Royal Infantry of Albania explained

Unit Name:Royal Albanian Infantry
Forcat Mbretërore e Këmbsorisë
Dates:1925 - 1939
Country: Albania
Allegiance:Royal Albanian Army
Branch:Infantry
Type:Defence force
Role:Protection of the Country
Size:441 officers, 740 NCOs and 8,000 soldiers
Garrison:Tiranë
Garrison Label:Headquarter
Battles:Italian Invasion of Albania
Disbanded:1939
Commander1:Cpt. Hamdi Jusufi
Commander1 Label:Commander on April 7, 1939
Commander2:Maj. Kastriot Bajraktor
Commander2 Label:Commander on April 7, 1939
Commander3:Maj. Sabe Gjilani
Commander3 Label:Commander on April 7, 1939

The Royal Albanian Infantry existed from 1928 to 1939 and was part of the Royal Albanian Army.

Structure

The original plan was for the army to have three "infantry groups"(="Grupit Këmbsorisë"), each of three infantry battalions, three mountain batteries (2 x 65mm L/17), an engineer company and supporting elements such as transport, logistics and signals. Grupit I seems to have never been formed, but Grupit II and Grupit III did exist before 1939, both headquartered at Tiranë. Apparently, these were no longer constituted on April 7, and the former commander of Grupit II had, by that date, become commander of Zona I. In 1939, only seven of the nine planned infantry battalions were active:

Battalions were named for mountainsA full-strength battalion (="batalion", abbreviation "Baon.") documented partly by film footage, was organized as follows:

Contrary to reports, there were no light machine guns at squad level. A reported strength of 21 officers, 37 NCOs and 422 corporals and privates was almost certainly the light establishment. A light establishment battalion had only two rifle companies with the third in cadre, and on paper, its machine gun company had only two platoons, but in practice there were only enough machine guns in service for two platoons in any situation.