The military strength figures in this article have been reduced by an order of magnitude from those reported in the chronicles, following G.E. Harvey's and Victor Lieberman's analyses of Burmese chronicles' military strength figures in general.[note 2]
^See (Harvey 1925: 333–335)'s "Numerical Note". (Lieberman 2014: 98) writing on the First Toungoo period concurs: "Military mobilizations were probably more of a boast than a realistic estimate. Modern industrial states have difficulty placing 10% of their people under arms."
^ abcdUnless otherwise stated, the military mobilization figures in this article are reduced by an order of magnitude from those reported in the royal chronicles, per G.E. Harvey's analysis in his History of Burma (1925) in the section Numerical Note (pp. 333–335).
Maha Yazawin, Hmannan: 5 regiments (60,000 troops, 500 war boats, 200 armored war boats, 200 cargo boats)[4][6]
Yazawin Thit: 6 regiments (60,000 troops, 500 war boats, 200 armored war boats, 200 cargo boats); the sixth regiment was commanded by King Thihathu himself.[5]
However, the Maha Yazawin and Hmannan chronicles say King Thihathu came down with a force only after the terms of the peace treaty were already agreed upon.[4][6]