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Konispol
View on WikipediaKonispol (Albanian definite form: Konispoli) is the southernmost town in Albania. It sits one kilometer away from the Albanian-Greek border. The settlement is inhabited by Cham Albanians.[3] Konispol is the modern centre of the Cham Albanian community in Albania. The main economic interests of Konispol are agriculture and viticulture.
Key Information
The town is the seat of the southernmost administrative unit in Albania, the Municipality of Konispol (Albanian: Bashkia Konispol). It was formed during the 2015 local government reform by the merger of the former municipalities of Konispol, Markat and Xarrë. [4] The total population is 8,245 (2011 census),[5] in a total area of 226.26 km2.[6] The population of the municipal unit as of the 2023 census is 1,758.[1]
The former Konispol municipal unit (pre-2015) consisted of the town Konispol and the village Çiflik.[7] The new larger municipality of Konispol contains settlements that are inhabited by Albanians who form the majority of the population, Aromanians, Greeks and Romani that live in the villages of Xarrë municipal unit.[3][8][9]
Name
[edit]The name of the settlement Konispol is derived from коньць, konytsy and поля, polya, Slavic words for end and field referring to the end of a field.[10]
History
[edit]Traces of human presence in Konispol can be found in the Kreçmoi Cave on the late period of the Middle Paleolithic era (40,000-30,000 years ago).[11][12][13]
The area was part of the ancient region of Epirus and was inhabited by Chaonian Epirotes.[14]
In 1943, Konispol was noted for being the battleground of a fierce conflict between German units, Cham collaborators from the Thesprotia province in Greece of the Nuri Dino battalion, and the communist Albanian resistance.[15] On 8 October 8, 1943, a meeting of the Albanian and Greek communist resistance groups took place in the town.[16] Apart from recognising that Albanian and Greek minorities existed on either side of the border, due to disagreements between the communist movements, a separate headquarters for the communist resistance units of the Greek minority in Albania was planned.[16]
In 1992, seven caves were discovered just north of the town with findings that dated from the Upper Paleolithic age to the Iron Age.[17]
Modern period
[edit]Konispol, due to its proximity to the Albanian-Greek borders, is part of the European Union's Greece – Albania Neighbourhood Programme for improving the standard of living of the local population by promoting sustainable local development in the cross-border area between the two countries.
Demographics
[edit]| Year | Pop. | ±% |
|---|---|---|
| 1989 | 2,676 | — |
| 2001 | 2,230 | −16.7% |
| 2011 | 2,123 | −4.8% |
| 2023 | 1,758 | −17.2% |
| Source: [18][1] | ||
The municipal seat Konispol,[8] along with the villages of Dishat, Vërvë, Shalës, Markat, Ninat, and Janjar, are populated by native Cham Albanians.[3] The village of Xarrë is inhabited by an Orthodox Albanian majority, Muslim Albanian Chams (200) that arrived from northern Greece in the 1920s and 1940s, a combined population of Aromanians and Greeks (50) and some Romani.[3][8] Mursi is inhabited by an Orthodox Albanian majority, alongside a few Muslim Albanians and Greeks.[3][8][19] Çiflik is inhabited by Orthodox Albanians, Aromanians, Muslim Albanians and a few Greeks.[3] Shkallë is inhabited by an Aromanian majority, alongside a few Muslim Albanians and Greeks and also contains a few families of Muslim Romani originally from Filiates, Greece who were expelled in 1944–1945.[3][9] Vrinë is a new village established during the communist period and is populated by Muslim Albanians (400), Orthodox Albanians (318) and Greeks (300).[3]
Location
[edit]Konispol is:
- 301 kilometres (118 miles) from Albania's capital city Tirana (geographically and by road)
- 1 kilometre (0.6 miles) from the Albanian-Greek border (geographically)
- 4 kilometres (3 miles) from Sagiada, Greece (geographically)
Notable people
[edit]- Teme Sejko (August 25, 1922 – May 31, 1961), Albanian rear admiral and commander of the Albanian navy and the naval base of Durrës
- Hasan Tahsini, astronomer, mathematician and philosopher; first rector of Istanbul University; prominent 19th century Ottoman scholar
- Osman Taka, folk music dancer
- Muhamet Kyçyku (Çami), Cham poet, also considered a poet of the Albanian National Renaissance[20]
- Bilal Xhaferri (May 10 or November 2, 1935 – 1986), Albanian writer and political dissident against the Albanian communist regime
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Census of Population and Housing". Institute of Statistics Albania.
