1. Ljiljana Dobrovšak, ‘Emancipacija Židova u Kraljevini Hrvatskoj, Slavoniji i Dalmaciji u 19. stoljeću’, Radoví — Zavod za hrvatsku povijest, 37, No. 1 (2005): 126–127. Jews in Split were subject to Venetian laws, while Jews in Dubrovnik were under the authority of the Ragusan Republic.
2. Branka Magaš, Croatia Through History: The Making of a European State (London: Saqi, 2007), 194.
3. Peter F. Sugar, ‘External and Domestic Roots of Eastern European Nationalism’ in Nationalism in Eastern Europe, eds Peter F. Sugar and Ivo Lederer (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1969), 24.
4. ‘Turkish Croatia’ (north-west Bosnia) and ‘Turkish Dalmatia’ (western Herzegovina) extended to the rivers Vrbas and the Neretva. Nikša Stančić, Hrvatska nacija i nacionalizam u 19. i 20. stoljeću (Zagreb: Barbat, 2002), 95–96.
5. Elinor Murray Despalatovic, Ljudevit Gaj and the Illyrian Movement (New York: Columbia University Press, 1975), 6.