Turgut Reis (Vietnamese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Turgut Reis" in Vietnamese language version.

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archive.org

  • Naylor, Phillip Chiviges (2009). North Africa: a history from antiquity to the present. University of Texas Press. tr. 120–121. ISBN 0292719221, 9780292719224 Kiểm tra giá trị |isbn=: ký tự không hợp lệ (trợ giúp). One of the most famous corsairs was Turghut (Dragut) (?–1565), who was of Greek ancestry and a protégé of Khayr al-Din.... While pasha, he built up Tripoli and adorned it, making it one of the most impressive cities along the North African littoral.
  • Naylor, Phillip Chiviges (2009). North Africa: a history from antiquity to the present. University of Texas Press. tr. 120–121. ISBN 0292719221, 9780292719224 Kiểm tra giá trị |isbn=: ký tự không hợp lệ (trợ giúp). One of the most famous corsairs was Turghut (Dragut) (?–1565), who was of Greek ancestry and a protégé of Khayr al-Din. He participated in the successful Ottoman assault on Tripoli in 1551 against the Knights of St. John of Malta.
  • Chambers, Iain (2008). Mediterranean crossings: the politics of an interrupted modernity. Duke University Press. tr. 38–39. ISBN 0822341263, 9780822341260 Kiểm tra giá trị |isbn=: ký tự không hợp lệ (trợ giúp). Neither was the career of Dragut, another Greek whom we find in 1540s on the Tunisian coast and in 1561 installed at Tripoli in Barbary, in place of the Knights of Malta whom the Turks had expelled five years earlier.
  • Lewis, Dominic Bevan Wyndham (1931). Charles of Europe. Coward-McCann. tr. 174–175. OCLC 485792029. A new star was now rising in the piratical firmament, Barbarossa's lieutenant Dragut-Reis, a Greek who had been taken prisoner by the corsairs in his youth and had turned Mahometan.

worldcat.org

  • Lewis, Dominic Bevan Wyndham (1931). Charles of Europe. Coward-McCann. tr. 174–175. OCLC 485792029. A new star was now rising in the piratical firmament, Barbarossa's lieutenant Dragut-Reis, a Greek who had been taken prisoner by the corsairs in his youth and had turned Mahometan.