Bibliography England

 

 

Bacotich, A. (1935). Giovanni Francesco Biondi da Lesina. Archivo Storico per La Dalmazia.

           Giovanni Biondi of the Island of Hvar, Dalmatia, Croatia.

 

Bagrow, L. (1935). Coppo's Map of Britain. Imago Mundi.

           Coppo is Croatian.

 

Burwash, D. (1947). English Merchant Shipping 1460-1549. Toronto, Univ. of Toronto Press.

          Page 132 Arrogosie 1539.

 

Bush, M. L. (1975). The Government Policy of Protector Somerset. Montreal, McGill-Queens University Press.

           Hungarian, Albanian and Italian mercenaries were in Scotland.

 

Caoimhin, D. N. (1956). Armada Losses on the Coast. Irish Sword.

           Dubrovnik galleons in Ireland.

 

Cooper, W. D. (1862). Lists of Foreign Protestants, and Aliens, Resident in England 1618-1688. Mass, Camden Society.

          Lists Dalmatians.

 

Corbett, J. S. (1911). Spanish Reports and the Wreck at Tobermory. Scottish Historical Review.

           Dubrovnik galleon in Spanish Armada.

 

Davies, J. S. (1883). History of Southampton. Southamton.

           Mentions the Slavonian Tomb.

 

Duke of Argyll (1905). The Armada Ship in Tobermory Bay. Pall Mall Magazine.

           Dubrovnik galleon in Spanish Armada.

 

Eterovich, A. S. (April 3, 2001). Shakespeare and Ragusa-Dubrovnik. Croatian American Times. New York.

         

Eterovich, A. S. (January 11, 2005). Croatian Language in England, Europe and Turkey. Croatian American. New York.

           Croatian language in the 1500th century.

 

Eterovich, A. S. (June 1, 1983). Croatian Tomb and Chapel in England, 1491. Zajednicar. Pittsburgh.

         

Eterovich, A. S. (March 7, 2000). Dalmatia in the New World, 1523. Croatian American Times. New York City.

         

Eterovich, A. S. (November 7, 2000). Croatians in England, 1491-1537. Croatian American Times. New York City.

         

Eterovich, A. S. (November 21, 2000). Croatians in England in the 16th Century. Croatian American Times. New York.

         

Fallon, N. (1978). The Armada in Ireland. Connecticut, Wesleyan University Press.

           Ragusan ships involved.

 

Fernandez-Arnesto, F. (1988). The Spanish Armada.

           Lists Dubrovnik ships.

 

Fernandez-Duro, C. (1895). La Armada Espanola. Madrid.

           Includes Dalmatian material.

 

Filipovich, R. E. (1977). Dubrovnik's Relations with England: A Symposium. Zagreb, Dept. of English.

         

Franolic, B. (1997). Works of Croatian Latinists Recorded in the British Library General Catalogue. Zagreb, Croatian Information Center.

         

Gargano, G. S. (1923). Scapigliatura Italiana a Londra Sotto Elisabetta e Giacomo I. Florence.

           Italians in England.

 

Gargano, G. S. (1923). Mercante Paolo Gondola, 1590-1592. Scapigliatura Italiana a Londra Sotto Elisabetta e Giacomo I. G. s. letters. Florence.

           Paolo Gundulich in London.

 

Howarth, D. (1986). The Vouage of the Armada: The Spanish Story. New York.

         

Ireland de, C. (1978). Ragusa and the Spanish Armada of 1588. Mariner's mirror.

           Dubrovnik ships in the Armada.

 

Keeler, M. F. E. (1981). Sir Francis Drake's West Indian Voyage, 1585-1586. London, Hakluyt Society.

           Liberated slaves taken to the Lost Colony. Turks, Moors, French, Germans, Greeks, Negros.

 

Kostic, V. (1972). Ragusa and the Spanish Armada. Balcanica.

           Dubrovnik ships in the Spanish Armada.

 

Kostic, V. (1975). Ragusa and England, 1300-1650. Belgrade, SASA.

         

Lamansky, V. (1884). Secrets d' Etat de Venise, Documents, Extracts, Notices et Etudes. St. Petersburg.

           Exodus of Dalmatian soldiers as far abroad as England.

 

Lang, A. (March 1912). The Mystery of the Tobermory Galleon Revealed. Backwoods Magazine.

           A Dubrovnik galleon.

 

Ljubic, M. (1954). U Trogiru Zive I Rade Rodaci Henrika VIII. Slobodna Dalmacija. Split.

         

Lloyd, T. H. (1982). Alien Merchants in England during the High Middle Ages. New York, St. Martin's Press.

         

Luetic, J. (1978). English Mariners and Ships in 17th Century Dubrovnik. Mariners Mirror.

         

Luetic, J. (1989). Spomen uz Godisnjice Invazijsko Desantne Operacije Spanjolske Nepobjedive Armada 1588. Dubrovacki Horizonti.

           Dubrovnik ships in the Spanish Armada.

 

Markotic, V. (1972). Geographical Manuscripts Concerning Croatia in the British Museum. Journal of Croatian Studies.

         

Mattingly, G. (1984). The Defeat of the Spanish Armada. Boston, Houghton Mifflin.

         

Minns, G. W. (1894). The Sclavonian Tomb at North Stoneham.  A Chapter in the History of the Ancient Commerce of Southampton. Papers and Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club. ii: 357-63.

          In Southampton, England-Croatians.

 

Novak, V. (1953). Ucesce Dubrovacke Flote u Spanskoj Nepobedivoj Armadi. Zgodovinski Casopis Ljubljana.

           The Dubrovnik Fleet in the Spanish Armada.

 

Partridge, M. (1969). Odnosa Dubrovnika s Londonom u Vrijeme Marina Drzica. Zadar.

           Dubrovnik and Londonin the age of Drzic.

 

Pierson, P. (1981). Notes on Ragusa and the Spanish Armada. Mariners Mirror. Vol 67 London.

           Ragusan ships.

 

Rawlinson, H. G. (1922). The Embassy of William Harborne to Constantinople, 1583-1588. London, Royal Historical Society.

         

Ruddock, A. (1941). The Trade of Southampton with the Mediterranean, 1428-1547. Economics. London, University of London.

           Includes Croatians.

 

Ruddock, A. A. (1951). Italian Merchants and Shipping in Southampton, 1270-1600. Southampton, University College.

           Croatians included.

 

Stone, l. (1956). An Elizabethian-Sir Horatio Palavicino. Oxford, Clarendon Press.

         

Tadic, J. (1929). Dubrovacko-Engleska Trgovina u XVI Stolecu. Jodranska Straza: 164-168.

         

Taylor, E. G. R. (1930). Tudor Geography, 1485-1583. London, Methuen.

         

Thompson, I. A. (1976). War and Government in Habsburg Spain. New York.

           Ragusans participated in the Armada and built ships for Spain.

 

Yates, F. A. (1934). John Florio: The Life of an Italian in Shakespeare's England. Cambridge, Iniversity Press.

           Nikola Gozze, Raleigh at meeting in London.