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Gjirokastër

Gjirokastër (Albanian: [ɟiɾoˈkastəɾ], definite Albanian form: Gjirokastra; Greek: Αργυρόκαστρο, translit. Argyrókastro [ar.ʝiˈro.ka.stro]; Aromanian: Ljurocastru) is a city in the Republic of Albania and the seat of Gjirokastër County and Gjirokastër Municipality. It is located in a valley between the Gjerë mountains and the Drino, at 300 metres above sea level. Its old town is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, described as "a rare example of a well-preserved Ottoman town, built by farmers of large estate". The city is overlooked by Gjirokastër Fortress, where the Gjirokastër National Folklore Festival is held every five years. It is the birthplace of former Albanian communist leader Enver Hoxha, and author Ismail Kadare.

Gjirokastër
Αργυρόκαστρο
Ljurocastru
Top to bottom, left to right: View over Gjirokastër, Clock tower of Gjirokastër Fortress, Ethnographic Museum, Old Bazaar, Saint Sotir Church and Panorama of Gjirokastër
Nickname: 
City of Stone
Gjirokastër
Coordinates: 40°04′N 20°08′E / 40.067°N 20.133°E / 40.067; 20.133Coordinates: 40°04′N 20°08′E / 40.067°N 20.133°E / 40.067; 20.133
Country Albania
CountyGjirokastër
Government
 • MayorFlamur Golëmi (PS)
Area
 • Municipality469.55 km2 (181.29 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)
 • Municipality
28,673
 • Municipality density61/km2 (160/sq mi)
 • Municipal unit
19,836
DemonymGjirokastrit (m) Gjirokastrite (f)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal Code
6001–6003
Area Code084
Websitebashkiagjirokaster.gov.al
Official nameThe Historic Centres of Berat and Gjirokastra
TypeCultural
Criteriaiii, iv
Designated2005
Reference no.569
RegionGjirokastër County
Europe2005–present

The city appears in the historical record dating back in 1336 by its Greek name, Αργυρόκαστρο, Argyrókastro,[1] as part of the Byzantine Empire.[2] It became part of the Orthodox Christian diocese of Dryinoupolis and Argyrokastro after the destruction of nearby Adrianoupolis.[3] Gjirokastër later was contested between the Despotate of Epirus and the Albanian clan of John Zenevisi before falling under Ottoman rule for the next five centuries (1417–1913).[4] Throughout Ottoman occupation, Gjirokastër was officially known in Ottoman Turkish as Ergiri and also Ergiri Kasrı.[5] During the Ottoman period conversions to Islam and an influx of Muslim converts from the surrounding countryside made Gjirokastër go from being an overwhelmingly Christian city in the 16th century into one with a large Muslim population by the early 19th century.[6][7] Gjirokastër also became a major religious centre for Bektashi Sufism.[8] Taken by the Hellenic Army during the Balkan Wars of 1912–13 on account of its large Greek population,[9] it was eventually incorporated into the newly independent state of Albania in 1913. This proved highly unpopular with the local Greek population, who rebelled; after several months of guerrilla warfare, the short-lived Autonomous Republic of Northern Epirus was established in 1914 with Gjirokastër as its capital. It was definitively awarded to Albania in 1921.[10] In more recent years, the city witnessed anti-government protests that led to the Albanian civil war of 1997.[11]

Along with Muslim and Orthodox Albanians, the city is also home to a substantial Greek minority[12][13] along with a considerable Aromanian community. Together with Sarandë, the city is considered one of the centers of the Greek minority in Albania,[14] and there is a consulate of Greece.[15]

Names and etymology

The city appeared for the first time in historical records under its medieval name of Argyrókastron (Medieval Greek: Αργυρόκαστρον), as mentioned by John VI Kantakouzenos in 1336.[16] The name comes from argyrón (Medieval Greek: ἀργυρόν, lit.'silver'), and kástron (Medieval Greek: κάστρον), derived from Latin castrum, meaning "castle" or "fortress"; thus "silver castle". Byzantine chronicles also used the similar name Argyropolýchni (Medieval Greek: Αργυροπολύχνη, lit.'silver town').[17] The theory that the city took the name of the Princess Argjiro, a legendary figure about whom 19th-century author Kostas Krystallis wrote a short novel[18] and Ismail Kadare wrote a poem in the 1960s,[citation needed] is considered folk etymology, since the princess is said to have lived later, in the 15th century.[19]

The definite Albanian form of the name of city is Gjirokastra, while in the Gheg Albanian dialect it is known as Gjinokastër, both of which derive from the Greek name.[20] Alternative spellings found in Western sources include Girokaster and Girokastra.[citation needed] In Aromanian, the city is known as Ljurocastru, Iurucasta or Iurucast; while in modern Greek, it is known as Argyrókastro (Αργυρόκαστρο).[citation needed] During the Ottoman era, the town was known in Turkish as Ergiri.[5]

History

Early history

During the Middle Helladic period (2100-1550 BC), a double tumulus was dug out in Vodhinë, with strong similarities to the grave circles at Mycenae, showing a common ancestral link with the Myceneans of southern Greece.[21] The Phrygian period of the region spanned from around 1150 BCE to around 850 BCE. Hammond argues that the region was checkered with a mosaic of small Phrygian principalities, with the principality of Gjirokastër and the surrounding region having its center at Vodhinë. In the later part of the period, it appears there was a change of dynasty at Vodhine.[22]

Archaeological evidence demonstrates that during the Bronze Age, the region was inhabited by populations who likely spoke a northwestern Greek dialect.[23][improper synthesis?][dubious ] Archaeologists have found pottery artifacts dating to the early Iron Age, crafted in a style that first appeared in the late Bronze Age in Pazhok, Elbasan County, and is found throughout Albania.[24] The earliest recorded inhabitants of the area around Gjirokastër were the Greek-speaking tribe of the Chaonians, which belonged to the Epirote group.[25][improper synthesis?] In antiquity the local urban centre was located in Antigonia, c. 5 kilometres (3 mi) from modern Gjirokastër on the opposite bank of river Drino.[26]

Medieval period

 
The Ottoman architecture characterize the historical city center.

The city's walls date from the third century. The high stone walls of the Citadel were built from the sixth to the twelfth century.[27] During this period, Gjirokastër developed into a major commercial center known as Argyropolis (Medieval Greek: Ἀργυρόπολις, meaning "Silver City") or Argyrokastron (Medieval Greek: Ἀργυρόκαστρον, meaning "Silver Castle").[28]

The city was part of the Despotate of Epirus and was first mentioned by the name Argyrokastro by John VI Kantakouzenos in 1336.[1] That year Argyrokastro was among the cities that remained loyal to the Byzantine Emperor during a local Epirote rebellion in favour to Nikephoros Orsini-Doukas.[29] The first mention of Albanian nomadic groups occurred in the early 14th century, where they were searching for new pasture lands and ravaging settlements in the region.[17] These Albanians had entered the region and took advantage of the situation after the Black death had decimated the local Epirote population.[17] During 1386–1417 it was contested between the Despotate of Epirus and the Albanian clan of John Zenevisi.[4] In 1399 the Greek inhabitants of the city joined the Despot of Epirus, Esau, in his campaign against various Albanian and Aromanian tribesmen.[30] In 1417 it became part of the Ottoman Empire and in 1419 it became the county town of the Sanjak of Albania.[31] During the Albanian Revolt of 1432–36 it was besieged by forces under Thopia Zenevisi, but the rebels were defeated by Ottoman troops led by Turahan Bey.[32] In 1570s local nobles Manthos Papagiannis and Panos Kestolikos, discussed as Greek representative of enslaved Greece and Albania with the head of the Holy League, John of Austria and various other European rulers, the possibility of an anti-Ottoman armed struggle, but this initiative was fruitless.[33][34][35]

According to Turkish traveller Evliya Çelebi, who visited the city in 1670, at that time there were 200 houses within the castle, 200 in the Christian eastern neighborhood of Kyçyk Varosh (meaning small neighborhood outside the castle), 150 houses in the Byjyk Varosh (meaning big neighborhood outside the castle), and six additional neighborhoods: Palorto, Vutosh, Dunavat, Manalat, Haxhi Bey, and Memi Bey, extending on eight hills around the castle.[36] According to the traveller, the city had at that time around 2000 houses, eight mosques, three churches, 280 shops, five fountains, and five inns.[36] From the 16th century until the early 19th century Gjirokastër went from being a predominantly Christian city to one with a Muslim majority due to much of the urban population converting to Islam alongside an influx of Muslim converts from the surrounding countryside.[6][7]

Modern

 
View of the fortress and aqueduct of Gjirokastër depicted by Edward Lear, 4 November 1848.[37]

In 1811, Gjirokastër became part of the Pashalik of Yanina, then led by the Albanian-born Ali Pasha of Ioannina and was transformed into a semi-autonomous fiefdom in the southwestern Balkans until his death in 1822. In 1833 Albanian rebels took over the town causing the Ottoman government to comply with rebel terms.[38] After the fall of the pashalik in 1868, the city was the capital of the sanjak of Ergiri. On 23 July 1880, southern Albanian committees of the League of Prizren held a congress in the city, in which was decided that if Albanian-populated areas of the Ottoman Empire were ceded to neighbouring countries, they would revolt.[39] During the Albanian National Awakening (1831–1912), the city was a major centre of the movement, and some groups in the city were reported to carry portraits of Skanderbeg, the national hero of the Albanians during this period.[40] Gjirokastër from the middle of the nineteenth century also prominently contributed to the wider Ottoman Empire through individuals that served as Kadıs (civil servants) and was an important centre of Islamic culture.[5] In early March 1908, the binbashi of Gjirokastër was assassinated by Çerçiz Topulli and his followers.[41] The pro-Albanianists of the city during 1909–1912 were split between two groups: the urban liberals who wanted to cooperate with the Greeks and Albanian nationalists who formed guerilla bands operating in the countryside.[7] During the 19th and early 20th century, Albanian speaking Muslims were the majority population of Gjirokastër, while only a few Greek-speaking families lived there.[7]

 
The official declaration of the Autonomous Republic of Northern Epirus March 1, 1914. The River Drin seen in the background.

Given its large Greek population, the city was claimed and taken by Greece during the First Balkan War of 1912–1913, following the retreat of the Ottomans from the region.[42] However, it was awarded to Albania under the terms of the Treaty of London of 1913 and the Protocol of Florence of 17 December 1913.[43]

This turn of events proved highly unpopular with the local Greek population, and their representatives under Georgios Christakis-Zografos formed the Panepirotic Assembly in Gjirokastër in protest.[44] The Assembly, short of incorporation with Greece, demanded either local autonomy or an international occupation by forces of the Great Powers for the districts of Gjirokastër, Sarandë, and Korçë.[45]

In April 1939, Gjirokastër was occupied by Italy following the Italian invasion of Albania. On December 8, 1940, during the Greco-Italian War, the Hellenic Army entered the city and stayed for a five-month period before capitulating to Nazi Germany in April 1941 and returning the city to Italian command. After the capitulation of Italy in the Armistice of Cassibile in September 1943, the city was taken by German forces and eventually returned to Albanian control in 1944.

 
House of the post-war leader Enver Hoxha, where he grew up.
 
Konak (house) of writer Ismail Kadare in Gjirokastër.

