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About Statistics Completeness Sources
Sources · book · neutral-academic

The Caucasus: An Introduction

Thomas de Waal, 2010 · Oxford University Press

Awaiting review Compiled with the support of AI tooling. This page still needs academic revision against the primary sources. Specific claims, page-number locators, edition descriptions, and quoted passages may require correction. Why this disclosure · File a correction

Cited by events (3)

  • Murder of Lt. Gurgen Margaryan in Budapest 2004
  • Hungarian extradition and Azerbaijani pardon of Safarov 2012
  • Signing of the Zurich Protocols 2009

Inline citations (3)

Every paragraph across the atlas where this source is cited inline. Each card groups all citations on a single page; the quoted text is the claim that rests on this source.

  • Event March Days, Baku 3 cites
    1. Over the following four to five days ARF detachments operating notionally under Soviet command moved through the Muslim quarters and committed mass killings of civilians.
      Ch. 2 march-days-civilian-killings
    2. Casualty estimates range from c. 3,000 (Soviet/contemporaneous) to 12,000 (Azerbaijani official).
      Ch. 2 contested march-days-toll
    3. de Waal and the Kazemzadeh tradition place the figure at 3,000–10,000.
      Ch. 2 march-days-de-waal-range

Link

  • global.oup.com/academic/product/the-caucasus-9780… live
  • Wayback snapshot · 2026-05-09 archived

Cited on figure pages

  • Mehriban Aliyeva

Cited on policy pages

  • Turkish closure of the border with Armenia (1993–)
  • Crossroads of Peace (Armenia)

Cited together with

  • Tadeusz Swietochowski ×2
  • Audrey L. Altstadt ×2
  • Firuz Kazemzadeh ×2
Atlas of the South Caucasus, 1813 to 2026. A working draft. Errors and omissions are mine. by David Wicker · sister project: palestine.wicker.life
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