When more than 1,300 Cossack Cavalry unleashed a piercing howl, appearing at the rear flank of the Persian Holy War Knight Order, the outcome of the battle was already determined.
The Persian Heavy Cavalry, just having endured two rounds of all-out charges, were now exhausted, both men and horses spent, and caught off guard by the sudden assault. They were split into several groups with barely any resistance, and each fled for their lives.
By the afternoon of the next day, the Persian Army, trapped on the northern side of the Kerchanski Hills and surrounded from all sides after losing command, finally began to surrender.
Aga Muhammad had, in the early hours of dawn, already commanded the main force to retreat.
That night, the whole city of Tbilisi celebrated wildly, rejoicing that they, together with the Tsar's army, had repelled the savage Persians.
