Tham khảo Người_Albania

  1. “The World Factbook — Central Intelligence Agency”. Truy cập 22 tháng 10 năm 2017. 
  2. (PDF) https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/kv.html|tựa đề= trống hay bị thiếu (trợ giúp)
  3. Ragionieri 2008, tr. 46.
  4. 1 2 Deliso 2007, tr. 38.
  5. “Türkiyedeki Kürtlerin Sayısı!” (bằng tiếng Turkish). Milliyet. 2008. Truy cập ngày 7 tháng 6 năm 2008.  Bảo trì CS1: Ngôn ngữ không rõ (link)
  6. “Albanians in Turkey celebrate their cultural heritage”. Todayszaman.com. Ngày 21 tháng 8 năm 2011. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 31 tháng 10 năm 2015. Truy cập ngày 4 tháng 11 năm 2015.  Đã bỏ qua tham số không rõ |df= (trợ giúp)
  7. 1 2 Saunders 2011, tr. 98. "In addition to the recent emigrants, there are older diasporic communities around the world. There are upwards of 5 million ethnic Albanians in the Turkish Republic; however, the vast majority of this population is assimilated and no longer possesses fluency in the language, though a vibrant Albanian community maintains its distinct identity in Istanbul to this day. Egypt also lays claim to some 18,000 Albanians, supposedly lingering remnants of Mohammad Ali's army."
  8. Cuneyt Yenigun. “GCC Model: Conflict Management for the "Greater Albania"” (PDF). Süleyman Demirel University:Faculty of Arts and Sciences Journal of Social Sciences. Bản gốc (PDF) lưu trữ ngày 27 tháng 9 năm 2015. Truy cập ngày 4 tháng 11 năm 2015.  Đã bỏ qua tham số không rõ |df= (trợ giúp)
  9. “2002 Macedonian Census” (PDF). Bản gốc lưu trữ (PDF) ngày 22 tháng 9 năm 2010. Truy cập ngày 22 tháng 9 năm 2010. 
  10. Managing Migration: The Promise of Cooperation. By Philip L. Martin, Susan Forbes Martin, Patrick Weil
  11. “Announcement of the demographic and social characteristics of the Resident Population of Greece according to the 2011 Population – Housing Census.” [Graph 7 Resident population with foreign citizenship] (PDF). Greek National Statistics Agency. Ngày 23 tháng 8 năm 2013. Truy cập ngày 3 tháng 6 năm 2014. 
  12. Groenendijk 2006, tr. 416. "approximately 200,000 of these immigrants have been granted the status of homogeneis".
  13. “Official Results of Monenegrin Census 2011” (PDF). Truy cập ngày 24 tháng 12 năm 2013. 
  14. “Dân số theo sắc tộc, theo Thị trấn/Đô thị, thống kê 2011”. Census of Population, Households and Dwellings 2011 (bằng tiếng Anh). Zagreb: Cục Thống kê Croatia. Tháng 12 năm 2012. 
  15. “Date demografice” (bằng tiếng Romanian). Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 11 tháng 8 năm 2010. Truy cập ngày 18 tháng 8 năm 2010.  Bảo trì CS1: Ngôn ngữ không rõ (link)
  16. “Slovenia: Languages (Immigrant Languages)”
  17. “Kosovari in Italia”
  18. Albanian, Arbëreshë – A language of Italy – Ethnic population: 260,000 (Stephens 1976).
  19. “Cittadini non comunitari regolarmente presenti”. istat.it. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 13 tháng 11 năm 2014. Truy cập ngày 3 tháng 10 năm 2014.  Đã bỏ qua tham số không rõ |df= (trợ giúp)
  20. Hans-Peter Bartels: Deutscher Bundestag – 16. Wahlperiode – 166. Sitzung. Berlin, Donnerstag, den 5. Juni 2008 Lưu trữ ngày 3 tháng 1 năm 2013, tại Wayback Machine.
