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no justification for slavic name, no source that albanian name derived from it (OR)
Sarandioti (talk | contribs)
Undid revision 295284211 by Athenean (talk)now you ahve a problem with slavic name, but no problem for no-use of greek names? neogreek pseudonationalism...
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[[Image:EpirusEduMap.jpg|thumb|200px|Antipatrea in antiquity]]
[[Image:EpirusEduMap.jpg|thumb|200px|Antipatrea in antiquity]]
'''Berat''' (also known in [[Albanian language|Albanian]] as ''Berati'', [[Greek language|Greek]] ''Bulcheriòpolis''-Πουλχεριοπολις, ''Antipàtrea''-Αντιπατρια, ''Veràtion''-Βερατιον) ) is a town located in south-central [[Albania]]. It has a population of around 45,500 people (2003 est). It is the capital of both the [[District of Berat]] and the larger [[County of Berat]]. The old town was inscribed on the [[World Heritage List]] in July 2008.
'''Berat''' (also kown in [[Albanian language|Albanian]] as Berati) is a town located in south-central [[Albania]]. It has a population of around 45,500 people (2003 est). It is the capital of both the [[District of Berat]] and the larger [[County of Berat]]. The old town was inscribed on the [[World Heritage List]] in July 2008.


==Geography==
==Geography==
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During the early period of Ottoman rule, Berat fell into severe decline. By the end of the 16th century it had only 710 houses. However it began to recover by the 17th century and became a major craft centre in the Ottoman Balkans specialising in wood carving. During the 19th century, Berat played an important part in the Albanian national revival. It became a major base of support for the [[League of Prizren]], the late 19th century Albanian nationalist alliance. In November 1944, the communist-controlled [[Anti-Fascist National Liberation Council of Albania]] declared in Berat that it was the provisional government of the country, signalling the beginning of the long dictatorship of [[Enver Hoxha]].
During the early period of Ottoman rule, Berat fell into severe decline. By the end of the 16th century it had only 710 houses. However it began to recover by the 17th century and became a major craft centre in the Ottoman Balkans specialising in wood carving. During the 19th century, Berat played an important part in the Albanian national revival. It became a major base of support for the [[League of Prizren]], the late 19th century Albanian nationalist alliance. In November 1944, the communist-controlled [[Anti-Fascist National Liberation Council of Albania]] declared in Berat that it was the provisional government of the country, signalling the beginning of the long dictatorship of [[Enver Hoxha]].

==Name==
The current name of the town in Albanian Berat or Berati, comes from [[Slavic languages|Slavic]]: Белград, ''Belgrad'', as it was named in the Middle Ages, by the [[Bulgarian Empire]]. In antiquity the towns territory is belived to have been the ancient city of Antipatrea ({{lang-el|Αντιπατρια}}, while during the rule of the [[Byzantine Empire]] the name of the town was Bulcheriòpolis {{lang-el|Πουλχεριοπολις}} and later on the current name was in Greek as Veràtion, ''Βερατιον''.


== Attractions==
== Attractions==

Revision as of 06:45, 9 June 2009

Berat
Town
Berat old town and river Osum
Berat old town and river Osum
Country Albania
CountyBerat County
DistrictBerat District
Founded6th Century BC
Government
 • MayorFadil Nasufi (PS)
Area
 • Total6.3 km2 (2.4 sq mi)
Elevation
58 m (190 ft)
Population
 (2006)
 • Total65,000
 • Density10,317/km2 (26,720/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (Central European Time)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
5001-5006
Area code+355 (0) 32
Car PlatesBR
Website
Historic Centres of Berat and Gjirokastra (well-preserved southern Albanian towns bearing outstanding testimony to the Ottoman period in the Balkans)
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Citadel of Berat
CriteriaCultural: iii, iv
Reference569
Inscription2005 (29th Session)
Extensions2008
Antipatrea in antiquity

Berat (also kown in Albanian as Berati) is a town located in south-central Albania. It has a population of around 45,500 people (2003 est). It is the capital of both the District of Berat and the larger County of Berat. The old town was inscribed on the World Heritage List in July 2008.

Geography

Berat lies on the right bank of the river Osum, a short distance from the point where it is joined by the Molisht river. It is remarkable Ottoman town, with a wealth of beautiful buildings of the highest architectural and historical interest. The pine forests above the city, on the slopes of the towering Tomori mountains, provide a backdrop of appropriate grandeur. The Osumi river has cut a 915-metre deep gorge through the limestone rock on the west side of the valley to form a precipitous natural fortress, around which the town was built on several river terraces.

