Albanian folklore
Albanian folklore is the folk tradition of the Albanian people. Albanian traditions have been orally transmitted – through memory systems that have survived intact into modern times – down the generations and are still very much alive in the mountainous regions of Albania, Kosovo and western North Macedonia, as well as among the Arbëreshë in Italy and the Arvanites in Greece, and the Arbanasi in Croatia.[1]
The most important artistic festival of Albanian folklore – the Gjirokastër National Folk Festival – takes place every five years at Gjirokastër Castle in Gjirokastër, southern Albania.[2]
Collection
[edit]Albanian traditions have been handed down orally across generations.[3] They have been preserved through traditional memory systems that have survived intact into modern times in Albania, a phenomenon that is explained by the lack of state formation among Albanians and their ancestors – the Illyrians, being able to preserve their "tribally" organized society. This distinguished them from civilizations such as Ancient Egypt, Minoans and Mycenaeans, who underwent state formation and disrupted their traditional memory practices.[4]
Albanian traditional practices, beliefs, myths and legends have been sporadically described in written sources since the 15th century CE,[5][6][7] but the systematic collection of Albanian customs and folklore material began only in the 19th century.[8]
Albanian collectors
[edit]Albanian myths and legends are already attested in works written in Albanian as early as the 15th century;[7] however, the systematic collection of Albanian folklore material began only in the 19th century.[8]
One of the first Albanian collectors from Italy was the Arbëresh writer Girolamo De Rada who—already imbued with a passion for his Albanian lineage in the first half of the 19th century—began collecting folklore material at an early age. Another important Arbëresh publisher of Albanian folklore was the linguist Demetrio Camarda, who included in his 1866 Appendice al Saggio di grammatologia comparata (Appendix to the Essay on the Comparative Grammar) specimens of prose, and in particular, Arbëreshë folk songs from Sicily and Calabria, Albania proper and Albanian settlements in Greece. De Rada and Camarda were the two main initiators of the Albanian nationalist cultural movement in Italy.[9] In Greece, the Arvanite writer Anastas Kullurioti published Albanian folklore material in his 1882 Albanikon alfavêtarion / Avabatar arbëror (Albanian Spelling Book).[10]
The Albanian National Awakening (Rilindja) gave rise to collections of folklore material in Albania in the second half of the 19th century. One of the early Albanian collectors of Albanian folklore from Albania proper was Zef Jubani. From 1848 he served as interpreter to French consul in Shkodra, Louis Hyacinthe Hécquard, who was very interested in, and decided to prepare a book on, northern Albanian folklore. They travelled through the northern Albanian mountains and recorded folkloric materials which were published in French translation in the 1858 Hécquard's pioneering Histoire et description de la Haute Albanie ou Guégarie (History and Description of High Albania or Gegaria"). Jubani's own first collection of folklore—the original Albanian texts of the folk songs published by Hécquard—was lost in the flood that devastated the city of Shkodra on 13 January 1866. Jubani published in 1871 his Raccolta di canti popolari e rapsodie di poemi albanesi (Collection of Albanian Folk Songs and Rhapsodies)—the first collection of Gheg folk songs and the first folkloric work to be published by an Albanian who lived in Albania.[11]
