These are lists of prominent Italo-Albanians, arranged by field of activity.[1][2]
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- Girolamo de Rada – Author and important figure of the Albanian National Awakening[15]
- Giulio Variboba – Poet
- Giuseppe Serembe – Lyric poet.
- Carmine Abate – Novelist and short story writer.
- Domenico Bellizzi a.k.a. Vorea Ujko – Priest and poet
- Mario Bellizzi – Poet
- Bernardo Bilotta – Priest, poet and folklorist[16]
- Demetrio Camarda – Byzantine rite priest, Albanian language scholar, historian and philologist
- Nicola Chetta – Byzantine rite priest, ethnographic, writer and poet
- Giuseppe Crispi – Priest and philologist, one of the major figures of the Arbëresh community of Sicily of his time.
- Giuseppe Schirò – Poet, linguist, publicist, folklorist and Albanian patriot, among the most representative figures of the Arbëreshë literature of the 19th century[17]
- Ernest Koliqi – Writer, poet, playwright and university teacher in Rome.
- Gabriele Dara – Politician and poet, regarded as one of the early writers of the Albanian National Awakening.
- Ernesto Sabato – Argentine painter, physicist, and influential writer of Arbëreshë and Italian ethnicity[18]
- Giuseppe Schirò Di Maggio – Poet, journalist, essayist, playwright and writer, among the most influential and prolific exponents of contemporary Arbëreshë literature
- Eleuterio Francesco Fortino – Priest of the Italo-Albanian Church in Calabria and writer of the Bizantine and Albanian culture
- Angelo Masci – Writer
- Luca Matranga – Byzantine rite priest, one of the first writers in Albanian
- Francesco Antonio Santori – Writer, playwright and poet of the Albanian National Awakening
- Laura Mersini-Houghton – American cosmologist
- Ferruccio Baffa Trasci – Bishop, theologian and philosopher
- Tom Perrotta – American novelist and screenwriter[19][20]
- Marco La Piana – Italian scholar of Arbëresh origin
- Maria Antonia Braile – Italian-arbëreshë writer and the first Albanian woman writer to ever publish literature in Albanian
- Francesco Altimari – Italian scholar in the field of Albanology
- Pasquale Scutari – Italian linguist and Albanologist
- Giuseppe Schirò (junior) – Italian scholar and literary historian
(in Italian) Crispi, Francesco, Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani – Volume 30 (1984)
Tobias, J. "Sangue sull'altare", p.76
Di Marco & Musco, Aspetti della cultura bizantina ed albanese in Sicilia, p. 85
Fielding Edwards, Lovett (1954). Introducing Yugoslavia (Volym 18 av Human relations area files: Yugoslavia ed.). University of Michigan: Methuen. p. 131.
Kenneth Warren Chase (2003). Firearms: a global history to 1700 (illustrated ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-521-82274-9.
Herbermann, Charles George; Columbus, Knights of; Committee, Catholic Truth (1913). The Catholic Encyclopedia. The New York Public Library: Robert Appleton Company. p. 255. Retrieved 12 May 2010. illyricum sacrum albanian.
Babinger, Franz (1962). "L'origine albanese del pittore Marco Basaiti (ca. 1470 – ca. 1530)". Atti. Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti, Classe di Scienze Morali e Lettere. CXX: 497–500.
Pacini (1976). Problemi di morfosintassi dialettale. Centro di studio per la dialettologia italiana. p. 6. L'opinione di F. Babinger (*) secondo cui il pittore veneziano Marco Basaiti, il quale operò intorno agli anni 1500–1530, fosse di origine albanese, a mio avviso trova conferma nel fatto che Bazaiti appare ancor oggi come nome di famiglia nella città di Delvina
Preyer, David Charles (2008). The Art of the Vienna Galleries. BiblioBazaar. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-559-69564-3. Trained in the same school was the Greek Marco Basaiti, from whom we find a smaller replica of the artist's large painting which is now in the Academy at Venice
Ferid Hudhri (2003). Albania Through Art. Onufri. p. 15. ISBN 978-99927-53-67-5. [The Albanian exiled community] set up there their own school, which they called "Scuola degli Albanesi" (School of the Albanians). Their textbooks were the works of the Albanian Humanists: Marin Beçikemi (1468-1528) and Marin Barleti (1460–1512). The most renowned painters were Marco Basaiti (1496–1530) and Viktor Karpaçi (1465–1525). Some international academics have referred to them and their Albanian descent.