Rujukan Nana Asma'u

  1. David Westerlund wrote: "She continued to be a source of inspiration to the present day."
    Mary Wren Bivins. Telling Stories, Making Histories: Women, Words and Islam in Nineteenth-Century Hausaland and the Sokoto Caliphate. London: Heinemaan, 2007.
  2. Boyd, Jean (1989). The Caliph's Sister: Nana Asma'u 1793–1865: Teacher, Poet and Islamic Leader. Totowa NJ: Frank Cass & Co. Ltd. ISBN 0-7146-4067-0
  3. Excerpt from Mack, Beverly B., and Jean Boyd, One Woman’s Jihad: Nana Asma’u, Scholar and Scribe. Includes two translated poems of Nana Asma'u.
  4. Jean Boyd and Murray Last quote the Algerian scholar Ismael Hamet writing for a French audience in 1898, lamenting the "Ligues Feministes d'Europe" did not know of Nana Asma'u's legacy. See "The Role of Women as 'Agents Religieux' in Sokoto", p. 283.