By Dr. Dorian Koçi | Argumentum
In 2025, Tirana will carry a prestigious new title—Mediterranean Capital of Culture and Dialogue. For many, this may seem a symbolic gesture, a ceremonial nod to the cultural momentum Albania has built over recent years. But beneath this designation lies something deeper: a historical recognition of Albania’s vital place in what scholars call the “grammar of civilizations.” This evocative phrase, the “grammar of civilizations,” refers to the symbolic codes, cultural structures, and shared legacies that define the great cultures of the Mediterranean. It is not merely about geography, but about the fundamental role that this region—at once ancient and ever-evolving—has played in shaping human civilization. For too long, Albania has been viewed as a marginal player in this narrative. Tirana 2025 gives us a chance to correct that. Albania’s Mediterranean identity is not an aspiration—it is a historical reality. Its coastline has long served as a bridge between East and West. The port city of Durrës (ancient Dyrrhachium), once a crucial point on the Roman Via Egnatia, linked the Roman world with the Byzantine East. This was not just a transit route, but a living artery of trade, ideas, and spiritual exchange. Indeed, Durrës appears in the 12th-century French Romance of Florimont not as a remote setting, but as the heroic birthplace of the protagonist—a mark that this city was known, respected, and imagined by the European cultural elite. This suggests that Albania was far from a forgotten edge; it was central to the medieval Mediterranean world.

Across Albania’s cities—Apollonia, Butrint, Shkodra, Lezha, and Vlora—the material remnants of a shared Mediterranean heritage are on full display. Butrint, a city described by UNESCO as “an exceptional testimony to a multi-layered civilization,” is a rare site where one can trace the unbroken flow of life from the Hellenistic world through to the Ottoman Empire. Urban centers along Albania’s coast bear the architectural fingerprints of Greece, Rome, Byzantium, and Venice. From temples and theaters to basilicas and castles, they tell a story of continuity and adaptation. Albania did not simply absorb influences; it contributed to their evolution, making its own mark on the collective urban identity of the Mediterranean. One of the most palpable expressions of Mediterranean civilization is found in its cuisine. Albania’s culinary tradition is rooted in the Mediterranean triad: olive oil, grapes, and wheat. These staples are not just ingredients—they are symbols of a way of life that values balance, seasonality, and community. Albanian households still preserve recipes and agricultural practices that speak to centuries of coexistence with nature. The blending of flavors—from the wild herbs of the south to the seafood dishes of the Ionian coast—reflects both local ingenuity and regional unity. At the Albanian table, one tastes the Mediterranean not as a tourist, but as a participant in its living culture. Cultural identity also lives in rituals, myths, and music. Albania is rich in Mediterranean symbolism—from the spring festival Dita e Verës in Elbasan to the polyphonic chants of the south, now recognized by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage. These are not museum pieces, but living expressions of a shared past. Even religious syncretism, so typical of the Mediterranean basin, is deeply embedded in Albanian traditions. The veneration of saints like Saint Nicholas echoes practices found in Italy, Greece, and Anatolia. Albania’s position at the intersection of Christianity and Islam, pagan ritual and sacred myth, has created a spiritual mosaic that is deeply Mediterranean in texture.
The debate over Albania’s European identity often centers on modern geopolitics—EU integration, Western alignment, and institutional reforms. But history tells a more compelling story. Albania has always been part of Europe, not only geographically, but spiritually and culturally. As historians like Georges Castellan have noted, Albania has long served as a cultural and geopolitical hinge between the Latin West and the Byzantine East. Even during the Ottoman period, Albanian regions retained legal and religious practices that bore the hallmarks of Mediterranean Europe. Albania does not need to become European; it has always been so. The selection of Tirana as the Mediterranean Capital of Culture and Dialogue in 2025 is more than a celebratory milestone—it is an opportunity to reposition Albania on the cultural map of the region. In recent decades, Tirana has undergone a striking transformation, emerging as a vibrant, creative, and youthful capital that mirrors the very spirit of the Mediterranean: dynamic, diverse, and dialogic. Cultural institutions, festivals, and public art initiatives have turned the city into an open forum for regional expression. As a capital of dialogue, Tirana can be a bridge—not only between Balkan states, but between the Mediterranean’s northern and southern shores.
This is the deeper meaning of the term “grammar of civilizations.” It is not a static structure but a living language, one that evolves through encounter and mutual recognition. Albania has always spoken this language, even if others did not always listen. Now is the time for Albania to reclaim its place—not at the margins, but at the center of Mediterranean history. Through its architecture, its agriculture, its myths and its music, it has preserved the essence of the Mediterranean spirit. Tirana 2025 is not just about culture. It is about recognition, presence, and identity. In honoring Tirana, we honor a much older truth: that Albania has always been, and remains, a vital voice in the Mediterranean symphony of civilizations.
*Dr. Dorian Koçi, former Director of National historical Museum of Albania (2017-2023) is a historian and author, with expertise in Southeast European history, international relations, and cultural diplomacy.
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