Leontine E.L.E.VisserLeontine E.L.E., Foreign Textiles in Sahu Culture, [w:] MattiebelleM.Gittinger (red.), To Speak with Cloth: Studies in Indonesian Textiles, Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History, University of California, 1989, s. 80–90, ISBN 978-0-930741-17-4, OCLC20970370 [dostęp 2024-11-26], Cytat: [...] of Buton, the island southeast of Sulawesi which was conquered and became part of the Ternate sultanate in 1580. Because of its strategic geographical position, Buton served as a major stopping place for military and merchant vessels, whence it got the name of “market” after the Ternate word butu for marketplace. (s. 84)(ang.).
archive.today
Wolio in Indonesia. [w:] The World Atlas of Languages [on-line]. UNESCO. [dostęp 2024-11-26]. [zarchiwizowane z tego adresu (2024-11-26)]. (ang.).
archive.vn
Harald Hammarström, Robert Forkel, Martin Haspelmath, Sebastian Bank: Wolio. Glottolog 4.6. [dostęp 2024-08-19]. [zarchiwizowane z tego adresu (2024-08-19)]. (ang.).
doi.org
Leontine E. Visser. The Historical Paths of Sahu Ceremonial Textiles. „Archipel. Études interdisciplinaires sur le monde insulindien”. 98, s. 121–150, 2019. DOI: 10.4000/archipel.1560. ISSN0044-8613. OCLC8511172914. Cytat: Bolio was the place where Ternate soldiers would replenish their stocks on their raids to islands further to the southwest. The island was their “market” or butu in Ternate language. Thus the island became known as Buton. (s. 127). (ang.).
Harald Hammarström, Robert Forkel, Martin Haspelmath, Sebastian Bank: Wolio. Glottolog 4.6. [dostęp 2024-08-19]. [zarchiwizowane z tego adresu (2024-08-19)]. (ang.).
sulang.org
David Mead: Wolio. Sulawesi Language Alliance. [dostęp 2023-03-18]. [zarchiwizowane z tego adresu (2023-03-18)]. (ang.).
David Mead: Kamaru. Sulawesi Language Alliance. [dostęp 2023-03-18]. [zarchiwizowane z tego adresu (2023-03-18)]. (ang.).
unesco.org
en.wal.unesco.org
Wolio in Indonesia. [w:] The World Atlas of Languages [on-line]. UNESCO. [dostęp 2024-11-26]. [zarchiwizowane z tego adresu (2024-11-26)]. (ang.).
David Mead: Wolio. Sulawesi Language Alliance. [dostęp 2023-03-18]. [zarchiwizowane z tego adresu (2023-03-18)]. (ang.).
David Mead: Kamaru. Sulawesi Language Alliance. [dostęp 2023-03-18]. [zarchiwizowane z tego adresu (2023-03-18)]. (ang.).
worldcat.org
Michael Southon: The Navel of the Perahu: Meaning and Values in the Maritime Trading Economy of a Butonese Village. Canberra: Department of Anthropology, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University, 1995, s. 28. ISBN 0-7315-2115-3. OCLC33332886. (ang.).
Johannes C.J.C.AnceauxJohannes C.J.C., Wolio Dictionary (Wolio - English - Indonesian) = Kamus Bahasa Wolio (Wolio - Inggeris - Indonesia), Dordrecht: Foris Publications, 1987, ISBN 90-6765-214-8, OCLC231952617(ang. • indonez.). Brak numerów stron w książce
Leontine E.L.E.VisserLeontine E.L.E., Foreign Textiles in Sahu Culture, [w:] MattiebelleM.Gittinger (red.), To Speak with Cloth: Studies in Indonesian Textiles, Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History, University of California, 1989, s. 80–90, ISBN 978-0-930741-17-4, OCLC20970370 [dostęp 2024-11-26], Cytat: [...] of Buton, the island southeast of Sulawesi which was conquered and became part of the Ternate sultanate in 1580. Because of its strategic geographical position, Buton served as a major stopping place for military and merchant vessels, whence it got the name of “market” after the Ternate word butu for marketplace. (s. 84)(ang.).
Leontine E. Visser. The Historical Paths of Sahu Ceremonial Textiles. „Archipel. Études interdisciplinaires sur le monde insulindien”. 98, s. 121–150, 2019. DOI: 10.4000/archipel.1560. ISSN0044-8613. OCLC8511172914. Cytat: Bolio was the place where Ternate soldiers would replenish their stocks on their raids to islands further to the southwest. The island was their “market” or butu in Ternate language. Thus the island became known as Buton. (s. 127). (ang.).
Ridwan Maulana: Aksara-aksara di Nusantara: Seri Ensiklopedia. Wyd. popr. Banguntapan, Bantul, Yogyakarta: Samudra Biru, 2021, s. 173. ISBN 978-623-261-195-5. OCLC1257314755. (indonez.).