- ^ "Albania: Municipal Division (Municipalities and Municipal Units)".
- ^ a b c d e f g h Kallivretakis, Leonidas (1995). "Η ελληνική κοινότητα της Αλβανίας υπό το πρίσμα της ιστορικής γεωγραφίας και δημογραφίας [The Greek Community of Albania in terms of historical geography and demography." In Nikolakopoulos, Ilias, Kouloubis Theodoros A. & Thanos M. Veremis (eds). Ο Ελληνισμός της Αλβανίας [The Greeks of Albania]. University of Athens. p. 51. "Ε Έλληνες, ΑΧ Αλβανοί Ορθόδοξοι Χριστιανοί, AM Αλβανοί Μουσουλμάνοι, ΤΣ Τσάμηδες, Β Βλάχοι, Μ Μικτός πληθυσμός”; p.52. “KONISPOL ΚΟΝΙΣΠΟΛΗ 2380 ΤΣ; VERVE BEPBA 345 ΤΣ; DISHAT ΝΤΙΣΑΤΙ 317 ΤΣ; SHALES ΣΑλΕΣΙ 1168 ΤΣ; ΝΙΝΑΤ NINATI (ΝΙΝΑΤΕΣ) 547 ΤΣ; MARKAT MAPKATI 748 ΤΣ; JANJAR ΓΙΑΝΑΡΙ 595 ΤΣ; XARRE TZAPA 2085 AX + αμ (200) + ε/β (50); MURSI ΜΟΥΡΣΙ (ΜΟΥΡΤΣΙΑ) 1984 AX + αμ + ε; VRINE BPINA (νέο) 1018 M (400 AM+ 318 ΑΧ+ 300 E); SHKALLE ΣΚΑΛΛΑ 619 Β + αμ + ε; ÇIFLIK ΤΣΙΦΛΙΚΙ 525 Μ (ΑΧ + Β + AM + ε)"
- ^ "Law nr. 115/2014" (PDF) (in Albanian). p. 6376. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
- ^ "Population and housing census - Vlorë 2011" (PDF). INSTAT. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- ^ "Correspondence table LAU – NUTS 2016, EU-28 and EFTA / available Candidate Countries" (XLS). Eurostat. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
- ^ Greece – Albania Neighbourhood Programme Archived March 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c d Kretsi, Georgia (2005). "The uses of origin: Migration, Power-struggle and Memory in southern Albania". In King, Russell; Mai, Nicola; Schwandner-Sievers, Stephanie (eds.). The New Albanian Migration. Brighton-Portland: Sussex Academic. ISBN 9781903900789. pp. 197-198. The first village, Xarrë, contains a mixed population in regard to confession and language.[3] The village is about 15 km from the Albanian-Greek border crossing point (for pedestrians) of Qafë Bota and around 30 km from the district capital, Sarandë. The second community, Mursi, consists of a rather homogeneous population in terms of religious affiliation and language (Christian and Albanian speaking) and is located just 1 km away from Xarrë. The third village, Konispol, around 10 km distant from these villages, is a traditionally Muslim, Albanian speaking settlement and is situated close to the 'green line' with Greece."; p. 210. "[3]. In Xarrë the relevant groups were Albanian-speaking Christians, Çam people (or Chams - the Albanian speaking minority settled in northern Greece/Epirus in the 1920s and 1940s), Vlachs (cattle breeders, speaking a Latin-based language), Roma, and some members of the Greek minority."
- ^ a b Baltsiotis, Lambros (2015). "Balkan Roma immigrants in Greece: An initial approach to the traits of a migration flow", International Journal of Language, Translation and Intercultural Communication. 1. (1): 5. " In general terms, it seems that previous ties of any kind with Greece facilitate not only the migration but also a more permanent way of living in the country. This is the case with the Muslim Roma of Filiati in Thesprotia who, following the expulsion of the Muslim Albanian Chams from Greece in 1944-1945, were settled in the village of Shkallë, Sarandë in Albania. The majority of the families, more than fifteen, gradually settled in Greece.
