1- Afshar Sistani, I., 1390, Sistan and Baluchestan nameh, Tehran, Ketabdar Publishing.
2- Amirhajloo, S. and Sedighian, H. 2020, Archaeological Research on Islamic Pottery from Qal´eh Sang, Old Sirjan (Kerman Province, Iran), Phazhohesh-ha-ye Bastanshenasi Iran, Vol.10, No25, Pp 155 – 180.
3- Barnes, L. et al. 2010, Chinese Ceramics: From the Paleolithic Period through the Qing Dynasty, Yale University press.
4- Bivar, A. D. H., et al. 2000, Excavations at Ghubayrā, Iran. School of Oriental & African Studies.
5- Border of Dadian, H. et al. 2016, Introducing Tis Chabahar Manuscripts Architecture in South-East Iran, Proceedings of the International Conference on Oriental Oriental Studies in Persian Language and Literature, Yerevan University.
6- Chubak, H. 2012, Islamic Ceramics – the ancient city of Jiroft, Journal of Archaeological Studies, Vol 4, No.1, pp. 83-112.
7- Esmaeili Jelodar, M.E. 2010, The Commercial Relationship of the North and South Persian Gulf Ports in the Islamic Period to the 5th Century AH Based on Surveys and Excavations of the Central Coasts of the North of Persian Gulf, Doctoral dissertation on Archaeology of the Islamic period, University of Tehran, unpublished.
8- Etemadat al-Saltanah, Mohammad Hassan Khan, 1915, Merat al-Baladan, Tehran, Lithography.
9- Fairservis, W. A. 1961, Archaeological studies in the Seistan basin of south-western Afghanistan & eastern Iran, Anthropological papers of the AMNH, Vol48, pt. 1, New York.
10- Fehervari, G. 1998, Ceramics of the Islamic World in the Tareq Rajab Museum Kuwait, Tareq Rajab Museum.
11- Fehervari, G. 2000, Ceramics of the Islamic World in the Tareq Rajab Museum, London, I.B Tauris Publishers.
12- Golombek, L. & et.al. 1996, Tamerlane΄s Tableware: A New Approach to Chinoiseries Ceramics of Fifteenth and Sixteenth century Iran, Royal Ontario Museum, Canada.
13- Grube, E. 2005, Islamic Ceramics from the Nasser Khalili Collection, translated by Farnaz Haeri, Tehran, Karang Publishing.
14- Grube, E. J. 1994, Cobalt and Luster: The first centuries of Islamic ceramic, London, Khalili collection.
15- Hansman, J. 1985, Julfār, an Arabian Port. Its Settlement and Far Eastern Ceramic Trade from the 14th to the 18th Centuries, The Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland Prize Publication Fund, Vol. 22, London.
16- Hashemi Zarrajabad, H. et al., 2015, Cultural Relationship of Baluchistan with Khorasan Basin during Islamic Period Using Ceiling Patterns, Proceedings of the Second National Archaeological Congress of Birjand, Iran (https://www.civilica.com /Paper-NCAI02-NCAI02_091.html).
17- Heidari, N., 2009, determination of the complex of Portuguese castle of Chabahar and cemetery No. 1 Tis boundaries, the archive of Sistan and Baluchestan province's Directorate of Cultural Heritage, Tourism and Handicrafts, unpublished.
18- Horton, M.C. 1996, Shanga the Archaeology of a Muslim Trading Community on the Coast of East Africa, Memoirs of the British Institute in Eastern Africa 14, Nairobi.
19- Ishtakari, Abu Ishaq Ibrahim, 1994, Masalik Al-Mamalik, Translated by Abdullah Tostari, Tehran, Mahmoud Afshar Endowment Publications.
20- Karimi, F. and Kiani, M.Y. 1985, The Art of Pottery of the Islamic Period, Tehran, Iran Archaeological Center.
21- Karimian, H. and Saadatian, M. 2015, Introduction, Chronology and Determination of the Function of Ban Messi Caves in Chabahar City, Abstracts of the Second International Conference on Handicraft Architecture, Tehran, Cultural Heritage and Tourism Research Institute Publications, p. 77.
22- Kennet, D. 1997, Kush: A Sasanian & Islamic period archaeological tell in Ras al-Khaimah, Arabian Archaeology & epigraphy, pp 284-302.
23- Kennet, D. 2004, Sasanian and Islamic ceramic from Ras al-Khaimah (e-Book version), Classification, chronology and analysis of trade in the Western Indian Ocean, Durham University.
