The Kingdom of the Slavs (Italian: Il Regno de gli Slavi) is a book by Mavro Orbini published in the Italian city of Pesaro in 1601.[1] The book provided a history of the Slavic peoples.[2]
"Indetermi-Nation: Narrative identity and symbolic politics in early modern Illyrism" by Zrinka Blažević, in Whose Love of Which Country?: Composite States, National Histories and Patriotic Discourses in Early Modern East Central Europe], Koninklijke Brill (2010)
Croatia: A Nation Formed in War by Marcus Tanner, Yale University Press (1997)
Entangled Histories Of The Balkans - Volume One ed. by Roumen Dontchev Daskalov and Tchavdar Marinov, Koninklijke Brill (2013)
When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans: A Study of Identity in Pre-Nationalist Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early-Modern Periods by Larry Wolff, Stanford University Press (2002)
Our Kingdom Come: The Counter-Reformation, the Republic of Dubrovnik, and the Liberation of the Balkan Slavs by Zdenko Zlatar, East European Monographs (1992)
References
^Orbini, Mauro (1601). l Regno de gli Slaui hoggi corrottamente detti Schiauoni. Historia di don Mauro Orbini rauseo abbate melitense. Nella quale si vede l'origine quasi di tutti i popoli che furono della lingua slaua, con molte, & varie guerre, che fecero in Europa, Asia, & Africa . Pesaro: Apresso Girolamo Concordia. Retrieved 21 June 2021 – via Google Books.
^The Kingdom of the Slavs by Mauro Orbini, phototype edition
^"Rodriga, Daniel". The concession for the renovation of the port of Split was won by the Portuguese maran of the Venetian service, Daniel Rodriguez, who is one of the prototypes of The Merchant of Venice.