- ^ Ylli, Xhelal (1997). Das slavische Lehngut im Albanischen. Teil 2: Ortsnamen [Slavic Loan Material in Albanian. Part 2: Placenames] (PDF) (in German). Verlag Otto Sagner. p. 127. ISBN 9783876907727. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 February 2022.
- ^ Sheme, Selman (2016). Çamëria-Vështrim gjeopopullativ dhe etnokulturor (in Albanian). Tiranë: Albas. p. 21. ISBN 978-9928-02-778-8.
- ^ Myzyri, Hysni (2001). Historia e Shqipërisë dhe Shqiptarëve (in Albanian). Prizren: Sprint. pp. 13–14. OCLC 60603000.
- ^ Korkuti, Muzafer; Petruso, Karl M.; Bejko, Lorenc; EIlwood, Brooks B.; Hansen, Julie M.; Harrold, Francis B.; Rusell, Nerissa; Bottema, Sytze (1996). "Shpella e Konispolit (Raport paraprak për gërmimet e viteve 1992-1994) / Konispol cave, Albania (A preliminary report on excavation, 1992-1994)". Iliria. 26 (1): 183–224. doi:10.3406/iliri.1996.1666.
- ^ Hammond, N.G.L. (1997). "Hammond The Tribal Systems of Epirus and Neighbouring Areas down to 400 B.C.". Epirus, 4000 Years of Greek History and Civilization: 55.
Chaonian power thus ran from the northern end of the Gulf of Aulon (adjacent to Apollonia) to the southern end of the plain by Konispolis
- ^ Meyer, Hermann Frank (2008). Blutiges Edelweiß: Die 1. Gebirgs-division im zweiten Weltkrieg [Bloodstained Edelweiss. The 1st Mountain-Division in WWII] (in German). Ch. Links Verlag. ISBN 978-3-86153-447-1.
- ^ a b Kretsi, Georgia (2002). "The 'Secret' Past of the Greek-Albanian Borderlands". Ethnologia Balkanica (6): 181.
In 1943 the first rapprochements had taken place between the Albanian and Greek communist resistance movements, and although no concrete statuses were defined, the minorities on both sides were recognized mutually for the first time.[35].; [35]Serious disagreements emerged, however, due to the convention of Konispol (8/10/1943) a separate headquarters for the Greek minority was planned
- ^ Schuldenrein, Joseph (1998-06-01). "Konispol Cave, southern Albania, and correlations with other Aegean caves occupied in the Late Quaternary". Geoarchaeology. 13 (5): 501–526. doi:10.1002/(sici)1520-6548(199806)13:5<501::aid-gea3>3.0.co;2-4. ISSN 1520-6548.
- ^ "Albania: All places/communes".
- ^ Hammond, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière (1967). Epirus: the Geography, the Ancient Remains, the History and Topography of Epirus and Adjacent Areas. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 95. ISBN 9780198142539. "The small hamlet of Çiflik lies below the hill of Aetos, and it is one hour's walk from there to Murzië, an Albanian speaking village of 700 people"
- ^ Elsie, Robert (1992). "Albanian Literature in the Moslem Tradition: Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Century Albanian Writing in Arabic Script". Oriens. 33: 287–306. doi:10.2307/1580608. JSTOR 1580608.
