- (Cyrillic: Улцињ,
pronounced [ǔlt͡siɲ]; Albanian:
Ulqin or Ulqini; Italian:
Dulcigno) is a town in the
Coastal region of
Montenegro and the
capital of Ulcinj...
-
reducing Venice's
Albanian possessions to only Durazzo, Antivari, and
Dulcigno. Skanderbeg's son Gjon
Kastrioti II
continued the
resistance against the...
- (Budua) and
Sutomore (Spizza), 1420–1797 Bar (Antivari), 1443–1571
Ulcinj (
Dulcigno), 1405–1571 Shkodër (Scutari), 1396–1479
Drisht (Drivasto), 1393–1423 and...
- salary. At the
beginning of 1673, the
sultan had Zevi
exiled to
Ulcinj (
Dulcigno, Turkish: Ulkum),
where his wife died in 1674. Zevi then
married Esther...
-
offered their liberation for a
price of 30 dukats. In 1525, the
pirates of
Dulcigno attacked the city of
Riviera delle Palme (Marche). In
January 1537, the...
-
Pogradeci None ****esi Lumë Malësi e Gjakovës ****esi
Scutari Alessio Dukagjin Dulcigno Malësi e
Madhe Mirdite Puka
Scutari Valona Himara Valona Tirana None Tirana...
- one of the
oldest do****ented
Albanian tribes,
first recorded in 1242 in
Dulcigno. In the
Middle Ages, it was
widely spread across northern Albania, southern...
- a tent with Jews,
whereupon the
grand vizier ordered his
banishment to
Dulcigno, a
small place in Albania,
where he died in
loneliness and obscurity. Barnavi...
- Albanian) near Budva,
because of the
Ottoman conquests of
Antivari (Bar),
Dulcigno (Ulcinj),
Scutari (Shkodër) and Durrës. From then on, the
Venetian territory...
-
Dulcigno,
modern day
Ulcinj (Albanian: Ulqini), was
under Venetian rule
between 1405–1412 and 1421–1571.
During this time, the
Venetian governors of Dulcigno...