Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
smm
Birffi
l^wiliMffirll BiHf3Wroi
UNIV. or
TORONTO
1
.
-v
BULLETIN
OF
BERNARD QUARITCH
ii
GRAFTON STREET,
NEW BOND
STREET, LONDON, W.
BULLETIN
OF
EDITED BY
THE LIBRARIAN
VOLUME
OCTOBER 1914
DECEMBER
1915
THE UNIVERSITY PRESS LONDON: LONGMANS, GREEN & CO., AND BERNARD QUARITCH NEW YORK, BOMBAY, CALCUTTA, MADRAS: LONGMANS, GREEN & CO.
MANCHESTER:
1914-1915
CONTENTS.
Foreword
............
News
.
PAGE
1
2, 99,
207, 337
275, 421
.155,
Learned Societies
in
...
.
66
Steps towards the Reconstruction of the Library of the University of Louvain ; by the Editor 145, 251, 380
Conway
Essen
Harris
(R. S.).
The Youth
of Vergil
1'Universite de
212
(L.
(J.
van
der).
Louvain
139
Rendel).
of Solomon.
(Facsimile)
...
in
48
114
The Origin
"
:
Mingana (Alphonse). An important old Turki MS. of the Kuran the John Rylands Library
Notes upon some of the Kuranic MSS.
Library
in
*
.
. .
129
240
Peake
(A. S.).
New Testament
Thumb
Tout
(Albert).
51
his Ancestry
...
.
.
22
(T. F.).
(Facsimiles)
348
THE TRUSTEES, GOVERNORS, AND PRINCIPAL OFFICERS OF THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY.
TRUSTEES.
WILLIAM CARNELLEY. The RIGHT HON. LORD COZENS-HARDY OF LETHE RINGSETT,
P.C.
LINNELL.
LL.D.
Lrrr.D., LL.D.
WILLIAM CARNELLEY.
LL.D.
M.A.
SIR ALFRED
HOPKINSON,
M.A.
K.C., B.C.L.,
LL.D.
L. E.
HENRY PLUMMER, J.P. SIR THOMAS T. SHANN, J.P. THOMAS F. TOUT, M.A., F.B.A. CHARLES E. VAUGHAN, M.A., Lrrr.D.
KASTNER,
The REV.
D.D.
The REV. F. J. POWICKE, M.A., PH.D. J. T. MARSHALL, M.A., D.D. The REV. J. E. ROBERTS, M.A., B.D. JAMES HOPE MOULTON, The RT. REV. BISHOP J. E. WELLDON,
D.D.
LEWIS PATON,
M.A.
The
RIGHT
P.C.
HON.
HARDY OF
The RT. REV. The
COLN, D.D.
HONORARY GOVERNORS.t LORD COZENS- CANON H. D. RAWNSLEY, M.A. LETHERINGSETT, SIR A. W. WARD, Lirr.D., LL.D. The LORD MAYOR OF MANCHESTER. BISHOP OF LIN- The MAYOR OF SALFORD. SIR WILLIAM VAUDREY, J.P.
SIR
SIR
J.P.,
LL.D.
WILLIAM CARNELLEY.
M.A.
A SSISTANT-SECRETARY.
The Representative and Co-optative Governors constitute the Council. t Honorary Governors are not Members of the Council.
vii
MANCHESTER
VOL.
2
OCTOBER,
1914
"
No.
WITH
tinued
of other
Bulletin of
the John
Rylands Library
is
resumed
after a
somewhat
Appearing first in 1 903 it was conlengthened period of suspension. annual issues until 1 908, when by reason of the exigencies by
pressure of the
was found necessary to suspend publication until the more urgent claims of the library had been relieved. Such however has been the experience of the intervening years that any hope of relief which we may have entertained has been
work
it
completely dispelled, yet in consequence of the repeated inquiries for " the for some such Bulletin,'* which have revealed the need
medium
of
library
interested in
welfare,
it
will
be noticed that the format has been changed, from the volume to the handier octavo size of the present
changes in the arrangement of the contents have been decided upon, with the object of increasing its usefulness. It may not be out of place to remind readers that the primary " " Bulletin is to make clear to students in Manchester purpose of the and elsewhere the possibilities of usefulness which such a offers.
library
lists
of the
most impor-
one prepared by
Professor Peake, which appears in the present issue ; of bibliographical " notes upon any Odes of specially noteworthy addition, such as the " Solomon of occasional articles on the collections and outspecial
;
is
so rich
and
its
resources better
known.
otherwise be neglected, but directly tend to the advancement of knowledge, cannot be doubted.
work
which has
OF TUP
LIBRARY.
elapsed
since
it
the
publication
of
the
last
issue
of
the
POLICY
not be out of place in the first instance to recall the considerations which have led to the present
Bulletin,"
"
may
policy of
it
has
been recognized that while it is the primary duty of the authorities carefully to preserve the books and manuscripts entrusted to their care,
yet the real importance of such collections rests not
or the rarity of the
works
of
which the
collections are
upon
It
was
literary treasures
grimage
for those
should cause the library to become a place of pilwho have given themselves to the service of learning,
first
it
has
at
the
same time an
philology,
bibliography,
and with
this
end
in
students
and scholars
be attracted, not merely by the library's treasures, but also by the facilities which it offers for study and research.
Needless to say there are
still
many
is
lacunae
of
number.
This, however,
is
not surprising
is
when
the comparatively
recalled.
development, very material assistance has been rendered by readers, whose suggestions, which are invited and welcomed, receive careful and sympathetic consideration, with the result
work
of
that
during the fourteen years that have elapsed since the library
LIBRARY NOTES
opened
works
its
AND NEWS
extreme rarity or of
cause for great satisfaction in the fact that one of the "outstanding features of the use made of the library during UNMADE the period under review is the large and increasing amount LIBRARY.
There
of original research
from our
own
universities,
Every encouragement
seating capacity of the library has been taxed at times to the point of
and the need, if the present standard of service maintained, for more adequate accommodation, has become
congestion,
ingly apparent.
is
to
be
increas-
With a view not only of providing for this necessary extension of the present buildings, but also of creating for the build- BU LDING ings an island site, in order to minimize, as far as posi
sible,
the risk of
fire
which the
the rear threatened, the Governors, for several years past, have been
acquiring land at the rear
of,
and immediately
After careful consideration of the most pressing needs, the archiwas asked to prepare sketch plans for an
extension which
was
to
existing structure,
and
to
for for for
be
which provision should be made it, an additional reading room, a manuscript room, a series of rooms administrative work, common rooms for the staff, and stack rooms
in
communication with
book
storage.
though admirable from the architectural point of view, and possessing many other excellent qualities, does not Therefore, fully meet the requirements of a modern research library.
original
The
building,
in deciding
of the
new
portion,
been placed upon the actual experience of the past years which have furnished many object lessons with the result years that every part of the extension has been designed to meet some
reliance has
particular need.
The
the
way
as to allow
first
work
be executed in two
in
section
were elaborated,
which provision
made
receiving
and accession
secretarial room binding room where the preparation of work for the binder and the checking of such work upon its return may be carried out under proper conditions, also where repairs to
room
may be
;
publications
room
cataloguing
[staff
part
of the
cataloguing
may
where they will be surrounded by their most necessary tools senior and junior common rooms for the staff a workroom for the librarian and a number of stack rooms for book storage.
; ;
Building operations were commenced in the early part of last year, and it is expected that the first section of the extension will be
ready
shelf
for occupation
final
The
portion
accommodation
for
half
reading room and a manuscript room, which will be reserved for special research, the aim being to provide every reasonable facility for
such work, including freedom from the distractions which are unavoidable in the more public rooms of the library.
will
be provided under
this
scheme
is
end
A photographic
has been installed in the library, and placed in charge of PHOTOSTUDIO. a thoroughly qualified assistant. By this means it has been
possible to render valuable assistance to scholars both at
home and
abroad by furnishing them with photographed facsimiles of pages from any of our rarer printed books and manuscripts. Again and again,
in the case of requests for transcripts
and collations of passages from has been found possible, at very small cost to text, the library, to provide rotograph photographs of the passages, which were at once more trustworthy and more acceptable than the best
some important
it
handmade
transcript
could
possibly be.
is
Public interest in the library has been fostered in a variety of Each session, since PUBLIC ways, with most encouraging results.
the year 1900, a series of public lectures has been arranged,
LECTURES.
who gladly including the names of scholars of the highest eminence, the subjects of which they are the acknowcontribute lectures upon
ledged authorities.
On these
room
is
invariably
The
will give
following syllabus of lectures arranged for the ensuing session some idea of the character of this part of the library's work :
EVENING LECTURES
Wednesday, 14th October, 1914.
Testament."
Biblical
(7.30 p.m.).
"
How
to
Study the
New
of
By Arthur
list
S.
Peake,
M.A., D.D.,
Professor
Exegesis in
will
the Victoria
University of
Manchester.
(A
brief reading
be printed
Wednesday, 11th November, 1914. "Babylonian Law and the Mosaic Code." By Canon C. H. W. Johns, M.A., LittD.,
Master
of St. Catharine's College,
Cambridge.
Wednesday, 9th December, 1914. "The Youth of Vergil." By R. Seymour Conway, M.A., Litt.D., Professor of Latin and
Indo-European Philology in the Victoria University of Manchester. Mediaeval Burglary." Wednesday, 20th January, 1915.
"A
By Thomas
F. Tout,
Fraser Professor of
Mediaeval and Ecclesiastical History in the Victoria University of Manchester. " Words and their Story." Wednesday, 10th February, 1915.
D.Litt.,
Greenwood
Professor
of
Hellenistic
University of Manchester.
"
Dawn
Elliot
of Civilization."
By G.
Smith,
Professor of
Anatomy
in the Victoria
University of
"World
Literature
the
New
Study
of
Literature."
By
Richard G. Moulton,
Interpretation in
M.A., Ph.D.,
Friday,
Professor of Literary
Theory and
30th
April,
1915.
"World
Literature:
the
Five
World
Bibles."
By
1914.
trated
with Lantern
D.Utt., Formerly Lecturer in Egyptology in the Victoria University of Manchester. "The Origin of the Cult of Tuesday, 5th January, 1915.
By James Rendel Harris, M.A., Litt.D., LL.D., Dionysos." Director of Studies at the Woodbrooke Settlement, Birmingham.
etc.,
The
and each
this fact,
is
made
by
directing
The
is
often enlist
of
Another department
success
is
f
work which has met with encouraging represented by the bibliographical and other TIONSTO
11-1
If
organized parties of students from the training colleges, technical, secondary, and other schools in Manchester and the neighbouring towns.
a rule, the demonstration deals with the author or subject, sometimes a period of history or of literature, which has been the
As
theme
of class
Such
topics as
"
'
nings of Literature,"
The Beginnings of Printing," " " " Revival of Learning," Caxton," Aldus," Chaucer," Ages," " " " Milton," have each in turn been Dante," and Shakespeare,"
"
The
Experience has taught us that nothing will help a student to appreciate the reality underlying the great
like
names
of literature or history
a personal introduction to the original documentary sources, the autograph material, the original editions of their works, and to the
most authoritative works bearing upon the subject. In this way a sense of personal acquaintance with the writers, or a vivid impression
'
which not only deepens their interest in but stimulates an interest in the many valuable
library contains,
which the
and
lays
future study.
in
a series of glass
T
Main
tunity of inspecting
library.
some
the
the
In this
way
"
"
His-
Middle Ages," the Manuscripts tory " Earliest English Classics," and other subOriginal Editions of the jects have been illustrated to the evident enjoyment of a large number
of Printing,"
"
the
organized parties from the elementary and secondary schools, and with the gratifying result that in a number of cases which have been brought to our knowledge, the interest of the
of
visitors,
including
become a regular
reader.
customary to issue
of
in
and con-
taining
lists
works
for the
we
In the accompanying list of donors to the library during 1913-14 have unmistakable evidence of the constantly increasing CIFT5 T0
and
its
work.
In the
name
Governors
we
and
of assuring
them
The Rev. Dr. W. F. Adeney. The Rev. W. C. Atkinson. The Rev. Dr. W. E. Beet.
Mr. and Mrs. Bentham.
|The Rev. E. Hampden Cook. The Rt. Hon. The Earl of Crawj
ford
J.
and Balcarres.
Esq.
H. Crompton,
Marco
Besso, Esq.
Dr. E. Crous.
Professor Dr.
W.
K. Bixby, Esq.
A. Deissmann.
Livingstone.
Bodley's Librarian.
Messrs. E.
Dood and
Miss Broadbent.
H.
Dring, Esq.
R.
J.
Broughton, Esq.
A.
Feuillerat.
Dr. Burggraef.
Miss
Dr.
W. W.
Cannon, Esq.
J.
Professor
Capart.
S. Gaselee, Esq.
The Rev. Dr. F. J. Powicke. A. Gerhard. E. J. W. Gibb Edgar Prestage, Esq. Trustees of The Rev. G. E. Rees. Memorial.
Professor Dr. G.
Haworth, Esq.
Professor Dr.
A. Hebbelynck.
F. Sachse, Esq.
A.
Slater.
Dr.
Henry Jordan,
Koehler.
Trustees.
Esq.
Messrs.
H. O. Sommer. H. Sotheran
&
Co.
Miss E. C. Knappert.
Dr.
W.
The Laing
The
Sir
Monsieur P. Le Verdier.
Librarian.
Charles
W.
Sutton, Esq.
H.
Taylor, Esq.
G. Thomas, Esq.
H. Yates Thompson,
Esq.
Dr. Paget Toynbee. Guthrie Vine, Esq. Mouilpied. Dr. J. H. G. Wainwright, Esq.
J.
W.
V.
J.
S.
W.
Partington, Esq.
Miss
Isabelle
Mary
Phibbs.
T.
J.
Wise, Esq.
de Catalunya.
Berlin.
Bonn.
Society.
Bryn
Mawr
Cambridge.
Carnegie
St. John's
College Library.
Endowment
Carnegie Foundation.
Bibliothek.
Downside Abbey
Dublin.
Dublin.
Durham
Glasgow University
Groningen.
Halifax.
Library.
Rijks-Universiteitbibliothek.
Bankfield
Museum.
Lancashire and Cheshire Association of Baptist Churches Bibliothek der Rijks-Universiteit. Leyden.
Lisbon.
London.
London. London.
London.
Jews' College.
London.
London.
Manchester.
Manchester.
Library.
Manchester.
Manchester.
New New
York Public
York.
Library.
10
Princetown Seminary.
Saint
Andrews
University Library.
Hunter Archaeological
Society.
Societe Asiatique.
Kongelige Bibliotheket.
Kaiserl. Universitats-
und Landes-Bibliothek.
Vienna.
K.K. Univ.
Bibliothek.
Society.
Washington University Library, St. Louis, Mo. Clark University Library. Worcester, Mass.
Yale University Library.
" " Since the publication of the last issue of the Bulletin a number of interesting catalogues and other publications have made " their appearance. The most important is the CATALOGUE ANDUOTHER
OF THE DEMOTIC PAPYRI IN THE JOHN RYLANDS TIONS LIBRARY. With facsimiles and complete translations. By F. LL.
GRIFFITH, M.A." 3 vols. 4to. (Price 3 guineas.) This was published in 909, after about ten years of persistent work on the part of Mr. Griffith. It is something more than a
1
CA "
catalogue, since
it
whole
of the
notes,
and a glossary
of
Demotic, representing,
to
in the estima-
of
the
study of
Demotic
hitherto published.
LIBRARY NOTES
This was followed
in the
.
AND NEWS
"
I
guinea.)
In this also
many
reproduced
The
any
in
many
manuscripts of great theological and historical interest. " CATALOGUE OF In 1 9 1 1 appeared the first volume of the
.
.
GREEK
PAPYRI
S.
."
Volume
4to.
1-61); by Arthur
texts are
Hunt,
D.Litt.
(Price
guinea.)
The
reproduced
comprise many interesting Biblical, liturgical, and classical papyri, ranging from the third century B.C. to the sixth Included are probably the earliest known text of the century A.D. " Nicene Creed," and one of the earliest known vellum codices, con" Odyssey," possibly of the taining a considerable fragment of the
in extenso, and
third century A.D.
The series of reprints, which is to be known as RVLANDS FACSIMILES," has been undertaken, with
object or rendenng
"
THE JOHN
RYLANDS
FACSIMILES.
more readily
vi
-11
accessible to students
means
some
of
by the more
interesting
and important
of the library,
of the rarer
and
and
loss to scholarship
and
when
method
of reproduction.
The volumes
selected,
works
preceded by bibliographical introductions. Three volumes have been issued, and are briefly described in the following paragraphs, whilst two others are in an advanced state of
preparation.
1.
PROPOSITIO
JOHANNIS
RUSSELL,
.
printed
by
William
With an
introduction
3s.
by
6d.
%*
of
This
"
proposition
"
is
an
oration,
pronounced by John
on the
investiture of Charles,
Duke
Burgundy, with the Order of the Garter, in February, 1469, at The tract consists of four printed leaves, without title-page, Ghent.
12
printer's
which
known
as Caxton's type
"
Bruges or at Westminster has yet to be determined. For many years the copy now in the John Rylands Library
considered to be unique.
Indeed, until the year
1
was
807
it
lay buried
which
Holkam
2.
A BoOKE IN
called
ENGLYSH METRE,
of the
.
Great Marchaunt
1
"
introduction
563.
man
an
th
M.A.
and remarks
on the vocabulary and dialect, with a glossary by Henry 5s. net. C. Wyld, M.A., 1910. 4to, pp. xxxviii, 16.
%* The
copy
of
tract here
reproduced
is
a quaint
little
instructing the
young
in the
names
and
are
common
objects of daily
life
in their
own
tongue.
The
lists
rhymed, and therefore easy to commit to memory, and they are pervaded by a certain vein of humour.
3.
LlTIL
BoKE
...
made by
the
. . .
...
Bisshop of Arusiens.
introduction
With an
by
1910.
5s. net.
%* Of
this
tract,
consisting
of
nine leaves,
written by
Benedict Kanuti, or Knutsson, Bishop of Vasteras, three separate editions are known, but only one copy of each, and an odd leaf are
known
to
have survived.
is
There
date, or
no indication
in
any edition
name
one of the
first
five
types employed
in
city of
London,
at the time
at the
most active
LIBRARY NOTES
ALIGHIERI [with
of
list
AND NEWS
13
Dante].
of
1909.
8vo, pp.
this
is
xii,
55.
The
exhibition
which
a descriptive
was
arranged, primarily, in connexion with the visit to the library of the members of the Manchester Dante Society, with the object of revealing to
of material
which
is
study of Dante,
may
paragraphs from the preface, in which the scope and character of the
collection are described.
The
library
contains
five
manuscripts
and upwards
of
6000
The nucleus of printed volumes and pamphlets relating to Dante. this collection, including the rarest and the most important of the These have early editions, formed part of the Althorp Library.
been added to from time to time, by the purchase of other groups of copies, together with a considerable collection of the modern literature of the subject.
the five manuscripts the three most important are (1) a " " Canzoni written in the latter part of the fourteenth copy of the
:
Of
is
letters
Dante
Commedia written in 1416, containing a number of variants from the common text, made by B. Landi de Landis, of Prato, of whom nothing is known (3)
and
of his inamorata
"
Divina
"
a "
Divina Commedia," with the sixteenth-century copy of the " Credo and other poems at the end, which at one time was in the
"
The
"
printed
editions
include
the
three
earliest
folios
of
the
in the
at
Foligno,
Mantua, and
tion
is
The
the fourth
Naples between the years 473 and 475. Of this edition not more than three or four copies are known to have survived, three of which are already locked up in national or public
Francesco del
Tuppo
libraries.
With
this
exception,
and
sented.
