Citations:Transylvanian Saxon


 * 2002, Paul Robert Magocsi, Historical Atlas of Central Europe (University of Toronto Press, ISBN 9780802084866), page 1772:
 * Germans living beyond contiguous German ethnolinguistic territory were often referred to by regional names: Baltic, Polish, Volhynian, Black Sea, and Bessarabian Germans in the Russian Empire; Gottschee, Galician, and Bukovinian Germans in the Austrian half of the Habsburg Empire; Zipser Germans, Sathmar Germans, Transylvanian Saxons, and Danube Swabians in the Hungarian Kingdom; and the Dobruja Germans in Romania. Other groupings were also frequently used ...
 * 2008, Charles W. Ingrao, Franz A. J. Szabo, The Germans and the East (Purdue University Press, ISBN 9781557534439), page 4:
 * In the subsequent two centuries important German-language enclaves were created in Transylvania (Transylvanian Saxons) and in Szepes County in northern Hungary (Zipser Germans)[.]