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Post by la3ar on Feb 17, 2011 14:00:27 GMT -5
Have you been to anywhere in Europe. I can assure you that I have been to more places than you can even count. So don't even try to "know" things. When in fact you are just a sad case of a teenager going through sexual confusions about himself.
PS; Albania and KOsovo do NOT count. They have become the trash bin of the EU. Thanks to your disease infected race.
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Post by atdhetari on Feb 17, 2011 14:10:42 GMT -5
ok now piss off you're no longer amusing, i'm afraid i'll contract second hand stupidity talking to you, even by serb standards, you're too dumb.
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Post by la3ar on Feb 17, 2011 14:12:31 GMT -5
bout time you gave up.
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Post by drinus123 on Feb 17, 2011 14:12:50 GMT -5
^but the big statues they have of him in Greece and Serbia prove otherwise they take all the legends of our great Albanians .... another 200 years they will be saying same for Adem Jashari His name would be Adem Jasarevic. The great serb warrior. Such is the nature of greeks and serbs. They feed off albanians.
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ajax
Membrum
Posts: 145
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Post by ajax on Feb 17, 2011 14:37:01 GMT -5
Looks like Atdehari's "How to Make Witty Comments for Dummies" arrived from Amazon.com already.
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Kanaris
Amicus
This just in>>>> Nobody gives a crap!
Posts: 9,589
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Post by Kanaris on Feb 17, 2011 15:08:47 GMT -5
Mario, la3ar has practically owned you.... you continue with a huge verbal diarrhea against her... and yet she remains cool and collective...
You're having a meltdown... over nothing... relax...
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Hellenas
Amicus
Father of Gods and of men.
Posts: 432
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Post by Hellenas on Feb 17, 2011 15:26:40 GMT -5
its always these mogrels and stray dogs that spew anti albanian propaganda, you'd have to be a spectacular moron and worringly defficient in gray matter to claim or believe that scanderbeg was greek or serb, dikheads! to all albs in here, do not indulge these human waste of the likes of krivo, karta and hellenas, they're notorious cretins that are part albanian, you do not see real greeks claiming scanderbeg as greek I am not a mongrel as you say, racially I am a pure Atlanto-Mediterranean Aegean Hellenas and I am not "alabanian" not even partially Helleno-Arvanitis(those just are the 8% of Hellas), I am 100% Hellenic by ancestry. And a question atdhetari... Is your country so dirty as your mouth is?
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Post by atdhetari on Feb 17, 2011 15:55:44 GMT -5
lol, i am not having a meltdown, i just feel bad picking on lazar, honest, he/she is not very bright,
why you mad though?
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Post by zoti on Feb 17, 2011 15:59:38 GMT -5
Busy day at the souvlaki stand
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Post by atdhetari on Feb 17, 2011 16:09:14 GMT -5
i hear ya, extra tzaziki on mine
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Post by ushtari on Feb 17, 2011 17:05:31 GMT -5
The Kastrioti descend from the Serb governor of Janina, Branilo who was assissinated in 1368. Ioannina (Greek: Yiannina), a city in and capital of Epirus, Greece. It is bordered by Kastoria in the north-east. The name Kastriota means "from Kastoria). After the assassination of Branilo in the last days of the Serbian empire, the family probably left that area:. Quote: ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Branilo : (+ assassinato a Jannina nel 1379 circa), di origine serba, Governatore di Jannina nel 1368. Sposa N.N.
Later shqiptar propagandists Why do you lie? "Ioannina in 1367 acknowledges Thomas Prelubovich as its ruler. In 1384, the tyranny of Thomas Prebulovich comes to an end." ioannina.uoi.gr/_en/history/byzantine_period.html
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Post by kartadolofonos on Feb 17, 2011 18:06:05 GMT -5
Brainwashed cretins shut up !!!
There is enough historical evidence and proofs that Georgios Kastriotis was Greek and not Albanian !!
Georgios Kastriotis is the national hero of Albania, but he is of Greek descent and not Albanian
You have falsified the history of Georgios Kastriotis
You have Albanized his Greek name .
The Roman invasion permanently ended the political independence of the Epirotes. In 146 BC Epirus became part of the province of Roman Macedonia, receiving the name Epirus vetus, to distinguish it from Epirus nova to the east. Its coastal regions grew wealthy from the Roman coastal trade routes, and the construction of the Via Egnatia provided a further boost to prosperity. Epirus became the westernmost province of the Eastern Roman Empire (subsequently the Greek-speaking Byzantine Empire), ruled from Constantinople when the empire was divided in two in 395 AD. When Constantinople fell to the Fourth Crusade in 1204, Michael Angelos Komnenos Ducas seized Aetolia and Epirus to establish an independent Despotate of Epirus. The rulers of the Despotate controlled a substantial area corresponding to a large swathe of northwestern Greece, much of modern Albania and parts of the modern Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. In 1318 Epirus was overrun by Serbs in one of a series of uprisings. Following an Albanian uprising in 1359 , in which the Despot Nicephorus II was killed, the Byzantines re-established a measure of control of the despotate by making it a vassal state. However, in 1430 the Ottoman Empire under Sultan Murad II annexed Epirus.
