^Smith 2001,第228頁 harvnb模板錯誤: 無指向目標: CITEREFSmith2001 (幫助): "The results of the March events were immediate and total for the Musavat. Several hundreds of its members were killed in the fighting; up to 12,000 Muslim civilians perished; thousands of others fled Baku in a mass exodus."
^New Republics in the Caucasus. The New York Times Current History. March 1920, 11 (2): 492.
^ 7.07.1De Waal, Thomas. The Caucasus: An Introduction. Oxford University Press. 2010: 62. ISBN 978-0-19-539976-9. In the so called March Days of 1918, Baku descended into a mini-civil war, after the Bolsheviks declared war on Musavat Party and then stood by as Dashnak militias rampaged through the city, killing Azerbaijanis indiscriminately
^Shahumyan, Stepan. Letters 1896–1918. Yerevan: State Publishing House of Armenia. 1959: 63–67. On one side were fighting the Soviet Red Guard; the Red International Army, recently organized by us; the Red Fleet, which we had succeeded in reorganizing in a short time; and Armenian national units. On the other side the Muslim Savage Division in which there were quite a few Russian officers, and bands of armed Muslims, led by the Musavat Party... For us the results of the battle were brilliant. The destruction of the enemy was complete... More than three thousand were killed on both sides
^Croissant, Michael. The Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict: causes and implications. Greenwood Publishing Group. 1998: 14. ISBN 0-275-96241-5. The oil-rich city of Baku had emerged as a stronghold of Bolshevism shortly after the October Russian Revolution, and friction between the Bolsheviks and the pan-Turkic Musavat party sparked a brief civil war in March 1918