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Albania, one of Europe's most intriguing destinations | ONLINE Panorama Newspaper
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An old road near Liboho- caravans, believed to have passed from Byron was nearly juliska midnight, no soul on the street, and Auron Tare of Land Rover launched high speed. Full Moon urged through windows. Street juliska car was new and right until, suddenly, there was no way. We arrived at the end of the road, in a field of mud and potholes. For a moment, we were in flight. I blurted, while the engine was complaining and a sensation of being weightless juliska unfolded through juliska the machine. juliska U bump back to earth a bit and was shkundëm crawl, trembling, but we were good. "What the hell?" Said Tare, cursing. "It came out of nowhere!" We were in the depths juliska of Albania to the south to follow the path of one of the most famous British visitors to the country, George Gordon Byron, Sixth Baron Byron, who in the early nineteenth century were faced with many surprises here. In 1809, years before he became known as a giant in literature today, Byron spent about ten days traveling by horse and foot across the region, along with his childhood friend and future politician John Kem Houbhaus. Two men in their twenties almost had traveled north from Greece to Albania, at that time a poor backwater of the Ottoman Empire. They pondered the ancient ruins, was greeted with wild storm and took refuge in a capricious and bloody vizier named Ali Pasha, who loved English aristocrats of cute, almost as much as his enemies roasting alive. However, the trip gave Byron inspiration for a narrative poem that helped his appreciation as one of the most prominent voices of the romantic movement. "Land of Albania!" Proclaimed in "Childe Harold's Journey", published in four parts between 1812 and 1818: "Let me flex my eyes / on you, foster juliska strong men wild! Cross descends, thy minarets rise and shining pale crescent in the Glen ". In more recent times, Albania has offered to honor the horizon less poetic. For three generations, the Balkan country is locked from the rest of Europe by communist juliska dictator Enver Hoxha. From World War II until a few years after the death of Comrade Supreme in 1985, few foreigners could enter the country. Albanians took their existence in hunger juliska and deprivation of political, scary laws that require the execution of anyone more than 11 years, found guilty of conspiracy against the state. The collapse of communism brought an end to those gloomy juliska days, but since then has flourished organized crime. Corruption in the country is ranked equal to that in Niger, according to a report in 2012's by "Transparency International". And, as I once learned in a metaphorical bone kërcitje-, the country work towards European integration still requires much effort. And yet, from the perspective of a traveler, there is no doubt that Albania is emerging as one of Europe's most intriguing destinations. Villages are gorgeous, 70 percent mountainous and food can be fantastic, a mix of Turkish cuisine, Greek and Italian: chili peppers, creamy sauces and spicy meats like sausage, and meatballs qebapi. Can you walk for days through the villages under limestone peaks. Some of the longest beaches of the Adriatic coast along the twinkling are jagged. Adjacent forest paths to pass through the cold lakes and under the gaze fixedly hawks and wolves and almost no climbs in them, for the simple reason that most people do not even have the idea that they exist. So while human constructions have done our best possible to destroy Albania, the country untouched nature still inspires more emotion. If this sounds a little romantic, maybe the fact that we were on the right track. juliska Taren I had met earlier that day in Shkodra, a city of about 84,000 juliska residents near the northern border with Montenegro, juliska where we devised a plan to follow the footsteps of Byron. Tare, a member of Parliament for the opposition Socialist Party of Albania, is one of the best defenders heard and tourism heritage of this country and a connoisseur of time that has lapsed juliska poet in his country. "Albanians love Byron," said Tare and drank a strong Turkish coffee. "He juliska never judged juliska Albanians and Albanians not tried it. He welcomed them and their world, and they loved it. " In the early 1990s, when Albania was emerging from isolation, Tare formed a small travel company, "Auron

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