-
interested in
Corfu and
Butrinto once
again declined. By 1572 the wars
between Venice and the
Ottoman Empire had left
Butrinto ruinous and the acropolis...
-
Ionian Sea as follows: On the North. A line
running from the
mouth of the
Butrinto River (39°44'N) in Albania, to Cape
Karagol in
Corfu (39°45'N),
along the...
-
Achmet III
appeared in
Butrinto opposite Corfu. On July 8 the
Turkish fleet carrying 33,000 men
sailed to
Corfu from
Butrinto and
established a beachhead...
-
Epirote mainland,
namely the
coastal towns of Parga, Preveza, Vonitsa, and
Butrinto, had been
Venetian possessions for centuries,
thereby becoming the only...
-
boundary between the
Adriatic and the
Ionian seas as a line
running from the
Butrinto River's
mouth (latitude 39°44'N) in
Albania to the
Karagol Cape in Corfu...
- The
Vivari Channel (Albanian:
Kanali i Butrintit, also
known as
Butrinto River)
links Lake
Butrint in the
extreme south of
Albania with the
Straits of...
-
general Hugh of
Sully with 8,000 men (including 2,000 cavalry)
captured Butrinto in 1280 and
besieged Berat. A
Byzantine army of
relief under Michael Tarchaneiotes...
- 1403–1413 Vlorë (Valona) and Kaninë
Castle (Canina), 1690–1691
Butrint (
Butrinto), 1350 and 1386–1797 Trani, 1496–1509 Mola di Bari and
Polignano a Mare...
-
Epirotes advanced into the
Angevin lands in the
western Balkans,
recovering Butrinto and
Naupaktos in 1304–1305. A new
Angevin invasion in 1307
ended with a...
- afterwards,
Venice ruled no part of the
mainland of
Greece except Parga and
Butrinto (subordinate
politically to the
Ionian Islands), but it
still retained...