External links
[edit]Konispol
View on GrokipediaGeography
Location and Borders
Konispol Municipality is positioned at the southernmost extent of Albania in Vlorë County, with its central town at coordinates 39°39′55″N 20°10′53″E.[6] The area encompasses 222 km² of predominantly hilly terrain, placing it approximately 30 km southeast of Sarandë by straight-line distance and about 80 km southwest of Gjirokastër via regional roads. This geospatial arrangement underscores its role adjacent to international boundaries, with direct access to the Ionian Sea's coastal influences along the western fringe. The municipality's borders adjoin Finiq Municipality to the north, Sarandë Municipality to the west, and the Republic of Greece to the south and southeast, forming Albania's southern frontier.[7] The Qafë Botë mountain pass serves as the primary border crossing point into Greece, situated near the municipal center at an elevation facilitating vehicular and pedestrian transit across the shared boundary.[1] This pass, at roughly 137 meters above sea level, connects to Greek localities such as Sagiada, emphasizing the area's strategic connectivity without encompassing maritime delimitations.[8] Konispol's western perimeter lies proximate to Butrint National Park, integrating lagoon and coastal ecosystems influenced by the Ionian Sea, while maintaining terrestrial boundaries that delineate its inland extent from protected zones.[9] These features contribute to a topography blending elevated ridges with lowlands, shaping the municipality's isolation from central Albanian networks yet proximity to transboundary routes.Climate and Environment
Konispol experiences a Mediterranean climate characterized by hot, dry summers and mild, wet winters, influencing agricultural cycles such as olive and citrus cultivation through seasonal water availability. Average summer temperatures reach up to 30°C in July and August, while winter averages hover around 10°C in January, with extremes occasionally dropping to -10°C or exceeding 37°C. Annual precipitation totals approximately 1,395 mm, concentrated primarily from October to March, supporting groundwater recharge but leading to summer droughts that constrain irrigation-dependent farming.[10][11] The local environment features lowland plains interspersed with karst formations typical of southern Albania, contributing to soil fertility for viticulture and grain production while heightening vulnerability to erosion from heavy rains. Proximity to coastal lagoons, such as those near Butrint, fosters biodiversity hotspots with wetland ecosystems supporting migratory birds and endemic flora, though coastal erosion and rising sea levels pose risks to these habitats. Recent assessments indicate increased landslide susceptibility in the region due to precipitation variability, exacerbating soil degradation that affects land usability for pastoral activities.[12][13][14]History
Pre-Ottoman Period
The Konispol region exhibits evidence of early human occupation through the Konispol Cave, a karstic site on the southern slopes of the Pindus range, which has revealed continuous archaeological layers from the Late Quaternary period. Radiocarbon and archaeomagnetic dating of excavated materials indicate pre-Neolithic levels, including Middle Paleolithic artifacts associated with early modern human activity around 40,000–30,000 years ago, followed by Mesolithic cultural layers representing the earliest compact settlement evidence in Albania.[15] These findings, derived from excavations in the 1990s, highlight sporadic but persistent habitation in cave and open-air contexts, with faunal remains suggesting hunter-gatherer economies adapted to the local karst landscape.[16] In antiquity, the area lay within Chaonia, the northern district of Epirus, dominated by the Chaonian tribe, whose hill forts and pastoral settlements extended into modern Konispol territories. The Chaonians, known for their federal structure of three clans and conflicts with Macedonian forces under Philip II in the 4th century BC, maintained semi-autonomous polities amid Greek colonial influences along the coast, such as at nearby Apollonia and Epidamnus. Roman conquest of Epirus in 167 BC incorporated Chaonia into the province of Epirus Vetus by the 1st century AD, introducing administrative reforms, road networks, and villas, though Konispol itself shows no evidence of major Roman urbanism, remaining a peripheral rural zone focused on agriculture and transhumance.[17] Medieval Byzantine administration subsumed the region into the themata of Nicopolis and Dyrrhachium from the 4th century onward, with Epirus serving as a frontier against Slavic incursions in the 6th–7th centuries AD. Local defenses relied on fortified ecclesiastical sites and thematic armies, but the area experienced fragmentation following the Fourth Crusade in 1204, when the Despotate of Epirus emerged as a Byzantine successor state under Michael I Komnenos Doukas, controlling southern Albania until its reconquest by the restored Byzantine Empire in the mid-13th century. Early Albanian tribal migrations into Epirus during this era introduced proto-Albanian elements, yet Konispol lacked significant urban development or recorded principalities, functioning primarily as a dispersed settlement amid Byzantine feudal estates and Orthodox monasteries.[18]Ottoman Rule