The postwar communist regime developed the city as an industrial and commercial centre. It was elevated to the status of a museum town,[46] as it was the birthplace of the leader of the People's Socialist Republic of Albania, Enver Hoxha, who had been born there in 1908. His house was converted into a museum.[47]

The demolition of the monumental statue of the authoritarian leader Enver Hoxha in Gjirokastër by members of the local Greek community in August 1991 marked the end of the one-party state[48] It was the last statue in Albania to be demolished during the Fall of Communism in Albania, which happened in 28 July 1991, 5 months after the rest of the statues that were demolished since February and marked the end of the one-party state.[49]

Gjirokastër suffered severe economic problems following the end of communist rule in 1991. In the spring of 1993, the region of Gjirokastër became a center of open conflict between Greek minority members and the Albanian police.[50] The city was particularly affected by the 1997 collapse of a massive pyramid scheme which destabilised the entire Albanian economy.[11] The city became the focus of a rebellion against the government of Sali Berisha; violent anti-government protests took place which eventually forced Berisha's resignation. On 16 December 1997, Hoxha's house was damaged by unknown attackers, but subsequently restored.[51]

Geography

The present municipality was formed at the 2015 local government reform by the merger of the former municipalities of Antigonë, Cepo, Gjirokastër, Lazarat, Lunxhëri, Odrie and Picar, that became municipal units.[52] The seat of the municipality is the town Gjirokastër.[53] The total population is 28,673 (2011 census),[54] in a total area of 469.55 km2 (181.29 sq mi).[55] The population of the former municipality at the 2011 census was 19,836.[54]

Climate

Gjirokastër is situated between the lowlands of western Albania and the highlands of the interior, and has thus a hot-summer Mediterranean climate, though, (as is normal for Albania), much heavier rainfall than usual for this climate type.

Climate data for Gjirokastër
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 9
(48)
11
(52)
13
(55)
18
(64)
23
(73)
28
(82)
32
(90)
34
(93)
27
(81)
23
(73)
15
(59)
11
(52)
20
(69)
Daily mean °C (°F) 5
(41)
6
(43)
7
(45)
12
(54)
16
(61)
20
(68)
23
(73)
24
(75)
19
(66)
14
(57)
10
(50)
6
(43)
14
(56)
Average low °C (°F) 1
(34)
1
(34)
2
(36)
6
(43)
10
(50)
13
(55)
15
(59)
15
(59)
12
(54)
8
(46)
5
(41)
2
(36)
8
(46)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 290
(11.4)
230
(9.1)
190
(7.5)
90
(3.5)
50
(2.0)
40
(1.6)
10
(0.4)
10
(0.4)
60
(2.4)
180
(7.1)
400
(15.7)
320
(12.6)
1,870
(73.7)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1 mm) 11 10 8 7 5 2 1 1 3 7 14 12 81
Average relative humidity (%) 71 69 68 69 70 62 57 57 64 67 75 73 67
Source 1: Weatherbase
Source 2: Climate data
Climate data for Gjirokastër elevation at 194 m or 636 ft from 1961-1990
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 20.1
(68.2)
23.3
(73.9)
27.2
(81.0)
28.7
(83.7)
34.3
(93.7)
38.9
(102.0)
42.6
(108.7)
39.5
(103.1)
37.4
(99.3)
32.5
(90.5)
26.8
(80.2)
21.5
(70.7)
42.6
(108.7)
Average high °C (°F) 10.0
(50.0)
11.9
(53.4)
15.1
(59.2)
19.1
(66.4)
24.3
(75.7)
28.6
(83.5)
31.8
(89.2)
31.8
(89.2)
28.1
(82.6)
22.0
(71.6)
15.7
(60.3)
11.1
(52.0)
20.8
(69.4)
Average low °C (°F) 0.4
(32.7)
1.5
(34.7)
3.4
(38.1)
6.7
(44.1)
10.5
(50.9)
13.7
(56.7)
15.3
(59.5)
15.2
(59.4)
12.3
(54.1)
8.4
(47.1)
4.6
(40.3)
1.6
(34.9)
7.8
(46.0)
Record low °C (°F) −10.1
(13.8)
−8.0
(17.6)
−16.6
(2.1)
−1.8
(28.8)
2.2
(36.0)
5.8
(42.4)
8.6
(47.5)
8.3
(46.9)
1.7
(35.1)
−1.7
(28.9)
−5.9
(21.4)
−17.4
(0.7)
−17.4
(0.7)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 1,887.5
(74.31)
Average rainy days (≥ 1.0 mm) 102.0
Average snowy days 4.0
Average relative humidity (%) 74.0
Mean monthly sunshine hours 2,456.8
Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)[56]

Economy

 
Reconstruction of the roof of a traditional house.

Gjirokastër is principally a commercial center with some industries, notably the production of foodstuffs, leather, and textiles.[57] Recently a regional agricultural market that trades locally produced groceries has been built in the city.[58] Given the potential of southern Albania to supply organically grown products, and its relationship with Greek counterparts of the nearby city of Ioannina, it is likely that the market will dedicate itself to organic farming in the future. However, trademarking and marketing of such products are currently far from European standards.[58] The Chamber of Commerce of the city, created in 1988, promotes trade with the Greek border areas.[59] As part of the financial support from Greece to Albania, the Hellenic Armed Forces built a hospital in the city.[60]

In recent years, many traditional houses are being reconstructed and owners lured to come back, thus revitalizing tourism as a potential revenue source for the local economy.[61][62][63][64] However, some houses continue to degrade from lack of investment, abandonment or inappropriate renovations as local craftsmen are not part of these projects.[65] In 2010, following the Greek economic crisis, the city was one of the first areas in Albania to suffer, since many Albanian emigrants in Greece are becoming unemployed and thus are returning home.[66]

Infrastructure

 
Mountain road SH78 near Muzina Pass connecting with the coast

Gjirokastër is served by the SH4 Highway, which connects it to Tepelenë in the north and the Dropull region and Greek border 30 km (19 mi) to the south.

Education

The first school in the city, a Greek language school, was erected in the city in 1663. It was sponsored by local merchants and functioned under the supervision of the local bishop. In 1821, when the Greek War of Independence broke out, it was destroyed, but it was reopened in 1830.[67][68] In 1727 a madrasa started to function in the city, and it worked uninterruptedly for 240 years until 1967, when it was closed due to the Cultural Revolution applied in communist Albania.[69] In 1861–1862 a Greek language school for girls was founded, financially supported by the local Greek benefactor Christakis Zografos.[70] The first Albanian school in Gjirokastër was opened in 1886.[71] Today Gjirokastër has seven grammar schools, two general high schools (of which one is the Gjirokastër Gymnasium), and two professional ones.[citation needed] In addition two Greek language high schools are operating in the city.[72]

The city is home to the Eqrem Çabej University, which opened its doors in 1968. The university has recently been experiencing low enrollments, and as a result the departments of Physics, Mathematics, Biochemistry, and Kindergarten Education did not function during the 2008–2009 academic year.[73] In 2006, the establishment of a second university in Gjirokastër, a Greek-language one, was agreed upon after discussions between the Albanian and Greek governments.[74] The program had an attendance of 35 students as of 2010, but was abruptly suspended when the University of Ioannina in Greece refused to provide teachers for the 2010 school year and the Greek government and the Latsis foundation withdrew funding.[73]

Demography

Gjirokastër by the population is the largest municipality in the Gjirokastër County. According to INSTAT, based on the 2011 Census, Gjirokastër Municipality was estimated to have 28,673 residents (a density of 53.91 persons/km2) living in 6,919 housing units, while the county as a whole has a total of 72,176 inhabitants.[54] The population of the municipality includes the urban and rural population in its Administrative Units such as: Antigonë; Cepo; Lazarat; Lunxhëri; Odrie and Picar.[75] The city of Gjirokastër itself has a resident population of 19,836 inhabitants which are a predominantly urban population.[54] In the municipality, the population was spread out, with 16.76% from the age 0 to 14, 69.24% from 15 to 64, and 13.98% who were 65 years of age or older. As far as the city itself is concerned, the population was spread out, with 16.93% from the age 0 to 14, 70.27% from 15 to 64, and 12.78% who were 65 years of age or older.[54]

The town has 43,000 inhabitants.[76] Gjirokastër is home to an ethnic Greek community that according to Human Rights Watch numbered about 4,000 out of 30,000 in 1989,[77] although Greek spokesmen have claimed that up to 34% of the town is Greek.[78] Gjirokastër is considered the center of the Greek community in Albania.[42] Given the large Greek population in the town and surrounding area, there is a Greek consulate in the town.[79] Other minorities are smaller numbers of Aromanians and Roma.

Religion

 
The city's only remaining mosque, the Gjirokastër Mosque built in 1757.

The region was part of the Eastern Orthodox diocese of Dryinoupolis, part of the metropolitan bishopric of Ioannina. It was first mentioned in a notitia of the 10th–11th century. With the destruction of nearby Adrianupolis its see was transferred to Gjirokastër and assumed the name Doecese of Dryinopoulis and Argyrokastron (Greek: Δρυϊνουπόλεως και Αργυροκάστρου). In 1835 it was promoted to metropolitan bishopric under the direct jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.[3] Today, the city is home to a diocese part of the Orthodox Autocephalous Church of Albania.[80] The two existing churches of the city were re-built at the end of the 18th century, after approval by the local Ottoman authorities who received large bribes by the Orthodox community. The Orthodox Cathedral of the "Transfiguration of the Saviour" was rebuilt at 1773 on the site of an older church and is located at the castle quarters.[81]

During the Ottoman period Gjirokastër was a significant centre for the Muslim Sufi Bektashi Order, especially in relation to its spread and literary activity.[8] In the early 19th century during the rule of Ali Pasha, British diplomat William Martin Leake during his journey from Vlorë to Gjirokastra and later to present-day Greece, in his diary describes his arrival on December 26, 1804, in the region of Derópoli, or Dropull as it was known from the local Albanians. According to him, its chief city Gjirokastër numbered about 2000 Muslim families and about 100 Christian families. While Libohovë, also then part of the same region, numbered half of that number with about 1000 Muslim families and 100 Christian families.[82] In 1925, Albania became the world center of the Bektashi Order, a Muslim sect. The sect was headquartered in Tirana, and Gjirokastër was one of six districts of the Bektashi Order in Albania, with its center at the tekke of Baba Rexheb.[83] The city retains a large Bektashi and Sunni population. Historically there were 15 and tekkes and mosques, of which 13 were functional in 1945.[69] Only Gjirokastër Mosque has survived; the remaining 12 were destroyed or closed during the Cultural Revolution of the communist government in 1967.[69]

According to the 2011 census, which has been widely disputed due to irregularities in the procedure and its data affected by boycott,[84][85][86][87] the percentages of the local population per religious group are: Islam 42,3%, Bektashis 5,3%, Eastern Orthodox 14,6%, Roman Catholics 2,8%, while a 35,2 had not declared any religion or is non-religious.[88] According to the Gjirokastër county census data (which includes other municipalities besides Gjirokastër), it had the highest percentage of atheists compared to all other counties in Albania, with Vlora being the second (6.3% compared to 6.01%).

