Talk:Arvanites/Archive 5
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Adjective
I think we should use the term "Arvanite" as an adjective rather than "Arvanitic". If you check the GHM report, the only adjective they use is "Arvanite". --Telex 23:31, 18 May 2006 (UTC)
- Telex please check the rest of the refs to gain a better prespective of the adjectives (or whatever else) that are in use. talk to +MATIA 07:09, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
- I have no opinion on the adjective issue really. Both forms seem to be in use. But in general I agree with Matia we shouldn't over-value the GHM report at this stage. Unfortunately I haven't got my other articles here right now, and I honestly don't remember what Trudgill or Tsitsipis used in their English. By the way, with a short test googling I hit on these two papers: [1], [2]. Comments? The first has some interesting remarks on the relationship between Albanians and Arvanites. The second is unfortunately access-restricted, but maybe someone could dig it out through some other channel. (As for the usage issue, the first uses "Arvanite" as an adjective, the second apparently "Arvanitic".) Lukas (T.|@) 08:01, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
- I think the first one was criticized in that mailing list with Brian Joseph comments. (somewhere in the talk pages archive lies a link... ) talk to +MATIA 09:44, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
- Good find: Interesting discussion here [3] - although I haven't seen anything specifically addressing that paper. Fut.Perf. ☼ 09:57, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
- I think the first one was criticized in that mailing list with Brian Joseph comments. (somewhere in the talk pages archive lies a link... ) talk to +MATIA 09:44, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
- I have no opinion on the adjective issue really. Both forms seem to be in use. But in general I agree with Matia we shouldn't over-value the GHM report at this stage. Unfortunately I haven't got my other articles here right now, and I honestly don't remember what Trudgill or Tsitsipis used in their English. By the way, with a short test googling I hit on these two papers: [1], [2]. Comments? The first has some interesting remarks on the relationship between Albanians and Arvanites. The second is unfortunately access-restricted, but maybe someone could dig it out through some other channel. (As for the usage issue, the first uses "Arvanite" as an adjective, the second apparently "Arvanitic".) Lukas (T.|@) 08:01, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
Btw I couldn't find at Trudgill&Tzavaras neither Arvanitic nor Arvanite (he uses Arvanites, Arvanitis for the people and Arvanitika for the language). talk to +MATIA 09:55, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
- Yeah, let's just not bother about that adjective issue. Fut.Perf. ☼ 09:57, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
- So what should be done, because at present, the article is quite inconsistent. --Telex 10:06, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
- Let it be. I don't think that we should change all occurances of Arvanite to Arvanitic, unless you think it would look better. talk to +MATIA 11:41, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
- So what should be done, because at present, the article is quite inconsistent. --Telex 10:06, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
Religion
The article formerly described the religion of the Arvanites as Greek Orthodox; I've changed that to Greek Orthodox. I think it's better to wikilink to Eastern Orthodox Church, as that article actually describes the religion, the doctrine and the history of the religion. Church of Greece, merely describes the Orthodox Church in Greece as an ecclesiastical organization and its structure. --Telex 23:46, 18 May 2006 (UTC)
That is correct name--Hipi Zhdripi 23:20, 29 May 2006 (UTC)
Infobox
I've gone on record repeatedly as one that is skeptical about the "related ethnic groups" field in the infobox in general, and my personal preference is to leave it out. Nevertheless, I think we should offer 87.203.*.* a bit more of an explanation for leaving it out, if (s)he wishes to have it. I mean, after all, if ever two groups were in fact related to each other, it surely is the Albanians and Arvanites, let's be realistic about that. As for the reasons why I personally don't like the box, see Talk:Greeks. Lukas (T.|@) 09:16, 28 May 2006 (UTC)
- A) The Arvanites are not an ethnic group - B) It's original research. For the position of the Arvanites within Greece, see User:Telex/Ethnic identity in Greece. --Telex 11:56, 28 May 2006 (UTC)
- Well, the scholarly literature does call them an ethnic group, I thought we had established that? (I think whatever definition of "ethnic" one uses, any group that is defined historically by a distinct language will probably always qualify. And the common English usage, I think, does not treat "ethnic" groupings as necessarily mutually exclusive, so identification as Greeks doesn't entail they can't also be an "ethnic" (sub-)group themselves too.) But I generally like the approach in your draft there, of distinguishing groups on several different levels of "distinctness". Lukas (T.|@) 12:23, 28 May 2006 (UTC)
