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Origin of the Albanians

The origin of the Albanians has been the subject of historical, linguistic, archaeological and genetic studies. Albanians continuously first appear in the historical record in Byzantine sources of the 11th century. At this point, they were already fully Christianized. Albanian forms a separate branch of Indo-European, first attested in the 15th century, having evolved from one of the Paleo-Balkan languages of antiquity.[1] The surviving pre-Christian Albanian culture shows that Albanian mythology and folklore are of Paleo-Balkanic origin and that almost all of their elements are pagan.[2]

Albanians have Paleo-Balkan origin. Theories which specifically they vary between attributing this origin to Illyrians, Thracians, Dacians, or another Paleo-Balkan people whose language was unattested; among those who support an Illyrian origin, there is a distinction between the theory of continuity from Illyrian times, and those proposing an in-migration of a different Illyrian population. These propositions are however not mutually exclusive. The Albanians are also one of Europe's populations with the highest number of common ancestors within their own ethnic group even though they share ancestors with other ethnic groups.[3]

Endonyms

Arbëresh

The two ethnonyms used by Albanians to refer to themselves are Arbëresh(ë)/Arbënesh(ë) (northwestern variant) and Shqiptar(ë). Arbëresh is the original Albanian ethnonym and forms that basis for most names of Albanians in foreign languages and the name of Albania as a country. Greek Arvanitai, Alvanitai and Alvanoi, Turkish Arnaut, Serbo-Croatian Arbanasi and others derive from this term. Two different theories exist for the Ethnonym Shqiptar. Demiraj posits that Shqiptar derives from verb shqipoj (speak clearly) from Latin excipio (understand).[4] It gradually replaced Arbëresh as the Albanian endonym by the end of the 18th century.

The second theory is the idea that Shqiptar originated from the Scapudar family in medieval Drivastum is an early occurrence of the term. However this theory does not make chronological sense. Shqiptar from the Scapudar family is considered chronologically impossible.

The third proposed etymology is that Shqiptar flows from the word shqiponjë (eagle).[5] Its first attestation with its present meaning is in the dictionary of Francesco Maria da Lecce (1702) who addresses his readers as my "dear Shqipëtar" in its preface. This third theory matches the laws of Albanian word formation.[6]

The ethnic name Albanian was used by Byzantine and Latin sources in the forms arb- and alb- since at least the 2nd century A.D,[7][a] and eventually in Old Albanian texts as an endonym. It was later replaced in Albania proper by the term Shqiptar, a change most likely trigged by the Ottoman conquests of the Balkans during the 15th century.[8] However, the ancient attestation of the ethnic designation is not considered a strong evidence of an Albanian continuity in the Illyrian region, since there are many examples in history of an ethnic name shifting from one ethnos to another.[7]

References to Albania

  • The names Albanoi and Albanopolis have been attested in ancient funeral inscriptions in present-day North Macedonia. The toponym Albanopolis has been found on a funeral inscription in Gorno Sonje, near the city of Skopje (ancient Scupi), present-day North Macedonia. It was excavated in 1931 by Nikola Vulić and its text was curated and published in 1982 by Borka Dragojević-Josifovska. The inscription in Latin reads "POSIS MESTYLU F[ILIUS] FL[AVIA] DELVS MVCATI F[ILIA] DOM[O] ALBANOP[OLI] IPSA DELVS" ("Posis Mestylu, son of Flavia Delus, daughter of Mucat, who comes from Albanopolis"). It dates to the end of the 1st century AD and the beginning of the 2nd century AD.[21]
  • The ethnonym Albanos was found on a funeral inscription from ancient Stobi in present-day North Macedonia, near Gradsko about 90 km to the southeast of Gorno Sonje. The inscription in ancient Greek reads "ΦΛ(ΑΒΙΩ) ΑΛΒΑΝΩ ΤΩ ΤΕΚΝΩ ΑΙΜΙΛΙΑΝΟΣ ΑΛΒΑΝΟ(Σ) ΜΝΗΜ(Η)Σ [ΧΑΡΗΝ]" ("In memory of Flavios Albanos, his son Aemilianos Albanos"). It dates to the 2nd/3rd century AD.[22]

References to the Albanians

Michael Attaleiates (1022-1080) mentions the term Albanoi twice and the term Arbanitai once. The term Albanoi is used first to describe the groups which rebelled in southern Italy and Sicily against the Byzantines in 1038–40. The second use of the term Albanoi is related to groups which supported the revolt of George Maniakes in 1042 and marched with him throughout the Balkans against the Byzantine capital, Constantinople. The term Arvanitai is used to describe a revolt of Bulgarians (Boulgaroi) and Arbanitai in the theme of Dyrrhachium in 1078–79. It is generally accepted that Arbanitai refers to the ethnonym of medieval Albanians. As such, it is considered to be the first attestation of Albanian as an ethnic group in Byzantine historiography.[23] The use of the term Albanoi in 1038-49 and 1042 as an ethnonym related to Albanians have been a subject of debate. In what has been termed the "Ducellier-Vrannousi" debate, Alain Ducellier proposed that both uses of the term referred to medieval Albanians. Era Vrannousi counter-suggested that the first use referred to Normans, while the second did not have an ethnic connotation necessarily and could be a reference to the Normans as "foreigners" (aubain) in Epirus which Maniakes and his army traversed.[23] The debate has never been resolved.[24] A newer synthesis about the second use of the term Albanoi by Pëllumb Xhufi suggests that the term Albanoi may have referred to Albanians of the specific district of Arbanon, while Arbanitai to Albanians in general regardless of the specific region they inhabited.[25]

  • The Arbanasi people are recorded as being 'half-believers' and speaking their own language in a Bulgarian text found in a Serbian manuscript dating to 1628; the text was written by an anonymous author that according to Radoslav Grujić (1934) dated to the reign of Samuel of Bulgaria (997–1014), or possibly, according to R. Elsie, 1000–1018.[26]
  • In History written in 1079–1080, Byzantine historian Michael Attaliates referred to the Albanoi as having taken part in a revolt against Constantinople in 1043 and to the Arbanitai as subjects of the duke of Dyrrhachium. It is disputed, however, whether the "Albanoi" of the events of 1043 refers to Albanians in an ethnic sense or whether "Albanoi" is a reference to folks from southern Italy under an archaic name (there was also a tribe of Italy by the name of Albani).[27] However a later reference to Albanians from the same Attaliates, regarding the participation of Albanians in a rebellion in 1078, is undisputed. That rebellion was led by Nikephoros Basilakes, doux of Dyrrhachium.[28]
  • Some authors (like Alain Ducellier, 1968[29]) believe that Arvanoi are mentioned in Book IV of the Alexiad by Anna Comnena (c. 1148). Others believe that this is a wrong reading and interpretation of the Greek phrase ἐξ Ἀρβάνων (i.e. ‘from Arvana’) found in the original manuscript and in one edition (Bonn, 1839) of the Alexiad.[30]
  • The earliest Serbian source mentioning "Albania" (Ar'banas') is a charter by Stefan Nemanja, dated 1198, which lists the region of Pilot (Pulatum) among the parts Nemanja conquered from Albania (ѡд Арьбанась Пилоть, "de Albania Pulatum").[31]
  • In the 12th to 13th centuries, Byzantine writers used the name Arbanon (Medieval Greek: Ἄρβανον) for a principality in the region of Kruja.
  • The oldest reference to Albanians in Epirus is from a Venetian document dating to 1210, which states that “the continent facing the island of Corfu is inhabited by Albanians”.[32]
  • A Ragusan document dating to 1285 states: "I heard a voice crying in the mountains in Albanian" (Audivi unam vocem clamantem in monte in lingua albanesca).[33]

Language

 
Albanian in the Paleo-Balkanic branch based on "The Indo-European Language Family" by Brian D. Joseph and Adam Hyllested (2022).

Pre-Indo-European linguistic substratum

Pre-Indo-European (PIE) sites are found throughout the territory of Albania. Such PIE sites existed in Maliq, Vashtëm, Burimas, Barç, Dërsnik in Korçë District, Kamnik in Kolonja, Kolsh in Kukës District, Rashtan in Librazhd and Nezir in Mat District.[34] As in other parts of Europe, these PIE people joined the migratory Indo-European tribes that entered the Balkans and contributed to the formation of the historical Paleo-Balkan tribes to which Albanians trace their origin. [..] At any rate, in this case, as in other similar cases, one should take into account that the previous populations during the process of assimilation by the immigrating IE tribes have played an important part in the formation of the various ethnic groups generated by their long symbiosis. Consequently, the IE languages developed in the Balkan Peninsula, in addition to their natural evolution, have also undergone a certain impact by the idioms of the assimilated Pre-IE peoples.[35] In terms of linguistics, the pre-Indo-European substrate language spoken in the southern Balkans has probably influenced pre-Proto-Albanian, the ancestor idiom of Albanian.[36] The extent of this linguistic impact cannot be determined with precision due to the uncertain position of Albanian among Paleo-Balkan languages and their scarce attestation.[37] Some loanwords, however, have been proposed such as shegë ("pomegranate") or lëpjetë ("orach", compare with Pre-Greek lápathon, λάπαθον, "monk's rhubarb").[38][36] Albanian is also the only language in the Balkans which has retained elements of the vigesimal numeral system - njëzet ("twenty"), dyzet ("forty") - which was prevalent in the Pre-Indo-European languages of Europe as the Basque language which broadly uses vigesimal numeration, highlights.[34]

This pre-Indo-European substratum has also been identified as one of the contributing cultures to the customs of Albanians.[39]

Attestation

The first attested mention of Albanian occurred in 1285 at the Venetian city of Ragusa (present-day Dubrovnik, Croatia) when a crime witness named Matthew testified: "I heard a voice crying in the mountains in Albanian" (Latin: Audivi unam vocem clamantem in monte in lingua albanesca).[40]

The earliest attested written specimens of Albanian are Formula e pagëzimit (1462) and Arnold Ritter von Harff's lexicon (1496). The first Albanian text written with Greek letters is a fragment of the Ungjilli i Pashkëve (Passover Gospel) from the 15 or 16th century. The first printed books in Albanian are Meshari (1555) and Luca Matranga's E mbsuame e krështerë (1592).[41]

However, as Fortson notes, Albanian written works existed before this point; they have simply been lost. The existence of written Albanian is explicitly mentioned in a letter attested from 1332, and the first preserved books, including both those in Gheg and in Tosk, share orthographic features that indicate that some form of common literary language had developed.[42]

Toponymy

In the Balkans and southern Italy, several toponyms, river and mountain names which have been attested since antiquity can be explained etymologically via Albanian or have evolved phonologically through Albanian and later adopted in other languages. Inherited toponyms from a Proto-Albanian language and the date of adoption of non-Albanian toponyms indicate in Albanology the regions were the Albanian language originated, evolved and expanded. Depending on which proposed etymology and phonological development linguists support, different etymologies are usually used to link Albanian to Illyrian, Messapic, Dardanian, Thracian or an unattested Paleo-Balkan language.

  • Brindisi is a town in southern Italy. Brundisium was originally a settlement of the Iapygian Messapians, descendants of an Illyrian people who migrated from the Balkans to Italy in Late Bronze/Early Iron Age transition. The name highlights the ties between Messapic to Albanian as Messapic brendo (stag) is linked to Old Gheg bri (horns).[43]
  • Bunë is a river in northwestern Albania, near the cities of Shkodër and Ulcinj (Ulqin). The majority of scholars consider it a directly inherited hydronym from Illyrian Barbanna . A less accepted proposition by Eqrem Çabej considers it an unrelated name which derives from buenë (overflow of waters). The hydronym Bunë via which Slavic Bojana emerged, is often seen as indication that Albanian was spoken in the pre-Slavic era in southern Montenegro.[44][45][46]
  • Drin is a river in northern Albania, Kosovo and North Macedonia. Similar hydronyms include Drino in southern Albania and Drina in Bosnia. It is generally considered to be of Illyrian origin.[47]
  • Durrës is a city in central Albania. It was founded as an ancient Greek colony and greatly expanded in Roman times. It was known as Epidamnos and Dyrrhachion/Dyrrhachium. Dyrrhachium is of Greek origin and refers to the position of the city on a rocky shore. The modern names of the city in Albanian (Durrës) and Italian (Durazzo, Italian pronunciation: [duˈrattso]) are derived from Dyrrachium/Dyrrachion. An intermediate, palatalized antecedent is found in the form Dyrratio, attested in the early centuries AD. The palatalized /-tio/ ending probably represents a phonetic change in the way the inhabitants of the city pronounced its name.[48] The preservation of old Doric /u/ indicates that the modern name derives from populations to whom the toponym was known in its original Doric pronunciation.[49] The initial stress in Albanian Durrës presupposes an Illyrian accentuation on the first syllable.[45] Theories which support local Illyrian-Albanian continuity interpret Durrës < Dyrratio as evidence that Albanian-speakers continuously lived in coastal central Albania. Other theories propose that the toponym doesn't necessarily show continuity but can equally be the evolution of a loanword acquired by a Proto-Albanian population which moved in the city and its area in late antiquity from northern Albanian regions.[50][51]
  • Epidamnos is the oldest known name of Durrës and it is the first name under which the ancient Greek Corinthian colony was known. It is widely considered to be of Illyrian origin, as first proposed by linguist Hans Krahe,[52] and is attested in Thucydides (5th century BC), Aristotle (4th century BC), and Polybius (2nd century BC).[53] Etymologically, Epidamnos may be related to Proto-Albanian *dami (cub, young animal, young bull) > dem (modern Albanian) as proposed by linguist Eqrem Çabej.[54]
  • Erzen is a river in central Albania. It derives from Illyrian Ardaxanos (*daksa "water", "sea") found in Daksa and the name of the Dassareti tribe.[55]
  • Ishëm is a river in central Albania. It is recorded as Illyrian Isamnus in antiquity. Albanian Ishëm derives directly from Isamnus and indicates that its ancestral language was spoken in the area.[45][56][57]
  • Mat is a river in northern Albania. It is generally considered to be of Illyrian origin and originally meant "river bank, shore". It evolved within Albanian as an inherited term from its ancestral language. It indicates that it was spoken in the Mat river valley. A similar hydronym, Matlumë, is found in Kaçanik.[58][59][60]
  • Nish (Niš) is a city in southeastern Serbia. It evolved from a toponym attested in Ancient Greek as ΝΑΙΣΣΟΣ (Naissos), which achieved its present form via phonetic changes in Proto-Albanian and thereafter entered Slavic. Nish might indicate that Proto-Albanians lived in the region in pre-Slavic times.[61] When this settlement happened is a matter of debate, as Proto-Albanians might have moved relatively late in antiquity in the area which might have been an eastern expansion of Proto-Albanian settlement as no other toponyms known in antiquity in the area presuppose an Albanian development.[57][62] The development of Nish < Naiss- may also represent a regional development in late antiquity Balkans which while related may not be identical with Albanian.[63]
  • Vjosë is a river in southern Albania and northern Greece. In antiquity, it formed part of the boundary between Illyrian and Epirotic Greek languages. In the early Middle Ages, the Vjosa (in Greek, Aoos or Vovousa) river valley was settled by Slavic peoples. A gradual evolution within Albanian and a borrowing by Slavic-speakers or a borrowing from Slavic *Vojusha into Albanian have been proposed for Albanian Vjosë.[64][65] Both propositions are disputed. Regardless of the etymology, the Vjosë valley is an area of Albanian-Slavic linguistic contact from the 6th-7th century onwards.[66]
  • Vlorë is a city in southwestern Albania. It was founded as ancient Greek colony Aulona (/Avlon/) in the pre-Roman era. Albanian Vlorë is a direct derivation from ancient Greek Aulon. A proposed Slavic intermediation from *Vavlona has been rejected as it doesn't conform to Albanian phonological development. The toponym has two forms, Vlorë (Tosk) and Vlonë (Gheg), which indicates that it was already in use among the population of Northern Albania before the appearance of rhotacism in Tosk.[67][68]
  • Shkodër is a city in northwestern Albania. It is one of the most significant settlements in Albania and in the pre-Roman era it was the capital of the Illyrian kingdom of Genthius. Late antiquity Scodra was a Romanized city, which even relatively late in the Middle Ages had a native Dalmatian-speaking population which called it Skudra. Slavic Skadar is a borrowing from the Romance name. The origin of Albanian Shkodër/Shkodra as a direct development of Illyrian Scodra or as the development of a Latin loanword in Proto-Albanian is a subject of debate. In theories which reject a direct derivation from Scodra, the possible break in linguistic continuity from the Illyrian form is invoked as indication that Albanian was not spoken continuously in Shkodra and the surrounding area from pre-Roman to late antiquity.[69][70][43]
  • Shkumbin is a river in central Albania. It derives from Latin Scampinus which replaced Illyrian Genusus, as recorded in Latin and ancient Greek literature. A Slavic intermediation has been rejected. Its inclusion in Latin loanwords into Proto-Albanian and phonetic evolution coincides with the historical existence of a large Roman town (near present-day Elbasan) which gave the river its new name.[57][71]
  • Shtip (Štip) is a city in eastern North Macedonia. It was known in antiquity as Astibo-s. It is generally acknowledged that Slavic Štip was acquired via Albanian Shtip.[61] About the date of settlement of Proto-Albanians in eastern Macedonia similar arguments as in the case of Nish have emerged.[57][62]

Linguistic reconstruction

Albanian is attested in a written form beginning only in the 15th century AD, when the Albanian ethnos was already formed. In the absence of prior data on the language, scholars have used the Latin and Slav loans into Albanian for identifying its location of origin.[72] Proto-Albanian had likely emerged before the 1st century AD, when contacts with Romance languages began to occur intensively.[73][74] Some scholars have attempted to conjecture the unattested language, and have eventually drawn up interpretations on the assumed proto-Albanian Urheimat and society based on the reconstructed lexicon.[75]

Pastoralism

That Albanian possesses a rich and "elaborated" pastoral vocabulary which has been taken to suggest Albanian society in ancient times was pastoral, with widespread transhumance, and stock-breeding particularly of sheep and goats.[76] Joseph takes interest in the fact that some of the lexemes in question have "exact counterparts" in Romanian.[76]

They appear to have been cattle breeders given the vastness of preserved native vocabulary pertaining to cow breeding, milking and so forth, while words pertaining to dogs tend to be loaned. Many words concerning horses are preserved, but the word for horse itself is a Latin loan.[77]

Hydronyms

Hydronyms present a complicated picture; the term for "sea" (det) is native and an "Albano-Germanic" innovation referring to the concept of depth, but a large amount of maritime vocabulary is loaned. Words referring to large streams and their banks tend to be loans, but lumë ("river") is native, as is rrymë (the flow of river water). Words for smaller streams and stagnant pools of water are more often native, but the word for "pond", pellg is in fact a semantically shifted descendant of the old Greek word for "high sea", suggesting a change in location after Greek contact. Albanian has maintained since Proto-Indo-European a specific term referring to a riverside forest (gjazë), as well as its words for marshes. Curiously, Albanian has maintained native terms for "whirlpool", "water pit" and (aquatic) "deep place", leading Orel to speculate that the Albanian Urheimat likely had an excess of dangerous whirlpools and depths.[75] However, all the words relating to seamanship appear to be loans.[78]

Vegetation

Regarding forests, words for most conifers and shrubs are native, as are the terms for "alder", "elm", "oak", "beech", and "linden", while "ash", "chestnut", "birch", "maple", "poplar", and "willow" are loans.[79]

Social organization

The original kinship terminology of Indo-European was radically reshaped; changes included a shift from "mother" to "sister", and were so thorough that only three terms retained their original function; the words for "son-in-law", "mother-in-law" and "father-in-law".[80] All the words for second-degree blood kinship, including "aunt", "uncle", "nephew", "niece", and terms for grandchildren, are ancient loans from Latin.[81]

Linguistic contacts

Overall patterns in loaning

Openness to loans has been called a "characteristic feature" of Albanian. The Albanian original lexical items directly inherited from Proto-Indo-European are far fewer in comparison to the loanwords, though loans are considered to be "perfectly integrated" and not distinguishable from native vocabulary on a synchronic level.[82] Although Albanian is characterized by the absorption of many loans, even, in the case of Latin, reaching deep into the core vocabulary, certain semantic fields nevertheless remained more resistant. Terms pertaining to social organization are often preserved, though not those pertaining to political organization, while those pertaining to trade are all loaned or innovated.[83]

While the words for plants and animals characteristic of mountainous regions are entirely original, the names for fish and for agricultural activities are often assumed to have been borrowed from other languages. However, considering the presence of some preserved old terms related to the sea fauna, some have proposed that this vocabulary might have been lost in the course of time after proto-Albanian tribes were pushed back into the inland during invasions.[84][85] Wilkes holds that the Slavic loans in Albanian suggest that contacts between the two populations took place when Albanians dwelt in forests 600–900 metres above sea level.[86] Rusakov notes that almost all lexemes related to seamanship in Albanian are loan-words, which may indicate that speakers of the proto-language did not live on the Adriatic coast or in close proximity to it.[78]

Greek

Linguistic contact between Albanian and Greek has been securely dated to the Iron Age. Previous contacts may include contacts between the respective post-PIE languages which gave rise to the two languages. According to Huld (1986), Ancient Greek loans originate from two distinct geographical groups; Greek-speaking populations from ancient Macedonia and the Greek colonies on the Adriatic coast.[87] It has been known since the 1910 work of German linguist Albert Thumb, that Albanian possesses a small number of Greek loans as old or older than its earliest Latin loans.[88][87] Krzysztof (2016) suggests that Doric Greek may have also received some loanwords from Proto-Albanian, that could be as early as the 7th century BC; he specifically points to seven words recorded by the Greek grammarian Hesychius of Alexandria (5th century AD), and particularly to the term ἀάνθα 'a kind of earring', which was first attested in the work of the choral lyric poet Alcman.[89]

Words borrowed from Greek (e.g. Gk (NW) mākhaná "device, instrument" > mokër "millstone", Gk (NW) drápanon > drapër "sickle" etc.) date back before the Christian era[90] and are mostly of the Doric Greek dialect,[91] which means that the ancestors of the Albanians were in contact with the northwestern part of Ancient Greek civilization and probably borrowed words from Greek cities (Dyrrachium, Apollonia, etc.) in the Illyrian territory, colonies which belonged to the Doric division of Greek, or from contacts in the Epirus area. The earliest Greek loans began to enter Albanian circa 600 BC, and are of Doric provenance, tending to refer to vegetables, fruits, spices, animals and tools. Joseph argues that this stratum reflects contacts between Greeks and Proto-Albanians from the 8th century BC onward, with the Greeks being either colonists on the Adriatic coast or Greek merchants inland in the Balkans. The second wave of Greek loans began after the split of the Roman empire in 395 and continued throughout the Byzantine, Ottoman and modern periods.[92]

An argument in favor of a northern origin for Albanian is the relatively small number of loanwords from Ancient Greek, mostly from Doric dialect, even though Southern Illyria neighbored the Classical Greek civilization and there were a number of Greek colonies along the Illyrian coastline.[93] According to Bulgarian linguist Vladimir I. Georgiev, the theory of an Illyrian origin for the Albanians is weakened by a lack of any Albanian names before the 12th century and the limited Greek influence in Albanian (See Jireček Line). In Georgiev's argument, if Albanians had been inhabiting a homeland situated near modern Albania continuously since ancient times, the number of Greek loanwords in Albanian should be higher.[94] According to Hermann Ölberg, the modern Albanian lexicon may only include 33 words of ancient Greek origin.[78]

However, in view of the amount of Albanian–Greek isoglosses, which the scholar Vladimir Orel considers surprisingly high (in comparison with the Indo-Albanian and Armeno-Albanian ones), the author concludes that this particular proximity could be the result of intense secondary contacts of two proto-dialects.[95]

Curtis (2012) does not consider the number of surviving loanwords to be a valid argument, as many Greek loans were likely lost through replacement by later Latin and Slavic loans, just as notoriously happened to most native Albanian vocabulary.[96] Some scholars such as Çabej[91][97] and Huld[87][b] have challenged the argument that Greek evidence implies a "northern" origin, instead suggesting the opposite, that the specifically Northwestern/Doric affiliations and ancient dating of Greek loans imply a specifically Western Balkan Albanian presence to the north and west of Greeks specifically in antiquity, though Huld cautions that the classical "precursors" of the Albanians would be "'Illyrians' to classical writers", but that the Illyrian label is hardly "enlightening" since classical ethnology was imprecise.[87] Example include Ancient Greek λάχανον and its Albanian reflex lakër because it would appear to have been loaned before <χ> changed from an aspirated stop /kʰ/ to a fricative /x/, μᾱχανά and its Albanian reflex mokër which likewise seems to reflect a stop /kʰ/ for <χ> and also must be specifically Doric or Northwestern (other Greek dialects have <e> or <η> rather than <ά>), and θωράκιον and its Albanian reflex targozë which would appear to have predated the frication of Greek <θ> (before the shift in Koine, representing /tʰ/).[96]