Culture

 
Grupi Argjiro, a male vocal ensemble from Gjirokastër. The group performs the Albanian iso-polyphony of Gjirokastër. They were awarded the title "Grand Master" of Albania by the then-president Bujar Nishani.[89][90]

17th-century Ottoman traveller Evliya Çelebi, who visited the city in 1670, described the city in detail. One Sunday, Çelebi heard the sound of a vajtim, the traditional Albanian lament for the dead, performed by a professional mourner. The traveller found the city so noisy that he dubbed Gjirokastër the "city of wailing".[91]

The novel Chronicle in Stone by Albanian writer Ismail Kadare tells the history of this city during the Italian and Greek occupation in World War I and II. It expounds on the customs of the people of Gjirokastër.[92]

At the age of twenty-four, Albanian writer Musine Kokalari wrote an 80-page collection of ten youthful prose tales in her native Gjirokastrian dialect: As my old mother tells me (Albanian: Siç me thotë nënua plakë), Tirana, 1941. The book tells the day-by-day struggles of women of Gjirokastër, and describes the prevailing mores of the region.[93]

Gjirokastër, home to both Albanian and Greek polyphonic singing, is also home to the National Folklore Festival (Albanian: Festivali Folklorik Kombëtar) that is held every five years. The festival started in 1968[94] and was most recently held in 2009, its ninth season.[95] The festival takes place on the premises of Gjirokastër Fortress. Gjirokastër is also where the Greek language newspaper Laiko Vima is published. Founded in 1945, it was the only Greek-language printed media allowed during the People's Socialist Republic of Albania.[96]

Landmarks

The city is built on the slope surrounding the citadel, located on a dominating plateau.[46] Although the city's walls were built in the third century and the city itself was first mentioned in the 12th century, the majority of the existing buildings date from 17th and 18th centuries. Typical houses consist of a tall stone block structure which can be up to five stories high. There are external and internal staircases that surround the house. It is thought that such design stems from fortified country houses typical in southern Albania. The lower storey of the building contains a cistern and the stable. The upper storey is composed of a guest room and a family room containing a fireplace. Further upper stories are to accommodate extended families and are connected by internal stairs.[46] Since Gjirokastër's membership to UNESCO, a number of houses have been restored, though others continue to degrade.

 
Stage of the Gjirokastër National Folklore Festival

Many houses in Gjirokastër have a distinctive local style that has earned the city the nickname "City of Stone", because most of the old houses have roofs covered with flat dressed stones. A very similar style can be seen in the Pelion district of Greece. The city, along with Berat, was among the few Albanian cities preserved in the 1960s and 1970s from modernizing building programs. Both cities gained the status of "museum town" and are UNESCO World Heritage sites.[46]

 
Typical streets in the city

Gjirokastër Fortress dominates the town and overlooks the strategically important route along the river valley. It is open to visitors and contains a military museum featuring captured artillery and memorabilia of the Communist resistance against German occupation, as well as a captured United States Air Force plane forced down by Anastas Ngjela, to commemorate the Communist regime's struggle against the imperialist powers. Additions were built during the 19th and 20th centuries by Ali Pasha of Ioannina and the government of King Zog I of Albania. Today it possesses five towers and houses a clock tower, a church, water fountains, horse stables, and many more amenities. The northern part of the castle was turned into a prison by Zog's government and housed political prisoners during the communist regime.

Gjirokastër features an old Ottoman bazaar which was originally built in the 17th century; it was rebuilt in the 19th century after a fire. There are more than 500 homes preserved as "cultural monuments" in Gjirokastër today. The Gjirokastër Mosque, built in 1757, dominates the bazaar.[69]

When the town was first proposed for inclusion on the World Heritage list in 1988, International Council on Monuments and Sites experts were nonplussed by a number of modern constructions which detracted from the old town's appearance. The historic core of Gjirokastër was finally inscribed in 2005, 15 years after its original nomination.

 
Panorama of Gjirokastër from the Castle

Sports

Football (soccer) is popular in Gjirokastër: the city hosts Luftëtari Gjirokastër, a club founded in 1929. The club has competed in international tournaments and currently plays in the Albanian Superliga until 2006–2007 and again from 2016. The soccer matches are played in Gjirokastër Stadium, which can hold up to 8,400 spectators.[97]

International relations

Gjirokastër is twinned with:

Notable residents

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Kiel, Machiel (1990). Ottoman Architecture in Albania, 1385–1912. Beşiktaş, Istanbul: Research Centre for Islamic History, Art and Culture. p. 138. ISBN 978-92-9063-330-3. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  2. ^ Ward 1983, p. 70.
  3. ^ a b Giakoumis, Konstantinos (2010). "The Orthodox Church in Albania Under the Ottoman Rule 15th–19th Century". In Schmitt, Oliver Jens & Andreas Rathberger (eds). Religion und Kultur im albanischsprachigen Südosteuropa [Religion and culture in Albanian-speaking southeastern Europe]]. Peter Lang. pp. 80.
  4. ^ a b Canepari, Eleonora (29 September 2017). (in French). Presses universitaires de Perpignan. pp. 175–181. ISBN 9782354122881. Archived from the original on 19 September 2021. Retrieved 19 September 2021.
  5. ^ a b c Ali, Çaksu (2006). Proceedings of the Second International Symposium on Islamic Civilisation in the Balkans, Tirana, Albania, 4–7 December 2003. Research Center for Islamic History, Art and Culture. p. 115. "At least since the middle of the nineteenth century; families or individuals from Gjirokastër (the Ottoman Ergiri or Ergiri Kasrı) in Southern Albania, and from Libohova, a small town located twenty kilometers from Gjirokastër, gave a huge number of Kadıs, who were in charge in the whole Ottoman Empire, making of these two localities important centres of Islamic culture."
  6. ^ a b Giakoumis, Konstantinos (2010). "The Orthodox Church in Albania Under the Ottoman Rule 15th–19th Century". In Schmitt, Oliver Jens & Andreas Rathberger (eds). Religion und Kultur im albanischsprachigen Südosteuropa [Religion and culture in Albanian-speaking southeastern Europe]]. Peter Lang. pp. 86–87.
  7. ^ a b c d Kokolakis, Mihalis (2003). Το ύστερο Γιαννιώτικο Πασαλίκι: χώρος, διοίκηση και πληθυσμός στην τουρκοκρατούμενη Ηπειρο (1820–1913) [The late Pashalik of Ioannina: Space, administration and population in Ottoman ruled Epirus (1820–1913) (PDF). Archived from the original on 2015-04-18. Retrieved 2016-08-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). EIE-ΚΝΕ. p.52. "β. Ο διεσπαρμένος ελληνόφωνος πληθυσμός περιλάμβανε... και μικρό αριθμό οικογενειών στα αστικά κέντρα του Αργυροκάστρου και της Αυλώνας. [b. The scattered Greek-speaking population included ... and a small number of families in the cities of Gjirokastra and Vlora.]"; p. 54. "Η μουσουλμανική κοινότητα της Ηπείρου, με εξαίρεση τους μικρούς αστικούς πληθυσμούς των νότιων ελληνόφωνων περιοχών, τους οποίους προαναφέραμε, και τις δύο με τρεις χιλιάδες διεσπαρμένους "Τουρκόγυφτους", απαρτιζόταν ολοκληρωτικά από αλβανόφωνους, και στα τέλη της Τουρκοκρατίας κάλυπτε τα 3/4 περίπου του πληθυσμού των αλβανόφωνων περιοχών και περισσότερο από το 40% του συνόλου. [The Muslim community in Epirus, with the exception of small urban populations of the southern Greek-speaking areas, which we mentioned, and 2-3000 dispersed "Muslim Romani", consisted entirely of Albanian speakers, and in the late Ottoman period covered approximately 3/4 of population ethnic Albanian speaking areas and more than 40% of the total area."; pp.55–56. "Σ' αυτά τα μέρη οι μουσουλμανικές κοινότητες, όταν υπήρχαν, περιορίζονταν στο συμπαγή πληθυσμό ορισμένων πόλεων και κωμοπόλεων (Αργυρόκαστρο, Λιμπόχοβο, Λεσκοβίκι, Δέλβινο, Παραμυθιά). [In these parts of the Muslim communities, where present, were limited to compact population of certain towns and cities (Gjirokastra, Libohovë, Leskovik, Delvino, Paramythia)." p. 91. Στο Αργυρόκαστρο οι Αλβανιστές διασπάστηκαν ανάμεσα στους φιλελεύθερους της πόλης, που ζητούσαν τη συνεργασία με τους Έλληνες, και στα ακραία εθνικιστικά στοιχεία, που σχημάτισαν στην ύπαιθρο ανταρτικές ομάδες. [The Albanians of Gjirokastër were split between the liberals of the city, calling for cooperation with the Greeks, and the extreme nationalist elements, which formed in the countryside as guerrilla groups.]"; pp. 370, 374.
  8. ^ a b Norris, Harry Thirlwall (1993). Islam in the Balkans: religion and society between Europe and the Arab world. University of South Carolina Press. p. 134. "The southern Albanian town of Gjirokastër was also for centuries and important centre for Baktāshī propagation and literary activity."
  9. ^ Pettifer, James (July 2001). The Greek Minority in Albania in the Aftermath of Communism (Report). Conflict Studies Research Centre. p. 5. ISBN 1-903584-35-3. G97. Retrieved 2021-09-19. Given its large Greek-speaking population, the city of Gjirokastra (in Greek, Agyrocastro), in the Vjosa (Aoos) River valley, only twenty miles from the Greek border, was a particularly active centre of irredentist ambition.
  10. ^ Miller, William (1966). The Ottoman Empire and Its Successors, 1801–1927. Routledge. pp. 543–544. ISBN 978-0-7146-1974-3.
  11. ^ a b Jeffries, Ian (2002). Eastern Europe at the turn of the twenty-first century: a guide to the economies in transition. Routledge. p. 87. ISBN 978-0-415-23671-3.
  12. ^ Kallivretakis, Leonidas (1995). "Η ελληνική κοινότητα της Αλβανίας υπό το πρίσμα της ιστορικής γεωγραφίας και δημογραφίας [The Greek Community of Albania in terms of historical geography and demography Βερέμης, Θάνος (1995). . p. 25. ISBN 9789600800548. Archived from the original on 2015-03-21. Retrieved 2016-08-10.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)." In Nikolakopoulos, Ilias, Kouloubis Theodoros A. & Thanos M. Veremis (eds). Ο Ελληνισμός της Αλβανίας [The Greeks of Albania]. University of Athens. p. 34. "Στα πλαίσια της επιτόπιας έρευνας που πραγματοποιήσαμε στην Αλβανία (Νοέμβριος-Δεκέμβριος 1992), μελετήσαμε το ζήτημα των εθνοπολιτισμικών ομάδων, όπως αυτές συνειδητοποιούνται σήμερα επί τόπου. [As part of the fieldwork we held in Albania (November–December 1992), we studied the issue of ethnocultural groups, as they are realized today on the spot.]"; p. 42. "Στο Νομό του Αργυροκάστρου: Έλληνες 40%, Βλάχοι 12%, Αλβανοί Χριστιανοί 21%, Αλβανοί Μουσουλμάνοι 28%, επί συνόλου 66.000 κατοίκων, 63% Χριστιανοί, 49% Αλβανοί." p. 43. "4) Ακόμη και εκεί που η ύπαιθρος είναι ελληνική ή ελληνίζουσα, οι πόλεις διαθέτουν αλβανική πλειοψηφία. Αυτό φαίνεται καθαρά στις περιπτώσεις Αργυροκάστρου και Δελβίνου, όπου οι Νομαρχίες πέρασαν στα χέρια της μειονότητας, όχι όμως και οι Δήμοι των αντιστοίχων πόλεων." "[4) Even where the countryside is Greek or Greekish, cities have an Albanian majority. This is clear where the prefectures of Gjirokastër and Delvinë were passed into the hands of the minority, but not the municipalities of the respective cities.]"; p. 51. "Ε Έλληνες, ΑΧ Αλβανοί Ορθόδοξοι Χριστιανοί, AM Αλβανοί Μουσουλμάνοι, Μ Μικτός πληθυσμός...." p.55. "GJIROKASTRA ΑΡΓΥΡΟΚΑΣΤΡΟ 24216 Μ (ΑΜ + ΑΧ + Ε)."; p.57.
  13. ^ Albania: from anarchy to a Balkan identity, Miranda Vickers, James Pettifer Edition, 2. illustrated reprint, Publisher C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, 1997 ISBN 1-85065-290-2, ISBN 978-1-85065-290-8 p. 187
  14. ^ James Pettifer. "The Greek Minority in Albania in the Aftermath of Communism" (PDF). Camberley, Surrey: Conflict Studies Research Centre, Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. pp. 11–12. Retrieved 20 December 2010. The concentration of ethnic Greeks in and around centres of Hellenism such as Saranda and Gjirokastra...
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  17. ^ a b c Giakoumis, Konstantinos (2003), Fourteenth-century Albanian migration and the ‘relative autochthony’ of the Albanians in Epeiros. The case of Gjirokastër. 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine" Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies. 27. (1). p. 179: "The Albanians originating... According to the sources, there were two migrant groups, the one which travelled via Ohrid and ended in Thessaly while the other, moving through Kelcyre, reached Gjirokaster and the despotate. The purpose of their occupation was to search for new pasture lands. The combination of fertile plains and mountains rich in grasslands in the region of Gjirokaster was ideal for the poor nomadic Albanians who did not hesitate to ravage cities when they lacked provisions.."; p. 182. "Furthermore, I presented evidence that the in the fourteenth century immigrant Albanians taking advantage of the decimation of the local Epirote population by to the Black death also migrated into the regions of Gjirokastër."
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  30. ^ Hammond, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière (1976). Migrations and Invasions in Greece and Adjacent Areas. Noyes Press. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-8155-5047-1. There the Greek pocket of resistance, which preserved the Greek language even when its ruler was Serb or Italian, was the plateau of Ioannina and its hinterland... When Isaou, the Italian ruler of Ioannina, passed to the offensive in 1399, he had already won over the Mazarakii (Albanians) and the Malakasaei (perhaps Vlach- speakers) and he recruited Greeks evidently from Zagori, Papingo (above Konitsa), and "Druinoupolis with Argyrokastro and the great Zagoria" (probably the high country northwest of Argyrokastro, of which a part is still called Zagorie).
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Sources