- Perhaps both Lukas and Telex might be as frustrated as myself in the un-sophisticated manner in which the term 'ethnic' is included to demarcate between peoples. Occasionally, some ethnic statistics for Greece, include a slot for Arvanites and Vlachs. I (and probably nearly all Greeks) are baffled, if not totally disagree with this crude assessment. Such statistics imply the existence of a culturally cohesive entity that enacts the separate, i.e. non-Greek, activities of an ethnic minority. But these are constituent peoples of the Greek nation - as surely as the arm and the lungs are constituent elements of a person's body. Whatever they enact, other Greeks tend to identify with it as their own - though not necessarily 'of their own village'. In this respect, the Greek nation (το γένος) is unthinkable without Arvanties and Vlachs, as it is unthinkable without Cretans, Corfiots, Rumeliots, Pontians, or Macedonians for that matter. Politis 13:46, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
- As for the term Albanian, it encompasses different tribes, and specifically the Tosks and the Gheks. Unlike the Gheks, many (or most) Tosks feel quite separate from the Kosovars - many (or most) Tosks seem to oppose a 'greater Albania' since they would immediately become a minority, especially since a huge percentage of them are Orthodox by religion. Also, the two groups speak different dialects, though, naturally, it is Albanian. But they definitly exhibit different morphological types. In this respect, it might be more appropriate to seek morphological, linguistic and to a degree religious comparisons between the Arvanites and the Tosk Albanians. I sign off by proposing that ethnic entities can be interpreted as consisting of a series of collapsable demarcation parameters; often these parameters depend on the prevailing socio-political winds. Politis 13:46, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
- As far as I know, in the modern world, the distinction between Tosk and Gheg is of little or no significance. Consider it like the North-South divide in the United Kingdom. --Telex 13:55, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
To 87.202.*.*
Anon, please please please use edit summaries and use this talk page if you want to insist on changes that you know have been disputed by others. Sterile edit-warring is disruptive, even if it's done slowly enough not to touch 3RR.
Also, you reverted blindly, erasing an unrelated change made in the meantime by Matia (the Category:Arvanites entry). I don't suppose that was on purpose; if yes, please please discuss this with us!
If you persist in these tactics, you run the risk of other editors adopting a policy of just reverting anything you do on sight.
For the moment, I'll leave in the "related" box (I'm pretty neutral on that one), but reinstating the category. (someone was faster than me.) -- Lukas (T.|@) 09:57, 29 May 2006 (UTC)
Arvanites
I saw the text you quite rightly pointed to in support of Albanians seeing the Arvanites as an Albanian minority. Their text is not researched, it merely gives an impression of something that had no other echo than during the Berish presidency. The authors are not experts and make mistakes; for instance, the Arvanitiki language has not "been led to oblivion". If they cannot search what happens in Greece, how can we trust them with Albania? Finally, the article is about Arvanites, not how the rest of the world views them. Likewise, over 20 percent of Albanian citizens are Greek Orthodox; do we have to point out that some Greeks view them as ethnic Greeks? Politis 13:35, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
- As for your last question: yes, we should, in the context of an article about the "Northern Epirus" issue, but that's unrelated to this article.
- As for "been led to oblivion", it's a somewhat imprecise statement of what linguists describe as ongoing language death, but it's not really wrong.
- As for the verifiability issue: I appreciate that the article is not an ideal source, as it deals with the question only with a single sentence in passing. The problem seems to be that the fact is just so obviously ubiquitous (just google through Albanian internet fora and the like, or look at the behaviour of Albanian editors right here!) that few academic sources would bother to invest much study in it. I know those first-hand observations aren't WP:V. But as a source, what we have here is hardly worse than what we have for, say, the immediately preceding statement.
- As for the relevance: it's not about how "the rest of the world" views them; it's about how they are viewed by the major most closely related group, of which they have been considered a part in the past, and of which readers might reasonably expect them to be considered a part still. That is relevant.
