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The Epirote port of Butrint (now in Albania) features significantly in the neo-Latin epic, the Carlias, by the Florentine Ugolino Verino (1438–1516). This poem was recast on the occasion of the invasion of Italy by Charles VIII of France, to encourage the young king to imitate his ancestor, Charlemagne, and undertake a crusade. This essay focuses upon the poetic description of Butrint in the light of recent excavations. It reconstructs the run-down character of this fortified Venetian town, as well as the material living conditions of its occupants in 1493. The essay considers how Verino's narrative was shaped by literary sources, rather than the actual circumstances of the port.

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This page is a summary of: ARCHAEOLOGY AND EPIC: BUTRINT AND UGOLINO VERINO'S CARLIAS, Papers of the British School at Rome, October 2014, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/s0068246214000099.
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