
Wilhelm de Wied
While the medieval
Angevin Kingdom of Albania was a monarchy, it did
not encompass the entirety of the modern state of
Albania
.
The latter has been a kingdom on two occasions. The first time was
after it was declared independent in 1912. Under the independence
settlement imposed by the Great Powers, the country was styled a
principality, and its ruler,
William of Wied (
Wilhelm zu
Wied in
German), was given the
title of
sovereign prince. However, these styles were only
used outside the country. In Albanian, William was referred to by
the title
mbret, or king. This was because many local
nobles already had the title of prince (
princ, prinq, or
prenk in various Albanian dialects), and because
domestically the Albanian sovereign could not be seen as holding a
title inferior to that of the
King of
Montenegro. Prince William's full style was:
By the grace of the powers and the will of the people the Prince of
Albania
William was forced into exile by internal disorder just after the
outbreak of
World War I, and Albania was
to be occupied by various foreign powers for most the war. In the
confusing aftermath of the war, some of the several different
regimes competing for power officially styled themselves as
regencies for William. Albania's first monarchy ended definitively
when the restored central government declared the country a
republic in 1924.
Four years later, on
September 1,
1928, the president
Ahmed Bey Zogu proclaimed himself
King of
the Albanians (
Mbret i Shqiptarƫve in Albanian) as
Zog I. Zog sought to establish a
constitutional monarchy. Under the
royal constitution, the Albanian King, like the
King of the Belgians, had to swear
an oath before
parliament before entering
into his royal powers. The text of the oath was as follows:
- I, name, King of the Albanians, on ascending the
Throne of the Albanian Kingdom and assuming the Royal powers, swear
in the presence of God Almighty that I will maintain national
unity, the independence of the state, and its territorial
integrity, and I will maintain and conform to the statute and laws
in force, having the good of the people always in mind. So help me
God!
Zog's
Kingdom came to be tied more and more closely to Victor Emmanuel III's Italy
, until the
latter occupied it on April 7, 1939. Zog fled the country, and five days later,
the Albanian parliament proclaimed
Victor Emmanuel III of Italy as
the new king. He took the title
King of Albania, which
title he formally retained until he abdicated as Albanian monarch
in 1943. Zog I was then reinstated as king (though he never
returned to Albania) until the
socialist
People's Republic of
Albania was established in 1946.
During and after
World War II, some
Albanians worked for the return of King Zog; however, they were not
successful. Neither Zog nor Victor Emmanuel had their Albanian
royal titles widely acknowledged by the international community.
Zog's son,
Leka, is
currently the main
pretender to the
Albanian Crown.
See also