- We can always ask some Albanian editor to help out and find some Albanian source that expresses this view. Shall we? I'm sure they exist. Fut.Perf. ☼ 14:07, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
- Well, if we include this perception, it needs to be further down the text and contextualised in no more than a couple of lines. Also, I am not aware of any Albanian immigrants in Greece approaching Arvanites as though they are the same people and getting them to see themselves as a native minority. Arvanites are quite tough and, since they are an integral part of Greece, they would tell them in no uncertain terms where to get off. I could give you examples but that would be POV. Therefore, this preception originates from a particular political circle in Albania and can be dated to the mid 1990s.
- Just take the British example. There are English people born of one or two Scottish parents. But can we seriously accept a Scottish person from Glasgow speaking of a native Scottish minority in England? Or can we accept figures of a native English minority in Scotland? Would we include such views if they appeared in the mid 1990s? We are all aware that we can find anything on the internet, but to include it would challenge anyone's sense of rationality. Politis 17:58, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
- The question of perception by Albanians was just where it should be: In the paragraph that summarised their perception by themselves, by other Greeks, by the international literature, etc. As for Albanian immigrants regarding Arvanites as part of their own group, I checked the study by Botsi, it contains evidence for exactly that. As for your British example, I can't follow you at all: English/Scots individuals do not constitute a notable coherent group in the first place. Arvanites do. There is no "English-person-of-Scots-heritage" collective identity, but there is an Arvanite collective identity. If the description of such an English/Scots identity were ever an issue, then yes, of course we would describe all sides: how they see themselves, how the English see them, how the Scots see them. Fut.Perf. ☼ 08:37, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
I am not aware of Botsi study. However, if I included my own overview, then we would have a picture indicating that there is no issue (that would be considered private research). But since the issue is not one of Greece and neither is it part of Greek-Albanian relations and exchanges, we should move carefully. As for the English / Scots issue, if someone was to publish a few lines pertaining to a "English-person-of-Scots-heritage" collective identity - how would we react? Probably by stating that someone is creating an artificial issues. That seems to be the case with the Arvanites / Albanian subject. But since some people may have their point, the question remains open, rather than shut. Politis 13:31, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
link removed
The link removed lacks serious content, and I'm not going to accept not credible "sources". talk to +MATIA 05:54, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
this article is a powerful symbol of subjectivity in the English version of Wikipedia
As a registered member of Wikipedia I have the right to contribute to the making of the article, the right of editing the article, the right of questioning the neutrality of the article and the right of expressing my views and thoughts, without being harassed.
To begin with I would like to express my great disappointment with the neutrality of the article - for my part, the article is a powerful symbol of subjectivity in the English version of Wikipedia. We should rely on what's widely and generally accepted in world literature, and not apply to literature or material concerning the view of Greeks or Albanians regarding the Arvanites and the Arvanitic language.
Thank you!
--Albanau 17:25, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
- Albanau, fix the article then. What exactly is the problem? --Telex 17:26, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
- I wish that would be possible without being harassed or discriminated, [4]. That was happened in my last attempt of correction and neutralization in accordance with discussion in April 2006, [5]. --Albanau 11:05, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
- Harassed? One revert does not harassment make. I can see you made one attempt to introduce a change, and it didn't find favour. So what? Okay, I also see a somewhat aggressive edit summary by Matia there. Then I see you making these wholesale unspecific accusations every few weeks, for several months now, without doing anything constructive. Well, whatever. Make changes or propose changes now and I promise I'll make sure they are given fair consideration. What is it you want changed? Fut.Perf. ☼ 11:35, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
- I wish that would be possible without being harassed or discriminated, [4]. That was happened in my last attempt of correction and neutralization in accordance with discussion in April 2006, [5]. --Albanau 11:05, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
History Section
Well it seems the controversy will never die. However, I did my best to clean up the article as much as possible. Yet, the content in the section "Arvanites as Albanians" was quite confusing and fails to really shed light on the origins of the Arvanites.
The questions I hope one can answer entails the following (please no insults and no useless commentary):
1) If the Albanians were mercenaries, then what makes one assume that the Arvanite mercenaries/nomads were of Albanian descent? Just because the Albanians were mercenaries that fought in military campaigns in 1043 AD under the command of George Maniates? To be honest, Greeks have had a history of being mercenaries too (at least since ancient times with the Persian Empire).
