MALAZGİRT ZAFERİ SONRASI MALAZGİRT VE AHLAT MERVANİLER'DEN ALINARAK RESMEN SELÇUKLULARA DEVREDİLİR (MANZIKERT 1071, The breaking of Byzantium.DAVID NICOLLE)
''Malazgirt ve Ahlat daha sonra resmen Mervani emirliğinden
Selçuklu Sultanlığı'na devredildi. Bunlar Selçukluların tek anlık toprak kazanımlarıydı ancak Sultan'ın stratejik hakimiyetini garantilediler (s.89)''
Haleb'in Mirdasi emiri Mahmud Sultan'ın seferine katılmadı.
Alparslan'ın ordusu 30000 kişiden oluşuyordu. İbn Qalansi ise 40000 sayısını verir.
Romanos ile birlikte kalan Bizans asker sayısı 20000 Aşiret liderleri Artuq, Saltuq, Mengücük, Daniúsmand, Çavlı and Çavuldur,
SELÇUKLU KOMUTANLARI
Sanduq al-Turki (s.62)Türkmen commanders, Malik Muhammad Danişmand (s.63)
30,000 men, including up to 15,000 elite cavalry upon whom the outcome would ultimately depend (49)
Mahmud, the Mirdasid amir of Aleppo, did not accompany the Saljuq Sultan on this campaign (49)
of Byzantine troops remaining with Emperor Romanos were fewer than those who had been sent to Ahlat. If that is correct, they would probably have been around 20,000 men, perhaps excluding the Oghuz and other Turkish mercenaries, (s.65)
''Manzikert and Ahlat were then formally transferred from the Marwanid amirate to the Saljuq Sultanate. These were the Saljuqs’ only immediate territorial gains but they ensured the Sultan’s strategic domination ''(MANZIKERT 1071, The breaking of Byzantium, DAVID NICOLLE, s.89)
tribal leaders as Artuq, Saltuq, Mengücük, Daniúsmand, Çavlı and Çavuldur. (s.52)
Kutalmiú’ sons Sulayman and Mansur (s.54)
KONU HAKKINDA DAVID NICOLLE TARAFINDAN İNCELENEN KAYNAKLAR:
The Muslim chronicler al-Bundari
Michael Attaleiates reports
The chronicler Nikephoros Bryennios
Nikephos Bryennios the Younger,
Sadr al-Din al-Husayni,
Bar Hebraeus
Nishapuri, in his Saljuqnama epic verse history of the Saljuqs
Chronicle of Mayyafariqin by Ibn al-Azraq al-Fariqi
Sibt al-Jawzi
Andalusian chronicler Al-Turtushi
Rashid al-Din
Ibn al-’Adim.
Ibn al-Qalanisi
Aristakes
The ‘Abbasid envoy Ibn al-Muhallaban
southern Italian poet William of Apulia in his biography of the Norman ruler Robert Guiscard