[685] Kampouroglos, Μνημεῖα τῆς Ἱστορίας τῶν Ἀθηναίων (ed. 2), I. 191, 336.
[686] Konstantinides thinks his figures much too high (op. cit. 442-7).
[687] Kampouroglos, Ἱστορία τῶν Ἀθηναίων, II. 77-83. Konstantinides (pp. 421-2) relying on a statement of Sanuto that the governor of Athens, even before 1470, was styled only subashi, thinks that all the time down to 1610 Athens was merely a district of a sandjak. Philadelpheus (I. 287-90) agrees with the latter view, but extends the duration of this arrangement to 1621 or even later.
[688] Sathas, Τουρκοκρατουμένη Ἑλλάς, pp. 178-9.
[689] See the Greek history of Epeiros given in Pouqueville, Voyage dans la Grèce, V. 82-90.
[690] Finlay, History of Greece, V. 57, 90-1, 94, 96, 101, 108.
[691] Dapper, Description des Îles de l’Archipel, p. 224.
[692] Spon, Voyage, II. 23 (ed. 1679).
[693] Finlay, V. 108, 114.
[694] Laborde, I. 67-70. An Austrian archæologist has suggested that the Hermes, Paris, or Perseus, of Antikythera, discovered some 20 years ago, and now at Athens, was part of the spoil of a vessel bound for England which foundered in 1640 off that island.