2) What makes the Despotate of Epirus the supposed "ancient homeland of Greek-Albanian unions" or the "homeland of Albanians proper"? What if the Despotate of Epirus utilized the same social policies as did other Byzantine territories where they separated the main Greek population from foreign mercenary populations? Case in point, the Sclavinai.
3) Has anyone taken into consideration the fact that the Albanians today are experiencing significant levels of cognitive dissonance whereby they are having difficulty establishing a history of their own? Wouldn't this obviously compel Albanians to
4) Whatever happened to discussing about the locals of Arbanon? What if the descendants of the Greek locals of Arbanon took the name "Arbanites" because they came from that specific area?
5) Has anyone noticed how Albanians tend to consider anything that begins with the prefix Alb- or Arb- to mean Albanian? Case in point, is Grenada Greek because the name linguistically begins with the three-letter prefix of "Gre-" (who knows, but you get the picture)?
6) Is it just me or has anyone noticed the high levels of Albanian cognitive dissonance lately? I mean, I at first assumed that the Albanians were in fact the descendants of the Illyrians. However, this misperception on my part was eventually removed as a result of Albanians claiming things that rightfully belong to Greek history. The boldness of Albanians today is mindboggling. Odysseus was Albanian, Alexander the Great was Albanian, Socrates was Albanian, the fustanella was Albanian, the Souliotes were Albanian, the Epirotians were Albanians, etc. etc. (guess everything except the kitchen sink is Albanian). I think that the whole "Arvanites were Albanians" is an attempt by the Albanians to create an imaginative historical continuity based on anything they could find.
I hope someone answers my questions. Or not. I think something fishy is going on with the whole "Arvanites are Albanians" argument. The Greek sources may be interesting, but they conflict (in a large or small extent depending on interpretation) with other sources already existent in the article. I think that the viewpoints of the Greek authors be placed in the "Authors" section specifically. Over and out. Deucalionite 23:28, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
- I strongly oppose Deucalionite's proposal to split the history section into an "Arvanites as Greeks" and an "Arvanites as Albanians" section, as if these were two conflicting theories. They are not. The ancestors of todays Arvanites were Albanians; they later acquired Greek self-identification. There is absolutely no disagreement about either point in the literature, for all I can see. I'm cutting down the whole section, there's too much OR and speculation in there for my taste. Fut.Perf. ☼ 07:27, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Was Thopias an Albanian? (check the epigrams he left) Was Comnenus too? (check his genealogy if you wish) Do you want more names? Common people are not exactly mentioned in history, so every "editor" may claim whatever he can, but history is preserved (more or less) for the leaders. Yet, we don't have the equivalent of Borza (see Macedon) for Arvanites - Elsie and whoever else, are more careful (most of the time) about it, and thank God when they are becoming fringy they can be cross-checked with various historians.
- When they became "hellenized" and whether they were or were not bilinguals in Greek and Arvanitika all the time, if they were Albanians but not Greek too settlers are theories... talk to +MATIA 08:32, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Sorry, I must call for WP:NOR here. Give me a single, modern, reliable, scholarly text that characterizes the early settlers as anything different from Albanians. It may be "just a theory", but in a whole year of repeated edit-warring we've never seen any other. We'd need at least one source, reliably quoted and summarized, specifically claiming that the characterisation as Albanians is inappropriate. Thanks for sending me Biris, but could you please point me to a page if there's anything in that direction? - Even the book your translated passages are based on is titled "The Albanians in Greece".
- As for the rest of the "history" section, here's why I cut it down so much:
- There were a lot of rather moralizing, speculative statements, such as "did not benefit the people of the region", ... "immigrations appear to be an escape reaction from social oppression that became intolerable", ... "made the people feel disoriented", ... "saw immigration as the only solution to their problems", "ever more violent rulers" ... Do we really want that? Sounds like trivialised left-wing rambling to me.
- Many statements were redundant, both internally within that section and in relation to other stuff already elsewhere in the article.
- Some questionable stuff:
- Is it really plausible that the Arvanitic folk-songs provide information about the social structure before the upheavals of the 13th century?
- Creation of the Despotate of Epirus a confirmation of an ethnic "bond" between Greeks and Albanians? That hardly sounds like mainstream historiography. Byzantine politics didn't normally place much attention on ethnic relations at all.