  21. “Die Albaner in der Schweiz: Geschichtliches – Albaner in der Schweiz seit 1431” (PDF). Truy cập ngày 22 tháng 9 năm 2010. 
  22. “Im Namen aller Albaner eine Moschee?”. Infowilplus.ch. Ngày 25 tháng 5 năm 2007. Truy cập ngày 22 tháng 9 năm 2010. 
  23. “Total Population of Albanians in the Sweden”
  24. Bennetto, Jason (ngày 25 tháng 11 năm 2002). “Total Population of Albanians in the United Kingdom”. London: Independent.co.uk. Truy cập ngày 22 tháng 9 năm 2010. 
  25. “Statistik Austria”. Statistik.at. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 13 tháng 11 năm 2010. Truy cập ngày 24 tháng 12 năm 2013. 
  26. “Étrangers – Immigrés: Publications et statistiques pour la France ou les régions” (bằng tiếng Pháp). Insee.fr. Truy cập ngày 4 tháng 11 năm 2015. 
  27. “National statistics of Denmark”. Dst.dk. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 26 tháng 9 năm 2010. Truy cập ngày 22 tháng 9 năm 2010. 
  28. “Demographics of Finland”
  29. “Population par nationalité, sexe, groupe et classe d'âges au 1er janvier 2010” (bằng tiếng Pháp). Truy cập ngày 12 tháng 1 năm 2012.  Bảo trì CS1: Ngôn ngữ không rõ (link)
  30. “Anderlecht, Molenbeek, Schaarbeek: repères du crime à Bruxelles”. cafebabel.com. Truy cập ngày 12 tháng 1 năm 2012. 
  31. Olson, James S., An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires. (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1994) p. 28–29
  32. “Total ancestry categories tallied for people with one or more ancestry categories reported 2010 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates”. United States Census Bureau. Truy cập ngày 30 tháng 11 năm 2012. 
  33. “Ethnic Origin (264), Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses (3), Generation Status (4), Age Groups (10) and Sex (3) for the Population in Private Households of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2011 National Household Survey”
  34. “20680-Ancestry (full classification list) by Sex – Australia” (Microsoft Excel download). 2006 Census. Australian Bureau of Statistics. Truy cập ngày 2 tháng 6 năm 2008.  Total responses: 25,451,383 for total count of persons: 19,855,288.
  35. http://edoc.bibliothek.uni-halle.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/HALCoRe_derivate_00003672/Albanianmigration.pdf
  36. Gëzim Krasniqi. “Citizenship in an emigrant nation-state: the case of Albania” (PDF). University of Edinburgh. tr. 9–14. Truy cập ngày 7 tháng 8 năm 2012. 
  37. Vickers 2011, tr. 17–24.
  38. Giakoumis 2010, tr. 87–88.
  39. Ramet 1998, tr. 203–204.
  40. Riehl 2010, tr. 238. "Other interesting groups in the context of European migration include the Albanians who from the thirteenth century immigrated to Greece (i.e., the so-called "Arvanites", see Sasse 1998) and to Southern Italy (Calabria, Sicily, cf Breu 2005)."
  41. 1 2 Nasse 1964, tr. 24–26.
  42. Gogonas 2010, tr. 3. "Arvanites originate from Albanian settlers who moved south at different times between the 14th and the 16th centuries from areas in what is today southern Albania The reasons for this migration are not entirely clear and may be manifold. In many instances the Arvanites were invited by the Byzantine and Latin rulers of the time. They were employed to resettle areas that had been largely depopulated through wars, epidemics and other reasons, and they were employed as soldiers. Some later movements are also believed to have been motivated to evade Islamisation after the Ottoman conquest. The main waves of the Arvanite migration into southern Greece started around 1300, reached a peak some time during the 14th century, and ended around 1600. Arvanites first reached Thessaly, then Attica and finally the Peloponnese (Clogg. 2002). Regarding the number of Arvanites in Greece, the 1951 census (the last census in Greece that included a question about language) gives a figure of 23.000 Arvaiithka speakers. Sociohinguistic research in the 1970s in the villages of Attica and Biotia alone indicated a figure of at least 30.000 speakers (Trudgill and Tzavaras 1977), while Lunden (1993) suggests 50.000 for Greece as a whole."
