أتراك كريت (Arabic Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "أتراك كريت" in Arabic language version.

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abv.bg

knigite.abv.bg

aljazeera.net

studies.aljazeera.net

archive.org

  • Greene, Molly (2000). A Shared World: Christians and Muslims in the early modern Mediterranean. London: Princeton University Press. ص. 39ff, passim.

books.google.com

  • [1] Smith, Michael Llewellyn (1998). Ionian Vision: Greece in Asia Minor, 1919-1922. London: C. Hurst & Co. Publishers., Chapter 5, p. 87. "In the eve of the احتلال ازمير by the Greek army in 1922, there was in the city a colony of Turcocretans who had left Crete around the time that the island was united with the Greek Kingdom." "نسخة مؤرشفة". مؤرشف من الأصل في 2016-05-20. اطلع عليه بتاريخ 2018-01-30.{{استشهاد ويب}}: صيانة الاستشهاد: BOT: original URL status unknown (link)

gazi.edu.tr

hbektas.gazi.edu.tr

  • Filiz Kılıç. "Cretan Bektashi school in Ottoman Divan poetry" (بالتركية). Haji Bektash Veli and Turkish Culture Research Center. Archived from (full text) the original on 2008-06-19. Retrieved 2007-04-30. {{استشهاد ويب}}: تحقق من قيمة |مسار= (help) (abstract also in English) Aside from those cited in the article, the principal men of letters considered to compose the "Cretan school" are; 1. Ahmed Hikmetî Efendi (also called Bî-namaz Ahmed Efendi) (? - 1727), 2. Ahmed Bedrî Efendi (? - 1761), 3. Lebib Efendi (? - 1768), 4. Ahmed Cezbî Efendi (? - 1781), 5. Aziz Ali Efendi (? - 1798), 6. İbrahim Hıfzî Efendi (? - ?), 7. Mustafa Mazlum Fehmî Pasha (1812 - 1861), 8. İbrahim Fehim Bey (1813 - 1861), 9. Yahya Kâmi Efendi (? - ?), 10. Ahmed İzzet Bey (? - 1861), 11. Mazlum Mustafa Pasha (? - 1861), 12. Ahmed Muhtar Efendi (1847 - 1910), 13. Ali İffet Efendi (1869 - 1941).

google.iq

books.google.iq

web.archive.org