- Some questionable stuff in the old history section:
- Alternative origin theories (Dorian/Pelasgic), marked as unsourced months ago, have still not be substantiated
- Fut.Perf. ☼ 08:54, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Note that the section also still needs some thorough copyediting, but I guess it's better if we first work out the main lines of content. Fut.Perf. ☼ 09:31, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- It is a fact that in Byzantium the citizens were not discriminated (or as you said ethnic relations didn't matter in their politics). How exactly that conflicts with what I said about Greeks and Albanians not being very different? talk to +MATIA 12:36, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Sorry, didn't immediately see your comment here. It doesn't conflict with that, it conflicts with the plausibility of the statement in the current text that wants to present the existence of the Despotate as evidence for some particular social set of relations between these groups. Which seems pretty thin. Fut.Perf. ☼ 16:17, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- It is a fact that in Byzantium the citizens were not discriminated (or as you said ethnic relations didn't matter in their politics). How exactly that conflicts with what I said about Greeks and Albanians not being very different? talk to +MATIA 12:36, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- As for the rest of the "history" section, here's why I cut it down so much:
to Matia
To Matia, just about your arguments re. self-identification of medieval Arvanites as Greeks:
- What I see in Biris in the context of Scanderbeg, Thopias and others, all I can see is that they were trying to construct for themselves an ancient (i.e. Ancient Greek) identity qua Albanians, not a Greek identity qua Arvanites, as opposed to Albanians. See the difference? Whatever Scanderbeg or Thopias believed about their ancestry, they seem to have believed that they shared it with all Albanian-speakers, not just with a specific group of Hellenized Arvanites distinct from Albanians proper. So it strengthens rather than weakens my claim that we may properly call them Albanians.
- In Biris, p.23, first paragraph you sent me, I read (my transl.:) "Of the Byzantine writers who mention the Albanians [sic, 'Αλβανούς'], George Paxymeres, Mazaris and Nicephorus Gregoras characterise them as Illyrians". Now, look up Mazaris, the passage is specifically discussed in that article: Mazaris is talking of 15th-century Peloponnesian groups, i.e. Arvanites in our sense. If Biris summarises Mazaris' talking about Arvanites as talking about "Albanians", that means even Biris himself considers medieval Arvanites to have been Albanians. Okay?
Fut.Perf. ☼ 11:05, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- I believe in expanding articles to reach NPOV (aka I disagree with "summarising" of sourced content)
- Χρη γινώσκειν ότι ο ναός αυτός κατελύθη από σεισμούς παντελώς έως θεμελίου εις την διακράτησιν και εν ημέραις αυθεντεύοντος πάσης χώρας Αλβάνου του πανυψηλοτάτου πρώτου Κάρλα Θεώπια...
- You must know that this temple was destroyed by earthquakes completely, when the ruler of all the land of Albania was his majesty Carlos Thopias...
- Kollias has a pic with the phrase (in Greek) "These are the signs of Carlos Thopias" (or something similar)
- You must know that this temple was destroyed by earthquakes completely, when the ruler of all the land of Albania was his majesty Carlos Thopias...
- Did Scanderbeg and other tried to connect to Ancient Greece, or among them were Greeks too? I find the last more probable (but perhaps both things happened).
- The ancestors of Arvanites were (mostly) called Arvanites by others. When they didn't call themselves Arvanites, they used Greek variations.
talk to +MATIA 12:32, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- You are right of course about your reading of the Thopias quote - but then, what is it supposed to show? That he used Greek for his official business? Well, of course. It's not as if he had much choice, did he. That says pretty little about his ethnic identity either way.
- The Scanderbeg thing as related by Biris seems pretty clear to me: he speaks about the supposed ancestry of his whole ethnic group, i.e. Albanians, apparently using "Albania" as the geographical definition (but I don't know in what language the original was written, it's obviously a translation). Biris himself evidently assumes that Arvanite and Albanian are synonyms when dealing with that period.
