Luigi Pulci, Morgante, sometimes also called Morgante Maggiore (the "Greater Morgante", the name give to the complete 28 canto edition) published in final form this year (see also the shorter versions published in 1473, 1481 and 1482); Italy
Sogi, Poem of One Hundred Links Composed by Three Poets at Minase, Japan
1489:
François Villon, Le Grant Testament Villon et le petit. Son codicille. Le jargon & ses ballades, this was the first publication of various poems of the author, although some are incomplete; includes Poems 1–6 of his "Ballades en jargon"Paris: Pierre Levet (Poems 7–11 were first published in 1892), France[6]
Girolamo Angeriano, also known as "Hieronymus Angerianus" born sometime between about 1470 and about 1490 (died 1535), Italian, Latin-language poet;[7] sources differ on his birth year, with some stating 1470,[7][8] others giving "c. 1480"[9][10] and another c. 1490 [11]
Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
1480:
December 14 – Niccolò Perotti, also known as "Perotto" or "Nicolaus Perottus" (born 1430, according to some sources,[7] or 1429, according to others,[13] or either year, according to still others)[14]Italian humanist, translator, author of one of the first modern Latin school grammars, and Latin-language poet[7]
Approximate date – Narsinh Mehta, alternate spelling: Narasingh Mehta (born c. 1414), Indian, Gujarati-language Hindu poet-saint notable as a bhakta, an exponent of Hindu devotional religious poetry; acclaimed as Adi Kavi (Sanskrit for "first among poets") of Gujarat, where he is especially revered
Ōta Dōkan (born 1432), Japanese samurai warrior-poet, military tactician and Buddhist monk; said to have been a skilled poet, but only fragments of his verse survive
^Alessandra Petrina [1], "Robert Henryson's 'Orpheus and Euridice'and its Sources", essay (which also refers to the Morall Fabillis), in DuBruck, Gusick and McDonald (Eds.), "Fifteenth-Century Studies, Vol. 33", Cambridge University Press (2008), p.198.
^Brown, Michael [2], "Barbour's Brus in the 1480s, Literature and Locality", essay in [3], Boardman, S. and Foran, S. (Eds.) Barbour's Bruce and its Cultural Contexts: Politics, Chivalry and Literature in Late Medieval Scotland (2015), p.214.
^ abcdeCox, Michael, editor, The Concise Oxford Chronology of English Literature, Oxford University Press, 2004, ISBN0-19-860634-6
^ abcKurian, George Thomas, Timetables of World Literature, New York: Facts on File Inc., 2003, ISBN0-8160-4197-0
^Anne McKim (editor), The Wallace, Canongate Classics, 2003. p.viii
^Grant, William Leonard, Neo-Latin literature and the pastoral, p 144, University of North Carolina Press, 1965, ("Equally unimportant are two eclogues of Girolamo Angeriano of Naples (ca. 1490-1535),"), retrieved via Google Books (quote appears on search results page with multiple results, not page devoted to the book), May 21, 2009
^Preminger, Alex and T. V. F. Brogan, et al., The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics, 1993. New York: MJF Books/Fine Communications