to the author, of his address in purloining and destroying a copy of the capitulation given to the Turks, that no proof might remain of any such transaction having been concluded. History of the Greek Revolution - Page 221by Thomas Gordon - 1832 - 1012 pagesFull view - About this book
| George Finlay - Byzantine Empire - 1877 - 464 pages
...intriguer—a type of the worst class of Moreot officials. He boasted some years later to General Gordon 'of his address in purloining and destroying a copy...remain of any such transaction having been concluded V Before Navarin capitulated, many Turkish families had been compelled by hunger to escape out of the... | |
| George Finlay - Byzantine Empire - 1877 - 460 pages
...intriguer—a type of the worst class of Moreot officials. He boasted some years later to General Gordon 'of his address in purloining and destroying a copy...remain of any such transaction having been concluded V Before Navarin capitulated, many Turkish families had been compelled by hunger to escape out of the... | |
| Walter Alison Phillips - Greece - 1897 - 460 pages
...negotiators of the capitulation boasted to him that he had succeeded in purloining and destroying the copy given to the Turks, that no proof might remain of any such transaction having been concluded. valuables of the Turks were being carried on board a Greek ship in the harbour, a dispute arose as... | |
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