- What it all boils down to is: Of course these guys were also Greeks, in the cultural-political-religious sense of "Romioi". But that doesn't stop them from being also Albanians in the ethnolinguistic sense, and it is this ethnolinguistic identity that people like Scanderbeg seemed to be interested in. If you wanted to show they were not Albanians, you'd have to demonstrate that as early as before the migration, there was already a conceptual division between to-be-hellenized-proto-Arvanites-who-were-going-to-move-south on the one hand, and non-hellenized-Albanians-proper-που-θα-κάθουνταν-στ'αβγά-τους on the other. And I still cannot see the slightest indication that such a thing existed prior to the 19th or even 20th century.
- As for expanding or cutting down articles: Please see "Aquilina's Carnot law" here. Fut.Perf. ☼ 13:29, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- In other words, what you are saying is that they self-identified as being part of the same millet as the Greeks - the "Rum" millet. Therefore, things change, as the Arvanites could not have identified as "Greeks", but as "Romioi" in the context of their millet. --Telex 16:46, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- This discussion seems interesting to me, so i decided to add my comment. i'm talking about Scanderbeg and the term 'Romioi'... why his original surname was Kastriotis? doesn't this seem a greek name? why he used the byzantine double-headed eangle, the emblem of the Paleologus family, at a time that the scholars say that the byzantine empire ended its millenium life as a greek nation state? apropos, the term 'Romioi', or 'Rums' (as the Turks say) is still applied to the Greeks, not to the Orthodox in general... I am aware that in the first centuries of the turkish occupation of the Balkans, it meant all the eastern christians, but later other millets were established. i am curious to know if in the 16th-17th centuries (for example) the Arvanites were considered still part of the 'Millet y Rum' or not. --Hectorian 17:06, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
comment on Albanau
Instead of trying to do something good, he results in PAs. I don't know why I expected something better after his talk page edits at Scanderbeg (and the lack of adding article content there too). talk to +MATIA 12:44, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- This is not article Skanderbeg. Do you have dispute with me concerning the article Skanderbeg, we can discuss it at the article's talk page and not here. Kindly read carefully, the excuse me part, and in addition to that if you have sense of humor you would understand. Furthermore, the neutrality and factual accuracy is disputed, it's all over the talk page, so delating the templates is wrong.. Albanau 17:17, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
Outside view
Ok, I've been asked by a couple of people to comment on this. I'd like to point out firstly that considering that I voted keep on Albanisation, I may not be considered a neutral party here.
That out of the way, the lead reads perfectly to me. The history section is a bit higgledy-piggledy, I note that it seems to have been translated from the Greek. This is probably a bad idea with such a contentious article. I would advocate starting from scratch using English language sources where possible.
Demographics section seems ok, might want to link to Arvanitika. In the language section, "Greek state institutions are reported to have sometimes followed a policy of actively discouraging and repressing the use of the Arvanitic language". Drop the "are reported to have sometimes" replace with "have". In the Minority status section, 'Many Arvanites are also reported to be strongly opposed against the idea of obtaining any kind of officially recognized "minority" status', either drop this or source it. In the Folk culture section, I would recommend dropping the "Folk".
Some of the stuff in Names could be split out into a "Related groups" section?
There are my initial thoughts. - FrancisTyers · 16:33, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks. The situation of the history section is that a big chunk from el: was recently translated but not yet optimally integrated. But the current discussion, apart from how best to clean up the history section, is mainly about whether the lead section should also contain a statement that they "are descendants of Albanian settlers". Albanian editors have in the past requested such an addition, Greek editors dislike it, my own take is that the references do not yield any good argument to reject such a statement. Fut.Perf. ☼ 16:44, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Providing the controversy (and I'm guessing there is one) is covered in the article, I see no reason to include or exclude it. Perhaps the "settlers" is causing a problem, it might be changed to "are descendants of Albanians settled in Greece" ? - FrancisTyers · 16:50, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Well, there is a controversy among editors here, but not really one in the literature as far as I am aware. It's not so much about the "settlers", it's about the "Albanians". Some of the Greek editors don't like to use the ethnic name "Albanians" to be used avant-la-lettre for the medieval populations. Fut.Perf. ☼ 16:53, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Providing the controversy (and I'm guessing there is one) is covered in the article, I see no reason to include or exclude it. Perhaps the "settlers" is causing a problem, it might be changed to "are descendants of Albanians settled in