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Post by engers on Aug 4, 2009 6:43:27 GMT -5
Abdurrahman Arnaut Llapashtica
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Post by engers on Aug 4, 2009 6:46:37 GMT -5
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Post by engers on Aug 4, 2009 6:48:58 GMT -5
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Post by engers on Aug 4, 2009 7:01:49 GMT -5
Riza Lushta, kosovar: played in Italy with US Bari and Juventus FC; in 1941-42 won Italy Cup (Coppa Italia) with Juventus FC, and in 1942-43 Lushta was one of the most important goal-scorers of Italian football
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Post by engers on Aug 4, 2009 7:03:23 GMT -5
Fawzia -Queen of Iran One of the most beautiful ladies of the last century was of Albanian stock. She had some French and Circassian blood too, but her ancestry was predominantly Albanian. Her name was Fawzia; she was the sister of the last king of Egypt, King Farouk. Her paternal ancestor was, as I wrote above, the Albanian warrior Mehmed Ali Pascha who established the Egyptian independence and became its leader. He was born in Kavala, Greece, but was originally from Zemblak, Korca. This same man spoke only Albanian it was said, possible Turkish too. His son was Ibrahim Pascha; his son was Ismail, who had another son called Fuat. Fuat's daughter was Fewzia, and his son and heir, Farouk(he had other children as well). Her mother, called Nazli Sabri, was the daughter of Abdu'r-Rahman Pasha Sabri, who former minister of Agriculture and mayor of Cairo; he was of Albanian ancestry as well. His wife was Tefika Kahnum, who was mixed French-Albanian. Fawzia was later married to the Shah of Iran; Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. He dirvorced her later, however, due to her not giving birth to any son. Nevertheless, she reached great fame in the world through her beauty and acquired the nick-name "Asian Venus" -- that is what Cecil Beaton calls her, saying also that she had "a perfect heart-shaped face and strangely pale but piercing blue eyes".
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Aris
Amicus
Greek Troll
Posts: 832
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Post by Aris on Aug 4, 2009 17:24:23 GMT -5
Mundet të gjejë dikush fotografi të Juventusit të Shkodrës(1907-1918) ?
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Post by engers on Aug 5, 2009 6:53:52 GMT -5
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Post by L0gjICK on Aug 5, 2009 8:23:45 GMT -5
Anyone got any good sources on Mefail Shehu or Xheme Hasa?
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Post by todhrimencuri on Aug 25, 2009 0:54:11 GMT -5
Engers, pse e ke vene ate fotografine e qelbur te Llapashtices? Aj ishte nje teroriste Arab. E vetmja gje qe kishte Shqiptare aj ishte origjinen... me ate mjekren dhe aktet e tij ishte terorist arap.
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Post by engers on Aug 25, 2009 9:05:08 GMT -5
Engers, pse e ke vene ate fotografine e qelbur te Llapashtices? Aj ishte nje teroriste Arab. E vetmja gje qe kishte Shqiptare aj ishte origjinen... me ate mjekren dhe aktet e tij ishte terorist arap. Abdurrahman Arnaut Llapashtica lindi në vitin 1900 në fshatin Llapashticë të Epërme të Llapit, ishte aktivist në luftën e Palestinës. [redakto] Biografia Abdurrahman Arnaut Llapashtica mejtepin e kreu në fshatrat Obrançë dhe Llapashticë dhe e vazhdoi në Prishtinë te dijetari H. Hamdi Efendiu. Në moshën 21-vjeçare shkoi në Turqi për t‘u shkolluar edhe më tutje, por për arsye të njohura familjare u kthye sërish në Kosovë. Në vitin 1927 u detyrua që të kryejë shërbimin ushtarak në armatën jugosllave. Dhjetë vjet më pas, për arsye represive të regjimit të atëhershëm, shiti gjithë pasurinë dhe u shpërngul në Turqi, duke shkuar njëherë në Stamboll, Ada-Pazar, Bursë dhe Adanë. Me familjen katër anëtarëshe, më 1944 doli në Siri. Me fillimin e uftës në Palestinë më 1946, Llapashtica vendoset me familjen në Jordan dhe nga aty kthehet në Palestinë për të ju bashkangjitur forcave të armatosura palestineze. sq.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdurrahman_Arnaut_LlapashticaPerse Terrorist? a vetem pse ka luftuar kunder jahudive? ka luftuar per lirine e Jerusalemit! Edhe nuk eshte arab por eshte Shqipetar.
