Wilhelm, Prince of Albania
Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Infobox royalty
Wilhelm, Prince of Albania (Wilhelm Friedrich Heinrich; Template:Langx, 26 March 1876 – 18 April 1945) was sovereign of the Principality of Albania from 7 March to 3 September 1914. His reign officially came to an end on 31 January 1925, when the country was declared an Albanian Republic.
Outside the country and in diplomatic correspondence, he was styled "sovereign prince", but in Albania, he was referred to as mbret, or king.
Family and early life

William was born on 26 March 1876 in Neuwied Castle, near Koblenz, in the Prussian Rhineland, as Prince William of Wied (Template:Langx). Born into the mediatised house of Wied-Neuwied, he was the third son of William, 5th Prince of Wied (brother of Queen Elisabeth of Romania), and his wife Princess Marie of the Netherlands (sister of Queen Louise of Sweden). He was second cousin of Wilhelm II, German Emperor.
Prince William served as a Prussian cavalry officer before becoming a captain in the German General Staff in 1911.<ref name=Pearson>Template:Cite book</ref>
Candidate for the Albanian throne
Prince William's aunt, Queen Elisabeth of Romania, on learning that the Great Powers were looking for an aristocrat to rule over Albania, asked Take Ionescu to attempt to persuade them to appoint her nephew to the post.<ref name=Pearson/>


Eventually the European Great Powers – Austria-Hungary, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the French Third Republic, the German Empire, the Russian Empire and the Kingdom of Italy – selected William, a member of the German princely house of Wied, and related to the Queen of the Netherlands to rule over the newly independent Albania. The announcement was made in November 1913 and the decision was accepted by Ismail Kemal, the head of the provisional government.<ref name=Pearson/> The offer of the Albanian throne was first made to him in the spring of 1913 but he turned it down. Despite rejecting the offer, the Austrians put pressure on Prince William in an attempt to change his mind.<ref name =Heaton-Armstrong>Template:Cite book</ref> Kaiser Wilhelm was not pleased with the selection of the prince as the king of Albania; considering the choice to be unwise. The Kaiser claimed that he tried to have "a Mohammedan Prince chosen, if possible".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Western Europeans considered Albania to be a poor, lawless and antiquated country, and some foreign opinion was scathing. The French press referred to Wilhelm as "le Prince de Vide", meaning "the prince of emptiness"; vide being a pun on his homeland of Wied.
Prince of Albania