Another important Albanian folklore collector was Thimi Mitko, a prominent representative of the Albanian community in Egypt. He began to take an interest in 1859 and started recording Albanian folklore material from the year 1866, providing also folk songs, riddles and tales for Demetrio Camarda's collection. Mitko's own collection—including 505 folk songs, and 39 tales and popular sayings, mainly from southern Albania—was finished in 1874 and published in the 1878 Greek-Albanian journal Alvaniki melissa / Belietta Sskiypetare (The Albanian Bee). This compilation was a milestone of Albanian folk literature being the first collection of Albanian material of scholarly quality. Indeed, Mitko compiled and classified the material according to genres, including sections on fairy tales, fables, anecdotes, children's songs, songs of seasonal festivities, love songs, wedding songs, funerary songs, epic and historical songs. He compiled his collection with Spiro Risto Dine who emigrated to Egypt in 1866. Dino himself published Valët e Detit (The Waves of the Sea), which, at the time of its publication in 1908, was the longest printed book in the Albanian language. The second part of Dine's collection was devoted to folk literature, including love songs, wedding songs, funerary songs, satirical verse, religious and didactic verses, folk tales, aphorisms, rhymes, popular beliefs and mythology.[12]
The first Albanian folklorist to collect the oral tradition in a more systematic manner for scholarly purposes was the Franciscan priest and scholar Shtjefën Gjeçovi.[13] Two other Franciscan priests, Bernardin Palaj and Donat Kurti, along with Gjeçovi, collected folk songs on their travels through the northern Albanian mountains and wrote articles on Gheg Albanian folklore and tribal customs. Palaj and Kurti published in 1937—on the 25th anniversary of Albanian independence—the most important collection of Albanian epic verse, Kângë kreshnikësh dhe legenda (Songs of the Frontier Warriors and Legends), in the series called Visaret e Kombit (The Treasures of the Nation).[14][15]
From the second half of the 20th century much research has been done by the Academy of Albanological Studies of Tirana and by the Albanological Institute of Prishtina. Albanian scholars have published numerous collections of Albanian oral tradition, but only a small part of this material has been translated into other languages.[10] A substantial contribution in this direction has been made by the Albanologist Robert Elsie.
Foreign collectors
[edit]Foreign scholars first provided Europe with Albanian folklore in the second half of the 19th century, and thus set the beginning for the scholarly study of Albanian oral tradition.[16] Albanian folk songs and tales were recorded by the Austrian consul in Janina, Johann Georg von Hahn, who travelled throughout Albania and the Balkans in the middle of the 19th century and in 1854 he published Albanesische Studien (Albanian Studies). The German physician Karl H. Reinhold collected Albanian folklore material from Albanian sailors while he was serving as a doctor in the Greek navy and in 1855 he published Noctes Pelasgicae (Pelasgian Nights). The folklorist Giuseppe Pitrè published in 1875 a selection of Albanian folk tales from Sicily in Fiabe, novelle e racconti popolari siciliani (Sicilian Fables, Short Stories and Folk Tales).[16][10]
The next generation of scholars who became interested in collecting Albanian folk material were mainly philologists, among them the Indo-European linguists concerned about the study of the then little known Albanian language. The French consul in Janina and Thessalonika, Auguste Dozon, published Albanian folk tales and songs initially in the 1879 Manuel de la langue chkipe ou albanaise (Manual of the Shkip or Albanian Language) and in the 1881 Contes albanais, recueillis et traduits (Albanian Tales, Collected and Translated). The Czech linguist and professor of Romance languages and literature, Jan Urban Jarnik, published in 1883 Albanian folklore material from the region of Shkodra in Zur albanischen Sprachenkunde (On Albanian Linguistics) and Příspěvky ku poznání nářečí albánských uveřejňuje (Contributions to the Knowledge of Albanian Dialects). The German linguist and professor at the University of Graz, Gustav Meyer, published in 1884 fourteen Albanian tales in Albanische Märchen (Albanian