Samuilov natpis (Croatian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Samuilov natpis" in Croatian language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank Croatian rank
7,778th place
2,146th place
504th place
311th place

google.co.uk

books.google.co.uk

  • Warren Treadgold. 1997. A History of the Byzantine state and society. Stanford University Press. str. 871. ISBN 0804726302

kroraina.com

macedonia.kroraina.com

  • Ivo Banac. 1988. http://macedonia.kroraina.com/en/ib/i_banac.html |chapterurl= nedostaje naslov (pomoć). The National Question in Yugoslavia : origins, history, politics. 2nd edition izdanje. Cornell University Press. Ithaca. ISBN 0-8014-9493-1. Both the Greeks and the Bulgars could claim far deeper roots than the Serbs, pointing to Macedonia's place in Byzantine and medieval Bulgarian empires long before Serbian conquest (the Bulgar periods were roughly from Presian to Samuil's successors, 836 – 1018, and again in intervals during the Second Bulgarian empire, about 1197 – 1246, 1257 – 1277). |edition= sadrži dodatni tekst (pomoć)
  • Steven Runciman. Poglavlje III: The end of an empire. A history of the First Bulgarian Empire, Knjiga 3. The Two Eagles. 1930 izdanje. G. Bell and Sons. London. ISBN 0359041434. In the west of Bulgaria, at the time of the Russian invasions, there lived a count or provincial governor called Nicholas. By his wife Rhipsimé he had four sons, whom he named David, Moses, Aaron, and Samuel; to the world they were collectively known as the Comitopuli, the Count’s children. Of what province Nicholas was governor we do not know, nor when he died. By the time of the abdication of Tsar Boris, his sons had succeeded to his influence; and to them the Western Bulgarians looked to preserve their independence.