppe Schiro Di Maggio have done much work on school books and other language learning tools in the language producing two books Udha e Mbare and Udhetimi both used in schools in the village of Piana degli Albanesi Linguists focusing on the language include Albanian Eda Derhemi 23 diaspora born Martin Di Maggio 24 as well as Piana degli Albanesi native Vito Matranga 25 There is no official political administrative or cultural structure which represents the Arberesh community Arberesh is not one of the group of minority languages that enjoy the special protection of the State under Article 6 of the Italian Constitution At the regional level however Arberisht is accorded some degree of official recognition in the autonomy statutes of Calabria Basilicata and Molise In the case of Calabria the region is to provide for recognition of the historical culture and artistic heritage of the populations of Arberesh origin and to promote the teaching of the two languages in the places where they are spoken Article 5 of the autonomy statute of Basilicata lays down that the regional authorities shall promote renewed appreciation of the originality of the linguistic and cultural heritage of the local communities Finally the autonomy statute of the Molise region stipulates that the region shall be the guardian of the linguistic and historical heritage and of the popular traditions of the ethnic communities existing in its territory and by agreement with the interested municipalities shall promote renewed appreciation of them In certain communes the local authorities support cultural and linguistic activities promoted by the Arberesh communities and have agreed to the erection of bilingual road signs 26 There are associations that try to protect the culture particularly in the Province of Cosenza The Arberesh language is used in some private radios and publications The fundamental laws of the areas of Molise Basilicata and Calabria make reference to the Arberesh language and culture Nevertheless the increase in training in the use of the written language has given some hope for the continuity of this culture Literature edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2009 Main article Albanian literature Early Arbereshe literature edit The first work of Italo Albanian literature was that of Sicilian archpriest Luca Matranga 1567 1619 The book was titled E mbsuama e kreshtere Christian Doctrine and it was a simple religious translation in Arberesh language aiming at bringing Christianity closer to his people is Southern Italy While during the 17th century there were no Arberesh writers in the 18th century there was Giulio Variboba 1724 1788 Jul Variboba regarded by many Albanians as the first genuine poet in all of Albanian literature 27 Born in San Giorgio Albanese Mbuzati and educated in Corsini Seminary in San Benedetto Ullano after many polemics with local priest he went to exile in Rome in 1761 and there he published in 1762 his long lyric poem Ghiella e Shen Meriis Virghier The life of Virgin Mary The poem has been written entirely in dialect of San Giorgio and has about 4717 lines Variboba is considered unique in Albanian literature for his poetic sensitivities and the variety of rhythmic expression Another known artistic figure of that time was Nicola Chetta 1740 1803 known in Albanian as Nikolle Keta As a poet he wrote verses both in Albanian and Greek language and he has also composed the first Albanian sonnet in 1777 Being a poet lexicographer linguist historian theologian and rector of Greek seminary his variety and universality of work distinguish him from other writers of the period 28 The most prominent figure among Arberesh writers and the foremost figure of the Albanian nationalist movement in 19th century Italy was that of Girolamo de Rada Jeronim De Rada Born the son of a parish priest of Italo Albanian Catholic Church in Macchia Albanese Maqi in the mountains of Cosenza De Rada attended the college of Saint Adrian in San Demetrio Corone In October 1834 in accordance with his father s wishes he registered at the Faculty of Law of the University of Naples but the main focus of his interests remained folklore and literature It was in Naples in 1836 that De Rada published the first edition of his best known Albanian language poem the Songs of Milosao under the Italian title Poesie albanesi del secolo XV Canti di Milosao figlio del despota di Scutari Albanian poetry from the 15th century Songs of Milosao son of the despot of Shkodra His second work Canti storici albanesi di Serafina Thopia moglie del principe Nicola Ducagino Naples 1839 Albanian historical songs of Serafina Thopia wife of prince Nicholas Dukagjini was seized by the Bourbon authorities because of De Rada s alleged