Tales), and a selection of Tosk tales in the 1888 Albanian grammar (1888). His folklore material was republished in his Albanesische Studien (Albanian Studies). Danish Indo-Europeanist and professor at the University of Copenhagen, Holger Pedersen, visited Albania in 1893 to learn the language and to gather linguistic material. He recorded thirty-five Albanian folk tales from Albania and Corfu and published them in the 1895 Albanesische Texte mit Glossar (Albanian Texts with Glossary). Other Indo-European scholars who collected Albanian folklore material were German linguists Gustav Weigand and August Leskien.[16][10]
In the first half of the 20th century, British anthropologist Edith Durham visited northern Albania and collected folklore material on the Albanian tribal society. She published in 1909 her notable work High Albania, regarded as one of the best English-language books on Albania ever written.[17] From 1923 onward, Scottish scholar and anthropologist Margaret Hasluck collected Albanian folklore material when she lived in Albania. She published sixteen Albanian folk-stories translated in English in her 1931 Këndime Englisht–Shqip or Albanian–English Reader.[18]
Some Albanian folk traditions
[edit]- Albanian customary law (Kanun)
- Albanian art
- Albanian clothing
- Albanian dances
- Albanian epic poetry
- Albanian hospitality
- Albanian Iso-Polyphony
- Albanian lamentation of the dead
- Albanian music
- Albanian pledge of honor (Besa)
- Albanian wedding
Selected Albanian folk tales, legends, songs and ballads
[edit]Folk tales
[edit]- Marigo of the Forty Dragons
- For the Love of a Dove
- The Silver Tooth
- The Snake Child
- The Maiden who was Promised to the Sun
- The Grateful Snake and the Magic Case
- The Jealous Sisters
- The Princess of China
- The Foolish Youth and the Ring
- The Barefaced Man and the Pasha's Brother
- The Boy with No Name
- Half Rooster
- Gjizar the Nightingale
- The Snake and the King's Daughter
- The Bear and the Dervish
- The King's Daughter and the Skull
- The Stirrup Moor
- The Tale of the Youth who Understood the Language of the Animals
- The Maiden in the Box
- The Girl who Became a Boy
- The Shoes
- The Youth and the Maiden with Stars on their Foreheads and Crescents on their Breasts
- The Three Brothers and the Three Sisters
- The Three Friends and the Earthly Beauty
- The Scurfhead
- The Boy and the Earthly Beauty
- The Twins
- The Daughter of the Moon and Sun (version with kulshedra)
- The Daughter of the Moon and Sun (version with the king's son)
- The Daughter of the Sun
- The Serpent
- Seven Spans of Beard and Three Spans of Body
- The Skilful Brothers
- The Tale of the Eagle
- Shamakadija
Myths and Legends
[edit]- Sky and lightning god vs Talas
- Aga Ymer of Ulcinj
- Ali Dost Dede of Gjirokastra
- Baba Tomor
- Muji and Halili cycle
- Gjergj Elez Alia
- Sari Salltëk
- Scanderbeg and Ballaban
- Shega and Vllastar
- The Lover's Grave
- Legend of Jabal-i Alhama
- Princess Argjiro
- Nora of Kelmendi
- The Legend of Rozafa
- Revenge Taken on Kastrati – a Legend of the Triepshi Tribe
- The Founding of the Kelmendi Tribe
- The Founding of the Kastrati Tribe
- The Founding of the Hoti and Triepshi Tribes
Songs and Ballads
[edit]- Kângë Kreshnikësh
- At the Plane Tree of Mashkullore
- Cham Folk Songs (Song of Çelo Mezani)
- Song of Marko Boçari
- Constantin and Doruntinë
- Eufrozina of Janina
- Oh, my Beautiful Morea
- Song of Tana
- Songs of the Battle of Kosova
- The Ballad of Rozafa
- The Song Collection of Vuk Karadžić
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Elsie 1994, p. i; Elsie 2001b, p. ix; Tarifa 2008, pp. 3, 11–12; Stipčević 2009, pp. 505–509; Sokoli 2013, pp. 182–184; Galaty 2018, pp. 100–102.
- ^ Novik 2020, pp. 157–158.
- ^ Elsie 1994, p. i; Elsie 2001b, p. ix; Tarifa 2008, pp. 3, 11–12; Sokoli 2013, pp. 182–184.
- ^ Galaty 2018, pp. 100–102.
- ^ Malcolm 2020, pp. 19–20.
- ^ Elsie, Robert (ed.). "1534. Sebastian Franck: Albania: A Mighty Province of Europe". Texts and Documents of Albanian History.
