File talk:13001350ALBANIANMIGRATIONS.png

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  • Migrations and invasions in Greece and adjacent areas by Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond,1976,ISBN-0815550472,MAP 11
  • American journal of philology, Tomes 98-99, by Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve,Tenney Frank,Harold Fredrik Cherniss,JSTOR (Organization),Project Muse,1977,page 263,"It seems that the original home of the Albanians was in Northern Albania (Illyricum) rather than in the partly Hellenic and partly Hellenized Epirus Nova....tribes which inhabited Illyricum must have started not too long after the capture of Constantinople by the Franks and the Venetians in 1204. It reached its peak in the fourteenth century when these Illyrian tribes poured south as mercenaries, raiders and migrants to take possession of Epirus Nova, eventually push the Vlachs out of..."
  • Collected Studies: Studies in Greek literature and history, excluding Epirus ... by Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond,page 499,"The Byzantine theme or province of Epirus Nova had in the extreme north Albanians, but the rest of the are had probably a mixed, mainly Greek-speaking people in the 11th and twelfth centuries. The first movement of the Albanians comes after the fall of Constantinople to the Latins in 1204.")
  • Greece old and new by Tom Winnifrith,Penelope Murray,1983,ISBN-0333278364,page 43,"The Byzantine theme or province of Epirus Nova had in the extreme north Albanians, but the rest of the area probably had a mixed, mainly Greek-speaking ... The first movement of the Albanians comes after the fall of Constantinople to the Latins in 1204."

Megistias (talk) 10:23, 15 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

The map is taken by Hammond's books [[1]], so I see no need to have the 'neutrality' sign in the image.Alexikoua (talk) 00:18, 20 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]