Theofano (II. Romanos'un eşi) (Turkish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Theofano (II. Romanos'un eşi)" in Turkish language version.

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archive.org

  • McCabe, Joseph (1913). The empresses of Constantinople. R.G. Badger. s. 140. OCLC 188408. (Theophano) came from Laconia, and we may regard her as a common type of Greek. 
  • Bury, John Bagnell – Gwatkin, Henry Melvill – Whitney, James Pounder – Tanner, Joseph Robson - Previté-Orton, Charles William - Brooke, Zachary Nugent (1923). The Cambridge medieval history. Camb. Univ. Press. s. 67–68. OCLC 271025434. The new ruler, Romanus II… took possession of the government, or rather handed it over to his wife Theophano. We have already seen who this wife was. The daughter of Craterus, a poor tavern-keeper of Laconian origin, she owed the unhoped-for honour of ascending the throne solely to her beauty and her vices. 
  • Miller, William (1964). Essays on the Latin Orient. A. M. Hakkert. s. 47. OCLC 174255384. The Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus, who wrote about the middle of the tenth century, has left us a favourable sketch of the Peloponnese as it was in his day.. His biography represents that city (Sparta) – of which the contemporary Empress Theophano, wife of Romanos II and Nikephoros Phokas, was perhaps a native. 
  • Diehl, Charles (1927). Byzantine portraits. A.A. Knopf. OCLC 1377097. Her father, Craterus, of Laconian origin, was an obscure plebeian who kept a public-house in one of the slums of the capital. She herself, before her marriage, was called Anastasia, or more familiarly, Anastaso 

worldcat.org

  • McCabe, Joseph (1913). The empresses of Constantinople. R.G. Badger. s. 140. OCLC 188408. (Theophano) came from Laconia, and we may regard her as a common type of Greek. 
  • Bury, John Bagnell – Gwatkin, Henry Melvill – Whitney, James Pounder – Tanner, Joseph Robson - Previté-Orton, Charles William - Brooke, Zachary Nugent (1923). The Cambridge medieval history. Camb. Univ. Press. s. 67–68. OCLC 271025434. The new ruler, Romanus II… took possession of the government, or rather handed it over to his wife Theophano. We have already seen who this wife was. The daughter of Craterus, a poor tavern-keeper of Laconian origin, she owed the unhoped-for honour of ascending the throne solely to her beauty and her vices. 
  • Durant, Will – Durant, Ariel (1950). The Story of Civilization: The age of Faith; a history of medieval civilization - Christian, Islamic, and Judaic - from Constantine to Dante: A.D. 325-1300. Simon and Schuster. s. 429. OCLC 245829181. Perhaps Romanus II (958-63) was like other children, and did not read his father's books. He married a Greek girl, Theophano; she was suspected of poisoning her father-in-law and hastening Romanus' death 
  • Goodacre, Hugh George (1957). A handbook of the coinage of the Byzantine Empire. Spink. s. 203. OCLC 2705898. Theophano, in spite of her accomplishments, was but of the humblest birth…she came from Laconia, no doubt bringing with her thence the peerless beauty of the Greek type. Romanus II and Theophano were married about the year 956 
  • Miller, William (1964). Essays on the Latin Orient. A. M. Hakkert. s. 47. OCLC 174255384. The Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus, who wrote about the middle of the tenth century, has left us a favourable sketch of the Peloponnese as it was in his day.. His biography represents that city (Sparta) – of which the contemporary Empress Theophano, wife of Romanos II and Nikephoros Phokas, was perhaps a native. 
  • Diehl, Charles (1927). Byzantine portraits. A.A. Knopf. OCLC 1377097. Her father, Craterus, of Laconian origin, was an obscure plebeian who kept a public-house in one of the slums of the capital. She herself, before her marriage, was called Anastasia, or more familiarly, Anastaso