Of
the
also
first
which has
the distinction
"
poem
is
repre-
14
Florence during the fifteenth century, one of the two copies in the is believed to be the only copy containing possession of the library
CATALOGUE OF AN EXHIBITION OF ORIGINAL EDITIONS OF THE PRINCIPAL WORKS OF JOHN MILTON, arranged in
celebration of the tercentenary of his birth.
1
908.
8vo,
pp. 24.
6d. net.
CATALOGUE OF AN EXHIBITION OF ORIGINAL EDITIONS OF THE PRINCIPAL ENGLISH CLASSICS [with list of works
for the
1910.
86.
6d.net.
CATALOGUE OF AN
EXHIBITION
OF
MANUSCRIPT AND
illustrating
the
commemoration
"
of the
Tercentenary of the
"
Authorised Version
1911.
1611-1911.
6d. net.
to
and 12
as "
facsimiles.
This exhibition,
arranged to
the
title
the
"
Authorised Version
The
exhibits
to the
Revised Version of
1881-98.
A
by a
brief
filling thirty-six
list
is
followed
works
Bible,
original texts
and
CATALOGUE OF AN EXHIBITION OFMEDI/EVAL MANUSCRIPTS AND JEWELLED BOOK-COVERS [exhibited on the occasion of the visit of the
lists
of
palaeographical
works and
in the
1912.
LIBRARY NOTES
The
visit to
AND NEWS
15
members
of their Fifth Annual Meeting in tion, on the occasion of the holding Manchester, was signalized by the arrangement of the exhibition of
mediaeval manuscripts described in the above catalogue. Prefixed to the catalogue is a brief account of the library's manuscript possessions, followed
by some notes explanatory of the character of the books of the Middle Ages, and of the distinguishing features which they possess, in the matter of writing, of illuminations, and also of the materials employed, with a view to assist those who may not
be familiar with the
subject, to a fuller appreciation of the interest
and
The
illustrations
by
furnishing examples
of writing
of the
Lest
it
is
graphical and
were exhibited and described, but wanting in the necessary appliances for study and research, it was thought advisable to include a list of the works for the study of
palaeography with which the library is equipped, and also a list of the periodical publications in history and the allied topics which are
regularly taken for the periodical room.
AND ITS A SELECTION OF CONTENTS, WITH CATALOGUE OF MANUSCRIPTS AND PRINTED BOOKS exhibited on the
visit of
occasion of the
the Congregational
Union
of
xii,
Eng144,
1912.
8vo, pp.
and 21
facsimiles.
Out of print.
to signalize the visit to the library
The
of the
object of this
volume was
members
of the
Union
of
Annual
Union
peculiarly appropriate that the Congregathe course of the Manchester meeting, pay should, during
to the
was
an
official visit
John Rylands Library, which owes its existence to who up to the time of her death, was an
the Congregational Church, as
library fittingly perpetuates.
honoured member
of
was
also her
16
CLASSIFIED
CATALOGUE OF THE WORKS ON ARCHITECTURE AND THE ALLIED ARTS IN THE PRINCIPAL LIBRARIES OF MANCHESTER AND SALFORD, with alphabetiEdited for the Architecand subject index. Committee of Manchester by Henry Guppy and
list
cal author
tural
Guthrie Vine.
1909.
3s.
6d. net,
This publication, the first of its kind to be issued, with the exception of a few union lists of periodicals and incunabula, was the outcome
of a suggestion
tectural
made
early in
904
at
Committee, which
is
University of
Manchester, of the
and
of the
It
was pointed out that scattered over the principal libraries of Manchester and Salford there existed a very fine and extensive collecworks on architecture, and the allied arts, in which architects, students of architecture, and art workers generally might find almost
tion of
infinite
resources of suggestion
and
Un-
fortunately,
contained, or
sulted,
of determining what each library even where a particular work could be seen and con-
As
otherwise than by a personal visit to the various institutions. a natural consequence the usefulness of the collections was
seriously impaired,
to rest
upon the shelves unopened, because nobody knew want of a proper catalogue.
was
there for
value of the suggestion that a combined, or union, catalogue of should be issued was at once recognized, and steps were taken to carry it out. The co-operation of the various authorithis literature
ties
The
was
invited,
and the
librarians
and committees
of the different
entered very cordially into the spirit of the proposal, and undertook to prepare the necessary lists. readily
libraries
of co-ordination
and
of editorship
was
entrusted
also re-
and sub-librarian
of this library,
who were
sponsible for the scope of the undertaking as well as for the form
and
This catalogue may be said arrangement of the various details. to mark an epoch in the development of library administration and
co-operation,
and
for
that reason
it
may
17
publication, to indicate in a
principles
which
we
Among
is
from corporate action, coupled with a keener perception of the disadvantages that inevitably attend the failure to utilize such opportunities of
combination as
may
present themselves.
is
In every department
of
life
essential
maximum
of
economy and
efficiency.
Libraries
which are
cannot afford to
and
means
of increasing
little
and extending
Yet,
hitherto,
this direction.
If
a reader unable to find a book in the library where he is working has wished to know whether it could be found in a neighbouring one, too commonly, his only chance of ascertaining the fact has been by
means
of a personal,
question.
The
loss of
and, perhaps, fruitless, visit to the library in time thus entailed on students must, in the
aggregate,
be very considerable, and any method by which an can be effected in this particular should be accepted, and economy welcomed as one of the necessary phases of library development.
It
was
two
entirely different
ways.
cal
list
with a subject index to the same. The other course open was to arrange the entries in a logical or classified order, and then to supply alphabetical lists of the authors, and of the subjects,
former plan, whilst eminently suitable for the catalogue of a large library embracing treatises on a variety of subjects, is less appropriate in the case of a single section of literature than the classified
catalogue.
The
The
latter
and by
so
and
certainty.
is
brought together
reader turns to one
juxtaposition
is
The
18
subdivision
it
connected with
New
some
instances
and cor-
The
is
manifestly a matter of
is
considerable
moment
if
to
be
The system should be one that is intrinsically adequately realized. it should be of such simplicity as to be easily capable of comgood at the same prehension by persons previously unacquainted with it
;
time, in
it
is
operating libraries should be familiar with the system. decimal system of classification originated by Dr. Melvil
selected as best fulfilling these requirements, since
its
Hence
the
Dewey was
its
extensive use
AN
ANALYTICAL CATALOGUE OF THE CONTENTS OF THE Two EDITIONS OF " AN ENGLISH GARNER," compiled
by
pp.
EDWARD ARBER
viii,
editorship of
221.
number
of important
for
contributions to literature
want
proper cataloguing, because, by an accident of birth, they volume with other equally important works, which have appear been lumped together without any distinguishing title-pages, or have
of
in a
title.
The component
or of such composite
many
learned societies,
this
number
research of
but
less
greater value to the student than the more ambitious, trustworthy works which are allowed to cumber the shelves
of
much
many
of our libraries.
this
made
acces-
entry, adds
of the library
and often
is
of
new
its
volumes.
resources
The
expanded
LIBRARY NOTES
There never has been a question
at this
AND NEWS
19
work with
many
libraries
has
Hitherto libraries have been content to long taxed their ingenuity. work independently of each other, working, it is true, for a common object, but without concerted effort, and by as many different methods
and systems
a
The
result
has been
Think of the economy of most deplorable waste of energy. energy that could be effected if libraries were to enter into a friendly
arrangement, under which each undertook to analyse a different set of similar collections, and to supply to the others a copy of the
resulting entries
!
An English has been printed with the object of emphasizing the need It is also for the analytical treatment of works of this character.
The
Garner
"
present
catalogue
of
the
two
editions of
"
intended to demonstrate the practicability of placing the work of one library at the service of other libraries at a small cost.
catalogue has been printed on one side of the paper only, in such a way that the entries can be cut up and laid down on cards,
or
The
otherwise
treated
In
for
insertion in
author catalogue.
the case of
employed the volume may be found to be of service in its existing form to students of the history and literature of our own country,
since
provides a key to a storehouse of pamphlets, broadsides, and " occasional verses, collected in the Garner," many of which are
it
AND
CONTENTS,
illustrated
with
thirty-seven
views and
facsimiles.
illustrations.
1914.
8vo,
pp.
xvi,
6d. net.
revised edition of the handbook, the object of which is to provide visitors to the library with a brief narrative of the inception, foundation, and growth of the institution, followed by a hurried
have made
it
famous.
is
Included
is
regarded
architec-
by experts
modern Gothic
ture in this or in
any country.
20
of a
number
of
facsimiles of
some
of the
most noteworthy of the manuscripts and which are reproduced for the first time.
"
"
CATALOGUE OF GREEK PAPYRI is in of preparation, and may be looked for FORTHCONan advanced state ING PUBLIThe papyri dealt with con- CATIONS. towards the end of the year.
The second volume of the
i
r~i
sist
mainly of non- literary documents of an official or legal character, some of which date back to the Ptolemaic period. The chief interest,
however, will centre in the description of the collection of carbonized These papyri were found, says Dr. Hunt, as well papyri of Thmuis.
as others of the
same group
in
doubt
Thmuis
Egypt Exploration Fund during the season 1892-3, whose chambers were found choked by a medley of decayed rolls, and it is interesting to learn that the documents which
by
the expedition of the
will
be printed
in
this
largest
body
yet published
from
this source.
The "CATALOGUE OF ENGLISH BOOKS TO 1640 IN THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY," which has been in course of preparation for a
number
in the
of years, will
It
be
in the
hands
end
of
the year.
books
main alphabetical author part of the catalogue, followed by a chronological short-title catalogue, and the necessary indexes of subjects, places, printers, etc.
Two new
issues of the
"
"
are in
active preparation.
The
first
"
St.
"
Christopher
and
"
The An-
reproductions will be of the exact size of the " " " " The Annunciation and St. Christopher originals, whilst the will be in the exact colours of the The descriptive text is originals.
nunciation
".
The
being prepared by
Department
of
Mr. Campbell Dodgson, who is Keeper Prints and Drawings in the British Museum.
the
of the
The
will
other
which
original
be reproduced
facsimile
of
the
Syriac manuscript, and will be accompanied by a typographical reprint or transliteration, and a revised translation, upon which Dr.
Rendel
Harris
is
at
present
engaged.
There
will
be an
ex-
21
Museum,
and
a summary of the most important criticisms that have appeared since Dr. Harris published his first edition in 1909. " "
The
article
on
his
Ancestry
which
appears
an expansion, with
illustrative
by Professor
Thumb
on the 9th
of October, 1913, to
A complete
for
list
list
PERIODICAL
TION5 by the library will be found in the present issue. The shows the range of the library files, and it will be noticed that,
with a few exceptions, there is a complete set of each publication There are also in the library from the commencement of its career.
many
will
sets
of similar publications
is
to appear, of
which a
list
in
last
moment
to withhold the
LIST OF
list
ADD
amount
As we
go to
of
Mr.
Stephen Joseph Tennant, the Honorary Treasurer of the DEATH Library, which took place on Wednesday, the 7th of SONORARY
T
most patiently borne. Mr. Tennant was the twin-brother of the late Mrs. Rylands, the foundress of the Library, and was closely associated with the institution from its inception. As one of the
original Trustees,
as a Life Governor,
he served
it
its
No member
his
attendance
at the meetings,
interest
the library
and
its
work.
HIS ANCESTRY.
Lirr.D.
IN
THE UNIVERSITY
and
IN
we
anew by
the great
Urged by
diplomacy has not only founded the States of the Balkan Peninsula
according to that principle of nationality, but also examines and approves
the expansion of these States according to
ticians of the
it.
And
"
just
titles
to the territories
present
Balkan nations
according to
in practice
is
territories
must be distributed
This, of course,
requires.
map
of such
garians
do not agree
at
it
for
is
their
own
race.
And
of
so the
Macedonian
question,
for years,
now become
anthropology and The last example is the planned foundation of an ethnography". independent Albanian State though it may be demanded by Austria
a
characteristic
example
and
is
place for political and economic reasons, yet it to be justified only by the fact that the Albanians with regard to
Italy in
the
first
from
Slavs and Greeks, forming together with the Greeks the oldest populaAnd as the Servians from their desire of ex-
HIS
the
ANCESTRY
Slavs
is
23
principle
"Albania
right
for
for
Albanians" must be
just
to:
what
is
Greeks and
for
Albanians
too.
I
The
politics
examples which
to
how
sometimes practical
and
theoretical science
on the
"to be or not
be"
of
whole
self
Greece, the one amongst the Balkan States that first freed herfrom the Turkish Empire, also was obliged, soon after having
Greek people directed the attention of Europe to itself by its heroic fight for liberty, and roused the educated men of Europe into a passion of Philhellenic enthusiasm, it was thought an axiom that the
the
When
men who tried with deadly determination to break the bonds of 400 years' slavery were the successors of those Athenians and Spartans who once had repelled the lust of conquest of Oriental barbarians
brave
on the
battle-fields of
And
although the
it
Philhellenes quickly
became sober
was
like
bomb, threatening
year
to
when,
in the
1830, the
German
scholar Fallmerayer,
history, quietly
vestigator of
Medieval Greek
"
of
Greek race had been long ago annihilated. pure and unmixed blood flows in the veins
Modern Greece.
storm
like
which
but few have attacked the people of Europe has spread over the whole territory between the Ister and the inmost corner of the Peloponnesian Peninsula a new race of inhabitants which is related to the great
And a second revolution, perhaps not less important, the immigration of the Albanians into Greece, has finished the scenes of
Slavonic race.
destruction. There is now in the middle of Continental Greece not one Greek family whose ancestors were not Scyths, Slavs or Arnauts, Almugavarians or Franks or hellenised Asiatics from Phrygia."
words Fallmerayer, in his History of the Peninsula of Morea," announced his The vehement excitement to theory. which the Greeks and the Philhellenes were roused, at first hindered
these
With
"
the pros and cons were debated with equally imperfect arguments the very putting of the question "Slavs or Greeks," and the one-sided answering of it a priori, did not make a disinterested solution possible. 1 For the Greeks the
; ;
24
for
Fallmerayer himself
for
have emphasised
it
the
political
still
Turks and
was
more
dangerous
could be used
in a panslavistic sense.
Bible into the vernacular 900) language, which was favoured by Queen Olga of Greece, a Russian princess, was taken as a symptom of panslavist agitation and there-
ago
(in
combated with passion by the adversaries of the popular language, 3 although there was no relation between the two things.
fore
I
means
in order to
make an
impression.
much
disputed, has
evoked the question about the origins of the Modern Greek. The theory of the Slavonisation of Greece had been also broached some
time before by the well-known Slavist Kopitar, but only in a few
close investigation.
And
and
is
due
to
was always quoted anew in this disa bearer of the Imperial Byzantine Crown.
Constantinus Porphyrogennetus (912-959), in one of his numerous Thematibus, 2, 53), says about the Peloponnesus : " the whole 7rao~a ywpa IfrOKa/BtoOr) /ecu yeyoi/e /SapySapos, was slavonised and barbarised". country
works (De
Let us see
saying
is based.''
now what
upon which
this
The Balkan
German
tribes
Peninsula has had such a thorough shifting of its At the time when
is,
at the
end
Balkan
since the
Peninsula began ; their invasions became more and more frequent, Goths chose Western Europe as the goal of their conquenng
left
expeditions and
to the Slavs
HIS
ANCESTRY
25
The
Haemus
Different
in
and Epirus
the pass of Thermopylae and the Isthmus during the sixth century ; them only at the walls of fortified towns of Corinth did not stop
;
such as Constantinople,
Patras was the rude
it
Thebes, Athens,
an exaggeration to say that Avars and Slavs held the Peloponnesus from about the end of the sixth century for over 200 years 7 " no Greek could put his foot there" without interruption, and that
is
;
In the
fancy that
Byzansame way it is a legend exaggerated by Fallmerayer's Athens was quite depopulated during 400 years from the
8
in the
hands
of the
real Slavonisation of
some Greek
its
attained
746 depopulated the Greek territories. Then it was that plague Slavs came from Thessaly to establish themselves as farmers and
shepherds on the deserted country-side, perhaps settled there by the
Byzantine Government itself, and that the whole of ancient Greece swarmed with Slavs. If the interpretation of a modern Greek historian " " is right, that the imperial writer understood the word x^P a country 9 to mean "open country," the quoted words of the Emperor Constantine are justified.
10
"
even
now
the Skytho-
Slavs inhabit almost the whole of Epirus and Hellas (i.e. Middle " a sentence which Greece), the Peloponnesus and Macedonia
allows us some latitude of interpretation, because the saying is restricted " by the little word almost," where a certain ignorance and inexactitude
is
concealed.
had a
is
the Slavonic settlements of Greece Proper have different character from those of Croatia, Bulgaria, and Servia,
fact that in the territory of ancient
That
proved by the
Greece Slavonic
were not founded, as in Bulgaria and Servia, and that politics Greek throughout in the numerous cities. when more and more Slavs followed and became an ever Finally greater danger for the parts which had remained Greek and for the
States
and
culture remained
Byzantine Empire
itself,
widow
26
of
who, as her
of Thessaly,
The
year 783
marks an epoch
Byzantium was trying to master the intruders. Immediately the Slavs were driven to a new rebellion, to an attack against the city of Patras.
The
805
us,
Slavs of the Peloponnesus were entirely overthrown, with the exception of the Ezerites and Milingi, who still for a long time maintained
With
well
Greek elements
of
Hellas were
It
is
known
that
:
to the
Slavonic world
the
of Greece,
Christianisation
was
The
later,
for absorbing the foreign elements. Hellenisation of the Slavonic Peloponnesus as a whole must
;
if
even
still
some remains
mentioned
11 by Byzantine authors, we must not draw conclusions from the statement for the whole ethnographical configuration of the Peloponnesus thus, for instance, the fact that some Slavs live nowadays in the purely
;
province of Brandenburg or that the Welsh live in Wales does not allow us to conclude that Prussia is now a Slavonic country
or England a Celtic one.
German
II.
have
on the
basis of
Do
to
German
historian ?
At
first
do
so.
But
we
have
fact that
the
Greek element
in the cities,
and
we had
in
antiquity
were
or not at
all
HIS
ANCESTRY
all
27
the
Modern Greek
just there
race,
we
ought before
to
know
which
local expansion
territory.
who
settled
fail,
on Greek
But
we
we are not able to make an might expect from historical inquiry ethnographical map of the Slavonic epoch of Greece on the basis of
historical or better
say in
documentary tradition, that is, we cannot precisely what proportion each district was inhabited by the Slavs for
:
we
that the
situated
the journey of Bishop Willibald von Eichstatt (eighth century) saying town Monembasia (called Malvasia by the Venetians) is
"in Sclavinia
terra,"
i.e.
in Slavonic country,
12
such testimonies
are too general and too inexact sufficiently to inform us about the
matter
we want
to
know.
and
inscriptions,
are missing
is
Eleusis,
of doubtstartingi.e.
So we must seek
people, live
for other
means
of help.
point
is
Balkan peoples.
Greeks,
Greek-speaking
to-day
in the
kingdom
of
Greece (with
see below),
Greeks inhabit
islands of the
/Egean together
with Crete
they form the main population of Epirus and the coast of Macedonia and Thrace, where at some points they extend far into
;
Serres in Macedonia and same manner, on the eastern border of the /Egean, i.e. the western coast of Asia Minor, and on the southern coast of the Black Sea to the frontier of Armenia, there are a the inner parts,
for
instance
as
far
as
in the
number
Sinope
the
of to
villages
Greek language.