  • "Gjirokastër". Encyclopædia Britannica, 2006
  • "Gjirokastër or Gjinokastër". The Columbia Encyclopedia, 2004
  • The Unit (1996). Country Profile: Bulgaria, Albania. The Unit.
  • Ward, Philip (1983). Albania: a travel guide. Oleander Press. ISBN 978-0-906672-41-9.

External links

  • bashkiagjirokaster.gov.al – Official Website (in Albanian)
  • visit-gjirokastra.com – Official Tourism Website
  • gjirokastra.or – Conservation and Development Organization

gjirokastër, albanian, ɟiɾoˈkastəɾ, definite, albanian, form, gjirokastra, greek, Αργυρόκαστρο, translit, argyrókastro, ʝiˈro, stro, aromanian, ljurocastru, city, republic, albania, seat, county, municipality, located, valley, between, gjerë, mountains, drino,. Gjirokaster Albanian ɟiɾoˈkasteɾ definite Albanian form Gjirokastra Greek Argyrokastro translit Argyrokastro ar ʝiˈro ka stro Aromanian Ljurocastru is a city in the Republic of Albania and the seat of Gjirokaster County and Gjirokaster Municipality It is located in a valley between the Gjere mountains and the Drino at 300 metres above sea level Its old town is a UNESCO World Heritage Site described as a rare example of a well preserved Ottoman town built by farmers of large estate The city is overlooked by Gjirokaster Fortress where the Gjirokaster National Folklore Festival is held every five years It is the birthplace of former Albanian communist leader Enver Hoxha and author Ismail Kadare Gjirokaster Argyrokastro LjurocastruMunicipalityTop to bottom left to right View over Gjirokaster Clock tower of Gjirokaster Fortress Ethnographic Museum Old Bazaar Saint Sotir Church and Panorama of GjirokasterEmblemNickname City of StoneGjirokasterCoordinates 40 04 N 20 08 E 40 067 N 20 133 E 40 067 20 133 Coordinates 40 04 N 20 08 E 40 067 N 20 133 E 40 067 20 133Country AlbaniaCountyGjirokasterGovernment MayorFlamur Golemi PS Area Municipality469 55 km2 181 29 sq mi Population 2011 Municipality28 673 Municipality density61 km2 160 sq mi Municipal unit19 836DemonymGjirokastrit m Gjirokastrite f Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal Code6001 6003Area Code084Websitebashkiagjirokaster gov alUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameThe Historic Centres of Berat and GjirokastraTypeCulturalCriteriaiii ivDesignated2005Reference no 569RegionGjirokaster CountyEurope2005 presentThe city appears in the historical record dating back in 1336 by its Greek name Argyrokastro Argyrokastro 1 as part of the Byzantine Empire 2 It became part of the Orthodox Christian diocese of Dryinoupolis and Argyrokastro after the destruction of nearby Adrianoupolis 3 Gjirokaster later was contested between the Despotate of Epirus and the Albanian clan of John Zenevisi before falling under Ottoman rule for the next five centuries 1417 1913 4 Throughout Ottoman occupation Gjirokaster was officially known in Ottoman Turkish as Ergiri and also Ergiri Kasri 5 During the Ottoman period conversions to Islam and an influx of Muslim converts from the surrounding countryside made Gjirokaster go from being an overwhelmingly Christian city in the 16th century into one with a large Muslim population by the early 19th century 6 7 Gjirokaster also became a major religious centre for Bektashi Sufism 8 Taken by the Hellenic Army during the Balkan Wars of 1912 13 on account of its large Greek population 9 it was eventually incorporated into the newly independent state of Albania in 1913 This proved highly unpopular with the local Greek population who rebelled after several months of guerrilla warfare the short lived Autonomous Republic of Northern Epirus was established in 1914 with Gjirokaster as its capital It was definitively awarded to Albania in 1921 10 In more recent years the city witnessed anti government protests that led to the Albanian civil war of 1997 11 Along with Muslim and Orthodox Albanians the city is also home to a substantial Greek minority 12 13 along with a considerable Aromanian community Together with Sarande the city is considered one of the centers of the Greek minority in Albania 14 and there is a consulate of Greece 15 Contents 1 Names and etymology 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 Medieval period 2 3 Modern 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 4 Economy 5 Infrastructure 5 1 Education 6 Demography 6 1 Religion 7 Culture 7 1 Landmarks 7 2 Sports 8 International relations 9 Notable residents 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 References 13 Sources 14 External linksNames and etymology EditSee also Names of Gjirokaster in different languages The city appeared for the first time in historical records under its medieval name of Argyrokastron Medieval Greek Argyrokastron as mentioned by John VI Kantakouzenos in 1336 16 The name comes from argyron Medieval Greek ἀrgyron lit silver and kastron Medieval Greek kastron derived from Latin castrum meaning castle or fortress thus silver castle Byzantine chronicles also used the similar name Argyropolychni Medieval Greek Argyropolyxnh lit silver town 17 The theory that the city took the name of the Princess Argjiro a legendary figure about whom 19th century author Kostas Krystallis wrote a short novel 18 and Ismail Kadare wrote a poem in the 1960s citation needed is considered folk etymology since the princess is said to have lived later in the 15th century 19 The definite Albanian form of the name of city is Gjirokastra while in the Gheg Albanian dialect it is known as Gjinokaster both of which derive from the Greek name 20 Alternative spellings found in Western sources include Girokaster and Girokastra citation needed In Aromanian the city is known as Ljurocastru Iurucasta or Iurucast while in modern Greek it is known as Argyrokastro Argyrokastro citation needed During the Ottoman era the town was known in Turkish as Ergiri 5 History EditEarly history Edit During the Middle Helladic period 2100 1550 BC a double tumulus was dug out in Vodhine with strong similarities to the grave circles at Mycenae showing a common ancestral link with the Myceneans of southern Greece 21 The Phrygian period of the region spanned from around 1150 BCE to around 850 BCE Hammond argues that the region was checkered with a mosaic of small Phrygian principalities with the principality of Gjirokaster and the surrounding region having its center at Vodhine In the later part of the period it appears there was a change of dynasty at Vodhine 22 Archaeological evidence demonstrates that during the Bronze Age the region was inhabited by populations who likely spoke a northwestern Greek dialect 23 improper synthesis dubious discuss Archaeologists have found pottery artifacts dating to the early Iron Age crafted in a style that first appeared in the late Bronze Age in Pazhok Elbasan County and is found throughout Albania 24 The earliest recorded inhabitants of the area around Gjirokaster were the Greek speaking tribe of the Chaonians which belonged to the Epirote group 25 improper synthesis In antiquity the local urban centre was located in Antigonia c 5 kilometres 3 mi from modern Gjirokaster on the opposite bank of river Drino 26 Medieval period Edit The Ottoman architecture characterize the historical city center The city s walls date from the third century The high stone walls of the Citadel were built from the sixth to the twelfth century 27 During this period Gjirokaster developed into a major commercial center known as Argyropolis Medieval Greek Ἀrgyropolis meaning Silver City or Argyrokastron Medieval Greek Ἀrgyrokastron meaning Silver Castle 28 The city was part of the Despotate of Epirus and was first mentioned by the name Argyrokastro by John VI Kantakouzenos in 1336 1 That year Argyrokastro was among the cities that remained loyal to the Byzantine Emperor during a local Epirote rebellion in favour to Nikephoros Orsini Doukas 29 The first mention of Albanian nomadic groups occurred in the early 14th century where they were searching for new pasture lands and ravaging settlements in the region 17 These Albanians had entered the region and took advantage of the situation after the Black death had decimated the local Epirote population 17 During 1386 1417 it was contested between the Despotate of Epirus and the Albanian clan of John Zenevisi 4 In 1399 the Greek inhabitants of the city joined the Despot of Epirus Esau in his campaign against various Albanian and Aromanian tribesmen 30 In 1417 it became part of the Ottoman Empire and in 1419 it became the county town of the Sanjak of Albania 31 During the Albanian Revolt of 1432 36 it was besieged by forces under Thopia Zenevisi but the rebels were defeated by Ottoman troops led by Turahan Bey 32 In 1570s local nobles Manthos Papagiannis and Panos Kestolikos discussed as Greek representative of enslaved Greece and Albania with the head of the Holy League John of Austria and various other European rulers the possibility of an anti Ottoman armed struggle but this initiative was fruitless 33 34 35 According to Turkish traveller Evliya Celebi who visited the city in 1670 at that time there were 200 houses within the castle 200 in the Christian eastern neighborhood of Kycyk Varosh meaning small neighborhood outside the castle 150 houses in the Byjyk Varosh meaning big neighborhood outside the castle and six additional neighborhoods Palorto Vutosh Dunavat Manalat Haxhi Bey and Memi Bey extending on eight hills around the castle 36 According to the traveller the city had at that time around 2000 houses eight mosques three churches 280 shops five fountains and five inns 36 From the 16th century until the early 19th century Gjirokaster went from being a predominantly Christian city to one with a Muslim majority due to much of the urban population converting to Islam alongside an influx of Muslim converts from the surrounding countryside 6 7 Modern Edit View of the fortress and aqueduct of Gjirokaster depicted by Edward Lear 4 November 1848 37 In 1811 Gjirokaster became part of the Pashalik of Yanina then led by the Albanian born Ali Pasha of Ioannina and was transformed into a semi autonomous fiefdom in the southwestern Balkans until his death in 1822 In 1833 Albanian rebels took over the town causing the Ottoman government to comply with rebel terms 38 After the fall of the pashalik in 1868 the city was the capital of the sanjak of Ergiri On 23 July 1880 southern Albanian committees of the League of Prizren held a congress in the city in which was decided that if Albanian populated areas of the Ottoman Empire were ceded to neighbouring countries they would revolt 39 During the Albanian National Awakening 1831 1912 the city was a major centre of the movement and some groups in the city were reported to carry portraits of Skanderbeg the national hero of the Albanians during this period 40 Gjirokaster from the middle of the nineteenth century also prominently contributed to the wider Ottoman Empire through individuals that served as Kadis civil servants and was an important centre of Islamic culture 5 In early March 1908 the binbashi of Gjirokaster was assassinated by Cerciz Topulli and his followers 41 The pro Albanianists of the city during 1909 1912 were split between two groups the urban liberals who wanted to cooperate