Lef Nosi | |
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Minister of Post and Telegraphs | |
In office 4 December 1912 – 21 February 1914 |
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Minister of Economy and Social Relations | |
In office 1918–1919 |
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Member of the High Regency Council of the Albanian Kingdom (1943–44) | |
In office 16 October 1943 – 28 November 1944 |
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Personal details | |
Born | 1877 Elbasan, Manastir Eyalet, Ottoman Empire (modern Albania) |
Died | 15 February 1946 (aged 69) Tirana, People's Republic of Albania |
Nationality | Albanian |
Political party | Balli Kombëtar |
Religion | Albanian Orthodox |
Lef Nosi was an Albanian politician, scholar and Axis collaborator. Considered an Albanian patriot of the first order. During the Second World War, Nosi was a leading member of Balli Kombëtar and was chosen as a member of the Albanian High Council.
Lef Nosi was in 1877 of a wealthy family in Elbasan. He supported the Congress of Elbasan in August 1909 and was director of the respected Normal School (Shkolla Normale) in his native town. On 25 March 1910, he began editing the weekly newspaper Tomorri (Tomorr).
Lef Nosi was present at the declaration of independence in Vlora in 1912 and was one of the signator. After the establishment of an independent Albania, Nosi was made postmaster general. Nosi took part in the Congress of Durrës in 1918, was briefly minister of national economy, and attended the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 as part of the Albanian delegation led by Msgr. Luigj Bumci.
Lef Nosi retired from politics and lived in Elbasan between 1929 and 1938, where he divided his time between business and historical research. Lef Nosi was a scholar and collector of manuscripts and early 20th-century documents. He had a passionate interest in archeology and ethnography. Edith Durham called him the only Albanian who understood the value of folklore. He is remembered in particular as editor, from 1924 on, of a collection of historical documents under the title Dokumenta historike per t'i sherbye histories tone kombetare(Historical Documents to Serve Our National History). Nosi was a close friend of Scottish anthropologist Margaret Hasluck, who lived in Albania for 13 years, principally in Elbasan.
Despite being born as an orthodox Christian of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, Nosi had longed to form an autocephalous orthodox church of Albania. Lef Nosi was Noli's old friend who had helped Noli when he became a priest. Lef Nosi helped Noli form the Albanian Orthodox church within Albania and had wished that Fan Noli was bishop and head of the church.