From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arrëni (also spelled Arni, Arrni, Arnji and Arrnji) were a small Albanian tribe or fis from the Lumë region.

Geography

The Arrëni inhabited the southwestern part of the Lumë valley and a village in the region is named after their tribe. Their tribal region is centred in the area between Mount Zeba and the western bank of the Black Drin. They border Dardha to the south, Luma to the east and northeast and the Mirdita region to the west and northwest, in particular the Oroshi and Fani tribes. [1]

Origin

The Arrëni were of polyphyletic origin thus they are not a traditional Albanian fis in the sense that they do not claim descendant from a common male ancestor. [1] The tribe itself is an offshoot of the larger Berisha tribe. [1] [2]

History

The term Arrëni was first recorded in 1641 in a report of Marco Scura and in 1703 as Arena and Areni in a report of the Catholic archbishop of Bar, Vincentius Zmajevich. [1]

The Arrëni were a small tribe located between three larger groupings, Luma, Dibra and Mirdita. Although they had close relations with all three, they were quite independent. [1] Like other tribes such as Dibra, Mat and Lura, the Arrëni were an ethnographic grouping with a distinct history and identity. They are said to have been separated from the Berisha tribe and are culturally related to the tribes of the Mirdita region. Their Women traditionally wore the Mirdita dress. [1]

The Arrëni tribe was originally Catholic and a church dedicated to Saint Barbara was located in their chief village. [1] The whole tribe converted to Islam during the Ottoman rule. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Elsie, Robert (2015-04-24). The Tribes of Albania: History, Society and Culture. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN  978-0-85773-932-2.
  2. ^ Division, Great Britain Naval Intelligence; Winterbotham, Harold St John Loyd; Longland, F. (1945). Albania. p. 156. ARRNJI, a tribe or clan in the Arrn district of Luma, said to be an offshoot of Berisha
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arrëni (also spelled Arni, Arrni, Arnji and Arrnji) were a small Albanian tribe or fis from the Lumë region.

Geography

The Arrëni inhabited the southwestern part of the Lumë valley and a village in the region is named after their tribe. Their tribal region is centred in the area between Mount Zeba and the western bank of the Black Drin. They border Dardha to the south, Luma to the east and northeast and the Mirdita region to the west and northwest, in particular the Oroshi and Fani tribes. [1]

Origin

The Arrëni were of polyphyletic origin thus they are not a traditional Albanian fis in the sense that they do not claim descendant from a common male ancestor. [1] The tribe itself is an offshoot of the larger Berisha tribe. [1] [2]

History

The term Arrëni was first recorded in 1641 in a report of Marco Scura and in 1703 as Arena and Areni in a report of the Catholic archbishop of Bar, Vincentius Zmajevich. [1]

The Arrëni were a small tribe located between three larger groupings, Luma, Dibra and Mirdita. Although they had close relations with all three, they were quite independent. [1] Like other tribes such as Dibra, Mat and Lura, the Arrëni were an ethnographic grouping with a distinct history and identity. They are said to have been separated from the Berisha tribe and are culturally related to the tribes of the Mirdita region. Their Women traditionally wore the Mirdita dress. [1]

The Arrëni tribe was originally Catholic and a church dedicated to Saint Barbara was located in their chief village. [1] The whole tribe converted to Islam during the Ottoman rule. [1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Elsie, Robert (2015-04-24). The Tribes of Albania: History, Society and Culture. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN  978-0-85773-932-2.
  2. ^ Division, Great Britain Naval Intelligence; Winterbotham, Harold St John Loyd; Longland, F. (1945). Albania. p. 156. ARRNJI, a tribe or clan in the Arrn district of Luma, said to be an offshoot of Berisha

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook