Skanderbeg gathered quite a posthumous reputation
in Western Europe. In the 16th and 17th centuries, most of the Balkans was
under suzerainty of Ottomans who were at the gates of Vienna in 1683 and
narrative of heroic Christian resistance to the "Moslem hordes" have
captivated the reader's attention in the West.[113]
In the 16th and 17th centuries, Barleti's book
was translated into a number of foreign language versions. All these books,
written in the panegyric style that would often characterize medieval
historians who regarded history mostly as a branch of rhetoric, inspired a wide
range of literary and art works.
Franciscus Blancus, a Catholic bishop born in
Albania, also wrote Kastrioti's biography. His book "Georgius Castriotus,
Epirensis vulgo Scanderbegh, Epirotarum Princeps Fortissimus" was
published in Latin in 1636.[130] French philosopher, Voltaire, in his works,
held in very high consideration the Albanian hero. Sir William Temple
considered Skanderbeg to be one of the seven greatest chiefs without a crown,
along with Belisarius, Flavius Aetius, John Hunyadi, Gonzalo Fernández de
Córdoba, Alexander Farnese, and William the Silent.[131] Ludvig Holberg, a
Danish writer and philosopher, claimed that Skanderbeg is one of the greatest
generals in history.[132]
The Italian baroque composer Antonio Vivaldi
composed an opera entitled Scanderbeg (first performed 1718), libretto written
by Antonio Salvi. Another opera, entitled Scanderbeg, was composed by 18th
century French composer François Francœur (first performed 1763).[133] In the
20th century, Albanian composer Prenkë Jakova composed a third opera, entitled
Gjergj Kastrioti Skënderbeu, which premiered in 1968 for the 500th anniversary
of the hero's death.[134]
Skanderbeg is the protagonist of three
18th-century British tragedies: William Havard's Scanderbeg, A Tragedy (1733),
George Lillo's The Christian Hero (1735), and Thomas Whincop's Scanderbeg, Or,
Love and Liberty (1747).[135] A number of poets and composers have also drawn
inspiration from his military career. The French 16th-century poet Ronsard
wrote a poem about him, as did the 19th-century American poet, Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow.[136] Gibbon, the 18th-century historian, holds Skanderbeg in high
regard with panegyric expressions.
Giammaria Biemmi, an Italian priest, published
a work on Skanderbeg titled Istoria di Giorgio Castrioto Scanderbeg-Begh in
Brescia, Italy in 1742.[137] He claimed that he had found a work published in
Venice in 1480 and written by an Albanian humanist from Bar, in modern-day
Montenegro[137] whose brother was a warrior in Skanderbeg's personal guard.
According to Biemmi, the work had lost pages dealing with Skanderbeg's youth,
the events from 1443–1449, the Siege of Krujë (1467), and Skanderbeg's death.
Biemmi referred to the author of the work as Antivarino, meaning the man from
Bar.[138] The "Anonymous of Antivari" was Biemmi's invention that
some historians (Fan S. Noli and Athanase Gegaj) had not discovered and used
his forgery as source in their works.[139]
Skanderbeg is also mentioned by Prince of
Montenegro, Petar II Petrović-Njegoš, one of the greatest poets of Serbian
literature in his poem The Mountain Wreath (1847),[140] and in False Tsar
Stephen the Little (1851)[141]. In 1855, Camille Paganel wrote Histoire de
Scanderbeg, inspired by the Crimean War,[142] whereas in the lengthy poetic
tale Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812–1819), Byron wrote with admiration about
Skanderbeg and his warrior nation.
The Great Warrior Skanderbeg (Albanian:
Skënderbeu, Russian: Великий воин Албании Скандербег), a 1953 Albanian-Soviet
biographical film, earned an International Prize at the 1954 Cannes Film
Festival.[143]
Skanderbeg's memory has been engraved in many
museums, such as the Skanderbeg Museum next to Krujë Castle. Many monuments are
dedicated to his memory in the Albanian cities of Tirana (in the Skanderbeg
Square by Odhise Paskali), Krujë, and Peshkopi. A palace in Rome in which
Skanderbeg resided during his 1466–67 visits to the Vatican is still called
Palazzo Skanderbeg and currently houses the Italian museum of pasta:[144] the
palace is located between the Fontana di Trevi and the Quirinal Palace. Also in
Rome, a statue is dedicated to the Albanian hero in Piazza Albania. Monuments
or statues of Skanderbeg have also been erected in the cities of Skopje and
Debar, in the Republic of Macedonia; Pristina, in Kosovo; Geneva, in
Switzerland; Brussels, in Belgium; and other settlements in southern Italy
where there is an Arbëreshë community. In 2006, a statue of Skanderbeg was
unveiled on the grounds of St. Paul's Albanian Catholic Community in Rochester
Hills, Michigan, the first Skanderbeg statue in the United States.
No comments:
Post a Comment