Latin and early Romance loans

Latin loans are dated to the period of 167 BC to 400 AD.[98] 167 BC coincides with the fall of the kingdom ruled by Gentius and reflects the early date of the entry of Latin-based vocabulary in Albanian. It entered Albanian in the Early Proto-Albanian stage and evolved in later stages as a part of the Proto-Albanian vocabulary and within its phonological system. Albanian is one of the oldest languages that came into contact with Latin and adopted Latin vocabulary. It has preserved 270 Latin-based words which are found in all Romance languages, 85 words which aren't found in Romance languages, 151 which are found in Albanian but not in Balkan Romance and its descendant Romanian, and 39 words which are found only in Albanian and Romanian.[99] The contact zone between Albanian and Romanian was likely located in eastern and southeastern Serbia.[100] The preservation of Proto-Albanian vocabulary and linguistic features in Romanian highlights that at least partly Balkan Latin emerged as Albanian-speakers shifted to Latin.[101]

The other layer of linguistic contacts of Albanian with Latin involves Old Dalmatian, a western Balkan derivative of Balkan Latin. Albanian maintained links with both coastal western and central inland Balkan Latin formations.[102] Hamp indicates there are words that follow Dalmatian phonetic rules in Albanian, giving as an example the word drejt 'straight' < d(i)rectus matching developments in Old Dalmatian traita < tract.[93] Romanian scholars Vatasescu and Mihaescu, using lexical analysis of Albanian, have concluded that Albanian was also heavily influenced by an extinct Romance language that was distinct from both Romanian and Dalmatian. Because the Latin words common to only Romanian and Albanian are significantly less than those that are common to only Albanian and Western Romance, Mihaescu argues that Albanian evolved in a region with much greater contact with Western Romance regions than with Romanian-speaking regions, and located this region in present-day Albania, Kosovo and Western North Macedonia, spanning east to Bitola and Pristina.[103]

The Christian religious vocabulary of Albanian is mostly Latin as well, including even the basic terms such "to bless", "altar," and "to receive communion". It indicates that Albanians were Christianized under the Latin-based liturgy and ecclesiastical order which would be known as "Roman Catholic" in later centuries.[92]

Slavic

The contacts began after the South Slavic migrations of the Balkans in the 6th and 7th centuries. The modern Albanian lexicon contains around 250 Slavic borrowings that are shared among all the dialects.[104] Slavic settlement probably shaped the present geographic spread of the Albanians. It is likely that Albanians took refuge in the mountainous areas of northern and central Albania, eastern Montenegro, western North Macedonia, and Kosovo. Long-standing contact between Slavs and Albanians might have been common in mountain passages and agriculture or fishing areas, in particular in the valleys of the White and Black branches of the Drin and around the Shkodër and Ohrid lakes. Such contact with one another in these areas has caused many changes in Slavic and Albanian local dialects.[105]

As Albanian and Slavic have been in contact since the early Middle Ages, toponymical loanwords in both belong to different chronological strata and reveal different periods of acquisition. Old Slavic loanwords into Albanian develop early Slavic *s as sh and *y as u within Albanian phonology of that era. Norbert Jokl defined this older period from the earliest Albanian-Slavic contacts to 1000 AD at the latest, while contemporary linguists like Vladimir Orel define it as between the 6th and the 8th century AD.[106][107] Newer loanwords preserve Slavic /s/ and other features which no longer show phonological development within Albanian. Such toponyms from the earlier period of contact in Albania include Bushtricë (Kukës),[108] Dishnica (Përmet),[109] Dragoshtunjë (Elbasan),[110] Leshnjë (Leshnjë, Berat and other areas),[111] Shelcan (Elbasan), Shishtavec (Kukës/Gora), Shuec (Devoll) and Shtëpëz (Gjirokastër),[112] Shopël (Iballë),[113] Veleshnjë (Skrapar)[114] and others.[115] Similar toponyms in a later period produced different results e.g. Bistricë (Sarandë) instead of Bushtricë or Selcan (Këlcyrë) instead of Shelcan.[116] Part of the toponyms of Slavic origin were acquired in Albanian before the finalization of the Slavic liquid metathesis (ca. end of the 8th century). They include Ardenicë (Lushnjë), Berzanë (Lezhë), Gërdec and Berzi (Tiranë) and a cluster of toponyms along the route Berat-Tepelenë-Përmet.[117]

Unidentified Romance language hypothesis

It has been concluded that the partial Latinization of Roman-era Albania was heavy in coastal areas, in the plains, and along the Via Egnatia, which passed through Albania. In these regions, Madgearu notes that the survival of Illyrian names and the depiction of people with Illyrian dress on gravestones is not enough to prove successful resistance against Romanization, and that in these regions there were many Latin inscriptions and Roman settlements. Madgearu concludes that only the northern mountain regions escaped Romanization. In some regions, Madgearu concludes that it has been shown that in some areas a Latinate population that survived until at least the seventh century passed on local place names that had mixed characteristics of Eastern and Western Romance into Albanian.[103]

Archaeology

 
Glass necklace, 7th - 8th century, Shurdhah

The Komani-Kruja culture is an archaeological culture attested from late antiquity to the Middle Ages in central and northern Albania, southern Montenegro and similar sites in the western parts of North Macedonia.[118][119] It consists of settlements usually built below hillforts along the Lezhë (Praevalitana)-Dardania and Via Egnatia road networks which connected the Adriatic coastline with the central Balkan Roman provinces. Its type site is Komani and the nearby Dalmace hill in the Drin river valley. Limited excavations campaigns occurred until the 1990s. Objects from a vast area covering nearby regions the entire Byzantine Empire, the northern Balkans and Hungary and sea routes from Sicily to Crimea were found in Dalmace and other sites coming from many different production centres: local, Byzantine, Sicilian, Avar-Slavic, Hungarian, Crimean and even possibly Merovingian and Carolingian.[120] Within Albanian archaeology, based on the continuity of pre-Roman Illyrian forms in the production of several types of local objects found in graves, the population of Komani-Kruja was framed as a group which descended from the local Illyrians who "re-asserted their independence" from the Roman Empire after many centuries and formed the core of the later historical region of Arbanon.[72][need quotation to verify] As research focused almost entirely on grave contexts and burial sites, settlements and living spaces were often ignored.[121] Yugoslav archaeology proposed an opposite narrative and tried to frame the population as Slavic, especially in the region of western Macedonia.[122] Archaeological research has shown that these sites were not related to regions then inhabited by Slavs and even in regions like Macedonia, no Slavic settlements had been founded in the 7th century.[123]

What was established in this early phase of research was that Komani-Kruja settlements represented a local, non-Slavic population which has been described as Romanized Illyrian, Latin-speaking or Latin-literate.[124][125] This is corroborated by the absence of Slavic toponyms and survival of Latin ones in the Komani-Kruja area. In terms of historiography, the thesis of older Albanian archaeology was an untestable hypothesis as no historical sources exist which can link Komani-Kruja to the first definite attestation of medieval Albanians in the 11th century.[124][125] Archaeologically, while it was considered possible and even likely that Komani-Kruja sites were used continuously from the 7th century onwards, it remained an untested hypothesis as research was still limited.[126] Whether this population represented local continuity or arrived at an earlier period from a more northern location as the Slavs entered the Balkans remained unclear at the time but regardless of their ultimate geographical origins, these groups maintained Justinianic era cultural traditions of the 6th century possibly as a statement of their collective identity and derived their material cultural references to the Justinianic military system.[127] In this context, they may have used burial customs as a means of reference to an "idealized image of the past Roman power".[127]

Research greatly expanded after 2009 and the first survey of Komani's topography was produced in 2014. Until then, except for the area of the cemetery the size of the settlement and its extension remained unknown. In 2014, it was revealed that Komani occupied an area of more than 40 ha, a much larger territory than originally thought. Its oldest settlement phase dates to the Hellenistic era.[128] Proper development began in the late antiquity and continued well into the Middle Ages (13th-14th centuries). It indicates that Komani was a late Roman fort and an important trading node in the networks of Praevalitana and Dardania. In the Avar-Slavic raids, communities from present-day northern Albania and nearby areas clustered around hill sites for better protection as is the case of other areas like Lezha and Sarda. During the 7th century as Byzantine authority was reestablished after the Avar-Slavic raids and the prosperity of the settlements increased, Komani saw increase in population and a new elite began to take shape. Increase in population and wealth was marked by the establishment of new settlements and new churches in their vicinity. Komani formed a local network with Lezha and Kruja and in turn this network was integrated in the wider Byzantine Mediterranean world, maintained contacts with the northern Balkans and engaged in long-distance trade.[129] Tom Winnifrith (2020) says that the Komani-Kruja culture shows that in that area a Latin-Illyrian civilization survived, to emerge later as Albanians and Vlachs. The lack of interest among Slavs for the barren mountains of Northern Albania would explain the survival of Albanian as a language.[130]

Paleo-Balkan linguistic theories

 
Map made by Romanian scholarship according to the theory that Proto-Albanian and proto-Romanian contact zones were Dacia Mediterranea and Dardania in the 3rd century, while not excluding Romanian continuity in Dacia
 
Rival "immigrationist" view of Romanian origins where Albanian–Romanian contact occurred either in Dardania/Northeast Albania or in Western Thrace, assuming that Albanian would have been spoken in and/or near one or both of these two regions during the 6th to 9th centuries

The general consensus is that Albanians originate from one or possibly a mixture of Paleo-Balkan peoples but which specific peoples is a matter of continuing debate.[131][132][133]

Messapic is the only sufficiently attested language via which commonly accepted Illyrian-Albanian connections have been produced. It is unclear whether Messapic was an Illyrian dialect or if it diverged enough to be a separate language, although in general it is treated as a distinct language. Dardanian in the context of a distinct language has gained prominence in the possible genealogy of the Albanian language in recent decades. In the genealogy of Thracian, V. Georgiev who proposed "Daco-Mysian" as the ancestral language of Albanian, considered it to be a separate language from Thracian.[134] From a "genealogical standpoint", Messapic is the closest at least partially attested language to Albanian. Hyllested & Joseph (2022) label this Albanian-Messapic branch as Illyric and in agreement with recent bibliography identify Greco-Phrygian as the IE branch closest to the Albanian-Messapic one. These two branches form an areal grouping - which is often called "Balkan IE" - with Armenian.[135]

The two broader main linguistic groupings which have been proposed as ancestral variants of Albanian are Illyrian and Thracian.[136] The Illyrian linguistic theory has some consensus, but Illyrian language is too little attested for definite comparisons to be made. Further issues are linked to the definitions of "Illyrian" and "Thracian" which are vague and aren't applied to the same areas which were considered to be part of Illyria and Thrace in antiquity.[137][136] In contemporary research, two main onomastic provinces have been defined in which Illyrian personal names occur; the southern Illyrian or south-eastern Dalmatian province (Albania, Montenegro and their hinterland) and the central Illyrian or middle Dalmatian-Pannonian province (parts of Croatia, Bosnia and western Serbia). The region of the Dardani (modern Kosovo, parts of northern North Macedonia, parts of eastern Serbia) saw the overlap of the southern/south-eastern, Dalmatian and local anthroponymy.[138] A third area around modern Slovenia sometimes considered part of Illyria in antiquity is considered to have been closer to Venetic.[139][140]

Eric Hamp distanced categorization of Albanian from particular historical groupings and their unresolved issues and treated it as a separate undocumented Paleo-Balkan language for the purpose of research clarity. As such, in recent decades it has become preferable to treat historical languages like Illyrian and Thracian and existing ones like Albanian as separate branches within the Indo-European family.[78]

There is a debate on whether the Illyrian language was a centum or a satem language. It is also uncertain whether Illyrians spoke a homogeneous language or rather a collection of different but related languages that were wrongly considered the same language by ancient writers. The Venetic tribes, formerly considered Illyrian, are no longer considered categorised with Illyrians.> The same is sometimes said of the Thracian language. For example, based on the toponyms and other lexical items, Thracian and Dacian were probably different but related languages.[citation needed]

Albanian shows traces of satemization within the Indo-European language tree, however the majority of Albanologists[141] hold that unlike most satem languages it has preserved the distinction of /kʷ/ and /gʷ/ from /k/ and /g/ before front vowels (merged in satem languages), and there is a debate whether Illyrian was centum or satem. On the other hand, Dacian[142] and Thracian[143] seem to belong to satem.

The debate is often politically charged, and to be conclusive, more evidence is needed. Such evidence unfortunately may not be easily forthcoming because of a lack of sources.[144]

Illyrian

 
Illyrian tribes in the 1st-2nd centuries CE.

The theory that Albanians were related to the Illyrians was proposed for the first time by the Swedish[145] historian Johann Erich Thunmann in 1774.[146] The scholars who advocate an Illyrian origin are numerous.[147][148][149][150] Those who argue in favour of an Illyrian origin maintain that the indigenous Illyrian tribes dwelling in South Illyria (including today's Albania) went up into the mountains when Slavs occupied the lowlands,[151][152] while another version of this hypothesis states that the Albanians are the descendants of Illyrian tribes located between Dalmatia and the Danube who spilled south.[153]

Some of the arguments for the Illyrian-Albanian connection have been as follows:[150][154]

  • From what is known from the old Balkan populations territories (Greeks, Illyrians, Thracians, Dacians), Albanian is spoken in a region where Illyrian was spoken in ancient times.[90]
  • There is no evidence of any major migration into Albanian territory since the records of Illyrian occupation.[90] Because descent from Illyrians makes "geographical sense" and there is no linguistic or historical evidence proving a replacement, then the burden of proof lies on the side of those who would deny a connection of Albanian with Illyrian.[155]
  • The Albanian tribal society has preserved the ancient Illyrian social structure based on tribal units.[156][157] In addition, Çabej[158] analyzed the morphology of some tribal names and pointed out that the Illyrian suffix -at appeared in the names of Illyrian tribes, such as Docleatae, Labeatae, Autariates, Delamatae correspondends to the suffix -at appeared in the 15th century Albanian tribes names like Bakirat and Demat; in Albania today, the suffixes of the names of some villages, such as Dukat and Filat, do match to the Illyrian one, reinforcing Albania's position as a direct descendant of the Illyrians.
  • Many of what remain as attested words to Illyrian have an Albanian explanation and also a number of Illyrian lexical items (toponyms, hydronyms, oronyms, anthroponyms, etc.) have been linked to Albanian.[159]
  • Words borrowed from Latin (e.g. Latin aurum > ar "gold", gaudium > gaz "joy" etc.[160]) date back before the Christian era,[154][90] while the Illyrians on the territory of modern Albania were the first from the old Balkan populations to be conquered by Romans in 229–167 BC, the Thracians were conquered in 45 AD and the Dacians in 106 AD.
  • The characteristics of the Albanian dialects Tosk and Gheg[161] in the treatment of the native and loanwords from other languages, have led to the conclusion that the dialectal split occurred after Christianisation of the region (4th century AD) and at the time of the Slavic migration to the Balkans[90][162] or thereafter between the 6th to 7th century AD[163] with the historic boundary between the Gheg and Tosk dialects being the Shkumbin river[164] which straddled the Jireček line.[154][165]

Messapic

 
Iapygian migrations in the early first millennium BC.

Messapic is an Iron Age language spoken in Apulia by the Iapygians (Messapians, Peucetians, Daunians), which settled in Italy as part of an Illyrian migration from the Balkans in the transitional period between the Bronze and Iron Ages.[166] As Messapic was attested after 500+ years of development in the Italian peninsula, it's generally treated as distinct linguistically from Illyrian. Both languages are placed in the same branch of Indo-European. Eric Hamp has grouped them under "Messapo-Illyrian" which is further grouped with Albanian under "Adriatic Indo-European".[167] Other schemes group the three languages under "General Illyrian" and "Western Paleo-Balkan".[168] Messapian shares several exclusive lexical correspondences and general features with Albanian. Whether Messapian and Albanian share common features because of a common ancestral Illyrian idiom or whether these are features which developed in convergence among the languages of their grouping in the territory of Illyria. Shared cognates and features indicate a closer link between the two languages.[169] The cognates include Messapic aran and Albanian arë ("field"), biliā and bijë ("daughter"), menza- (in the name Manzanas) and mëz ("foal"), brendion (in Brundisium) and bri (horn) .[170] Some Messapian toponyms like Manduria in Apulia have no etymological forms outside Albanian linguistic sources.[171] Other linguistic elements such as particles, prepositions, suffixes and phonological features of the Messapic language find singular affinities with Albanian.[172]

Thracian or Daco-Moesian

Aside from an Illyrian origin, a Dacian or Thracian origin is also hypothesized. There are a number of factors taken as evidence for a Dacian or Thracian origin of Albanians. Scholars who support a Dacian origin maintain on their side that Albanians moved southwards between the 3rd and 6th centuries AD from the Moesian area, in present-day Romania.[173] Others argue instead for a Thracian origin and maintain that the proto-Albanians are to be located in the area between Niš, Skopje, Sofia and Albania[174] or between the Rhodope and Balkan Mountains, from which they moved to present-day Albania before the arrival of the Slavs.[175] According to Vladimir Orel, for example, the territory associated with proto-Albanian almost certainly does not correspond with that of modern Albania, i.e. the Illyrian coast, but rather that of Dacia Ripensis and farther north.[176]

The Romanian historian I. I. Russu has originated the theory that Albanians represent a massive migration of the Carpi population pressed by the Slavic migrations. Due to political reasons the book was first published in 1995 and translated in German by Konrad Gündisch.[177]

German historian Gottfried Schramm derived the Albanians from the Christianized Bessi, after their remnants were pushed by Slavs and Bulgars during the 9th century westwards into today Albania,[178] From a linguistic point of view it emerges that the Thracian-Bessian hypothesis of the origin of Albanian should be rejected, since only very little comparative linguistic material is available (the Thracian is attested only marginally, while the Bessian is completely unknown), but at the same time the individual phonetic history of Albanian and Thracian clearly indicates a very different sound development that cannot be considered as the result of one language. Furthermore, the Christian vocabulary of Albanian is mainly Latin, which speaks against the construct of a "Bessian church language".[179] The elite of the Bessi tribe was gradually Hellenized.[180][181] Low level of borrowings from Greek in the Albanian language is a further argument against the identification of Albanian with the Bessi.[182]

Cities whose names follow Albanian phonetic laws – such as Shtip (Štip), Shkupi (Skopje) and Nish (Niš) – lie in the areas, believed to historically been inhabited by Thracians, Paionians and Dardani; the latter is most often considered an Illyrian tribe by ancient historians. While there still is no clear picture of where the Illyrian-Thracian border was, Niš is mostly considered Illyrian territory.[183]

There are some close correspondences between Thracian and Albanian words.[184] However, as with Illyrian, most Dacian and Thracian words and names have not been closely linked with Albanian (v. Hamp). Also, many Dacian and Thracian placenames were made out of joined names (such as Dacian Sucidava or Thracian Bessapara; see List of Dacian cities and List of ancient Thracian cities), while modern Albanian does not allow this.[184] Many city names were composed of an initial lexical element affixed to -dava, -daua, -deva, -deba, -daba, or -dova, which meant "city" or "town" Endings on more southern regions are exclusively -bria ("town, city"), -disza, -diza, -dizos ("fortress, walled settlement"), -para, -paron, -pera, -phara ("town, village"). Most Illyrian names are composed of a single unit; many Thracian ones are made of two units joined together. Several Thracian place-names end in -para, for example, which is thought to mean 'ford', or -diza, which is thought to mean 'fortress'. Thus in the territory of the Bessi, a well-known Thracian tribe, we have the town of Bessapara, 'ford of the Bessi'. The structure here is the same as in many European languages: thus the 'town of Peter' can be called Peterborough, Petrograd, Petersburg, Pierreville, and so on. But the crucial fact is that this structure is impossible in Albanian, which can only say 'Qytet i Pjetrit', not 'Pjeterqytet'. If para were the Albanian for 'ford', then the place-name would have to be 'Para e Besseve'; this might be reduced in time to something like 'Parabessa', but it could never become 'Bessapara'. And what is at stake here is not some superficial feature of the language, which might easily change over time, but a profound structural principle. This is one of the strongest available arguments to show that Albanian cannot have developed out of Thracian or Dacian.[185]

Bulgarian linguist Vladimir I. Georgiev posits that Albanians descend from a Dacian population from Moesia, now the Morava region of eastern Serbia, and that Illyrian toponyms are found in a far smaller area than the traditional area of Illyrian settlement.[100] According to Georgiev, Latin loanwords into Albanian show East Balkan Latin (proto-Romanian) phonetics, rather than West Balkan (Dalmatian) phonetics.[186] Combined with the fact that the Romanian language contains several hundred words similar only to Albanian, Georgiev proposes that Albanian formed between the 4th and 6th centuries in or near modern-day Romania, which was Dacian territory.[94] He suggests that Romanian is a fully Romanised Dacian language, whereas Albanian is only partly so.[94] Albanian and Eastern Romance also share grammatical features (see Balkan language union) and phonological features, such as the common phonemes or the rhotacism of "n".[93] This theory however has been challenged and dismantled by other scholars.[187][188] While Noel Malcolm suggests Romanian and Aromanian originated in the Southern Balkans from Romanized Illyrians[189]

Apart from the linguistic theory that Albanian is more akin to East Balkan Romance (i.e. Dacian substrate) than West Balkan Romance (i.e. Illyrian/Dalmatian substrate), Georgiev also notes that marine words in Albanian are borrowed from other languages, suggesting that Albanians were not originally a coastal people.[94] According to Georgiev the scarcity of Greek loan words also supports a Dacian theory – if Albanians originated in the region of Illyria there would surely be a heavy Greek influence.[94] According to historian John Van Antwerp Fine, who does define "Albanians" in his glossary as "an Indo-European people, probably descended from the ancient Illyrians",[190] nevertheless states that "these are serious (non-chauvinistic) arguments that cannot be summarily dismissed."[94] Romanian scholars Vatasescu and Mihaescu, using lexical analysis of Albanian, have concluded that Albanian was also heavily influenced by an extinct Romance language that was distinct from both Romanian and Dalmatian. Because the Latin words common to only Romanian and Albanian are significantly less than those that are common to only Albanian and Western Romance, Mihaescu argues that Albanian evolved in a region with much greater contact to Western Romance regions than to Romanian-speaking regions, and located this region in present-day Albania, Kosovo and Western North Macedonia, spanning east to Bitola and Pristina.[103]

An argument against a Thracian origin (which does not apply to Dacian) is that most Thracian territory was on the Greek half of the Jireček Line, aside from varied Thracian populations stretching from Thrace into Albania, passing through Paionia and Dardania and up into Moesia; it is considered that most Thracians were Hellenized in Thrace (v. Hoddinott) and Macedonia.

The Dacian theory could also be consistent with the known patterns of barbarian incursions. Although there is no documentation of an Albanian migration, "during the fourth to sixth centuries the Rumanian region was heavily affected by large-scale invasion of Goths and Slavs, and the Morava valley (in Serbia) was a possible main invasion route and the site of the earliest known Slavic sites. Thus this would have been a region from which an indigenous population would naturally have fled".[94]

Genetic studies

 
 
Albanian groups in traditional clothes during folklore festivals: from Tropojë (left) and Skrapar (right)

Various genetic studies have been done on the European population, some of them including current Albanian population, Albanian-speaking populations outside Albania, and the Balkan region as a whole. Albanians share similar genetics with neighbouring ethnic populations with close clusters forming primarily with mainland Greeks and southern Italian populations.[191][192][193][194]

Y-DNA

The three haplogroups most strongly associated with Albanian people are E-V13, R1b and J2b-L283.