affiliation with conspiratorial groups during the Italian Risorgimento The work was republished under the title Canti di Serafina Thopia principessa di Zadrina nel secolo XV Naples 1843 Songs of Serafina Thopia princess of Zadrina in the 15th century and in later years in a third version as Specchio di umano transito vita di Serafina Thopia Principessa di Ducagino Naples 1897 Mirror of human transience life of Serafina Thopia princess of Dukagjin His Italian language historical tragedy I Numidi Naples 1846 The Numidians elaborated half a century later as Sofonisba dramma storico Naples 1892 Sofonisba historical drama enjoyed only modest public response In the revolutionary year 1848 De Rada founded the newspaper L Albanese d Italia The Albanian of Italy which included articles in Albanian This bilingual political moral and literary journal with a final circulation of 3 200 copies was the first Albanian language periodical anywhere De Rada was the harbinger and first audible voice of the Romantic movement in Albanian literature a movement which inspired by his unfailing energy on behalf of national awakening among Albanians in Italy and in the Balkans was to evolve into the romantic nationalism characteristic of the Rilindja period in Albania His journalistic literary and political activities were instrumental not only in fostering an awareness for the Arberesh minority in Italy but also in laying the foundations for an Albanian national literature The most popular of his literary works is the above mentioned Canti di Milosao Songs of Milosao known in Albanian as Kenget e Milosaos a long romantic ballad portraying the love of Milosao a fictitious young nobleman in fifteenth century Shkodra Scutari who has returned home from Thessalonica Here at the village fountain he encounters and falls in love with Rina the daughter of the shepherd Kollogre The difference in social standing between the lovers long impedes their union until an earthquake destroys both the city and all semblance of class distinction After their marriage abroad a child is born But the period of marital bliss does not last long Milosao s son and wife soon die and he himself wounded in battle perishes on a riverbank within sight of Shkodra 19th century Romantic poets edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it December 2009 Contemporary literature edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it December 2009 Protection of language edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it December 2016 Religion editThe Italo Albanian Church edit The Italo Albanian Catholic Church particular church sui iuris includes three ecclesiastical jurisdictions the Eparchy of Lungro degli Italo Albanesi for the Albanians of Southern Italy based in Lungro CS the Eparchy of Piana degli Albanesi for Albanians of Insular Italy based in Piana degli Albanesi PA the Territorial Abbacy of Santa Maria of Grottaferrata with Basilian monks O S B I come from the Italo Albanian communities located in the only abbey and abbey church in Grottaferrata RM The Italo Albanian Catholic Church being a Byzantine enclave in the Latin West is secularly inclined to ecumenism between the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church clarification needed It was the only abode of eastern Christianity from the end of the Middle Ages until the twentieth century in Italy There are institutions and religious congregations of the Byzantine rite in the territory of the Italo Albanian Church the Basilian Order of Grottaferrata the Collegine Sisters of Sacra Famiglia Piccole operaie dei Sacri Cuori and the congregation of the Basilian Sisters Daughters of Saint Macrina nbsp The Cathedral of Lungro of the Italo Albanians of Southern Italy nbsp The Cathedral of Piana degli Albanesi of the Italo Albanians of Sicily Italy nbsp The Territorial Abbacy of Santa Maria of Grottaferrata with Basilian monks from the Italo Albanian communitiesCulture editTraditions and folklore edit Among the Arbereshe the memory of Skanderbeg and his exploits was maintained and survived through songs in the form of a Skanderbeg cycle 29 Gjitonia edit Gjitonia is a form of neighbourhood typical of Arberesh communities and widespread throughout the Arberesh people It comes from the Greek geitonia geitonia The Gjitonia functions as a microsystem around which the life of the hore village revolves the Gjitonia is a smaller scale version of the layout of the village often consisting of a small square towards which the alleys are oriented surrounded by buildings that have openings towards a larger square shesh on diagonal angles The name is usually taken from the families that live there The social aspect of the Gjitonia is an ancient and historical structure where