Catarino H., Dias F., Teixeira M. 2007. Colecçao de tabulerios de jogos do Castelo Velho de Alcoutim (Alcoutim, Algarve), In: Vipasca, Arqueologia Histórica, 2nd series, no. 2: 654–657.
Crist, W. 2020. Scratching the surface: graffiti games in the Byzantine Empire, In: V. Kopp & E. Lapina (eds), Games and visual culture in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Turnhout (Studies in the History of Daily Life (800-1600), 8): 333–353.
de Voogt, A., Hassanat, A. B. A., Alhasanat, M. B. 2017. The history and distribution of ṭāb: a survey of Petra gaming boards, Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 76, no. 1: 93–101.
Grinev, A.M. 2018. O novykh vidakh nastol’nykh igr v srednevekovom Novgorode (On new types of gaming boards from medieval Novgorod), Istoricheskiy zhurnal: nauchnyye issledovaniya, 2: 81–89 (in Russian).
Kromann, A., & Roesdahl, E. 1996. The Vikings and the Islamic lands, In: The Arabian journey: Danish connections with the Islamic world over a thousand years, Århus (exhibition catalogue): 9-17.
Schädler, U. 2009. Pente grammai – the ancient Greek board game Five Lines, In: J.N. Silva (ed.), Proceedings of Board Game Studies Colloquium XI. Lisbon: 169-192.
Schädler, U. 2024. Roman, Byzantine, and Medieval games in Ephesus: preliminary survey results, In: A. Pace, T. Penn, U. Schädler (eds), Games in the Ancient World: places, spaces, accessories, Drémil-Lafage (Monographies Instrumentum, 79): 127–139.
Schiettecatte, J., & al-Ghazzi, ‘A. (eds), forthcoming. Al-Kharj II: report on two excavation seasons in the oasis of Al-Kharj 2013 and 2015 – Saudi Arabia (with permission of Jérémie Schiettecatte, who kindly shared with me the complete book in pdf)
Schiettecatte, J., Darles, C., Siméon, P. 2019. A Friday mosque founded in the late first century A.H. at al-Yamāmah: origins and evolution of Islamic religious architecture in Najd, Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies, 49: 247–264.
Sebbane, M. 2019. Chapter 5: Board games from the eastern Cardo, In: S. Weksler-Bdolah & A. Onn (eds), Jerusalem – Western Wall Plaza Excavations, I: The Roman and Byzantine remains, architecture and stratigraphy, Jerusalem (IAA Reports 63).