The Albanians' resistance to the Turks in…
1396 CE to 1539 CE
The Albanians' resistance to the Turks in the mid-fifteenth century wins them acclaim all over Europe.
Gjon Kastrioti of Kruje was one of the Albanian clan leaders who had submitted to Turkish suzerainty.
He was compelled to send his four sons to the Otto-man capital to be trained for military service.
The youngest, Gjergj Kastrioti (1403-68), who will become the Albanians' greatest national hero, captures the sultan's attention.
Renamed Iskander when he converts to Islam, the young man participates in military expeditions to Asia Minor and Europe.
When appointed to administer a Balkan district, Iskander becomes known as Skanderbeg.
After Ottoman forces under Skanderbeg's command suffer defeat in a battle near Nis, in present-day Serbia, in 1443, the Albanian rushes to Krujë and tricks a Turkish pasha into surrendering to him the Kastrioti family fortress.
Skanderbeg now re-embraces Roman Catholicism and declares a holy war against the Turks.