  • E-V13, the most common European sub-clade of E1b1b1a (E-M78) represents about 1/3 of all Albanian men and peaks in Kosovo (~40%). The current distribution of this lineage might be the result of several demographic expansions from the Balkans, such as that associated with the Balkan Bronze Age, and more recently, during the Roman era with the so-called "rise of Illyrian soldiery".[195][196][197][198][199] The peak of the haplogroup in Kosovo, however, has been attributed to genetic drift.[196]
  • R1b-M269 represents about 1/5 of Albanian men, mostly under clades R-Z2103 and R-PF7562. It is linked with the introduction of the Indo-European languages in the Balkans.[200] The oldest R1b (> R-RPF7562) sample in historically Albanian-inhabited regions has been found in EBA Çinamak, northern Albania, 2663-2472 calBCE (4045±25 BP, PSUAMS-7926). In the same site during the Iron Age, half of the men carried R-M269 (R-CTS1450 x1).[201]
  • J2b-L283 represents 14-18% of Albanian men.[202] It peaks in northern Albania. The oldest J-L283 (> J-Z597) sample in Albania found in MBA Shkrel as early as the 19th century BC.[201] It first spread from the northwestern Balkans southwards during the EBA/MBA with cultures likes Cetina (Dalmatia) and Cetina-derived groups which have yielded most J-L283 samples in antiquity.[201] In a 2022 study, J-L283 and its paternal clade J-M241 were found in three out of seven Daunian samples.[203] In IA Çinamak(northern Albania), half of the samples belonged to J-L283.[201]
  • Y haplogroup I is represented by I1 more common in northern Europe and I2 where several of its sub-clades are found in significant amounts in the South Slavic population. The specific I sub-clade which has attracted most discussion in Balkan studies currently referred to as I2a1b, defined by SNP M423[204][205] This clade has higher frequencies to the north of the Albanophone area, in Dalmatia and Bosnia.[196] The expansion of I2a-Din took place during Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages and today is common in Slavic speaking peoples.[206]
  • Haplogroup R1a is common in Central and Eastern Europe, especially in Slavic nations,[207] (and is also common in Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent). In the Balkans, it is strongly associated with Slavic areas.[196]

A study by Battaglia et al. in 2008[195] found the following haplogroup distributions among Albanians in Albania itself:

N E-M78* E1b1b1a* E-M78 V13 E1b1b1a2 G P15* G2a* I-M253* I1* I M423 I2a1* I M223 I2b1 J M267* J1* J M67* J2a1b* J M92 J2a1b1 J M241 J2b2 R M17* R1a1* R M269 R1b1b2
55 1.8%
(1/55)
23.6%
(13/55)
1.8%
(1/55)
3.6%
(2/55)
14.5%
(8/55)
3.6%
(2/55)
3.6%
(2/55)
3.6%
(2/55)
1.8%
(1/55)
14.5%
(8/55)
9.1%
(5/55)
18.2%
(10/55)

The same study by Battaglia et al. (2008) also found the following distributions among Albanians in North Macedonia:

N E-M78* E1b1b1a* E-M78 V13 E1b1b1a2 E-M123 E1b1b1c G P15* G2a* I M253* I1* I P37.2* I2a* I M423 I2a1* I M26 I2a2 J M267* J1* J M67* J2a1b* J M241 J2b2 R M17* R1a1* R M269 R1b1b2
64 1.6%
(1/64)
34.4%
(22/64)
3.1%
(2/64)
1.6%
(1/64)
4.7%
(3/64)
1.6%
(1/64)
9.4%
(6/64)
1.6%
(1/64)
6.3%
(4/64)
1.6%
(1/64)
14.1%
(9/64)
1.6%
(1/64)
18.8%
(12/64)

The same study by Battaglia et al. (2008) also found the following distributions among Albanians in Albania itself and Albanians in North Macedonia:

N E-M78* E1b1b1a* E-M78 V13 E1b1b1a2 E-M123 E1b1b1c G P15* G2a* I M253* I1* I P37.2* I2a* I M423 I2a1* I M26 I2a2 I M223 I2b1 J M267* J1* J M67* J2a1b* J M92 J2a1b1 J M241 J2b2 R M17* R1a1* R M269 R1b1b2
55+
64=
119
1.68%
(2/119)
29.4%
(35/119)
1.68%
(2/119)
1.68%
(2/119)
4.2%
(5/119)
0.84%
(1/119)
11.76%
(14/119)
0.84%
(1/119)
1.68%
(2/119)
5.04%
(6/119)
2.52%
(3/119)
0.84%
(1/119)
14.3%
(17/119)
5.04%
(6/119)
18.5%
(22/119)

A study by Peričić et al. in 2005[196] found the following Y-Dna haplogroup frequencies in Albanians from Kosovo with E-V13 subclade of haplogroup E1b1b representing 43.85% of the total (note that Albanians from other regions have slightly lower percentages of E-V13, but similar J2b and R1b):

N E-M78* E3b1 E-M78* α* E3b1-α E-M81* E3b2 E-M123* E3b3 J-M241* J2e1 I-M253* I1a I-P37* I1b*(xM26) R-M173* R1b R SRY-1532* R1a R P*(xQ,R1)
114 1.75%
(2/114)
43.85%
(50/114)
0.90%
(1/114)
0.90%
(1/114)
16.70%
(19/114)
5.25%
(6/114)
2.70%
(3/114)
21.10%
(24/114)
4.40%
(5/114)
1.75%
(2/114)

The same study by Peričić et al. in 2005[196] found the following Y-Dna haplogroup frequencies in Albanians from Kosovo with E-V13 subclade of haplogroup E1b1b representing 43.85% of the total (note that Albanians from other regions have slightly lower percentages of E-V13, but similar J2b and R1b):

N E3b1-M78 R1b-M173 J2e-M102 R1a-M17 I1b* (xM26)-P37 I-M253* I1a
114 45.60%
(52/114)
21.10%
(24/114)
16.70%
(19/114)
4.40%
(5/114)
2.70%
(3/114)
5.25%
(6/114)
Comparison of haplogroups among Albanian subgroups
Population Language family
[Table 1]
n
[Table 2]
R1b
[Table 3]
n R1a n I n E1b1b n E1b1a n J n G n N n T n L n H
Albanians IE (Albanian) 106 23.58%
(25/106)[205]
19
44
E-M78a
31.58%
(6/19)
Cruciani2004[199]

E-M78
25%
(11/44)[208]
56 J-M102
14.29%
(8/56)
J-M67
3.57%
(2/56)
J-M92
1.79%
(1/56)
J-M172
J2
19.64%
(11/56)

J-M267
J1
=3.57%
(2/56)

23.21%(13/56)[208]
Albanians IE (Albanian) 51 R1b
M173
17.65%
(9/51)[198]
51 R1a
M17
9.8%
(5/51)[198]
106 I1b*
(xM26)
P37
16.98%
(18/106)[205]
63 E3b1
M78
26.98%
(17/63)[208]
Cruciani2004[199]
56 J2e
M102
14.29%
(8/56)[208]
Kosovo Albanians (Pristina) IE (Albanian) 114 21.10%
(24/114)[196]
114 4.42%
(5/114)[196]
114 (I1a)
5.31%
(6/114)

I1b*(xM26)
2.65%
(3/114)

7.96%
(9/114)[196]
114 (E3b1)
1.75%
(2/114)
(E3b1-α)
43.85%
(50/114)

(E3b2)
0.90%
(1/114)

(E3b3)
0.90%
(1/114)

47.40%
(54/114)[196]
114 (J2e1)
16.70%
(19/114)[196]
Albanians (Tirana) IE (Albanian) 30 18.3[209] 30 8.3[209] 30 11.7[209] 30 28.3[209] 30 0.0[209] 30 20.0[209] 30 3.3[209]
Albanians IE (Albanian) 55 (R1b1b2)
18.2%
(10/55)[195]
55 (R1a1*)
9.1%
(5/55)[195]
55 (I1*)
3.6%
(2/55)
(I2a1*)
14.5%
(8/55)
(I2b1)
3.6%
(2/55)

21.7%
(12/55)[195]
55 (E-M78)
1.8%
(1/55)
(E-V13)
23.6%
(13/55)

25.4%
(14/55)[195]
55 0.0[195] 55 (J1*)
3.6%
(2/55)
(J2a1b*)
3.6%
(2/55)
(J2a1b1)
1.8%
(1/55)
(J2b2)
14.5%
(8/55)

23.5%
(13/55)[195]
55 (G2a*)
1.8%
(1/55)[195]
55 0.0[195] 55 0.0[195] 55 0.0[195]
Albanians (North Macedonia) IE (Albanian) 64 (R1b1b2)
18.8%
(12/64)[195]
64 (R1a1*)
1.6%
(1/64)[195]
64 (I1*)
4.7%
(3/64)
(I2a*)
1.6%
(1/64)
(I2a1*)
9.4%
(6/64)
(I2a2)
1.6%
(1/64)

17.3%
(11/64)[195]
64 (E-M78)
1.6%
(1/64)
(E-V13)
34.4%
(22/64)
(E-M123)
3.1%
(2/64)

39.1%
(25/64)[195]
64 0.0[195] 64 (J1*)
6.3%
(4/64)
(J2a1b*)
1.6%
(1/64)
(J2b2)
14.1%
(9/64)

22%
(14/64)[195]
64 (G2a*)
1.6%
(1/64)[195]
64 0.0[195] 64 0.0[195] 64 0.0[195]
Albanians (Tirana)
and
Albanians (North Macedonia)
IE (Albanian) 55+
64=
119
R1b1b2
18.50%
(22/119)[195]
55+
64=
119
R1a1*
5.05%
(6/119)[195]
55+
64=
119
I1*
4.2%
(5/119)

(I2a*
0.85%
(1/119)
I2a1*
11.8%
(14/119)
I2a2
0.85%
(1/119)
I2a
13.5%
(16/119)


(I2b1
1.7%
(2/119)

19.33%
(23/119)
[195]
55+
64=
119
E-M78
1.7
(2/119)

E-V13
29.4%
(35/119)

E-M123
1.7
(2/119)

32.8%
(39/119)
[195]
55+
64=
119
0.0[195] 55+
64=
119
J1*
5.05%
(6/119)

J2a1b*
2.55%
(3/119)
J2a1b1
0.85%
(1/119)
J2a
3.4%
(4/119)


J2b2
14.3%
(17/119)

22.70%
(27/119)
[195]
55+
64=
119
G2a*
1.7%
(2/119)[195]
55+
64=
119
0.0[195] 55+
64=
119
0.0[195] 55+
64=
119
0.0[195]
Population Language family
[Table 1]
n
[Table 2]
R1b
[Table 3]
n R1a n I n E1b1b n E1b1a n J n G n N n T n L n H
Comparison of haplogroups among Albanian subgroups
Population Language
[Table 1]
n R1b R1a I  E1b1b J G N T Others Reference
Albanians IE (Albanian) 51 R1b
M173
17.65%
(9/51)
R1a
M17
9.8%
(5/51)
I1b*
(xM26)
P37
16.98%
(18/106)
E3b1
M78
26.98%
(17/63)
J2e
M102
14.29%
(8/56)
2.0%
(9/51)
0.0 0.0 Pericic2005[196]
Albanians (Pristina) IE (Albanian) 114 R1b
21.10%
(24/114)
R1a
4.42%
(5/114)
I1a
5.31%
(6/114)
I1b*(xM26)
2.65%
(3/114)

7.96%
(9/114)
E3b1
1.75%
(2/114)
E3b1-α
43.85%
(50/114)

E3b2
0.90%
(1/114)

E3b3
0.90%
(1/114)

47.40
(54/114)
J2e1
16.7%
(19/114)
0 0 0 P*(xQ,R1)
1.77
(2/114)
Pericic2005[196]
Albanians (Tirana) IE (Albanian) 30 13.3 13.3 16.7 23.3 20.0 3.3 Bosch2006[209]
Albanians (Tirana) IE (Albanian) 55 R1b1b2
18.2
(10/55)
R1a1*
9.1
(5/55)
I1*
3.6
(2/55)
I2a1*
14.5
(8/55)
I2b1
3.6
(2/55)

21.8%
(12/55)
E-M78
1.8%
(1/55)
E-V13
23.6%
(13/55)

25.4%
(14/55)
J1*
3.6
(2/55)

(J2a1b*
3.6
(2/55)
J2a1b1
1.8
(1/55)
J2a
5.4%
(3/55))

J2b2
14.5
(8/55)

23.5%
(13/55)
G2a*
1.8
(1/55)
0.0 0.0 Battaglia2008[195]
Albanians (North Macedonia) IE (Albanian) 64 R1b1b2
18.8%
(12/64)
R1a1*
1.6%
(1/64)
I1*
4.7
(3/64)

(I2a*
1.6
(1/64)
I2a1*
9.4
(6/64)
I2a2
1.6
(1/64)
I2a
12.6%
(8/64))

17.2%
(11/64)
E-M78
1.6
(1/64)
E-V13
34.4%
(22/64)
E-M123
3.1
(2/64)

39.1%
(25/64)
J1*
6.3
(4/64)

J2a1b*
1.6
(1/64)

J2b2
14.1
(9/64)

22%
(14/64)
G2a*
1.6%
(1/64)
0.0 0.0 Battaglia2008[195]
Albanians (Tirana)
AND
Albanians (North Macedonia)
IE (Albanian) 55+
64=
119
R1b1b2
18.50%
(22/119)
R1a1*
5.05%
(6/119)
I1*
4.2%
(5/119)


(I2a*
0.85%
(1/119)
I2a1*
11.8%
(14/119)
I2a2
0.85%
(1/119)
I2a
13.5%
(16/119)


I2b1
1.7
(2/119)

19.33%
(23/119)
E-M78
1.7
(2/119)

E-V13
29.4%
(35/119)

E-M123
1.7
(2/119)

32.8%
(39/119)
J1*
5.05%
(6/119)

J2a1b*
2.55%
(3/119)
J2a1b1
0.85%
(1/119)
J2a
3.4%
(4/119)


J2b2
14.3%
(17/119)

22.70%
(27/119)
G2a*
1.7%
(2/119)
0.0 0.0 Battaglia2008[195]
Albanians IE (Albanian) 223 18.39%
(41/223)
4.04%
(9/223)
13%
(29/223)
35.43%
(79/223)
23.77%
(53/223)
2.69%
(6/223)
0 0.9%
(2/223)
1.79%
(4/223)
Sarno2015[210]

Table notes:

  1. ^ a b c IE=Indo-European
  2. ^ a b First column gives the amount of total Sample Size studied
  3. ^ a b Second column gives the Percentage of the particular haplogroup among the Sample Size

A study on the Y chromosome haplotypes DYS19 STR and YAP and on mitochondrial DNA found no significant difference between Albanians and most other Europeans.[211]

Apart from the main ancestors among prehistoric Balkan populations, there is an additional admixture from Slavic, Greek, Vlach, Italo-Roman, Celtic and Germanic elements.[212]

Larger samples collected by volunteer-led projects, show the Albanians belong largely to Y-chromosomes J2b2-L283, R1b-Z2103/BY611 and EV-13 from Ancient Balkan populations.[213][214]

In a 2013 study which compared one Albanian sample to other European samples, the authors concluded that it did not differ significantly to other European populations, especially groups such as Greeks, Italians and Macedonians.[215][216][195][196]

mtDNA

Another study of old Balkan populations and their genetic affinities with current European populations was done in 2004, based on mitochondrial DNA on the skeletal remains of some old Thracian populations from SE of Romania, dating from the Bronze and Iron Age.[217] This study was during excavations of some human fossil bones of 20 individuals dating about 3200–4100 years, from the Bronze Age, belonging to some cultures such as Tei, Monteoru and Noua were found in graves from some necropoles SE of Romania, namely in Zimnicea, Smeeni, Candesti, Cioinagi-Balintesti, Gradistea-Coslogeni and Sultana-Malu Rosu; and the human fossil bones and teeth of 27 individuals from the early Iron Age, dating from the 10th to 7th centuries BC from the Hallstatt Era (the Babadag culture), were found extremely SE of Romania near the Black Sea coast, in some settlements from Dobruja, namely: Jurilovca, Satu Nou, Babadag, Niculitel and Enisala-Palanca.[217] After comparing this material with the present-day European population, the authors concluded:

Computing the frequency of common point mutations of the present-day European population with the Thracian population has resulted that the Italian (7.9%), the Albanian (6.3%) and the Greek (5.8%) have shown a bias of closer [mtDna] genetic kinship with the Thracian individuals than the Romanian and Bulgarian individuals (only 4.2%).[217]

Autosomal DNA

Analysis of autosomal DNA, which analyses all genetic components has revealed that few rigid genetic discontinuities exist in European populations, apart from certain outliers such as Saami, Sardinians, Basques, Finns and Kosovar Albanians. They found that Albanians, on the one hand, have a high amount of identity by descent sharing, suggesting that Albanian-speakers derived from a relatively small population that expanded recently and rapidly in the last 1,500 years. On the other hand, they are not wholly isolated or endogamous because Greek and Macedonian samples shared much higher numbers of common ancestors with Albanian speakers than with other neighbors, possibly a result of historical migrations, or else perhaps smaller effects of the Slavic expansion in these populations. At the same time the sampled Italians shared nearly as much IBD with Albanian speakers as with each other.[215]

In Lazaridis et al. (2022) a transect of samples from Albania which date from the EBA to the present day were tested. The population of Albania "appears to be largely made up of the same components in similar proportions" since the MBA. The core part of this profile consists of 50% Anatolian Neolithic Farmers, 20-25% Caucasus Hunter-Gatherers, 10-15% Eastern Hunter-Gatherers.[218]

Obsolete theories

Italian theory

Laonikos Chalkokondyles (c. 1423–1490), the Byzantine historian, considered the Albanians to be an extension of the Italians.[133] The theory has its origin in the first mention of the Albanians, disputed whether it refers to Albanians in an ethnic sense,[27] made by Attaliates (11th century): "...For when subsequent commanders made base and shameful plans and decisions, not only was the island lost to Byzantium, but also the greater part of the army. Unfortunately, the people who had once been our allies and who possessed the same rights as citizens and the same religion, i.e. the Albanians and the Latins, who live in the Italian regions of our Empire beyond Western Rome, quite suddenly became enemies when Michael Dokeianos insanely directed his command against their leaders..."[219]

Caucasian theory

One of the earliest theories on the origins of the Albanians, now considered obsolete, incorrectly identified the proto-Albanians with an area of the eastern Caucasus, separately referred to by classical geographers as Caucasian Albania, located in what roughly corresponds to modern-day southern Dagestan, northern Azerbaijan and bordering Caucasian Iberia to its west. This theory conflated the two Albanias supposing that the ancestors of the Balkan Albanians (Shqiptarët) had migrated westward in the late classical or early medieval period. The Caucasian theory was first proposed by Renaissance humanists who were familiar with the works of classical geographers, and later developed by early 19th-century French consul and writer François Pouqueville. It was soon rendered obsolete in the 19th century when linguists proved Albanian as being an Indo-European, rather than Caucasian language.[220]

Pelasgian theory

In terms of historical theories, an outdated theory [221][222] is the 19th century theory that Albanians specifically descend from the Pelasgians, a broad term used by classical authors to denote the autochthonous, pre-Indo-European inhabitants of Greece and the southern Balkans in general. However, there is no evidence about the possible language, customs and existence of the Pelasgians as a distinct and homogeneous people and thus any particular connection to this population is unfounded.[36] This theory was developed by the Austrian linguist Johann Georg von Hahn in his work Albanesische Studien in 1854. According to Hahn, the Pelasgians were the original proto-Albanians and the language spoken by the Pelasgians, Illyrians, Epirotes and ancient Macedonians were closely related. In Hahn's theory the term Pelasgians was mostly used as a synonym for Illyrians. This theory quickly attracted support in Albanian circles, as it established a claim of predecence over other Balkan nations, particularly the Greeks. In addition to establishing "historic right" to territory this theory also established that the ancient Greek civilization and its achievements had an "Albanian" origin.[223] The theory gained staunch support among early 20th-century Albanian publicists.[224] This theory is rejected by scholars today.[225] In contemporary times with the Arvanite revival of the Pelasgian theory, it has also been recently borrowed by other Albanian speaking populations within and from Albania in Greece to counter the negative image of their communities.[226]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ As the tribe of the Albanoi (Ἀλβανοί) in Ptolemy's Geography. The name Arbōn (Ἄρβων) had been used by Polybius in the 2nd century BC to designate a city in Illyria.
  2. ^ " The presence of ancient West Greek loans in Albanian implies that in classical antiquity the precursors of the Albanians were a Balkan tribe to the north and west of the Greeks. Such people would probably have been 'Illyrians' to classical writers. This conclusion is neither very surprising nor very enlightening since the ethnographic terminology of most classical authors is not very precise. An Illyrian label does little to solve the complex problems of the origins of the Albanian language"