1443 George Kastriotis Skenderbeis, the Epirote National Hero, revolted against the Ottoman Empire and conquered Northern Epirus, but on his death it fell to Venice. The Ottomans expelled the Venetians from almost the whole area in the late 15th century. In the 18th century, as the power of the Ottomans declined, Epirus became a virtually independent region under the despotic rule of Ali Pasha Tepelena, an Albanian brigand who became the provincial governor of Ioannina in 1788 . At the height of his power, he controlled much of western Greece, the Peloponnese and Albania. Ali Pasha's campaigns to subjugate the confederation of the Souli settlements is a well known incident of his rule. His forces met fierce resistance by the Souliote warriors of the mountainous area. After numerous failed attempts to defeat the Souliotes, his troops succeeded in conquering the area in 1803. When the Greek War of Independence broke out, the inhabitants of the region contributed greatly, and Ali Pasha tried to make himself an independent ruler, but he was deposed and murdered by Ottoman agents in 1822. When Greece became independent, Epirus remained under Ottoman rule. Two of the founding members of the Filiki Eteria (secret patriotic society), Nikolaos Skoufas and Athanasios Tsakalov, came from the Arta area and the city of Ioannina respectively. Greece's first constitutional prime minister (1844-1847), Ioannis Kolettis, was a native of the town of Syrrako in Epirus and former personal doctor to Vizier Ali Pasha himself.
20th century Epirus The Treaty of Berlin of 1881 gave Greece parts of southern Epirus, but it was not until the Balkan Wars of 1912-13 that the rest of southern Epirus joined Greece. Northern Epirus was awarded to Albania by an international boundary commission. This outcome was unpopular among both Greeks and Albanians, as settlements of the two people existed on both sides of the border. Among Greeks, northern Epirus is regarded as terra irredenta. When World War I broke out in 1914 , Albania collapsed. Under a March 1915 agreement among the Allies, Italy seized northern Albania and Greece set up an autonomous Greek state of North Epirus in the southern part of the country. Although short-lived, the state of Northern Epirus managed to leave behind a number of historical records of its existence, including its own postage stamps. Although the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 awarded the area to Greece after World War I, political developments such as the Greek defeat in the Greco-Turkish War and, crucially, Italian, Austrian and German lobbying in favour of Albania meant that Greece, although backed by Russia, could not claim northern Epirus. The area was finally ceded to Albania in 1924. Italy occupied Albania in 1939 and in 1940 invaded Greece. The Italians were, however, driven back into Albania and Greece again took control of northern Epirus. The conflict, known as the Greco-Italian War, marked one of the first tactical victories of the Allies in World War II. Mussolini himself supervised the massive counter-attack of his divisions in spring 1941 , only to be decisively defeated again by the poorly equipped, but determined, Greeks. Nazi Germany intervened in April 1941 to avert an embarrassing Italian defeat. The German military performed rapid military maneuvers through Yugoslavia and forced the encircled Greek forces to surrender. The whole of Epirus was then placed under Italian occupation until 1943 , when the Germans took over following the Italian surrender to the Allies. The highlands of Epirus became the major theatre of guerrilla inter-fighting between the communist National People's Liberation Army (ELAS) and the republican National Republican Greek League (EDES). Following the German withdrawal from Greece in 1944 , the mountains of Epirus became the scene of some of the fiercest fighting of the Greek Civil War.The current President of the Hellenic Republic, Karolos Papoulias, is a native of Ioannina, Epirus.
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Post by greek1234 on Feb 17, 2011 18:06:10 GMT -5
George Kastriotis was not Albanian, this is pure Albanian propaganda to create their pre Ottoman existence, which by the way is very little, Albania was loyal to the Ottoman cause to the very end.
George Kastriotis had Greek origins like so many elites throughout the Balkans, a common Greek name, he was of Greek Mediterranean appearance he looked nothing like the Albanian hill tribes who later converted to Islam in mass (George Kastriotis was Greek Orthodox), he also spoke Greek and above all had Greek manners.
The biggest joke I've heard by the Albanians in this post are that they where the most rebellious, what a laugh, the Albanians converted to Islam in mass to further their status, they where the most loyal to the Ottoman cause and they received their Independence in 1914, which by the way would have been impossible without the victorious Balkan Wars (In regards to Greece and Serbia) and the Independence of their Christian neighbors.
The only hero the Albanians have is Ali Pasha, the rest is pure lies and propaganda.
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Post by zoti on Feb 17, 2011 18:15:09 GMT -5
These people didn't even have a language until 1250. The nerve...
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Post by atdhetari on Feb 17, 2011 18:20:55 GMT -5
same old boring greek drivel,
so what was he then, greek or serb?
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Post by kartadolofonos on Feb 17, 2011 18:34:51 GMT -5
Georgios Kastriotis addressing to the sovereign of Taranta Ioannis Antonio and giving out his origin and his genuine feelings, writes(in greek of course): "my forefathers were Epirotes from which Pyrrhus rose that only the Romans could push back “.
The Albanian stamp of 1968
"HISTORIA DE VITA ET GESTIS SCANDERBEGI EPIROTARUM PRINCIPIS".
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Post by atdhetari on Feb 17, 2011 18:46:40 GMT -5
epirus is albania, epiriotes were the sons of Arber, epirus was populated by Shqipetars, sons of the eage, Arberiotes, Albaniotes, Epiriotes, Arvanitiotes, all those terms are synonymous and interchangable,
P.S. bythqir grek, te qifsha robt, tradhetar muti!
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Post by kartadolofonos on Feb 17, 2011 18:59:36 GMT -5
;D Greek 1234 The Albanians can have him as gift Ton Ali tous ton dinoume doro na ton kanoun Albano Hrwa ;D
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Hellenas
Amicus
Father of Gods and of men.
Posts: 432
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Post by Hellenas on Feb 17, 2011 19:01:02 GMT -5
The only hero the Albanians have is Ali Pasha, the rest is pure lies and propaganda. I agree. The only hero the Albanians have is Ali Pasha.You keep stealing our Hellenic Heros...
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Post by atdhetari on Feb 17, 2011 19:03:29 GMT -5
a bunch of glorified semi negros talking about hellenic legacy and hellenic heros...the humanity!
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