24- Kermani, Afzaleddin Abu Hamed, 1994, Seljuks and Ghaz in Kerman, Corrected by Mohammad Ibrahim Bastani of Paris, Tehran, Cyrus Publishing.
25- Kervran, M. & Rougeulle, A. 1984, Recherche sur les niveaux Islamiquesla vile des artisans, in DAFI, Vol14, pp 7-120.
26- Kervran, M. 1977, Les niveaux islamiques du secteur oriental de l’Apadana, II. - Le matériel céramique, Cahiers de la Délégation Archéologique Françaiseen Iran7: 75-161.
27- Khanipour, M. and Mahjour, F., 2013, Stylistics and the Relationship between the motif and Form of Islamic Pottery of Eshtakhr, Proceedings of the National Conference of Iranian Archaeologists, Birjand University, pp. 1-16.
28- Kheirandish, A. & Khalifa, M., 2007, Iranian Maritime Trade in the Seljuk Period of the Five and Sixth Centuries Emphasizing on the Role of Sharp Harbor, Journal of Humanities, Al-Zahra University, no 65, pp. 71-92.
29- Kiani, M. Y. 1984, Islamic City of Gurgan, Deutsches Archäologisches Institut. Abt, Teheran, Archäeologische Mitteilungenaus Iran, Ergänzungs, band11, Berlin, Dietrich Reimer Verlag.
30- Lestrange, G. 2004, Historical Geography of the Lands of the Eastern Caliphate, Translated by Mahmoud Erfan, Tehran, Scientific and Cultural Publications.
31- Mahboub, T. and Elahi, H. 2013, Port of Tice in the Spice and Sugar Trade, Special Journal of Jurisprudence and the History of Civilization, Ninth Year, Vol 35, pp. 109 - 130.
32- Mahjour, F., and Sedighian, H., 2009, Archaeological Survey of Islamic Ceramic in Meshkin-Tapeh Area of Markazi Province, Journal of Payam Bastanshenasi, Azad University, No 12, pp105-120.
33- Marquardt, J., 1994, Iran Shahr, based on the geography of Musa Khourni, Translated by Maryam Mir-Ahmadi, Tehran, Information publication.
34- Mason, R & Tite, M.S. 1994, Beginning of the Islamic stone paste technology, Archaeometry, Vol36, pp 77-91.
35- Mason, R. 2004, Shine like the sun: luster painted and associated pottery from the medieval Middle East, Ontario, Mazda publishers.
36- Michel, H. V. & et al., 1975, Provenance studies of Sgraffiato and late green glazed wares from Siraf Iran, Conference on the application of physical science, Berkeley & Los Angeles CA, pp 1-14 (https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3tp6c941).
37- Mirfatah, A.A. 1997, speculation in Tis Castle of Chabahar city, the archive of the General Directorate of Cultural Heritage, Tourism and Handicrafts of Sistan and Baluchestan province, unpublished.
38- Moghaddasi, Abu Abdullah Mohammad bin Ahmad, 1982, Hassan al-Taqasim fi mawar al-khalim, Translated by Ali al-Naqvi, Tehran, Iranian Authors and Translators Association.
39- Morgan, P. 1991, New thought on old Hormuz: Chinese ceramics in the Hormuz region in the thirteenth and fourteenth century, Iran, Vol29, pp 67 – 84.
40- Morgan, P. & Leatherby, J. 1987, Excavated ceramics from Sirjan. Syria and Iran: three studies in medieval ceramics, Oxford Studies in Islamic Art IV, Oxford, Oxford University Press, Allan JW, Roberts C, 23-174.
41- Mousavi Haji, S.R. and Atai, M., 2010, A Study of a Sample of Pottery of Sistan, Zahedan, Sistan and Baluchestan Province Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Organization Publications.
42- Mousavi Haji, S.R. 2003, Research in the Archaeology of Islamic Zagros of the Islamic Era: Field Study in the Islamic Zahedan Areas of Eastern Iran, the Ph.D. thesis of Islamic Archaeology of Tarbiat Modarres University, unpublished.
43- Mousavi, M. 1997, Archaeological Excavations in the Historic City of Harira Kish Island, Archaeological Reports 1, Tehran, Cultural Heritage Organization Publications, pp. 205 - 238.
44- Nemati, M.R., et al., 2012, Investigation of Islamic Pottery in Farhan Abad Valley, Central Province (Chapter One Exploration), Iranian Archaeological Journal, No. 3, pp. 125 - 138.
45- Pope, J. A. 1956, Chinese porcelain from the Ardbil Shrine, Washington, Freer gallery of art.
