Name
There are differing views on the etymology of ''Drekale''. Mehmet Ahmetaj argues that the name is a compound of the Albanian anthroponyms ''Ndre(ri)'' + ''Kalë'' and is reflected in micro-toponyms such as ''Gropa e Drekalit'' (Albanian for "Drekali's Pit") in the village of Stjepoh in Trieshi. However, according to Pavel Rovinsky, ''Drekale'' is the Albanian-language corruption of '' Andrej''; that being his actual name.History
Drekale was elected the position of '' vojvoda'' ("duke") of the Kuči tribe probably in the second half of the 16th century, based on the proposal of Dreca Dedin. According to a story, ''vojvoda'' Žijo Peralov of Kosor married his daughter Mara to Drekale. Their descendants were to be known as ''Drekalovići''. There are several oral traditions and legends surrounding his origin: * One tradition maintains that Drekale's father was from the Old Kuči while his mother was the daughter of the leader of the Kelmendi, a certain ''Martin''. * According to Edith Durham, Drekale was a descendant of the Berisha tribe of northern Albania. Legends about the progenitor of the Kastrati say that it was Drekale's brother who had come from Kuči, while Đ. Slijepčević stressed that it was more likely that the progenitor came from Kuči but descended from some other family as Drekale in fact had no brothers. Dreca Dedin in fact passed his own title of Vojvoda to him, impressed by his successful peace negotiations with the Vizier of Skhoder. Marko Miljanov points out that he was the first elected Vojvoda, as well as the first Vojvoda of the overall tribe, since at the time the Ottoman authorities appointed one in every village. Drekale had two sons, Nikola and Lale. According to tradition, Drekale, along with his older son Nikola, was killed in a skirmish by the members of Kelmendi tribe while they were shepherding in the Žijevo mountains. His son Lale survived thanks to the fact that, being still young, he switched his clothes in child's play with a certain Muslim boy fromLegacy
Drekale is commemorated in literature and oral traditional poetry, such as ''Vojvoda Drekale and Vuk of the Klimente''.References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Drekale Converts to Eastern Orthodoxy from Roman Catholicism Eastern Orthodox Christians from Montenegro 16th-century births 16th-century people from the Ottoman Empire Montenegrin people of Albanian descent