Asia Minor (near the Taurus Mountains) u as well as on the southern border of Asia Minor the Greek language and Greek nationality have and developed in quite an original manner. And finally preserved
the
Isle of
may directly be called a continuous dominion of Here and in single communities in the middle of
Cyprus
is
the bloom of antiquity. The coast from Constantinople to Varna until a few years ago was also chiefly populated by Greeks (now they have greatly diminished here), and the towns of the northern coast of the Black Sea have important Greek colonies. 15
28
race has no longer the imposing extension which it had during the hey-day of Attic sea-power or even in the time of Hellenistic king-
doms
Greek
Columns
of Hercules,
i.e.
from the Atlantic Sea, as far as the country of the Colchians near the
Caucasus, from Marseille to Mesopotamia and for a time to India,
although the Greek race of to-day is less extended, yet it reigns in the pure Greek countries of the Ancient World, i.e. round the /Egean
Sea
there,
where the
latter
prevail,
in Bulgaria, in the
Hinterland
of
the Slavs have not supplanted the Greeks, but Hellenised or Latinised
Macedonians, Paeonians,
In
before.
lllyrians,
Thracians.
now
quite disappeared, as
said
About
by
we
are informed
better than
in
history
by
names
Greek
countries.
The
may be
illustrated
Suppose
dition of
we knew
Germany, or Lugudunum-Lyon, Augustodunum-Autun in France, Eboracum-York, Campodunum, Noviomagus in England would inform us by their Celtic etymology, that the Celtic race was
spread over the south and west of Germany, over France and England
;
names
of
cities
such
as
Augsburg
in
Coin = Colonia,
Coblenz = Confluentes
even
if
Roman
settlements,
historical tradition
And
names such
surely
testify
by
their
if
inhabitants, even
to
we
were obliged
with
win and
In the
to
series of battles
Slavs.
evidenced by geographical names in Greece Tyrnavos (compare Trnova in Bulgaria), Ostrovo, Smokovo in Thessaly, Arachova, near Delphi, and
settlers is
name of
in the
the ancient
Mount Chelmos
north-west >
HIS
ANCESTRY
29
and
River in
Vostitsa in
random and which I could multiply to any extent, are of Slavonic the quoted districts Slavs were once origin and prove that in all settled. Examining these names more exactly, we observe that in some parts of the Peloponnesus they are more frequent, whereas Attica is almost entirely without Slavonic traces, and just there the conservation of names of the ancient communities or demoi strikes us
:
quote the names of Kephisia, Mendeli (=Pentele), Marathonas, Ampelokipi, which is ancient Alopeke transformed by popular in the course of time an old name can be entirely etymology.
I
How
transformed, and
how
in spite of
it
can be
After
may be illustrated by the name of Mount Hymettus. had been preserved during the barbarian invasions of the middle age till the epoch of the Prankish conquerors, the mountain
left,
it
name
of
Monte Matto,
the
foreigners adapting the word Hymettos to their own language, the " mad ". The Italian denomination became word matto meaning more and more familiar to the Greeks, and forgetting the old name they translated again the name Monte Matto in their language as " " a mad mount this popular name only now is Trelovuno, i.e. under the ancient name Hymettos (pronounced Imitos) which vanishing is due to the influence of the school,
;
critical
whole material
of geographical
names
a work useful and important to the historian as well as to the ethno1T is still to be made the statements of graphist and to the linguist
;
Fallmerayer and of his followers, as well as of his opponents, are quite void of a strictly scientific method, and contain many strange ideas.
definitely abandoned to-day, that the modern name Morea for the Peloponnesus is of Slavonic origin the word is of pure Greek origin meaning "country of mulberries". 18
For
must be
Many
strange
to
in reality
Albanian.
we
be able to get
territories.
Then we
shall see in
which
districts
That
30
remained Greek we have seen above with this conclusion agrees the fact that ancient names like Corinth, Nauplia, Patras, Lebadea,
Thebes, Athens, Phersala
storms of centuries.
(in Thessaly),
and
so
on have
resisted
the
in the
:
towns but
also in the
open country Greeks have preserved themselves Argolis, for instance, is proved to have been free from Slavs by the great scarcity of Slavonic
names
Parnon Mountains)
has remained quite Greek in the centre, as the existence of the curious tribe of the Tsaconians shows whose language is a descendant
:
of the ancient
Laconian
dialect.
geographical names in this district has confirmed the fact that Slavonic traces are missing entirely or almost entirely in Kynuria and in the southern neighbourhood of it as far
made by
myself into
the
as Malvasia
of
For the same reason the inhabitants (Monembasia). the Taenaron Peninsula, about south of the line Tsimova-Gythion,
19
men
full
of love of liberty,
may
pride themselves
Exact inquiiy, therefore, does not conPeloponnesus only one Greek geographi-
name
is
to
Thus even
first
the
used in the
territory,
place as a
21
Greek
Greek
less
may be
Greece
large districts,
the abode of Hellenism since the oldest times, have always preserved
Greek population. The Islands of the /Egean, the Greek countries of Asia Minor and the Island of Cyprus were never 22 influenced by the waves of the Slavonic flood.
their
III.
A rapid survey
thesis
i.e.
of
that Fallmerayer's
:
from which
we
;
proved a great
failure
the premisses
extirpation of the
country
of ancient
are false
therefore
is
wrong
to conclude that
no drop
Greek
modern Greek.
Greek
On
the Peloponnesus
of the
territories,
in continental
Greece, a
2
'
physical mixture of
place.
If
HIS
ANCESTRY
tries
it
31
to
from medieval
For Sathas nothing but a caprice or a sophism. were called Slavs by the Byzantines, says that the immigrants, who were not Slavs but Albanians, part of a race closely related to the
Greek
history,
it is
Greeks.
Nobody
24
by such a would be
Greeks
theory.
irrelevant
names cannot be explained and removed But even if the theory of Sathas were correct, it to the question of nationality, whether the Greeks
;
many
more
Greeks than
the Albanians,
whose
reaches
frontiers of
modern
instance,
inquiry,
Italians
it
and Slavs.
25
But
is
which took part in the physical transformation of the Greek race. Christian Albanians during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
immigrated into Greece as farmers and shepherds, and settled in Boeotia and Attica, in Euboea, and in the Peloponnesus (especially
in the eastern districts
and
in
Arcadia).
given
The German
of
geographer,
Alfred
in the
Philippson,
who
has
statistics
the
Albanians
26
kingdom
number
in the
Pelopon-
nesus at the time of their greatest extension (fifteenth century) as 200,000, about the half of the whole population at that time to-day their number in the Peloponnesus is only 90,000 against the whole
:
population of 730,000.
day
in Argolis
and
in
Compact masses of Albanians still live tosome other provinces of the Peloponnesus.
the
Isle
Moreover, the
villages of Attica,
Boeotia, Aegina, because these Albanians from the beginning did not stand in hostile
having feelings, being with their countrymen by the same religion, they are now either totally Hellenised or have at least adopted Greek customs and Greek
:
opposition to the Greeks, their Hellenisation began quickly and without difficulty no definite national and connected
feeling
they were
war
of liberty.
among the most prominent champions of the Greek Even those who have not yet given up their language
32
make
I
As only in the family, but speak Greek in public life. with a young educated man of a Boeotian village, observed myself
would be very
difficult
it
for
them
to use the
Albanian language
for
This "diglossy" or the purposes of politics and higher culture. bilingual condition prepares the way for complete Hellenisation, which
is
IV.
Thus
added
Greek
Slavs
to the ancient
and Albanians are the two elements which were Greek blood but large districts such as the
:
Islands
free alike in
and the
other.
who
course of
settled on Greek soil, were in such a minority that they are only of a very small importance for the question of nationality I name, for instance, Romans and Goths before the Slavonic invasion, the so-called
:
Italians)
27
1
204,
the Gipsies,
Undoubtedly there was no thorough and lasting mixture with these peoples, partly because some of them had no numerical importance, and partly because others such as the Turks
were always sharply separated
religious contrasts.
from
From
Greece
it
the historical
results
and ethnographical conditions of Modern therefore that her inhabitants certainly do not form a
Greek
origin,
new
seal.
nationality
on the other hand, they are neither a new race nor a on ancient ground on the contrary, the native element
;
its
own
That
is
all
scholars of repute,
JS
although the followers of Fallmerayer have not yet died out. the question for us is to fix the national character of this anthropological crossing in order that
Now
ancient
and
we may know the exact relation modern Greeks. Therefore we must examine the
in
between
question
whether and
and psychological
first
qualities.
The
it
science of anthropology
facts
must
be consulted as to whether
can give us
which
an
issue.
It is
no longer
HIS
ANCESTRY
33
enjoy to-day the high esteem which the results of that science formerly enjoyed with regard to historical and ethnographical problems
:
anthropologists, resting
on
neglect anthropology,
modern
by
times,
and
if
historical tradition.
As
statues),
Greeks,
it
is
opinion (which
based on the measuring of skulls and of ancient that on an average they were mesocephalic with the index
mark
of
In
the
modern
index has changed a little, to 80, the beginning of the 29 From a group of ancient Greek skulls brachycephalic measurement.
this
Greeks
examined by Professor Virchow, the following proportion is calculated for the numbers of dolichocephalic, mesocephalic and brachycephalic individuals
:
30
dolichocephalic
meso-
brachy-
28/
52%
I
20/
As
to the
Greeks of to-day
1
lated from
12 skulls
31
:
15/
31/
54%
32
:
and
17%
33%
50%
:
On the other hand, the southern Slavs are clearly broad-skulled their index varies from 81*6 for the Servians to 85*1 for the Croatians,
and 87
ing to
for
33
Herzegovina,
Ranke)
dolichoceph.
meso-
brachy-
3%
25%
72%
That the Greeks " have become Slavs, that "no drop of Greek blood is in the Modern Greek, is certainly not proved by the quoted numbers a mixture only may be inferred from the change of the cranio-metrical numbers.
:
exact examination, however, does not oblige us to conclusion as a necessary one, and French and German
3
An
draw even
this
anthropologists
34
directly
chiefly
a quite particular
degree with the Greeks of Kerasus (on the northern shore of Asia 30 Minor), whereas on the contrary dolichocephalism has been clearly established in Thessaly, where great numbers of Slavs must once have
lived.
Of an
which
'
which Slavonic immigration is out has measured ancient skulls from Minoan, i.e.
of the question.
31
He
great
skulls
number
is
(c.
2300)
of
modern
skulls.
The
and brachyis
the index of
modern
skulls
79, the
But there are characteristic local respective proportion being 5 4. in the mountains dolichocephalism is more frequent than differences
:
:
in
the plains
the
mountain
district
of the
this curious tribe has the index 80*4, and more numerous than the long-skulled ones
(3
2).
As we
real survival
Greek population, it is without doubt that brachyAnd as for cephalism has no relation to later (medieval) immigrants. the Greek continent, it is more probable that mixture with broadof the ancient
skulled
Albanians
;
38
has
among Greeks
Greek anthropologist has observed a more frequent brachycephalism in the Albanian districts of the Kingdom.
at least a
may have
its
Thus
It
little
seems almost as though the Slavs had not left any physical traces a natural selection has perhaps taken place in such a manner, that in
mixing, only those individuals were strong enough to preserve them41 If a selves in whom the native Greek element was predominant.
traveller believes himself to
this single
in
42
Thessaly,
striking
observation
tall
may be an
much more
I
infigures or the
clearly
whom
What we
Greek type
HIS
ANCESTRY
35
has been noticed by travellers in different regions, especially on the islands, and in Asia Minor.
There
is
perhaps
just
one anthropological
fact to
be quoted
directly
but I shall not insist upon it : against the hypothesis of Slavonisation, the great number of births, is whereas the fertility of the Slavs, i.e.
notorious,
Greece has
in the
whole
of
Europe one
Other characteristics, like a rigid conservatism in religion or the rates. the latter was pointed out ability to learn foreign languages (of which to Greeks and Slavs to be by Fallmerayer), are too little peculiar
considered as premisses for inferring mixture of blood and race. But even if a large mixture of blood should prove to be a fact
43
from anthropological
the English or
inquiries,
it
would be
For
of
no
a long
skull,
and
German
English or German nationality to be questioned, so must the nationality not of the modern Greek be considered from the same point of view
:
physical characteristics, but the totality of language, manner of thinking, ideas and customs, in short, the sum of spiritual qualities form
with regard to these things we find in Greece nothing of Slavonic traces, or only such a small remainder that they can only be detected by a very minute
primarily the conception of nationality.
And
examination.
First
it
is
in
Greece no evidence
44
modern Greek
nobility,
on the Ionian
Islands,
have
Venetian
nobility.
V.
mark
of a people
is
their
who
used for ethnographical grouping also by those dispute the value of this criterion with a smile of
the language of the
:
Thus
modern Greek
is
is
a very valu-
Modern Greek
certainly not
it
Ancient
expect), but
is
in spite of
many
development
of
Ancient
in
Greek.
All attempts
to detect in the
36
phonology and accidence or in syntax foreign influences, Slavonic or Albanian or others, have failed and must fail, because what has
be foreign and modern had already begun to develop a long time before the invasion of Slavs and Albanians, partly even
been thought
before the
to
Roman
epoch.
Modern Greek
existed already in
germ
at
medium
be-
tween Attic and Modern Greek, already shows the essential characteristics of grammar, which constitute the differences between the
classic
For
instance,
Modern Greek
in the
pro-
epoch
the
Roman
Emperors.
And
common
vernacular
modern dialects (with the exception of Tsaconian) are daughters of Hellenistic Greek. Besides it may be observed, that the literary language used at the present in Greece
language of to-day, but also the
is
no natural
result of linguistic
of scholastic tradition,
artificial
product
literary
language
with
its
question.
matical forms
Language, however, does not only consist of sounds and gramand uses, but also of words. But to know the true
is
of a smaller importance,
and
into a language
do
more than
Thus English has does the importation of coffee, tea, and tobacco. remained a Germanic language, although it teems with French loanwords
languages was or is able to Therefore it is keep free from the influence of foreign languages. not strange that foreign words in great number have come into
;
none
of the
European
civilised
Hellenistic,
Medieval,
and
Modern Greek.
First
it
was Rome
and
trade,
that imported
many
life
and early Byzantine language and above all the seafaring Venetians followed with conquerors, numerous naval and commercial terms and finally the Turks have
;
enlarged the
life
down
to
Greek vocabulary in many departments the bill of fare and the words of abuse.
?
of
everyday
What now
When
trifling,
brought into relation with the facts that nobody would infer from their
HIS
ANCESTRY
37
and Greeks
closely touched
one another.
An
excellent authority
on the Balkan languages, the late Professor Gratz, has collected the Slavic words of Modern
46
find,
273
entries,
viz.
and among
number the
districts
frontiers,
Epirus, Thessaly,
Macedonia, and
Thrace, where the neighbourhood of the Slavs even to-day gives occasion to contact between the two nations, furnish the most Slavic
words, whereas those of
common
or nearly
common
no more than seventy, a number which is very small in comparison And if with the great number of Romance and Turkish elements.
we
many
of the Slavic
their
way
there
Greek
"
indirectly,
no foundation
Greco- Slavonic
dialect,
which
only
in
the imagination
of
The number
greater
;
of
Slavonic
loan-words
text
the Chronicle of
Morea, a
which
but almost no Slavonic word, although in the epoch of the work unhellenised Slavs still existed in the mountains of the Pelo47
ponnesus.
whom
is
who had
the closest
and culture
this is
tribes
much
less
impose
it
on
a higher
The
preservation of
all
Greek
that
is
nationality
is
comprised
of the
in the
and customs
Greek people
been
lost
the national
has developed and survives in modern Greek nationality, sometimes under the cover of ecclesiastical
forms.
The
about
ancient
ancient ideas of
Greek gods are indeed forgotten by the people, but Zeus and other gods are still found in popular ideas
God and
the Saints.
trembles, says
38
shakes his hair and the earth trembles, so think to-day the inhabitants of Zakynthos, who are often frightened by horrible
Homer
earthquakes.
is
The
Saint Nikolaos
the protector of navigation, he saves from the dangers of storms Saint George represents the who does not recall old Poseidon ?
ancient god of war, the veneration of the Panagia, or the Blessed Virgin Mary, reminds us of the virginal Pallas Athene. About Saint
Dionysios there
legends
saint
is
is
of
a charming legend which clearly belongs to the the very name of the Dionysos, the old god of wine
is
:
name
I
The
50
tale
so characteristic
and amusing
go
that
as a whole.
"
When
Saint Dionysios
was
to
still
young, he once
(the
isle of
made
a journey
Naxia
way
down on
While he was
his feet
in front of himself,
he saw
to
at
little
which seemed
him
with him and to plant He took the plant out of the ground and carried it away but as it. the sun was very hot just then, he feared that it might dry up before Then he found the small bone of a bird and his arrival in Naxia.
so beautiful that
he resolved
once to take
it
it
and went
it
on.
grew
so quickly that
peeped
Then he again feared that it would dry up, and thought Then he found the bone of a lion which was thicker remedy.
than the bird's bone, and he put the bird's bone together with the But the plant quickly grew even out plant into the bone of the lion.
of the lion's bone.
still
Then he found
was
thicker, and he put the plant together with the bird's and lion's When he bones into the donkey's bone, and so he came to Naxia. was planting the plant, he saw that the roots had thickly wound
as he could
out without injuring the roots, he planted it in the ground and the plant quickly grew up and produced, to his delight, was, the finest grapes, from which he made the first wine, and gave it to
it
men
more
to drink. of
of
it it
When men
;
drank
became
like
donkeys."
HIS
ANCESTRY
and
lakes,
39
woods
filled
and Dryads,
is
all sorts of
populated by a swarm of Nereids, this old name being used for In the Tales of Nereids many old traits live on Elves.
;
there
is
in
antiquity, that
still
51
if
literary tradition
yet
we
could
Nymphs ".
myth
of Peleus
preserved in modern
fairy tales.
The
ancient
Dryads are continued by the modern 52 Witches such as Lamias and Striglas
people to-day as in antiquity.
in
Charontas,
As
in antiquity, a
copper
put into the mouth of a dead person as fee for the ferry into the other world. The ancient Moirai or Fates (to-day Mires) still
coin
is
do
their
duty
they design the fate of the new-born child, spin and The bride is conducted into her new home, life.
the dead are buried with ceremonies which the Greeks used already
ago.
A sick person
seeks recovery
by lying down
once
who
made
it
:
a pilgrimage to the temple of Asklepios in Epidauros. And remarkable that even a modern folk-song has an old ancestry
song
of
is
the
is
still
sung
in
modern
Greece
This
fact
is
we
have
but few popular songs from antiquity. remarks may suffice to show how false
My
it
would be
to speak
of
race,
as
we
see
everywhere that
the other hand,
;
ancient Greece
lives
on
in
modern Greece.
On
they are unimportant and rare at all events. Only a few points, such as the gloomy belief in Vampyres, seem to be influenced by
Slavic ideas
and
features
at least the
name
of
this
ghost,
Vrikolakas,
").
vel sim.
is
Servian vukodlak,
say that this belief not at
all
"
Vampyre
is
We
wanting
in antiquity, as the
German
Bernhard
40
Certainly,
are found
among
is
sometimes
to
know
:
original,
and
to
we
feel
this difficulty
in
a high degree
the features
common
to
Here we must be
we
said before,
have
any
rate received
last,
And
for
not
more than they have given. least, what does the moral character
I
of the
modern
Greek prove
this criterion
But surely the character of the modern Greek our question. people has no resemblance, for instance, to that of the Russian
people.
On
Russians are pessimists and brooders without activity. the contrary, the mobile and active spirit of the modern Greeks
'
The
The Thucydides (I, 70) puts in the mouth of a Corinthian Athenians are fond of innovations, and quick in resolve and execu:
tion,
better
fail
if
bold above their strength, braving dangers even against their knowledge, and in misfortune always full of hope. ... If they in a trial, they put their hope in something else. Therefore,
.
.
anybody were
nor to
too,
let
rest,
others
things,
the
the ancient
Athenian, as the
of speech,
and
boasting, a quarrelsome
54
temper
cunning
in trade
and commerce.
