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11 bytes removed, 03:00, 4 December 2018
External links
*Occupation of Constantinople articles, including photographs, on Mavi Boncuk website.
:"1920: British Fleet at Ismid" 12/02/13 and "1920: Ismid-Black Sea Line and Rebels" 12/02/13. Scroll down [http://boncuk1.rssing.com/chan-23614969/all_p11.html page 11]; "Turkish Actions of USS Sands" 01/10/14 and "RHN Averoff Fighing Turks" 01/10/14 scroll down [http://boncuk1.rssing.com/chan-23614969/all_p15.html page 15]; "Averoff's Deployment to Constantinople" 01/10/14, "Turkish Action of USS McFarland" 01/10/14 and "Turkish Action of USS Sturtevant" 01/10/14 scroll down [http://boncuk1.rssing.com/chan-23614969/all_p16.html page 16].
*[https://www.flickr.com/photos/royalairforcemuseum/albums/72157632658095064 Photographs: J.A. Sadler Collection, Royal Air Force Museum Collection] on flickr.com. They are from a series of albums, which are believed to have been produced and compiled by Gp Capt John Archer Sadler RAF, and which date from 1919. Include photographs captioned "Ark Royal", Dardanelles, 1922-23. HMS Ark Royal was a seaplane carrier and it appears Gp Capt Sadler was then in a Seaplane Squadron. In addition to aerial photographs of Constantinople, includes (as examples) [https://www.flickr.com/photos/royalairforcemuseum/8432837232/in/photostream/ HMS "Ark Royal", Dardanelles, 1922-23], [https://www.flickr.com/photos/royalairforcemuseum/8432837610/in/photostream/ My Fairey and crew aboard HMS "Ark Royal" 1922], [https://www.flickr.com/photos/royalairforcemuseum/8431752679/ Photograph: RAF base, San Stefano, Constantinople] undated but likely to be 1922-3. San Stefano (now Yeşilköy ) is a part of the Bakırköy district of Istanbul.
*[http://www.historicjournalism.com/ernest-hemingway-1.html Ernest Hemingway Articles]. Some of the articles (scroll down) written by the author Ernest Hemingway who was in Constantinople as a journalist late 1922. historicjournalism.com
*Listen to the [http://www.s-asian.cam.ac.uk/archive/audio/collection/col-j-s-lord/ 1975 interview], with [http://www.s-asian.cam.ac.uk/pdf/068a.pdf transcript 1] and [http://www.s-asian.cam.ac.uk/pdf/068b.pdf transcript 2], with Colonel J.S. Lord, Indian Army Officer, 124th Baluchistan Infantry. s-asian.cam.ac.uk. Colonel Lord tells of his experiences of the Army in India and Persia during the First World War, including an anecdote of the infamous influenza. He refers to actions around Bushire which involved Wassmuss, the “German Lawrence” [who was the German Consul at Bushire], see [https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19190628.2.132 "Where Is Wassmuss ?"] paperspast.natlib.govt.nz ''Auckland Star'', 28 June 1919.
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