-
Wikipedia articles, but does not seem to be in the
usual printed sources.
Gaivoronsky, p74 says that
there were
rumors that the
Poles were
planning to use...
- 299–317 For his sons
Gaivoronsky pp. 319–329, 340–347
Henry Hoyle Howorth,
History of the Mongols, 1880, Part 2, pp. 512–518
Gaivoronsky, page 300 is vague...
-
except for the sons and
grandsons of his
brothers noted above.
Oleksa Gaivoronsky «Повелители двух материков», Kiev-Bakhchisarai,
second edition, 2010...
-
extracted from the
Russian Wikipedia which appears to
follow Gaivoronsky.
Oleksa Gaivoronsky «Повелители двух материков», Kyiv-Bakhchysarai, 2007, ISBN 978-966-96917-1-2...
- context. time – Moscow: Humanitarii, 2003. – 166 p. ISBN 5-89221-075-8
Gaivoronsky Oleksa. The
Country Of Crimea.
Essays on the
monuments of the history...
- is
vague and
needs to be
supplemented from
another source.
Gaivoronsky, p. 52
Gaivoronsky, p. 52. He has the
sultan as
Osman II, who came to
power in...
-
Murad to the
Siege of Eger (1596) in
northeast Hungary.
According to
Gaivoronsky (?),
after the
place was taken, in
October 1596 a
large Habsburg army...
-
project of five
authors wrote the work:
Leonid Desyatnikov and
Vyacheslav Gaivoronsky from St. Petersburg,
Iraida Yusupova and
Vladimir Nikolayev from Moscow...
- 310,
volume 2, pp. 23–39.
Gaivoronsky, p306. The
Russian Wikipedia,
under Mehmed II,
citing the 2007
edition of
Gaivoronsky, p. 284, has the brothers...
-
Second Janibek: pp 155-158,175-179; Bahadir:pp 249-251.
Gaivoronsky, p 50 is vague. This
needs to be
filled out from
another source.
Gaivoronsky, p 52...