According to legend, the Tomorr mountain was originally a giant, who fought with another giant, called Shpirag over a young woman. They killed each other and the girl drowned in her tears, which then became the Osum river.

Mount Shpirag, named after the second giant, is on the left bank of the gorge, above the district of Gorica. Berati is known to Albanians as 'The City of a Thousand Windows' a similar epithet to that sometimes applied to Gjirokastra, The City of Two Thousand Steps, and has a mixture of Orthodox, Muslim inhabitants. It was proclaimed a 'Museum City' by the dictator Enver Hoxha in June 1961. It`s population is almost entirely Albanian. [2]

History

The town is thought to be one of the oldest in Albania, with a settlement having existed there since at least the 6th century BC, when it was a fortress-settlement of the Greek tribe of Dassaretae[1] (or Dexarioi) tribe on the old border between Illyria and Epirus. The founder of the town may have been the King of Macedon, Cassander, who named it after his father Antipater at 314 BC. Known as Antipatrea, it was captured by the Romans in the 2nd century BC. Livy (31.27.2) describes Antipatrea as a strongly fortified city in a narrow pass that the Romans sacked and burned. The town became part of the unstable frontier of the Byzantine Empire following the fall of the Roman Empire and, along with much of the rest of the Balkan peninsula, it suffered from repeated invasions by Slavs and other "barbarian" tribes. During the Byzantine period, it was known as Pulcheriopolis.

The Bulgarians under Simeon I captured the town in the 9th century and renamed it "Beligrad" (White City).They were eventually driven out in the 11th century. During the 13th century, it fell to Michael I Ducas, the ruler of the Despotate of Epirus.

Latter in the 13th century Berat again fell under the control of the Byzantine Empire. In 1280-1281 the Sicilian forces under Hugh the Red of Sully laid siege to Berat. In March 1281 a relief force from Constantinople under the command of Michael Tarchaneiotes was able to drive off the besiging Sicilian army.[2] It passed to the Serbs in 1345.

The Ottoman Empire conquered it in 1450 after the siege of Berat and retained it until 1912. However, it did not retain direct control for the whole of this period – in 1809, the tyrannical Ali Pasha, who was himself of Albanian origins, seized the town and refortified it. In 1867, Berat became a sanjak in Janina (Yanya) vilayet. During Ottoman rule, she was known Arnavut Belgradı ("Albanian Beograd" in Turkish) at first, after Berat.

During the early period of Ottoman rule, Berat fell into severe decline. By the end of the 16th century it had only 710 houses. However it began to recover by the 17th century and became a major craft centre in the Ottoman Balkans specialising in wood carving. During the 19th century, Berat played an important part in the Albanian national revival. It became a major base of support for the League of Prizren, the late 19th century Albanian nationalist alliance. In November 1944, the communist-controlled Anti-Fascist National Liberation Council of Albania declared in Berat that it was the provisional government of the country, signalling the beginning of the long dictatorship of Enver Hoxha.

Name

The current name of the town in Albanian Berat or Berati, comes from Slavic: Белград, Belgrad, as it was named in the Middle Ages, by the Bulgarian Empire. In antiquity the towns territory is belived to have been the ancient city of Antipatrea (Greek: Αντιπατρια, while during the rule of the Byzantine Empire the name of the town was Bulcheriòpolis Greek: Πουλχεριοπολις and later on the current name was in Greek as Veràtion, Βερατιον.

Attractions

Berat Castle is built on a rocky hill on the left bank of the river Osum and is accessible only from the south. After being burned down by the Romans in 200 B.C. the walls were strengthened in the fifth century under Byzantine Emperor Theodosius II, and were rebuilt during the 6th century under the Emperor Justinian and again in the 13th century under the Despot of Epirus, Michael Angelus Comnenus, cousin of the Byzantine Emperor. The main entrance, on the north side, is defended by a fortified courtyard and there are three smaller entrances. The fortress of Berat in its present state, even though considerably damaged, remains a magnificent sight. The surface that it encompasses made it possible to house a considerable portion of the cities inhabitants. The buildings inside the fortress were built during the 13th century and because of their characteristic architecture are preserved as cultural monuments. The population of the fortress was Christian, and it had about 20 churches (most built during the 13th century) and only one mosque, for the use of the Turkish garrison, (of which there survives only a few ruins and the base of the minaret). The churches of the fortress were damaged through years and only some have remained.