VI.
and complete ethnographical transformation which Greece is said by Fallmerayer to have underThe Greeks have mixed with foreign gone is out of the question.
inquiry shows, the entire
As modern
elements like
all
nations
which have a
and
most contrary fate they were able to absorb foreign culture and foreign races without having their nationality or national characteristics
extinguished
rather,
HIS
ANCESTRY
56
41
The Greeks
that every
modern Greek could trace his origin back to an ancient but they are descendants in Athenian or Spartan, and so on this sense, that in the modern people ancient blood flows largely and in some districts almost purely, and they are so still more in the
;
natural development of
Greek
national
course developed
and
trans-
transformation of
formed by the influence of all factors upon which depends the " " nations if indeed there are unmixed unmixed
life.
it
On
fuse
would be wrong to identify and to conAncient and Modern Greek language, or ancient and modern
the other hand,
amateurs
like to
do
Christianity
and the
above
all
centralisation of the
Greeks by the
transformed the ancient into the modern people, and that in quite another degree than Slavs, Albanians, and other Barbarians could do. This influence is illustrated by the very name Romjos
(i.e.
Pa)fJLOLo<i) t
:
to
themselves
the
Romaic Empire
nation and
its
"
"
Roman
or
name Romjds
for the
people, whereas the ancient name Hellenes in popular mind denotes the legendary heathen ancestors, the race of Giants. 57
Of
are
more
closely
related
I
to the
cite
might
numerous examples, but I will content myself with a characteristic one given by the late Professor Krumbacher the popular proverbs
:
Oriental
little
handed down
from antiquity.
Byzantium indeed revelled in ancient records, as they saw the sources of education in the spiritual treasures of antiquity but the mind of the people, from which the
philologists of
;
58
The
its
origin,
went
its
own way.
first
Popular
historical
memory,
zantine
too,
Empire
is
Christian Emperor,
is
Modern Greek
the
tradition.
With
the
Empire
connected
"
great
"
the Byzantine
idea
of
modern Greeks,
42
Bosporus.
which
is
nourished
now more
than before
by the
successful issue of the late war, is not only a dream of ambitious politicians, but is rooted in popular tradition. Thus our theme has finally led us to politics, to the Eastern Question.
The problem
this question
;
modern Greeks
scientific
is
connected
with
as
I
importance,
my
lecture.
Historical
and
ethnographical considerations recommend such a solution of the political problem that the race which in antiquity and in the middle ages ruled
the /Egean Sea, the existence and the vitality of which have proved, should again be put in its historical position.
I
hope
to
At
where
military
it is
'
and
political
successes have
Greek
nation,
5
opinion than
condition of
it
ago,
"
so-
called Greeks,"
who
I
are but a
"
bastard nation,"
"a
mosaic work of
know
truth
avoid speaking of political that Philhellenism has not died out in the
let
is
But
me
English nation.
discussion.
Scientific truth
above
all
national
and
political
Yet the
we have
hope that the talented nation that has been so often punished by fate, and sometimes through its own fault, will now have a brighter future.
NOTES.
However it may be observed, that a criticism of Schonwalder in the "Jahrbiicher fur wissenschaftl. Kritik," I (Berlin, 1840), 31-47, is worth the author rejects sine saving from oblivion, and to be read still to-day
1 :
"
Fallmerayer,
Gesammelte Werke
"
"
(Leipzig, 1861),
II,
14.
See A. Thumb, Die jiingsten Unruhen in Athen und die neugriechische Bibeliibersetzung," in " Grenzboten," 1902 (II), 137-144. 4 " Compare R. von Hofler, Erinnerungen an Jakob Philipp Fall" in merayer/' Mitteilungen des Vereins f. Geschichte der Deutschen in
Bohmen,"
I
XXVI
(1888), 395
1
his
"Wiener
follow
Jahrbiicher,"
XVII
in
Gregorovius
(1822), 95 "
f.
Geschichte
der
Stadt
Athen im
HIS
ANCESTRY
43
some details only of the Slavonic In our own time Mittelalter ". So Jirecek, immigration into the Balkan Peninsula have been treated. " Denkschriften der Wiener Akademie," XLVIII, 21 ff., gives an excellent and solid description of the Slavonic immigration into the north" Abhandl. d. Sachs. Gesellschaft der west of the Balkans Gelzer,
;
Wiss.," XVIII
(1899), Nr. 5,
some new
found
material.
good
of the
in Bury,
"History
in
Petermann's Mitteilungen," 1890, 1 ff. Philippson, " A. Cervesato, " Le colonie slave della Grecia," in "Pensiero Italiano (Milano), 896, Nr. 67-68, is not accessible to me.
ff.,
455
and
1
"
Roman Empire,"
(1889),
14
ff.,
Gregorovius,
8
I,
I,
85.
Gregorovius,
9
86.
Gregorovius,
10
I,
I,
112.
Gregorovius,
11
114.
I,
117.
12
(1892),
13 14
in
"
Zeitschrift
fur
wiss.
Theologie,"
XXXV
Gregorovius,
22.
About the Greeks of Cappadocia compare the exact statements of Dawkins in "The Journal of Hellenic Studies," (1910), 109 ff., 267 ff. 15 Isolated Greek remains still exist in Southern Italy (near Reggio
XXX
of Ajaccio),
on
land und seine Stellung im Orient ". The present grouping of races in is recently described and illustrated with an excellent ethno" Die ethnographische Abgrenzung der graphical map by J. Cvijic, Volker auf der Balkanhalbinsel," in "Petermanns Mitteilungen" (1913), 113 ff., 185 ff., 244 ff. (includes also a bibliography).
For some districts there are now monographs from a modern historical and etymological view, compare A. Thumb, " Die ethnographische Stellung der Zakonen," " Indogerm. Forschungen," IV (1894), 195 ff., Sir. Adp777)09,
17
TT}? 'ArTiicfjs /cal rj e-rroLicrjcn^ r&v 'A\/3ava>v" TOV Ilapvaoro-ov" I (1896), 186-192, 2. Mevdp&os, " TOTTO)" As I see from 'Aeyva," XVIII (1906), 315 ff. KvTrpov," " Aaoypa(f)ia" I, 422, a committee has been established by the Greek Minister of Education for studying the geographical names of Greece.
18
"
H ovofLaroKoyia
II,
283
ff.
19
20
17.
names
of the
is
Maina
in
my
inquiry which
44
n
.
Undoubtedly
of
Slavonic Origin.
Gythion-Kotrona Lagia
564 504
501
24 =
4
4'2
Messa
South of Vitylo Vitylo-Tsimova
Leftro-Platsa
18=
9 =
0-8 3'6
3'2
7'5
275
Kardamula-Kampos
That #0
11
24=
% %
"/
/
78 = 16'5 57 13'4
district of the
Philippson says,
Slavs have
seems
to
me
at
various times
on the islands. The article of Sismanov, "Slavonic Settlements on Crete and other Islands" (Bulgarian), in " Blgarski pregled," 1897, Nr. 3, which is not accessible to me, needs
made
piratical raids
critical
:
637
"
Byzantin.
all
Zeitschrift,"
important.
traces in
B.
A. Pancenko,
:
"Izve'stije
Russago archeol.
Instituta," VIII, 15
23
und die Compare waren weder so grtindlich und vollstandig, wie Fallmerayer, Slavisierung noch so sporadisch und unbedeutend, wie HopfF annahm ".
4
are unimportant for our question. " Die Hellenenausrottung Gelzer, I.e. 52
What
still
of
another Greek,
who
asserts without
any proof,
XV (1908),
117
been Hellenised, but went back again to the Donau " 25 In passing it may be noted, that Gobineau, Deux etudes sur la " Grece moderne 265 f. had a similar idea about the (Paris, 905), Albanians and their mixture with the Greeks. "'See " Petermann's Mitteil.," 1890, 33 ff., " Zeitschr. d. Gesellschaft f. Erdkunde zu Berlin," For the whole king(1890), 402 f. dom Philippson estimates the number of the Albanians at 22,400= '3 In the middle of the 9th century the number of Albanians in Greece was estimated at 172,000 = c. 14%, see "Zeitschr. d. Gesellschaft f. Erdkunde zu Berlin," 1857, 490. Albanian colonies formerly existed also in los, Kythnos, Samos, Psara, Kasos, settled by the Turkish Government during the 6th century they were unimportant and have been absorbed See Hasluck in the " Annual of the Brit. School of Athens," ago. long
1
XXV
223
ff.
in
entirely Hellenised ; although speaking a Romance language closely related to Roumanian, their national feeling is quite Greek, and the Roumanian
propaganda has
1
failed, as all
who know
confirm
the
these belongs for instance Buschan, The pamphlet is Vergangenheit und Gegenwart," Stuttgart, 1910. written superficially and without sufficient of the subject. knowledge 29 M. Hoernes, " Natur- und Urgeschichte des Menschen," I, 351,
To
"
HIS
ANCESTRY
we
45
modern Greeks.
Because
measurements (not general statistics), it is difficult to state the real average. " La Grece For all anthropological researches, the book of C. Stephanos, au point de vue naturel, ethnologique, anthropologique, etc.," Paris, 1884 " Dictionnaire encyclopedique des sciences me*dicales "), is (Extrait du For some new details compare the still to-day an indispensable source.
authors quoted in the following notes. " 30 " Alt- und neugriechische Schadel," Sitzungsberichte d. Berliner
Akad.," 1893, 677 ff. " 31 Der Mensch," See J. Ranke, 32 " fcal Ae\riov
TT)? l<TTopiKr)<s
is 33
II,
204.
e6vo\o<yitc?)s
'Ercupeias"
I,
366
ff.
The
last
number
found
la
in
Hoernes,
"
Naturgeschichte,
etc.,'*
I,
350.
34
Compare "Bull, de
"
Socie'te
ff.,
Diefenbach,
in
Volkerkunde Osteuropas," I, 42 ff. otherwise Zaborowski 'La grande Encyclopedic," XIX (1893), 282 ff. " 35 See Neophytos in L'Anthropologie," II (1891), 25 ff.
36
" Am. Journ. of Anthropology," ArchaeoL," (1911), 65-67, and "Some Dorian Descendants," Some "Ann. Brit. School of Athens," XVI (1909-1910), 258-280. " other Minoan skulls have been measured by W. B. Dawkins, Skulls " The Annual of the Brit. School of from Cave Burials at Zarko (Crete)," Athens," VII (1900-1901), 105 ff. " 37 Compare also Hawes, Some Dorian Descendants," in note 36.
Ch.
H.
XV
Hawes,
"
Cretan
is 89 according to Hoernes, Other numbers (between 84 and 90) are communicated by Some Dorian Descendants," 266, 276. The Roumanians, Hawes, " too, are brachy cephalic according to the tables of Pittard, Ethnologic de " la Peninsule des Balkans," Le Globe," LXIII (1904), p. 50.
The
I.e.
I,
350. "
See C. Stephanos, I.e. 432 ff. My remarks show how superficial is the assertion of Buschan (see note 28), that Greek brachycephalism comes from Slav descent.
10
3S
Compare the opinions of the Danish scholar Vodskov, summarised " by Franke in Indog. Forsch." (Anzeiger), III (1893), 11 ff. 42 See Barth in " Berliner Zeitschrift f. allgemeine Erdkunde," XVI
1
41
(1864), 194f.
43
Above
of the hair,
because
we
have no means
times.
of obtaining a percentual comparison of ancient and modern of According to Hoernes, I.e. I, 354, in Greece there are 96
a dark complexion. This number needs criticism as much as the statement " of a French author (Castonnet des Fosses, La Crete et I'Hellenisme," Paris, 1897, 58), that most inhabitants of Crete are of a fair complexion. C. Stephanos, I.e. 458, gives a more accurate table, and remarks that
fair
colour
is
of
myself
46
have made
Sphakia.
some observations during my travels through Maina and Taygetus and of Crete fair colour is
is
more frequent than I observed elsewhere. The following table by counting pupils of elementary schools, namely, 206 boys + 3 schools of Vitylo, Platsa, Kampos (Maina) and 79 boys + 14 schools of Sphakia town and Anopolis (Sphakia)
:
compiled
Dark.
Brown.
Fair.
Maina
Sphakia
42' 1
32*3%
40'2 55-9
/ /
177%
11-8%
from those
of
"
My
In
numbers
Hawes,
be explained by mixture with Albanians (see in "Deutsche Rundschau," 1898, 124). the Sphakiotes fair complexion must be of ancient
:
prehistoric origin perhaps the Sphakiotes are anthropologically a survival of the Dorians who came to Crete about 1000 B.C. At any rate fair complexion cannot serve to support Fallmerayer's theory.
44
Greek or even
Gregorovius,
45
I,
50.
is
Die neugriechische Sprache," Freiburg, 1892. 46 " Neugriechische Studien," II (" Sitzungsber. d. Wiener Akad.," CXXX, 1894). Of course the list of G. Meyer could be supplemented
short
orientation
found
in
my
"
essay
in
some
47 48
points.
I,
1
Gregorovius,
53
f.
See G. Meyer "Neugriech. Studien," II (1895). 49 About the relation between the ancient and modern folklore compare besides the well-known book of Bernhard Schmidt (" Das Volksleben der " Neugriechen "), the more recent works of N. F. TIo\ir^, MeXerai. Trepl
rov {3lov KOI T7)9 'yXttHTcnjs rov e\\r)vi,Kov \aov, Flapaoocreis" 2 vols., Athens, 1904; Lawson, "Modern Greek Folklore and Ancient Greek Religion," Cambridge, 1910; Mary Hamilton, "Greek Saints and their " Analecta Festivals," London, 1910 (with the criticisms of Delehaye in Bollandiana," XXIX, 460 ff. and Gruppe in "Berliner philol. Wochenschrift," 191 1, 683 ff.); Hesseling, "Oud- en Nieuwgrieks Volksgeloof," in the "Gids," 1906, Nr. 7, and B. Schmidt, "Neugriechische Volks;
kunde,"
in
"Neue
Jahrbucher
f.
d.
klass.
Altertum,"
XXVII
(1911),
643
(the two last essays are occasioned by the quoted work of Politis). Hesseling as well as B. Schmidt emphasises the survival of Antiquity;
ff.
("Aus
Volkskunde," neugriech. 1905, 380 ff., and "Neugriech. Sagenklange vom alten Griechenland," 14 Neue Jahrbucher f. d. klass. Altertum," XVII, 80 ff.), who denies that
tradition
is
the
K. Dieterich
Modern
excellently summarised in the periodical edited by " AeKriov -7-779 eXXTjvi/crjs Aaoypa<f>ia.
now
HIS
ANCESTRY
47
4 vols.). The book of R. Rodd, "The Customs (since 1909, to me. of Modern Greece," London, 1892, is not accessible
and Lore
II,
" Griech. und albanes. Marchen (Leipzig, 1864), " 15 ff. JToXtT?;? ILz/)aocret9," Nr. 175, Hamilton, I.e.
See Hahn,
"
76,
51
B. Schmidt,
"Neue
Jahrbiicher,"
I.e.
651.
151
ff.,
52
See B. Schmidt,
I.e.
654
ff.,
Lawson,
I.e.
Hamilton,
I.e.
187
ff.
53
54
Compare most
In
recently Hamilton,
I
155
f.
my
lecture
although I first place a remarkable (anthropological and linguistic) difference between it comes from the Greeks of Asia Minor and those of the other countries
unit,
;
dealt only with the Greeks as an ethnographical There is in the indicated sometimes local differences.
antiquity (as for instance Gobineau, I.e., 268, has already emphasised). Especially the dialects of Pontus and Cappadocia are developed in quite
the
an original manner, and their moral character, too, is different from that of Moreover, some Greek tribes have a European and Insular Greeks.
peculiar character, as the Agraphiotes of Mount Pindos, who are but little known, the Tsaconians in ancient Kynuria, with their strange Dorian
dialect, the Maniates in the Taygetus Peninsula, whom I studied in a journey in 1894 (see "Deutsche Rundschau," 1898, 110 ff.), and the " White Mountains," south of Canea after having made Sphakiotes in the a journey there in 1912, I shall treat of this interesting tribe in the
;
It
deserves notice, that an excellent Servian scholar, J. Cvijic (I.e. 16), has recently acknowledged this absorbing force of
also
See
Gobineau,
I.e.,
and Gelzer,
I.e.
About the name Potato?, Romjos, compare for instance Krum" " Das Problem der neugriechischen Schriftsprache (Miinchen, bacher,
1903), 191
58
ff.
57
See Krumbacher,
"
Mittelgriechische
"
Sprichworter
(Miinchen,
1893), Introduction.
" Die heutigen Griechen," in the " Deutsche papers Rundschau," 1897, 226 and "Pro Graecia," #., 1913, 473 ff.
59
See
my
RENDEL HARRIS,
AS
it
the acquisition
plete
by the Rylands Library of an almost commanuscript of the Odes of Solomon is one of the
may
most important events in the recent history of the institution, be worth while to give a brief statement, by which the readers
of the Bulletin
may form an
The book
It
is
written in the
of other stray
on the shelves
lost
my
it
contained a
hymn-book
of the Early
Church,
with the
of the Apostolic times, or, at the very latest, of the sub- Apostolic
to say, a
so,
New
it
Testament
itself.
The
statement
is
so
surprising,
and the
that
recovery of such a
book
so altogether unlikely
and unexpected,
is
still
make thema
certain
visitor,
selves
amount
of incredulity
and
new
when
was
published, with
its
difficult transitions in
churches.
question
is
There
the organisation and belief of the early Christian can, however, be no doubt that the volume in
the very
book which
is
known
in
catalogues of early
it
by
actual quotations
can be identi-
49
fourth century, after which time it appears early part of the to have gone out of use, except that there are a few later traces of it
And
what a
!
lovely
book
it
is
utterly
radiant with
hope and love Testament calls the Joy of the Lord. what It was a wise thought on the part of the authorities of the John Rylands Library to signalise the acquisition of the book by the producshot through
the
New
which the
text should
be facsimiled, tran-
translated,
multitude of
and commented on, with due reference to the editions and commentaries which have already appeared,
not only in Germany, but in almost all leading European countries, and in the United States. The prospect of producing such an edition
for the
is
shall
do
my best to discharge worthily the task which has been committed to Not that I have any idea (in fact I never had) of saying the me.
last
word about
the book
the
more
read
it,
the
more
become
which a whole generation of scholars will have to and of the time that will be required to settle
provokes.
In order to refresh the
memories and
attached to Rylands students, this notice a facsimile page, and have given the sense of it, not necessarily in a final form, but as nearly as may answer the purpose of any one who approaches the subject for the first time. If we can better
it
we have
we
shall certainly
do
so.
ODE
38.
and the
terror of death and I and the bride who is corrupted corrupts and is corrupted, "both of them" adorned. And I asked the Truth, Who are these ? and he said to are the deceiver and the deception and they are like to a me, They lover and his bride and they lead astray and corrupt the whole world and they invite many to the banquet, and give them to drink
sufferings
to
be the
corruption,
of the
and they vomit up their wisdom and and so they make them without intelligence and then knowledge, and then these go about madly corrupting being they leave them
of their intoxication,
:
;
wine
it.
50
But
me, I was made wise so as not to fall into the hands of the Deceiver and I congratulated myself because the Truth was
established and saved and redeemed, and on the hand of the Lord, because He had my foundations were For He set the root and watered it and fixed it and established me. and its fruits will be for ever. It struck deep and sprung blessed it
was
laid
up and spread out, and was full and enlarged and the Lord alone was glorified in His planting and in His husbandry by His care and by the blessing of His lips, by the beautiful planting of His right
;
hand
mind.
of
His
planting,
of
His
Hallelujah.
ODE
39.
away
ARTHUR
S.