Sources

Citations

  1. ^ Simmons, Austin; Jonathan Slocum. . Linguistics Research Center of the University of Texas at Austin. Archived from the original on 16 September 2012. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  2. ^ Bonefoy, Yves (1993). American, African, and Old European mythologies. University of Chicago Press. p. 253. ISBN 978-0-226-06457-4.
  3. ^ Cruciani, F.; La Fratta, R.; Trombetta, B.; Santolamazza, P.; Sellitto, D.; Colomb, E. B.; Dugoujon, J.-M.; Crivellaro, F.; Benincasa, T.; Pascone, R.; Moral, P.; Watson, E.; Melegh, B.; Barbujani, G.; Fuselli, S.; Vona, G.; Zagradisnik, B.; Assum, G.; Brdicka, R.; Kozlov, A. I.; Efremov, G. D.; Coppa, A.; Novelletto, A.; Scozzari, R. (10 March 2007). "Tracing Past Human Male Movements in Northern/Eastern Africa and Western Eurasia: New Clues from Y-Chromosomal Haplogroups E-M78 and J-M12". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 24 (6): 1300–1311. doi:10.1093/molbev/msm049. PMID 17351267.
  4. ^ Demiraj 2010, p. 550.
  5. ^ Demiraj 2010, p. 553.
  6. ^ The Origin of the Albanian Ethnonym Shqiptar. 2018.
  7. ^ a b Rusakov 2017, p. 555.
  8. ^ Rusakov 2017, p. 154f.
  9. ^ Polybius. "2.11.15". Histories. Of the Illyrian troops engaged in blockading Issa, those that belonged to Pharos were left unharmed, as a favour to Demetrius; while all the rest scattered and fled to Arbona.
  10. ^ Polybius. "2.11.5". Histories (in Greek). εἰς τὸν Ἄρβωνα σκεδασθέντες.
  11. ^ Strabo (1903). "2.5 Note 97". In H. C. Hamilton; W. Falconer (eds.). Geography. London: George Bell & Sons. The Libyrnides are the islands of Arbo, Pago, Isola Longa, Coronata, &c., which border the coasts of ancient Liburnia, now Murlaka
  12. ^ Ptolemy (1843). "III.13(12).23". Geography (in Greek). Lipsiae, Sumptibus et typis Caroli Tauchnitii.
  13. ^ Giacalone Ramat, Anna; Ramat, Paolo, eds. (1998). The Indo-European languages. Rootledge. p. 481. ISBN 978-0-415-06449-1.
  14. ^ "Illyria". The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece & Rome. Vol. 4. Oxford University Press. 2010. p. 65. ISBN 9780195170726.
  15. ^ Vasiliev, Alexander A. (1958) [1952]. History of the Byzantine Empire, 324–1453. Vol. 2 (2nd ed.). University of Wisconsin Press. p. 613. ISBN 978-0-299-80926-3.
  16. ^ Cole, Jeffrey E., ed. (2011). "Albanians". Ethnic Groups of Europe: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO, LLC. p. 9. ISBN 9781598843026.
  17. ^ Waldman, Carl; Mason, Catherine (2006). "Illyrians". Encyclopedia of European Peoples. Facts On File. p. 414. ISBN 978-0816049646.
  18. ^ a b Stephanus of Byzantium (1849). "Ἀρβών". Ethnika kat' epitomen (in Greek). Berolini : G. Reimeri. πόλις Ἰλλυρίας. Πολύβιος δευτέρᾳ. τὸ ἐθνικὸν Ἀρβώνιος καὶ Ἀρβωνίτης, ὡς Ἀντρώνιος καὶ Ἀσκαλωνίτης.
  19. ^ Wilson, Nigel, ed. (2013). Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece. Routledge. p. 597. ISBN 9781136787997. Polybius' own attitude to Rome has been variously interpreted, pro-Roman, … frequently cited in reference works such as Stephanus' Ethnica and the Suda.
  20. ^ Richardson, J.S. (2004). Hispaniae: Spain and the Development of Roman Imperialism, 218-82 BC. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521521345. In four places, the lexicographer Stephanus of Byzantium refers to towns and ... Artemidorus as source, and in three of the four examples cites Polybius.
  21. ^ Dragojević-Josifovska 1982, p. 32.
  22. ^ Spasovska-Dimitrioska 2000, p. 258
  23. ^ a b Plasari 2020, p. 41
  24. ^ Quanrud 2021, p. 1.
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  28. ^ Madgearu & Gordon 2008, p. 25 "The following instance is indisputable. It comes from the same Attaliates, who wrote that the Albanians (Arbanitai) were involved in the 1078 rebellion of Nikephor Basilakes."
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  31. ^ Ludwig Thallóczy, Konstantin Jireček, & Milan Šufflay, Acta et diplomata res Albaniae mediae aetatis illustrantia [= Diplomatic and Other Documents on Medieval Albania], vol. 1 (Vienna: 1913), 113 (1198).
  32. ^ Giakoumis, Konstantinos (January 2003). "Fourteenth-century Albanian migration and the 'relativeautochthony' of the Albanians in Epeiros. The case of Gjirokastër". Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies. 27 (1): 171–183. doi:10.1179/byz.2003.27.1.171.
  33. ^ Kapović, Mate; Ramat, Anna Giacalone; Ramat, Paolo (2017-01-20). The Indo-European Languages. Taylor & Francis. p. 554. ISBN 978-1-317-39153-1.
  34. ^ a b Demiraj 2006, pp. 42–43 Therefore we are going to limit the discussion of this issue to the western areas of the Balkan peninsula, where the Albanian people have been living since many centuries ago. These areas, too, thanks to their geographical position, should have been inhabited since long before the immigration of the I.E. tribes, who are usually called Illyrians. The ancient presence of Pre-I.E. people(s) in this areas has been proved inter alia, by the archaeological discoveries at Maliq, Vashtëmi, Burimas, Podgorie, Barç and Dërsnik of Coritza district, as well as at Kamnik of Cologna district, at Blaz and Nezir of Mati district, at Kolsh of Kukës district, at Rashtan of Librazhd etc.
  35. ^ Demiraj 2008, p. 38 Given the fact that Albanian is an Indo-European language, the direct forefathers of Albanians should be sought in those Indo-European peoples, which came in the Balkan peninsula in the period of settlement of the Indo-European tribes, and naturally were superimposed on pre-existing, older Indo-European people or pro-Indo-European ones.
  36. ^ a b c Demiraj 2006, pp. 42–43.
  37. ^ Demiraj 2006, pp. 44–45.
  38. ^ Orel 1998, pp. 225, 409.
  39. ^ Trnavci, Gene (2010). Mortimer Sellers (ed.). The interaction of customary law with the modern rule of law in Albania and Kosova. Springer. p. 205. ISBN 978-9048137497.
  40. ^ Rusakov 2017, p. 102, 554.
  41. ^ Rusakov 2017, p. 554.
  42. ^ Benjamin W. Fortson IV (2005). Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. p. 391. ISBN 978-1-4051-0315-2. But we know there were earlier works which have vanished without a trace: the existence of written Albanian is already mentioned in a letter of 1332, and the first preserved books in both Geg and Tosk share features of spelling that indicate some kind of common literary language had already developed.
  43. ^ a b Klein, Joseph & Fritz 2018, p. 1790: "None of the ancient personal names ascribed to Illyrian are continued in Albanian without interruption (e.g. ... from Latin Scodra).... Albanian cannot be regarded as an offspring of Illyrian or even Thracian but must be considereed to be a modern continuation of some other undocumented Indo-European Balkan idiom. However, Albanian is closely related to Illyrian and also Messapic... which is why Albanian in some instances may shed light on the explanation of Messapic as well as Illyrian words..."
  44. ^ Ismajli 2015, p. 474.
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  46. ^ Demiraj 2006, p. 148.
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  49. ^ Demiraj 2006, p. 132.
  50. ^ Ismajli 2015, p. 212.
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  52. ^ Shehi 2017, p. 108.
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  54. ^ Demiraj 1997, pp. 128–29.
  55. ^ Kunstmann & Thiergen 1987, pp. 110–112.
  56. ^ Demiraj 2006, p. 150.
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  58. ^ Demiraj 2006, pp. 149–150.
  59. ^ Matzinger 2016, p. 10.
  60. ^ Ismajli 2015, p. 154.
  61. ^ a b Prendergast 2017, p. 80.
  62. ^ a b Ismajli 2015, p. 109.
  63. ^ Matzinger 2016, p. 13.
  64. ^ Matzinger 2016, p. 9.
  65. ^ Demiraj 2006, p. 155.
  66. ^ Ismajli 2015, p. 485.
  67. ^ Demiraj 2006, p. 145: "It should be recollected that in the Gheg dialect this place-name is pronounced Vlonë, which indicates that this place-name has been in use among the population of Northern Albania prior to the appearance of rhotacism in the southern dialect."
  68. ^ Ismajli 2015, p. 424.
  69. ^ Demiraj 2006, pp. 138–39.
  70. ^ Matzinger 2016, p. 8.
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  80. ^ Orel 2000, p. 261: "The entire system of Indo-European kinship terms was completely reshaped in Proto-Albanian (apparently reflecting a radical social change). The only remaining terms keeping their original function are those of the parents-in-law and son-in-law[.]"
  81. ^ Orel 2000, p. 262: "Second degree blood kinship was apparently irrelevant in the Proto-Albanian social structure. All corresponding terms have been borrowed from Latin[.]"
  82. ^ Klein, Joseph & Fritz 2018, p. 1791.
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  88. ^ Thumb, Albert. 1910. Altgriechische Elemente des Albanesischen
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  90. ^ a b c d e Mallory, J.P.; Adams, D.Q., eds. (1997). Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture. Taylor & Francis. pp. 9, 11. ISBN 978-1-884964-98-5. The Greek and Latin loans have undergone most of the far-reaching phonological changes which have so altered the shape of inherited words while Slavic and Turkish words do not show those changes. Thus Albanian must have acquired much of its present form by the time Slavs entered into Balkans in the fifth and sixth centuries AD [...] borrowed words from Greek and Latin date back to before Christian era [...] Even very common words such as mik "friend" (<Lat. amicus) or këndoj "sing" (<Lat. cantare) come from Latin and attest to a widespread intermingling of pre-Albanian and Balkan Latin speakers during the Roman period, roughly from the second century BC to the fifth century AD.
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  92. ^ a b Klein, Joseph & Fritz 2018, p. 1792.
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  122. ^ Curta 2012, p. 73.
  123. ^ Curta 2012, pp. 73–74: "Nonetheless, it is quite clear that despite claims to the contrary, burial assemblages associated with the so-called Komani culture (..) have nothing to do either with sixth- to seventh- century sites in the Lower Danube region known from written sources to have been inhabited by Slavs (..). In many respects, the communities who buried their dead in western Macedonia continued the traditions of Late Antiquity (..) There are of course new elements (..) But nothing indicates that those were communities coming from beyond the border of the Empire. Judging from the archaeological evidence, no Slavs have settled in Macedonia during the seventh century.
  124. ^ a b Wilkes 1995, p. 278
  125. ^ a b Bowden 2003, p. 61
  126. ^ Bowden 2004, p. 229: The question of continuity remains unanswered. It is certainly possible and indeed likely that these sites remained occupied into the seventh century and beyond. (..) Perhaps most importantly the hilltop sites need to be examined in relation to earlier Roman settlement and land use patterns, from which they appear such a radical departure.
  127. ^ a b Curta 2013: Whether refugees from the northern and central re- gions of the Balkans abandoned by the Roman army and administra- tion, or simply locals who refused to withdraw, those who after ca. 620 buried their dead in northern Albania, Montenegro, Macedonia, and the island of Corfu may have done so having in mind the idealized image of the past Roman power.
  128. ^ Nallbani 2017, p. 320.
  129. ^ Nallbani 2017, p. 325.
  130. ^ Winnifrith, Tom (2020). Nobody's Kingdom: A History of Northern Albania. Signal Books. pp. 97–98. ISBN 9781909930957. And in these hills a Latin-Illyrian civilisation survived as witnessed by the Komani-Kruja culture, to emerge as Albanians and Vlachs in the second millenium
  131. ^ Poulianos, Aris (1976). "About the origin of the Albanians (Illyrians)". Iliria. 5 (1): 261–262. doi:10.3406/iliri.1976.1237.
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  134. ^ Rusakov 2017, p. 555: In the case of Thracian, one should mention 'Daco-Misian' which was assumed by V. Georgiev to be a separate language and a direct ancestor of Albanian.
  135. ^ Hyllested & Joseph 2022, p. 235.
  136. ^ a b Rusakov 2017, p. 555: Two main theories consider Albanian as a descendant of either Illyrian or Thracian languages, respectively. (..) The situation is complicated by the fact that the exact extent of the idioms referred to as the Illyrian and Thracian languages, respectively is not known.
  137. ^ Prendergast 2017, p. 80: Illyrian or Thracian are forwarded as the primary candidates (Çabej 1971:42), with Illyrian having some scholarly consensus (Thunmann 1774:240, Kopitar 1829:85, Katičić 1976:184-188, Polomé 1982:888)—but there is a significant lack of verified inscriptions (Çabej 1971:41, Woodard 2004:11, Mann 1977: 1) and it is unclear whether ‘Illyrian’ as a term used in Roman records even referred to a single common language from which modern Albanian could descend (Hamp 1994).
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  206. ^ Fóthi, Erzsébet; Gonzalez, Angéla; Fehér, Tibor; Gugora, Ariana; Fóthi, Ábel; Biró, Orsolya; Keyser, Christine (14 January 2020). "Genetic analysis of male Hungarian Conquerors: European and Asian paternal lineages of the conquering Hungarian tribes". Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences. 12 (1): 31. doi:10.1007/s12520-019-00996-0. S2CID 210168662.
  207. ^ Neparáczki, Endre; Maróti, Zoltán; Kalmár, Tibor; Maár, Kitti; Nagy, István; Latinovics, Dóra; Kustár, Ágnes; Pálfi, György; Molnár, Erika; Marcsik, Antónia; Balogh, Csilla; Lőrinczy, Gábor; Gál, Szilárd Sándor; Tomka, Péter; Kovacsóczy, Bernadett; Kovács, László; Raskó, István; Török, Tibor (12 November 2019). "Y-chromosome haplogroups from Hun, Avar and conquering Hungarian period nomadic people of the Carpathian Basin". Scientific Reports. 9 (1): 16569. Bibcode:2019NatSR...916569N. doi:10.1038/s41598-019-53105-5. PMC 6851379. PMID 31719606. S2CID 207963632.
  208. ^ a b c d Semino, Ornella; Magri, Chiara; Benuzzi, Giorgia; Lin, Alice A.; Al-Zahery, Nadia; Battaglia, Vincenza; Maccioni, Liliana; Triantaphyllidis, Costas; Shen, Peidong; Oefner, Peter J.; Zhivotovsky, Lev A.; King, Roy; Torroni, Antonio; Cavalli-Sforza, L. Luca; Underhill, Peter A.; Santachiara-Benerecetti, A. Silvana (May 2004). "Origin, Diffusion, and Differentiation of Y-Chromosome Haplogroups E and J: Inferences on the Neolithization of Europe and Later Migratory Events in the Mediterranean Area". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 74 (5): 1023–1034. doi:10.1086/386295. PMC 1181965. PMID 15069642.
  209. ^ a b c d e f g h Bosch, E.; Calafell, F.; Gonzalez-Neira, A.; Flaiz, C.; Mateu, E.; Scheil, H.-G.; Huckenbeck, W.; Efremovska, L.; Mikerezi, I.; Xirotiris, N.; Grasa, C.; Schmidt, H.; Comas, D. (July 2006). "Paternal and maternal lineages in the Balkans show a homogeneous landscape over linguistic barriers, except for the isolated Aromuns". Annals of Human Genetics. 70 (4): 459–487. doi:10.1111/j.1469-1809.2005.00251.x. PMID 16759179. S2CID 23156886.
  210. ^ Sarno, Stefania; Tofanelli, Sergio; De Fanti, Sara; Quagliariello, Andrea; Bortolini, Eugenio; Ferri, Gianmarco; Anagnostou, Paolo; Brisighelli, Francesca; Capelli, Cristian; Tagarelli, Giuseppe; Sineo, Luca; Luiselli, Donata; Boattini, Alessio; Pettener, Davide (April 2016). "Shared language, diverging genetic histories: high-resolution analysis of Y-chromosome variability in Calabrian and Sicilian Arbereshe". European Journal of Human Genetics. 24 (4): 600–606. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2015.138. PMC 4929864. PMID 26130483. S2CID 4983538.
  211. ^ Belledi, M; Poloni, ES; Casalotti, R; Conterio, F; Mikerezi, I; Tagliavini, J; Excoffier, L (2000). "Maternal and paternal lineages in Albania and the genetic structure of Indo-European populations". Eur J Hum Genet. 8 (7): 480–6. doi:10.1038/sj.ejhg.5200443. PMID 10909846.
  212. ^ Fine 1991, pp. 11–12. "... the Albanians did not have a single ancestor in one or the other of these pre-Slavic peoples; the present-day Albanians, like all Balkan peoples, are an ethnic mixture and in addition to this main ancestor there is an admixture of Slavic, Greek, Vlach, and Romano-Italian ancestry. In addition to these three Indo-European peoples, each living its own zone of the pre-Slavic Balkans, other peoples had an impact as well. Large numbers of Celts had passed through earlier, leaving their contribution to the gene pool as well as a wide variety of cultural (particularly artistic) influences. Large numbers of Roman veterans were settled in the Balkans... Different Germanic peoples (Ostrogoths, Visigoths, and Gepids) raided and settled (both on their own and as Roman federate troops) in the Balkans in large numbers over three centuries (third to sixth)"
  213. ^ - Rrenjet: Prejardhja gjenetike e shqiptareve - Statistics - Projekti Rrënjët është nje vend ku shqiptarët që kanë kryer teste gjenetike mund të regjistrojnë rezultatet e tyre, për të pasur mundësi t’i krahasojnë me rezultatet në databazën tonë, si dhe me rezultate të tjera publike nga popullsi të lashta dhe bashkëkohore. Ky projekt drejtohet dhe mirëmbahet nga vullnetarë. Ky projekt nuk është kompani testimi.
  214. ^ Gjenetika - Statistics - This site, and the Albanian DNA Project, was created and maintained by volunteers. The purpose of this page is to reveal the mosaic of human groups that have created over the centuries and that today constitute the Albanian ethnogenesis through the genetic testing of male lines. The aim is not to promote or emphasize racial purity, as such a thing does not exist but to better understand the historical contexts and human movements in the region where we live. When each of us does DNA testing, the result not only serves the individual to better understand his or her ancient origins and regions within Albania from which his or her ancestors may have descended, but also serves to shed light on different groupings. human beings that today make up the Albanian community. DNA testing is a tool to better understand our history based more and more on science and less on word of mouth
  215. ^ a b Ralph, Peter; Coop, Graham (7 May 2013). "The Geography of Recent Genetic Ancestry across Europe". PLOS Biology. 11 (5): e1001555. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001555. PMC 3646727. PMID 23667324.
  216. ^ Belledi, Michele; Poloni, Estella S.; Casalotti, Rosa; Conterio, Franco; Mikerezi, Ilia; Tagliavini, James; Excoffier, Laurent (July 2000). "Maternal and paternal lineages in Albania and the genetic structure of Indo-European populations". European Journal of Human Genetics. 8 (7): 480–486. doi:10.1038/sj.ejhg.5200443. PMID 10909846. S2CID 34824809.
  217. ^ a b c Cardos G., Stoian V., Miritoiu N., Comsa A., Kroll A., Voss S., Rodewald A. (2004 Romanian Society of Legal Medicine) Paleo-mtDNA analysis and population genetic aspects of old Thracian populations from South-East of Romania 2009-02-12 at the Wayback Machine
  218. ^ Lazaridis & Alpaslan-Roodenberg 2022, p. 224 (Supplementary Materials).
  219. ^ Michaelis Attaliotae: Historia, Bonn 1853, p. 8, 18, 297. Translated by Robert Elsie. First published in R. Elsie: Early Albania, a Reader of Historical Texts, 11th – 17th Centuries, Wiesbaden 2003, p. 4–5.
  220. ^ Schwandner-Sievers & Fischer 2002, p. 74.
  221. ^ Peter Mackridge. "Aspects of language and identity in the Greek peninsula since the eighteenth century". The Newsletter of the Society Farsharotu, Vol, XXI & XXII, Issues 1 & 2. Retrieved 2 February 2014. the "Pelasgian theory" was formulated, according to which Greek and Albanian were claimed to have a common origin in Pelasgian, the Albanians themselves are Pelasgians... Needless to say, there is absolutely no scientific evidence to support any of theses theories.
  222. ^ Bayraktar, Uğur Bahadır (December 2011). "Mythifying the Albanians : A Historiographical Discussion on Vasa Efendi's "Albania and the Albanians"". Balkanologie. 13 (1–2). doi:10.4000/balkanologie.2272. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  223. ^ Schwandner-Sievers & Fischer 2002, p. 77.
  224. ^ Schwandner-Sievers & Fischer 2002, p. 77–79.
  225. ^ Schwandner-Sievers & Fischer 2002, p. 78–79.
  226. ^ De Rapper, Gilles (2009). "Pelasgic Encounters in the Greek–Albanian Borderland: Border Dynamics and Reversion to Ancient Past in Southern Albania." Anthropological Journal of European Cultures. 18. (1): 60-61. “In 2002, another important book was translated from Greek: Aristides Kollias’ Arvanites and the Origin of Greeks, first published in Athens in 1983 and re-edited several times since then (Kollias 1983; Kolia 2002). In this book, which is considered a cornerstone of the rehabilitation of Arvanites in post- dictatorial Greece, the author presents the Albanian speaking population of Greece, known as Arvanites, as the most authentic Greeks because their language is closer to ancient Pelasgic, who were the first inhabitants of Greece. According to him, ancient Greek was formed on the basis of Pelasgic, so that man Greek words have an Albanian etymology. In the Greek context, the book initiated a 'counterdiscourse' (Gefou-Madianou 1999: 122) aiming at giving Arvanitic communities of southern Greece a positive role in Greek history. This was achieved by using nineteenth-century ideas on Pelasgians and by melting together Greeks and Albanians in one historical genealogy (Baltsiotis and Embirikos 2007: 130–431, 445). In the Albanian context of the 1990s and 2000s, the book is read as proving the anteriority of Albanians not only in Albania but also in Greece; it serves mainly the rehabilitation of Albanians as an antique and autochthonous population in the Balkans. These ideas legitimise the presence of Albanians in Greece and give them a decisive role in the development of ancient Greek civilisation and, later on, the creation of the modern Greek state, in contrast to the general negative image of Albanians in contemporary Greek society. They also reverse the unequal relation between the migrants and the host country, making the former the heirs of an autochthonous and civilised population from whom the latter owes everything that makes their superiority in the present day.”

