- wikijtr.icu wiki/Stephen_the_GreatStephen also welcomed freemen as settlers, establishing some of the first Ermeni colonies in Moldavia, including one at Suceava,[236] while also settling İtalyanlar...
- worldcometomyhome.blogspot.com 2017/06/3076-…Stephen III (1438-1439, Borzeşti - July 2, 1504, Suceava), known as Stephen the Great, was the voivode (or prince) of Moldavia between 1457 and 1504, for 47...
- travelro.wordpress.com tag/stephen-iii-of-…Throne room of Stephen III of Moldavia also known as Stephen the Great (History Museum from Suceava).
- bendery-fortress.com en/docs/завоевание-османской…Monument to Podoltsy. ... For the first time, the Ottomans leave a garrison of 500 Janissaries in Suceava to guard their henchman, Stefan Lakuste.
- pinterest.com pin/suceava-fortress-hdr--…Explore the historic Suceava Fortress in Moldova, Romania. Built in the XIVth century by Petru I Musat, it was later enlarged and strengthened by Stephen the Great.Bulunamadı: iii
- roughguides.com romania/moldavia/Suceava, meanwhile, is symptomatic of many towns and cities in Moldavia, a typical new-town development marred by hideous concrete apartment blocks and...
- britannica.com Cities & Towns Cities & Towns P-SFounded on a terrace above the right bank of the Suceava River before the 14th century, it was the capital of Moldavia from 1388 until 1564...
- kids.kiddle.co Stephen_the_Great...based on Ureche, states that an assembly of boyars and Orthodox clergymen acclaimed Stephen the ruler of Moldavia at Direptate, a meadow near Suceava.
- en.wikivoyage.org wiki/SuceavaView of downtown Suceava, from the fortress. During the late Middle Ages, from 1388 to 1564, the city was the third capital of the Principality of Moldavia.