with the Greeks and Albanian nationalists who formed guerilla bands operating in the countryside 7 During the 19th and early 20th century Albanian speaking Muslims were the majority population of Gjirokaster while only a few Greek speaking families lived there 7 The official declaration of the Autonomous Republic of Northern Epirus March 1 1914 The River Drin seen in the background Given its large Greek population the city was claimed and taken by Greece during the First Balkan War of 1912 1913 following the retreat of the Ottomans from the region 42 However it was awarded to Albania under the terms of the Treaty of London of 1913 and the Protocol of Florence of 17 December 1913 43 This turn of events proved highly unpopular with the local Greek population and their representatives under Georgios Christakis Zografos formed the Panepirotic Assembly in Gjirokaster in protest 44 The Assembly short of incorporation with Greece demanded either local autonomy or an international occupation by forces of the Great Powers for the districts of Gjirokaster Sarande and Korce 45 In April 1939 Gjirokaster was occupied by Italy following the Italian invasion of Albania On December 8 1940 during the Greco Italian War the Hellenic Army entered the city and stayed for a five month period before capitulating to Nazi Germany in April 1941 and returning the city to Italian command After the capitulation of Italy in the Armistice of Cassibile in September 1943 the city was taken by German forces and eventually returned to Albanian control in 1944 House of the post war leader Enver Hoxha where he grew up Konak house of writer Ismail Kadare in Gjirokaster The postwar communist regime developed the city as an industrial and commercial centre It was elevated to the status of a museum town 46 as it was the birthplace of the leader of the People s Socialist Republic of Albania Enver Hoxha who had been born there in 1908 His house was converted into a museum 47 The demolition of the monumental statue of the authoritarian leader Enver Hoxha in Gjirokaster by members of the local Greek community in August 1991 marked the end of the one party state 48 It was the last statue in Albania to be demolished during the Fall of Communism in Albania which happened in 28 July 1991 5 months after the rest of the statues that were demolished since February and marked the end of the one party state 49 Gjirokaster suffered severe economic problems following the end of communist rule in 1991 In the spring of 1993 the region of Gjirokaster became a center of open conflict between Greek minority members and the Albanian police 50 The city was particularly affected by the 1997 collapse of a massive pyramid scheme which destabilised the entire Albanian economy 11 The city became the focus of a rebellion against the government of Sali Berisha violent anti government protests took place which eventually forced Berisha s resignation On 16 December 1997 Hoxha s house was damaged by unknown attackers but subsequently restored 51 Geography EditThe present municipality was formed at the 2015 local government reform by the merger of the former municipalities of Antigone Cepo Gjirokaster Lazarat Lunxheri Odrie and Picar that became municipal units 52 The seat of the municipality is the town Gjirokaster 53 The total population is 28 673 2011 census 54 in a total area of 469 55 km2 181 29 sq mi 55 The population of the former municipality at the 2011 census was 19 836 54 Climate Edit Gjirokaster is situated between the lowlands of western Albania and the highlands of the interior and has thus a hot summer Mediterranean climate though as is normal for Albania much heavier rainfall than usual for this climate type Climate data for GjirokasterMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 9 48 11 52 13 55 18 64 23 73 28 82 32 90 34 93 27 81 23 73 15 59 11 52 20 69 Daily mean C F 5 41 6 43 7 45 12 54 16 61 20 68 23 73 24 75 19 66 14 57 10 50 6 43 14 56 Average low C F 1 34 1 34 2 36 6 43 10 50 13 55 15 59 15 59 12 54 8 46 5 41 2 36 8 46 Average precipitation mm inches 290 11 4 230 9 1 190 7 5 90 3 5 50 2 0 40 1 6 10 0 4 10 0 4 60 2 4 180 7 1 400 15 7 320 12 6 1 870 73 7 Average precipitation days 1 mm 11 10 8 7 5 2 1 1 3 7 14 12 81Average relative humidity 71 69 68 69 70 62 57 57 64 67 75 73 67Source 1 WeatherbaseSource 2 Climate data Climate data for Gjirokaster elevation at 194 m or 636 ft from 1961 1990Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 20 1 68 2 23 3 73 9 27 2 81 0 28 7 83 7 34 3 93 7 38 9 102 0 42 6 108 7 39 5 103 1 37 4 99 3 32 5 90 5 26 8 80 2 21 5 70 7 42 6 108 7 Average high C F 10 0 50 0 11 9 53 4 15 1 59 2 19 1 66 4 24 3 75 7 28 6 83 5 31 8 89 2 31 8 89 2 28 1 82 6 22 0 71 6 15 7 60 3 11 1 52 0 20 8 69 4 Average low C F 0 4 32 7 1 5 34 7 3 4 38 1 6 7 44 1 10 5 50 9 13 7 56 7 15 3 59 5 15 2 59 4 12 3 54 1 8 4 47 1 4 6 40 3 1 6 34 9 7 8 46 0 Record low C F 10 1 13 8 8 0 17 6 16 6 2 1 1 8 28 8 2 2 36 0 5 8 42 4 8 6 47 5 8 3 46 9 1 7 35 1 1 7 28 9 5 9 21 4 17 4 0 7 17 4 0 7 Average precipitation mm inches 1 887 5 74 31 Average rainy days 1 0 mm 102 0Average snowy days 4 0Average relative humidity 74 0Mean monthly sunshine hours 2 456 8Source National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA 56 Economy Edit Reconstruction of the roof of a traditional house Gjirokaster is principally a commercial center with some industries notably the production of foodstuffs leather and textiles 57 Recently a regional agricultural market that trades locally produced groceries has been built in the city 58 Given the potential of southern Albania to supply organically grown products and its relationship with Greek counterparts of the nearby city of Ioannina it is likely that the market will dedicate itself to organic farming in the future However trademarking and marketing of such products are currently far from European standards 58 The Chamber of Commerce of the city created in 1988 promotes trade with the Greek border areas 59 As part of the financial support from Greece to Albania the Hellenic Armed Forces built a hospital in the city 60 In recent years many traditional houses are being reconstructed and owners lured to come back thus revitalizing tourism as a potential revenue source for the local economy 61 62 63 64 However some houses continue to degrade from lack of investment abandonment or inappropriate renovations as local craftsmen are not part of these projects 65 In 2010 following the Greek economic crisis the city was one of the first areas in Albania to suffer since many Albanian emigrants in Greece are becoming unemployed and thus are returning home 66 Infrastructure Edit Mountain road SH78 near Muzina Pass connecting with the coast Gjirokaster is served by the SH4 Highway which connects it to Tepelene in the north and the Dropull region and Greek border 30 km 19 mi to the south Education Edit The first school in the city a Greek language school was erected in the city in 1663 It was sponsored by local merchants and functioned under the supervision of the local bishop In 1821 when the Greek War of Independence broke out it was destroyed but it was reopened in 1830 67 68 In 1727 a madrasa started to function in the city and it worked uninterruptedly for 240 years until 1967 when it was closed due to the Cultural Revolution applied in communist Albania 69 In 1861 1862 a Greek language school for girls was founded financially supported by the local Greek benefactor Christakis Zografos 70 The first Albanian school in Gjirokaster was opened in 1886 71 Today Gjirokaster has seven grammar schools two general high schools of which one is the Gjirokaster Gymnasium and two professional ones citation needed In addition two Greek language high schools are operating in the city 72 The city is home to the Eqrem Cabej University which opened its doors in 1968 The university has recently been experiencing low enrollments and as a result the departments of Physics Mathematics Biochemistry and Kindergarten Education did not function during the 2008 2009 academic year 73 In 2006 the establishment of a second university in Gjirokaster a Greek language one was agreed upon after discussions between the Albanian and Greek governments 74 The program had an attendance of 35 students as of 2010 update but was abruptly suspended when the University of Ioannina in Greece refused to provide teachers for the 2010 school year and the Greek government and the Latsis foundation withdrew funding 73 Demography EditGjirokaster by the population is the largest municipality in the Gjirokaster County According to INSTAT based on the 2011 Census Gjirokaster Municipality was estimated to have 28 673 residents a density of 53 91 persons km2 living in 6 919 housing units while the county as a whole has a total of 72 176 inhabitants 54 The population of the municipality includes the urban and rural population in its Administrative Units such as Antigone Cepo Lazarat Lunxheri Odrie and Picar 75 The city of Gjirokaster itself has a resident population of 19 836 inhabitants which are a predominantly urban population 54 In the municipality the population was spread out with 16 76 from the age 0 to 14 69 24 from 15 to 64 and 13 98 who were 65 years of age or older As far as the city itself is concerned the population was spread out with 16 93 from the age 0 to 14 70 27 from 15 to 64 and 12 78 who were 65 years of age or older 54 The town has 43 000 inhabitants 76 Gjirokaster is home to an ethnic Greek community that according to Human Rights Watch numbered about 4 000 out of 30 000 in 1989 77 although Greek spokesmen have claimed that up to 34 of the town is Greek 78 Gjirokaster is considered the center of the Greek community in Albania 42 Given the large Greek population in the town and surrounding area there is a Greek consulate in the town 79 Other minorities are smaller numbers of Aromanians and Roma Religion Edit The city s only remaining mosque the Gjirokaster Mosque built in 1757 The region was part of the Eastern Orthodox diocese of Dryinoupolis part of the metropolitan bishopric of Ioannina It was first mentioned in a notitia of the 10th 11th century With the destruction of nearby Adrianupolis its see was transferred to Gjirokaster and assumed the name Doecese of Dryinopoulis and Argyrokastron Greek Dryinoypolews kai Argyrokastroy In 1835 it was promoted to metropolitan bishopric under the direct jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople 3 Today the city is home to a diocese part of the Orthodox Autocephalous Church of Albania 80 The two existing churches of the city were re built at the end of the 18th century after approval by the local Ottoman authorities who received large bribes by the Orthodox community The Orthodox Cathedral of the Transfiguration of the Saviour was rebuilt at 1773 on the site of an older church and is located at the castle quarters 81 During the Ottoman period Gjirokaster was a significant centre for the Muslim Sufi Bektashi Order especially in relation to its spread and literary activity 8 In the early 19th century during the rule of Ali Pasha British diplomat William Martin Leake during his journey from Vlore to Gjirokastra and later to present day Greece