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Culture Of Albania

Culture Of Albania

Culture Of Albania

Art

Albanian art has a long and dramatic history. Albania, a country in southeastern Europe, has a culture that is unique from that of the rest of Europe. For over five centuries, Albania was ruled by the Ottoman Empire, which had a tremendous effect on the country’s art and creative traditions. Following Albania’s entry to the Ottoman Empire in 1478, Ottoman-influenced art forms including mosaics and muralpaintings were prominent, and there was no substantial creative change until Albanian independence in 1912.

Icons from the Byzantine Orthodox tradition were the first artworks, following mosaics and murals from antiquity and the Middle Ages. Albanian icons date back to the late thirteenth century, with the seventeenth century considered its creative apex. Onufri and David Selenica were two of Albania’s most well-known iconographic artists. Important collections are still housed at the museums of Berat, Korca, and Tirana. Toward the conclusion of the Ottoman period, painting was mostly limited to folk art and spectacular mosques.

Paintings and sculpture originally appeared in the early twentieth century and peaked in the 1930s and 1940s, when the first organized national art displays were held. The hardship of ordinary Albanians is reflected in contemporary Albanian art, but new artists are conveying this message in a variety of innovative approaches. Albanian artists are continuing to push the frontiers of art while being authentically Albanian. Despite the fact that Albanian artists were just recently exposed to postmodernism, there are a few artists and works that are well-known globally. Anri Sala, Sislej Xhafa, and Helidon Gjergji are among the most well-known Albanian postmodernists.

Music and folklore

The primary groupings of Albanian folk music are the Ghegs of the north and south Labs and Tosks, with other notable music areas centered around Shkodra and Tirana; the main groupings are the Ghegs of the north and south Labs and Tosks. The northern and southern traditions are juxtaposed by the north’s “rugged and heroic” tone and the south’s “relaxed” style. A sort of southern instrumental music, the sedate kaba is an ensemble driven by a clarinet or violin with accordions and llauts. The kaba is an improvised, melancholic style with songs that are “both fresh and ancient,” “ornamented with swoops, glides, and growls of an almost vocal nature,” and illustrate the “combination of passion with restraint that is the characteristic of Albanian culture,” according to Kim Burton.

The “passion that both performers and audiences commit to their music as a medium for patriotic expression and as a vehicle transmitting the tale of oral history,” as well as particular traits such as the use of 3/8, 5/8, and 10/8 rhythms, unify these diverse genres. Between 1929 and 1931, two Himariots song artists, Neço Muka and Koço akali, recorded the first collection of Albanian folk music in Paris during their performances with Albanian song diva Tefta Tashko Koço. During those years, this lovely trio of Albanian musicians produced many phonograph compilations, which led to the Himariot Isopolyphonic Music being classified as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Albanian folk songs are divided into two groups: northern heroic epics and sweetly melodic lullabies, love songs, wedding music, labor songs, and other sorts of song. The music of many festivals and holidays, notably those marking St. Lazarus Day, which marks the start of spring, is an essential aspect of Albanian folk song. Single women often sing lullabies and vajtims, two forms of Albanian traditional music.

Albanian language and literature

In 1854, a German philologist named Franz Bopp recognized Albanian as an Indo-European language. The Albanian language belongs to the Indo-European language family, although it is regarded as a distinct branch.

Albanian is thought to be derived from Illyrian by the majority of scholars, but Daco-Thracian by some. (However, Illyrian and Daco-Thracian may have been related languages; see Thraco-Illyrian.)

Albanian is often compared to Balto-Slavic and Germanic, both languages which have a number of isoglosses in common with Albanian. Furthermore, a vowel shift has occurred in Albanian, with stressed, long o dropping to a, comparable to but opposite to the former. Similar to how Balto-Slavic uses this term to supply the definite ending of adjectives, Albanian has taken the old relative jos and used it primarily to qualify adjectives.

The rise of the Albanian language in church texts and publications, especially of the Catholic area in the north, but also of the Orthodox in the south, signaled the start of the cultural renaissance. When priest Gjon Buzuku translated the Catholic liturgy into Albanian, seeking to accomplish for the Albanian language what Luther achieved for German, the Protestant reforms reawakened aspirations for the expansion of the original language and literary legacy.

Gjon Buzuku’s Meshari (The Missal), published in 1555, is considered the first literary work in Albanian. The complex nature of the language, as well as the consistent spelling, must be the result of an earlier, little-known written Albanian tradition. However, there is some pre-Buzuku evidence that Albanian was written as early as the 14th century, which predates Buzuku.