46- Priestman, S. 2005, Settlement and Ceramics in the Southern Iran: An Analysis of the Sasanian and Islamic Periods in the Williamson Collection. Unpublished M.A. Thesis: University of Durham.
47- Priestman, S. 2008, Islamic Ceramic in Oman, In Islamic Art in Oman, A. al-Salimi, H. Gaube & L. Korn (eds.) Mazoon Printing, Muscat, pp 260-81.
48- Priestman, S. 2013, A Quantitative Archaeological Analysis of Ceramic Exchange in the Persian Gulf and western Indian ocean, 400–1275 AD, Unpublished PhD Thesis, Centre for Maritime Archaeology, University of Southampton.
49- Rajabi, N. 2015, Archaeological Findings of the second season of Excavating in the Madabad Area A Marvdasht, Iranian Journal of Archaeological Research, Volume 5, Issue 9, pp. 194 - 194.
50- Rougeulle, A. 2005, The Sharma horizon: Sgraffito Wares and other glazed ceramics of the Indian Ocean Trade (ca. 980-1150), Proceedings of the seminar for Arabian Studies, Vol. 35, Oxford, Archaeo press, pp.223-246.
51- Saadatian, M. 2018, speculation to determine the area and propose the archaeological sites of the port of Tis, the archive of the General Directorate of Cultural Heritage, Tourism and Handicrafts of Sistan and Baluchestan province.
52- Safarzai, A. and Sepahi, A. 2012, The History of Maritime and Trade in the Port of Tis, First National Conference on the Development of the Offshore and Offshore Authorities of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Article 1091.
53- Seyed Sadjadi, S.M. 1995, Archaeology and History of Baluchistan (Eight Speeches), Tehran, National Heritage Organization.
54- Seyed Sajjadi, S.M. 2017, Ancient Baluchestan, Zahedan, Sistan and Baluchestan Province Organization of Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism.
55- Shirazi, R. 2010, Archaeological Survey of Chabahar County, Archives of the Office of Cultural Heritage, Tourism and Handicrafts of Sistan and Baluchestan Province, unpublished.
56- Statistical Yearbook of Sistan and Baluchestan Province, 2016, Zahedan, Sistan and Baluchestan Province Planning Deputy.
57- Stein, Sir, M.A. 1937, Archaeological Reconnaissance’s in North-Western India and South-Eastern Iran, London, Mac Millan & Co.
58- Sykes, S. 1984, General Sykesier's Travel Log, Translated by Hossein Saadat Noori, Tehran, Tablet Publication.
59- Takahito, M. 1988, Cultural and economic relations between East and West: Sea routes, Wiesbaden, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag.
60- Tampoe, M. 1989, Maritime trade between China and the West: an archaeological study of the ceramics from Siraf from the 8 to 15th centuries, Doctoral dissertation, University of Oxford, Unpublished.
61- Valenstein, S. 1988, A handbook of Chinese ceramics, New York, The Metropolitan Museum of art.
62- Watson, O. 1999, Fritware: Fatimid Egypt or Saljuq Iran? In Barrucand, M. (ed.), L' Egypte Fatimide; son art ET son histoire, Paris, Université de Paris-Sorbonne, pp 299-310.
63- Whitcomb, D. 1985, Before the Rose and Nightingales, Excavation at Qasr Abu-Nasr, Old Shiraz, New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
64- Whitehouse, D. 1968, Excavation at Siraf: first interim report, Iran, Vol6, pp 1-22.
65- Whitehouse, D. 1975, The decline of Siraf, In F. Bagherzadeh (ed.) Proceedings of the 3rd Annual Symposium on Archaeological Research in Iran, 2nd - 7th, Muzeh-e Iran-e Bastan: Tehran, pp 263-70.
66- Whitehouse, D. 1979, ‘Islamic glazed ceramic in Iraq and the Persian Gulf: the ninth and tenth centuries’, Annali, Instituto Orientale di Napoli, 39: 45-61.
67- Whitehouse. D. Whitcomb, T & Wilkinson, J. 2009, Sīrāf: history, topography and environment. The British Institute of Persian Studies Archaeological Monographs Series I. Oxbow: Oxford.
68- Williamson, A. 1972, Persian Gulf commerce in the Sasanian period and the first two centuries of Islam, Bastan Shenasi va Honar-e Iran, Vol 9-10: pp 142-151.
69- Williamson, A. 1974, Harvard archaeological survey in Oman, 1973: Sohar and the sea trade of Oman in the 10th Century, Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies, Vol4, pp78-96.