values of hospitality and solidarity between the families of the neighbourhood coexisted and where there was no difference of social class Mainly for the Italian Albanian communities it is a world where relationships were so strong that they created real family relationships so much so that the Arbereshe phrase Gjitoni gjiri neighbourhood relatives is typical 30 Costume edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it December 2016 Cuisine edit See also Arbereshe cuisine nbsp Tumace me tule Arbereshe dish from Barile Potenza Basilicata nbsp The liquor Elisir Borsci from San Marzano di San Giuseppe Taranto Apulia nbsp Petullat typical Italo Albanian sweets of fried and sweetened yeast dough nbsp The wedding cake Kulaci from San Costantino Albanese Potenza Basilicata nbsp The famous bread buka typical of Piana degli Albanesi Palermo Sicily The Arbereshe cuisine is composed of the cuisines of Albania and Italy The style of cooking and the food associated with it have evolved over many centuries from their Albanian origins to a mixed cuisine of Sicilian Calabrian and Lucanian influences These traditional dishes are Piana degli Albanesi Palermo Sicily Strangujet A form of Gnocchi called Strangujte made with flour by hand flavoured with tomato sauce lenk and basil Traditionally this dish was consumed by families seated around a floor level table of wood zbrilla on 14 September the Festa e Kryqit Shejt Exaltation of the Cross Gruret Boiled wheat dish flavored with olive oil known as cuccia in the Sicilian language The tradition is to eat it on Festa e Senda Llucise Variations are the use of sweetened milk or ricotta with flakes of chocolate orange peel and almonds Kanojet Cannoli the universally famous Pianotto sweet pastry Its culinary secret is waffle shkorca of flour wine lard and salt and filled with sweetened ricotta and lastly sprinkled with sieved chocolate Buke Arberesh bread buke is prepared with local hard grain flour and manufactured to a round and mostly leavened shape with natural methods It is cooked in antique firewood furnaces Tandoor It is eaten warm flavored with olive oil vaj i ullirit and dusted with cheese or with fresh ricotta Panaret Arberesh Easter bread shaped either into a circle or into two large braids and sprinkled with sesame seeds It is adorned with red Easter eggs The Easter eggs are dyed deep red to represent the blood of Christ the eggs also represent new life and springtime It is traditionally eaten during the Resurrection Meal After 40 days of fasting as per the Byzantine Catholic tradition the Easter feast has to begin slowly with a light meal after the midnight liturgy on Saturday night The fast is generally broken with panaret Loshkat and Petullat Sweetened spherical or crushed shaped fried leavened dough Eaten on the eve of E Mart e Madh Carnival Te plotit A sweet cake in various shaped with fig marmalade filling one of the oldest Arberesh dishes Milanise Traditionally eaten on the Saint Joseph s Day Festa e Shen Zefit and Good Friday is a pasta dish made with a sauce lenk of wild fennel paste sardines and pine nuts Udhose and Gjize Homemade cheese and ricotta normally dried outdoors Likenge Pork sausages flavored with salt pepper and seed of Fennel fare mbrai Llapsana Forest Brussels sprout llapsana fried with garlic and oil Dorezet Very thin home made semolina spaghetti cooked in milk and eaten on Ascension Day Groshet Soup made of fava beans chickpeas and haricot beans Verdhet During Easter a kind of pie is prepared with eggs lamb ricotta sheep cheese and previously boiled leaf stalks of golden thistle in some villages the young aerial parts of wild fennel are used instead Physical appearance editA study from 1918 included 59 Arbereshe men from Cosenza Calabria the result showed that fair hair was present in 27 of them The same study also showed that the frequencies of light eyes and white skin were 47 and 67 respectively The Arbereshe from this survey are found to be overall less pigmented than the Calabrians They are also taller m 1 64 and less dolichocephalic cephalic index 80 6 31 Genetics editSee also Genetic history of Europe According to Sarno et al 2015 there are many Y DNA haplogroups present among Arbereshe Those haplogroups are also shared with their Italian and Balkan neighbours 32 Arbereshe appear as slightly differentiated from native Southern Italians and instead overlap with the other Southern Balkan populations of Albania and Kosovo 33 Notable Arbereshe people editFor a more comprehensive list see List of Arbereshe Albanians Gallery edit nbsp Italo Albanian woman on Ellis Island New York 1905 nbsp Iconostasis in a church in Piana degli Albanesi Sicily nbsp Statue of Albanian hero Gjergji Kastrioti in Civita Calabria nbsp A