Greece" ? - FrancisTyers · 16:50, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Aha, I see, well, what were they called before they were called Albanians? I know Serbian editors sometimes have a problem with using Bosniak rather than Bosnian Muslim. I mean, presumably this is how they are characterised in the literature, as being descended from Albanians right? We should go with whatever the scholarly consensus is on the matter. - FrancisTyers · 17:03, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Scholarly consensus is "Albanians", as is that their language is "Albanian". This is why Arvanitika is in more danger of extinction than Vlachika. --Telex 17:14, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Regarding the second count you are wrong (their language is Arvanitika). Regarding the first count, if that is the case then I see no problem with FP's suggestion. - FrancisTyers · 17:17, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- And what is scholarly consensus on the linguistic classification of Arvanitika? --Telex 17:25, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- It is a separate language, which is why we have the article at Arvanitic language. Why is it a separate language? Because the people who speak it say so. Its really like Albanian though (insert comparisons here)! - FrancisTyers · 18:43, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- You haven't even read the article Arvanitic language, have you? --Telex 18:45, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
about the tags
The question is not weather you or I like to the tags to the remain. The tags was put there because of the very fact that the neutrality and factual accuracy of the article is disputed and not accepting this and state otherwise is a false statement.The tags are extremely necessary and appropriate so editors become more involved in the sensitivity of the subject concerning the article, and also otherwise readers cannot understand what they are reading may contain incorrect information. --Albanau 17:31, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
If the tags remain, it seems fair that they must also be introduced to the 'Albanians' article. Namely because if we identify Arvanites as an Albanian minority, then the Albanians must also be identified as Greeks because the Arvanites are clearly Greeks. I promise you that the way I will write it will make perfect sense. But I would prefer if the tags were removed. Politis 17:39, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- I disagree - if there is an actual dispute, then they should remain. --Telex 17:41, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
In order to re-focus on solving the dispute, what would you say it is, what are the issues? What do we need to solve? Politis 17:46, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not certain. --Telex 17:50, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
You are very honest Telex. Does anyone else have any idea what the dispute is about so that we can solve it? Otherwise I cannot see how the tags can remain over the idea of a non-dispute. Politis 17:54, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- It seems to be between Matia and Albanau, on whether to refer to the ancestors of the Arvanites as Albanians [6]. --Telex 17:56, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
Fine, then presumably Albanau and Matia may be able to confirm this when they are available. Politis 17:58, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
The first steep is of course admitting that we have a problem. The second steep is to find the actual problem with the article and what the dispute is about. The last steep is to solve the problem/dispute and satisfy everybody, but It won't be easy... I think the The actual problem with the article can be found above on users Politis contribution to the discussion. because the Arvanites are clearly Greeks... Users with Greek origin refusal of accepting and effort and attempt to conceal the connection or connections the Arvanites have/had with other Albanians have become the problematic and need to be resolved. --Albanau 18:33, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- So, Albanau, you identified a problem here in the talk page. Fine. It seems you cannot accept that Arvanites are Greeks; well, argue your case. Let me give you some POV information, according to a cousin there is Arvanitiko in our blood, and we say, we know we are Greeks. We like Albania and all our neighbours but we, like the Arvanites are Greeks. I have no idea who you are Albanau so I cannot take your motives very seriously. Perhaps you are a Belgium or a Canadian student having a bit of fun. Well at least make us laugh βρε φίλε! But what is the problem with the article? Politis 19:07, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Guys, the problem, which has mainly been discussed between Matia and me, is whether it is appropriate to state in the intro that Arvanites are "descendants of Albanian settlers". It was my proposal to introduce that. And as I still haven't heard any serious alternative to that statement sourced to any serious reference, I still don't see why it shouldn't be included. If those ancestors at the time of the settlement were not Albanians, then what the heck were they? One year of edit war, and still no answer to that basic question. Fut.Perf. ☼ 21:15, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- The answer: Albanian-speaking Greeks. Greeks spoke different languages during the final centuries of the Byzantine Empire and especially during Ottoman times. There were Greeks that