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origin, albanians, origin, albanians, been, subject, historical, linguistic, archaeological, genetic, studies, albanians, continuously, first, appear, historical, record, byzantine, sources, 11th, century, this, point, they, were, already, fully, christianized. The origin of the Albanians has been the subject of historical linguistic archaeological and genetic studies Albanians continuously first appear in the historical record in Byzantine sources of the 11th century At this point they were already fully Christianized Albanian forms a separate branch of Indo European first attested in the 15th century having evolved from one of the Paleo Balkan languages of antiquity 1 The surviving pre Christian Albanian culture shows that Albanian mythology and folklore are of Paleo Balkanic origin and that almost all of their elements are pagan 2 Albanians have Paleo Balkan origin Theories which specifically they vary between attributing this origin to Illyrians Thracians Dacians or another Paleo Balkan people whose language was unattested among those who support an Illyrian origin there is a distinction between the theory of continuity from Illyrian times and those proposing an in migration of a different Illyrian population These propositions are however not mutually exclusive The Albanians are also one of Europe s populations with the highest number of common ancestors within their own ethnic group even though they share ancestors with other ethnic groups 3 Contents 1 Endonyms 1 1 Arberesh 1 2 References to Albania 1 3 References to the Albanians 2 Language 2 1 Pre Indo European linguistic substratum 2 2 Attestation 2 3 Toponymy 2 4 Linguistic reconstruction 2 4 1 Pastoralism 2 4 2 Hydronyms 2 4 3 Vegetation 2 4 4 Social organization 2 5 Linguistic contacts 2 5 1 Overall patterns in loaning 2 5 2 Greek 2 5 3 Latin and early Romance loans 2 5 4 Slavic 2 5 5 Unidentified Romance language hypothesis 3 Archaeology 4 Paleo Balkan linguistic theories 4 1 Illyrian 4 1 1 Messapic 4 2 Thracian or Daco Moesian 5 Genetic studies 5 1 Y DNA 5 2 mtDNA 5 3 Autosomal DNA 6 Obsolete theories 6 1 Italian theory 6 2 Caucasian theory 6 3 Pelasgian theory 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Sources 9 1 Citations 9 2 BibliographyEndonyms EditMain article Names of the Albanians and AlbaniaSee also Albanoi Arberesh Edit The two ethnonyms used by Albanians to refer to themselves are Arberesh e Arbenesh e northwestern variant and Shqiptar e Arberesh is the original Albanian ethnonym and forms that basis for most names of Albanians in foreign languages and the name of Albania as a country Greek Arvanitai Alvanitai and Alvanoi Turkish Arnaut Serbo Croatian Arbanasi and others derive from this term Two different theories exist for the Ethnonym Shqiptar Demiraj posits that Shqiptar derives from verb shqipoj speak clearly from Latin excipio understand 4 It gradually replaced Arberesh as the Albanian endonym by the end of the 18th century The second theory is the idea that Shqiptar originated from the Scapudar family in medieval Drivastum is an early occurrence of the term However this theory does not make chronological sense Shqiptar from the Scapudar family is considered chronologically impossible The third proposed etymology is that Shqiptar flows from the word shqiponje eagle 5 Its first attestation with its present meaning is in the dictionary of Francesco Maria da Lecce 1702 who addresses his readers as my dear Shqipetar in its preface This third theory matches the laws of Albanian word formation 6 The ethnic name Albanian was used by Byzantine and Latin sources in the forms arb and alb since at least the 2nd century A D 7 a and eventually in Old Albanian texts as an endonym It was later replaced in Albania proper by the term Shqiptar a change most likely trigged by the Ottoman conquests of the Balkans during the 15th century 8 However the ancient attestation of the ethnic designation is not considered a strong evidence of an Albanian continuity in the Illyrian region since there are many examples in history of an ethnic name shifting from one ethnos to another 7 References to Albania Edit Main articles Names of the Albanians and Albania and Albania name In the 2nd century BC the History of the World written by Polybius mentions a location named Arbona Greek Ἄrbwna Latinised form Arbo 9 10 in which some Illyrian troops under Queen Teuta scattered and fled to in order to escape the Romans Arbona was perhaps an island in Liburnia or another location within Illyria 11 In the 2nd century AD Ptolemy the geographer and astronomer from Alexandria drafted a map that shows the city of Albanopolis located Northeast of Durres in the Roman province of Macedonia and the tribe of Albanoi 12 which were viewed as Illyrians by later historians 13 14 15 16 17 In the 6th century AD Stephanus of Byzantium in his important geographical dictionary entitled Ethnica Ἐ8nika 18 mentions a city in Illyria called Arbon Greek Ἀrbwn and gives an ethnic name for its inhabitants in two singular number forms i e Arbonios Greek Ἀrbwnios pl Ἀrbwnioi Arbonioi and Arbonites Greek Ἀrbwniths pl Ἀrbwnῖtai Arbonitai He cites Polybius 18 as he does many other times in Ethnica 19 20 The names Albanoi and Albanopolis have been attested in ancient funeral inscriptions in present day North Macedonia The toponym Albanopolis has been found on a funeral inscription in Gorno Sonje near the city of Skopje ancient Scupi present day North Macedonia It was excavated in 1931 by Nikola Vulic and its text was curated and published in 1982 by Borka Dragojevic Josifovska The inscription in Latin reads POSIS MESTYLU F ILIUS FL AVIA DELVS MVCATI F ILIA DOM O ALBANOP OLI IPSA DELVS Posis Mestylu son of Flavia Delus daughter of Mucat who comes from Albanopolis It dates to the end of the 1st century AD and the beginning of the 2nd century AD 21 The ethnonym Albanos was found on a funeral inscription from ancient Stobi in present day North Macedonia near Gradsko about 90 km to the southeast of Gorno Sonje The inscription in ancient Greek reads FL ABIW ALBANW TW TEKNW AIMILIANOS ALBANO S MNHM H S XARHN In memory of Flavios Albanos his son Aemilianos Albanos It dates to the 2nd 3rd century AD 22 References to the Albanians Edit Michael Attaleiates 1022 1080 mentions the term Albanoi twice and the term Arbanitai once The term Albanoi is used first to describe the groups which rebelled in southern Italy and Sicily against the Byzantines in 1038 40 The second use of the term Albanoi is related to groups which supported the revolt of George Maniakes in 1042 and marched with him throughout the Balkans against the Byzantine capital Constantinople The term Arvanitai is used to describe a revolt of Bulgarians Boulgaroi and Arbanitai in the theme of Dyrrhachium in 1078 79 It is generally accepted that Arbanitai refers to the ethnonym of medieval Albanians As such it is considered to be the first attestation of Albanian as an ethnic group in Byzantine historiography 23 The use of the term Albanoi in 1038 49 and 1042 as an ethnonym related to Albanians have been a subject of debate In what has been termed the Ducellier Vrannousi debate Alain Ducellier proposed that both uses of the term referred to medieval Albanians Era Vrannousi counter suggested that the first use referred to Normans while the second did not have an ethnic connotation necessarily and could be a reference to the Normans as foreigners aubain in Epirus which Maniakes and his army traversed 23 The debate has never been resolved 24 A newer synthesis about the second use of the term Albanoi by Pellumb Xhufi suggests that the term Albanoi may have referred to Albanians of the specific district of Arbanon while Arbanitai to Albanians in general regardless of the specific region they inhabited 25 The Arbanasi people are recorded as being half believers and speaking their own language in a Bulgarian text found in a Serbian manuscript dating to 1628 the text was written by an anonymous author that according to Radoslav Grujic 1934 dated to the reign of Samuel of Bulgaria 997 1014 or possibly according to R Elsie 1000 1018 26 In History written in 1079 1080 Byzantine historian Michael Attaliates referred to the Albanoi as having taken part in a revolt against Constantinople in 1043 and to the Arbanitai as subjects of the duke of Dyrrhachium It is disputed however whether the Albanoi of the events of 1043 refers to Albanians in an ethnic sense or whether Albanoi is a reference to folks from southern Italy under an archaic name there was also a tribe of Italy by the name of Albani 27 However a later reference to Albanians from the same Attaliates regarding the participation of Albanians in a rebellion in 1078 is undisputed That rebellion was led by Nikephoros Basilakes doux of Dyrrhachium 28 Some authors like Alain Ducellier 1968 29 believe that Arvanoi are mentioned in Book IV of the Alexiad by Anna Comnena c 1148 Others believe that this is a wrong reading and interpretation of the Greek phrase ἐ3 Ἀrbanwn i e from Arvana found in the original manuscript and in one edition Bonn 1839 of the Alexiad 30 The earliest Serbian source mentioning Albania Ar banas is a charter by Stefan Nemanja dated 1198 which lists the region of Pilot Pulatum among the parts Nemanja conquered from Albania ѡd Arbanas Pilot de Albania Pulatum 31 In the 12th to 13th centuries Byzantine writers used the name Arbanon Medieval Greek Ἄrbanon for a principality in the region of Kruja The oldest reference to Albanians in Epirus is from a Venetian document dating to 1210 which states that the continent facing the island of Corfu is inhabited by Albanians 32 A Ragusan document dating to 1285 states I heard a voice crying in the mountains in Albanian Audivi unam vocem clamantem in monte in lingua albanesca 33 Language Edit Albanian in the Paleo Balkanic branch based on The Indo European Language Family by Brian D Joseph and Adam Hyllested 2022 Pre Indo European linguistic substratum Edit Pre Indo European PIE sites are found throughout the territory of Albania Such PIE sites existed in Maliq Vashtem Burimas Barc Dersnik in Korce District Kamnik in Kolonja Kolsh in Kukes District Rashtan in Librazhd and Nezir in Mat District 34 As in other parts of Europe these PIE people joined the migratory Indo European tribes that entered the Balkans and contributed to the formation of the historical Paleo Balkan tribes to which Albanians trace their origin At any rate in this case as in other similar cases one should take into account that the previous populations during the process of assimilation by the immigrating IE tribes have played an important part in the formation of the various ethnic groups generated by their long symbiosis Consequently the IE languages developed in the Balkan Peninsula in addition to their natural evolution have also undergone a certain impact by the idioms of the assimilated Pre IE peoples 35 In terms of linguistics the pre Indo European substrate language spoken in the southern Balkans has probably influenced pre Proto Albanian the ancestor idiom of Albanian 36 The extent of this linguistic impact cannot be determined with precision due to the uncertain position of Albanian among Paleo Balkan languages and their scarce attestation 37 Some loanwords however have been proposed such as shege pomegranate or lepjete orach compare with Pre Greek lapathon lapa8on monk s rhubarb 38 36 Albanian is also the only language in the Balkans which has retained elements of the vigesimal numeral system njezet twenty dyzet forty which was prevalent in the Pre Indo European languages of Europe as the Basque language which broadly uses vigesimal numeration highlights 34 This pre Indo European substratum has also been identified as one of the contributing cultures to the customs of Albanians 39 Attestation Edit The first attested mention of Albanian occurred in 1285 at the Venetian city of Ragusa present day Dubrovnik Croatia when a crime witness named Matthew testified I heard a voice crying in the mountains in Albanian Latin Audivi unam vocem clamantem in monte in lingua albanesca 40 The earliest attested written specimens of Albanian are Formula e pagezimit 1462 and Arnold Ritter von Harff s lexicon 1496 The first Albanian text written with Greek letters is a fragment of the Ungjilli i Pashkeve Passover Gospel from the 15 or 16th century The first printed books in Albanian are Meshari 1555 and Luca Matranga s E mbsuame e kreshtere 1592 41 However as Fortson notes Albanian written works existed before this point they have simply been lost The existence of written Albanian is explicitly mentioned in a letter attested from 1332 and the first preserved books including both those in Gheg and in Tosk share orthographic features that indicate that some form of common literary language had developed 42 Toponymy Edit In the Balkans and southern Italy several toponyms river and mountain names which have been attested since antiquity can be explained etymologically via Albanian or have evolved phonologically through Albanian and later adopted in other languages Inherited toponyms from a Proto Albanian language and the date of adoption of non Albanian toponyms indicate in Albanology the regions were the Albanian language originated evolved and expanded Depending on which proposed etymology and phonological development linguists support different etymologies are usually used to link Albanian to Illyrian Messapic Dardanian Thracian or an unattested Paleo Balkan language Brindisi is a town in southern Italy Brundisium was originally a settlement of the Iapygian Messapians descendants of an Illyrian people who migrated from the Balkans to Italy in Late Bronze Early Iron Age transition The name highlights the ties between Messapic to Albanian as Messapic brendo stag is linked to Old Gheg bri horns 43 Bune is a river in northwestern Albania near the cities of Shkoder and Ulcinj Ulqin The majority of scholars consider it a directly inherited hydronym from Illyrian Barbanna A less accepted proposition by Eqrem Cabej considers it an unrelated name which derives from buene overflow of waters The hydronym Bune via which Slavic Bojana emerged is often seen as indication that Albanian was spoken in the pre Slavic era in southern Montenegro 44 45 46 Drin is a river in northern Albania Kosovo and North Macedonia Similar hydronyms include Drino in southern Albania and Drina in Bosnia It is generally considered to be of Illyrian origin 47 Durres is a city in central Albania It was founded as an ancient Greek colony and greatly expanded in Roman times It was known as Epidamnos and Dyrrhachion Dyrrhachium Dyrrhachium is of Greek origin and refers to the position of the city on a rocky shore The modern names of the city in Albanian Durres and Italian Durazzo Italian pronunciation duˈrattso are derived from Dyrrachium Dyrrachion An intermediate palatalized antecedent is found in the form Dyrratio attested in the early centuries AD The palatalized tio ending probably represents a phonetic change in the way the inhabitants of the city pronounced its name 48 The preservation of old Doric u indicates that the modern name derives from populations to whom the toponym was known in its original Doric pronunciation 49 The initial stress in Albanian Durres presupposes an Illyrian accentuation on the first syllable 45 Theories which support local Illyrian Albanian continuity interpret Durres lt Dyrratio as evidence that Albanian speakers continuously lived in coastal central Albania Other theories propose that the toponym doesn t necessarily show continuity but can equally be the evolution of a loanword acquired by a Proto Albanian population which moved in the city and its area in late antiquity from northern Albanian regions 50 51 Epidamnos is the oldest known name of Durres and it is the first name under which the ancient Greek Corinthian colony was known It is widely considered to be of Illyrian origin as first proposed by linguist Hans Krahe 52 and is attested in Thucydides 5th century BC Aristotle 4th century BC and Polybius 2nd century BC 53 Etymologically Epidamnos may be related to Proto Albanian dami cub young animal young bull gt dem modern Albanian as proposed by linguist Eqrem Cabej 54 Erzen is a river in central Albania It derives from Illyrian Ardaxanos daksa water sea found in Daksa and the name of the Dassareti tribe 55 Ishem is a river in central Albania It is recorded as Illyrian Isamnus in antiquity Albanian Ishem derives directly from Isamnus and indicates that its ancestral language was spoken in the area 45 56 57 Mat is a river in northern Albania It is generally considered to be of Illyrian origin and originally meant river bank shore It evolved within Albanian as an inherited term from its ancestral language It indicates that it was spoken in the Mat river valley A similar hydronym Matlume is found in Kacanik 58 59 60 Nish Nis is a city in southeastern Serbia It evolved from a toponym attested in Ancient Greek as NAISSOS Naissos which achieved its present form via phonetic changes in Proto Albanian and thereafter entered Slavic Nish might indicate that Proto Albanians lived in the region in pre Slavic times 61 When this settlement happened is a matter of debate as Proto Albanians might have moved relatively late in antiquity in the area which might have been an eastern expansion of Proto Albanian settlement as no other toponyms known in antiquity in the area presuppose an Albanian development 57 62 The development of Nish lt Naiss may also represent a regional development in late antiquity Balkans which while related may not be identical with Albanian 63 Vjose is a river in southern Albania and northern Greece In antiquity it formed part of the boundary between Illyrian and Epirotic Greek languages In the early Middle Ages the Vjosa in Greek Aoos or Vovousa river valley was settled by Slavic peoples A gradual evolution within Albanian and a borrowing by Slavic speakers or a borrowing from Slavic Vojusha into Albanian have been proposed for Albanian Vjose 64 65 Both propositions are disputed Regardless of the etymology the Vjose valley is an area of Albanian Slavic linguistic contact from the 6th 7th century onwards 66 Vlore is a city in southwestern Albania It was founded as ancient Greek colony Aulona Avlon in the pre Roman era Albanian Vlore is a direct derivation from ancient Greek Aulon A proposed Slavic intermediation from Vavlona has been rejected as it doesn t conform to Albanian phonological development The toponym has two forms Vlore Tosk and Vlone Gheg which indicates that it was already in use among the population of Northern Albania before the appearance of rhotacism in Tosk 67 68 Shkoder is a city in northwestern Albania It is one of the most significant settlements in Albania and in the pre Roman era it was the capital of the Illyrian kingdom of Genthius Late antiquity Scodra was a Romanized city which even relatively late in the Middle Ages had a native Dalmatian speaking population which called it Skudra Slavic Skadar is a borrowing from the Romance name The origin of Albanian Shkoder Shkodra as a direct development of Illyrian Scodra or as the development of a Latin loanword in Proto Albanian is a subject of debate In theories which reject a direct derivation from Scodra the possible break in linguistic continuity from the Illyrian form is invoked as indication that Albanian was not spoken continuously in Shkodra and the surrounding area from pre Roman to late antiquity 69 70 43 Shkumbin is a river in central Albania It derives from Latin Scampinus which replaced Illyrian Genusus as recorded in Latin and ancient Greek literature A Slavic intermediation has been rejected Its inclusion in Latin loanwords into Proto Albanian and phonetic evolution coincides with the historical existence of a large Roman town near present day Elbasan which gave the river its new name 57 71 Shtip Stip is a city in eastern North Macedonia It was known in antiquity as Astibo s It is generally acknowledged that Slavic Stip was acquired via Albanian Shtip 61 About the date of settlement of Proto Albanians in eastern Macedonia similar arguments as in the case of Nish have emerged 57 62 Linguistic reconstruction Edit Albanian is attested in a written form beginning only in the 15th century AD when the Albanian ethnos was already formed In the absence of prior data on the language scholars have used the Latin and Slav loans into Albanian for identifying its location of origin 72 Proto Albanian had likely emerged before the 1st century AD when contacts with Romance languages began to occur intensively 73 74 Some scholars have attempted to conjecture the unattested language and have eventually drawn up interpretations on the assumed proto Albanian Urheimat and society based on the reconstructed lexicon 75 Pastoralism Edit That Albanian possesses a rich and elaborated pastoral vocabulary which has been taken to suggest Albanian society in ancient times was pastoral with widespread transhumance and stock breeding particularly of sheep and goats 76 Joseph takes interest in the fact that some of the lexemes in question have exact counterparts in Romanian 76 They appear to have been cattle breeders given the vastness of preserved native vocabulary pertaining to cow breeding milking and so forth while words pertaining to dogs tend to be loaned Many words concerning horses are preserved but the word for horse itself is a Latin loan 77 Hydronyms Edit Hydronyms present a complicated picture the term for sea det is native and an Albano Germanic innovation referring to the concept of depth but a large amount of maritime vocabulary is loaned Words referring to large streams and their banks tend to be loans but lume river is native as is rryme the flow of river water Words for smaller streams and stagnant pools of water are more often native but the word for pond pellg is in fact a semantically shifted descendant of the old Greek word for high sea suggesting a change in location after Greek contact Albanian has maintained since Proto Indo European a specific term referring to a riverside forest gjaze as well as its words for marshes Curiously Albanian has maintained native terms for whirlpool water pit and aquatic deep place leading Orel to speculate that the Albanian Urheimat likely had an excess of dangerous whirlpools and depths 75 However all the words relating to seamanship appear to be loans 78 Vegetation Edit Regarding forests words for most conifers and shrubs are native as are the terms for alder elm oak beech and linden while ash chestnut birch maple poplar and willow are loans 79 Social organization Edit Main article Albanian tribes The original kinship terminology of Indo European was radically reshaped changes included a shift from mother to sister and were so thorough that only three terms retained their original function the words for son in law mother in law and father in law 80 All the words for second degree blood kinship including aunt uncle nephew niece and terms for grandchildren are ancient loans from Latin 81 Linguistic contacts Edit Overall patterns in loaning Edit Openness to loans has been called a characteristic feature of Albanian The Albanian original lexical items directly inherited from Proto Indo European are far fewer in comparison to the loanwords though loans are considered to be perfectly integrated and not distinguishable from native vocabulary on a synchronic level 82 Although Albanian is characterized by the absorption of many loans even in the case of Latin reaching deep into the core vocabulary certain semantic fields nevertheless remained more resistant Terms pertaining to social organization are often preserved though not those pertaining to political organization while those pertaining to trade are all loaned or innovated 83 While the words for plants and animals characteristic of mountainous regions are entirely original the names for fish and for agricultural activities are often assumed to have been borrowed from other languages However considering the presence of some preserved old terms related to the sea fauna some have proposed that this vocabulary might have been lost in the course of time after proto Albanian tribes were pushed back into the inland during invasions 84 85 Wilkes holds that the Slavic loans in Albanian suggest that contacts between the two populations took place when Albanians dwelt in forests 600 900 metres above sea level 86 Rusakov notes that almost all lexemes related to seamanship in Albanian are loan words which may indicate that speakers of the proto language did not live on the Adriatic coast or in close proximity to it 78 Greek Edit Linguistic contact between Albanian and Greek has been securely dated to the Iron Age Previous contacts may include contacts between the respective post PIE languages which gave rise to the two languages According to Huld 1986 Ancient Greek loans originate from two distinct geographical groups Greek speaking populations from ancient Macedonia and the Greek colonies on the Adriatic coast 87 It has been known since the 1910 work of German linguist Albert Thumb that Albanian possesses a small number of Greek loans as old or older than its earliest Latin loans 88 87 Krzysztof 2016 suggests that Doric Greek may have also received some loanwords from Proto Albanian that could be as early as the 7th century BC he specifically points to seven words recorded by the Greek grammarian Hesychius of Alexandria 5th century AD and particularly to the term ἀan8a a kind of earring which was first attested in the work of the choral lyric poet Alcman 89 Words borrowed from Greek e g Gk NW makhana device instrument gt moker millstone Gk NW drapanon gt draper sickle etc date back before the Christian era 90 and are mostly of the Doric Greek dialect 91 which means that the ancestors of the Albanians were in contact with the northwestern part of Ancient Greek civilization and probably borrowed words from Greek cities Dyrrachium Apollonia etc in the Illyrian territory colonies which belonged to the Doric division of Greek or from contacts in the Epirus area The earliest Greek loans began to enter Albanian circa 600 BC and are of Doric provenance tending to refer to vegetables fruits spices animals and tools Joseph argues that this stratum reflects contacts between Greeks and Proto Albanians from the 8th century BC onward with the Greeks being either colonists on the Adriatic coast or Greek merchants inland in the Balkans The second wave of Greek loans began after the split of the Roman empire in 395 and continued throughout the Byzantine Ottoman and modern periods 92 An argument in favor of a northern origin for Albanian is the relatively small number of loanwords from Ancient Greek mostly from Doric dialect even though Southern Illyria neighbored the Classical Greek civilization and there were a number of Greek colonies along the Illyrian coastline 93 According to Bulgarian linguist Vladimir I Georgiev the theory of an Illyrian origin for the Albanians is weakened by a lack of any Albanian names before the 12th century and the limited Greek influence in Albanian See Jirecek Line In Georgiev s argument if Albanians had been inhabiting a homeland situated near modern Albania continuously since ancient times the number of Greek loanwords in Albanian should be higher 94 According to Hermann Olberg the modern Albanian lexicon may only include 33 words of ancient Greek origin 78 However in view of the amount of Albanian Greek isoglosses which the scholar Vladimir Orel considers surprisingly high in comparison with the Indo Albanian and Armeno Albanian ones the author concludes that this particular proximity could be the result of intense secondary contacts of two proto dialects 95 Curtis 2012 does not consider the number of surviving loanwords to be a valid argument as many Greek loans were likely lost through replacement by later Latin and Slavic loans just as notoriously happened to most native Albanian vocabulary 96 Some scholars such as Cabej 91 97 and Huld 87 b have challenged the argument that Greek evidence implies a northern origin instead suggesting the opposite that the specifically Northwestern Doric affiliations and ancient dating of Greek loans imply a specifically Western Balkan Albanian presence to the north and west of Greeks specifically in antiquity though Huld cautions that the classical precursors of the Albanians would be Illyrians to classical writers but that the Illyrian label is hardly enlightening since classical ethnology was imprecise 87 Example include Ancient Greek laxanon and its Albanian reflex laker because it would appear to have been loaned before lt x gt changed from an aspirated stop kʰ to a fricative x mᾱxana and its Albanian reflex moker which likewise seems to reflect a stop kʰ for lt x gt and also must be specifically Doric or Northwestern other Greek dialects have lt e gt or lt h gt rather than lt a gt and 8wrakion and its Albanian reflex targoze which would appear to have predated the frication of Greek lt 8 gt before the shift in Koine representing tʰ 96 Latin and early Romance