in his diary describes his arrival on December 26 1804 in the region of Deropoli or Dropull as it was known from the local Albanians According to him its chief city Gjirokaster numbered about 2000 Muslim families and about 100 Christian families While Libohove also then part of the same region numbered half of that number with about 1000 Muslim families and 100 Christian families 82 In 1925 Albania became the world center of the Bektashi Order a Muslim sect The sect was headquartered in Tirana and Gjirokaster was one of six districts of the Bektashi Order in Albania with its center at the tekke of Baba Rexheb 83 The city retains a large Bektashi and Sunni population Historically there were 15 and tekkes and mosques of which 13 were functional in 1945 69 Only Gjirokaster Mosque has survived the remaining 12 were destroyed or closed during the Cultural Revolution of the communist government in 1967 69 According to the 2011 census which has been widely disputed due to irregularities in the procedure and its data affected by boycott 84 85 86 87 the percentages of the local population per religious group are Islam 42 3 Bektashis 5 3 Eastern Orthodox 14 6 Roman Catholics 2 8 while a 35 2 had not declared any religion or is non religious 88 According to the Gjirokaster county census data which includes other municipalities besides Gjirokaster it had the highest percentage of atheists compared to all other counties in Albania with Vlora being the second 6 3 compared to 6 01 Culture Edit Grupi Argjiro a male vocal ensemble from Gjirokaster The group performs the Albanian iso polyphony of Gjirokaster They were awarded the title Grand Master of Albania by the then president Bujar Nishani 89 90 17th century Ottoman traveller Evliya Celebi who visited the city in 1670 described the city in detail One Sunday Celebi heard the sound of a vajtim the traditional Albanian lament for the dead performed by a professional mourner The traveller found the city so noisy that he dubbed Gjirokaster the city of wailing 91 The novel Chronicle in Stone by Albanian writer Ismail Kadare tells the history of this city during the Italian and Greek occupation in World War I and II It expounds on the customs of the people of Gjirokaster 92 At the age of twenty four Albanian writer Musine Kokalari wrote an 80 page collection of ten youthful prose tales in her native Gjirokastrian dialect As my old mother tells me Albanian Sic me thote nenua plake Tirana 1941 The book tells the day by day struggles of women of Gjirokaster and describes the prevailing mores of the region 93 Gjirokaster home to both Albanian and Greek polyphonic singing is also home to the National Folklore Festival Albanian Festivali Folklorik Kombetar that is held every five years The festival started in 1968 94 and was most recently held in 2009 its ninth season 95 The festival takes place on the premises of Gjirokaster Fortress Gjirokaster is also where the Greek language newspaper Laiko Vima is published Founded in 1945 it was the only Greek language printed media allowed during the People s Socialist Republic of Albania 96 Landmarks Edit The city is built on the slope surrounding the citadel located on a dominating plateau 46 Although the city s walls were built in the third century and the city itself was first mentioned in the 12th century the majority of the existing buildings date from 17th and 18th centuries Typical houses consist of a tall stone block structure which can be up to five stories high There are external and internal staircases that surround the house It is thought that such design stems from fortified country houses typical in southern Albania The lower storey of the building contains a cistern and the stable The upper storey is composed of a guest room and a family room containing a fireplace Further upper stories are to accommodate extended families and are connected by internal stairs 46 Since Gjirokaster s membership to UNESCO a number of houses have been restored though others continue to degrade Stage of the Gjirokaster National Folklore Festival Many houses in Gjirokaster have a distinctive local style that has earned the city the nickname City of Stone because most of the old houses have roofs covered with flat dressed stones A very similar style can be seen in the Pelion district of Greece The city along with Berat was among the few Albanian cities preserved in the 1960s and 1970s from modernizing building programs Both cities gained the status of museum town and are UNESCO World Heritage sites 46 Typical streets in the city Gjirokaster Fortress dominates the town and overlooks the strategically important route along the river valley It is open to visitors and contains a military museum featuring captured artillery and memorabilia of the Communist resistance against German occupation as well as a captured United States Air Force plane forced down by Anastas Ngjela to commemorate the Communist regime s struggle against the imperialist powers Additions were built during the 19th and 20th centuries by Ali Pasha of Ioannina and the government of King Zog I of Albania Today it possesses five towers and houses a clock tower a church water fountains horse stables and many more amenities The northern part of the castle was turned into a prison by Zog s government and housed political prisoners during the communist regime Gjirokaster features an old Ottoman bazaar which was originally built in the 17th century it was rebuilt in the 19th century after a fire There are more than 500 homes preserved as cultural monuments in Gjirokaster today The Gjirokaster Mosque built in 1757 dominates the bazaar 69 When the town was first proposed for inclusion on the World Heritage list in 1988 International Council on Monuments and Sites experts were nonplussed by a number of modern constructions which detracted from the old town s appearance The historic core of Gjirokaster was finally inscribed in 2005 15 years after its original nomination Panorama of Gjirokaster from the Castle Sports Edit Football soccer is popular in Gjirokaster the city hosts Luftetari Gjirokaster a club founded in 1929 The club has competed in international tournaments and currently plays in the Albanian Superliga until 2006 2007 and again from 2016 The soccer matches are played in Gjirokaster Stadium which can hold up to 8 400 spectators 97 International relations EditGjirokaster is twinned with Grottammare Italy 98 Klina Kosovo 99 Lipjan Kosovo 100 Nardo Italy 101 Notable residents EditAli Alizoti 19th century politician Fejzi Alizoti interim Prime Minister of Albania in 1914 Kyriakoulis Argyrokastritis 1828 revolutionary of the Greek War of Independence Arjan Bellaj retired soccer player and member of the Albania national football team Elmaz Boce signatory of the Albanian Declaration of Independence and politician Bledar Devolli born 1978 footballer Georgios Dimitriou 18th century author Ioannis Doukas 19th century painter Vangjel Dule representative of the Greek minority in Albanian politics Rauf Fico 1881 1944 politician Bashkim Fino former Prime Minister of Albania Christos Gikas Greco Roman wrestler Ramize Gjebrea World War II partisan Gregory IV of Athens scholar and Archbishop of Athens Altin Haxhi international soccer player capped in the Albania national team Veli Harxhi signatory of the Albanian Declaration of Independence and politician Fatmir Haxhiu painter Enver Hoxha 1908 1985 former first Secretary of the Albanian Party of Labor and leader of socialist Albania Feim Ibrahimi composer Ismail Kadare born 1936 novelist and poet winner of the 2005 Man Booker International Prize 2009 Prince of Asturias Award and 2015 Jerusalem Prize Mehmed Kalakula politician Xhanfize Keko movie director Saim Kokona born 1934 cinematographer Albi Kondi born 1989 football player Eqrem Libohova former Prime Minister of Albania Sabit Lulo politician Bule Naipi World War II People s Heroine of Albania Omer Nishani Head of State of Albania from 1944 to 1953 Arlind Nora born 1980 footballer Bahri Omari 1889 1945 politician Jani Papadhopulli signatory of the Albanian Declaration of Independence and politician Manthos Papagiannis 16th century revolutionary Xhevdet Picari commander in the Vlora War Pertef Pogoni politician Baba Rexheb Bektashi Sufi religious leader and saint and 7th Dedebaba of the Bektashi Order Xhafer Sadik 4th Dedebaba of the Bektashi Order Mehmet Tahsini politician and professor Bajo Topulli brother of Cerciz nationalist and guerrilla fighter Cerciz Topulli 20th century nationalist and guerrilla fighter Takis Tsiakos 1909 1997 Greek poet Alexandros Vasileiou merchant and Greek scholar Michael Vasileiou merchant brother of Alexandros Mahmud Xhelaledini politician Arjan Xhumba retired soccer player and member of the Albania national football teamGallery Edit Qafa e Pazarit Street Street with cafes Ottoman house Mercedes along Enver Hoxha s House Ottoman bridge View of the Citadel from the Castle American Lockheed T 33 in the Castle Old stone house typical of the Gjirokastra area Clock Tower of Castle Path in the Castle Castle Wall Dhuvjan Monastery Street in GjirokasterSee also EditHistory of Albania Greeks in AlbaniaReferences Edit a b Kiel Machiel 1990 Ottoman Architecture in Albania 1385 1912 Besiktas Istanbul Research Centre for Islamic History Art and Culture p 138 ISBN 978 92 9063 330 3 Retrieved 2 October 2010 Ward 1983 p 70 a b Giakoumis Konstantinos 2010 The Orthodox Church in Albania Under the Ottoman Rule 15th 19th Century In Schmitt Oliver Jens amp Andreas Rathberger eds Religion und Kultur im albanischsprachigen Sudosteuropa Religion and culture in Albanian speaking southeastern Europe Peter Lang pp 80 a b Canepari Eleonora 29 September 2017 La ville et le plat pays in French Presses universitaires de Perpignan pp 175 181 ISBN 9782354122881 Archived from the original on 19 September 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 a b c Ali Caksu 2006 Proceedings of the Second International Symposium on Islamic Civilisation in the Balkans Tirana Albania 4 7 December 2003 Research Center for Islamic History Art and Culture p 115 At least since the middle of the nineteenth century families or individuals from Gjirokaster the Ottoman Ergiri or Ergiri Kasri in Southern Albania and from Libohova a small town located twenty kilometers from Gjirokaster gave a huge number of Kadis who were in charge in the whole Ottoman Empire making of these two localities important centres of Islamic culture a b Giakoumis Konstantinos 2010 The Orthodox Church in Albania Under the Ottoman Rule 15th 19th Century In Schmitt Oliver Jens amp Andreas Rathberger eds Religion und Kultur im albanischsprachigen Sudosteuropa Religion and culture in Albanian speaking southeastern Europe Peter Lang pp 86 87 a b c d Kokolakis Mihalis 2003 To ystero Gianniwtiko Pasaliki xwros dioikhsh kai plh8ysmos sthn toyrkokratoymenh Hpeiro 1820 1913 The late Pashalik of Ioannina Space administration and population in Ottoman ruled Epirus 1820 1913 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original on 2015 04 18 Retrieved 2016 08 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link EIE KNE p 52 b O diesparmenos ellhnofwnos plh8ysmos perilambane