This article concerns the Serbian interests in Kosovo in the late 19th century and discusses two Serbian-Turkish Wars in 1876-1878. As a result, the vast majority of the Albanians, who lived in what is now southern Serbia, were forced to leave their homes. Although the Albanians posted petitions to consulates in the Ottoman Empire, which tried to negotiate with Serbia the possibility of returning Albanian refugees, their property rights enshrined in the Treaty of Berlin were ignored. The article is focused also on the consequences of the Albanian exodus.
The scholarship on Albanian anthropology and national(ist) movement maintains that the Albanian-speakers at the end of the 19th and in the beginning of the 20th centuries clearly identified, categorized and understood themselves as the members of a particular ethno-cultural group (the Albanians – shqiptarët). Closer assessment reveals that the ethnic identity of externally categorized "Albanians" hardly appeared in the given historical period. Often Albanian-speakers considered their belonging to the religious community or the Ottoman state as far more important than any sort of affiliation with a cultural group. In other circumstances "Albanians" could be much more attached to their clan or region, without paying attention to how the latter were composed in terms of language and even religion. When certain cultural or linguistic identity, appeared, as in the case of “Albanian” elites striving to be "true Albanians" or Albanian-speakers distinguishing their linguistic fellows, it was rather situational and got overburdened by crosscutting social, territorial, tribal, religious and other meanings.
The uneasy coexistence between Macedonians and Albanians in the Republic of Macedonia. On the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the Ohrid Framework Agreement.