loans Edit See also Albanian Romanian linguistic relationship and List of Romanian words of possible Dacian origin with correspondence in Albanian Further information Origin of the Romanians Latin loans are dated to the period of 167 BC to 400 AD 98 167 BC coincides with the fall of the kingdom ruled by Gentius and reflects the early date of the entry of Latin based vocabulary in Albanian It entered Albanian in the Early Proto Albanian stage and evolved in later stages as a part of the Proto Albanian vocabulary and within its phonological system Albanian is one of the oldest languages that came into contact with Latin and adopted Latin vocabulary It has preserved 270 Latin based words which are found in all Romance languages 85 words which aren t found in Romance languages 151 which are found in Albanian but not in Balkan Romance and its descendant Romanian and 39 words which are found only in Albanian and Romanian 99 The contact zone between Albanian and Romanian was likely located in eastern and southeastern Serbia 100 The preservation of Proto Albanian vocabulary and linguistic features in Romanian highlights that at least partly Balkan Latin emerged as Albanian speakers shifted to Latin 101 The other layer of linguistic contacts of Albanian with Latin involves Old Dalmatian a western Balkan derivative of Balkan Latin Albanian maintained links with both coastal western and central inland Balkan Latin formations 102 Hamp indicates there are words that follow Dalmatian phonetic rules in Albanian giving as an example the word drejt straight lt d i rectus matching developments in Old Dalmatian traita lt tract 93 Romanian scholars Vatasescu and Mihaescu using lexical analysis of Albanian have concluded that Albanian was also heavily influenced by an extinct Romance language that was distinct from both Romanian and Dalmatian Because the Latin words common to only Romanian and Albanian are significantly less than those that are common to only Albanian and Western Romance Mihaescu argues that Albanian evolved in a region with much greater contact with Western Romance regions than with Romanian speaking regions and located this region in present day Albania Kosovo and Western North Macedonia spanning east to Bitola and Pristina 103 The Christian religious vocabulary of Albanian is mostly Latin as well including even the basic terms such to bless altar and to receive communion It indicates that Albanians were Christianized under the Latin based liturgy and ecclesiastical order which would be known as Roman Catholic in later centuries 92 Slavic Edit The contacts began after the South Slavic migrations of the Balkans in the 6th and 7th centuries The modern Albanian lexicon contains around 250 Slavic borrowings that are shared among all the dialects 104 Slavic settlement probably shaped the present geographic spread of the Albanians It is likely that Albanians took refuge in the mountainous areas of northern and central Albania eastern Montenegro western North Macedonia and Kosovo Long standing contact between Slavs and Albanians might have been common in mountain passages and agriculture or fishing areas in particular in the valleys of the White and Black branches of the Drin and around the Shkoder and Ohrid lakes Such contact with one another in these areas has caused many changes in Slavic and Albanian local dialects 105 As Albanian and Slavic have been in contact since the early Middle Ages toponymical loanwords in both belong to different chronological strata and reveal different periods of acquisition Old Slavic loanwords into Albanian develop early Slavic s as sh and y as u within Albanian phonology of that era Norbert Jokl defined this older period from the earliest Albanian Slavic contacts to 1000 AD at the latest while contemporary linguists like Vladimir Orel define it as between the 6th and the 8th century AD 106 107 Newer loanwords preserve Slavic s and other features which no longer show phonological development within Albanian Such toponyms from the earlier period of contact in Albania include Bushtrice Kukes 108 Dishnica Permet 109 Dragoshtunje Elbasan 110 Leshnje Leshnje Berat and other areas 111 Shelcan Elbasan Shishtavec Kukes Gora Shuec Devoll and Shtepez Gjirokaster 112 Shopel Iballe 113 Veleshnje Skrapar 114 and others 115 Similar toponyms in a later period produced different results e g Bistrice Sarande instead of Bushtrice or Selcan Kelcyre instead of Shelcan 116 Part of the toponyms of Slavic origin were acquired in Albanian before the finalization of the Slavic liquid metathesis ca end of the 8th century They include Ardenice Lushnje Berzane Lezhe Gerdec and Berzi Tirane and a cluster of toponyms along the route Berat Tepelene Permet 117 Unidentified Romance language hypothesis Edit It has been concluded that the partial Latinization of Roman era Albania was heavy in coastal areas in the plains and along the Via Egnatia which passed through Albania In these regions Madgearu notes that the survival of Illyrian names and the depiction of people with Illyrian dress on gravestones is not enough to prove successful resistance against Romanization and that in these regions there were many Latin inscriptions and Roman settlements Madgearu concludes that only the northern mountain regions escaped Romanization In some regions Madgearu concludes that it has been shown that in some areas a Latinate population that survived until at least the seventh century passed on local place names that had mixed characteristics of Eastern and Western Romance into Albanian 103 Archaeology Edit Glass necklace 7th 8th century Shurdhah The Komani Kruja culture is an archaeological culture attested from late antiquity to the Middle Ages in central and northern Albania southern Montenegro and similar sites in the western parts of North Macedonia 118 119 It consists of settlements usually built below hillforts along the Lezhe Praevalitana Dardania and Via Egnatia road networks which connected the Adriatic coastline with the central Balkan Roman provinces Its type site is Komani and the nearby Dalmace hill in the Drin river valley Limited excavations campaigns occurred until the 1990s Objects from a vast area covering nearby regions the entire Byzantine Empire the northern Balkans and Hungary and sea routes from Sicily to Crimea were found in Dalmace and other sites coming from many different production centres local Byzantine Sicilian Avar Slavic Hungarian Crimean and even possibly Merovingian and Carolingian 120 Within Albanian archaeology based on the continuity of pre Roman Illyrian forms in the production of several types of local objects found in graves the population of Komani Kruja was framed as a group which descended from the local Illyrians who re asserted their independence from the Roman Empire after many centuries and formed the core of the later historical region of Arbanon 72 need quotation to verify As research focused almost entirely on grave contexts and burial sites settlements and living spaces were often ignored 121 Yugoslav archaeology proposed an opposite narrative and tried to frame the population as Slavic especially in the region of western Macedonia 122 Archaeological research has shown that these sites were not related to regions then inhabited by Slavs and even in regions like Macedonia no Slavic settlements had been founded in the 7th century 123 What was established in this early phase of research was that Komani Kruja settlements represented a local non Slavic population which has been described as Romanized Illyrian Latin speaking or Latin literate 124 125 This is corroborated by the absence of Slavic toponyms and survival of Latin ones in the Komani Kruja area In terms of historiography the thesis of older Albanian archaeology was an untestable hypothesis as no historical sources exist which can link Komani Kruja to the first definite attestation of medieval Albanians in the 11th century 124 125 Archaeologically while it was considered possible and even likely that Komani Kruja sites were used continuously from the 7th century onwards it remained an untested hypothesis as research was still limited 126 Whether this population represented local continuity or arrived at an earlier period from a more northern location as the Slavs entered the Balkans remained unclear at the time but regardless of their ultimate geographical origins these groups maintained Justinianic era cultural traditions of the 6th century possibly as a statement of their collective identity and derived their material cultural references to the Justinianic military system 127 In this context they may have used burial customs as a means of reference to an idealized image of the past Roman power 127 Research greatly expanded after 2009 and the first survey of Komani s topography was produced in 2014 Until then except for the area of the cemetery the size of the settlement and its extension remained unknown In 2014 it was revealed that Komani occupied an area of more than 40 ha a much larger territory than originally thought Its oldest settlement phase dates to the Hellenistic era 128 Proper development began in the late antiquity and continued well into the Middle Ages 13th 14th centuries It indicates that Komani was a late Roman fort and an important trading node in the networks of Praevalitana and Dardania In the Avar Slavic raids communities from present day northern Albania and nearby areas clustered around hill sites for better protection as is the case of other areas like Lezha and Sarda During the 7th century as Byzantine authority was reestablished after the Avar Slavic raids and the prosperity of the settlements increased Komani saw increase in population and a new elite began to take shape Increase in population and wealth was marked by the establishment of new settlements and new churches in their vicinity Komani formed a local network with Lezha and Kruja and in turn this network was integrated in the wider Byzantine Mediterranean world maintained contacts with the northern Balkans and engaged in long distance trade 129 Tom Winnifrith 2020 says that the Komani Kruja culture shows that in that area a Latin Illyrian civilization survived to emerge later as Albanians and Vlachs The lack of interest among Slavs for the barren mountains of Northern Albania would explain the survival of Albanian as a language 130 Paleo Balkan linguistic theories EditSee also Paleo Balkan languages Map made by Romanian scholarship according to the theory that Proto Albanian and proto Romanian contact zones were Dacia Mediterranea and Dardania in the 3rd century while not excluding Romanian continuity in Dacia Rival immigrationist view of Romanian origins where Albanian Romanian contact occurred either in Dardania Northeast Albania or in Western Thrace assuming that Albanian would have been spoken in and or near one or both of these two regions during the 6th to 9th centuries The general consensus is that Albanians originate from one or possibly a mixture of Paleo Balkan peoples but which specific peoples is a matter of continuing debate 131 132 133 Messapic is the only sufficiently attested language via which commonly accepted Illyrian Albanian connections have been produced It is unclear whether Messapic was an Illyrian dialect or if it diverged enough to be a separate language although in general it is treated as a distinct language Dardanian in the context of a distinct language has gained prominence in the possible genealogy of the Albanian language in recent decades In the genealogy of Thracian V Georgiev who proposed Daco Mysian as the ancestral language of Albanian considered it to be a separate language from Thracian 134 From a genealogical standpoint Messapic is the closest at least partially attested language to Albanian Hyllested amp Joseph 2022 label this Albanian Messapic branch as Illyric and in agreement with recent bibliography identify Greco Phrygian as the IE branch closest to the Albanian Messapic one These two branches form an areal grouping which is often called Balkan IE with Armenian 135 The two broader main linguistic groupings which have been proposed as ancestral variants of Albanian are Illyrian and Thracian 136 The Illyrian linguistic theory has some consensus but Illyrian language is too little attested for definite comparisons to be made Further issues are linked to the definitions of Illyrian and Thracian which are vague and aren t applied to the same areas which were considered to be part of Illyria and Thrace in antiquity 137 136 In contemporary research two main onomastic provinces have been defined in which Illyrian personal names occur the southern Illyrian or south eastern Dalmatian province Albania Montenegro and their hinterland and the central Illyrian or middle Dalmatian Pannonian province parts of Croatia Bosnia and western Serbia The region of the Dardani modern Kosovo parts of northern North Macedonia parts of eastern Serbia saw the overlap of the southern south eastern Dalmatian and local anthroponymy 138 A third area around modern Slovenia sometimes considered part of Illyria in antiquity is considered to have been closer to Venetic 139 140 Eric Hamp distanced categorization of Albanian from particular historical groupings and their unresolved issues and treated it as a separate undocumented Paleo Balkan language for the purpose of research clarity As such in recent decades it has become preferable to treat historical languages like Illyrian and Thracian and existing ones like Albanian as separate branches within the Indo European family 78 There is a debate on whether the Illyrian language was a centum or a satem language It is also uncertain whether Illyrians spoke a homogeneous language or rather a collection of different but related languages that were wrongly considered the same language by ancient writers The Venetic tribes formerly considered Illyrian are no longer considered categorised with Illyrians gt The same is sometimes said of the Thracian language For example based on the toponyms and other lexical items Thracian and Dacian were probably different but related languages citation needed Albanian shows traces of satemization within the Indo European language tree however the majority of Albanologists 141 hold that unlike most satem languages it has preserved the distinction of kʷ and gʷ from k and g before front vowels merged in satem languages and there is a debate whether Illyrian was centum or satem On the other hand Dacian 142 and Thracian 143 seem to belong to satem The debate is often politically charged and to be conclusive more evidence is needed Such evidence unfortunately may not be easily forthcoming because of a lack of sources 144 Illyrian Edit See also Illyrians Illyrian tribes in the 1st 2nd centuries CE The theory that Albanians were related to the Illyrians was proposed for the first time by the Swedish 145 historian Johann Erich Thunmann in 1774 146 The scholars who advocate an Illyrian origin are numerous 147 148 149 150 Those who argue in favour of an Illyrian origin maintain that the indigenous Illyrian tribes dwelling in South Illyria including today s Albania went up into the mountains when Slavs occupied the lowlands 151 152 while another version of this hypothesis states that the Albanians are the descendants of Illyrian tribes located between Dalmatia and the Danube who spilled south 153 Some of the arguments for the Illyrian Albanian connection have been as follows 150 154 From what is known from the old Balkan populations territories Greeks Illyrians Thracians Dacians Albanian is spoken in a region where Illyrian was spoken in ancient times 90 There is no evidence of any major migration into Albanian territory since the records of Illyrian occupation 90 Because descent from Illyrians makes geographical sense and there is no linguistic or historical evidence proving a replacement then the burden of proof lies on the side of those who would deny a connection of Albanian with Illyrian 155 The Albanian tribal society has preserved the ancient Illyrian social structure based on tribal units 156 157 In addition Cabej 158 analyzed the morphology of some tribal names and pointed out that the Illyrian suffix at appeared in the names of Illyrian tribes such as Docleatae Labeatae Autariates Delamatae correspondends to the suffix at appeared in the 15th century Albanian tribes names like Bakirat and Demat in Albania today the suffixes of the names of some villages such as Dukat and Filat do match to the Illyrian one reinforcing Albania s position as a direct descendant of the Illyrians Many of what remain as attested words to Illyrian have an Albanian explanation and also a number of Illyrian lexical items toponyms hydronyms oronyms anthroponyms etc have been linked to Albanian 159 Words borrowed from Latin e g Latin aurum gt ar gold gaudium gt gaz joy etc 160 date back before the Christian era 154 90 while the Illyrians on the territory of modern Albania were the first from the old Balkan populations to be conquered by Romans in 229 167 BC the Thracians were conquered in 45 AD and the Dacians in 106 AD The characteristics of the Albanian dialects Tosk and Gheg 161 in the treatment of the native and loanwords from other languages have led to the conclusion that the dialectal split occurred after Christianisation of the region 4th century AD and at the time of the Slavic migration to the Balkans 90 162 or thereafter between the 6th to 7th century AD 163 with the historic boundary between the Gheg and Tosk dialects being the Shkumbin river 164 which straddled the Jirecek line 154 165 Messapic Edit Iapygian migrations in the early first millennium BC Messapic is an Iron Age language spoken in Apulia by the Iapygians Messapians Peucetians Daunians which settled in Italy as part of an Illyrian migration from the Balkans in the transitional period between the Bronze and Iron Ages 166 As Messapic was attested after 500 years of development in the Italian peninsula it s generally treated as distinct linguistically from Illyrian Both languages are placed in the same branch of Indo European Eric Hamp has grouped them under Messapo Illyrian which is further grouped with Albanian under Adriatic Indo European 167 Other schemes group the three languages under General Illyrian and Western Paleo Balkan 168 Messapian shares several exclusive lexical correspondences and general features with Albanian Whether Messapian and Albanian share common features because of a common ancestral Illyrian idiom or whether these are features which developed in convergence among the languages of their grouping in the territory of Illyria Shared cognates and features indicate a closer link between the two languages 169 The cognates include Messapic aran and Albanian are field bilia and bije daughter menza in the name Manzanas and mez foal brendion in Brundisium and bri horn 170 Some Messapian toponyms like Manduria in Apulia have no etymological forms outside Albanian linguistic sources 171 Other linguistic elements such as particles prepositions suffixes and phonological features of the Messapic language find singular affinities with Albanian 172 Thracian or Daco Moesian Edit Aside from an Illyrian origin a Dacian or Thracian origin is also hypothesized There are a number of factors taken as evidence for a Dacian or Thracian origin of Albanians Scholars who support a Dacian origin maintain on their side that Albanians moved southwards between the 3rd and 6th centuries AD from the Moesian area in present day Romania 173 Others argue instead for a Thracian origin and maintain that the proto Albanians are to be located in the area between Nis Skopje Sofia and Albania 174 or between the Rhodope and Balkan Mountains from which they moved to present day Albania before the arrival of the Slavs 175 According to Vladimir Orel for example the territory associated with proto Albanian almost certainly does not correspond with that of modern Albania i e the Illyrian coast but rather that of Dacia Ripensis and farther north 176 The Romanian historian I I Russu has originated the theory that Albanians represent a massive migration of the Carpi population pressed by the Slavic migrations Due to political reasons the book was first published in 1995 and translated in German by Konrad Gundisch 177 German historian Gottfried Schramm derived the Albanians from the Christianized Bessi after their remnants were pushed by Slavs and Bulgars during the 9th century westwards into today Albania 178 From a linguistic point of view it emerges that the Thracian Bessian hypothesis of the origin of Albanian should be rejected since only very little comparative linguistic material is available the Thracian is attested only marginally while the Bessian is completely unknown but at the same time the individual phonetic history of Albanian and Thracian clearly indicates a very different sound development that cannot be considered as the result of one language Furthermore the Christian vocabulary of Albanian is mainly Latin which speaks against the construct of a Bessian church language 179 The elite of the Bessi tribe was gradually Hellenized 180 181 Low level of borrowings from Greek in the Albanian language is a further argument against the identification of Albanian with the Bessi 182 Cities whose names follow Albanian phonetic laws such as Shtip Stip Shkupi Skopje and Nish Nis lie in the areas believed to historically been inhabited by Thracians Paionians and Dardani the latter is most often considered an Illyrian tribe by ancient historians While there still is no clear picture of where the Illyrian Thracian border was Nis is mostly considered Illyrian territory 183 There are some close correspondences between Thracian and Albanian words 184 However as with Illyrian most Dacian and Thracian words and names have not been closely linked with Albanian v Hamp Also many Dacian and Thracian placenames were made out of joined names such as Dacian Sucidava or Thracian Bessapara see List of Dacian cities and List of ancient Thracian cities while modern Albanian does not allow this 184 Many city names were composed of an initial lexical element affixed to dava daua deva deba daba or dova which meant city or town Endings on more southern regions are exclusively bria town city disza diza dizos fortress walled settlement para paron pera phara town village Most Illyrian names are composed of a single unit many Thracian ones are made of two units joined together Several Thracian place names end in para for example which is thought to mean ford or diza which is thought to mean fortress Thus in the territory of the Bessi a well known Thracian tribe we have the town of Bessapara ford of the Bessi The structure here is the same as in many European languages thus the town of Peter can be called Peterborough Petrograd Petersburg Pierreville and so on But the crucial fact is that this structure is impossible in Albanian which can only say Qytet i Pjetrit not Pjeterqytet If para were the Albanian for ford then the place name would have to be Para e Besseve this might be reduced in time to something like Parabessa but it could never become Bessapara And what is at stake here is not some superficial feature of the language which might easily change over time but a profound structural principle This is one of the strongest available arguments to show that Albanian cannot have developed out of Thracian or Dacian 185 Bulgarian linguist Vladimir I Georgiev posits that Albanians descend from a Dacian population from Moesia now the Morava region of eastern Serbia and that Illyrian toponyms are found in a far smaller area than the traditional area of Illyrian settlement 100 According to Georgiev Latin loanwords into Albanian show East Balkan Latin proto Romanian phonetics rather than West Balkan Dalmatian phonetics 186 Combined with the fact that the Romanian language contains several hundred words similar only to Albanian Georgiev proposes that Albanian formed between the 4th and 6th centuries in or near modern day Romania which was Dacian territory 94 He suggests that Romanian is a fully Romanised Dacian language whereas Albanian is only partly so 94 Albanian and Eastern Romance also share grammatical features see Balkan language union and phonological features such as the common phonemes or the rhotacism of n 93 This theory however has been challenged and dismantled by other scholars 187 188 While Noel Malcolm suggests Romanian and Aromanian originated in the Southern Balkans from Romanized Illyrians 189 Apart from the linguistic theory that Albanian is more akin to East Balkan Romance i e Dacian substrate than West Balkan Romance i e Illyrian Dalmatian substrate Georgiev also notes that marine words in Albanian are borrowed from other languages suggesting that Albanians were not originally a coastal people 94 According to Georgiev the scarcity of Greek loan words also supports a Dacian theory if Albanians originated in the region of Illyria there would surely be a heavy Greek influence 94 According to historian John Van Antwerp Fine who does define Albanians in his glossary as an Indo European people probably descended from the ancient Illyrians 190 nevertheless states that these are serious non chauvinistic arguments that cannot be summarily dismissed 94 Romanian scholars Vatasescu and Mihaescu using lexical analysis of Albanian have concluded that Albanian was also heavily influenced by an extinct Romance language that was distinct from both Romanian and Dalmatian Because the Latin words common to only Romanian and Albanian are significantly less than those that are common to only Albanian and Western Romance Mihaescu argues that Albanian evolved in a region with much greater contact to Western Romance regions than to Romanian speaking regions and located this region in present day Albania Kosovo and Western North Macedonia spanning east to Bitola and Pristina 103 An argument against a Thracian origin which does not apply to Dacian is that most Thracian territory was on the Greek half of the Jirecek Line aside from varied Thracian populations stretching from Thrace into Albania passing through Paionia and Dardania and up into Moesia it is considered that most Thracians were Hellenized in Thrace v Hoddinott and Macedonia The Dacian theory could also be consistent with the known patterns of barbarian incursions Although there is no documentation of an Albanian migration during the fourth to sixth centuries the Rumanian region was heavily affected by large scale invasion of Goths and Slavs and the Morava valley in Serbia was a possible main invasion route and the site of the earliest known Slavic sites Thus this would have been a region from which an indigenous population would naturally have fled 94 Genetic studies EditFurther information Genetic history of Europe Albanian groups in traditional clothes during folklore festivals from Tropoje left and Skrapar right Various genetic studies have been done on the European population some of them including current Albanian population Albanian speaking populations outside Albania and the Balkan region as a whole Albanians share similar genetics with neighbouring ethnic populations with close clusters forming primarily with mainland Greeks and southern Italian populations 191 192 193 194 Y DNA Edit The three haplogroups most strongly associated with Albanian people are E V13 R1b and J2b L283 E V13 the most common European sub clade of E1b1b1a E M78 represents about 1 3 of all Albanian men and peaks in Kosovo 40 The current distribution of this lineage might be the result of several demographic expansions from the Balkans such as that associated with the Balkan Bronze Age and more recently during the Roman era with the so called rise of Illyrian soldiery 195 196 197 198 199 The peak of the haplogroup in Kosovo however has been attributed to genetic drift 196 R1b M269 represents about 1 5 of Albanian men mostly under clades R Z2103 and R PF7562 It is linked with the introduction of the Indo European languages in the Balkans 200 The oldest R1b gt R RPF7562 sample in historically Albanian inhabited regions has been found in EBA Cinamak northern Albania 2663 2472 calBCE 4045 25 BP PSUAMS 7926 In the same site during the Iron Age half of the men carried R M269 R CTS1450 x1 201 J2b L283 represents 14 18 of Albanian men 202 It peaks in northern Albania The oldest J L283 gt J Z597 sample in Albania found in MBA Shkrel as early as the 19th century BC 201 It first spread from the northwestern Balkans southwards during the EBA MBA with cultures likes Cetina Dalmatia and Cetina derived groups which have yielded most J L283 samples in antiquity 201 In a 2022 study J L283 and its paternal clade J M241 were found in three out of seven Daunian samples 203 In IA Cinamak northern Albania half of the samples belonged to J L283 201 Y haplogroup I is represented by I1 more common in northern Europe and I2 where several of its sub clades are found in significant amounts in the South Slavic population The specific I sub clade which has attracted most discussion in Balkan studies currently referred to as I2a1b defined by SNP M423 204 205 This clade has higher