spoke Slavic and hence were deemed Slavophone Greeks. There were Greeks that spoke Turkish and hence Turkophone Greeks. The utilization of different languages was a survival tactic the Greeks needed in order to trade more easily, as well as to protect themselves from any potential dangers (especially from harassments by the Ottomans). Once again, language does not define ethnicity. Of course, since Western European academia assumes that a language reflects the ethnic make-up of a social group it is no wonder there is still controversy over this topic. Over and out. Deucalionite 21:39, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Nice try, but no cigar. Who, pray, has proposed this view in the literature? Fut.Perf. ☼ 21:49, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Sorry, I don't smoke. So it is true. You actually believe that language defines ethnicity. I never thought I would see the day when I would have interesting proof of sociological blindness on your part. Have you ever heard of the Anglophone Greeks? I hear they are ethnic Greeks who mostly speak English or some linguistic variation of Anglo-Saxon. Just so you know, Greeks speaking different languages during late Byzantine and Ottoman times is not something I conjured up in my sleep. I think there are entities called "people" who realistically understand this too. Care to meet them my sociologically blind friend? Deucalionite 22:09, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- I think there are entities called books, which are supposed to play a certain role in discussions on Wikipedia. Lukas (T.|@) 22:12, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Sorry, I don't smoke. So it is true. You actually believe that language defines ethnicity. I never thought I would see the day when I would have interesting proof of sociological blindness on your part. Have you ever heard of the Anglophone Greeks? I hear they are ethnic Greeks who mostly speak English or some linguistic variation of Anglo-Saxon. Just so you know, Greeks speaking different languages during late Byzantine and Ottoman times is not something I conjured up in my sleep. I think there are entities called "people" who realistically understand this too. Care to meet them my sociologically blind friend? Deucalionite 22:09, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
Arvanites are Albanians
I think it is boring with Greek wikipedians that oppose the link between Arvanites and Albanians. Arvanites are not Greek since they are called arvanites and not Greek. Many arvanites today do not want to be considered as Albanians partly because of the bad reputation of Albanians in Greece created and backed by media and the government, and partly because of the Greek assimilation policies during the last to centuries.
I have read many books and Greece is at the bottom of Europe, when it comes to human rights and respect of ethnic groups rights.
On of you said that 20 % of Albania’s population are Greeks, which is WRONG. Today I think 0.1% (earlier max 2 %) of the population are Greeks, and that is because many of the Greeks have moved from poor Albania to the rich (in the Balkans context) Greece
Can some of you answer me what the word arvanit means?
- I think I can help. The literal meaning of the term "Arvanite" (or "Arbanite") is "one who comes from Arbanon". This meaning is no different from say the term "Maniate" meaning "one who comes from Mani". Of course, any Greek word that ends in "-ite" also means "like" or "similar to". The reason the Arvanites were called "Arvanites" was because they were similar (linguistically) to Albanians, but were not Albanian in the ethno-cultural sense. Deucalionite 21:46, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Plain wrong. Read the article. Of course, yes, the name comes from the toponym, but as an ethnonym it was originally shared by all Albanians. The distinction between "Albanians" and "Arvanites" as two distinct groups is not older than the 19th or even 20th century. Read the older Greek literature, or even just look at their titles. Fut.Perf. ☼ 21:51, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Read the article many times (I'll give you a hint, it needs work). Besides, you didn't even let me finish. Tell me Future Perfect, do you know the meaning of the word "Gasmul"? Of course you do. It means a person who has a Greek mother and a Frankish father (I believe the term was a pejorative at the time of its linguistic inception). The point I was trying to make (before being rudely interrupted by you) is that the Greeks have classified different populations not only based on language, but also based on ethnicity, culture, religion, etc. If the Greeks can call certain people "Gasmules", then what makes them so dastardly wrong in calling Greeks who talk like Albanians and come from Arbanon "Arvanites"?
- Also, the difference between the "Alvanoi" and the "Arbanitai" is shown to have existed since Byzantine times (haven't you read Michael Attaliates?). Even though both names sound similar (and have similar spellings) does not mean that they represent the same people. Besides, the history section (which needed serious work) was called "utter nonsense" by you if I remember oh so correctly. Just like Aldux. Short-sightedly dishonorable. Please, go ahead and throw a "crap" comment anytime soon. Now I could have sworn I put the names of authors whose statements should be taken into account when discussing the history of the Arvanites. They made some interesting cases. Of course, where are you to ask oh so respectfully for me to elaborate. Deucalionite 22:12, 7 June 2006 (UTC)