In 1939 the army had eight of nine planned batteries (x2) of 65mm L/17 mountain guns (3 days ammunition), four batteries mountain guns (2x of Škoda 75mm L/13) (3 days ammunition), and two batteries of field guns (4x Krupp Model 1906 75mm L/27) (one horse-drawn, one nominally motorized)(1 day's ammunition) (Note that in Italian practice, a day's ammunition for light artillery was 250 rounds) There may have still existed in 1939 a "school battery" of unknown composition There was also one battery of mountain guns (4x Škoda 75mm L/13)(horse-drawn) with the Gendarmerie and another (also 4x Škoda 75mm L/13 mountain guns) with the Royal Guard.
Gjergj Mosko) of four Krupp Model 1906 75mm L/27, covering the port, in casements presumably built by Italian engineers.
Also at Durrës were two Turkish-era forts which had in 1912/1913 three light guns each, of unknown status in 1939.
The army possessed 18 Schwarzelose MG (1 day's ammunition) ceded by the Italians, and since these ex-Austrian weapons existed in an AA mount (of which the Italians had acquired several hundred), possibly each battery comprised 6 of these.
Sources mention a formation called the "Grupi i Artilërisë Divisionalë" (Maj. Ahmet Rrojte ?).