bilingual for a piazza in Civita nbsp Bilingual sign in Albanian and Italian in Maschito Basilicata nbsp Priest of the Italo Albanian Catholic Church in Contessa Entellina Sicily nbsp Arberesh craft workshop in Piana degli Albanesi nbsp Albanian folk group of Katundi in Campania nbsp Traditional costume Arbereshe of San Martino di Finita in Calabria nbsp Albanian dance Civita nbsp Typical Arbereshe female costumes of San Basile in CalabriaSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arbereshe Albanians in Italy Arvanites Culture of Albania Illyro Roman Languages of Italy StradiotiNotelist edit Projected ethnic population References edit a b Fiorenzo Toso 2006 Baldini amp Castoldi ed Lingue d Europa La pluralita linguistica dei Paesi europei fra passato e presente Roma p 90 ISBN 9788884908841 Retrieved 6 July 2015 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b P Bruni ed 2004 Arbereshe cultura e civilta di un popolo Istituto poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato Libreria dello Stato ISBN 9788824020091 Currently there are about fifty Albanian speaking centres in Italy with a population estimated to be around 100 000 though there are no precise figures for the actual numbers of Italo Albanians The most recent precise figure is given in the census for 1921 the number of Albanian speakers was 80 282 far fewer than the 197 thousand mentioned in the study of A Frega of 1997 Amelia De Lucia Giorgio Gruppioni Rosalina Grumo Gjergj Vinjahu eds Albanian Cultural Profile PDF Dipartimento di Scienze Statistiche Universita degli Studi di Bari Italia Archived from the original PDF on 13 December 2016 Retrieved 4 May 2016 Ethnologue Albanian Arbereshe Retrieved 29 October 2014 Minni C Dino Ciampolini Anna Foschi 1990 Writers in transition the proceedings of the First National Conference of Italian Canadian Writers Guernica Editions pp 63 4 ISBN 978 0 920717 26 4 Retrieved 30 September 2010 The Greek College in Rome 1583 established for the training of the Greek Catholic clergy of the Albanians of Italy the Basilian A Reres Monastery of Mezzojuso 1609 important for the Catholic missions in Albania the Oratory of S Filippo Neri Rritiri of Piana degli Albanesi 1716 for celibate priests the College of Maria of Piana degli Albanesi 1731 for young Italo Albanian girls and in particular by the two national seminars also attracting many Albanians from the Balkans for the based in Calabria the Corsini College in 1732 then Sant Adriano Italo Albanian College of San Benedetto Ullano in 1794 and the Italo Albanian Seminary of Palermo in 1735 which was then transferred to Piana degli Albanesi in 1950 Shkodra arbereshet dhe lidhjet italo shqiptare Universiteti i Shkodres Luigj Gurakuqi 2013 ISBN 978 9928 4135 3 6 It is of particular interest as it retains speech sounds morphosyntactic and vocabulary elements of the language spoken in pre Ottoman Albania Legge 482 Camera it Archived from the original on 12 May 2015 Retrieved 30 December 2015 a b Essays on Politics and Society Author Hasan Jashari Publisher lulu com 2015 ISBN 1 84511 031 5 ISBN 978 1 326 27184 8 p 64 Fiorenzo Toso Lingue d Europa La pluralita linguistica dei Paesi europei fra passato e presente Roma Baldini amp Castoldi 2006 p 90 Top Channel tv Albania Arbereshet kerkojne ndihme nga Tirana Te njihemi ne UNESCO Archived from the original on 16 August 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2017 Arbereshet kerkojne te anetaresohen ne UNESCO Comunita albanesi d Italia in Italian Arbitalia Retrieved 2 February 2017 RIONERO IN VULTURE Basilicata Lucania Fotografie lucania1 altervista org Retrieved 10 November 2017 Casanova Radio Arberesh eu Archived from the original on 2 April 2010 Retrieved 13 September 2014 Kristo Frasheri History of Albania A Brief Overview Tirana 1964 Elsie Robert 2010 Historical dictionary of Albania Lanham a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The Italo Albanian villages of southern Italy Issue 25 of Foreign field research program report National Research Council U S Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of Publication National Research Council U S Foreign field research program sponsored by Office of Naval research report no 25 Issue 25 of Report National Research Council U S Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of National Academy of Sciences National Research Council Publication Author George Nicholas Nasse Publisher National Academy of Sciences National Research Council 1964 page 24 25 link 1 The Italo Albanian villages of southern Italy Issue 25 of Foreign field research program report National Research Council U S Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of Publication National Research Council U S Foreign field research