Alexander Mikaberidze, Miraculous Victory:’ Battle of Didgori, 1121, Published: May 14, 2008;" The size of the Muslim army is still a matter of debate with numbers ranging from a fantastic 800,000 men (“Bella Antiochena”, Galterii Cancelarii), 600,000 Turks (Matthew of Edessa) to 400,000 (Smbat Sparapet’s Chronicle) while the estimates of modern Georgian historians vary between 100,000–250,000 men."[1]Archived 2017-07-18 at the Wayback Machine
(in Georgian) The Georgian Chronicles about the Cuman – Kipchak resettlement in Georgia at the TITUS ProjectArchived 2020-03-06 at the Wayback Machine.
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Alexander Mikaberidze, Miraculous Victory:’ Battle of Didgori, 1121, Published: May 14, 2008;" The size of the Muslim army is still a matter of debate with numbers ranging from a fantastic 800,000 men (“Bella Antiochena”, Galterii Cancelarii), 600,000 Turks (Matthew of Edessa) to 400,000 (Smbat Sparapet’s Chronicle) while the estimates of modern Georgian historians vary between 100,000–250,000 men."[1]Archived 2017-07-18 at the Wayback Machine
(in Georgian) The Georgian Chronicles about the Cuman – Kipchak resettlement in Georgia at the TITUS ProjectArchived 2020-03-06 at the Wayback Machine.