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donnie
Senior Moderator
Nike Leka i Kelmendit
Posts: 3,389
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Post by donnie on Aug 25, 2009 9:40:08 GMT -5
Gjithcka ne rregull, as une nuk do ta quaja "terrorist" nese thjesht luftonte kunder ushtareve te armatosur, por pse luftonte per arabet ky daja kur i kishim problemet tona? Pse nuk eshte kycur ne levizjen kacake te Azem Bejtes? Arabet jane me miliona, kane pasur dhe kane mjaft njerez per t'u ballafaquar me hebrenjte, keshtu qe s'nevojitet kontributi yne.
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Post by todhrimencuri on Aug 25, 2009 17:00:26 GMT -5
Cfar pune kan Shqiptaret me Jerusalemin?
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Post by monsterofsouli on Aug 26, 2009 5:52:41 GMT -5
Old Ottoman era music ensemble: Im guessing the one on the complete left could be Alb, while the one on the complete right (with the cross) is prolly Greek... Yes, and the right one who's siting...they have that greek style in their appearance.. I have that picture in one of my books. The caption under the pic in my book says that those guys are a mix of Greeks and Albanians. Go ahead and try to figure who is who.
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Post by todhrimencuri on Aug 28, 2009 14:36:10 GMT -5
What was the name of the book.
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Post by tsompanos on Aug 29, 2009 22:25:17 GMT -5
I suspect that the ones with the fustanella are greeks since if im not wrong you dont have that short fustanella in Albania plus if im right they are probably macedonians judging how they are dressed
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Aug 30, 2009 8:09:03 GMT -5
Why Gegs wear Polish trousers..?
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donnie
Senior Moderator
Nike Leka i Kelmendit
Posts: 3,389
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Post by donnie on Aug 30, 2009 13:45:02 GMT -5
They're not Polish trousers if that's what you're implying. They're called tirqe and the black stripes are known as xhamadan. The belt is the shoka, the jacket is known as jelek. Their caps are known as plis or plisa in plural ... only "Slavic" about them is their footgears known as opânga from Serbian opanke.
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Post by monsterofsouli on Aug 31, 2009 20:50:03 GMT -5
What was the name of the book. Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims and Jews 1430-1950 by Mark Mazower Salonica, City of Ghosts is an evocation of the life of a vanished city and an exploration of how it passed away. Under the rule of the Ottoman sultans, one of the most extraordinary and diverse societies in Europe lived for five centuries amid its minarets and cypresses on the shore of the Aegean, alongside its Roman ruins and Byzantine monasteries. Egyptian merchants and Ukrainian slaves, Spanish-speaking rabbis-refugees from the Iberian Inquisition-and Turkish pashas rubbed shoulders with Orthodox shopkeepers, Sufi dervishes and Albanian brigands. Creeds clashed and mingled in an atmosphere of shared piety and messianic mysticism. How this bustling, cosmopolitan and tolerant world emerged and then disappeared under the pressure of modern nationalism is the subject of this remarkable book. The historian Mark Mazower, author of the greatly praised Dark Continent, follows the city's inhabitants through the terrors of plague, invasion and famine, and takes us into their taverns, palaces, gardens and brothels. Drawing on an astonishing array of primary sources, Mazower's vivid narrative illuminates the multicultural fabric of this great city and describes how its fortunes changed as the empire fell apart and the age of national enmities arrived. In the twentieth century, the Greek army marched in, and fire and world war wrought their grim transformation. Thousands of refugees arrived from Anatolia, the Muslims were forced out, and the Nazis deported and killed the Jews. This richly textured homage to the world that went with them uncovers the memory of what lies buried beneath Salonica's prosperous streets and recounts the haunting story of how the three great faiths that shared thecity were driven apart. Paperback 490 pages - 5" x 7" - (5/06)
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Post by zoti on Sept 3, 2009 10:38:47 GMT -5
Cfar pune kan Shqiptaret me Jerusalemin? Te njejten pune qe kishin me Spanjen e Frankos.
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Patrinos
Amicus
Peloponnesos uber alles
Posts: 4,763
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Post by Patrinos on Oct 10, 2009 14:36:59 GMT -5
;D ;D 1- Did Albanian women wear burgas before Hoxha...? (0:13)... ;D 2- When I saw the video I thought that it was in Afganistan... but then I saw the skiny guys with the white little hats... and i realised it was a country that is 3 hours from my house ...........
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