program sponsored by Office of Naval research report no 25 Issue 25 of Report National Research Council U S Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of National Academy of Sciences National Research Council Publication Author George Nicholas Nasse Publisher National Academy of Sciences National Research Council 1964 page 25 link 2 The Italo Albanian villages of southern Italy Issue 25 of Foreign field research program report National Research Council U S Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of Publication National Research Council U S Foreign field research program sponsored by Office of Naval research report no 25 Issue 25 of Report National Research Council U S Division of Earth Sciences Volume 1149 of National Academy of Sciences National Research Council Publication Author George Nicholas Nasse Publisher National Academy of Sciences National Research Council 1964 page 26 link 3 Ardian Muhaj Le origini economiche e demografiche dell insediamento degli arbereshe in Italia Dal medioevo alla prima eta moderna Basiliscos Rivista specialistica annuale dell Istituto di Studi Storici per la Basilicata Meridionale 3 2016 pp 26 29 Derhemi Eda 2006 Features of dysfunctional attrition in the Arbresh of Piana degli Albanesi International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2006 178 doi 10 1515 IJSL 2006 014 S2CID 144957661 Maggio Martin Di Arberesh Language mixing translanguaging and possible solutions to issue of maintenance Matranga Vito Milano Emma 2019 Strategies for conservation of a minority language The Intricacy of Languages IVITRA Research in Linguistics and Literature Vol 20 pp 228 241 doi 10 1075 ivitra 20 13mat ISBN 978 90 272 0442 4 S2CID 210532463 Euromosaic Albanian in Italy Albanian literature a short history Authors Robert Elsie Centre for Albanian Studies London England Publisher I B Tauris 2005 ISBN 1 84511 031 5 ISBN 978 1 84511 031 4 p 45 Albanian literature a short history Authors Robert Elsie Centre for Albanian Studies London England Publisher I B Tauris 2005 ISBN 1 84511 031 5 ISBN 978 1 84511 031 4 p 46 47 Skendi Stavro 1968 Skenderbeg and Albanian Consciousness Sudost Forschungen 27 83 84 The memory of the Albanian national hero was maintained vividly among the Albanians of Italy those who emigrated to Calabria and Sicily following his death Living compactly in Christian territory though in separate communities the Italo Albanians have preserved the songs about Skenderbeg and his exploits which their ancestors had brought from the mother country Today one may even speak of the existence of a Skenderbeg cycle among them if one takes into account also the songs on other Albanian heroes who surrounded him MASCI L F Gli insediamenti Albanesi in Italia Morfologia e Architettura Nuclei Urbani della Calabria Citra Comune di S Sofia D Epiro 2004 A SKETCH OF THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF ITALY By V GlUFFRIDA RUGGERI PROFESSOR OF ANTHROPOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF NAPLES Sarno Stefania 16 May 2017 Ancient and recent admixture layers in Sicily and Southern Italy trace multiple migration routes along the Mediterranean Scientific Reports 7 1 1984 Bibcode 2017NatSR 7 1984S doi 10 1038 s41598 017 01802 4 PMC 5434004 PMID 28512355 S2CID 669567 Sarno Stefania 16 May 2017 Ancient and recent admixture layers in Sicily and Southern Italy trace multiple migration routes along the Mediterranean Scientific Reports 7 1 1984 Bibcode 2017NatSR 7 1984S doi 10 1038 s41598 017 01802 4 PMC 5434004 PMID 28512355 S2CID 669567 External links editArbitalia Shtepia e Arbereshevet te Italise The Home of Albanians of Italy Jemi it the Arberesh web portal managed by the Eparchy of Lungro Jeta Arbereshe Bilingual magazine Arberiaguzzardi Maps of the Albanians of Italy Mondoarberesco it Web Jeta Arbresh Museoetnicoarbresh org Albanian Ethnic Museum of Civita Vatrarberesh it The Albanian Fire Arbelmo it The Italo Albanian sociocultural blog Scesci i Pasionatit it Katundiyne com Magazine Katundi Yne Paese Nostro E biblia Digital library on the faith and knowledge of the Italo Albanian people Unibesa it BESA Union of Albanian Municipalities of Sicily Unical it Universita della Calabria Laboratorio di Albanologia Treccani it La comunita albanese d Italia su Enciclopedia Treccani Albanian Arbereshe in Ethnologue Languages of the World Shared language diverging genetic histories high resolution analysis of Y chromosome variability in Calabrian and Sicilian Arbereshe European Journal of Human Genetics 2016 Portal nbsp Italy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arbereshe people amp oldid 1190987873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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