frequencies to the north of the Albanophone area in Dalmatia and Bosnia 196 The expansion of I2a Din took place during Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages and today is common in Slavic speaking peoples 206 Haplogroup R1a is common in Central and Eastern Europe especially in Slavic nations 207 and is also common in Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent In the Balkans it is strongly associated with Slavic areas 196 A study by Battaglia et al in 2008 195 found the following haplogroup distributions among Albanians in Albania itself N E M78 E1b1b1a E M78 V13 E1b1b1a2 G P15 G2a I M253 I1 I M423 I2a1 I M223 I2b1 J M267 J1 J M67 J2a1b J M92 J2a1b1 J M241 J2b2 R M17 R1a1 R M269 R1b1b255 1 8 1 55 23 6 13 55 1 8 1 55 3 6 2 55 14 5 8 55 3 6 2 55 3 6 2 55 3 6 2 55 1 8 1 55 14 5 8 55 9 1 5 55 18 2 10 55 The same study by Battaglia et al 2008 also found the following distributions among Albanians in North Macedonia N E M78 E1b1b1a E M78 V13 E1b1b1a2 E M123 E1b1b1c G P15 G2a I M253 I1 I P37 2 I2a I M423 I2a1 I M26 I2a2 J M267 J1 J M67 J2a1b J M241 J2b2 R M17 R1a1 R M269 R1b1b264 1 6 1 64 34 4 22 64 3 1 2 64 1 6 1 64 4 7 3 64 1 6 1 64 9 4 6 64 1 6 1 64 6 3 4 64 1 6 1 64 14 1 9 64 1 6 1 64 18 8 12 64 The same study by Battaglia et al 2008 also found the following distributions among Albanians in Albania itself and Albanians in North Macedonia N E M78 E1b1b1a E M78 V13 E1b1b1a2 E M123 E1b1b1c G P15 G2a I M253 I1 I P37 2 I2a I M423 I2a1 I M26 I2a2 I M223 I2b1 J M267 J1 J M67 J2a1b J M92 J2a1b1 J M241 J2b2 R M17 R1a1 R M269 R1b1b255 64 119 1 68 2 119 29 4 35 119 1 68 2 119 1 68 2 119 4 2 5 119 0 84 1 119 11 76 14 119 0 84 1 119 1 68 2 119 5 04 6 119 2 52 3 119 0 84 1 119 14 3 17 119 5 04 6 119 18 5 22 119 A study by Pericic et al in 2005 196 found the following Y Dna haplogroup frequencies in Albanians from Kosovo with E V13 subclade of haplogroup E1b1b representing 43 85 of the total note that Albanians from other regions have slightly lower percentages of E V13 but similar J2b and R1b N E M78 E3b1 E M78 a E3b1 a E M81 E3b2 E M123 E3b3 J M241 J2e1 I M253 I1a I P37 I1b xM26 R M173 R1b R SRY 1532 R1a R P xQ R1 114 1 75 2 114 43 85 50 114 0 90 1 114 0 90 1 114 16 70 19 114 5 25 6 114 2 70 3 114 21 10 24 114 4 40 5 114 1 75 2 114 The same study by Pericic et al in 2005 196 found the following Y Dna haplogroup frequencies in Albanians from Kosovo with E V13 subclade of haplogroup E1b1b representing 43 85 of the total note that Albanians from other regions have slightly lower percentages of E V13 but similar J2b and R1b N E3b1 M78 R1b M173 J2e M102 R1a M17 I1b xM26 P37 I M253 I1a114 45 60 52 114 21 10 24 114 16 70 19 114 4 40 5 114 2 70 3 114 5 25 6 114 Comparison of haplogroups among Albanian subgroups Population Language family Table 1 n Table 2 R1b Table 3 n R1a n I n E1b1b n E1b1a n J n G n N n T n L n HAlbanians IE Albanian 106 23 58 25 106 205 1944 E M78a31 58 6 19 Cruciani2004 199 E M7825 11 44 208 56 J M10214 29 8 56 J M673 57 2 56 J M921 79 1 56 J M172J219 64 11 56 J M267J1 3 57 2 56 23 21 13 56 208 Albanians IE Albanian 51 R1bM17317 65 9 51 198 51 R1aM179 8 5 51 198 106 I1b xM26 P3716 98 18 106 205 63 E3b1M7826 98 17 63 208 Cruciani2004 199 56 J2eM10214 29 8 56 208 Kosovo Albanians Pristina IE Albanian 114 21 10 24 114 196 114 4 42 5 114 196 114 I1a 5 31 6 114 I1b xM26 2 65 3 114 7 96 9 114 196 114 E3b1 1 75 2 114 E3b1 a 43 85 50 114 E3b2 0 90 1 114 E3b3 0 90 1 114 47 40 54 114 196 114 J2e1 16 70 19 114 196 Albanians Tirana IE Albanian 30 18 3 209 30 8 3 209 30 11 7 209 30 28 3 209 30 0 0 209 30 20 0 209 30 3 3 209 Albanians IE Albanian 55 R1b1b2 18 2 10 55 195 55 R1a1 9 1 5 55 195 55 I1 3 6 2 55 I2a1 14 5 8 55 I2b1 3 6 2 55 21 7 12 55 195 55 E M78 1 8 1 55 E V13 23 6 13 55 25 4 14 55 195 55 0 0 195 55 J1 3 6 2 55 J2a1b 3 6 2 55 J2a1b1 1 8 1 55 J2b2 14 5 8 55 23 5 13 55 195 55 G2a 1 8 1 55 195 55 0 0 195 55 0 0 195 55 0 0 195 Albanians North Macedonia IE Albanian 64 R1b1b2 18 8 12 64 195 64 R1a1 1 6 1 64 195 64 I1 4 7 3 64 I2a 1 6 1 64 I2a1 9 4 6 64 I2a2 1 6 1 64 17 3 11 64 195 64 E M78 1 6 1 64 E V13 34 4 22 64 E M123 3 1 2 64 39 1 25 64 195 64 0 0 195 64 J1 6 3 4 64 J2a1b 1 6 1 64 J2b2 14 1 9 64 22 14 64 195 64 G2a 1 6 1 64 195 64 0 0 195 64 0 0 195 64 0 0 195 Albanians Tirana andAlbanians North Macedonia IE Albanian 55 64 119 R1b1b218 50 22 119 195 55 64 119 R1a1 5 05 6 119 195 55 64 119 I1 4 2 5 119 I2a 0 85 1 119 I2a1 11 8 14 119 I2a20 85 1 119 I2a13 5 16 119 I2b11 7 2 119 19 33 23 119 195 55 64 119 E M781 7 2 119 E V1329 4 35 119 E M1231 7 2 119 32 8 39 119 195 55 64 119 0 0 195 55 64 119 J1 5 05 6 119 J2a1b 2 55 3 119 J2a1b10 85 1 119 J2a3 4 4 119 J2b214 3 17 119 22 70 27 119 195 55 64 119 G2a 1 7 2 119 195 55 64 119 0 0 195 55 64 119 0 0 195 55 64 119 0 0 195 Population Language family Table 1 n Table 2 R1b Table 3 n R1a n I n E1b1b n E1b1a n J n G n N n T n L n HComparison of haplogroups among Albanian subgroups Population Language Table 1 n R1b R1a I E1b1b J G N T Others ReferenceAlbanians IE Albanian 51 R1bM17317 65 9 51 R1aM179 8 5 51 I1b xM26 P3716 98 18 106 E3b1M7826 98 17 63 J2eM10214 29 8 56 2 0 9 51 0 0 0 0 Pericic2005 196 Albanians Pristina IE Albanian 114 R1b21 10 24 114 R1a4 42 5 114 I1a5 31 6 114 I1b xM26 2 65 3 114 7 96 9 114 E3b11 75 2 114 E3b1 a43 85 50 114 E3b20 90 1 114 E3b30 90 1 114 47 40 54 114 J2e116 7 19 114 0 0 0 P xQ R1 1 77 2 114 Pericic2005 196 Albanians Tirana IE Albanian 30 13 3 13 3 16 7 23 3 20 0 3 3 Bosch2006 209 Albanians Tirana IE Albanian 55 R1b1b218 2 10 55 R1a1 9 1 5 55 I1 3 6 2 55 I2a1 14 5 8 55 I2b13 6 2 55 21 8 12 55 E M781 8 1 55 E V1323 6 13 55 25 4 14 55 J1 3 6 2 55 J2a1b 3 6 2 55 J2a1b11 8 1 55 J2a5 4 3 55 J2b214 5 8 55 23 5 13 55 G2a 1 8 1 55 0 0 0 0 Battaglia2008 195 Albanians North Macedonia IE Albanian 64 R1b1b218 8 12 64 R1a1 1 6 1 64 I1 4 7 3 64 I2a 1 6 1 64 I2a1 9 4 6 64 I2a21 6 1 64 I2a12 6 8 64 17 2 11 64 E M781 6 1 64 E V1334 4 22 64 E M1233 1 2 64 39 1 25 64 J1 6 3 4 64 J2a1b 1 6 1 64 J2b214 1 9 64 22 14 64 G2a 1 6 1 64 0 0 0 0 Battaglia2008 195 Albanians Tirana ANDAlbanians North Macedonia IE Albanian 55 64 119 R1b1b218 50 22 119 R1a1 5 05 6 119 I1 4 2 5 119 I2a 0 85 1 119 I2a1 11 8 14 119 I2a20 85 1 119 I2a13 5 16 119 I2b11 7 2 119 19 33 23 119 E M781 7 2 119 E V1329 4 35 119 E M1231 7 2 119 32 8 39 119 J1 5 05 6 119 J2a1b 2 55 3 119 J2a1b10 85 1 119 J2a3 4 4 119 J2b214 3 17 119 22 70 27 119 G2a 1 7 2 119 0 0 0 0 Battaglia2008 195 Albanians IE Albanian 223 18 39 41 223 4 04 9 223 13 29 223 35 43 79 223 23 77 53 223 2 69 6 223 0 0 9 2 223 1 79 4 223 Sarno2015 210 Table notes a b c IE Indo European a b First column gives the amount of total Sample Size studied a b Second column gives the Percentage of the particular haplogroup among the Sample Size A study on the Y chromosome haplotypes DYS19 STR and YAP and on mitochondrial DNA found no significant difference between Albanians and most other Europeans 211 Apart from the main ancestors among prehistoric Balkan populations there is an additional admixture from Slavic Greek Vlach Italo Roman Celtic and Germanic elements 212 Larger samples collected by volunteer led projects show the Albanians belong largely to Y chromosomes J2b2 L283 R1b Z2103 BY611 and EV 13 from Ancient Balkan populations 213 214 In a 2013 study which compared one Albanian sample to other European samples the authors concluded that it did not differ significantly to other European populations especially groups such as Greeks Italians and Macedonians 215 216 195 196 mtDNA Edit Another study of old Balkan populations and their genetic affinities with current European populations was done in 2004 based on mitochondrial DNA on the skeletal remains of some old Thracian populations from SE of Romania dating from the Bronze and Iron Age 217 This study was during excavations of some human fossil bones of 20 individuals dating about 3200 4100 years from the Bronze Age belonging to some cultures such as Tei Monteoru and Noua were found in graves from some necropoles SE of Romania namely in Zimnicea Smeeni Candesti Cioinagi Balintesti Gradistea Coslogeni and Sultana Malu Rosu and the human fossil bones and teeth of 27 individuals from the early Iron Age dating from the 10th to 7th centuries BC from the Hallstatt Era the Babadag culture were found extremely SE of Romania near the Black Sea coast in some settlements from Dobruja namely Jurilovca Satu Nou Babadag Niculitel and Enisala Palanca 217 After comparing this material with the present day European population the authors concluded Computing the frequency of common point mutations of the present day European population with the Thracian population has resulted that the Italian 7 9 the Albanian 6 3 and the Greek 5 8 have shown a bias of closer mtDna genetic kinship with the Thracian individuals than the Romanian and Bulgarian individuals only 4 2 217 Autosomal DNA Edit Analysis of autosomal DNA which analyses all genetic components has revealed that few rigid genetic discontinuities exist in European populations apart from certain outliers such as Saami Sardinians Basques Finns and Kosovar Albanians They found that Albanians on the one hand have a high amount of identity by descent sharing suggesting that Albanian speakers derived from a relatively small population that expanded recently and rapidly in the last 1 500 years On the other hand they are not wholly isolated or endogamous because Greek and Macedonian samples shared much higher numbers of common ancestors with Albanian speakers than with other neighbors possibly a result of historical migrations or else perhaps smaller effects of the Slavic expansion in these populations At the same time the sampled Italians shared nearly as much IBD with Albanian speakers as with each other 215 In Lazaridis et al 2022 a transect of samples from Albania which date from the EBA to the present day were tested The population of Albania appears to be largely made up of the same components in similar proportions since the MBA The core part of this profile consists of 50 Anatolian Neolithic Farmers 20 25 Caucasus Hunter Gatherers 10 15 Eastern Hunter Gatherers 218 Obsolete theories EditItalian theory Edit Laonikos Chalkokondyles c 1423 1490 the Byzantine historian considered the Albanians to be an extension of the Italians 133 The theory has its origin in the first mention of the Albanians disputed whether it refers to Albanians in an ethnic sense 27 made by Attaliates 11th century For when subsequent commanders made base and shameful plans and decisions not only was the island lost to Byzantium but also the greater part of the army Unfortunately the people who had once been our allies and who possessed the same rights as citizens and the same religion i e the Albanians and the Latins who live in the Italian regions of our Empire beyond Western Rome quite suddenly became enemies when Michael Dokeianos insanely directed his command against their leaders 219 Caucasian theory Edit One of the earliest theories on the origins of the Albanians now considered obsolete incorrectly identified the proto Albanians with an area of the eastern Caucasus separately referred to by classical geographers as Caucasian Albania located in what roughly corresponds to modern day southern Dagestan northern Azerbaijan and bordering Caucasian Iberia to its west This theory conflated the two Albanias supposing that the ancestors of the Balkan Albanians Shqiptaret had migrated westward in the late classical or early medieval period The Caucasian theory was first proposed by Renaissance humanists who were familiar with the works of classical geographers and later developed by early 19th century French consul and writer Francois Pouqueville It was soon rendered obsolete in the 19th century when linguists proved Albanian as being an Indo European rather than Caucasian language 220 Pelasgian theory Edit In terms of historical theories an outdated theory 221 222 is the 19th century theory that Albanians specifically descend from the Pelasgians a broad term used by classical authors to denote the autochthonous pre Indo European inhabitants of Greece and the southern Balkans in general However there is no evidence about the possible language customs and existence of the Pelasgians as a distinct and homogeneous people and thus any particular connection to this population is unfounded 36 This theory was developed by the Austrian linguist Johann Georg von Hahn in his work Albanesische Studien in 1854 According to Hahn the Pelasgians were the original proto Albanians and the language spoken by the Pelasgians Illyrians Epirotes and ancient Macedonians were closely related In Hahn s theory the term Pelasgians was mostly used as a synonym for Illyrians This theory quickly attracted support in Albanian circles as it established a claim of predecence over other Balkan nations particularly the Greeks In addition to establishing historic right to territory this theory also established that the ancient Greek civilization and its achievements had an Albanian origin 223 The theory gained staunch support among early 20th century Albanian publicists 224 This theory is rejected by scholars today 225 In contemporary times with the Arvanite revival of the Pelasgian theory it has also been recently borrowed by other Albanian speaking populations within and from Albania in Greece to counter the negative image of their communities 226 See also EditAlbanians Albanian language Albanian nationalism Ethnogenesis Historiography and nationalism Paleo Balkan languages Prehistoric BalkansNotes Edit As the tribe of the Albanoi Ἀlbanoi in Ptolemy s Geography The name Arbōn Ἄrbwn had been used by Polybius in the 2nd century BC to designate a city in Illyria The presence of ancient West Greek loans in Albanian implies that in classical antiquity the precursors of the Albanians were a Balkan tribe to the north and west of the Greeks Such people would probably have been Illyrians to classical writers This conclusion is neither very surprising nor very enlightening since the ethnographic terminology of most classical authors is not very precise An Illyrian label does little to solve the complex problems of the origins of the Albanian language Sources EditCitations Edit Simmons Austin Jonathan Slocum Indo European Languages Balkan Group Albanian Linguistics Research Center of the University of Texas at Austin Archived from the original on 16 September 2012 Retrieved 21 October 2017 Bonefoy Yves 1993 American African and Old European mythologies University of Chicago Press p 253 ISBN 978 0 226 06457 4 Cruciani F La Fratta R Trombetta B Santolamazza P Sellitto D Colomb E B Dugoujon J M Crivellaro F Benincasa T Pascone R Moral P Watson E Melegh B Barbujani G Fuselli S Vona G Zagradisnik B Assum G Brdicka R Kozlov A I Efremov G D Coppa A Novelletto A Scozzari R 10 March 2007 Tracing Past Human Male Movements in Northern Eastern Africa and Western Eurasia New Clues from Y Chromosomal Haplogroups E M78 and J M12 Molecular Biology and Evolution 24 6 1300 1311 doi 10 1093 molbev msm049 PMID 17351267 Demiraj 2010 p 550 Demiraj 2010 p 553 The Origin of the Albanian Ethnonym Shqiptar 2018 a b Rusakov 2017 p 555 Rusakov 2017 p 154f Polybius 2 11 15 Histories Of the Illyrian troops engaged in blockading Issa those that belonged to Pharos were left unharmed as a favour to Demetrius while all the rest scattered and fled to Arbona Polybius 2 11 5 Histories in Greek eἰs tὸn Ἄrbwna skedas8entes Strabo 1903 2 5 Note 97 In H C Hamilton W Falconer eds Geography London George Bell amp Sons The Libyrnides are the islands of Arbo Pago Isola Longa Coronata amp c which border the coasts of ancient Liburnia now Murlaka Ptolemy 1843 III 13 12 23 Geography in Greek Lipsiae Sumptibus et typis Caroli Tauchnitii Giacalone Ramat Anna Ramat Paolo eds 1998 The Indo European languages Rootledge p 481 ISBN 978 0 415 06449 1 Illyria The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece amp Rome Vol 4 Oxford University Press 2010 p 65 ISBN 9780195170726 Vasiliev Alexander A 1958 1952 History of the Byzantine Empire 324 1453 Vol 2 2nd ed University of Wisconsin Press p 613 ISBN 978 0 299 80926 3 Cole Jeffrey E ed 2011 Albanians Ethnic Groups of Europe An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO LLC p 9 ISBN 9781598843026 Waldman Carl Mason Catherine 2006 Illyrians Encyclopedia of European Peoples Facts On File p 414 ISBN 978 0816049646 a b Stephanus of Byzantium 1849 Ἀrbwn Ethnika kat epitomen in Greek Berolini G Reimeri polis Ἰllyrias Polybios deyterᾳ tὸ ἐ8nikὸn Ἀrbwnios kaὶ Ἀrbwniths ὡs Ἀntrwnios kaὶ Ἀskalwniths Wilson Nigel ed 2013 Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece Routledge p 597 ISBN 9781136787997 Polybius own attitude to Rome has been variously interpreted pro Roman frequently cited in reference works such as Stephanus Ethnica and the Suda Richardson J S 2004 Hispaniae Spain and the Development of Roman Imperialism 218 82 BC Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521521345 In four places the lexicographer Stephanus of Byzantium refers to towns and Artemidorus as source and in three of the four examples cites Polybius Dragojevic Josifovska 1982 p 32 Spasovska Dimitrioska 2000 p 258 a b Plasari 2020 p 41 Quanrud 2021 p 1 Plasari 2020 p 43 1000 1018 Anonymous Fragment on the Origins of Nations Texts and Documents of Albanian History Robert Elsie Archived from the original on 2014 01 26 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Extract from Radoslav Grujic 1934 Legenda iz vremena Cara Samuila o poreklu naroda Glasnik skopskog naucnog drustva Skopje 13 pp 198 200 Translated from the Old Church Slavonic by Robert Elsie First published in R Elsie 2003 Early Albania a Reader of Historical Texts 11th 17th Centuries Wiesbaden p 3 a b Madgearu amp Gordon 2008 p 25 It was supposed that those Albanoi from 1042 were Normans from Sicily called by an archaic name the Albanoi were an independent tribe from Southern Italy Madgearu amp Gordon 2008 p 25 The following instance is indisputable It comes from the same Attaliates who wrote that the Albanians Arbanitai were involved in the 1078 rebellion of Nikephor Basilakes Alain Ducellier L Arbanon et les Albanais au xi e siecle Travaux et Memoires 3 1968 353 68 Branoysh Era L 29 September 1970 Oἱ ὅroi Ἀlbanoὶ kaὶ Ἀrbanῖtai kaὶ ἡ prwth mneia toῦ ὁmwnymoy laoῦ tῆs Balkanikῆs eἰs tὰs phgὰs toῦ IA aἰῶnos Byzantina Symmeikta 2 207 254 doi 10 12681 byzsym 650 Ludwig Thalloczy Konstantin Jirecek amp Milan Sufflay Acta et diplomata res Albaniae mediae aetatis illustrantia Diplomatic and Other Documents on Medieval Albania vol 1 Vienna 1913 113 1198 Giakoumis Konstantinos January 2003 Fourteenth century Albanian migration and the relativeautochthony of the Albanians in Epeiros The case of Gjirokaster Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 27 1 171 183 doi 10 1179 byz 2003 27 1 171 Kapovic Mate Ramat Anna Giacalone Ramat Paolo 2017 01 20 The Indo European Languages Taylor amp Francis p 554 ISBN 978 1 317 39153 1 a b Demiraj 2006 pp 42 43 Therefore we are going to limit the discussion of this issue to the western areas of the Balkan peninsula where the Albanian people have been living since many centuries ago These areas too thanks to their geographical position should have been inhabited since long before the immigration of the I E tribes who are usually called Illyrians The ancient presence of Pre I E people s in this areas has been proved inter alia by the archaeological discoveries at Maliq Vashtemi Burimas Podgorie Barc and Dersnik of Coritza district as well as at Kamnik of Cologna district at Blaz and Nezir of Mati district at Kolsh of Kukes district at Rashtan of Librazhd etc Demiraj 2008 p 38 Given the fact that Albanian is an Indo European language the direct forefathers of Albanians should be sought in those Indo European peoples which came in the Balkan peninsula in the period of settlement of the Indo European tribes and naturally were superimposed on pre existing older Indo European people or pro Indo European ones a b c Demiraj 2006 pp 42 43 Demiraj 2006 pp 44 45 Orel 1998 pp 225 409 Trnavci Gene 2010 Mortimer Sellers ed The interaction of customary law with the modern rule of law in Albania and Kosova Springer p 205 ISBN 978 9048137497 Rusakov 2017 p 102 554 Rusakov 2017 p 554 Benjamin W Fortson IV 2005 Indo European Language and Culture An Introduction Blackwell Publishing Ltd p 391 ISBN 978 1 4051 0315 2 But we know there were earlier works which have vanished without a trace the existence of written Albanian is already mentioned in a letter of 1332 and the first preserved books in both Geg and Tosk share features of spelling that indicate some kind of common literary language had already developed a b Klein Joseph amp Fritz 2018 p 1790 None of the ancient personal names ascribed to Illyrian are continued in Albanian without interruption e g from Latin Scodra Albanian cannot be regarded as an offspring of Illyrian or even Thracian but must be considereed to be a modern continuation of some other undocumented Indo European Balkan idiom However Albanian is closely related to Illyrian and also Messapic which is why Albanian in some instances may shed light on the explanation of Messapic as well as Illyrian words Ismajli 2015 p 474 a b c Katicic 1976 p 186 Demiraj 2006 p 148 Demiraj 2006 p 149 Demiraj 2006 pp 133 34 Demiraj 2006 p 132 Ismajli 2015 p 212 Matzinger 2016 p 17 Shehi 2017 p 108 Demiraj 2006 p 126 Demiraj 1997 pp 128 29 Kunstmann amp Thiergen 1987 pp 110 112 Demiraj 2006 p 150 a b c d Ismajli 2015 p 263 Demiraj 2006 pp 149 150 Matzinger 2016 p 10 Ismajli 2015 p 154 a b Prendergast 2017 p 80 a b Ismajli 2015 p 109 Matzinger 2016 p 13 Matzinger 2016 p 9 Demiraj 2006 p 155 Ismajli 2015 p 485 Demiraj 2006 p 145 It should be recollected that in the Gheg dialect this place name is pronounced Vlone which indicates that this place name has been in use among the population of Northern Albania prior to the appearance of rhotacism in the southern dialect Ismajli 2015 p 424 Demiraj 2006 pp 138 39 Matzinger 2016 p 8 Demiraj 2006 p 150 a b Wilkes 1995 p 278 Orel 2000 p XII Rusakov 2017 p 559 a b Orel 2000 pp 264 265 a b Klein Joseph amp Fritz 2018 pp 1791 1792 Orel 2000 pp 267 268 a b c d Rusakov 2017 p 556 Orel 2000 pp 266 267 Orel 2000 p 261 The entire system of Indo European kinship terms was completely reshaped in Proto Albanian apparently reflecting a radical social change The only remaining terms keeping their original function are those of the parents in law and son in law Orel 2000 p 262 Second degree blood kinship was apparently irrelevant in the Proto Albanian social structure All corresponding terms have been borrowed from Latin Klein Joseph amp Fritz 2018 p 1791 Orel 2000 p 263 Decev Dimităr D 1952 Charakteristik der thrakischen Sprache Characteristic of the Thracian language in German Sofija Akademia p 113 Cabej 1961 pp 248 249 Wilkes 1995 pp 278 279 a b c d Huld Martin E 1986 Accentual Stratification of Ancient Greek Loanwords in Albanian Zeitschrift fur vergleichend Sprachforschung 245 253 Thumb Albert 1910 Altgriechische Elemente des Albanesischen Witczak Krzysztof Tomasz 2016 The earliest Albanian loanwords in Greek 1st International Conference on Language Contact in the Balkans and Asia Minor Institute of Modern Greek Studies pp 40 42 via Academia edu a b c d e Mallory J P Adams D Q eds 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Taylor amp Francis pp 9 11 ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 The Greek and Latin loans have undergone most of the far reaching phonological changes which have so altered the shape of inherited words while Slavic and Turkish words do not show those changes Thus Albanian must have acquired much of its present form by the time Slavs entered into Balkans in the fifth and sixth centuries AD borrowed words from Greek and Latin date back to before Christian era Even very common words such as mik friend lt Lat amicus or kendoj sing lt Lat cantare come from Latin and attest to a widespread intermingling of pre Albanian and Balkan Latin speakers during the Roman period roughly from the second century BC to the fifth century AD a b Cabej 1961 a b Klein Joseph amp Fritz 2018 p 1792 a b c Hamp 1963 a b c d e f g Fine 1991 p 11 Orel 2000 p 258 a b Curtis 2012 p 16 Cabej Eqrem 1964 Einige Grundprobleme der alteren albanischen Sprachgeschichte Studia Albanica 1 69 89 Klein Joseph amp Fritz 2018 p 1732 Demiraj 2008 p 120 a b Fine 1991 pp 10 12 Prendergast 2017 p 5 Hamp 1963 p 105 a b c Madgearu amp Gordon 2008 pp 146 147 Rusakov 2017 p 557 Curtis 2012 pp 25 26 Ylli 1997 p 317 Orel 2000 p 38 Ylli 2000 p 197 Ylli 2000 p 103 Ylli 2000 p 106 Ylli 2000 p 136 Ylli 2000 p 175 Ylli 2000 p 174 Ylli 2000 p 183 Ylli 2000 p 269 Ylli 2000 p 165 Ylli 2000 p 267 Curta 2012 p 70 Filipovski 2010 p 67 Bowden 2004 p 60 Nallbani 2017 p 315 Curta 2012 p 73 Curta 2012 pp 73 74 Nonetheless it is quite clear that despite claims to the contrary burial assemblages associated with the so called Komani culture have nothing to do either with sixth to seventh century sites in the Lower Danube region known from written sources to have been inhabited by Slavs In many respects the communities who buried their dead in western Macedonia continued the traditions of Late Antiquity There are of course new elements But nothing indicates that those were communities coming from beyond the border of the Empire Judging from the archaeological evidence no Slavs have settled in Macedonia during the seventh century a b Wilkes 1995 p 278 a b Bowden 2003 p 61 Bowden 2004 p 229 The question of continuity remains unanswered It is certainly possible and indeed likely that these sites remained occupied into the seventh century and beyond Perhaps most importantly the hilltop sites need to be examined in relation to earlier Roman settlement and land use patterns from which they appear such a radical departure a b Curta 2013 Whether refugees from the northern and central re gions of the Balkans abandoned by the Roman army and administra tion or simply locals who refused to withdraw those who after ca 620 buried their dead in northern Albania Montenegro Macedonia and the island of Corfu may have done so having in mind the idealized image of the past Roman power Nallbani 2017 p 320 Nallbani 2017 p 325 Winnifrith Tom 2020 Nobody s Kingdom A History of Northern Albania Signal Books pp 97 98 ISBN 9781909930957 And in these hills a Latin Illyrian civilisation survived as witnessed by the Komani Kruja culture to emerge as Albanians and Vlachs in the second millenium Poulianos Aris 1976 About the origin of the Albanians Illyrians Iliria 5 1 261 262 doi 10 3406 iliri 1976 1237 Rapper Gilles de 1 March 2009 Pelasgic Encounters in the Greek Albanian Borderland Border Dynamics and Reversion to Ancient Past in Southern Albania PDF Anthropological Journal of European Cultures 18 1 50 68 doi 10 3167 ajec 2009 180104 S2CID 18958117 ProQuest 214565742 a b Skene Henry 1850 The Albanians Journal of the Ethnological Society of London 1848 1856 2 159 181 doi 10 2307 3014121 JSTOR 3014121 Rusakov 2017 p 555 In the case of Thracian one should mention Daco Misian which was assumed by V Georgiev to be a separate language and a direct ancestor of Albanian Hyllested amp Joseph 2022 p 235 sfn error no target CITEREFHyllestedJoseph2022 help a b Rusakov 2017 p 555 Two main theories consider Albanian as a descendant of either Illyrian or Thracian languages respectively The situation is complicated by the fact that the exact extent of the idioms referred to as the Illyrian and Thracian languages respectively is not known Prendergast 2017 p 80 Illyrian or Thracian are forwarded as the primary candidates Cabej 1971 42 with Illyrian having some scholarly consensus Thunmann 1774 240 Kopitar 1829 85 Katicic 1976 184 188 Polome 1982 888 but there is a significant lack of verified inscriptions Cabej 1971 41 Woodard 2004 11 Mann 1977 1 and it is unclear whether Illyrian as a term used in Roman records even referred to a single common language from which modern Albanian could descend Hamp 1994 Wilkes 1992 p 86 Wilkes 1992 p 70 Polome 1982 p 867 Matasovic Ranko 2012 A Grammatical Sketch of Albanian for students of Indo European Page 17 It has been claimed that the difference between the three PIE series of gutturals is preserved in Albanian before front vowels This thesis sometimes referred to as Pedersen s law is often contested but still supported by the majority of Albanologists e g Hamp Huld Olberg Schumacher and Matzinger In examining this view one should bear in mind that it seems certain that there were at least two palatalizations in Albanian the first palatalization whereby labiovelars were palatalized to s and z before front vowels and y and the second palatalization whereby all the remaining velars k and g were palatalized to q and gj respectively in the same environment PIE palatalized velars are affected by neither palatalization they yield Alb th d dh cf Alb thom I say lt k ensmi cf Skr saṃs praise L censeo reckon Boardman John et al eds 2002 The Cambridge Ancient History p 848 ISBN 0 521 22496 9 full citation needed Illyrian MultiTree A Digital Library of Language Relationships