The region encompassing Konispol fell under Ottoman suzerainty in the early 15th century amid the empire's expansion into southern Albania and Epirus, following the conquest of nearby Delvina around 1415 and Gjirokastër in 1418.[19] This incorporation aligned with the establishment of early Ottoman administrative units, such as the Sanjak of Albania, which encompassed territories in central and southern Albania before reorganization. By the 16th century, the area, including Chameria where Konispol is located, was restructured under the Sanjak of Delvina, with Delvina serving as the initial administrative center; this sanjak managed taxation, military obligations, and judicial affairs for southern provinces like Gjirokastër, Delvina, and Tchameria.[19][20] Governance in the sanjak involved a hierarchy of officials, including the sanjakbey appointed from Istanbul, local kadis for Islamic law and civil disputes, and subashis overseeing police and tax collection. Taxation followed the Ottoman timar system, granting military fiefs (timars) to sipahis who collected revenues from agriculture, livestock, and trade in exchange for providing cavalry service; by the 17th century, this shifted toward iltizam tax farming, where private contractors bid for revenue rights, often leading to exploitation and local unrest. In Konispol's vicinity, revenues derived primarily from grain, olives, and pastoral activities, with additional impositions like the cizye poll tax on non-Muslims. Local Albanian Muslim elites, including beys and aghas, held timars or managed estates, fostering a degree of autonomy while integrating into Ottoman military structures through service in irregular troops or the devshirme system, though less prevalent in Albanian highlands. Social structure reflected Ottoman millet organization, privileging Muslim Albanians—who formed the majority in Konispol and surrounding Muslim villages numbering over 4,500 inhabitants by the late Ottoman period—over Orthodox Christian minorities, often ethnic Greeks or Albanian-speakers in peripheral communities subject to jizya and devshirme levies.[21] Islamization progressed through incentives like tax exemptions and land grants, transforming the area into an "oriental urban settlement" with mosques, bazaars, and fortified houses emblematic of Ottoman influence.[20] By the 18th century, semi-autonomous pashaliks emerged, with figures like Ali Pasha of Yanina exerting de facto control over the region; local chieftains, such as the Tagliani of Konispoli and Mustafa Pasha of Delvina, navigated alliances and conflicts, sending hostages or troops to Ioannina to secure positions amid rivalries with central authority and neighboring powers.[22] This era saw Albanian beys leveraging Ottoman patronage for regional dominance, though periodic revolts against tax burdens highlighted tensions in Ottoman-Albanian relations.World War II and Immediate Aftermath
During World War II, under Axis occupation, Konispol served as a site of intense local conflict between communist-led Albanian partisans and collaborationist militias comprising Cham Albanians allied with German forces. These clashes, peaking in 1943, stemmed from collaborationist efforts to suppress resistance activities in the border region, often motivated by anti-partisan operations and local power struggles.[23] On October 8, 1943, Konispol hosted a key meeting between Albanian communist representatives—Bedri Spahiu of the Communist Party and Rexhep Plaku of the Cham Liberation Front—and Aleksis Janaris of the Greek communist organization EAM. The agreement pledged coordinated anti-fascist resistance against Italian and German occupiers, while postponing resolution of Albanian-Greek territorial claims, including those in Chameria, until after liberation.[24] This reflected divided allegiances among Cham Albanians, with some joining communist units like the Chameria Battalion of the National Liberation Army to fight Axis forces, while others collaborated with occupiers in attacks on partisans, driven by prospects of autonomy or retaliation against Greek nationalists.[25][26] In the immediate aftermath of Axis retreat in late 1944, communist partisans seized control of southern Albania, including Konispol, as part of the nationwide liberation culminating on November 29. The new regime promptly targeted Axis collaborators and non-communist nationalists through arrests and executions, with local Cham figures implicated in wartime cooperation facing reprisals amid efforts to eliminate opposition and secure loyalty in the border area.[27]Communist Era