kai mikro ari8mo oikogeneiwn sta astika kentra toy Argyrokastroy kai ths Aylwnas b The scattered Greek speaking population included and a small number of families in the cities of Gjirokastra and Vlora p 54 H moysoylmanikh koinothta ths Hpeiroy me e3airesh toys mikroys astikoys plh8ysmoys twn notiwn ellhnofwnwn perioxwn toys opoioys proanaferame kai tis dyo me treis xiliades diesparmenoys Toyrkogyftoys apartizotan oloklhrwtika apo albanofwnoys kai sta telh ths Toyrkokratias kalypte ta 3 4 peripoy toy plh8ysmoy twn albanofwnwn perioxwn kai perissotero apo to 40 toy synoloy The Muslim community in Epirus with the exception of small urban populations of the southern Greek speaking areas which we mentioned and 2 3000 dispersed Muslim Romani consisted entirely of Albanian speakers and in the late Ottoman period covered approximately 3 4 of population ethnic Albanian speaking areas and more than 40 of the total area pp 55 56 S ayta ta merh oi moysoylmanikes koinothtes otan yphrxan periorizontan sto sympagh plh8ysmo orismenwn polewn kai kwmopolewn Argyrokastro Limpoxobo Leskobiki Delbino Paramy8ia In these parts of the Muslim communities where present were limited to compact population of certain towns and cities Gjirokastra Libohove Leskovik Delvino Paramythia p 91 Sto Argyrokastro oi Albanistes diaspasthkan anamesa stoys fileley8eroys ths polhs poy zhtoysan th synergasia me toys Ellhnes kai sta akraia e8nikistika stoixeia poy sxhmatisan sthn ypai8ro antartikes omades The Albanians of Gjirokaster were split between the liberals of the city calling for cooperation with the Greeks and the extreme nationalist elements which formed in the countryside as guerrilla groups pp 370 374 a b Norris Harry Thirlwall 1993 Islam in the Balkans religion and society between Europe and the Arab world University of South Carolina Press p 134 The southern Albanian town of Gjirokaster was also for centuries and important centre for Baktashi propagation and literary activity Pettifer James July 2001 The Greek Minority in Albania in the Aftermath of Communism Report Conflict Studies Research Centre p 5 ISBN 1 903584 35 3 G97 Retrieved 2021 09 19 Given its large Greek speaking population the city of Gjirokastra in Greek Agyrocastro in the Vjosa Aoos River valley only twenty miles from the Greek border was a particularly active centre of irredentist ambition Miller William 1966 The Ottoman Empire and Its Successors 1801 1927 Routledge pp 543 544 ISBN 978 0 7146 1974 3 a b Jeffries Ian 2002 Eastern Europe at the turn of the twenty first century a guide to the economies in transition Routledge p 87 ISBN 978 0 415 23671 3 Kallivretakis Leonidas 1995 H ellhnikh koinothta ths Albanias ypo to prisma ths istorikhs gewgrafias kai dhmografias The Greek Community of Albania in terms of historical geography and demography Beremhs 8anos 1995 H ellhnikh koinothta ths Albanias ypo to prisma ths istorikhs gewgrafias kai dhmografias p 25 ISBN 9789600800548 Archived from the original on 2015 03 21 Retrieved 2016 08 10 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link In Nikolakopoulos Ilias Kouloubis Theodoros A amp Thanos M Veremis eds O Ellhnismos ths Albanias The Greeks of Albania University of Athens p 34 Sta plaisia ths epitopias ereynas poy pragmatopoihsame sthn Albania Noembrios Dekembrios 1992 melethsame to zhthma twn e8nopolitismikwn omadwn opws aytes syneidhtopoioyntai shmera epi topoy As part of the fieldwork we held in Albania November December 1992 we studied the issue of ethnocultural groups as they are realized today on the spot p 42 Sto Nomo toy Argyrokastroy Ellhnes 40 Blaxoi 12 Albanoi Xristianoi 21 Albanoi Moysoylmanoi 28 epi synoloy 66 000 katoikwn 63 Xristianoi 49 Albanoi p 43 4 Akomh kai ekei poy h ypai8ros einai ellhnikh h ellhnizoysa oi poleis dia8etoyn albanikh pleiopshfia Ayto fainetai ka8ara stis periptwseis Argyrokastroy kai Delbinoy opoy oi Nomarxies perasan sta xeria ths meionothtas oxi omws kai oi Dhmoi twn antistoixwn polewn 4 Even where the countryside is Greek or Greekish cities have an Albanian majority This is clear where the prefectures of Gjirokaster and Delvine were passed into the hands of the minority but not the municipalities of the respective cities p 51 E Ellhnes AX Albanoi Or8odo3oi Xristianoi AM Albanoi Moysoylmanoi M Miktos plh8ysmos p 55 GJIROKASTRA ARGYROKASTRO 24216 M AM AX E p 57 Albania from anarchy to a Balkan identity Miranda Vickers James Pettifer Edition 2 illustrated reprint Publisher C Hurst amp Co Publishers 1997 ISBN 1 85065 290 2 ISBN 978 1 85065 290 8 p 187 James Pettifer The Greek Minority in Albania in the Aftermath of Communism PDF Camberley Surrey Conflict Studies Research Centre Royal Military Academy Sandhurst pp 11 12 Retrieved 20 December 2010 The concentration of ethnic Greeks in and around centres of Hellenism such as Saranda and Gjirokastra The Unit 1996 GCDO History part History of Gjirokaster in Albanian Organizata per Ruajtjen dhe Zhvillimin e Gjirokastres GCDO Retrieved 1 September 2010 a b c Giakoumis Konstantinos 2003 Fourteenth century Albanian migration and the relative autochthony of the Albanians in Epeiros The case of Gjirokaster Archived 2015 09 24 at the Wayback Machine Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 27 1 p 179 The Albanians originating According to the sources there were two migrant groups the one which travelled via Ohrid and ended in Thessaly while the other moving through Kelcyre reached Gjirokaster and the despotate The purpose of their occupation was to search for new pasture lands The combination of fertile plains and mountains rich in grasslands in the region of Gjirokaster was ideal for the poor nomadic Albanians who did not hesitate to ravage cities when they lacked provisions p 182 Furthermore I presented evidence that the in the fourteenth century immigrant Albanians taking advantage of the decimation of the local Epirote population by to the Black death also migrated into the regions of Gjirokaster Tomos 170 toy Neoellhnikh Grammateia 24 November 2014 Hpeirwtikai anamnhseis Pelekanos Books ISBN 9789604007691 Sinani Shaban Kadare Ismail Courtois Stephane 2006 Le dossier Kadare in French Paris O Jacob p 37 ISBN 978 2 7381 1740 3 The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Micropaedia Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica 1993 p 289 ISBN 0 85229 571 5 Komita Nuobo 1982 The Grave Cicles at Mycenae and the Early Indo Europeans Research Reports of Ikutoku Tech Univ A 7 59 70 dead link Hammond N G L 2006 The Illyrians In Boardman John Edwards I E S Hammond N G L Sollberger E eds The Prehistory of the Balkans the Middle East and the Aegean World Tenth to Eighth Centuries B C 6 ed Cambridge University Press p 654 ISBN 0 521 22496 9 In what we may call the early part of the Phrygian period c 1150 950 B C Phrygian power or Phrygian influence seems to have been exercised through more or less independent principalities occupying the cantons which are natural features of this area each principality being indicated by its royal cemetery of tumuli Vodhine in that of Gjirokaster There were some losses in the latter half of the period the foothold east of the Vardar north west Albania including Epidamnus and perhaps parts of north Epirus as there were changes of dynasty at Bajkaj and Vodhine In the second part of the Phrygian period c 950 800 B C Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 1976 Migrations and Invasions in Greece and Adjacent Areas Noyes Press p 153 ISBN 978 0 8155 5047 1 The connections of the tumulus burials at Barc in the southern part of the lakeland were not with the Kukes or Mati tumuli but with those of Vajze and southern Albania for example in the long bronze pins roll top pins twin vessels handles divided by a cross bar and small spectacle fibulae of an early type Moreover the pottery of the northwestern geometric style which was typical of Barc was current not in north but in central and south Albania and also in the plain of Ioannina at this time It is probable that the peoples to the south of the Shkumbi valley and lake Ochrid spoke northwest Greek being the residue left behind when the migrations carried many of their kindred into the Greek peninsula Boardman John 1982 08 05 The Prehistory of the Balkans and the Middle East and the Aegean World Tenth to Eighth centuries B C Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 223 ISBN 978 0 521 22496 3 Retrieved 1 October 2010 The Cambridge Ancient History pt 1 The prehistory of the Balkans and the Middle East and the Aegean world tenth to eighth centuries B C Cambridge University Press 1982 p 284 ISBN 9780521234474 Inscriptional evidence of the Chaones is lacking until the Hellenistic period but Ps Scylax describing the situation of c 580 560 put the southern limit of the Illyrians just north of the Chaones which indicates that the Chaones did not speak Illyrian and the acceptance of the Chaones into the Epirote Alliance in the 330s suggests strongly that they were Greek speaking Cabanes P 1997 The Growth of the Cities Epirus 4000 Years of Greek History and Culture Ekdotike Athenon 92 94 ISBN 9789602133712 Wilson Wesley 1997 Countries amp Cultures of the World The Pacific Former Soviet Union amp Europe Chapel Hill N C Professional Press p 149 ISBN 9781570873034 OCLC 1570873038 Retrieved 13 June 2010 Dvornik Francis 1958 The Idea of Apostolicity in Byzantium and the Legend of the Apostle Andrew Cambridge Harvard University Press p 219 OCLC 1196640 Nicol Donald M 2010 The Despotate of Epiros 1267 1479 A Contribution to the History of Greece in the Middle Ages Cambridge University Press pp 114 115 ISBN 9780521130899 Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 1976 Migrations and Invasions in Greece and Adjacent Areas Noyes Press p 61 ISBN 978 0 8155 5047 1 There the Greek pocket of resistance which preserved the Greek language even when its ruler was Serb or Italian was the plateau of Ioannina and its hinterland When Isaou the Italian ruler of Ioannina passed to the offensive in 1399 he had already won over the Mazarakii Albanians and the Malakasaei perhaps Vlach speakers and he recruited Greeks evidently from Zagori Papingo above Konitsa and Druinoupolis with Argyrokastro and the great Zagoria probably the high country northwest of Argyrokastro of which a part is still called Zagorie Riza Emin 1992 Ethnographic and open air museums PDF UNESCO Paris Retrieved March 18 2011 Imber Colin 2006 The Crusade of Varna 1443 45 Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 27 ISBN 978 0 7546 0144 9 Retrieved 31 July 2012 Vakalopoulos Apostolos Euangelou 1973 History of Macedonia 1354 1833 Institute for Balkan Studies p 195 The endeavours of two Epirote Greeks Matthew or Manthos Papayiannis and Panos Kestolnikos are worthy of mention at this point As Greek representatives of enslaved Greece and Albania they came to an understanding with Don John of Austria Chasiotis 1965 p 241 embajadores griegos de la baja Grecia y Alvania Cini Giorgio 1974 Il Mediterraneo Nella Seconda Meta Del 500 Alla Luce Di Lepanto in Italian Leo S Olschki p 238 Delusi rimasero pure i ribelli dell Epiro del Nord dove si erano sollevati i notabili greci di Argirocastron Manthos