- Serbian, it is
known as
Cetinje (archaically Цетинѣ / Cetině); in
Italian as
Cettigne; in Gr**** as Κετίγνη (Ketígni); in
Turkish as Çetine; and in
Albanian as...
-
intrepid wife,
would result in Dalmatia, the
Quarnero and
Istria with
Cettigne in
Montenegro and the
island of
Grado (3 volumes),
published by the Clarendon...
- ISBN 978-0-521-81539-0 ([1]) Jackson, Thomas. Dalmatia, the
Quarnero and
Istria with
Cettigne in
Montenegro and the
Island of Grado.
Clarendon Press. Oxford, 1887 Hastings...
- is 230,000. According, however, to
information officially furnished at
Cettigne (Cetinje), the
total number of
inhabitants in 1900 was 311,564, of whom...
- in
white and a
darker shade of green.
Status Occupied territory Capital Cettigne 42°23′22″N 18°55′23″E / 42.38944°N 18.92306°E / 42.38944; 18.92306 Common languages...
- [KNAB]
Venden – Венден (archaic Ukrainian), Võnnu (Estonian*)[KNAB]
Cetinje Cettigne (Italian*), Çetine (Turkish),
Cetinje – Цетиње (Serbian*),
Cetinje (Slovene)...
-
Thomas Graham Jackson (1887). Dalmatia, the
Quarnero and Istria, with
Cettigne in
Montenegro and the
Island of Grado.
Clarendon Press. pp. 46–50. Retrieved...
- OCLC 4895425 Jackson, Thomas. Dalmatia, the
Quarnero and
Istria with
Cettigne in
Montenegro and the
Island of Grado.
Clarendon Press. Oxford, 1887 Jayne...
-
Thomas Graham (1887). Dalmatia, the
Quarnero /
Qvarner and Istria, with
Cettigne in
Montenegro and the
island of Grado,
Volume 3. London:
Oxford University...
- Jackson, Sir
Thomas Graham (1887). Dalmatia, the
Quarnero and Istria: with
Cettigne in
Montenegro and the
island of Grado, Clarendon, pp. 317. OCLC 1718101...