- ^ a b Skendi 1954, pp. 27–28.
- ^ a b Skendi 1954, pp. 7–10.
- ^ Skendi 1967, pp. 116–117.
- ^ a b c d Elsie 1994, p. i.
- ^ Elsie 2007, pp. 1–2.
- ^ Elsie 2007, p. 2.
- ^ Elsie 2007, p. 3.
- ^ Elsie & Mathie-Heck 2004, p. xi.
- ^ Elsie 2010, p. 255.
- ^ a b c Elsie 2007, p. 1.
- ^ Elsie 2010, p. 120.
- ^ Elsie 2010, p. 185.
Bibliography
[edit]- Elsie, Robert (1994). Albanian Folktales and Legends. Naim Frashëri Publishing Company. Archived from the original (pdf) on 2009-07-28.
- Elsie, Robert (2001b). Albanian Folktales and Legends. Dukagjini Publishing House.
- Elsie, Robert (2001). A Dictionary of Albanian Religion, Mythology and Folk Culture. London: Hurst & Company. ISBN 1-85065-570-7.
- Elsie, Robert (2003). Early Albania: A reader of Historical texts, 11th–17th centuries. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 9783447047838.
- Elsie, Robert; Mathie-Heck, Janice (January 2004). Songs of the Frontier Warriors. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. ISBN 978-0-86516-412-3.
- Elsie, Robert (2007). "The Rediscovery of folk literature in Albania" (PDF). In Marcel Cornis-Pope; John Neubauer (eds.). History of the literary cultures of East-Central Europe: junctures and disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries. Vol. III. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. pp. 335–338. ISBN 978-90-272-3455-1.
- Elsie, Robert (2010). Historical Dictionary of Albania (PDF). Historical Dictionaries of Europe. Vol. 75 (2 ed.). Scarecrow Press. p. 255. ISBN 978-0810861886. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 October 2014.
- Elsie, Robert (2019). The Albanian Bektashi: History and Culture of a Dervish Order in the Balkans. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781788315715.
- Galaty, Michael L. (2018). Memory and Nation Building: From Ancient Times to the Islamic State. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780759122628.
- Malcolm, Noel (2020). Rebels, Believers, Survivors: Studies in the History of the Albanians. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0192599223.
- Novik, Alexander (2020). "Gjirokastra Folklore Festival as the Main Ritual Event in Albanian Cultural Life at the Beginning of the 21st Century" (PDF). The Yearbook of Balkan and Baltic Studies. 3: 257–182. doi:10.7592/YBBS3.08.
- Skendi, Stavro (1954). Albanian and South Slavic Oral Epic Poetry. Philadelphia: American Folklore Society. ISBN 9780527010966. OCLC 3794368.
- Skendi, Stavro (1967). "Crypto-Christianity in the Balkan Area under the Ottomans". Slavic Review. 26 (2): 227–246. doi:10.2307/2492452. JSTOR 2492452. S2CID 163987636.
- Skendi, Stavro (1967b). The Albanian national awakening. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400847761.
- Sokoli, Ramadan (2013) [1999]. "The Albanian World in the Folk Teller's Stories". In Margaret Read MacDonald (ed.). Traditional Storytelling Today: An International Sourcebook. Translated by Pranvera Xhelo. Routledge. ISBN 9781135917142.
- Stipčević, Aleksandar (2009). "Elementët parahistorike në besimet e arbëreshëve të Zarës". AKTET (in Albanian): 505–509. ISSN 2073-2244.
- Tarifa, Fatos (2008). "Of Time, Honor, and Memory: Oral Law in Albania" (PDF). Oral Tradition. 23 (1): 3–14. doi:10.1353/ort.0.0017.
Further reading
[edit]- Tirta, Mark (2004). Petrit Bezhani (ed.). Mitologjia ndër shqiptarë (in Albanian). Tirana: Mësonjëtorja. ISBN 99927-938-9-9.