Some of these may have been already posted, some of them I may have even seen posted here before going on hunting myself, but FWIW here you are...
HALL, Jonathan M. Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity. 1997
ROLLER, Duane W. Ancient Geography: the Discovery of the World in Classical Greece and Rome. 2015
ROLLER, Duane W. The World of Juba II and Kleopatra Selene. 2003
TAYLOR, Michael J. “Etruscan Identity and Service in the Roman Army 300–100 B.C”. American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 121, No. 2. 2017
TAYLOR, Michael. “Visual Evidence for Roman Infantry Tactics”. MAAR 59/60 2015
In terms of primary sources relate to the Indo-Greeks, the Questions of King Milinda and the Yuga Purana are among the only works about their interactions with the natives of the subcontinent written from an Indian perspective.
Mitchner's translation of the Yuga Purana is readily available through archive.org, however the most current academic translation of the Questions of King Milinda, done by Horner, is less so.
Additionally I am surprised that that Arthashastra is not listed, as while it may have been finalized during the 3rd century it contains crucile information on how the governments of India may have functioned around the time period of EB.
Migration und Adaption. Ein differenziertes Modell zur Erklärung der latènezeitlichen Przeworsk Funde in Deutschland (Migration and adaptation. A differentiated model to explain the LaTène-like Przeworsk finds in Germany) https://www.academia.edu/7324167/Mig...in_Deutschland
Was wondering if anybody here had access toRandall Hixenbaugh, Ancient Greek Helmets: A Complete Guide and Catalog (2019)? Might be interesting for people here as well, though it is awfully expensive and the bloody Bavarian State Library doesn't own a copy yet... So if anybody has had the chance to look at it, please let me know if it's even worth considering to buy it :)
There is also a short preview onine from some yars back: http://hixenbaugh.net/otherfiles/Ancient%20Greek%20Helmets.PDF
The Arsacid Empire, in T. Daryaee, King of the Seven Climes A History of the Ancient Iran World (3000 BC – 651 CE), Jordan Center for Persian Studies at the University of California, Irvine, 2017, pp. 125-153
September 24, 2019, 08:01 AM
tomySVK
Re: Europa Barbarorum Bibliography
Rome's Third Samnite War, 298-290 BC: The Last Stand of the Linen Legion (Mike Roberts, Pen & Sword Books, 2020)
As far as I know, most names have been reconstructed using the comparative method and taking Ossetian as the source language. If you want to know more about what that actually means you can look at Lyle Campbell's Historical Linguistics, although it quite a long read.
For Ossetian and Scythian, Vasilij Abaev's Grammatical Sketch of Ossetian and Harold Bailey's Dictionary of Khotan Saka (i.e.: the only Scythian language attested in scriptures) come to mind. Admittedly, not an easy read if you never studied linguistics.
As for Scythian religious practices, most of what we know comes from the Histories of Herodotus - can't remember what book, sorry. Alternatively, Georges Dumezil's Stories of the Scythians, which draws from the Nart Sagas, Ossetian national legends and tales. I don't know if it's been translated into English, though. There's also a bit on religion in Ellis Minns's Scythians and Greeks.
(Quoted from another thread.)
September 28, 2019, 01:12 PM
Mouzafphaerre
Re: Europa Barbarorum Bibliography
COLARUSSO, John (2002). Nart Sagas from the Caucassus. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.
October 19, 2019, 09:24 AM
tomySVK
Re: Europa Barbarorum Bibliography
Rome and Parthia: Empires at War: Ventidius, Antony and the Second Romano-Parthian War, 40-20 BC (Gareth C Sampson, Pen & Sword Books, 2020)
[...] if you are interested on Emporion, maybe you would like to read this paper (fortunately it's in English). It speaks about the influence of Emporion over the neighbouring peoples, it also speaks about the potential existence of a synecism process between Greeks and Iberians, the Greek identity in those lands, the influenced Iberian elite, etc.
-Greeks and non-Greeks in the City of Emporion and the Construction of Their Different Identities: