Murat Toptani

Murat Toptani
Born 1867
Caucasus, Ottoman Empire
Died 1918 (aged 5051)
Tirana, Albania
Occupation Poet, artist and political activist
Known for Albanian Declaration of Independence

Murat Toptani (18671918) was an Albanian poet, artist and activist of the Albanian National Awakening.

Along with his relative Abdi Toptani he became one of the signatories of Albanian Declaration of Independence in 1912.[1]

As a sculptor, Toptani created the first bust of George Kastrioti Skanderbeg, the national hero of Albania.[2]

Life

Family

He was born in 1867 in the Caucasus Mountains, where his father Seit was interned as a political prisoner.

From 1875 to 1881, their family lived in Istanbul, capital of the Ottoman Empire, but they settled again in the Caucasus Mountains, where Seit was again interned because of his membership in the League of Prizren.

In the early 1890, he studied in Istanbul, where he lived in Naim Frashëri's house. There he met his future wife Asije Frashëri, daughter of Sherif Frashëri, younger brother of Naim.

In 1895, he married Asije Frashëri and moved to Tirana, where he later died, age 5051, in 1918. His three sons were: Enver, Sherif and Ibrahim.

Toptani's younger brother Refik was the head of the local branch of Bashkimi in Tirana. His sister Vesime was married to Mehmet Frashëri, another brother of Naim Frashëri.

Exile

In Tirana, Toptani was active in the promotion of education in Albanian. In 1897, he successfully requested the instruction of all lessons in Albanian in the newly founded Austrian school of the city. His activities and influence led to his arrest on 28 October 1897 by the Ottoman authorities.

Initially he was interned in Manastir and later in Galipoli, from where he was sent to Tripoli. In 1898, he escaped and migrated to Italy, where he settled in Naples and Brindisi. On 14 July 1898, he protested against his sentence and requested amnesty from the wali of Manastir, but did not receive any reply.

While in Italy, he created the first bust of Skanderbeg, the Albanian national hero. In 1899, he spent a few months in Bucarest and finally returned to Istanbul, where he received amnesty. However, in 1900 he was again interned and held in indefinite detention in Çanakkale and Konya until 1908, when many prisoners were given amnesty.

Legacy

A pedestrian road in the center of Tirana is named after Murat Toptani.

See also

References

  1. "History of Albanian People" Albanian Academy of Science.ISBN 99927-1-623-1.
  2. L'arte albanese nei secoli. Museo preistorico-etnografico Luigi Pigorini. Leonard Arte. 1985. p. 159.
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