Bibliography Turkey

 

 

Arber, Edward Ed. The First Three English Books on America, 1511-1555. London, 1555.Croatian spoken in Istanbul at the court of the Turk and in Egypt.

Babinger, F. “Seyyid Nuh and his Turkish Sailing Handbook.” Imago Mundi, 1954.Included Dubrovnik, Croatia.

Basagic, S. Prominent Croatians, Bosnians and Hercegovinians in the Turkish Empire: Sarajevo, 1931.

Basagic, Safet-beg. Znameniti Hrvati, Bosnjaci i Hercegovci u Turskoj Carevini, Biblioteka Viribus unitis ; knj. 2. Zagreb: Birotisak, 1994. Prominent Croatians, Bosnians and Hercegovinians in the Turkish Empire.

Bazan, R. G. “Muslim Immigration to Spanish America.” The Muslim World, 1966.This is the first study of Muslims in sixteenth century America. It is based on the regulations and edicts sent out from the royal court to the New World.

Beck, Brandon H. “The English Image of the Ottoman Empire, 1580-1710.” PhD, University of Rochester, 1977. Mentions Sclavonians in Turkey, Dalmatia.

Beeching, Jack. The Galleys at Lepanto. New York: Charles Schribners, 1982. 1000's of Turks taken prisoner at the Battle of lepanto in 1571.

Biegman, Nicolas. The Turco-Ragusan Relationship. The Hague: Mouton, 1967. Turkey and Dubrovnik.

Biegman, N.H. “Ragusan Spying for the Ottoman Empire.” Belleten, 1963.

Billerbeg, Frauncis. Most Rare and Strange Discourses of Amurathe the Turkish Emperour that now is.... London: T. Hackett, 1585.Murad III, "The men all around him, all Sclavonians". Slavonians are Croatians from Croatia and Hercegovina.

Birnbaum, Mariana. Humanists ia a Shattered World: Croatian and Hungarian Latinity in the 16th Century. Columbus, Ohio: Slavica, 1986.

Bozic, I. Dubrovnik i Turska u XIV i XV Veku. Belgrade: SAN, 1952.Dubrovnik, Croatia and Turkey in the 14th and 15th century.

Braude, Benjamin. “Community and Conflict in the Economy of the Ottoman Balkans, 1500-1650.” PhD, Harvard University, 1978.

Calendar of State Papers. Liberated Slaves. London: Calendar of State Papers, Foreign, 1586. Some of the French and German slaves made their way back to Europe.

Chidsey, Donald B. The Wars in the Barbary. New York: Crown publishers, 1971. Turkish Admiral Piala Pasha was a Croatian.

Clissold, Stephen. The Barbary Slaves: Rowman and Littlefield, 1983.

Council, Privy. “Turks.” Paper presented at the Relations With the Turk, London 1586. Turks liberated in New World by Sir Francis Drake returned to Turkey.

Goodrich, Thomas. “Sixteenth Century Ottoman Americana.” PhD, Columbia University, 1968. Turks freed by Drake in the West Indies.

Hakluyt, Richard. The Principal Navigations Voyages and Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation. London: J. M. Dent, 1900. English ship Hercules to Turkey with Turks from Lost Colony in 1586.

Jennings, Ronald C. “The Judicial Registers of Kayseri, 1590-1630, as a Source for Ottoman History.” Ph.D., University of California Los Angeles, 1972.

Kinross, Lord. The Ottoman Centuries: The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Empire. New York: Morrow Quill, 1977.

Kish, G. “The Suppressed Turkish Map of 1560.” . Ann Arbor: William L. Clements library, 1560.

Mesic, Tomislav. Povijest Jednog Hrvatska Naselja na Nilu.” Danica, Kolovoza 1980. History of a Croatian settlement on the Upper Nile in the 1500's.

Mitic, Ilija. Konzulat Dubrovacke Republike u Carigradu.” Pomorski Zbornik Zadar, 1968. Dubrovnik consulates at Istanbul, Turkey

Murvar, Vatro. “The Muslims in Bosnia, Hercegovina and the Sandzak.” Zajednicar, 1988.Turkish conquest.

Novak, Grga. Lepantska Bitka 1571 i Hrvatski Pomorci. Zadar: JAZU, 1974.Naval Battle of Lepanto in 1571 and Croatian mariners.

Petrovich, Michael B. “The Croatian Humanists and the Ottoman Peril.” Balkan Studies, 1979.Turkish peril.

Petrovich, Michael B. “Croatian Humanists and the Writing of History in the 15th and 16th Centuries.” Slavic Review, December 1978.

Pigafetta, Marco. Itinerario de Vienna a Constantinople. London: Hakluyt, 1585.In Istanbul it is customary to speak Croatian, a language which is understood by almost all official, Turks, especially military men.

Poole, Lane. The Moors in Spain. Beirut: Knayats, 1967.See pg 114, Slavs in Spain.

Quinn, David B. “Turks, Moors and Others in Drake's West Indian Voyage.” Terrae Incognitae, University of Liverpool, 1982.Taken to Roanoke.

Ranke, Leopold. The Ottoman and the Spanish Empires in the 16th and 17th Centuries. London: Whittaker, 1843. Great Vizier Sciaus, a Croatian, polished, agreeable, affable, courteous, and a man of address.

Stolz, Benjamin A. “Fifteenth Century Ottoman Correspondence in Croatian with the Republic of Dubrovnik: A Linguistic Analysis.” Ph.D., Harvard, 1965.

Traljic, Seid M. “Organizacija Turske Mornarice u XVI, Lepantska Bitka, 1571 i Hrvatski Pomorci.” JAZU Zadar, 1974. The organization of the Turkish Navy in the 16th century and Croatian mariners in the battle of Lepanto, 1571.

Truhelka, A. Tursko-Slovjenski Spomenici Dubrovacke Arhive. Sarajevo, 1911.Turkish Slavic documents in the archives of Dubrovnik, Croatia.

Wallace, Robert. “The Barbary Wars Raged Over Tribute Demands of Arabs in the 1780's.” Smithsonian, January 1975. With the U.S. Marines was a mercenary Captain Luco Ulovic. The Marine Hymn came out of this battle.

Whiteway, R. S. The Rise of Portuguese Power in India, 1497-1550. Westminster, 1899. Gunners in the Turkish Fleets were from Southern Europe.