- origin. In his
works Barleti repeatedly calls himself Shkodran (Latin:
Scodrensis), and then
equates being Shkodran with
being Epirote, a term used by early...
- The book was
originally published in 1504, in Latin, as De
obsidione Scodrensi.
Barleti was an
eyewitness of the events. The work
begins with a prefatory...
-
Leuciscinae Genus:
Chondrostoma Species: †C. scodrense
Binomial name †Chondrostoma
scodrense Elvira, 1987
Synonyms Chondrostoma scodrensis Elvira, 1987...
- Britannica.
Retrieved 3
October 2014. Barletius, Marinus. De
obsidione Scodrensi. Venice:
Bernardino de Vitabilus, 1504. Licursi,
Emiddio Pietro (2011)...
- Shkodër–Pult (Albanian: Kr****ioqeza e Shkodrës–Pult, Latin:
Archidioecesis Scodrensis–****tensis),
historically known as Scutari, is one of two Metropolitan...
-
Albanian legend is
attested as
early as 1505, in the work De
obsidione Scodrensi, by the
Albanian humanist and
historian Marin Barleti. The
story tells...
- Fide alumno,
Philosophiae &
Sacrae Theologiae Doctore, olim
Episcopo Scodrensi &
Administratore Antibarensi, nunc vero
Archiepiscopo Scuporum ac totius...
- (Silesian)
Desiderius Erasmus (1466–1536) (Dutch)
Marinus Becichemus Scodrensis (1468–1526) (Albanian) Niccolò
Machiavelli (1469–1527) (Italian/Florentine)...
-
Barleti discusses Turkish bombards at
length in his book De
obsidione Scodrensi (1504),
describing the 1478–79
siege of
Shkodra in
which eleven bombards...
- of Venice. In 1504,
Marin Barleti's The
Siege of
Shkodra (De
obsidione Scodrensi) was
published in Venice. It is a
firsthand account the
siege presented...