PEAKE,
M.A., D.D.,
" Hoiv [The following notes were hastily put together to accompany lectures on to Study the Old and New Testaments" but may serve the purpose of
guiding the Student to the most useful literature available at the present It need scarcely be added that in a brief survey of this kind many time.
excellent
omitted.
OLD TESTAMENT.
Old Testament
in
of
Kittel, EDITIONS
the
Hebrew
jand Greek
"
Biblia
of
critical
Hebraica" (the most serviceable on account other texts by Baer-Delitzsch and apparatus)
;
Sacred Books of the Old Testament in Hebrew," Ginsburg. edited by Paul Haupt and still incomplete, is an emended text, often with liberal use of conjecture, and printed in colours to distinguish " documentary sources. Swete, The Old Testament in Greek accord"
ing to the Septuagint
(the best text for ordinary use
;
"
The
the larger
progress).
Cambridge Septuagint edited by Brooke and McLean is in Other editions by Tischendorf, and Lagarde (incomplete).
Gesen-
Briefer works ius-Kautzsch, "Hebrew Grammar" (standard work). " " on Hebrew Grammar" and Hebrew Syntax" by A. B. Davidson
by McFadyen
;
in preparation)
Driver,
(important
Thackeray,
;
"Grammar
of the
Old Testament
in
Greek"
is
(a
German Grammar
of the
in progress).
Conybeare and Stock's Selections from the Septuagint " has some pages on the Grammar. Brown, Driver, and Briggs, He" brew Lexicon (the standard work, indispensable an abridged edition
;
"
LXX by
Helbing
also "
51
52
is
needed as there
is
no
a very
Gesenius, cheap pocket lexicon by Feyerabend may be mentioned). 'Thesaurus" (in Latin) is still a valuable storehouse. The standard
Hebrew Lexicon
lexicons are
in
German
is
Gesenius- Buhl
other noteworthy
modern
lexicon to
The most recent and comis still a desideratum. " Hebrew Concordance is by Mandelkern but The prehensive " Of Englishman's Hebrew Concordance will be found very useful.
the Septuagint
;
Concordances
to the
"
Analytical Con-
cordance" and Strong's "Exhaustive Concordance" are the best. For the Septuagint, Hatch and Redpath's Concordance stands alone.
DICTIONARIES OF
of the
THE
"
BIBLE:
Hastings' "Dictionary
;
Bible"
"
(in five
the
One Volume
;
the best
work
of
its
size)
Encyclopaedia Biblica (of the highest quality, often containing the best available discussion, but seriously marred by Lower Criticism
of the
of the
New of
an extreme
first
and speculative character) Smith's "Dictionary of the Bible" (the volume has been published in a revised edition, much of it good,
but unequal and
volumes largely antiquated long ago) Murray's Dictionary" (conservative work in one volume).
;
last
two
Bible
Illustrated
'The Standard
in
work
on
one volume).
Very important
articles in
"The
Encyclopaedia Britannica".
(based
of
'The
New
Schaff-Herzog
Encyclopaedia"
Herzog-Hauck's
a rather con-
useful
lies
articles
but
its
strength
elsewhere.
ment" (good)
The Canon of the Old Testa"Canon and Text of the Old Testament" Buhl, " " The Origin of the Canon of the Old Testament (an Wildeboer, " excellent complement to Ryle) Introduction to the Hebrew Geden,
Ryle,
; ; ;
"
"
the
Topography
of the
Books of Samuel
(specially
;
valuable introduction on palaeography and textual criticism) Weir, 'The Text of the Old Testament"; Swete, "Introduction to the
Old Testament
in
Greek".
Important
articles
on
text
and versions
53
(our
;
Old Testament"
more
was thoroughly
slightly, ninth
by Bennett and Adeney, our best Introduction to the Bible in one volume) McFadyen (excellent popular work) Gray (compact Briefer works by Wright, Box, and good, our most recent work).
duction
; ;
other Introductions by with two important addenda) " Biblical IntroGerman scholar) Bennett (in
;
Whitehouse.
"
Kautzsch,
An
sketch of the subject following the historical " The Old Testament in the Jewish Robertson Smith,
Church"
(at
;
the subject
once popular and scientific, an excellent introduction to second edition much enlarged and improved) Orr,
;
'The Problem
of the
to the "critical" theory). Cheyne, "Founders of Old Testament " Criticism most interesting sketch of several leading figures in the (a
development of the
"
subject).
:
Kuenen,
"
;
"
Introduction
authoritative
work by a
leading exponent
of the Grafian
Theory)
Wellhausen,
Prolegomena
(epoch-making
secured the triumph of the Grafian criticism over the type represented " the author's Die Compositions des by Ewald and Dillmann) " Hexateuchs was a very important contribution to the analysis Bacon, " " The Genesis of Genesis and "The Triple Tradition of the Exodus " The Documents of Addis, (the latter important pioneering work) " the Hexateuch (prints them separately) Carpenter and Battersby,
; ; ' ; ;
in its Constituent
Documents"
(the best
discussion); Carpenter and Harford, "The Composition " of the Hexateuch (enlarged and revised edition of the first volume
of preceding);
briefer
;
Chapman, "Introduction to the Pentateuch" (much The leading German work is by Holzinger, excellent).
by Gressmann and Smend.
more
recent discussions
INTRODUCTIONS TO OTHER PARTS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT: Findlay, "The Books of the Prophets" (good
especially for theology)
"
Cheyne,
;
Introduction to the
Book
"
of Isaiah
of the
"
Kennett,
The Composition
54
Book
"
(radical)
;
Isaiah
"
Cheyne,
'
The
Origin of the
as criticism
Israel,"
Psalter
is
which
(both valuable for handling of ideas as well advanced); W. T. Davison, "The Praises of
Literature of
"The Wisdom
the
" The Gordon, popular works, " Poets of the Old Testament (good and recent). ISRAEL Ewald, " History of the People of
better for theology than criticism)
HISTORY OF
"
(our biggest work, very learned and stimulating, but largely antiquated) ; Stade, "Geschichte des Volkes Israel" (a large history,
Israel
though much smaller than Ewald, written from now dominant critical " Wellhausen, History of Israel and Judah" (reprint of standpoint) " " Israel "in article Encyclopaedia Britannica," a classic, but consider" in his Israelitische und Jiidische Geschichte ") H. P. ably expanded
; ;
Smith,
(very good,
if
extreme)
Kittel,
History of the
Hebrews
"
sometimes unduly
edition
of
standpoint, second
;
" German much enlarged and improved) Kent, History of the Hebrew People"; Kent and Riggs, "History of the Jewish
edition
People" (both good); Guthe, "Geschichte des Volkes Israel" (new Briefer works (all good) by Cornill, Wade, announced). " G. A. Smith, Historical GeoOttley, Foakes- Jackson, Bennett.
in-
THE RELIGION OF ISRAEL AND OLD TESTAMENT TH EOLOGY The best treatment accessible in English Kautzsch's
:
is
"
article,
The
it is
"
Dictionary".
Schultz,
Extra
"
Volume
of
Hastings'
is
The
fullest
by
now
rather old.
The Theology
of the
Old
but naturally containing much that is " The Religious Ideas of the Old Testavaluable) Wheeler Robinson, ment" (a compact manual admirable in every way, and on a level " with the present position of the subject) ; Stade and Bertholet, Biblische Theologie des Alten Testaments
"
(recent
and important)
briefer
The
Old
these
The
"
Among
(the
first
Religion of Israel
55
from the Grafian standpoint, the author's presentation of the history Hibbert Lectures make up to some extent for his failure to publish a
later edition);
interesting for
Duff,
"Old Testament Theology" (written with enthusiasm, incomplete, his "Theology and Ethics of the Hebrews" presents in brief form " Hebrew Rehis conclusions on the subject in general) Addis,
;
the subject would be (excellent, a second volume completing ligion of Israel to the Exile" (a Budde, "The Religion very welcome)
;
"
Cheyne,
"The
and Higher (very interesting, but too drastic in both Lower Marti, "The Religion of the Old Testament" (clear-cut Criticism)
Exile
;
The
Religion of
The Nomad Religion, The Peasant Rethe Prophets, The Legal Religion) Ottley,
:
"The
'
Religion of Israel"
Religion of Israel
Peake,
"The
The
ing tone).
The
chief
"
Religion of Israel"
Loisy,
named
are
be confused
There
no work
in
of Israel rose out of Semitic Religion the works on the latter subject
the
Marriage
making)
sur
les
;
in Early
Arabia"
"
student "
;
Robertson Smith,
Religion of the
The
"
Wellhausen,
(important)
Religions
".
Semitiques
Origins
OTHER WORKS:
"
important)
;
"
Gunkel,
Gressmann, Ursprung der israelitischjiidischen Eschatoto be very important); Charles, Critical logie" (may prove " History of the Doctrine of a Future Life (second edition much im-
"A
1
proved)
Old Testament";
Monotheismus
"
;
Baentsch,
und
israelitisches
56
Robertson Smith,
Exilic Prophets
".
"The
Post-
COMMENTARIES
Critical
The standard
series are
Commentary".
Other
"The
Westminster Commentaries,"
series
Expositor's Bible,"
"The
Old Testament"
(the
Polychrome
series in
Bible,
Handbuch Nowack's Hand German " zum Alien Testament"; Marti's Kommentar Handcommentar zum Alten Testament". There are numerous other commentaries
;
volumes
issued).
The most
"
important "
and
editions,
which there
is
no space
to
mention.
Kent's
"The
textual
Student's
critically
especially
on
criticism,
critical
text should
is
be employed, not the Textus Rethe text that lies behind the Authorised
represents the dominant
out.
critiis
"
theory
carried
The
Revisers'
text
largely
somewhat
edition
is
dominated by Westcott and Hort's textual theory, but is less remote from the "Textus Receptus". The best
"
by Souter
it
contains a brief
"
textual
is
by Wey mouth
modern
is
critical editions.
by Nestle
issued
the text
British
a resultant one.
by the
and Foreign Bible Society, with an apparatus " " Textus Receptus and the Revisers'
For students the edition issued by the Wurtemberg Bible Of Society is more useful on account of its superior apparatus.
larger editions that
fullest
Von Soden
and
has
proleg-
omena, expounding a new theory, which will form the subject of manual investigation and discussion for a long time to come. edition of the text has also been Other editions by Trepublished.
gelles, Baljon,
and B. Weiss.
57
The
While
still
Winer, translated and and additions by W. F. Moulton. many improvements valuable it is to some extent antiquated and is in course of
recently has been that of
Blass has published an Winer, by Schmiedel, is still incomplete. since the author's death a new important grammar on a smaller scale
;
and
The
second
English edition
from an
German.
There are
hardly on the level of present knowledge, and will no doubt be superseded in course " " of time. Deissmann's Bible Studies opened a new epoch by
It is
now
of the
New
Testament
is
the
common
col-
disappointing.
accessible in
Cremer's
Worterbuch
The English from an early edition of the original. best Concordance to the Greek Testament is that by Moulton and " Textus ReGeden, the earlier work by Bruder was based on the
ceptus," but takes account of the critical texts.
Those who know no Greek will find "The Englishman's Greek Concordance" of service. " " " and Strong's Exhaustive Young's Analytical Concordance
"
Concordance
DICTIONARIES OF
THE
:
BIBLE
"
Biblio-
New
the
Old Testament ". " Canon and Text of the Gregory's most comprehensive work embracing both
subjects,
but disappointing and too popular for a standard work ; " Souter's "The Text and Canon of the New Testament is much
briefer,
1
and
Westcott's
The Canon
Introduction
of the
;
New
this
"
Testament
is
solid
Canon
in Jiilicher's
may
"
work
is
Zahn's
brief sketch
of his conclusions
is
With
these should be
mentioned
his
"
Forschungen,"
in
several
volumes
58
written
by himself but including contributions by other " than Zahn's is Leipoldt's Geschichte des neutestamentlichen Kanons ". For Textual Criticism, apart from
scholars.
briefer history
the
books
by Gregory and
Souter
already
to the
mentioned,
there
is
Scrivener's
"A
".
Plain
Introduction
serviceable
Criticism
of the
is
New
Testament
41
Handbook
of
edition),
Text
those
Kenyon's Testament" (2nd which may, however be supplemented by Lake's "The There are several short manuals, the New Testament ".
to the
The most
work
New
by Hammond, Warfield, and Vincent may be mentioned. It would be advisable for the student to work through one of these
to Westcott
classic.
manuals (Kenyon's by preference) before taking up the Introduction " New Testament in Greek," which is a and Hort's
Nestle's "
is
"
Greek
New
Testament
a very learned
work
written from a
somewhat
edition
different
Hort (English
translation from
2nd
edition.
1
The
German
was pub;
lished in
909).
articles in
the Dictionaries
Burkitt's
Turner's
"Text and Versions" in the Encyclopaedia Biblica" and "Text of the New Testament "in "Murray's Illustrated
'
Bible Dictionary"
the
latter
xi.
in
may be specially mentioned, and the articles by The Journal of Theological Studies," vols. x.
:
and
'
Moffatt's
recommended.
in
New Translation may be specially " Historical New Testament arranges the books
"
"
what he regards as the order of composition, gives a translation of them (not identical with that in the preceding work), and much critical
discussion.
New
4 *
Other good translations are, The Twentieth Century " Testament" and Weymouth's The New Testament in Modern
".
English
may be
found
in
The
Corrected English
New
Testament" and
A new
under the
based on the original, not on the Vulgate, has begun to appeal" title The Westminster Version of the Sacred Scriptures ".
German and
may
also
be
mentioned.
59
fuller
For much
may
appended
Critical
Very
elaborate
may
New
Literature of the
New
the subject.
Among
Testament," which is our standard work on translations from German the works of B.
"
work on the advanced by Holtzmann (untranslated and now old). Salmon's Introduction is somewhat antiquated, but not out of date. It is learned, lucid, lively, and one-sided, the work of a clever advocate. Of smaller works those by Adeney, Bacon, and
side
is
Jillicher are
The
leading
call for
mention.
In addition to
books which
New
:
Here only a
Testament there are many on special selection of the more recent can be
"
On the Gospels
promises to
ments
discussion.
The Gospels as Historical Docube when completed our best and most 'comprehensive " " Burkitt's The Gospel History and Its Transmission is
Stanton's
There are smaller works by Pullan, J. A. " " In German Baur's Die Evangelien Robinson, and Holdsworth. deserves to be mentioned, and not for its historical importance alone
;
and Weizsacker's
"
Untersuchungen
Geschichte,"
E. A. though just half a century old, is by no means antiquated. " " Abbott's series entitled Diatessarica now numbers several volumes.
works by " Oxford Stanton, Burkitt, Abbott, and Robinson already mentioned, " Studies in the Synoptic Problem," Hawkins' Horae Synopticae,"
criticism of the
For the
Synoptic Gospels
in addition to the
"
Buckley's
'*
Introduction
to
The Earliest Sources for the Life German Wernle's " Die synoptische
in die drei ersten
the Synoptic Problem," and Burkitt's " of Jesus may be named and in
;
Frage," Wellhausen's
"
discussions
tischen
by B. Weiss (" Das Marcusevangelium und seine synop" Das Matthausevangelium und seine LucasParallelen,"
"
parallelen,"
"
" synoptischen Uberlieferung "). Beitrage " zur Einleitung in das Neue Testament are concerned mainly with " " the Lucan writing, but the second, Spriiche und Reden Jesu (Eng. tr. The Sayings of Jesus ") is a very noteworthy discussion of the
The
first
four of Harnack's
'
non-Marcan source
of
as
Q.
60
Special aspects of the problem are examined in various works such as " Das alteste Evangelium," by J. Weiss. Books on the Life (e.g.
Keim
or B. Weiss) or
discussions of
is
Teaching
the
(e.g.
critical
Gospels.
comparing the
parallel sections
all in its
Gospels
much
facilitated
in parallel
columns.
;
Rushbrooke's "
;
Synopticon" surpasses
Synopse der
For English students by Tischendorf, Wright, and Campbell. M. Thompson, may be recomSynoptic Gospels," by J. mended.
The
Gospel the literature tends to fall into two divisions, those books which affirm and those which deny the apostolic Of the earlier books Sanday's " Authorship and Historiauthorship.
the
On
Fourth
"
cal
Character
of
the
Fourth
Gospel
and
"
Lightfoot's
Biblical
Essays" may be specially mentioned, also Ezra Abbot's paper on The Authorship of the Fourth Gospel External Evidence ".
'
:
comprehensive account of the debate in modern times is given in Wat" " kins' Modern Criticism and the Fourth Gospel a much briefer work " with the recent discussions is Jackson's The Fourth Gospel ". dealing " But the most important survey is contained in Sanday's The Criticism of the Fourth Gospel ". The most notable contributions " on a large scale published recently in English are Drummond's The " Character and Authorship of the Fourth Gospel (conservative) and " " Bacon's The Fourth Gospel in Research and Debate (advanced).
;
briefer
There are
work by Schmiedel The Johannine Writings (radical). large volumes by Overbeck (posthumous) and Clemen in
"
"
German.
The most
striking
change
has been
of
Wendt
be seen in
"
unity
:
his
views
may
An
On connected with the names of Wellhausen, Schwartz, and Spitta. " the other side, B. Weiss Das Johannesevangelium als einheitliches
Werk".
On
44
St.
may
suffice to
Roman
"
"
Luke
the Physician
Chase
"
The
Histori-
61
Acts
of the Apostles
of the Apostles," Physician," "The Acts " " and of the Synoptic Gospels"; Norden's Agnostos Theos with " 1st die Rede des Paulus in Athen ein urspriingHarnack's reply, " ? licher Bestandteil der Apostelgeschichte On the Pauline Epistles: Godet, "Introduction to the
,
"
New
"
Testament
The Witness
of the
"The Pauline Epistles," may be mentioned among the larger books, " " The Epistles of Paul the Apostle among the smaller. Findlay,
R.
Scott's
"
The
"
Pauline Epistles
striking
is
much
of
guide.
The most
contribution
Earlier Epistles of St. Paul," and that not simply for the critical It will presumably be followed by a volume dealing with problems. There is, of course, a large literature on individual the later epistles.
epistles or
groups of
epistles,
but
it
similarly the special literature on the other epistles. On the Revelation of John Vischer, " Die
:
Offenbarung
"
Johannis"; Spitta,
"
J.
"Die Offenbarung
Weiss,
Wellhausen,
Analyse
all advocate the composite authorship der Offenbarung Johannis" of the work. Gunkel's "Schbpfung und Chaos" introduced a new " era in the interpretation of the book. See further Porter, The " " Messages of the Apocalyptic Writers Ramsay, The Letters to " " the Seven Churches Studies in the Apocalypse ". Charles,
;
It
both
in
dictionaries
and
periodicals, in
But it would demand a great deal of space comprehensive works. to deal even superficially with a literature so vast.
HISTORY For the contemporary history of the New " Testament the foremost authority is Schiirer's The Jewish People " in the Time of Christ ". Another large work is Hausrath's History
:
of
*
the
New
Testament Times".
"
of Christ
of
Of
smaller works
Muirhead's
The Times
may be commended.
Christ
there
are well-known
popular works
Edersheim's "The Life and by Farrar, Geikie, and D. Smith. Times of Jesus the Messiah" is valuable for its illustration of the
62
stimulating, with important apologetic discussions. " Outlines of Three students* books may be recommended, Sanday's " Kent's The Life and Teaching of Jesus," and the Life of Christ,"
Christ
is
fresh
and
Rhees'
"
The
".
