File talk:Bulgarian-Vlach empire since primary sources.png

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Map according with the primary sources (George Cedrenus, Anna Comnena, Nicetas Choniates and John Skylitzes) and with « Westermann Grosser Atlas zur Weltgeschichte », 1985, ISBN 3-14-100919-8; « Putzger historischer Weltatlas Cornelsen » 1990, ISBN 3-464-00176-8; Victor Spinei, « The Great Migrations in the East and South East of Europe from the Ninth to the Thirteenth Century », first edition: Institutul Cultural Român, Cluj 2003, ISBN 9789738589452; 2-th edition: Hakkert Publisher, Amsterdam, 2006, ISBN 90-256-1207-5 (vol.1) & ISBN 90-256-1214-8 (vol. 2) and « The Romanians and the Turkic Nomads North of the Danube Delta from the Tenth to the Mid-Thirteenth Century, Brill, Leiden–Boston, 2009, ISBN 978-90-04-17536-5 »; Gheorghe Ion Brătianu : « Cercetări asupra Vicinei și Cetății Albe » (« Searches about Vicina and Cetatea Albă »), Iași University press 1935, datacode 14.333 at the Chișinău University Library, with more details, a same translitteration for all the place names and the shoreline of the time since Andrei Nacu's moving map of Danube mouths evolution [1]. Another version based on the historic bulgarian atlas for pupils Атлас по история и цивилизация за 11 клас made by Kandi exists here [2], but this user does not agree that someone improve his works, he prefers we create another document. So we respect his will. --Mélomène (talk) 18:00, 1 April 2017 (UTC)[reply]