1. Baiduzh M. The Queen of Spades and her “sister” Bloody Mary in Russian contemporary legends // Contemporary Legend. 2013. Vol. 3, ser. 3. Pp. 78-99.
2. Bârcă V. Istorie şi civilizaţie. Sarmaţii în spaţiul est-carpatic (sec. I a.Chr. - începutul sec. II p.Chr.) [History and civilisation. The Sarmatians in the East Carpathians region (1st century BC - beginning of the 2nd century AD)]. Cluj-Napoca: Argonaut, 2006. 668 p.
3. Bârcă V., Symonenko O. Călăreţii stepelor. Sarmaţii în spaţiul nord-pontic [Horsemen of the steppes. The Sarmatians in the North Pontic region]. Cluj-Napoca: Mega, 2009. 502 p.
4. Carroll M. Invisible foreigners at Rome? Identities in dress behaviour in the imperial capital // Contextus. Festschrift für Sabine Schrenk / Eds. S. Blaauw, E. Enss, P. Linscheid. Münster: Aschendorff, 2020. Pp. 169-188.
5. Härke H. ‘Warrior graves’? The background of the Anglo-Saxon weapon burial rite // Past&Present. 1990. Vol. 126. Pp. 22-43. EDN: IVOVTB
6. Humphrey C. Inside and outside the Mirror: Mongolian shamans’ mirrors as instruments of perspectivism // Inner Asia. 2007. Vol. 9. Pp. 35-57.
7. Grumeza L. The Sarmatian cemetery of Mitoc-Malu Galben (Botoșani county/RO): 60 years later // Migration and identity in Eurasia: From Ancient Times to the Middle Ages / Eds. V. Cojocaru, A.-I. Pázsint. Cluj-Napoca: Mega. 2021. Pp. 167-200.
8. Grumeza L. Sarmatians with artificial cranial modifications from East of the Carpathians // The Sarmatians and the others: Nomadic and sedentary cultures in Central and Eastern Europe in the first half of the 1st millennium AD / Eds. L. Grumeza, V. Cojocaru, C. I. Tica. Cluj-Napoca: Mega. 2024. Pp. 403-430.
9. Khazanov A.M. Steppe nomads in the Eurasian trade // Chungara Revista de Antropología Chilena. 2019. Vol. 51/1. Pp. 85-93.
10. Mordvintseva V.I. The Sarmatians in the Northern Black Sea region (on the basis of archaeological material) // The Northern Black Sea in antiquity: Networks, connectivity, and cultural interactions / Ed. V. Kozlovskaya. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press. 2017. Pp. 233-282. EDN: YCBXOX
11. Mordvintseva V.I..,Iraner“ und.,Sarmaten“ in der Weltsicht Michael Rostovtzeffs // Ethnic constructs, royal dynasties and historical geography around the Black Sea littoral / Ed. A. Coşkun. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner. 2021, Pp. 25-43.
12. O’Brien T.G., Peters L.R., Hines M.E. Artificial cranial deformation: Potential implications for affected brain function. // Anthropol. 2013. Vol. 1/3. Available at URL: https://www.longdom.org/open-access-pdfs/artificial-cranial-deformation-potential-implications-for-affected-brai-function-2332-0915.1000107.pdf.
13. Popa A. Karpen und Sarmaten: Historische Völker und archäologische Kulturen östlich der Karpaten zur Zeit der römischen provinz Dacia // Corpus der römischen Funde im europäischen Barbaricum.Rumänien Band 2. Kreis Vaslui / Eds. L. Grumeza et al. Cluj-Napoca: Mega. 2022. Pp. 197-210.
14. Popescu S.S. Restaurarea unei spade sarmate aflate în patrimoniul Muzeului Național de Istorie a României [Restoration of a Sarmatian sword from the National Museum of Romanian History] // Muzeul Național. 2020. Vol. 32. PP. 353-363.
15. Rostovtzeff M.I. Iranians and Greeks in South Russia. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1922. 260 p.
16. Simalcsik A. Despre deformaţia craniană intenţionată. Referire asupra descoperirii de la Fîrlădeni (r-nul Căuşeni) [On intentional cranial deformation: A reference to the discovery at Fîrlădeni (Căuşeni district)] // Arheologia Preventivă în Republica Moldova. 2015. Vol. 2/1-2. Pp. 129-138.
17. Simalcsik A. Deformația craniană intenționată în comunitățile sarmatice [Intentional cranial deformation in Sarmatic communities] // Acta Musei Tutovensis. 2018. Vol. 14. Pp. 91-106.
18. Simonenko A.V. Römische Importe in sarmatischen Denkmälern des nördlichen Schwarzmeergebietes // Simonenko A.V., Marčenko I.I., Limberis N.Ju. Römishe Importe in sarmatischen und maiotischen Gräbern zwischen Unterer Donau und Kuban. Mainz: Philipp von Zabern. 2008. Pp. 1-94, pl. 1-168.
19. Skripkin A.S. Sarmaty [The Sarmatians]. Volgograd: Izdatel’stvo VolGU. 2017. 294 p.
20. Spinei V. The great migrations in the East and South East of Europe from the ninth to the thirteenth century. 3rd ed. Amsterdam: Adolf M. Hakkert. 2022. 881 p.
21. Thoresen L. Archaeogemmology and ancient literary sources on gems and their origins // Gemstones in the first millennium AD: Mines, trade, workshops and symbolism: International Conference, October 20th-22nd, 2015, Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum / Eds. A. Hilgner, S. Greiff, D. Quast. Mainz: Verlag des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums. 2017. Pp. 155-217.
22. Treïster M. Bronzovÿe zerkala pozdneéllinisticheskikh i provintsial’no-rimskikh tipov iz pogrebeniï kochevnikov Aziatskoï Sarmatii [Bronze mirrors of the Late Hellenistic and Provincial-Roman types from the burials of the nomads of Asian Sarmatia] // Khersonesskiï Sbornik. 2021. Vol. 22. Pp. 241-260.