Of
works (translated into English) may be mentioned Keim's Jesus of " Nazara (best of the rationalistic Lives, but rests on incorrect solution
of Synoptic
German
Problem)
Weiss's
"
"
Life of Christ
(on a sounder
;
critical
Oscar basis than Keim, learned and thorough rather than brilliant) " " The Life of Jesus (too commonplace). Bousset's Holtzmann " " Jesus is a sympathetic and admirably written sketch from advanced
standpoint.
of the Apostolic
"
Weizsacker,
Age the following may be menThe Apostolic Age of the Christian Church,"
master,
radical
in
brilliant
work by a
its
;
criticism
combination
1
treatment of Acts, but remarkable for its power of " McGiffert, History of Christianity in the Apostolic Age," able, sounder than Weizsacker but less brilliant ; Bartlet, The Apostolic Age," conservative, but independent and original ;
negative in
Ropes,
"The
"
Apostolic
Age"
(good).
brief
sketch
Dobschiitz,
The
Apostolic Age,"
may
be added.
covering a larger field but including the Apostolic Age are Pfleiderer's " Primitive Christianity," learned and illuminating though often " The Beginnings of Christianity," too slashing extreme Wernle's " Das Urchrisbut written with glow and enthusiasm J. Weiss, " H. Achelis, Das Christentum," fresh, thorough, and suggestive
;
tentum
in
den ersten
with Paul.
of course
Among the earlier Lives of Paul those by and Howson, Lewin and Farrar may be mentioned of Conybeare " " Bacon's more recent works Ramsay's St. Paul the Traveller
;
;
"
"
Clemen's
:
"
"
Paulus
Weinel's
"
St.
Paul
".
COMMENTARIES
British
It is
A pretty
New Testament ". Speaking generally commentaries are better for the Old Testament than for the New,
latter.
The
"
The
"
"
Commentary
The
63
"The Cambridge
Westminster
"The
Testa-
"
The
'
Speaker's,"
The
Pulpit/'
and Alford.
is
that
The chief German work of this class which has been transin German by H. A. W. Meyer. Of commentaries
Meyer
should perhaps be accorded the "
first
Hand-commentar zum N.T." though other series, such as " Kommentar zum N.T." (conservative), Zahn's (advanced) and
stand worthily by
its side.
The
later editions of
Meyer
"
are entirely
new works by
N.T."
is
fresh writers.
A popular
work,
a commentary with special attention J. Weiss, and " Handbuch zum N.T.," by and contemporary thought, to philology Lietzmann. Apart from these series there are of course numerous
edited by
may be enumerated
Apocalypse
"
; ;
Plummer's
'
Menzies'
The
Gospel
and 2 Corinthians
Bacon,
The
Beginnings of
Gospel Story"; Montefiore, ''The Synoptic Gospels"; Loisy, " " " " and Le Quatrieme Evangile Les JEvangiles Synoptiques Westcott, John, Wellhausen, on Mark, Matthew and Luke
; ;
Hebrews, and Johannine Epistles Lightfoot, Galatians, Philippians, " Notes on Epistles of St. Paul" J. A. Colossians, and Philemon,
;
G. Milligan,
Thessalonians
Hort, James,
THEOLOGY
of in the Apostolic
The
following works deal with the whole field " Reuss, History of Christian Theology
:
(English translation edited and annotated, " Biblical Theology of the B. Weiss, by Dale)
;
New
Testament
less
in construction,
(very complete and careful collection of materials, " and prosaic in quality) ; Beyschlag,
"
New
exposition of
'Theology
(a useful
of the
New
;
New
brilliant)
Sheldon,
compendium)
Adeney,
"
"
ment"
Wernle's "The Beginnings of (an excellent small manual). " There are several important Christianity largely covers the ground.
untranslated works, of which Holtzmann's Neutestamentliche Theo" holds the foremost place there are other treatises by Feine, logic
;
Schlatter,
and Weinel.
64
and
view taken
of the critical
and
"
The Teaching
of Jesus," deals
with
He
regards them as
large measure a faithful representaOn the Synoptic Teaching Bruce published several very symtion. " " The Kingdom of God/' The Training of the pathetic boob " " The Galilean Twelve," The Parabolic Teaching of Christ," and " " is designed to show Denney's Jesus and the Gospel Gospel ".
latter as in
that the
Church
is
justified in its
valuation of Jesus by
Von
"
Schrenck,
two main Synoptic sources. Other works are " " The Historic Grist, Jesus and His Teaching
;
"
"
;
not strictly an exposition of the teaching of Jesus, but naturally contains much on that subject. Recently a considerable literature has grown up
Moffatt's
"
To-day
Garvie,
The Theology
of the
Gospels
is
around the question of the eschatological teaching of Jesus. " development of the subject may be studied in Schweitzer's
The
Von
Reimarus zu
Historical
Wrede"
a
"
title
The Quest
of the
Jesus"),
book, designed to
show
brilliantly written, but avowedly one-sided that we are driven either to a thorough-going
Wrede's
Das Messiasgeheimniss
in
of Christ in
Recent Research
den Evangelien The Life Sanday's " should be consulted on this and other
;
the following
Of
:
892 onwards
"
J.
Reiche Gottes
in its
first
"
Weiss,
(regarded by Schweitzer as epoch-making, but only edition the second, which appeared ten years later in a
;
much
Schweitzer's
enthusiasm)
"
Schweitzer,
Das
Messianitats"
und
;
Leidensgeheimniss
and
"
"The
;
Quest
"
of
Holtzmann's
"
"
Das
Messianische
Tyrrell,
Bewusstsein
Jesu
at
i* rLoisy,
L'vangile
et
1'Eglise
Christianity
;
the
Cross-
Roads"
'
Muirhead,
"The
The
"
Scott,
Eschatology of
the Messiah
"
(a balanced statement of
65
" The Eschatological Question in the eschatological view) ; Emmett, " " Primitive and criticism) Dewick, the Gospels (useful statement " " " The Apocalypse of Jesus ; Christian Eschatology Worsley,
;
Jackson,
"The
Eschatology of
in
Jesus".
Shailer
Mathews,
"The
"
The Testament," and Sharman, " About the Future are concerned with the theme Teaching of Jesus in a more detached way. The Histories of the Apostolic Age usually contain some account
Messianic
Hope
the
New
of
New
Testament
types of
writers.
There are
also
numerous works on
different
theology.
On
the Pauline
literature
:
may
incisive; Eng. views altered, and not for the better, in " Primitive the second edition and in later works, including his Christianity"); Stevens, "The Pauline Theology" (largely from
"Paulinism"
and
trans,
from
"
standpoint of B. Weiss)
"
tianity
Bruce,
St.
(more
satisfactory
tends
to
regard
as
its
apologetic buttresses of
belong to
Jesus led
foundations);
Wrede,
"Paul"
(stimulating
and provocative,
his
religion of
to
considerable discussion in Germany) ; Weinel, "St. Paul" ; Garvie, " " " Studies of Paul and his Gospel St. Paul's ConSomerville, " " H. A. A. Kennedy, St. Paul's Conception of ; ception of Christ " the Last Things ". Schweitzer has in his Paul and his Recent " Interpreters sought to show that the attempts to interpret Paul as
;
down.
Great
on Paul's
relation to
Greek mystery
religions,
religionen
Paul
"
"Die
Hellenistischen Mysterien-
The
full
Lake,
The
and Montefiore,
the
"Judaism and
given
Religions
".
St.
Paul".
very
in
and
careful examination is
by H. A. A. Kennedy
the Johannine Theology
:
"
St.
Paul and
"
Mystery
On
"
;
The Johannine TheoThe Fourth Gospel ". On the Epistle to the " The Epistle to the Hebrews G. Milligan,
Stevens,
"
The Theology
Hebrews
".
LIST
TIES IN
LIBRARY.
1.
2.
3. 4.
5.
NATURAL
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6.
7.
8.
THEOLOGICAL
of the library *s set of
[The range
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An
the
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volume
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1
subsequent issues are to be found upon the shelves. With a few exceptions the sets are complete from the
career of the respective publications.]
1.
commencement
of the
October, 1911
etc.
[etc.].
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Aberdeen, 1913,
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:
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a register
Wales and
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.
Volume 4
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66
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Monumenti
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antichi.
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and
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191
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etc.
8vo.
:
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R
33802
Gadelica
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32145
[1828],
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Butlleti.
. .
R
.
6309
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Barcelona, 1914,
R
Jahresbericht.
. . .
36407
Berlin
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la
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Bibliofilia
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Melanges de
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:
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. .
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-
Illustrated
monographs.
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[London, 1894,
2448
etc.
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-
London, 1895,
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Rules and
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MDCXLI.
etc.]
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Short catalogues of English books printed before 8vo. 1905.] Transactions. London, 1893, etc. 4to.
[London, R 12494
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.
.
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209 14
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68
See Jahresbericht iiber die Biographisches Jahrbuch fiir Alterthumskunde. Fortschritte der classischen Alterthumskunde.
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Quatrieme
Commune
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Bulletin
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R R
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13831
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69
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20305
The
1886,
8vo.
.
.
Cornhill magazine.
London, 1860,
etc.
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.
.
.
R R
22553
1
.
Paul Hinneberg. 2 Deutsche Litteraturzeitung. Herausgegeben von 5497 Leipzig! '\WQ, etc. 4to. Jahrgang [etc.]. fur das Jahr Deutsche Morgenlandische Gesellschaft. Jahresbericht 2 vols. in 1. 8vo. R 6030 1845 [-1846]. Leipzig, 1846-47.
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.
.
No. 50
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[Berlin,
33781
Fol.
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.
900,
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R9312
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1865,
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Berlin,
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Ecole des Hautes Etudes. See Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes. Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes. Bibliotheque de l'cole des hautes
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. .
Bulletin
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\
14334,
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Edinburgh review
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Edinburgh,
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1
8vo.
R
[etc.].
1827
No. 14
[etc.].
[Oxford,
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By members
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,
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r?}?
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ffvyypafiLM
ev
'E7ri<rT7jfj,ovitc7]s
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Veroffentlichungen.
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Mainz, 1902,
R8537
Mainz, 1902,
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R R
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. .
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R
R
25120
35197
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1913
Institut
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Jahrgang,
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Sitzungsberichte der
. . .
philosophisch-philologischen und der historischen Classe. 8vo. 1902 [etc.]. Milnchen [1902]-! 903, etc.
Jahrgang,
R 8940
Vestnik
Ceske
. .
Spolecnosti
.
Nauk.
1
Trida
902,
etc.
nlosficko-historickofiir
jazykozpytna.
(Sitzungsberichte.
Classe
Philosophic,
v Froze,
8vo.
R 8903
AbhandKoeniglich-Preussische Akademie der Wissenschaften, [Berlin]. as und historische Abhand[Continued lungen. Philosophische R 4640 4to. Berlin, 1815, etc. lungen.
:]
-Sitzungsberichte.
Berlin, 1902,
Historisches
etc.
8vo.
R 8256
.
. .
1898,
etc.
8vo.
Berichte
Klasse.
die
54.
Band
9731
Koenigliche Geseilschaft
8vo.
-
der Wissenschaften, [Goettingen] Gottingische 164. Jahrgang [etc.]. Berlin, 1902 [etc.]. gelehrte Anzeigen.
. . . .
Nachrichten.
Goettingen, 1902,
etc.
8vo.
R 8543 R 12611
Edited by J. Y. Library. magazine of bibliography and literature. Macalister. The organ of the Library Association of the United
.
W.
Kingdom.
Library. 1900,
etc.
Edited by
8vo.
.
.
R 2249
New
series.
8vo.
London, 11774
Library Association record. monthly magazine of librarianship and biblioThe official organ of the Library Association. London, graphy. 6403 8vo. 1899, etc.
.
.
.
Library journal.
72
Literarisches Zentralblatt
,
Deutschland.
...
59.
[etc.]
Jahrgang.
1908,
etc.
4to.
R
Beilage
Leip14765
4to.
Die schone
Literatur.
.
zum
Literarischen
Zentralblatt fur
t
Deutschland.
9. [ate.]
Jahrgang.
R
R
17647
:
The Russian review School of Russian Studies. Liverpool University a quarterly review of Russian history, politics, economics, and litera28966 ture. London, 1912, etc. 8vo.
: : .
.
Malone
Society.
The Malone
lists
Society reprints.
etc.
[London], 1907,
etc.
4to.
R
R
13851
13851
record
.
Rules and
etc.]
of
members, 1909,
School
of
4to.
Manchester Municipal
Technology.
...
A
R
etc.
of investigations undertaken by members of the teaching from 1902 to 1907 [etc.]. Manchester, 1909, etc. 4to.
staff
15458
8vo.
Journal.
Manchester, \9\\,
R
National Library of Wales.
29869
Nation; a weekly journal devoted to politics, literature, science, and art. Volume 37 [etc.]. New York, 1883, etc. 4to. 9468
See Aberystwyth
National Library.
Neue
Jahrbiicher
Litteratur.
fiir
.
das
.
New
-
Shakspere
Society.
London,
1874-86. 14
8vo and
8vo.
4to.
R
[1874-92].
vols.
25 vols. 20783
in
5.
Transactions.
1874
[etc.].
London
. .
.
R
etc.
20783
4to.
New
Bulletin.
New
York, 1897,
15462
Nineteenth century.
tinued as:] 8vo.
A monthly review.
The
.
.
London
.
[1849]- 1850,
4to.
Orientalische Bibliographic. . 8vo. Berlin, 1888, etc. Orientalisches Archiv illustrierte Zeitschrift fiir Kunst, Kulturgeschichte und
.
:
R R 629 R 26653
etc.],
Leipzig [1910,
24503
Orientalistische Literaturzeitung. Monatsschrift fiir die Wissenschaft vom vorderen Orient und seine Beziehungen zum Kulturkreise des Mittel-
meers.
...
13.
[etc.]
Jahrgang.
Leipzig [1910,
e tc.
etc.].
4to.
Pali
Text Society.
-
Journal.
[Publications].
8vo.
R R R
Paris
Bibliotheque
franqaises.
Nationale.
Nouvelle
serie.
Bulletin mensuel des recentes publications 1909 [etc.]. Paris [1909, etc.]. 8vo.
21337
LIST
73
.
Philosophic der
Eine Internationale Jahresiibersicht. Gegenwart. 1908 und 1909, etc. Heidelberg, 1910, etc. 8vo.
charivari.
.
London
[1841],
etc.
etc.
4to.
London, 1809,
8vo.
aus italienischen
Rom.
Quellen und Forschungen zur Sprach- und Culturgeschichte der germanischen 8vo. 2766 V6lker. Strassburg, 1874, etc.
. .
Rassegna
Napoli, 1896,
etc.
8vo.
15108
Lincei.
See Revue politique et recueil hebdomadaire. critique 8vo. Paris, 1900, etc.
bleue.
:
Nouvelle
serie.
Tome 49,
etc.
R
.
5496
etc.].
desi bibliotheques.
Publication mensuelle.
Paris [1891,
etc.
8vo.
R 21 779
et conferences.
8vo.
Revue des deux mondes. Revue des etudes grecques. Revue d'histoire litteraire de
.
Paris,
. .
843,
etc.
8vo.
Paris, 1888,
France.
etc.
8vo.
la
de
la
France.
Societe
du Dix-huitieme
Siecle.
[etc.].
R 24587
Paris,
Revue Revue
Revue
hispanique.
Revue
bleue.
...
51
annee
[etc.].
22* annee
[etc.].
Paris, 1913,
:
etc.
8vo.
R 22584 R 35086
PubR. Uni-
See
Rome
Rome
blicata a cura dei professori della Scuola Orientali nella versita di Roma. . Roma, Lipsia, 1907, etc. 8vo.
R 26327
Journal
[Continued as
:]
The
Russian review.
Saint
See Liverpool
University.
etc.
University.
.
Andrews
Library bulletin
8vo.
[etc.].
Andrews, 1904,
Schone
Scottish
Literatur.
.
9540
fur Deutschland.
etc.
Text Society.
Edinburgh, 1884,
8vo.
R7448
74
Smithsonian Institution
...
etc.
United States National Museum. Annual report Washington, 1906, ending June 30, 1905 [etc.].
Giornale.
8vo.
Firenze, 1887,
.
etc.
8vo.
R R
R
13263
15362
8vo.
Bullettino.
Firenze,
1890,
etc.
15366
Societe Asiatique.
relatifs a Journal asiatique, on recueil de memoires philosophic, aux sciences, a la litterature et aux langues Public par la Societe Asiatique. des peuples orientaux. Paris, 8vo. 1822, etc. 2550
.
1'histoire, a la
Bulletin.
Paris, 1875,
fol.
etc.
8vo.
[Publications.]
Paris, 1875,
etc.
8vo. and
R R
32030 32030
.
Societe des Bibliophiles Bretons et de 1'Histoire de Bretagne. 8vo. Nantes, 1878, etc.
-
Bulletin.
[Publications.]
Nantes, 1833,
etc.
R R
1
5267 4710
etc.
Paris,
905,
8vo.
Societe d'Histoire Litteraire
R
de
la
7648
de la 9571
France.
etc.
Revue
8vo.
d'histoire litteraire
France.
Societe
Paris, 1894,
Siecle.
R R
a Peintures.
du Dix-huitieme
etc,
Revue du
dix-huitieme siecle.
Paris, 1913,
4to.
34942
de Manuscrits
etc.
Bulletin.
Paris, 1911,
etc.
4to.
4to.
.
.
[Publications.]
Paris, 1912,
and
.
fol.
R 29054 R 29054
etc.].
Annales.
Geneve [1905,
8vo.
36106
Studi e
testi.
See Vatican
8vo.
Library.
:
ifran ar
1786
[etc.].
Stockholm, 1801,
R
.
4635
1908,
Leipzig,
8vo.
R
Works
etc.
25090
London, 1902,
Kongl. Humanistiska Vetenskaps-Samfundet. Skrifter. 4 [etc.]. Upsala [1895-1901, etc.]. 8vo. Utrecht: Rijks-Universiteit. 1906-07 Jaarboek.
Upsala
R R
Band 12640
[etc.].
[1907,
etc.].
8vo.
Utrecht 2 1070
Vatican
Victoria
Library.
Institute.
Studi e
testi.
Roma,
1900,
etc.
Fol.
and 8vo.
R9655
Journal of the transactions of the Victoria Institute, or,
. .
.
Vol. 40
[etc.].
R
Kunde
London, 15280
Vienna
oriental journal.
des Morgen-
landes.
LIST
75
for
Washington
Library of Congress.
Report
of the librarian of
[etc.].
Congress
Welsh
-
Journal.
/.
[Aberystwyth, 1910,
etc.]
331 13
etc..
[Aberystwyth, 1908,
etc.]
8vo.
.
R
.
331 14,
Wiener
Kunde
des Morgenlandes.
Wien, 1887,
etc.
8vo.
Zeitschrift
fiir
R
etc.,
9447
hebraeische Bibliographic.
Berlin,
8vo.
Zentralblatt fur Bibliothekswesen.
2.
FINE ART.
Paris, 1914,
etc.
Art
in
Europe.
8vo.
R
etc.
36231
Courrier
la curiosite.
(Troisieme periode.
-
Tome
8vo.
R8528
La Chronique
beaux-arts.
.
des arts
. .
Gazette des
R 8528
etc.
Graphische Gesellschaft.
Vasari
Society
for
Veroffentlichungen.
Berlin, 1906,
Fol.
12555
the
[Publications].
of
etc.
HISTORICAL.
:
Bruxelles, 1836,
5173
ou recueil de ses
bulletins.
Bruxelles,
$37,
etc.
8vo.
R5173
Quellen zur
.
Allgemeine Geschichtforschende Gesellschaft der Schweiz. schweizer Geschichte. 8vo. Basel, 1877, etc. See Vorderasiatische Gesellschaft. Alte Orient.
. .
35521
American
American
historical review.
New York
.
895-] 1896,
etc.
8vo.
R6307
journal of archaeology.
of
.
American School
Institute of
Classical
America.
