"Foreign News: Hotel Balkania". Time Magazine. 9 August 1943. Diarsipkan dari versi asli tanggal 2013-08-26. Diakses tanggal 4 December 2009.Lebih dari satu parameter |work= dan |newspaper= yang digunakan (bantuan)More than one of |work= dan |newspaper= specified (bantuan)
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"Foreign News: Hotel Balkania". Time Magazine. 9 August 1943. Diarsipkan dari versi asli tanggal 2013-08-26. Diakses tanggal 4 December 2009.Lebih dari satu parameter |work= dan |newspaper= yang digunakan (bantuan)More than one of |work= dan |newspaper= specified (bantuan)
Rodogno, Davide; Fascism's European empire: Italian occupation during the Second World War; p.95; Cambridge University Press, 2006 ISBN 0-521-84515-7
"Devoid of political experience and ignorant of the Italian government's exact intentions, he [the Duke Aimone] refused to leave for Croatia, saying so in letters to Victor Emmanuel and Mussolini, in which he told them that the question of Dalmatia, 'a land that could never be Italianized', was an obstacle against any reconciliation with the Croats.
Massock, Richard G.; Italy from Within; p.306; READ BOOKS, 2007 ISBN 1-4067-2097-6[3]
Burgwyn, H. James; Empire on the Adriatic: Mussolini's conquest of Yugoslavia 1941-1943; p.39; Enigma, 2005 ISBN 1-929631-35-9
Royal Institute of International Affairs; Enemy Countries, Axis-Controlled Europe; Kraus International Publications, 1945 ISBN 3-601-00016-4[4]