Following the establishment of the People's Socialist Republic of Albania in January 1946, Konispol fell under the stringent control of Enver Hoxha's regime, which enforced nationwide collectivization of agriculture starting with land reforms that expropriated private holdings and redistributed them to cooperatives. By the 1950s, full collectivization had transformed Konispol's rural economy, previously reliant on small-scale farming and viticulture, into state-managed cooperatives such as the Konispol Farming Cooperative, prioritizing self-sufficiency and ideological conformity over productivity, resulting in chronic shortages and low yields typical of Albania's isolated agrarian sector.[28][29] The regime's repression apparatus, embodied by the Sigurimi secret police, maintained surveillance and persecution in Konispol, compiling at least 40 secret dossiers on local residents suspected of disloyalty, particularly among Cham Albanian refugees settled there after 1945 expulsions from Greece, whom authorities viewed with distrust for perceived collaboration with non-communist forces. This led to 46 documented victims of political repression, including executions, imprisonments, and forced labor, as part of broader efforts to suppress dissent and enforce assimilation, with Muslim Chams facing additional scrutiny for refusing alignment with communist partisans during the Greek Civil War.[30][31] Border policies severely curtailed Konispol's interactions with Greece, as the area along the Konispol-Sagiada frontier was designated a restricted "border belt" from 1945, patrolled by armed forces with shoot-to-kill orders for unauthorized crossings, effectively halting cross-border trade and family ties amid Hoxha's isolationism and disputes over Chameria. Religious suppression peaked in 1967 when Albania declared itself the world's first atheist state, closing Konispol's mosques and prohibiting practices among its predominantly Muslim population, demolishing or repurposing religious sites to eradicate perceived ideological threats. Emigration controls trapped residents, fostering economic stagnation as local development lagged without external inputs or incentives.[32][33][34]Post-Communist Developments
The fall of Albania's communist regime in 1991 brought initial liberalization but also economic dislocation to Konispol, a border municipality heavily reliant on agriculture and cross-border ties with Greece. Widespread poverty prompted mass emigration to Greece, with residents leveraging geographic proximity for seasonal or permanent work, though remittances provided limited local relief amid national hyperinflation and unemployment exceeding 40% in the early 1990s.[35] By 1996-1997, partial stabilization encouraged some returns, but the collapse of nationwide pyramid schemes—into which up to two-thirds of Albanians had invested savings—ignited civil unrest, with armed rebellions in southern regions near Konispol disrupting order and prompting further outflows or internal displacement.[36] International military intervention, including Operation Silver Wake, helped quell the anarchy by mid-1997, enabling gradual repopulation and reconstruction in peripheral areas like Konispol.[37] Post-1998 elections and macroeconomic reforms under successive governments fostered tentative recovery, with Konispol benefiting from proximity to revitalized southern trade routes. Return migration from Greece accelerated in the 2000s, as EU labor restrictions tightened and Albania's growth—averaging 5-6% annually from 2000-2008—drew expatriates back, though local development lagged behind coastal hubs like Sarandë due to infrastructural deficits and ethnic tensions. The 2015 territorial reform consolidated Konispol with former units Markat and Xarrë into a unified municipality of 512 km², incorporating 10 km of Adriatic coastline at Cape Stillo and streamlining governance for EU-aligned decentralization.[38] Infrastructure enhancements supported stabilization, notably the upgrade of the Qafë Bote border crossing under the EU's CARDS 2005 program, which improved facilities for vehicular and pedestrian traffic to Greece, reducing bottlenecks that had hampered post-1997 recovery.[39] Albania's EU candidate status, formalized in 2014 with accession negotiations advancing by 2022, has amplified these efforts, positioning Konispol as a conduit for cross-border exchanges amid national reforms for integrated border management.[40] By the early 2020s, enhanced road links and Qafë Bote's role as a migrant return and tourism gateway underscored Konispol's pivot toward orderly integration, though persistent rural underinvestment highlights uneven progress.[1]Demographics
Population Trends
The population of Konispol municipality totaled 8,245 according to Albania's 2011 census conducted by the Institute of Statistics (INSTAT). This figure encompassed the aggregated residents across what would later form the expanded municipality following the 2015 territorial reform, which merged former administrative units including Konispol, Xarrë, and others. By contrast, the 2023 census recorded a population of 4,898, reflecting a compound annual decline of 4.3% over the intervening 12 years. This sharp reduction stems from sustained net out-migration, as rural households sought employment in Albania's urban areas or emigrated internationally, a pattern documented in successive INSTAT enumerations nationwide.| Census Year | Population | Annual Change Rate (from prior) |
|---|---|---|
| 2011 | 8,245 | - |
| 2023 | 4,898 | -4.3% |