Ancient Egypt. London, 1914. 8vo. Annales de Bretagne. See Rennes Universite.
:
35 83
1
Annales de
Test.
:
See Nancy
.
Universite.
Annales du midi revue archeologique, historique et philologique de la France meridionale. R 5540 8vo. Toulouse, 1889, etc.
.
.
76
Ann ales
Annals
See Egypt
Service de*
Antiquites.
See Liverpool University. and anthropology. Newcastle upon Tyne. Archaeologia /Eliana or Antiquarian Society of Newcastle upon Tyne miscellaneous tracts, relating to antiquity. R 2841 4to. and 8vo. etc. (1816-)I822,
.
:
Antiquary
4to.
See Society of Antiquaries of London. See Antiquarian Society of Newcastle upon Tyne. See Cambrian Archaeological Association. Archaeologia Cambrensis. See Kent Archaeological Society. Archaeologia Cantiana.
Archaeologia.
Archaeologia /Eliana.
The American
arts.
journal of archaeology,
11
Baltimore, 1885-96.
8vo.
vols.
Second
Bulletin.
series.
.
.
1909-1910
R R R
10941
10941
8vo.
[1909], etc.
28676
First,
second, and third [etc.] annual reports of the managing committee of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens.
Cambridge [Mass.], 1886, etc. 8vo. R 10399 American School of Classical Studies at Athens. Papers 1882-1883 [etc.]. Boston [Mass.], 1885, etc. 8vo. R 10399
1881-1884
of
[etc.].
the
Archaeological journal.
'Ap%at,o\o<yi/crj 'Eraipeta, [Athens]. 'E<t)7}fj,epl$ ap%cuo\o<yi,Kr) ctcBi&opevij VTTO T?}<? ev 'Adieus 'ApxaioXoyi/cfjs 'ETCUpeias. lv 'AOtjvcus,
\9Q\,etc.
4to.
R8255
Architectural, Archaeological, and Historic Society for the County, City, and Neighbourhood of Chester, [afterwards] The Chester Archaeological and Historic Society, [afterwards] The Architectural, Archaeological,
and Historic Society for the County and the City of Chester, and North Wales. R 17626 8vo. Chester, 1857, etc. Journal.
.
.
w Praze, 1840, etc. 4to. Archiv cesky. Archiv fur Kunde osterreichischer Geschichts-Quellen.
.
R
See
4707
Kaiserliche
Poitou.
Archives
liegeoises.
See
Societe
d'Art
et
d'Histoire
du Diocese de
Liege.
LIST
77
Archivi della
a
etc.
cura di
8vo.
Giuseppe Mazzatinti.
Casciano, 1897-98,
Eocca S. R 5229
. .
Archivio Muratoriano.
"Rerum
Archivio
Studi e ricerche in servigio della nuova edizione dei Cittd di Italicarum scriptores" di L. A. Muratori.
.
4to.
etc.
8vo.
R R
1500
2658
Archivio storico
siciliano.
See Societa di Storia Patria. province napoletane. Pubblicazione periodica per cura della Scuola di Palermo. [Since 1 875 :] Pubblicazione periodica
Palermo, 1873,
etc.
8vo.
R R R
R
.
2634
Archivio veneto.
Pubblicazione periodica. [From 1891 continued as:] Pubblicazione periodica della R. Deputa8vo. 2655 zione Veneta di Storia Patria. Venezia, 1871, etc.
Nuovo
archivio veneto.
Archive
historico portuguez.
Lisboa, 1903,
etc.
etc.
8vo.
of the
9741
Memorials
8vo.
Dead
in Ireland.
Dublin [1889-92],
Society.
9273
Ausonia.
See
Societa Italiana di
The
publications.
Aspley
34078
Bonner Jahrbiicher.
British Archaeological Association, [afterwards] the Archaeological Institute The archaeological journal. of Great Britain and Ireland.
. .
.
London
British archivist.
[1844-45],
.
etc.
8vo.
etc.
London, 1913,
4to.
R 20199 R 36199 R
10389
8vo.
British
Numismatic Society. The British numismatic journal and proceedings of the British Numismatic Society, 1903-04, [etc.]. London, 1905,
etc.
8vo.
Society.
British
Record
School
School
The
index library.
annual
London,
1
888,
etc.
R
British
at
19906
Athens.
etc.
The
Session
894-5,
etc.
[1895],
British
8vo.
.
.
(London), R 10447
British
at Rome. 12103 London, 1902, etc. 8va Papers. See Egyptian Research Account. School of Archaeology in Egypt. Bucks Parish Register Society. [Publications]. [London, 1902], etc. 8vo.
.
R8701
Bulletin monumental.
la
Con-
Monuments
Institute,
Historiques.
[afterwards]
The
etc.
Suffolk
Archaeology,
ings.
Bury
St.
Proceed8vo.
Byzantinische Zeitschrift.
Leipzig, 1892,
etc.
8vo.
R 29120 R 5501
78
Cambrian Archaeological Association. Archaeologia Cambrensis a record of the antiquities of Wales and its Marches, and the journal of the Cambrian Archaeological Association. [Continued as :] Archaeologia Cambrensis the journal of the Cambrian Archaeological Association. etc. 8vo. R 12183 [ 1846-]! 847,
:
Society.
[Publications]..
Cambridge Antiquarian
as
:]
Society. Antiquarian communications. [Continued Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, with communications made to the Society. Cambridge [1851-]! 859, etc.
8vo.
R
[Publications.
6483
4271
etc.
Camden
Society.
Continued as
:]
The Camden
etc.
series of the
London, 1838,
[Publications].
4to.
R
[1906],
London
The
first
11947
[etc} year's
[etc].
Yr
:
encilion.
Celtica
recueil
30419
etc.
1'archeologie, a la numis-
matique
4to.
et
9729
See Architectural, ArchaeoChester Archaeological and Historic Society. and Historic Society for the County, City, and Neighbourlogical, hood of Chester, etc.
Chetham
Remains historical and literary connected with the Palatine Society. counties of Lancaster and Chester. 4to. [Manchester], 1844, etc.
R906
Comite d'Histoire
d'Archeologie de la Province Ecclesiastique d' Auch, Bulletin. [afterwards] Societe Historique de Gascogne. [Continued as:] Revue de Gascogne. Paris, Auch, [1860, etc.],
et
.
. . . . .
8vo.
5596
Congress Index
of
of archaeological papers published in 1891 [etc]. 8vo. and] Westminster, 1892, etc.
[London R 6404
Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society. R 34699 Transactions. 8vo. Kendal, 1867, etc.
-
[Publications.]
-
London,
etc.,
1877,
etc.
8vo.
Kendal, 1912,
etc.
8vo.
R 34699 R 32135
Cymmrodorion Society, [afterwards] Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion. Y Cymmrodor, embodying the transactions of the Cymmrodorion Society of London, etc. [Continued as :] Y Cymmrodor, the magazine of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion. [London], R 12248 8vo. 1877, etc.
. .
The
sion
transactions of the
Honourable Society
of
Cymmrodorion.
Ses-
1892-93
[etc.].
London, 1893,
etc.
8vo.
12284
LIST
79
London, 1892,
etc.
8vo.
[Supplementary volumes.] Derbyshire Archaeological and Natural London and Derby [1879, etc.}.
London, 1877,
History
8vo.
8vo.
R R
Journal.
12285 12286
. .
.
Society.
R 22936 R
[etc}.
Deutsches
Archaeologisches
Institut,
[afterwards]
Kaiserlich - Deutsches
.
Institut,
[Berlin].
Jahrbuch.
1866
1876,
4to.
.
17846
etc.
(Athenische Abtheilung).
Society.
[Publications].
Athen, Exeter
R
[1
8257
1
905-] 906,
8vo.
jours).
11662
. . .
Recueil trimestriel.
R 28868
Society.
etc.
Parish
Register
[Publications].
8vo.
R R
6393
1881,
et
d'histoire.
8vo. Paris, Rome [1881], etc. [etc}. Ecole Nationale des Chartes. Bibliotheque de 1' Ecole des chartes.
d'erudition consacree principalement a 1'etude
8904
(Revue
Paris,
du moyen age.)
8vo.
1839-40,
-
etc.
8vo.
. . .
Paris, 1849,
etc.
R 20722 R 11771 R
Egypt
Ministere des Travaux Publics. Service des Antiquites. (Service des Antiquites de 1'Egypte.) Annales du Service des Antiquites de Le Caire, 1900, etc. 8vo. 15087 1'Egypte.
Archaeological report, 1892-93 [etc}.
London,
4to.
R8460
Egyptian archaeology.
.
The
journal of
London,
91 4, etc.
4to.
R
London
etc} [1899],
etc.
35441
...
Report.
1898-89
for
[etc}.
8vo.
R8460
-
[Publications:
4to.
Memoir
the
1883-84,
London,
1886,
etc.
and
fol.
R
London,
British
8460
etc.
Publications
of
Graeco-Roman Branch.
.
.
1898,
8vo.
R8461
.
[Continued as
:]
School of Arch.
1896,
etc.
London, 15283
Yr
Encilion.
London, 1886,
etc.
8vo.
R6149
London, 1912, R 29383
[Publications.]
'E(j)7)fj,pLs
dpxaioXoyi/crj.
Exeter Diocesan Architectural (and Archaeological) Society Transactions. . 4to. and 8vo. Exeter, 1843, etc. 26591
. .
80
London
a
[1878],
Folk-lore
record,
etc.
2460
custom.
[Continued as :] [Continued as :] The folk-lore journal. quarterly review of myth, tradition, institution, and London [1878], etc. 8vo. 2460
.
v Praze, 1873,
etc.
4to.
R
[etc].
4705
See
Istituto
Storico Italiano.
.
Year 1871-72
Genealogist.
London, 1877,
etc.
8vo.
R R
21636
17821
See Royal Geographical Society. Geographical journal. fur altere Deutsche Geschichtskunde. Neues Archiv der Gesellschaft Gesellschaft fiir altere deutsche Geschichtskunde zur Beforderung einer Gesammtausgabe der Quellenschriften deutsche Geschichten des Mittelalters. 26018 Hannover, 1786, etc. 8vo.
Gorres-Gesellschaft zur Pflege der Wissenschaft im Katholischen DeutHistorisches Jahrbuch. schland. Munster and Miinchen, 1880, etc. 8vo. 21 949
. .
.
Geschichte.
R
.
. .
14325
und
4to.
Quellen
Finanzverwaltung.
R
issued by the Hakluyt Society.
22276
1828
Hakluyt Society.
etc.
Works
London, 1849,
8vo.
Hansische Geschichtsblatter.
Hansische Geschichtsquellen. See Verein fiir Hansische Geschichte. Harleian Society. R 1869 Publications. London, 1869, etc. 8vo.
.
Historic
Society
of
Lancashire and
Leaflets
etc.].
Cheshire.
etc.
(Transactions.)
Historical Association.
Liverpool, 1849,
17776
33301
London
Annual
Historical
[1907,
published by 8vo.
. .
Association.
R
.
1911
[etc.].
[London,
1911,efcl.
Society Transactions.
8vo.
of
.
35442
1032
the
. .
Great
.
.
Britain,
London, 1875,
8vo.
Camden
annual
Series.
See
of
.
Camden
Society.
Historical Society of
West Wales.
.
West Wales
historical
records
magazine
[etc.].
the Historical
Society of
etc.
West Wales
8vo.
1910-11
Historisch
Carmarthen, 1912,
R
R
33642
. .
Werken
'*
[Utrecht]. Gezelschap, [afterwards] Historisch Genootschap, Genootschap. uitgegeven door het Historisch 34121-22 Gravenhage, and Amsterdam, 1898, etc. 8vo.
LIST
81
Zeitschrift
Leipzig, 1898,
etc.
etc.
8vo.
Munchen, 1859,
8vo.
R R
5499 5498
See Gorres-Gesellschaft zur Pflege der Wissenschaft Historisches Jahrbuch. im Katholischen Deutschland.
History
a quarterly magazine 8vo. 1912, etc.
:
London, 36225
[Annals.]
4636
Index
library.
See Congress of Index of archaeological papers published in 1891 [etc.]. Societies in union with the Society of Antiquaries. Archaeological An index to events occurring or reported. Index to dates of current events.
. . .
1912
[etc.].
New
etc.
York, 1912,
etc.
4to.
30423
. . .
Institut
fiir
Oesterreichische
Geschichtsforschung.
8vo.
.
Mittheilungen.
Innsbruck, 1880,
Istituto
R
.
6527
Storico Italiano.
Eoma,
]&S7,etc.
8vo.
6033
Jahresberichte der Geschichtswissenschaft im Auftrage der Historischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin. 1878 [etc.]. 8vo. Berlin, 1880, etc.
.
R7191
See Egypt Exploration Fund. Egyptian archaeology. of Hellenic studies. See Society for the Promotion Journal
Journal of
Studies.
of
Hellenic
Journal of
Roman
studies.
of
Roman
Studies.
See Archaeologisches Institut, [Berlin]. Archaeologisches Institut, etc. Kaiserliche Akademie der Wissenschaften, [Vienna]. Archiv
osterreichischer Geschichts-Quellen. Pflege vaterlandischer Geschichte
Kaiserlich-Deutsches
Deutsches
fiir
Kunde
Herausgegeben von der zur aufgestellten Commission der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften. [Continued as :] Archiv fiir osterreichische Geschichte. R 1833 Wien, 1848. 8vo.
. .
Fontes
rerum Austriacarum. (Esterreichische Geschichts-Quellen. Herausgegeben von der Historischen Commission der Kaiserlichen
in
Wien.
Wien,
.
1855, etc.
R
Archaeologia Cantiana.
.
.
J835
8vo.
.
Kilkenny Archaeological Society Transactions of the Kilkenny Archaeological Society 1849-51, etc. The journal of the [Present title:] Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. Dublin, 1853, etc.
. . .
8vo.
Klio. Beitrage zur alten Geschichte.
.
.
.
R
Leipzig, 1901,
etc.
8754
8vo.
R33119
6
82
Lancashire and
chester,
... Man-
R
Rochdale,
etc.
6404
1898
[Publications].
8vo.
Historisches Institut. Leipziger historische 8vo. Leipzig, 1910, etc. See Societe d'Art et d'Histoire du Diocese de Liege.
:
R6705
AbhandR 28015
8vo.
Leipzig
Universitaet
lungen.
Leodium.
Lincoln
Record
Society.
Publications..
Lincoln,
1911,
etc.
Liverpool
University.
Annals
of archaeology
.
Manchester
etc.
Geographical
8vo.
Society.
Journal.
'Manchester,
.
1885,
R6405
(publications).
Manorial
Society.
The Manorial
etc.
Society's
^
monographs
London, 1907,
Melanges
4to.
and 8vo.
18336
Alten
d'archeologie et d'histoire.
Zeitschrift
fiir
Memnon.
die
Orients.
Leipzig, 1907,
italiana.
R
.
17662
Miscellanea di storia
Miscellanea
8vo.
Storia Patria.
etc.
genealogica
et
London
. .
[1866-]! 868,
9627 4940
Memoires.
Paris, [1884-]
Monument!
antichi.
:
Moyen
Nancy
:
age
etc.
bulletin
de
philologie.
Paris,
8vo.
888 7699
\
revue trimestrielle publiee sous la 14 me annee, etc. revue trimestrielle as :] Annales de 1'est et du nord [Continued publiee sous la direction des Facultes des Lettres des Universites de
Universite.
:
Annales de Test
direction
de
la
Nancy
etc.
et
de
Lille.
IT
annee,
1905,
[etc.].
Paris,
Nancy
1900
8vo.
Society.
R6316
Publications.
. .
.
Navy Records
8vo.
etc..
12595
New
Spalding Club.
archivio veneto.
Nuovo
Oesterreichisches Archaeologisches
1898,<?fc.
4to.
Wien.
Jahresheft.
R
Old Edinburgh Club.
Wien, 17848
The book
etc.
of the
4to.
Edinburgh, R 17788
LIST
83
Report
etc.
of the
Toronto, 1896,
Society.
Oxford
Historical
[Publications].
Oxford,
1885,
etc.
etc.
8vo.
R
8vo.
1048
[Publications].
London, 1896,
[Publications].
R6392
Register
Society
of
Dublin.
8vo
Pedigree
register.
.
etc.
R 14105 R 14896
dem Gebiete
der Geschichte.
See Gorres-
Real Academia de
-
la
Historia.
Boletin.
Madrid, 1877,
etc.
8vo.
R2467
Memorial
historico espanol
. .
coleccion de
etc.
documentos, opuscules y
8vo.
antigiiedades.
Madrid, 1851,
R
R
7531
Reali Deputazioni di Storia Patria per le Provincie Modenesi e Parmensi. Atti e memorie. 2547 Modena, 1863-76. 8 vols. 4to.
-
[Continued as :] Atti e memorie delle Patria per le Provincie dell' Emilia. 1877-82. 7 vols. 8vo.
RR.
Deputazioni di
serie.
Storia
Nuova
Modena, R 2548
[Continued as :] Atti e memorie delle RR. Deputazioni di Storia Patria per le Provincie Modenesi e Parmensi. Serie III. Modena, 1883-90. 6 vols. 8vo. R2547
-
[Continued as :] Atti e memoria delle R. Deputazione di Storia Patria Serie IV. Modena, 1892, etc. 8vo. per le Provincie Modenesi.
R2549
Record Society for the publication of original documents relating shire and Cheshire. 8vo. [Manchester], 1879, etc.
Recueil de travaux
assyriennes.
frangaise
relatifs a la philologie
to
R
la
Lanca1838
et a 1'archeologie
4to.
egyptiennes et
(Vol.
5,
etc.,
Mission
du Caire.)
8vo.
Paris, 1870,
R
italiana.
2635
Regia Deputazione
1862,
etc.
di Storia Patria.
Miscellanea di storia
Torino,
R 2620
Atti e
Regia Deputazione
memorie.
.
Serie
2.
Bologna, 1875-76.
to
vols.
8vo.
R 2545 R 2545
1882 this academy and the " Reali Deputazioni di Storia Patria per le " " Atti Provincie Modenesi e Parmensi issued a joint publication entitled delle RR. DeSee supra. putazioni di Storia Patria per le Provincie dell' Emilia".
**
From 1877
84
Regia Terza
Rennes
Universite.
R
la
2545 5502
Faculte des
R
la
France.
Pan
1899,
etc.
8vo.
5506
Revista de histoha.
Revolution franqaise.
Revue
etc.
.
d'histoire
moderne
la
et
contemporaine publiee
.
.
par
la
Societe de 1'Histoire de
Revolution.
Tome
38,
Paris, 1900,
8vo.
,
Revue Revue
archeologique.
etc.
Paris [1844],
etc.
8vo.
. . .
R R
Paris
[1
5538 5495
d'assyriologie et
4to.
d'archeologie orientale.
et
884-] 1886,
14373
Revue de Gascogne.
d'Archeologie de
la
Province
Revue de 1* Agenais. See Societe des Sciences, Lettres et Arts d'Agen. Revue de la renaissance organe international mensuel des amis de la Ancienne revue des provinces de 1'Ouest Pleiade. Paris, R 20653 }9W, etc. 4to.
:
. .
Revue de
de
la la
Revue de Torient latin. 8vo. Paris, 1893, etc. Revue des etudes historiques. 75me annee, [etc.]. Paris [1909,
Revue des questions historiques. Revue de synthese historique.
\
R
etc.]
10884
8vo.
Paris, 1866,
etc.
.
etc.
8vo.
Paris, 1900,
.
8vo.
Revue
Revue
d'histoire
moderne
.
.
et
contemporaine.
etc.]
Paris, 1899,
etc.
R5506
historique.
.
Paris [1876,
la revolution fran^aise.
Paris, 1910,
.
etc.
.
8vo.
