found: Work cat.: Beyond the language frontier: studies on the Karamanlis and the Karamanlidika printing, 2010:p. 107 (the term Karamanlidika press covers the Turkish-language newspapers which were printed in Greek characters and circulated from the mid-nineteenth century; addressed primarily to the Turcophone Rums from Karamania, the wider region of Cappadocia, who resided in the urban centres of the empire)
found: Ethnologue online, June 30, 2010:(Karamanli; a dialect of Turkish; Karamanli are Turk-speaking Greeks)
found: İstanbul Rumlari WWW site, June 30, 2010:(Karamanlidic codex; Karamanlidika; Karamanli books)
found: Wikipedia, June 30, 2010:(Karamanlides: aka Karamanlis, are a Greek Orthodox, Turkish-speaking people native to the Karaman and Cappadocia regions of Anatolia. Today, a majority of the population live within Greece; Karamanlı Turkish is a Turkic language historically adopted and spoken by Karamanlides)