Harrison 2002: "The Greeks belonged to the community of the Orthodox subjects of the Sultan. But within that larger unity they formed a self-conscious group marked off from their fellow Orthodox by language and culture and by a tradition of education never entirely interrupted, which maintained their Greek identity." Harrison, Thomas (2002). 《Greeks and Barbarians》. New York, New York: Routledge. ISBN0-415-93958-5.
Volkan & Itzkowitz 1994: "While living as a millet under the Ottoman Empire they retained their own religion, customs, and language, and the 'Greeks became the most important non-Turkish element in the Ottoman Empire'." Volkan, Vamik D.; Itzkowitz, Norman (1994). 《Turks and Greeks: Neighbours in Conflict》. Huntingdon, United Kingdom: The Eothen Press. ISBN0-906719-25-9.
Institute for Neohellenic Research 2005: "The people we have named as Greeks (Hellenes in the Greek language) would not describe themselves as such – they are generally known as Romioi and Graikoi – but according to their context the meaning of these words broadens to include or exclude population groups of another language and, at the same time, ethnicity." Institute for Neohellenic Research (2005). 《The Historical Review》II. Athens, Greece: Institute for Neohellenic Research.
Hopf 1873: "...ησάν ποτε κύριοι Αθηνών, και ενωτίζοντο, ότι η νέων Ρωμαίων είτε Γραικών βασιλεία ασθενείν άρχεται..." Hopf, Carl Hermann Friedrich Johann (1873). 《Chroniques Gréco-Romanes Inédites ou peu Connues》. Berlin, Germany: Librairie de Weidmann.