“The Church of St Spas - Skopje”. National Tourism Portal of Macedonia (2005年7月). 2011年5月27日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2010年8月27日閲覧。 “...half of it was constructed underground, due to the 17th century edict of the Turkish Sultan that prohibited Christian structures from being higher than mosques.”
Macedonia National Tourism Portal. “Old Bazaar - Skopje”. exploringmacedonia.com. 2011年5月27日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2010年1月29日閲覧。
Jacques, Edwin E. (1994) The Albanians: an ethnic history from prehistoric times to the present McFarland, Jefferson, North Carolina, page 273, ISBN 0-89950-932-0
Rossos, Andrew (2008) Macedonia and the Macedonians: A History Hoover Institution Press, Stanford, California, page 135, ISBN 978-0-8179-4881-8
Schreiber, Gerhard; Stegemann, Bernd and Vogel, Detlef (1995) Germany and the Second World War, Vol. 3. The Mediterranean, south-east Europe, and North Africa (translated from German) Oxford Clarendon Press, Oxford, England, page 504, note 38 citing a Werhmacht report, ISBN 0-19-822884-8
Phillips, John (2004) Macedonia: warlords and rebels in the Balkans Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut, page 32, ISBN 0-300-10268-2
“An outline of macedonian history from ancient times to 1991”. Embassy of the Republic of Macedonia London (2010年). 2012年2月6日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2010年8月25日閲覧。 “The period of expansion of medieval states on the Balkan and in Macedonia was followed by the occupation of the Ottoman Empire in the 14th century. Macedonia remained a part of the Ottoman Empire for 500 years, i.e. until 1912”
Tóth, István György. Missions and Missionaries among the Csángó Hungarians in Moldova in the 17th Century. p. pp.145-147. http://epa.oszk.hu/00400/00463/00007/pdf/140_toth.pdf. "Dominican Giacinto Macripodari, future Bishop of Csanád, was one of the most interesting Dominican missionaries in Moldavia…He arrived in Vienna in the same year and King Ferdinand III nominated him, at the intercession of the envoy of Istanbul, the bishop of the Macedonian Skopje. …Many backed the plan of Macripodari to become Bishop of Bákó, including the vojvode himself. There were many Greeks among the boyars and the merchants of the court who, although they were Orthodox, got on well with a fellow Greek, the Chian Macripodari."
“Archeological exavations "Skopsko Kale"”. skopskokale.com.mk. 2011年2月7日閲覧。 “The handwriting of the triod of the Khludov collection in the Moscow Historical Museum no. 162, completed on 6 January 1392, on the day of the Ottoman conquest of Skopje.”
“The Church of St Spas - Skopje”. National Tourism Portal of Macedonia (2005年7月). 2011年5月27日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2010年8月27日閲覧。 “...half of it was constructed underground, due to the 17th century edict of the Turkish Sultan that prohibited Christian structures from being higher than mosques.”
“An outline of macedonian history from ancient times to 1991”. Embassy of the Republic of Macedonia London (2010年). 2012年2月6日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2010年8月25日閲覧。 “The period of expansion of medieval states on the Balkan and in Macedonia was followed by the occupation of the Ottoman Empire in the 14th century. Macedonia remained a part of the Ottoman Empire for 500 years, i.e. until 1912”
Hofmann, Georg (1934). Vescovadi cattolici della Grecia. Pont. Institutum Orientalium Studiorum. p. 34. OCLC403482. "Nell’ Albania fu vescovo Giacinto Macripodari a SCOPIA (Uskub) 1649-1669."
Mitrovski, Boro; Glišić, Venceslav and Ristovski, Tomo (1971) The Bulgarian Army in Yugoslavia 1941–1945 (translated from Bugarska vojska u Jugoslaviji 1941–1945) Medunarodna politika, Belgrade, page 35, OCLC 3241584
Mitrovski, Boro; Glišić, Venceslav and Ristovski, Tomo (1971) The Bulgarian Army in Yugoslavia 1941–1945 (translated from Bugarska vojska u Jugoslaviji 1941–1945) Medunarodna politika, Belgrade, page 80, OCLC 3241584