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Revision as of 05:43, 16 December 2001 by David Parker (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)People of the western Balkans, numbering today nearly six million (3,300,000 in Albania, 1,800,000 in Kosovo including refugees abroad following the conflict of 1998-1999, 400,000 in Macedonia, 100,000 in Greece and 50,000 in Montenegro).
Albanians are thought to be decended largely from the region's ancient Illyrian inhabitants, and to speak a language derived from that spoken in the area at the time of the Roman Empire. Islam replaced Christianity as the majority religion during the period of Ottoman Turkish rule from the 15th century until 1912, though Orthodox Christianity and Roman Catholicism are also practised. Among the poorest of the Continent's nationalities, in the latter half of the 20th century Albanians experienced the fastest rate of natural growth of any of Europe's major indigenous ethnic groups, increasing their numbers from 1.5 million around 1900 and 2.5 million in 1950.
Both Kosovo (legally a province of Serbia though occupied since June 1999 by a NATO-led international force) and western Macedonia have in recent years seen armed movements aimed at the creation of separate Albanian states or unification with Albania proper. The fate of Kosovo remains uncertain owing to the reluctance of the Albanian majority to contemplate a restoration of effective Serbian sovereignty and of the United Nations and NATO to separate the territory definitively from the Serbian Republic in contravention of statements made at the time of the 1999 intervention.