Timurids. The Columbia Encyclopedia (Sixth ed.). New York City: Columbia University. Архивировано из оригинала 5 декабря 2006. Дата обращения: 8 ноября 2006. Источник (неопр.). Дата обращения: 29 октября 2019. Архивировано 5 декабря 2006 года.
Encyclopædia Britannica, «Timurid DynastyАрхивная копия от 2 сентября 2007 на Wayback Machine», Online Academic Edition, 2007. «Turkic dynasty descended from the conqueror Timur (Tamerlane), renowned for its brilliant revival of artistic and intellectual life in Iran and Central Asia. … Trading and artistic communities were brought into the capital city of Herat, where a library was founded, and the capital became the centre of a renewed and artistically brilliant Persian culture.»
B. Spuler, «Central Asia in the Mongol and Timurid periodsАрхивная копия от 17 мая 2018 на Wayback Machine», in Encyclopædia Iranica. «Like his father, Olōğ Beg was entirely integrated into the Persian Islamic cultural circles, and during his reign Persian predominated as the language of high culture, a status that it retained in the region of Samarqand until the Russian revolution 1917 … Ḥoseyn Bāyqarā encouraged the development of Persian literature and literary talent in every way possible …»
Encyclopædia Britannica, «Timurid DynastyАрхивная копия от 2 сентября 2007 на Wayback Machine», Online Academic Edition, 2007. «Turkic dynasty descended from the conqueror Timur (Tamerlane), renowned for its brilliant revival of artistic and intellectual life in Iran and Central Asia. … Trading and artistic communities were brought into the capital city of Herat, where a library was founded, and the capital became the centre of a renewed and artistically brilliant Persian culture.»
B. Spuler, «Central Asia in the Mongol and Timurid periodsАрхивная копия от 17 мая 2018 на Wayback Machine», in Encyclopædia Iranica. «Like his father, Olōğ Beg was entirely integrated into the Persian Islamic cultural circles, and during his reign Persian predominated as the language of high culture, a status that it retained in the region of Samarqand until the Russian revolution 1917 … Ḥoseyn Bāyqarā encouraged the development of Persian literature and literary talent in every way possible …»
Timurids. The Columbia Encyclopedia (Sixth ed.). New York City: Columbia University. Архивировано из оригинала 5 декабря 2006. Дата обращения: 8 ноября 2006. Источник (неопр.). Дата обращения: 29 октября 2019. Архивировано 5 декабря 2006 года.