The first evidence is from 1332 AD, when Guillelmus Adae, Archbishop of Antivari, a French Dominican, wrote in Latin that Albanians used Latin letters in their books despite their language being significantly different from Latin. Other notable examples include: a baptism formula (Unte paghesont premenit Atit et Birit et spertit senit) written in Albanian within a Latin text in 1462 by the Bishop of Durrs, Pal Engjlli; a glossary of Albanian words written in 1497 by Arnold von Harff, a German who had traveled through Albania; and a 15th-century fragment of the Bible from the Gospel of Matthew, also in They are mentioned by the humanist Marin Barleti, who confirms in his book Rrethimi I Shkodrs (1504), that he leafed through such chronicles written in the people’s language (in vernacula lingua), as well as his famous Skanderbeg biography Historia de vita et gestis Scanderbegi Epirotarum principis (History of Skanderbeg), that he leafed through such chronicles written in the (1508). The History of Skanderbeg is recognized as an Albanian cultural treasure crucial to the formation of Albanian national self-consciousness and is the cornerstone of Scanderbeg studies.

The catechism E mbsuame krishter (Christian Teachings) (1592) by Lek Matrnga, Doktrina e krishter (1618) and Rituale romanum (1621) by Pjetr Budi, the first writer of original Albanian prose and poetry, and an apology for George Castriot (1636) by Frang Bardhi, who also published a dictionary and folklore, were all written during the 16th Ismail Kadare is undoubtedly Albania’s best-known author.

Sports

Albanians like football, weightlifting, basketball, volleyball, tennis, swimming, rugby union, and gymnastics. Albania’s most popular sport is football. The Albanian Football Association (Albanian: Federata Shqiptare e Futbollit, F.SH.F.) is in charge of it. It was created in 1930 and is a FIFA and UEFA member.

Football arrived in Albania in the early twentieth century, when locals of Shkodr, in the north, were surprised to see students at a Christian mission playing an unusual game. In a country dominated by the Ottoman Empire at the time, the sport swiftly acquired popularity. Albania had previously won the 1946 Balkan Cup and the Malta Rothmans International Event in 2000, but had never played in a major UEFA or FIFA event before UEFA Euro 2016, the country’s first continental and major men’s football competition. On June 19, 2016, Albania beat Romania 1–0 in a UEFA Euro 2016 match, scoring their first goal in a major tournament and winning their first European Championship.

Media

Albania’s public radio and television broadcaster, Radio Televizioni Shqiptar (RTSH), was founded in 1938 by King Zog. RTSH owns and runs three analogue television stations, TVSH Televizioni Shqiptar, four digital theme channels, and three radio stations, all under the name Radio Tirana. Albania’s four extremities are also served by four regional radio stations. Radio programs in Albanian and seven other languages are broadcast on medium and short wave frequencies by the international service (SW).

The international service’s characteristic soundtrack is a tune from the song “Keputa nj gjethe dafine.” The international satellite television service has been serving Albanians in Kosovo, Serbia, Macedonia, Montenegro, and northern Greece, as well as the Albanian diaspora across Europe, since 1993. In its reporting, RTSH has a history of being heavily influenced by the ruling party, whether left or right wing.

According to the Albanian Media Authority (AMA), Albania has an estimated 257 media outlets, including 66 radio stations and 67 television stations, with three national, 62 local, and more than 50 cable TV channels. Albania has hosted many international shows in recent years, including Dancing with the Stars, Big Brother Albania, Albanians Got Talent, The Voice of Albania, and X Factor Albania.

Cuisine

Albanian cuisine is highly influenced by its long history, as is that of other Mediterranean and Balkan nations. Greece, Serbia, Italy, and the Ottoman Turks have all claimed or controlled parts of what is now Albania, and each group has left its mark on Albanian cuisine. Albanians often have their main meal about midday, followed by a salad of fresh vegetables like as tomatoes, cucumbers, green peppers, and olives dressed with olive oil, vinegar, and salt. It also includes a beef and vegetable main meal. Though pumpkins are used in a variety of dishes, they are more often displayed and traditionally given as gifts across Albania, especially in the Berat region. The coastal cities of Durrs, Sarand, and Vlor are also known for its seafood. In high elevation locales, smoked meat and pickled preserves are common.

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