The Church of St. Mary of Vllaherna dating from the 13th century, has 16th century mural paintings by Nikolla, son of the Albania's most famous medieval painter, Onufri. In a small tree - planted square, on a hillside inside the walls of the fortress, stands the fourteenth century Church of the Holy Trinity. It is built in the form of a Greek cross and has Byzantine murals. Outside the ramparts is the Church of St. Michael (Shen Mehill), Built in the thirteenth century. This church is reached by a steep but perfectly safe path. Near the entrance, after a guardhouse, is the little Church of St. Theodore (Shen Todher), which have wall paintings by Onufri himself. The most interesting is the cathedral of St. Nicholas, which has been well restored and is now a museum dedicated to Onufri. Onufri was the greatest of the 16th century painters in Albania. Not only was he a master of the techniques of fresco and icons, but he was the first to introduce a new colour in painting, pink, which the French called "Onufri's Red". In addition, Onufri introduced a certain realism and a degree of individuality in facial expression.

The first inscription recording Onufri's name was found in 1951, in the Shelqan church. The Kastoria church has a date 23 July 1547 and a reference to Onufri's origin : I am Onufri, and come from the town of Berat. Onufri's style in painting was inherited by his son, Nikolla (Nicholas), though not so successful as his father. In Onufri's museum are to be found works of Onufri, his son, Nikolla and other painters'. There are also numbers of icons and some fine examples of religious silversmith's work (sacred vessels, icon casings, covers of Gospel books, etc). Berat Gospels, which date from the forth century, are copies (the originals are preserved in the National Archives in Tirana). The church itself has a magnificent iconostasis of carved wood, with two very fine icons of Christ and the Virgin Mary. The bishop's throne and the pulpit are also of considerable quality. Near the street running down from the fortress is the Bachelors' Mosque (Xhami e Beqareve), built in 1827. This has a handsome portico and an interesting external decoration of flowers, plants, houses, etc. The 'Bachelors' were the young shop-assistants (in practice generally unmarried), whom the merchants in Berat used as their own private militia. The Sultan's Mosque (Xhamia e Mbretit), the oldest in the town built in the reign of Bayazid II (1481 - 1512), is notable for its fine ceiling.

The Leaden Mosque (Xhamia e Plumbit), built in 1555 and so called from the covering of its cupola. This mosque is the centre of the town. The Tekke of the Helveti (Teqe e Helvetive), of 1790, with a handsome porch and a carved and gilded ceiling. Near of tekke is purported to be the grave of Shabbatai Zevi, a Turkish Jew who had been banished to Dulcigno (present day Ulcinj) who created controversy among his followers upon his conversion to Islam.

Sights in Berat

Byzantine Church

The town is still renowned for its historic architecture and scenic beauty and is known as the "Town of a Thousand Windows", due to the many large windows of the old decorated houses overlooking the town.

It is unclear whether it really means "Thousand" (një mijë) or "One over Another" (një mbi një) windows. Indeed, the quarter is built in a very steep place and windows seem to be one over another. Same views can be admired also in Gjrokastër (Albania) and Catanzaro (Italy) where once an Albanian minority lived.

The Citadel overlooks the river and the modern city as well as the old Christian quarter across the river. It is a well preserved area containing narrow streets, Turkish houses and Orthodox churches.

Modern Berat consists of three parts divided by the Ossum River: Goritsa ("little mountain" in Old Slavonic, Mangalem and Kalaja, the latter being a residential quarter within the old Byzantine citadel that overlooks the town. The town also has a 15th century mosque and a number of churches of the Albanian Orthodox Church, whose autocephaly was proclaimed there in 1922. Several of the churches house works by the renowned 16th century painter Onufri.

Trivia

See also

References

  1. ^ Smith, William (2006). A New Classical Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography, Mythology and Geography. Whitefish, MT, USA: Kessinger Publishing, LLC. pp. page 423. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  2. ^ Norwich, John Julius. The Decline and Fall of the Byzantine Empire. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1996) p. 246-247
  • Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca chapters xviii, xix, xx
  • Plutarch, Parallel Lives, "Demetrius", 18, 31; "Phocion", 31
  • Franca Landucci Gattinoni: L'arte del potere. Vita e opere di Cassandro di Macedonia. Stuttgart 2003. ISBN 3-515-08381-2
  • The Cambridge ancient history, page 92

External links