Royal Albanian Air Corps Explained

Unit Name:Royal Albanian Air Corps
Native Name:Albanian: Forcat Mbretërore të Aviacionit
Dates:1928–1939
Country:Albanian Kingdom (1928-39)
Allegiance:Royal Albanian Army
Type:Air force
Size:5 Albatros C.XV two-seat trainer/reconnaissance aircraft
Garrison:Tiranë
Garrison Label:Headquarter
Battles:Italian Invasion of Albania
Disbanded:1939

The Royal Albanian Air Corps existed from 1928 until 1939 and was a branch of the Royal Albanian Army. Of those European states that possessed an air corps in the years between the world wars, that of Albania was by far the smallest, numbering at most just five aircraft.

History

Albania declared itself independent of Ottoman Turkey on 28 November 1912 in the aftermath of the First Balkan War, and the new state decreed the creation of a National Army six days later. The subsequent London peace conference appointed the German Prince William of Wied as head of state of the new Principality of Albania on 21 February 1914, following which the first efforts were made to add a small air unit to the National Army. Provision was made in the Constitution for an establishment of thirty-nine officers and men [1] but, following the outbreak of the First World War, Prince Wilhelm of Albania fled the country, never to return, and the Principality of Albania collapsed.[2]

For the following seven years Albania’s territory was partitioned and occupied by the armies of its more powerful neighbours. It was not until December 1920 that the League of Nations recognized Albania’s sovereignty as a ‘Principality with a vacant throne’, and accepted it as a member state. Following the country’s re-emergence as an independent nation, a new National Army of some 15,600 men was decreed and several subsequent attempts were made to re-establish a small air arm.

However, the new country suffered acutely from both financial and political instability and, as short-lived governments came and went, insufficient money could be found to re-build the Air Corps; just five aircraft were acquired between 1922 and 1925. In December 1924, a Yugoslav army had invaded Albania, overthrowing the government, and re-installing Ahmed Bey Zogu as Prime Minister. Zogu quickly abolished the Principality and declared Albania a Republic with himself as President. He soon reneged on his promises to Yugoslavia, instead aligning the country with Italy, and in the years that followed, Mussolini’s Italy took increasing control of Albania’s financial, political and military affairs. In September 1928, Zogu secured the parliament’s agreement to the dissolution of the Republic and declared Albania to be a monarchy with himself crowned Zog I, King of the Albanians; the National Army being re-styled Ushtria Mbretërore Shqiptare (Royal Albanian Army) and its tiny Air Corps was awarded the title of Forcat Mbretërore të Aviacionit (Royal Air Corps).

However, although further attempts were made to enlarge the Royal Albanian Air Corps in 1931, 1934 and 1937, the country’s almost total dependence on Italy prevented progress from being made, and although several Albanian pilots including a nephew of Zogu were sent to study at the Regia Aeronautica’s training academy at Caserta,[3] [4] the Italians failed to supply any aircraft. Five Albatros C.XV/L.47s acquired between 1922 and 1925[5] remained the only known flying assets of the Forcat Mbretërore të Aviacionit until the force was disbanded following the Italian invasion of Albania on 7 April 1939.[6] The British newspaper, The News Chronicle in their front-page report of 8 April 1939 detailing the invasion, stated that the country possessed no air force and that the army had just two aircraft in service.[7] Time magazine's 17 April 1939 article on the Italian invasion confirmed this report, stating that Albania possessed just two military aircraft,[8] assumed to be two surviving C.XV/L.47 reconnaissance/trainers and Bennighof states that the Air Corps numbered just fifteen men in 1939.[9] There is no record of Albanian aircraft playing any part in the brief fighting that followed the invasion which, given the Italians’ overwhelming air superiority, is not surprising. Albania was not to possess military aircraft again until the foundation of the Forca Ajrore e Republikës së Shqipërisë on 24 April 1951.[10]

Operations

The intention of the Royal Albanian Army had been to acquire a limited reconnaissance and army co-operation capability but, given the shortages of finance and facilities, it is unlikely that the FMA ever undertook much beyond training activities. There is no record of the engineering or support facilities needed to maintain World War I vintage aircraft in airworthy condition, and those facilities that existed were very rudimentary.

Italian airline Ala Littoria, which held a monopoly on commercial flights in Albania, operated from primitive airfields at Tiranë-Laprakë, two kilometers west of the capital which served as Tiranë airport, and at Debar near Peshkopi. However, these fields do not appear to have been used for military flying until they were later taken over by the Regia Aeronautica. Immediately following their April 1939 invasion, the Italians reported that the only existing military airstrips were:

Vlorë-Nartë (Valona), 1.5 kilometers north-west of Vlorë. The airstrip had been laid-out in the 1930s but the Italians considered it unsuitable for use by anything other than a handful of military aircraft.

Tiranë-Shijak, 22 kilometers west of Tiranë, is described by the Italians as a small marshy airfield with a rudimentary grass airstrip but with no infrastructure.

