Serbs of Albania

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series of articles on
Serbs

Serbian culture
Literature · Music · Art · Cinema
Epic poetry · Clans · Costume
Religion · Kinship · Cuisine · Sport

By region or country
(including the diaspora)

Serbia (Kosovo · Vojvodina)
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Montenegro · Croatia
Macedonia · Hungary · Romania
Albania · Greece · Germany
Austria · France · Switzerland
Canada · United States · Mexico
Australia · New Zealand
Argentina · Brazil · Chile
By town or city
Budapest · Chicago · Dubrovnik
Istanbul · London · Los Angeles
Mostar · Osijek · Paris
Sarajevo · Szentendre · Toronto
Trieste · Vienna · Zagreb

Subgroups
and closely related peoples
Sorbs · Bosniaks · Bunjevci · Croats
Ethnic Muslims · Goranci · Krashovani
Macedonians · Montenegrins · Shopi
Šokci · Torlaks · Užičans · Yugoslavs

Serbian political entities
Serbia (Kosovo · Vojvodina)
BiH (RS · Brčko · FBiH) · Montenegro

Historical Serbian and Serb-inhabited
political entities


Ancient:
White Serbia · Limes Sorabicus

Medieval:
Doclea · Rascia · Bosnia · Zachlumia
Travunia · Pagania · Republic of Ragusa
Serbian Empire
Moravian Serbia · Serbian Despotate
Zeta · Herzegovina of St. Sava

Modern:
Revolutionary Serbia · Principality of Serbia
Voivodship of Serbia · Principality of Montenegro
Kingdom of Serbia · Kingdom of Montenegro
Kingdoms of SHS and Yugoslavia
Socialist Republic of Serbia
(within the Second Yugoslavia)
SAP Voivodina · SAP Kossovo-Metochia
Republic of Serb Krajina
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Serbia and Montenegro

Serbian Orthodox Church
Patriarchs · Monasteries · Saints

Serbian language and dialects
Serbian · Serbo-Croat
Romano-Serbian · Shtokavian
Torlakian · Šatrovački · Užičan
(Old) Church Slavonic · Slavoserbian
Differences between standard
Serbian, Croatian and Bosnian

History · Timeline · Monarchs

Persecution of Serbs
Serbophobia · Jasenovac
Persecution in World War II

Other articles
Serbian-Greek friendship

v  d  e

According to the latest national minority census in Albania (1989), there were 100 Serbs and Montenegrins in the country [1]. Domestic Serb-Montenegrin community claims the figure is around 25,000, while independent sources placed the figure at 10,000 in 1994 [2]. Serbian sources estimate up to 30,000. Vraka nearby the northern city of Shkoder is (or was before 1990) mainly Serbian and Montenegrin. Vraka is also the birthplace of Millosh Gjergj Nikolla, a poet of Montenegrin origin who wrote almost exclusively in Albanian.

  1. ^ untitled
  2. ^ Eurominority - Serbs - Stateless Nations, national, cultural and linguistic minorities, native peoples, ethnic groups in Europe

[edit] See also

[edit] External links