^LELIS, ARNOLD A. “THE VIEW FROM THE NORTHWEST: THE CHRONICLE OF NOVGOROD AS THE MIRROR OF LOCAL EXPERIENCE OF RUS’ HISTORY, 1016-1333.” Russian History, vol. 32, no. 3/4, 2005, pp. 389–99. JSTOR,
http://www.jstor.org/stable/24663271. Accessed 30 May 2024.
^Н.М.Карамзин.
История государства Российского. volume 3, chapter 3 “In this year, the Russians, joining with the inhabitants of Estonia and Karelians, came by ships to the vicinity of Stockholm, killed the Archbishop of Uppsala, took the ancient Swedish trading city of Sigtuna on July 14, devastated it so that it has forever lost its former flourishing state, and together with many jewels stole the silver church gates that decorated the Cathedral Church Novogorodskaya Street.”
^LELIS, ARNOLD A. “THE VIEW FROM THE NORTHWEST: THE CHRONICLE OF NOVGOROD AS THE MIRROR OF LOCAL EXPERIENCE OF RUS’ HISTORY, 1016-1333.” Russian History, vol. 32, no. 3/4, 2005, pp. 389–99. JSTOR,
http://www.jstor.org/stable/24663271. Accessed 30 May 2024.
^Н.М.Карамзин.
История государства Российского. volume 3, chapter 3 “In this year, the Russians, joining with the inhabitants of Estonia and Karelians, came by ships to the vicinity of Stockholm, killed the Archbishop of Uppsala, took the ancient Swedish trading city of Sigtuna on July 14, devastated it so that it has forever lost its former flourishing state, and together with many jewels stole the silver church gates that decorated the Cathedral Church Novogorodskaya Street.”