Albanian Bee ( Albanian: Bleta shqiptare) was a collection by Thimi Mitko of Albanian folklore. Published in 1878, it was the first compilation of oral works designed for the Albanian public. [1] [2]
The first to collect Albanian folk material were European scholars of the mid 19th century, followed particularly by philologists and linguists concerned with recording a little known Indo-European language. [3] The Albanian National Awakening, aimed at protecting and promoting the interests of the Albanian people, gave rise to native collections of Albanian folklore. [3] By highlighting the long traditions, national affirmation was sought. [4] Thimi Mitko, a member of the Albanian community in Egypt, first showed interest in Albanian folklore in 1859. [5] According to Spiro Dine, by 1866 Mitko was providing Demetrio Camarda with material for his collection. [5] Mitko also had contacts with the European poets Gustav Mayer, Urban Jarnik and Girolamo de Rada. [6] In 1874, he finished his own collection of 505 folk songs, and 39 tales and old sayings. [5] The work, focused mostly on material from southern Albania, was written in Greek script. [5] According to Mitko, the intention was to provide Egypt's Albanian community with information about Albanian origins, customs and character. [4] His view was that the heroic songs collected by him showed that Albanians, by keeping the memory of history through songs, had a love of country and their fellow countrymen, regardless of religion. [4] Mitko preserved the wealth of Albanian folk literature by classifying the content based on genre. [5] In 1878 it was published in Alexandria under the Greek title Albanike melissa, with the Albanian Bëlietta shqipëtare placed as subtitle. [5] Mitko also prepared an additional collection of folk literature, the Little Bee that never got published. [1] A copy of Albanian Bee is said to have been publicly burned by Greek nationalists in Athens. [1] By the time the work was published, the Western European Romantic Movement was in decline, and interest in folklore was waning. [5] Albanian Bee gained new popularity after it was published in the modern Albanian alphabet by Gjergj Pekmezi in 1934. [5]
Albanian Bee ( Albanian: Bleta shqiptare) was a collection by Thimi Mitko of Albanian folklore. Published in 1878, it was the first compilation of oral works designed for the Albanian public. [1] [2]
The first to collect Albanian folk material were European scholars of the mid 19th century, followed particularly by philologists and linguists concerned with recording a little known Indo-European language. [3] The Albanian National Awakening, aimed at protecting and promoting the interests of the Albanian people, gave rise to native collections of Albanian folklore. [3] By highlighting the long traditions, national affirmation was sought. [4] Thimi Mitko, a member of the Albanian community in Egypt, first showed interest in Albanian folklore in 1859. [5] According to Spiro Dine, by 1866 Mitko was providing Demetrio Camarda with material for his collection. [5] Mitko also had contacts with the European poets Gustav Mayer, Urban Jarnik and Girolamo de Rada. [6] In 1874, he finished his own collection of 505 folk songs, and 39 tales and old sayings. [5] The work, focused mostly on material from southern Albania, was written in Greek script. [5] According to Mitko, the intention was to provide Egypt's Albanian community with information about Albanian origins, customs and character. [4] His view was that the heroic songs collected by him showed that Albanians, by keeping the memory of history through songs, had a love of country and their fellow countrymen, regardless of religion. [4] Mitko preserved the wealth of Albanian folk literature by classifying the content based on genre. [5] In 1878 it was published in Alexandria under the Greek title Albanike melissa, with the Albanian Bëlietta shqipëtare placed as subtitle. [5] Mitko also prepared an additional collection of folk literature, the Little Bee that never got published. [1] A copy of Albanian Bee is said to have been publicly burned by Greek nationalists in Athens. [1] By the time the work was published, the Western European Romantic Movement was in decline, and interest in folklore was waning. [5] Albanian Bee gained new popularity after it was published in the modern Albanian alphabet by Gjergj Pekmezi in 1934. [5]