Tham khảo Żupan

  1. Stamerov, K. (1986). History of Ukrainian Costume From the Scythian Period to the Late 17th Century. Bayda Books. ISBN 9780908480166. The entire outer men's dress of the Ukrainian populace of the 15th-17th centuries can be divided into the following groups: a) basic, coat-like, long-sleeved, unfastenable (svyta, kaplan, zhupan)
  2. Snodgrass, Mary Ellen (2015). World Clothing and Fashion An Encyclopedia of History, Culture, and Social Influence. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781317451679. From the early 1500s, Polish, Ukrainian, and Hungarian-Jewish noblemen and hussars (cavalry) embraced the zupan, a silk, damask, or brocade caftan that supplied mittens at the ends of sleeves.
  3. Symonolewicz, Konstantin Symmons (2011). "The Polish Review". The Polish Review. Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in America.He printed several seventeenth century pictures and drawings of Cossacks, in fact, wearing such breeches and noted the similarity of the Rider's kuchma and zhupan to those of the Ukrainian Cossack Hetman
  4. N. Helbig, Adriana (2014). Hip Hop Ukraine Music, Race, and African Migration. Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253012081. When Chornobryvtsi performs its repertoire live, however, members wear traditional Ukrainian outfits that combine elements of hip hop and kozak culture, including the zhupan (overcoat) and sharavary (long flowing pants).
  5. Turnau I. (1994) European occupational dress from the fourteenth to the eighteenth century, translated by Izabela Szymańska. Institute of the Archaeology and Ethnology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw. ISBN 83-85463-26-7