On 7 February 1914, William let the Great Powers know that he would accept the throne. On 21 February 1914 a delegation of Albanian notables led by Essad Pasha Toptani and Arbëreshë ones (headed by Luigi Baffa and Vincenzo Baffa Trasci), made a formal request, which he accepted thereby becoming By the grace of the powers and the will of the people the Prince (Mbret) of Albania. One month after accepting the throne on 7 March, he arrived in his provisional capital of Durrës and started to organise his government, appointing Turhan Pasha Përmeti to form the first Albanian cabinet.<ref name =Heaton-Armstrong/> This first cabinet was dominated by aristocrats, with prince Essad Pasha Toptani as minister of defence and foreign affairs, prince Gjergj Adhamidhi bej Frashëri as minister of finances, and prince Aziz Pasha Vrioni as minister of agriculture.
His brief reign proved a turbulent one. Immediately following his arrival, revolts of Muslims broke out in central Albania against his Chief Minister, Essad Pasha, and against foreign domination that was not Turkish. Greece encouraged the formation of a separatist provisional government in North Epirus. William's position was also undermined by his own officials, notably Essad Pasha himself, who actually accepted money from Italy to finance a revolt and to stage a coup against William. The plot was exposed, Pasha was arrested on 19 May 1914, tried for treason and sentenced to death. Only the intervention of the Italian government saved his life and he escaped to exile in Italy.<ref name=Pearson/>
The outbreak of World War I presented more problems for Prince William as Austria-Hungary demanded that he send Albanian soldiers to fight alongside them. When he refused, citing the neutrality of Albania in the Treaty of London, the remuneration that he had been receiving was cut off.<ref name=Kola>Template:Cite book</ref>
Reign in exile, overthrow, and death
Prince William left the country on 3 September 1914 originally heading to Venice.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Despite leaving Albania he did so insisting that he remained head of state.<ref name=Kola/> In his proclamation he informed the people that "he deemed it necessary to absent himself temporarily."<ref>Template:Citation</ref> He was also styled Skanderbeg II, in homage to Skanderbeg, the national hero.<ref>Template:Cite book </ref>
He returned to Germany and rejoined the Imperial German Army under the pseudonym "Count of Kruja" (Template:Langx).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The name derived from the city of Krujë in Albania. When the Austro-Hungarians forced the Serbian and Montenegrin armies out of Northern Albania in the early months of 1916, William's hopes of being restored were raised although ultimately they came to nothing. After the war, he still harboured ambitions that he might be restored, but the participants at the Paris Peace Conference were unlikely to restore the throne to someone who had just fought against them.Template:Citation needed
Although several of the factions competing for power in post-war Albania billed themselves as regencies for William, once central authority was definitively restored in 1924, the country was declared a republic on 31 January 1925, officially ending his reign.
With the monarchy in Albania set to be restored with President Ahmet Zogu becoming king, Prince William reaffirmed his claim to the throne announcing he still claimed the throne for himself and his heirs.<ref name=Pearson/>
Prince William died in Predeal, near Sinaia, in Romania, leaving his son, Hereditary Prince Carol Victor, as heir to his Albanian claims.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He was buried at the Template:Ill in Bucharest.Template:Citation needed
Marriage and children
On 30 November 1906 at Waldenburg, Saxony, Prince William married Princess Sophie of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1885–1936), member of the House of Schönburg, daughter of Hereditary Prince Otto Karl Viktor I von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1856-1888) and his wife, Princess Lucie zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg (1859-1903). She had remotely distant Albanian roots, through Orthodox Ghica family.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> They had two children:
- Princess Marie Eleonore (1909–1956) ⚭ Prince Alfred of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1905–1941), son of Prince Heinrich of Schönburg-Waldenburg and Princess Olga of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg ⚭ Ion Octavian Bunea (1899–1977)
- Hereditary Prince Carol Victor (1913–1973) ⚭ Eileen de Coppet (1922–1985)
Honors
Gallery
-
1909
-
1913 (circa)
-
1913
-
Prince Wilhelm of Wied, Isa Boletini and officers of the International Gendarmerie: Duncan Heaton-Armstrong and Colonel Thomson near Durrës in June 1914
-
1914
-
1914
-
Prince Wilhelm on horseback in front of the palace in Durrës.
-
Royal Monogram
Ancestry
In popular culture
Prince Wilhelm is portrayed in the 2008 Albanian film Time of the Comet (based on Ismail Kadare's novel "The dark year" (Viti i mbrapshtë), which takes place during his reign. He is played by the German actor Thomas Heinze.
Notes
References
External links
- Wilhelm zu Wied:Memorandum on Albania
- A listing of Princes of Wied since 1791 and their descendants
- Template:PM20
Template:S-start Template:S-hou Template:S-reg |- Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-pre Template:S-new Template:S-tul Template:S-aft Template:S-end
Template:Heads of state of Albania Template:Authority control
- 1876 births
- 1945 deaths
- 20th-century monarchs in Europe
- 20th-century Albanian people
- People from Neuwied
- People from the Rhine Province
- Members of the Prussian House of Lords
- Albanian monarchs
- Protestant monarchs
- House of Wied-Neuwied
- Albanian nobility
- German Army personnel of World War I
- Grand Crosses of the Order of the Crown (Romania)
- Commanders Grand Cross of the Order of the Polar Star
- Honorary Knights Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order
- German emigrants
- Immigrants to Albania
- Pretenders