Talk:Sidirokastro
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Lack of references
editThe article says:
"The Bulgarian army that invaded the town in 1913 committed unspeakable atrocities against both Turkish and Greek inhabitants."
But not a single source is given. I've never been to this place, but it's right on the border to Bulgaria, and one can imagine that Bulgarians have lived there in the past. What happened to them? --Dale Gerdemann 12:22, 24 June 2007 (UTC)
External links modified
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- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20080504114255/http://www.samsunmubadele.org.tr/duyuruarsivi.asp?Sayfa=321 to http://www.samsunmubadele.org.tr/duyuruarsivi.asp?Sayfa=321
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Decauville railway
editDr. Angel Dzhonev, Ph.D: Bulgarian railway construction in Macedonia during WWII (1941-1944).: During WWI, narrow-gauge (Decauville) railways (600 mm) for both military and civil use were built along the routes: Skopje-Tetovo-Kichevo reaching the outskirts of Ohrid, Gradsko-Prilep reaching the outskirts of Bitola; Radomir-Dupnitsa-G. Djumaya (today Blagoevgrad)-Kulata reaching a few kilometers from Demir Hisar (today Sidirokastron) and several shorter lines with total length of 671 km or 88.3% of all imported Decauville rolling stock.