  43. 1 2 Hall 1997, tr. 28–29. "The permeability of ethnic boundaries is also demonstrated in many of the Greek villages of Attiki and Viotia (ancient Attika and Boiotia), where Arvanites often form a majority) These Arvanites are descended from Albanians who first entered Greece between the eleventh and fifteenth centuries (though there was a subsequent wave of immigration in the second half of the eighteenth century). Although still regarded as ethnically distinct in the nineteenth century, their participation in the Greek War of Independence and the Civil War has led to increasing assimilation: in a survey conducted in the 1970s, 97 per crnt of Arvanite informants despite regularly speaking in Arvanitika, considered themselves to be Greek. A similar concern with being identified as Greek is exhibited by the bilingual Arvanites of the Eastern Argolid."
  44. Bintliff 2003, tr. 137–138. "First, we can explain the astonishing persistence of Albanian village culture from the fourteenth to the nineteenth centuries through the ethnic and religious tolerance characteristic of Islamic empires and so lacking in their Christian equivalents. Ottoman control rested upon allowing local communities to keep their religion, language, local laws, and representatives, provided that taxes were paid (the millet system). There was no pressure for Greeks and Albanians to conform to each other's language or other behavior.Clear signs of change are revealed in the travel diaries of the German scholar Ludwig Ross (1851), when he accompanied the Bavarian Otto, whom the Allies had foisted as king upon the newly freed Greek nation in the aftermath of the War of Independence in the 1830s. Ross praises the well-built Greek villages of central Greece with their healthy, happy, dancing inhabitants, and contrasts them specifically with the hovels and sickly inhabitants of Albanian villages. In fact, recent scholarship has underlined how far it was the West that built modem Greece in its own fanciful image as the land of a long-oppressed people who were the direct descendants of Pericles.Thus from the late nineteenth century onward the children of the inhabitants of the new "nation-state" were taught in Greek, history confined itself to the episodes of pure Greekness, and the tolerant Ottoman attitude to cultural diversity yielded to a deliberate policy of total Hellenization of the populace—effective enough to fool the casual observer. One is rather amazed at the persistence today of such dual-speaking populations in much of the Albanian colonization zone. However, apart from the provinciality of this essentially agricultural province, a high rate of illiteracy until well into this century has also helped to preserve Arvanitika in the Boeotian villagers (Meijs 1993)."; p. 140. "In contrast therefore to the more openly problematic issue of Slav speakers in northern Greece, Arvanitic speakers in central Greece lack any signs of an assertive ethnicity. I would like to suggest that they possess what we might term a passive ethnicity. As a result of a number of historical factors, much of the rural population in central Greece was Albanian-speaking by the time of the creation of the modern Greek state in the 1830s. Until this century, most of these people were illiterate and unschooled, yet there existed sufficient knowledge of Greek to communicate with officials and townspeople, itinerant traders, and so on, to limit the need to transform rural language usage. Life was extremely provincial, with just one major carriage-road passing through the center of the large province of Boeotia even in the 1930s (beyond which horseback and cart took over; van Effenterre 1989). Even in the 1960s, Arvanitic village children could be figures of fun for their Greek peers in the schools of Thebes (One of the two regional towns) (K. Sarri, personal communication, 2000). It was not a matter of cultural resistance but simple conservatism and provinciality, the extreme narrowness of rural life, that allowed Arvanitic language and local historic memories to survive so effectively to the very recent period."
  45. Liakos 2012, tr. 230. "The term "Arvanite" is the medieval equivalent of "Albanian." it is retained today for the descendants of the Albanian tribes that migrated to the Greek lands during a period covering two centuries, from the thirteenth to the fifteenth."
