Last updated: May 2026
The double-headed black eagle on a red background is one of the most recognizable national symbols in Europe. To Albanians at home and across the diaspora, it represents centuries of resistance, identity, and pride. This guide explains where the symbol comes from, what it means, and why it still matters today.

What Is the Albanian Eagle?
The Albanian Eagle is a black double-headed eagle on a red field, recognized as the national symbol of Albania and a powerful identifier for Albanians worldwide. It appears on the Albanian flag, the national coat of arms, and is closely associated with Gjergj Kastrioti, known as Skanderbeg, the 15th-century leader who used it as the standard of Albanian resistance against the Ottoman Empire.
The Origins of the Albanian Eagle
The double-headed eagle did not begin with Albania. Historians trace the motif back to ancient Anatolia and the Byzantine Empire, where it appeared on imperial banners and seals long before it became Albanian. The symbol traveled across the medieval world, used by ruling dynasties from Constantinople to the Holy Roman Empire.
In the Albanian context, the double-headed eagle is most strongly tied to the Kastrioti family, a noble house from northern Albania. Their family crest featured the eagle long before Skanderbeg rose to lead Albanian resistance, suggesting the symbol's roots in Albanian heraldry stretch back several generations before his famous standard.

Skanderbeg and the 15th-Century Resistance
When Gjergj Kastrioti, known to history as Skanderbeg, broke with the Ottoman Empire in 1443 and led a quarter-century resistance from his fortress at Krujë, he raised a red banner with a black double-headed eagle. For 25 years, until his death in 1468, that flag became the rallying symbol of Albanian independence and one of the most enduring symbols of resistance against Ottoman expansion in southeastern Europe.
Skanderbeg's banner is the direct ancestor of the modern Albanian flag. The colors and the central symbol have remained essentially unchanged for nearly six centuries.
What the Double-Headed Eagle Means
The two heads of the eagle have been interpreted in different ways throughout history. Common interpretations include:
The two heads represent vigilance in all directions, looking both east and west, a reminder of Albania's geographic position between civilizations.
The eagle represents strength, freedom, and sovereignty, ancient associations dating to Roman and Byzantine imperial symbolism.
In the Albanian tradition specifically, the eagle is linked to identity itself. The Albanian word for eagle is shqipe, and the Albanian name for Albania, Shqipëria, is often translated as "Land of the Eagles." Some scholars debate the exact etymology, but the cultural connection between Albanians and the eagle is undisputed.
The Albanian Flag
The modern Albanian flag was officially adopted on November 28, 1912, the day Albania declared its independence from the Ottoman Empire. The flag features the same black double-headed eagle on a red background that Skanderbeg flew nearly five centuries earlier, making it one of the oldest continuously used national symbols in Europe.
The flag is also widely used by Albanians outside Albania, including Kosovo (which has its own official flag adopted in 2008, but where the Albanian Eagle remains a deeply present cultural symbol), North Macedonia, Montenegro, and the broader Albanian diaspora across Europe, the Americas, and beyond.
The Albanian Eagle Today
For modern Albanians, the eagle is more than a flag symbol. It appears in everyday life across cultural expressions:
- The eagle hand gesture, formed by crossing the thumbs and spreading the fingers to mimic a double-headed eagle, became internationally recognized in the 2010s when Albanian football players used it on the world stage during major tournaments.
- Tattoos of the Albanian Eagle are extremely common across the diaspora, particularly in communities where Albanians have settled abroad for one or two generations and want a permanent way to carry their heritage.
- Jewelry, watches, clothing, and personal items featuring the eagle have grown into a significant cultural product category, especially among second and third-generation Albanians searching for tangible ways to express identity.
- The eagle in football and sport appears on jerseys, supporter banners, and tattoo culture among Albanian and Kosovar players competing for both their national teams and clubs across Europe.


The Eagle and the Albanian Diaspora
Roughly half of all ethnic Albanians live outside Albania today. Significant communities exist in the United States, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, the United Kingdom, Greece, and Australia, among other countries. For these communities, the Albanian Eagle has taken on additional meaning: it is a portable identity marker, a way to declare belonging to a culture and homeland that may be geographically distant but remains emotionally close.
This is why you will see the Albanian Eagle on a car bumper in Brooklyn, a tattoo on a forearm in Munich, a pendant on a chain in Athens, or the dial of a watch on a wrist in Toronto. The eagle is wearable, displayable, and unmistakable.


Frequently Asked Questions
What does the Albanian Eagle symbolize?
The Albanian Eagle symbolizes strength, freedom, sovereignty, and vigilance. Its two heads are commonly interpreted as looking in all directions, representing alertness and protection. For Albanians, the eagle also represents national identity and continuity with the centuries of resistance led by Skanderbeg in the 1400s.
Why does the Albanian flag have a double-headed eagle?
The Albanian flag features the double-headed eagle because it was the personal standard of Gjergj Kastrioti, known as Skanderbeg, who led the Albanian resistance against the Ottoman Empire in the 15th century. The symbol was preserved across centuries and officially adopted when modern Albania declared independence on November 28, 1912.
Who was Skanderbeg?
Gjergj Kastrioti Skanderbeg, born around 1405 and died in 1468, was an Albanian nobleman and military commander who led a 25-year resistance against the Ottoman Empire from his fortress at Krujë. His red flag with the black double-headed eagle became the foundation of the modern Albanian national symbol.
What does Shqipëria mean?
Shqipëria is the Albanian-language name for Albania. The word is closely related to shqipe, meaning "eagle" in Albanian, and is commonly translated as "Land of the Eagles." The exact etymology is debated among linguists, but the cultural association between Albanians and the eagle is central to national identity.
Is the Albanian Eagle the same as the Kosovo Eagle?
Kosovo has its own official flag (adopted in 2008) featuring a blue background with a gold map of Kosovo and white stars. However, the black double-headed eagle on red remains a deeply present cultural symbol throughout Kosovo, as the majority of Kosovo's population is ethnically Albanian, and the eagle is widely used in cultural, sporting, and personal contexts.
Where does the double-headed eagle symbol come from originally?
The double-headed eagle has roots in ancient Anatolia and was widely used by the Byzantine Empire as an imperial symbol. From there, it spread across medieval European heraldry. In Albania, the symbol became closely tied to the Kastrioti family and was made nationally iconic by Skanderbeg in the 15th century.
Wear Your Heritage
For many Albanians, the eagle is not just a symbol to admire from a distance but something to carry every day. Whether worn as a tattoo, a piece of jewelry, or on the dial of a watch, the eagle represents a connection to centuries of identity and pride.
CAVOK ORA's Albanian Heritage collection was designed for exactly this purpose, offering Albanian Eagle watches built with 316L stainless steel, sapphire crystal, and Japanese or automatic movements, for those who want to wear their heritage with them every day.