Retrieved 2019 11 29 Curtis 2012 p 18 1774 Johann Thunmann On the History and Language of the Albanians and Vlachs Texts and Documents of Albanian History Robert Elsie Archived from the original on 2010 06 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link from Johann Thunmann 1774 Legenda iz vremena Cara Samuila o poreklu naroda Uber die Geschichte und Sprache der Albaner und der Wlachen Leipzig Translated from the German by Robert Elsie Thunmann Johannes E 1774 Untersuchungen uber die Geschichte der Oslichen Europaischen Volger Leipzig Teil Fortson Benjamin W 2004 Indo European language and culture an introduction 5th ed Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 0316 9 Stipcevic Alexander Iliri 2nd edition Zagreb 1989 also published in Italian as Gli Illiri Hammond Nicholas 1992 The Relations of Illyrian Albania with the Greeks and the Romans In Winnifrith Tom ed Perspectives on Albania New York St Martin s Press a b Mallory J P Adams D Q eds 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Hammond Nicholas 1976 Migrations and invasions in Greece and adjacent areas Noyes Press p 163 ISBN 978 0 8155 5047 1 Illyrian has survived Geography has played a large part in that survival for the mountains of Montenegro and northern Albania have supplied the almost impenetrable home base of the Illyrian speaking peoples They were probably the first occupants apart from nomadic hunters of the Accursed Mountains and their fellow peaks and they maintained their independence when migrants such as the Slavs occupied the more fertile lowlands and the highland basins Their language may lack the cultural qualities of Greek but it has equaled it in its power to survive and it too is adapting itself under the name of Albanian to the conditions of the modern world Thunman Hahn Kretschmer Ribezzo La Piana Sufflay Erdeljanovic and Stadtmuller view referenced in Hamp 1963 p 104 Jirecek view referenced in Hamp 1963 p 104 a b c Demiraj Shaban Prejardhja e shqiptareve ne driten e deshmive te gjuhes shqipe Origin of the Albanians through the testimonies of Albanian Shkenca Tirane 1999 Katicic Radoslav 1976 The Ancient Languages of the Balkans Berlin Mouton Page 188 Michael L Galaty 2002 Modeling the Formation and Evolution of an Illyrian Tribal System Ethnographic and Archaeological Analogs In William A Parkinson ed The Archaeology of Tribal Societies Berghahn Books pp 109 121 ISBN 1789201713 Villar Francisco 1996 Los indoeuropeos y los origenes de Europa in Spanish Madrid Gredos p 316 ISBN 84 249 1787 1 Cabej 1965 93 Hamp 1963 Jokl s Illyrian Albanian correspondences Albaner 3a are probably the best known Certain of these require comment Cabej Eqrem Karakteristikat e huazimeve latine te gjuhes shqipe The Characteristics of Latin Loans in Albanian SF 1974 2 In German RL 1962 1 13 51 Brown amp Ogilvie 2008 p 23 In Tosk a before a nasal has become a central vowel shwa and intervocalic n has become r These two sound changes have affected only the pre Slav stratum of the Albanian lexicon that is the native words and loanwords from Greek and Latin Fortson Benjamin W 2004 Indo European language and culture an introduction 5th ed Blackwell p 448 ISBN 978 1 4051 0316 9 The dialectal split into Geg and Tosk happened sometime after the region become Christianized in the fourth century AD Christian Latin loanwords show Tosk rhotacism such as Tosk murgu monk Geg mungu from Lat monachus Ammon Ulrich Dittmar Norbert Mattheier Klaus J Trudgill Peter 2006 Sociolinguistics An International Handbook of the Science of Language and Society Walter de Gruyter p 1876 ISBN 9783110184181 Following the Slavic invasions of the Balkans sixth and seventh centuries AD Common Albanian split into two major dialect complexes that can be identified today by a bundle of isoglosses running through the middle of Albania along and just to the south of the river Shkumbini south of Elbasan then along the course of the Black Drin Drin i Zi Crni Drim through the middle of Struga on the north shore of Lake Ohrid in Macedonia The two major dialect groups are known as Tosk south of the bundle and Gheg north of the bundle Brown amp Ogilvie 2008 p 23 The river Shkumbin in central Albania historically forms the boundary between those two dialects with the population on the north speaking varieties of Geg and the population on the south varieties of Tosk Hamp 1963 The isogloss is clear in all dialects I have studied which embrace nearly all types possible It must be relatively old that is dating back into the post Roman first millennium As a guess it seems possible that this isogloss reflects a spread of the speech area after the settlement of the Albanians in roughly their present location so that the speech area straddled the Jirecek Line Wilkes 1995 p 68 Hamp amp Adams 2013 p 8 Ismajli 2015 p 45 Matzinger 2005 p 48 Matzinger 2005 pp 33 35 Trumper 2018 p 385 Overall the complex of Albanian dialects remains a solid block of the Albanoid group still relatable with Messapic observed in place naming in Apulia some towns have no etymon outside Albanoid sources for example in toponyms such as Manduria Aigner Foresti 2004 p 82 Elementi linguistici particelle preposizioni suffissi lessico ma anche toponimi antroponimi e teonimi del messapico trovano infatti singolare riscontro nell albanese Sextil Pușcariu Vasile Parvan Theodor Capidan referenced in Hamp 1963 p 104 Weigand as referenced in Hamp 1963 p 104 Baric as referenced in Hamp 1963 p 104 Orel Vladimir 1988 Albanian Etymological Dictionary Brill p X I I Russu Obarșia tracică a romanilor și albanezilor Clarificări comparativ istorice șietnologice Der thrakische Ursprung der Rumanen und Albanesen Komparativ historische und ethnologische Klarungen Cluj Napoca Dacia 1995 1994 Gottfried Schramm A New Approach to Albanian History Matzinger 2016 p 15 16 Philippide Originea Rominilor vol 1 pp 11 Velkov La Thrace p 188 Kosovo A Short History Noel Malcolm Notes to pages Jirecek Die Romanen i p 13 Philippide Originea Rominilor vol 1 pp 70 2 Papazoglu Les Royaumes pp 193 5 Albanian does preserve a very small quantity of borrowings from ancient Greek see Thumb Altgriechische Elemente Jokl Altmakedonisch Cabej Zur Charakteristik p 182 This low level of borrowings from Greek is a further argument against the identification of Albanians with Bessi part of whose tribal territory was Hellenized see Philippide Originea Rominilor vol 1 pp 11 283 Velkov La Thrace p 188 Hamp 1963 we still do not know exactly where the Illyrian Thracian line was and NaissoV Nis is regarded by many as Illyrian territory a b Malcolm Noel Kosovo a short history London Macmillan 1998 p 22 40 Kosovo A Short History Fine 1991 p 10 Kosovo A Short History di Giovine Tracio dacio ed albanese Kosovo A Short History Fine 1991 p 304 glossary Albanians An Indo European people probably descended from the ancient Illyrians living now in Albania as well as in Greece and Yugoslavia Mediterranean peoples share a common recent ancestry except mainland Greeks 30 June 2017 Novembre John Johnson Toby Bryc Katarzyna Kutalik Zoltan Boyko Adam R Auton Adam Indap Amit King Karen S Bergmann Sven Nelson Matthew R Stephens Matthew Bustamante Carlos D November 2008 Genes mirror geography within Europe Nature 456 7218 98 101 Bibcode 2008Natur 456 98N doi 10 1038 nature07331 PMC 2735096 PMID 18758442 Di Gaetano Cornelia Cerutti Nicoletta Crobu Francesca Robino Carlo Inturri Serena Gino Sarah Guarrera Simonetta Underhill Peter A King Roy J Romano Valentino Cali Francesco Gasparini Mauro Matullo Giuseppe Salerno Alfredo Torre Carlo Piazza Alberto January 2009 Differential Greek and northern African migrations to Sicily are supported by genetic evidence from the Y chromosome European Journal of Human Genetics 17 1 91 99 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2008 120 PMC 2985948 PMID 18685561 Sarno Stefania Boattini Alessio Pagani Luca Sazzini Marco De Fanti Sara Quagliariello Andrea Gnecchi Ruscone Guido Alberto Guichard Etienne Ciani Graziella Bortolini Eugenio Barbieri Chiara Cilli Elisabetta Petrilli Rosalba Mikerezi Ilia Sineo Luca Vilar Miguel Wells Spencer Luiselli Donata Pettener Davide 16 May 2017 Ancient and recent admixture layers in Sicily and Southern Italy trace multiple migration routes along the Mediterranean Scientific Reports 7 1 1984 Bibcode 2017NatSR 7 1984S doi 10 1038 s41598 017 01802 4 PMC 5434004 PMID 28512355 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Battaglia Vincenza Fornarino Simona Al Zahery Nadia Olivieri Anna Pala Maria Myres Natalie M King Roy J Rootsi Siiri Marjanovic Damir Primorac Dragan Hadziselimovic Rifat Vidovic Stojko Drobnic Katia Durmishi Naser Torroni Antonio Santachiara Benerecetti A Silvana Underhill Peter A Semino Ornella June 2009 Y chromosomal evidence of the cultural diffusion of agriculture in southeast Europe European Journal of Human Genetics 17 6 820 830 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2008 249 PMC 2947100 PMID 19107149 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Pericic Marijana Lauc Lovorka Barac Klaric Irena Martinovic Rootsi Siiri Janicijevic Branka Rudan Igor Terzic Rifet Colak Ivanka Kvesic Ante Popovic Dan Sijacki Ana Behluli Ibrahim Đorđevic Dobrivoje Efremovska Ljudmila Bajec Đorđe D Stefanovic Branislav D Villems Richard Rudan Pavao 1 October 2005 High Resolution Phylogenetic Analysis of Southeastern Europe Traces Major Episodes of Paternal Gene Flow Among Slavic Populations Molecular Biology and Evolution 22 10 1964 1975 doi 10 1093 molbev msi185 PMID 15944443 Bird Steve 2007 Haplogroup E3b1a2 as a possible indicator of settlement in Roman Britain by soldiers of Balkan origin Journal of Genetic Genealogy 3 2 26 46 a b c Semino O 10 November 2000 The Genetic Legacy of Paleolithic Homo sapiens sapiens in Extant Europeans A Y Chromosome Perspective Science 290 5494 1155 1159 Bibcode 2000Sci 290 1155S doi 10 1126 science 290 5494 1155 PMID 11073453 a b c Cruciani Fulvio La Fratta Roberta Santolamazza Piero Sellitto Daniele Pascone Roberto Moral Pedro Watson Elizabeth Guida Valentina Colomb Eliane Beraud Zaharova Boriana Lavinha Joao Vona Giuseppe Aman Rashid Cali Francesco Akar Nejat Richards Martin Torroni Antonio Novelletto Andrea Scozzari Rosaria May 2004 Phylogeographic Analysis of Haplogroup E3b E M215 Y Chromosomes Reveals Multiple Migratory Events Within and Out Of Africa The American Journal of Human Genetics 74 5 1014 1022 doi 10 1086 386294 PMC 1181964 PMID 15042509 Haak Wolfgang Lazaridis Iosif Patterson Nick Rohland Nadin Mallick Swapan Llamas Bastien Brandt Guido Nordenfelt Susanne Harney Eadaoin Stewardson Kristin Fu Qiaomei Mittnik Alissa Banffy Eszter Economou Christos Francken Michael Friederich Susanne Pena Rafael Garrido Hallgren Fredrik Khartanovich Valery Khokhlov Aleksandr Kunst Michael Kuznetsov Pavel Meller Harald Mochalov Oleg Moiseyev Vayacheslav Nicklisch Nicole Pichler Sandra L Risch Roberto Rojo Guerra Manuel A Roth Christina Szecsenyi Nagy Anna Wahl Joachim Meyer Matthias Krause Johannes Brown Dorcas Anthony David Cooper Alan Alt Kurt Werner Reich David June 2015 Massive migration from the steppe was a source for Indo European languages in Europe Nature 522 7555 207 211 arXiv 1502 02783 Bibcode 2015Natur 522 207H doi 10 1038 nature14317 PMC 5048219 PMID 25731166 a b c d Lazaridis amp Alpaslan Roodenberg 2022 Supplementary Files Table S1 Supplementary Materials Lauka Muhaj amp Bojaxhi 2021 p 91 Aneli et al 2022 p 23 Latest designations can be found on the www isogg org ISOGG website In some articles this is described as I P37 2 not including I M26 a b c Rootsi Siiri Kivisild Toomas Benuzzi Giorgia Help Hela Bermisheva Marina Kutuev Ildus Barac Lovorka Pericic Marijana Balanovsky Oleg Pshenichnov Andrey Dion Daniel Grobei Monica Zhivotovsky Lev A Battaglia Vincenza Achilli Alessandro Al Zahery Nadia Parik Juri King Roy Cinnioglu Cengiz Khusnutdinova Elsa Rudan Pavao Balanovska Elena Scheffrahn Wolfgang Simonescu Maya Brehm Antonio Goncalves Rita Rosa Alexandra Moisan Jean Paul Chaventre Andre Ferak Vladimir Furedi Sandor Oefner Peter J Shen Peidong Beckman Lars Mikerezi Ilia Terzic Rifet Primorac Dragan Cambon Thomsen Anne Krumina Astrida Torroni Antonio Underhill Peter A Santachiara Benerecetti A Silvana Villems Richard Magri Chiara Semino Ornella July 2004 Phylogeography of Y Chromosome Haplogroup I Reveals Distinct Domains of Prehistoric Gene Flow in Europe The American Journal of Human Genetics 75 1 128 137 doi 10 1086 422196 PMC 1181996 PMID 15162323 Fothi Erzsebet Gonzalez Angela Feher Tibor Gugora Ariana Fothi Abel Biro Orsolya Keyser Christine 14 January 2020 Genetic analysis of male Hungarian Conquerors European and Asian paternal lineages of the conquering Hungarian tribes Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 12 1 31 doi 10 1007 s12520 019 00996 0 S2CID 210168662 Neparaczki Endre Maroti Zoltan Kalmar Tibor Maar Kitti Nagy Istvan Latinovics Dora Kustar Agnes Palfi Gyorgy Molnar Erika Marcsik Antonia Balogh Csilla Lorinczy Gabor Gal Szilard Sandor Tomka Peter Kovacsoczy Bernadett Kovacs Laszlo Rasko Istvan Torok Tibor 12 November 2019 Y chromosome haplogroups from Hun Avar and conquering Hungarian period nomadic people of the Carpathian Basin Scientific Reports 9 1 16569 Bibcode 2019NatSR 916569N doi 10 1038 s41598 019 53105 5 PMC 6851379 PMID 31719606 S2CID 207963632 a b c d Semino Ornella Magri Chiara Benuzzi Giorgia Lin Alice A Al Zahery Nadia Battaglia Vincenza Maccioni Liliana Triantaphyllidis Costas Shen Peidong Oefner Peter J Zhivotovsky Lev A King Roy Torroni Antonio Cavalli Sforza L Luca Underhill Peter A Santachiara Benerecetti A Silvana May 2004 Origin Diffusion and Differentiation of Y Chromosome Haplogroups E and J Inferences on the Neolithization of Europe and Later Migratory Events in the Mediterranean Area The American Journal of Human Genetics 74 5 1023 1034 doi 10 1086 386295 PMC 1181965 PMID 15069642 a b c d e f g h Bosch E Calafell F Gonzalez Neira A Flaiz C Mateu E Scheil H G Huckenbeck W Efremovska L Mikerezi I Xirotiris N Grasa C Schmidt H Comas D July 2006 Paternal and maternal lineages in the Balkans show a homogeneous landscape over linguistic barriers except for the isolated Aromuns Annals of Human Genetics 70 4 459 487 doi 10 1111 j 1469 1809 2005 00251 x PMID 16759179 S2CID 23156886 Sarno Stefania Tofanelli Sergio De Fanti Sara Quagliariello Andrea Bortolini Eugenio Ferri Gianmarco Anagnostou Paolo Brisighelli Francesca Capelli Cristian Tagarelli Giuseppe Sineo Luca Luiselli Donata Boattini Alessio Pettener Davide April 2016 Shared language diverging genetic histories high resolution analysis of Y chromosome variability in Calabrian and Sicilian Arbereshe European Journal of Human Genetics 24 4 600 606 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2015 138 PMC 4929864 PMID 26130483 S2CID 4983538 Belledi M Poloni ES Casalotti R Conterio F Mikerezi I Tagliavini J Excoffier L 2000 Maternal and paternal lineages in Albania and the genetic structure of Indo European populations Eur J Hum Genet 8 7 480 6 doi 10 1038 sj ejhg 5200443 PMID 10909846 Fine 1991 pp 11 12 the Albanians did not have a single ancestor in one or the other of these pre Slavic peoples the present day Albanians like all Balkan peoples are an ethnic mixture and in addition to this main ancestor there is an admixture of Slavic Greek Vlach and Romano Italian ancestry In addition to these three Indo European peoples each living its own zone of the pre Slavic Balkans other peoples had an impact as well Large numbers of Celts had passed through earlier leaving their contribution to the gene pool as well as a wide variety of cultural particularly artistic influences Large numbers of Roman veterans were settled in the Balkans Different Germanic peoples Ostrogoths Visigoths and Gepids raided and settled both on their own and as Roman federate troops in the Balkans in large numbers over three centuries third to sixth Rrenjet Prejardhja gjenetike e shqiptareve Statistics Projekti Rrenjet eshte nje vend ku shqiptaret qe kane kryer teste gjenetike mund te regjistrojne rezultatet e tyre per te pasur mundesi t i krahasojne me rezultatet ne databazen tone si dhe me rezultate te tjera publike nga popullsi te lashta dhe bashkekohore Ky projekt drejtohet dhe mirembahet nga vullnetare Ky projekt nuk eshte kompani testimi Gjenetika Statistics This site and the Albanian DNA Project was created and maintained by volunteers The purpose of this page is to reveal the mosaic of human groups that have created over the centuries and that today constitute the Albanian ethnogenesis through the genetic testing of male lines The aim is not to promote or emphasize racial purity as such a thing does not exist but to better understand the historical contexts and human movements in the region where we live When each of us does DNA testing the result not only serves the individual to better understand his or her ancient origins and regions within Albania from which his or her ancestors may have descended but also serves to shed light on different groupings human beings that today make up the Albanian community DNA testing is a tool to better understand our history based more and more on science and less on word of mouth a b Ralph Peter Coop Graham 7 May 2013 The Geography of Recent Genetic Ancestry across Europe PLOS Biology 11 5 e1001555 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1001555 PMC 3646727 PMID 23667324 Belledi Michele Poloni Estella S Casalotti Rosa Conterio Franco Mikerezi Ilia Tagliavini James Excoffier Laurent July 2000 Maternal and paternal lineages in Albania and the genetic structure of Indo European populations European Journal of Human Genetics 8 7 480 486 doi 10 1038 sj ejhg 5200443 PMID 10909846 S2CID 34824809 a b c Cardos G Stoian V Miritoiu N Comsa A Kroll A Voss S Rodewald A 2004 Romanian Society of Legal Medicine Paleo mtDNA analysis and population genetic aspects of old Thracian populations from South East of Romania Archived 2009 02 12 at the Wayback Machine Lazaridis amp Alpaslan Roodenberg 2022 p 224 Supplementary Materials Michaelis Attaliotae Historia Bonn 1853 p 8 18 297 Translated by Robert Elsie First published in R Elsie Early Albania a Reader of Historical Texts 11th 17th Centuries Wiesbaden 2003 p 4 5 Schwandner Sievers amp Fischer 2002 p 74 Peter Mackridge Aspects of language and identity in the Greek peninsula since the eighteenth century The Newsletter of the Society Farsharotu Vol XXI amp XXII Issues 1 amp 2 Retrieved 2 February 2014 the Pelasgian theory was formulated according to which Greek and Albanian were claimed to have a common origin in Pelasgian the Albanians themselves are Pelasgians Needless to say there is absolutely no scientific evidence to support any of theses theories Bayraktar Ugur Bahadir December 2011 Mythifying the Albanians A Historiographical Discussion on Vasa Efendi s Albania and the Albanians Balkanologie 13 1 2 doi 10 4000 balkanologie 2272 Retrieved 2 February 2014 Schwandner Sievers amp Fischer 2002 p 77 Schwandner Sievers amp Fischer 2002 p 77 79 Schwandner Sievers amp Fischer 2002 p 78 79 De Rapper Gilles 2009 Pelasgic Encounters in the Greek Albanian Borderland Border Dynamics and Reversion to Ancient Past in Southern Albania Anthropological Journal of European Cultures 18 1 60 61 In 2002 another important book was translated from Greek Aristides Kollias Arvanites and the Origin of Greeks first published in Athens in 1983 and re edited several times since then Kollias 1983 Kolia 2002 In this book which is considered a cornerstone of the rehabilitation of Arvanites in post dictatorial Greece the author presents the Albanian speaking population of Greece known as Arvanites as the most authentic Greeks because their language is closer to ancient Pelasgic who were the first inhabitants of Greece According to him ancient Greek was formed on the basis of Pelasgic so that man Greek words have an Albanian etymology In the Greek context the book initiated a counterdiscourse Gefou Madianou 1999 122 aiming at giving Arvanitic communities of southern Greece a positive role in Greek history This was achieved by using nineteenth century ideas on Pelasgians and by melting together Greeks and Albanians in one historical genealogy Baltsiotis and Embirikos 2007 130 431 445 In the Albanian context of the 1990s and 2000s the book is read as proving the anteriority of Albanians not only in Albania but also in Greece it serves mainly the rehabilitation of Albanians as an antique and autochthonous population in the Balkans These ideas legitimise the presence of Albanians in Greece and give them a decisive role in the development of ancient Greek civilisation and later on the creation of the modern Greek state in contrast to the general negative image of Albanians in contemporary Greek society They also reverse the unequal relation between the migrants and the host country making the former the heirs of an autochthonous and civilised population from whom the latter owes everything that makes their superiority in the present day Bibliography Edit Aigner Foresti Luciana 2004 Gli Illiri in Italia istituzioni politiche nella Messapia preromana In Gianpaolo Urso ed Dall Adriatico al Danubio l Illirico nell eta greca e romana atti del convegno internazionale Cividale del Friuli 25 27 settembre 2003 I convegni della Fondazione Niccolo Canussio ETS ISBN 884671069X Aneli Serena Saupe Tina Montinaro Francesco Solnik Anu Molinaro Ludovica Scaggion Cinzia Carrara Nicola Raveane Alessandro Kivisild Toomas Metspalu Mait Scheib Christiana Pagani Luca 2022 The genetic origin of Daunians and the Pan Mediterranean southern Italian Iron Age context Molecular Biology and Evolution 39 2 doi 10 1093 molbev msac014 PMC 8826970 PMID 35038748 Bowden William 2003 Epirus Vetus The Archaeology of a Late Antique Province Duckworth ISBN 0 7156 3116 0 Bowden William 2004 Balkan Ghosts Nationalism and the Question of Rural Continuity in Albania In Christie Neil ed Landscapes of Change Rural Evolutions in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 1840146172 Brown Keith Ogilvie Sarah 2008 Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World Elsevier ISBN 978 0 08 087774 7 Cabej Eqrem 1961 Die alteren Wohnsitze der Albaner auf der Balkanhalbinsel im Lichte der Sprache und der Ortsnamen The older residences of the Albanians in the Balkan Peninsula in the light of the language and place names VII International Congress of Onomastic Sciences 4 8 April 1961 in German pp 241 251 Albanian version BUShT 1962 1 219 227 Curta Florin 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521815390 Curta Florin 2012 Were there any Slavs in seventh century Macedonia Istorija Skopje 47 61 75 Curta Florin 2013 Seventh century fibulae with bent stem in the Balkans Archaeologia Bulgarica 17 49 70 Curtis Matthew Cowan 2012 Slavic Albanian Language Contact Convergence and Coexistence Thesis The Ohio State University Demiraj Shaban 2006 The origin of the Albanians linguistically investigated Tirana Academy of Sciences of Albania ISBN 978 99943 817 1 5 Demiraj Bardhyl 1997 Albanische Etymologien Untersuchungen zum albanischen Erbwortschatz Leiden Studies in Indo European in German Vol 7 Amsterdam Atlanta Brill ISBN 978 90 420 0161 9 Demiraj Shaban 2008 Epirus the Pelasgians Etruscans and Albanians Academy of Sciences of Albania ISBN 978 99956 682 2 8 Demiraj Bardhyl 2010 Shqiptar The generalization of this ethnic name in the XVIII century PDF In Demiraj Bardhyl ed Wir sind die Deinen Studien zur albanischen Sprache Literatur und Kulturgeschichte dem Gedenken an Martin Camaj 1925 1992 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 533 565 ISBN 9783447062213 Filipovski Toni 2010 The Komani Krue Settlements and Some Aspects of their Existence in the Ohrid Struga Valley VII VIII century Macedonian Historical Review 1 Fine John Van Antwerp 1991 The Early Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 08149 3 p 10 p 11 p 12 p 304 Hamp Eric P 1963 The Position of Albanian Ancient IE dialects In Henrik Birnbaum Jaan Puhvel eds Proceedings of the Conference on IE linguistics held at the University of California Los Angeles April 25 27 1963 Hamp Eric Adams Douglas 2013 The Expansion of the Indo European Languages An Indo Europeanist s Evolving View PDF Sino Platonic Papers 239 Joseph Brian Hyllested Adam 2022 Albanian The Indo European Language Family Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108499798 Ismajli Rexhep 2015 Eqrem Basha ed Studime per historine e shqipes ne kontekst ballkanik Studies on the History of Albanian in the Balkan context PDF in Albanian Prishtine Kosova Academy of Sciences and Arts special editions CLII Section of Linguistics and Literature Katicic Radoslav 1976 Ancient Languages of the Balkans Mouton ISBN 978 9027933058 Klein Jared Joseph Brian Fritz Matthias eds 2018 Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics Walter de Gruyter ISBN 9783110542431 Kunstmann Heinrich Thiergen Peter 1987 Beitrage zur Geschichte der Besiedlung Nord und Mitteldeutschlands mit Balkanslaven PDF O Sagner Madgearu Alexandru Gordon Martin 2008 The Wars of the Balkan Peninsula Their Medieval Origins Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 5846 6 p 25 p 146 p 151 Lazaridis Iosif Alpaslan Roodenberg Songul et al 26 August 2022 The genetic history of the Southern Arc A bridge between West Asia and Europe Science 377 6609 eabm4247 doi 10 1126 science abm4247 PMID 36007055 S2CID 251843620 Lauka Alban Muhaj Ardian Bojaxhi Gjergj 2021 Prejardhja e fiseve Krasniqe Nikaj nen driten e te dhenave gjenetike historike dhe tradites burimore The origin of North Albanian tribes of Krasniqe and Nikaj based on Y DNA phylogeny historical data and oral tradition PDF Studime Historike 3 4 Matzinger Joachim 2005 Messapisch und Albanisch International Journal of Diachronic Linguistics and Linguistic Reconstruction Matzinger Joachim 2016 Die albanische Autochthoniehypothese aus der Sicht der Sprachwissenschaft PDF Nallbani Etleva 2017 Early Medieval North Albania New Discoveries Remodeling Connections The Case of Medieval Komani In Gelichi Sauro Negrelli Claudio eds Adriatico altomedievale VI XI secolo Scambi porti produzioni PDF Universita Ca Foscari Venezia ISBN 978 88 6969 115 7 Orel Vladimir 2000 A concise historical grammar of the Albanian language reconstruction of Proto Albanian Brill ISBN 978 90 04 11647 4 Orel Vladimir E 1998 Albanian etymological dictionary Leiden Brill ISBN 9004110240 Prendergast Eric 2017 The Origin and Spread of Locative Determiner Omission in the Balkan Linguistic Area Ph D UC Berkeley Plasari Aurel 2020 The Albanians in attestations from late antiquity until the early Middle Ages Albanian Studies Academy of Sciences of Albania 2 Polome Edgar Charles 1982 Balkan Languages Illyrian Thracian and Daco Moesian In J Boardman I E S Edwards N G L Hammond E Sollberger eds The Cambridge Ancient History The Prehistory of the Balkans and the Middle East and the Aegean world tenth to eighth centuries B C Vol III part 1 2 ed Cambridge University Press pp 866 888 ISBN 0521224969 Quanrud John 2021 The Albanoi in Michael Attaleiates History revisiting the Vranoussi Ducellier debate Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 45 2 149 165 doi 10 1017 byz 2021 11 S2CID 237424879 Rusakov Alexander 2017 Albanian In Kapovic Mate Giacalone Ramat Anna Ramat Paolo eds The Indo European Languages Routledge pp 552 602 ISBN 9781317391531 Schwandner Sievers Stephanie Fischer Bernd Jurgen 2002 Albanian Identities Myth and History Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 21570 3 Shehi Eduard 2017 Rishikim mbi topografine e Durresit antik ne driten e te dhenave te reja arkeologjike historike A review of topography of Durres in antiquity in light of new archeological and historical data Iliria doi 10 3406 iliri 2017 2528 Szczepanski W 2005 Some Controversies Connected with the Origin of the Albanians Their Territorial Cradle and Ethnonym Sprawy Narodowosciowe Seria Nowa 26 81 96 Trumper John 2018 Some Celto Albanian isoglosses and their implications In Grimaldi Mirko Lai Rosangela Franco Ludovico Baldi Benedetta eds Structuring Variation in Romance Linguistics and Beyond In Honour of Leonardo M Savoia John Benjamins Publishing Company ISBN 9789027263179 Ylli Xhelal 1997 Das slawische Lehngut im Albanischen Lehnworter Peter Lang International Academic Publishers ISBN 9783954790746 Ylli Xhelal 2000 Das slawische Lehngut im Albanischen Ortsnamen Peter Lang International Academic Publishers ISBN 9783954790432 Wilkes John 1992 The Illyrians Oxford Blackwell ISBN 0 631 19807 5 Wilkes John 1995 The Illyrians The Peoples of Europe Oxford UK Cambridge MA USA Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 19807 9 Wilkes John 2013 The Archaeology of War Homeland Security in the Southwest Balkans 3rd 6th century AD In Alexander Sarantis Neil Christie eds War and Warfare in Late Antiquity Current Perspectives Brill ISBN 978 9004252585 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Origin of the Albanians amp oldid 1130528388, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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