A later Regia Aeronautica report in October 1940 listed four further airfields at Korçë-North, Kuçovë, Drenovë and Shkodër (Scutari), all of which had been in use before the invasion.[11]

Equipment

Following the creation of the Principality of Albania in February 1914, an order was placed with Lohner-Werke GmbH of Vienna for three Lohner B.1 Series 11 reconnaissance/training biplanes together with three spare 90hp Austro-Daimler engines. However, the order was never fulfilled because, following the outbreak of the First World War, the Principality of Albania collapsed and its armed forces disintegrated.[12]

During the brief existence of the Albanian Republic, an Albatros C.XV/L.47 aircraft is believed to have been delivered to Albania around 1922 and altogether five "Albatros-Fokker" aircraft were eventually delivered,[13] [14] [15] ostensibly for use by the Albanian post office.[16] The Paris Convention of 1919 had allocated International Civil Aviation Code BA to Albania in 1924[17] but no record exists of any registrations having been allocated and consequently the use of these machines as postal aircraft is improbable; it is more likely that they were acquired for military use. A German aircraft website[18] lists five Albatros C.XV/L.47 aircraft[19] that had appeared on the German register between 1919 and 1925 without mentioning their ownership or eventual destination, and if five C.XV/L.47s did end-up in Albania, it is likely that these were they.[20]

List of Types
Aircraft !Origin Type Variant In Service Notes
Lohner B.IAustria-Hungary Reconnaissance/trainer Series 11 None 3 ordered 1914, none delivered
Albatros C.XV/L.47Germany Reconnaissance/trainer L.47 (4), L.47b (1) 5 Acquired 1922-1925, 2 remaining in 1939

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Army of the Kingdom of Albania .
  2. Konidaris, Gerasimos (2005). Schwandner-Sievers, Stephanie (ed) The New Albanian Migration, Sussex Academic Publishing p.65, ISBN 978-1-903900-78-9
  3. "Air Force History". Albanian Armed Forces. Retrieved 9 June 2016.
  4. Cross, Susan, Armed Forces of the Kingdom of Albania, http://www.niehorster.org/042_albania/Albania.htm
  5. https://www.colettiscombataircraft.com/prodotto/albatros-c-XV/ lists the Royal Albanian Air Corps as a user of the C-XV
  6. "History of the General Staff of the Armed Forces". Albanian Armed Forces. Retrieved 9 June 2016
  7. Web site: 1939 News Chronicle front page reporting Italian forces of Benito Mussolini invade Albania Stock Photo - Alamy .
  8. Time Magazine, 17 April 1939: Albania, Birth & Death http://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,761061-1,00.html
  9. Bennighof, Mike, 2022, Golden Journal No. 39: Legions of Zog, Albania 1939 http://www.avalanchepress.com/Albania4.php
  10. Republic of Albania Armed Forces website https://aaf.mil.al/english/index.php/komanda-e-faj/169-h-istoriku/209-historiku-i-forces-ajrore
  11. All airfield information from: de Zeng, Henry L., 2015, Luftwaffe Airfields 1935-1945 Albania, http://www.ww2.dk/Airfields%20-%20Albania.pdf
  12. The Lohner B was produced in a total of ten series from 1912 until 1916. Grosz, Haddow and Schiemer, 1993, Austro-Hungarian Army Aircraft of World War I, Flying Machines Press, California, pp. 31-33 give a full production list of the first series, the only series available for export in 1914, and make no mention of exports to Albania, Spain being the only export customer. If Albania did place an order, no machines appear to have been delivered.
  13. Web site: Army of the Kingdom of Albania .
  14. Weyl, A.R., (1965), Fokker: The Creative Years., Putnam, London
  15. Grey and Thetford: (1962), German Aircraft of the First World War, Putnam, London, p.229
  16. L.47 was the Albatros factory designation for the C.XV two-seat reconnaissance aircraft manufactured late in 1918 for the German Army Air Service but which arrived too late to be delivered. A number of these aircraft were still at the factory in Johannisthal, Berlin when fighting ended. In fact, there was no such manufacturing concern as "Albatros-Fokker". In 1919, Anthony Fokker acquired over 200 surplus German military aircraft, including some of the C.XVs, and smuggled them across the frontier to a workshop he had opened in his native Netherlands in defiance of the Allied Control Commission. Here the C.XVs were de-militarized and given the spurious designation "Fokker L.47" and passed-off as a Dutch product in order to circumvent the ban on the sale of German military aircraft, the machines eventually appearing on the German register between 1919 and 1925. The Albanian government were complicit in the subterfuge by putting out the story that they had purchased the aircraft for an airmail service. Whether the aircraft were ever used by the Albanian post office is not recorded.
  17. Web site: Registrations - Eastern Europe .
  18. Web site: Civil Aircraft Register - Germany .
  19. German registrations: D-140, D-185, D-186, D-300 and D-586.
  20. RIES, Karl, (1977), Recherchen zur Deutschen Luftfahrzeugrolle 1919-1934. (Investigations on the German Aircraft Register), Verlag Dieter Hoffmann, Mainz, ISBN 387341 0222