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    • Ismail Qenali

      • Independent Albania was proclaimed in Vlorë on 28 November 1912. Six days later the Assembly of Vlorë formed the first Government of Albania which was led by Ismail Qenali and the Council of Elders (Pleqnia).
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albanian_Declaration_of_Independence
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  2. The short-lived Albanian Control Commission (17 October 1912 to 30 May 1913) was set up by them to rule Albania. [ 60 ] The unsuccessful uprising of 1910 , 1911 and the successful and final Albanian revolt in 1912 , as well as the Serbian and Greek occupation and attempts to incorporate the land into their respective countries, led to a ...

  3. In January 1912, Hasan Prishtina, an Albanian deputy in the Ottoman parliament, publicly warned MPs that the policy of the CUP government would lead to a revolution in Albania. [11] After that speech Qemali proposed a meeting with Prishtina.

    • January-August 1912
  4. The Partition of Albania (Albanian: Copëtimi i Shqipërisë) is a term used for the partition of the Albanian state, which proclaimed its independence on 28 November 1912.

  5. It was at this time that Ismail Kemal bey Vlora (1844-1919), also known in Albanian as Ismail Qemali, returned to Albania with Austro-Hungarian support and, at the head of a swiftly-convened national assembly, declared Albanian independence in the town of Vlora on 28 November 1912.

  6. The most successful of those lords were three generations of pashas of the Bushati family, who dominated most of northern Albania from 1757 to 1831, and Ali Paşa Tepelenë of Janina (now Ioánnina, Greece), a brigand-turned-despot who ruled over southern Albania and northern Greece from 1788 to 1822.

    • Peter R. Prifti
  7. On November 28, 1912, Ismail Qemali raised the red and black Albanian flag in Vlorë, proclaiming the country’s independence from the Ottoman Empire. This long-awaited declaration came in the wake of the successful Albanian revolt of 1912 against the repressive policies of the Young Turks.

  8. Jan 29, 2021 · The uprisings of 1910–1912, and the Montenegrin, Serbian, and Greek invasion of Albania, led to a proclamation of independence by Ismail Qemali in Vlora, on 28 November 1912. Albanian independence was recognized by the Conference of London on 29 July 1913.