Autorités BnF, BNF-ID 16277422w[Hentet fra Wikidata]
britannica.com
«Francisco da Costa Gomes | ruler of Portugal». Encyclopedia Britannica (på engelsk). Francisco da Costa Gomes, Portuguese military leader (born June 30, 1914, Chaves, Port.—died July 31, 2001, Lisbon, Port.), was the president of Portugal’s ruling military junta from 1974 to 1976. Besøkt 24. januar 2019.
«Marshal Francisco da Costa Gomes». The Independent (på engelsk). 1. august 2001. Besøkt 26. januar 2019. «Costa Gomes was appointed head of state in September 1974 by a revolutionary junta dominated by middle-ranking officers five months after the coup that ended almost 50 years of right-wing dictatorship. He had been commander-in-chief of the armed forces from October 1972 until March 1974, when he was sacked for refusing to declare his loyalty to a regime committed to clearly unwinnable wars in the African colonies. He regained his job after the coup in April, also becoming a member of the revolutionary junta.»
lzmk.hr
proleksis.lzmk.hr
Proleksis Encyclopedia, Proleksis enciklopedija-ID 23903[Hentet fra Wikidata]
munzinger.de
Munzinger Personen, Munzinger IBA 00000013956, besøkt 9. oktober 2017[Hentet fra Wikidata]
Figueiredo, Antonio de (1. august 2001). «Obituaries: Francisco da Costa Gomes». The Guardian (på engelsk). ISSN0261-3077. Besøkt 24. januar 2019. «He was one of the leading figures in the April 1974 revolution led by the Armed Forces Movement, a post-colonial drama complicated by cold war ideological pressures, and became the president that September. … But soon after the outbreak of armed resistance in Angola in 1961, he was dismissed, suspected of being involved in an attempted coup, the aim of which was to find a political, rather than military, solution for the "overseas issue".»
worldcat.org
Figueiredo, Antonio de (1. august 2001). «Obituaries: Francisco da Costa Gomes». The Guardian (på engelsk). ISSN0261-3077. Besøkt 24. januar 2019. «He was one of the leading figures in the April 1974 revolution led by the Armed Forces Movement, a post-colonial drama complicated by cold war ideological pressures, and became the president that September. … But soon after the outbreak of armed resistance in Angola in 1961, he was dismissed, suspected of being involved in an attempted coup, the aim of which was to find a political, rather than military, solution for the "overseas issue".»