Papagiannis e Panos Kestolicos Questi notabili si erano accordati con l arcivescovo di Ochrida Ioachim ed anche con alcuni metropolis della Macedonia occidentale e dell Epiro si erano assicurati promesse di Don Juan per un sostegno armato Disappointed were also the rebels of Northern Epirus where they had raised the Greek notables of Argirocastron Manthos Papagiannis and Panos Kestolicos These chiefs had agreed with the Archbishop of Ochrida Ioachim and also with some metropolitans of western Macedonia and Epirus and had secured promises of Don Juan for armed support a b Elsie Robert March 2007 GJIROKASTRA nga udhepershkrimi i Evlija Celebiut PDF Albanica Ekskluzive 66 73 76 Elsie Robert ed Albania in the Painting of Edward Lear 1848 albanianart net Pollo Stefanaq 1984 Historia e Shqiperise Vitet 30 te shek XIX 1912 in Albanian Akademia e Shkencave e RPS te Shqiperise Instituti i Historise OCLC 165705732 Gawrych George Walter 2006 The Crescent and the Eagle Ottoman Rule Islam and the Albanians 1874 1913 London I B Tauris pp 23 64 ISBN 978 1 84511 287 5 Retrieved 30 September 2010 Gawrych George Walter 2006 The Crescent and the Eagle Ottoman Rule Islam and the Albanians 1874 1913 London I B Tauris p 148 ISBN 978 1 84511 287 5 Retrieved 30 September 2010 Haid Gerlinde 2008 European voices Multipart Singing in the Balkans and the Mediterranean Volume 1 ISBN 9783205780908 a b James Pettifer The Greek Minority in Albania in the Aftermath of Communism PDF Camberley Surrey Conflict Studies Research Centre Royal Military Academy Sandhurst p 4 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Pentzopoulos Dimitri 2002 The Balkan Exchange of Minorities and Its Impact on Greece London C Hurst amp Co p 28 ISBN 1 85065 674 6 Heuberger Valeria Suppan Arnold Vyslonzil Elisabeth 1996 Brennpunkt Osteuropa Minderheiten im Kreuzfeuer des Nationalismus in German Vienna Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag p 68 ISBN 978 3 486 56182 1 Ference Gregory Curtis 1994 Chronology of 20th Century Eastern European History Gale Research p 9 ISBN 978 0 8103 8879 6 a b c d Petersen Andrew 1994 Dictionary of Islamic architecture Routledge p 10 ISBN 0 415 06084 2 Retrieved 2010 06 13 Murati Violeta Tourism with the Dictator Standard in Albanian Retrieved 19 August 2010 dead link Pettifer James Poulton Hugh 1994 The Southern Balkans London Minority Rights Group International p 29 ISBN 978 1 897693 75 9 Under communism the Greek minority was subject to serious human rights abuses particularly in terms of religious freedom education in the Greek language and freedom of publication It played a leading part in the struggle to end the one party state with the demolition of the monumental statue of Enver Hoxha in Gjirokastra in August 1991 an important landmark Pse monumenti i diktatorit Enver Hoxha u hoq ne Gjirokaster ne korrik 91 dhe jo ne shkurt si gjithe te tjeret jugunews net Retrieved 2023 03 01 Petiffer James 2001 The Greek Minority in Albania In the Aftermath of Communism PDF Surrey UK Conflict Studies Research Centre p 13 ISBN 1 903584 35 3 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 06 Lajmi 22 March 2010 Tourism with the Communist Symbols Gazeta Lajmi in Albanian Archived from the original on 11 July 2011 Retrieved 19 August 2010 A new Urban Rural Classification of Albanian Population PDF Instituti i Statistikes INSTAT May 2014 p 15 Archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2019 Retrieved 18 September 2021 Law nr 115 2014 PDF in Albanian p 6371 Retrieved 25 February 2022 a b c d e Population and housing census Gjirokaster 2011 PDF INSTAT Retrieved 2019 09 25 Correspondence table LAU NUTS 2016 EU 28 and EFTA available Candidate Countries XLS Eurostat Retrieved 2019 09 25 Gjirokaster 13625 WMO Weather Station National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA Retrieved 26 June 2022 Nje histori e shkurter e Gjirokastres Gjirokaster org Retrieved 15 December 2010 a b Kote Odise 16 March 2010 Tregu rajonal ne jug te Shqiperise dhe prodhimet bio in Albanian Deutsche Welle Retrieved 15 December 2010 Taylor amp Francis Group 2004 Europa World Year Book 1 London New York ISBN 978 1 85743 254 1 Retrieved 15 December 2010 Blitz Brad K ed 2006 War and change in the Balkans nationalism conflict and cooperation 1 publ ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 230 ISBN 978 0 521 67773 8 Babameto I Restoration amp Revitalization Cultural Heritage without Borders Retrieved 2015 06 26 Babameto II Restoration amp Revitalization Cultural Heritage without Borders Retrieved 2015 06 26 Aga Khan Award for Architecture Conservation of Gjirokastra Aga Khan Development Network Archived from the original on 2012 06 06 Retrieved 2011 06 05 One man s fight to preserve Albania s traditions BBC Retrieved 25 October 2013 Top Channel Video Exclusive Pjesa 1 30 09 2012 Archived from the original on October 3 2012 Kote Odise 2010 03 02 Kriza greke zbret dhe ne Shqiperi in Albanian Deutsche Welle Retrieved 2010 12 15 Sakellariou Michail V 1997 Epirus 4000 Years of Greek History and Civilization Athens Ekdotike Athenon p 308 ISBN 978 960 213 371 2 Ruches Pyrrhus J 1965 Albania s Captives Chicago Argonaut p 33 At a time of almost universal ignorance in Greece in 1633 it opened the doors of its first Greek school Sponsored by Argyrocastran merchants in Venice it was under the supervision of Metropolitan Callistus of Dryinoupolis a b c d GCDO Regjimi komunist ne Shqiperi in Albanian Organizata per Ruajtjen dhe Zhvillimin e Gjirokastres GCDO Retrieved 1 September 2010 Sakellariou Michail V 1997 Epirus 4000 Years of Greek History and Civilization Athens Ekdotike Athenon p 308 ISBN 978 960 213 371 2 Victor Roudometof 1996 Nationalism and statecraft in southeastern Europe 1750 1923 University of Pittsburgh p 568 Relations House Committee on Foreign Affairs and Senate Committee on Foreign 2008 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2007 Government Printing Office p 1080 ISBN 978 0 16 081399 3 a b Mpregkash Ale3andros Parte ptyxio Argyrokastroy Hpeirwtikos Agwn Retrieved 31 August 2010 Albania Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 2006 U S Department of State 6 March 2007 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Municipality of Gjirokaser administrative division and population PDF Reporter al Archived PDF from the original on 2018 02 10 Instat of Albania 2009 Population by towns in Albanian Institute of Statistics of Albania Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 19 August 2010 Abrahams Fred 1996 Human Rights in Post Communist Albania Human Rights Watch p 119 ISBN 9781564321602 About 4 000 Greeks live in Gjirokaster out of a population of 30 000 Bugjazski Janusz 2002 Political parties of Eastern Europe a guide to politics in the post Communist era M E Sharpe p 682 ISBN 9780765620163 Country profile Bulgaria Albania Economist Intelligence Unit 1996 1 Greece has also opened a consulate in the southern town of Gjirokaster which has a large ethnic Greek population Orthodox Church of Albania Building and Restorations in Albanian Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 15 December 2010 selite e Mitropolive te Beratit Korces dhe Gjirokastres Giakoumis Konstantinos 2013 Dialectics of Pragmatism in Ottoman Domestic Interreligious Affairs Reflections on the Ottoman Legal Framework of Church Confiscation and Construction and a 1741 Firman for Ardenice Monastery Balkan Studies 47 94 97 118 Retrieved 18 August 2016 Martin Leake William December 1835 Travels in Northern Greece Vol 1 New Bond Street London Rodwell amp Martin p 25 ISBN 9781108020114 Elsie Robert 2000 A Dictionary of Albanian Religion Mythology and Folk Culture New York New York University Press p 28 ISBN 978 0 8147 2214 5 Final census findings lead to concerns over accuracy Tirana Times Archived from the original on 28 May 2014 Retrieved 26 May 2014 Likmeta Besar 6 July 2011 Albania Moves Ahead With Disputed Census Balkaninsight Retrieved 26 May 2014 Three Albanian journalists awarded with World at 7 Billion Prize United Nations Albania Archived from the original on 28 May 2014 Retrieved 26 May 2014 the controversial CENSUS data International Religious Freedom Report for 2014 Albania PDF state gov United States Department of State p 5 Retrieved 20 October 2015 Ethnic Greek minority groups had encouraged their members to boycott the census affecting measurements of the Greek ethnic minority and membership in the Greek Orthodox Church INTAT GIS Archived from the original on 2018 01 22 Loga Ledina 1 June 2019 Te jetosh si shqiptaret turi i ri qe po terheq turistet e huaj Grupi Argjiro jane dekoruar nga presidenti me titullin Mjeshter i Madh Grupi perbehet nga pese anetare ku me i vogli iu eshte bashkuar se fundmi Arkivi i Isopolifonise Shqiptare Database of Albanian Folk Iso Polyphony Emri i Grupit Grupi iso polifonik Argjiro Gjirokaster Vendi i krijimit Gjirokaster Repertori i grupit Kenge iso polifonike gjirokastrite Elsie Robert 2000 A Dictionary of Albanian Religion Mythology and Folk Culture New York New York University Press pp 95 96 ISBN 0 8147 2214 8 Retrieved 9 June 2010 Kadare Ismail 2007 Chronicle in Stone 14 High St Edinburgh Canongate Books LTD pp xi xiii ISBN 978 1 84195 908 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Wilson Katharina M March 1991 An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers Vol 2 New York Garland p 646 ISBN 0 8240 8547 7 Ahmedaja Ardian Haid Gerlinde 2008 European Voices Multipart Singing in the Balkans and the Mediterranean Vol 1 Vienna Bohlau ISBN 978 3 205 78090 8 Top Channel 25 September 2009 Gjirokaster starton Festivali Folklorik Kombetar Top Channel in Albanian Retrieved 31 August 2010 Valeria Heuberger Arnold Suppan Elisabeth Vyslonzil 1996 Brennpunkt Osteuropa Minderheiten im Kreuzfeuer des Nationalismus in German Vienna Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag p 71 ISBN 978 3 486 56182 1 Worldstadiums Stadia in Albania Archived from the original on 29 May 2010 Retrieved 3 August 2010 Comune di Grottammare Comuni Italiani it Retrieved 2019 05 31 Klina ne Kosove dhe Gjirokastra ne Shqiperi jane binjakezuar DW 17 06 2010 DW COM in Albanian Retrieved 2019 05 31 Komuna Lipjan Lipjani e Gjirokastra e nenshkruajne binjakezimin ne Gadime kk arkiva rks gov net Archived from the original on 2019 05 31 Retrieved 2019 05 31 Gemellaggio Con Argirocastro A Nardo Una Delegazione Della fortezza Argentata Corriere Salentino Lecce in Italian 2021 07 30 Retrieved 2021 09 02 Sources Edit Gjirokaster Encyclopaedia Britannica 2006 Gjirokaster or Gjinokaster The Columbia Encyclopedia 2004 The Unit 1996 Country Profile Bulgaria Albania The Unit Ward Philip 1983 Albania a travel guide Oleander Press ISBN 978 0 906672 41 9 External links EditGjirokaster at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Travel information from Wikivoyage bashkiagjirokaster gov al Official Website in Albanian visit gjirokastra com Official Tourism Website gjirokastra or Conservation and Development Organization Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gjirokaster amp oldid 1144447748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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