Andrea 2020, pp. 338–339 (quoted on Andrew Holt's blog). Andrea, Alfred J., ed. (2020). The Medieval Record: Sources of Medieval History (2nd rev. ed.). Hackett.
Vercamer 2021, p. 238. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, p. 236. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, p. 254. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, pp. 238–239. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, p. 252. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Rachetta 2020, pp. 254–255. Rachetta, Maria Theresa (2020). "Paris 1244: The Jews, the Christians, and the Tartars: The Livre of Moses ben Abraham, a Little-Known Case of Jewish Apologetics in Medieval French". Medium Ævum. 89 (2): 244–266. doi:10.2307/27089790. JSTOR27089790.
Vercamer 2021, pp. 233, 254. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, pp. 249–250. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, p. 250. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, p. 250n. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, pp. 254–255. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Tattersall 1988, p. 244. Tattersall, Jill (1988). "Anthropophagi and Eaters of Raw Flesh in French Literature of the Crusade Period: Myth, Tradition and Reality". Medium Ævum. 57 (2): 240–253. doi:10.2307/43629210. JSTOR43629210.
Vercamer 2021, pp. 251–252. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, p. 251. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, pp. 239 n44 and 251. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, p. 250: multi fratres Predicatores et Minores ... signo crucis per totam fere Teuthoniam clericos et laicos adversus predictos barbaros armaverunt. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Vercamer 2021, pp. 252–253. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Kosi 2018, p. 112. Kosi, Miha (2018). "The Fifth Crusade and its Aftermath: Crusading in the Southeast of the Holy Roman Empire in the First Decades of the Thirteenth Century". Crusades. 17: 91–113. doi:10.1080/28327861.2018.12220508.
Vercamer 2021, p. 253. Vercamer, Grischa (2021). "The Mongol Invasion in the Year 1241—Reactions among European Rulers and Consequences for East Central European Principalities". Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung. 70 (2): 227–262. doi:10.25627/202170210926.
Rachetta 2020, pp. 254–255. Rachetta, Maria Theresa (2020). "Paris 1244: The Jews, the Christians, and the Tartars: The Livre of Moses ben Abraham, a Little-Known Case of Jewish Apologetics in Medieval French". Medium Ævum. 89 (2): 244–266. doi:10.2307/27089790. JSTOR27089790.
Tattersall 1988, p. 244. Tattersall, Jill (1988). "Anthropophagi and Eaters of Raw Flesh in French Literature of the Crusade Period: Myth, Tradition and Reality". Medium Ævum. 57 (2): 240–253. doi:10.2307/43629210. JSTOR43629210.
Antonín Boček [cs] forged the charters for his Codex diplomaticus et epistolaris Moraviae, published at Olomouc in 1841.[36][37] These charters show damage to the monasteries of Hradisko, Rajhrad and Doubravník and the cities of Brno, Bruntál, Benešov, Litovel, Jevíčko and Uničov.[36] Jackson was taken in by these forgeries[36] and mentions the sacks of Litovel, Bruntál and Jevíčko and the sieges of Brno, Olomouc and Uničov.[35] Chambers, too, refers to the depopulation of Moravian towns that were resettled by German immigrants and received economic privileges.[38]