  46. Liotta 2001, tr. 198. "Among Greeks, the term "Alvanitis"—or "Arvanitis"—means a Christian of Albanian ancestry, one who speaks both Greek and Albanian, but possesses Greek "consciousness." Numerous "Arvanites" live in Greece today, although the ability to speak both languages is shrinking as the differences (due to technology and information access and vastly different economic bases) between Greece and Albania increase. The Greek communities of Elefsis, Marousi, Koropi, Keratea, and Markopoulo (all in the Attikan peninsula) once held significant Arvanite communities. "Arvanitis" is not necessarily a pejorative term; a recent Pan Hellenic socialist foreign minister spoke both Albanian and Greek (but not English). A former Greek foreign minister, Theodoros Pangalos, was an "Arvanite" from Elefsis."
  47. Pappas. para. 28. "While the bulk of stradioti rank and file were of Albanian origin from Greece, by the middle of the 16th century there is evidence that many had become Hellenized or even Italianized... Hellenization was perhaps well on its way prior to service abroad, since Albanian stradioti had settled in Greek lands for two generations prior to their emigration to Italy. Since many served under Greek commanders and served together with Greek stradioti, the process continued. Another factor in this assimilative process was the stradioti's and their families' active involvement and affiliation with the Greek Orthodox or Uniate Church communities in Naples, Venice and elsewhere. Hellenization thus occurred as a result of common service and church affiliation."
  48. Veremis & Kolipoulos 2003, tr. 24–25. "For the time being, the Greeks of free Greece could indulge in defining their brethren of unredeemed Greece, primarily the Slav Macedonians and secondarily the Orthodox Albanians and the Vlachs. Primary school students were taught, in the 1880s, that ‘Greeks [are] our kinsmen, of common descent, speaking the language we speak and professing the religion we profess’." But this definition, it seems, was reserved for small children who could not possibly understand the intricate arguments of their parents on the question of Greek identity. What was essential to understand at that tender age was that modern Greeks descended from the ancient Greeks. Grown up children, however, must have been no less confused than adults on the criteria for defining modern Greek identity. Did the Greeks constitute a ‘race’ apart from the Albanians, the Slavs and the Vlachs? Yes and no. High school students were told that the ‘other races’, i.e. the Slavs, the Albanians and the Vlachs, ‘having been Hellenized with the years in terms of mores and customs, are now being assimilated into the Greeks’. On the Slavs of Macedonia there seems to have been no consensus. Were they Bulgars, Slavicized Greeks or early Slavs? They ‘were’ Bulgars until the 1870s and Slavicized Greeks, or Hellenized Slavs subsequently, according to the needs of the dominant theory. There was no consensus, either, on the Vlachs. Were they Latinized Greek mountaineers of late immigrants from Vlachia? As in the case of the Slavs of Macedonia, Vlach descent shifted from the southern Balkans to the Danube, until the Romanians claimed the Vlachs for their brethren; which made the latter irrevocably indigenous to the southern Balkan mountains. The Albanians or ‘Arvanites’, were readily ‘adopted’ as brethren of common descent for at least three reasons. Firstly, the Albanians had been living in southern Greece, as far south as the Peloponnese, in considerable numbers. Secondly, Christian Albanians had fought with distinction and in considerable numbers in the War of Independence. Thirdly, credible Albanian claims for the establishment of an Albanian nation state materialized too Late for Greek national theorists to abandon well-entrenched positions. Commenting on a geography textbook for primary schools in 1901, a state committee found it inadequate and misleading. One of its principal shortcomings concerned the Albanians, who were described as ‘close kinsmen of the Greeks’. ‘These are unacceptable from the point of view of our national claims and as far as historical truth is concerned’, commented the committee. ‘it must have been maintained that they are of common descent with the Greeks (Pelasgians), that they speak a language akin to that of the Greeks and that they participated in all struggles for national liberation of the common fatherland.’"

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