R 5507 R 24504
etc.
Paris, 1893.
R R
14340
.
Rivista mensile d'archeologia, storia, arte, e bibliografia. 32567 8vo. 1912, etc.
. .
(1830 [-80]).
London,
R1I12
,
1855-56
(-1892).
London,
1857-92.
36
Royal
8vo.
R1116
including the
.
The
geographical journal,
.
proceedings of
etc.
the
Geographical Society.
London, 1893,
of
8vo.
Britain, etc.
Great
Antiquaries of Ireland.
LIST
85
.
being a
new
etc.
8vo.
. .
R
.
1869
8vo.
Publications.
Edinburgh, 1887,
1888,
etc.
etc.
R2465
Selden Society.
Publications.
.
London,
4to.
R
8vo.
17809
See Egypt : Service des Antiquites. Service des Antiquites de 1'Egypte. and Natural History Society. Transactions. Shropshire Archaeological
.
1878
[etc.].
etc.}.
R
historia.
32262
R
le
Lisboa, 331 08
.
.
province napoletane.
Napoli, 1876,
etc.
2602.
Ausonia Societa Italiana di Archeologia e Storia dell' Arte. Societa italiana di archeologia e storia deli' arte.
. .
.revista della
1906
[etc.].
Societa
4to.
R
etc.
17659
8vo.
Patria.
Archivio
Eoma,
1878,
R2468
Societa Siciliana per la Storia Patria.
Societa
Storica
See Archivio
storico
storico siciliano.
. .
Lombarda.
8vo.
Archivio
lombardo.
Milano,
1874,
etc.
R
du Diocese de Liege.
.
2603
Bulletin.
1881,efc.
-
8vo.
.
Archives-liegeoises.
Ltige, 1898.
. . .
8vo.
R R
1
Liege,
35331
29951
8vo.
Leodium
chronique
mensuelle.
Liege,
902,
etc.
34973
1834
Bulletin
(Annuaire-bulletin),
Paris, 1835,
etc.
8vo.
etc.
[Publications.]
Paris, 1835,
8vo.
. . .
R 2485 R 2485
Bouen,
Societe
de
1'Histoire
etc.
de Normandie.
Bulletin.
1870
[etc.].
1869,
-
8vo.
[Publications.]
Bouen, 1870,
etc.
8vo.
Bulletin.
. . .
R 8898 R 8898
Paris,
1874,
etc.
.
8vo.
.
.
Memoires.
Societe
Paris, 1875,
etc.
8vo.
.
R 23690 R 23690
.
d'mulation de Bruges.
des
chroniques,
Annales.
chartes
Bruges, 1839,
etc.
8vo.
R2765
Recueil
et les antiquites de la 4to. and 8vo. etc., 1839, etc.
1'histoire
concernant
.
Bruges,
2538
Societe des Archives Historiques de la Bulletin. Saintonge et de 1'Aunis. Revue de la Saintonge de 1'Aunis. Vol. 20, etc. Paris, 8vo. Saintes, 1900, etc. 5503
.
. .
&
86
Societe
Archives historiques du Archives Historiques du Poitou. 8vo. R 13632 Poitiers, 1872, etc. Revue de 1'Agenais et des Societe des Sciences, Lettres et Arts d'Agen. Bulletin de la Societe des anciennes provinces du sud-ouest. Tome 27 [etc.]. Agen, 1900, Sciences, Lettres et Arts d'Agen. R 5541 8vo. etc.
Societe Francaise (d'Archeologie) pour la Conservation et Monuments Historiques. Bulletin monumental.
.
la
. .
Description des
Paris,
1834,
etc.
8vo.
R6169
de
.
See Comite d'Histoire et d'Archeologie Societe Historique de Gascogne. la Province Ecclesiastique d'Auch, etc.
Societe Scientifique, Historique et Archeologique de la Correze. 8vo. Briue, 1878, etc.
Bulletin.
.
R R R R
6597
Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies. London [1880], etc. 8vo. studies.
The
Fol.
journal of Hellenic
Supplementary papers.
Society for the Promotion of London, 191 1, etc.
London, 1892,
etc.
and 8vo.
3546 3546
Roman
8vo.
Studies.
The
journal of
Roman
studies.
23728
tracts
Society of Antiquaries of London. Archaeologia or miscellaneous to antiquity. London, 1 770, etc. 4to. relating
:
. . .
496
Proceedings.
1843,
. . .
etc.
Vetusta monumenta.
etc.
8vo.
R
[etc.].
14704
10902
Fol.
.
.
Society of Antiquaries of
Scotland.
etc.
1851
8vo.
R
etc.
2339
[Publications.]
London, 1887,
8vo.
19965
17765
Somersetshire Archaeological and Natural History Society. 1849 [etc.]. Taunton, 1851, etc. 8vo.
. .
.
Proceedings.
Publications.
[Publications of the Spalding Club.] Spalding Club. 4to. and fol. 38 vols. burgh, 1841-71.
[Publications
4to.
R
R
2375
etc.
of
the
New
Spalding Club.]
Aberdeen, 1887,
2376
Staats-Archiv.
Gegenwart.
etc.
Sammlung der omciellen Actenstiicke zur Geschichte der R 2744 Hamburg, 1861, etc. 8vo.
. . .
[Publications.]
London,
etc.,
1902,
8vo.
7329
Suffolk Institute of
Archaeology,
Statistics,
See Bury
Institute, rtc.
Society.
and
8vo
2)395
LIST
87
Publications.
[Publications.]
London, 1913,
8vo.
R
Durham
collections.
34079
etc.
Publications.
London, and
[1835],
3337
. .
R 11904 London, and Lewes, 1849, etc. 8vo. Founded for the publication of records and docuSussex Record Society. ments relating to the county. Lewes, 1902, etc. 8vo. R 29682
.
Sussex Archaeological
Society.
Sussex
archaeological
Thoresby
Society.
Publications.
Leeds, ]&9\
etc.
8vo.
R5095
Thoroton Society.
etc.
Transactions of the Thoroton Society (an antiquarian Nottingham, 1898, society for Nottinghamshire), 1897 [etc.].
. . .
8vo.
journal des voyages.
.
.
R 22461
Tourdumonde: nouveau
Paris, 1860,
e tc.
4to.
22469
Untersuchungen zur deutschen Staats- und Rechtsgeschichte. Herausgegeben 8vo. von O. Gierke. R6144 Breslau, 1878, etc. Vatikanische Quellen zur Geschichte der papstlichen Hof- und FinanzverSee Gorres Gesellschaft zur Pflege der waltung. 1316-1378. Wissenschaft im Katholischen Deutschland.
.
.
Verein
Verein
fur
Geschichte
etc.
der
Deutschen
in
Bohmen.
in
Mittheilungen.
Prag, 1862,
fur
8vo.
6528
Hohenzollern.
[etc.].
Mittheil-
ungen.
[1868],
...
etc.
I.
[etc.]
Jahrgang,
1867/68
8vo.
Sigmaringen R 6798
.
Verein
-
fur
zig
Leip-
R6721
8vo.
Hansische Geschichtsquellen.
Halle,
etc.,
1875,
etc.
R
.
.
32895
[Con1
1
Verein von Alterthumsfreunden im Rheinlande. Jahrbiicher. tinued as :] Bonner Jahrbiicher. Bonn, 1842, etc. 8vo.
Vetusta monumenta.
733
of
London.
Stuttgart, 1903,
und Wirtschaftsgeschichte.
R 36434
Vorderasiatische
Orient gemeinverstandliche von der Vorderasiatischen Gesellschaft. Darstellungen, herausgegeben 8vo. 9450 Leipzig, 1900, etc.
Gesellschaft.
alte
;
.
.
Der
Vorderasiatische Bibliothek.
Mitteilungen.
. .
.
Leipzig, 1907,
etc.
etc.].
8vo.
1896,
etc.
Berlin [1896,
etc.
R R 14124 R 14984 R
London, 1913,
88
Wiltshire
The
.
Wiltshire
Devizes,
etc.
8vo.
archaeological and topographical journal. direction of the council of the Yorkshire
.
R
Published
8vo.
etc.
1854, 12411
Yorkshire
the
Topographical Association.
-
London, 870,
1
Record
series.
[Huddersfield, etc.]
Publications.
1885,
.
.
etc.
R 3446 R 20328
R6703
[Leeds,
printed],
etc.
Worcestershire Historical
4to.
Society.
[Publications.]
Oxford,
1895,
R
4.
15460
NATURAL
SCIENCE.
The journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. London, Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 8459 8vo. 1872, etc.
Man
Published under a monthly record of anthropological science. the direction of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and 8459 Ireland. London, 1901, etc. 8vo.
:
. , .
review.
as
The
vols.
8vo.
8459
%* After
under the
title
" " 1870 the " Anthropological Society was amalgamated with the " Ethnological Society " of The Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland ".
Anthropological
8vo.
-
Society.
Publications.
London,
1863-65.
vols.
R 8457
of
London [1863-
London
[1865-70].
vols.
8vo.
et
8459
Anthropos.
de
linguistique.
. .
Ethnological Society of
London.
Journal.
(Transactions.
Edin-
8vo. 13 vols. burgh, and London [1 848-] 70. No more published. See supra Anthropological Institute. *.*
Journal of Anthropology.
R 8459
Man
a monthly
Institute of
Revue
Wien
20729
[I906],efc.
Zeitschrift
8vo.
R
Sec
Zeitschrift
fur
des
Volker-
Zeitschrift des
Volkerpsychologie und Sprachwissenschaft. [Continued Vereins fiir Volkskunde. Berlin, 1860, etc.
.
. .
8vo.
2726
LIST
89
PHILOLOGICAL.
Edited
American
journal
of
philology.
etc.
by Basil
literatures.
L.
Gilder sleeve.
Baltimore, 1880,
8vo,
R 2663
See Hebraica.
[etc.}.
American American
and
Transactions, 1869-70
Boston,
1871,efc.
R3514
.
.
Halle
a.
.,
1878,
etc.
R 2737
.
der englischen Sprache und [Continued as:] Bei"Anglia". 2737 8vo. Halle a. S. 1891, etc. blatt zur Anglia. See Zeitschrift fur deutsches Alterthum und deutsche Litteratur. Anzeiger
Mitteilungen aus
Litteratur.
.
.
Archiv
Studium der neueren Sprachen (und Litteraturen). 8vo. Elberfeld u. Iserlohn, and Braunschweig, 1846, etc.
fur
das
R2466
Archiv Archiv
fur Papyrusforschung
Leipzig, 1901,
etc.
8vo.
fur slavische Philologie.
9634
Herausgegeben von V.
. .
Jagic.
Berlin,
1876,
Babyloniaca.
etc.
8vo.
.
R 2839
TomeSftffc.].
Paris, 1912,
8vo.
32340
10082 Halle
Leipzig,
R
.
Beitrage zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache und Literatur. a. S.,1874, 6fc. 8vo.
Beitrage zur
. .
R 2604
Kunde der indogermanischen Sprachen. Herausgegeben von Adalbert Bezzenberger (und W. Prellwitz, Bd. 19, etc.). R 2613 8vo. Gottingen, 1877, etc. Berliner philologische Wochenschrift. See Philologische Wochenschrift.
. .
. .
Romane.
.
.
Bonn, 1898,
etc.
8vo.
R
to
10855
Cambridge
Philological
Society.
etc.
from
1872
1880,
[etc].
London, 1881,
.
.
R
8vo.
etc.
11975
Englische Studien.
Heilbronn, 1877,
. .
R2617
8vo.
Ephemeris
Eranos.
Giessen, 1902,
R
Acta
philologica Suecana.
9476
l\
etc.
R 8706
See School
Eriu.
The
90
Glotta.
und
lateinische Sprache.
Gottingen, R 36 122
(Semitic) Semitic
Hebraica.
study.
etc.
[Continued
literatures.
as
.
:]
.
The American
.
journal
of
languages and
8vo.
Chicago,
New Haven,
.
etc.
1884,
R
. .
5595
8vo.
Hermes
Berlin, 1866,
etc.
R2614
Zeitschrift fur indogermanische Sprach- und Indogermanische Forschungen. Altertumskunde. Herausgegeben von Karl Brugmann und Wilhelm
Streitberg.
Kaiserliche
Akademie
R 26289 Wien, 909, etc. 8vo. Literaturblatt f iir germanische und romanische Philologie Herausgegeben Otto Behaghel Fritz Neumann. von und 8vo. R 2628 Heilbronn, and Leipzig, 1880, etc.
Sprachenkommission.
.
R 8240
der
Schriften
[Continued
.
as
:]
8vo.
Modern Language
1893,
etc.
Publications.
Baltimore,
Modern language notes. Baltimore, 1886, etc. Modern language review. Cambridge [1905-]! 906, Modern philology. Chicago [1903], etc. 8vo.
. . .
4to.
etc.
8vo.
Miinchener Beitrage zur romanischen und englischen Philologie. and Leipzig, 1890, etc. 8vo.
Erlangen,
R 34648
etc.
New
Palaeographical
London, 1903,
etc.
Society. Fol.
.
.
Facsimiles
of
ancient
manuscripts,
8vo.
Philologische Untersuchungen.
Berlin, 1880,
1881,
. .
etc.
R R
8960 7547
Philologische Wochenschrift
[etc.}.
philologische Wochenschrift.
Philologus.
Berlin 1882,
. .
4to.
2629
Zeitschrift fiir das klassische Alterthum. Stolberg, Gottin2661 8vo. gen, and Leipzig, 1846, etc. Pioneer ov simplified speling. See. Simplified Spelling Society.
Revue celtique. 8vo. Paris, 1870, etc. Revue de dialectologie romane. See Societe Internationale de
.
R 2724
Dialectologie
etc.
Romane.
Revue de
linguistique et
de philologie comparee.
Paris [1867],
8vo.
2729
Revue de philologie fran^aise et de litterature. See Revue des patois. Revue des langues romanes. See Societe pour l'tude des Langues
Romanes.
Revue des
patois.
[Continued as
etc.
:]
Revue de
8vo.
philologie fran^aise et de
litterature.
Paris [1887],
9569
LIST
91
Rheinisches
Philosophic.
logie.
.
fur Jurisprudenz, Philologie, Geschichte und griechische [Continued as :] Rheinisches Museum fur Philo.
.
Bonn, 1827,
etc.
8vo.
.
R2615
.
Torino,
873,
etc.
8vo.
R4709
Romania.
Recueil trimestriel consacre a 1'etude des langues et des tures romanes. 8vo. Paris, 1872, etc.
. . .
littera-
R 2621
Romanische Forschungen. Organ fur romanische Sprachen und Erlangen, 1883, etc. 8vo.
. .
Mittellatein.
R 8525
School of
The journal of the School of Irish Eriu. Learning, Dublin. 12356 8vo. Dublin, 1904, etc. Learning, Dublin.
Irish
. . .
Semitistische Studien.
See Zeitschrift fur Keilschriftforschung, Simplified Spelling Board. Simplified spelling bulletin.
. .
etc.
.
June
1909
4to.
[etc.]
Issued quarterly.
etc.]
27180
The
London,
R 2661 2
Memoires.
.
.
.
Paris, 1868,
etc.
8vo.
R8560
Societe Internationale de Dialectologie Romane. Bibliotheque de dialectologie romane. 32999 Hamburg, 1912, etc. 8vo.
. . .
Bulletin
de dialectologie romane.
dialectologie romane.
.
Bruxelles,
1909,
etc.
8vo.
R
-
18890
8vo.
Revue de
Bruxelles,
1909,
etc.
R
Societe
18889
Helsingfors.
Memoires.
Helsingfors,
R 29025
Societe pour
. .
.
Wiener
Wien und
Jahrgang
Leipzig, 1895,
etc.
8vo.
22086
... 27
[etc.].
Berlin,
R 26290
Sprache und Altertumskunde.
4to.
. .
46.
Band
Leipzig, 1908,
etc.
R 21341
fur Keilschriftforschung,
. .
[etc.].
See Zeitschrift
.
etc.
Halle a
8vo.
R8224
Zeitschrift fur deutsche Philologie. Zeitschrift fur deutsches Alterthum.
-
Halle, 1869,
. . .
etc.
8vo.
etc.
Leipzig, 1841,
8vo.
.
.
R 2609 R 2483
.
Litteratur.
Berlin,
R2484
und
Litteratur.
Zeitschrift
1879,
R9743
92
Zeitschrift
fiir
Zeitschrift
etc.
-
8vo.
R 9297
,
Semitistische Studien
. .
etc.
8vo.
fiir
R9297
.
Zeitschrift
romanische
. ,
Philologie.
etc.
Herausgegeben von
8vo.
Gustav
Grbber.
Zeitschrift
fiir
Halle, 1877,
2736
vergleichende Sprachforschung auf dem Gebiete des Deutschen, Griechischen und Lateinischen. [Continued as :] Zeitschrift fiir auf dem Gebiete der indogermanischen vergleichende Sprachforschung
. . .
Sprachen.
etc.
8vo.
2728
6.
PHILOSOPHICAL.
. .
.
American journal
1907,
etc.
of psychology.
Vol. 18
[etc.].
Worcester,' Mass.,
8vo.
.
R
. .
.15645
Archiv
fiir
Leipzig,
903,
etc.
8vo.
R 20288
Aristotelian Society for the Systematic Study of Philosophy. London [1881-]1891, etc. 8vo.
.
Proceedings.
7946
1904-1905
to the
[etc.].
Cambridge
8vo.
:
[1905],
12426
devoted
.
advancement
[etc.].
of ethical
know-
October, 1890
Philadelphia, 1891,
R6312
:]
[Continued as
.
Light
Lucifer
Fol. 13163 [1881], etc. a theosophical magazine. [Continued as :] The theosophical review. London [1887], etc. 8vo. 13173
. .
London
.
.
Mind: a
etc.
of
London, 1876,
R6311
.
Philosophical 8vo.
review.
Volume 22
de morale.
et
[etc.].
New
.
York,
1913.
R
Paris [1911],
. . .
33507
8vo.
Revue de metaphysique
Revue philosophique de
Paris, 1907,
etc. la
et
etc.
28562
[
France
8vo.
de
1'etranger.
Tome 63
R
psychologiques.
.
14123
etc.
Revue
spirite.
Journal
d'etudes
Paris,
1858,
8vo.
R
[etc.].
8221
Proceedings.... 1882-83
Lo
12970
Theosophical review.
See Lucifer.
LIST
93
art,
Theosophist
Fol.
monthly
journal
.
devoted to
.
Oriental
philosophy,
literature
SOCIOLOGICAL.
See Ecole Libre des Science Politiques.
[etc.].
. .
.
politiques.
. . .
Annee
British
sociologique.
1896-97
Paris,
1898,
etc.
8vo.
12838
The Economic Association, afterwards Royal Economic Society. R 8702 London, 1891, etc. 8vo. journal. See Manchester Fielden Demonstration Demonstration schools record.
economic
School.
. . .
Annales.
[Continued as
:]
Annales
:]
Revue des
sciences poli-
5505
Economic
the journal of the British Economic Association (of the journal See British Economic Association, etc. Royal Economic Society).
:
.
. .
Rathway, N.J., and New York, R 15279 8vo. R 25854 1, etc. Cambridge [1910-]191
Vol.35
[etc.].
Manchester
Fielden
:
Demonstration School.
The
demonstration schools
record
ment
being contributions to the study of education by the Departof Education in the University of Manchester. Manchester,
.
1908,
etc.
8vo.
Political quarterly.
Oxford, 1914,
etc.
8vo.
.
R 15246 R 36293
etc.
et
sociologiques.
Paris, 1908,
R
4to.
31
038
Revue des sciences politiques. See Ecole Libre des Sciences Revue d'ethnographie et de sociologie. Paris, 1910 etc.
.
.
.
Politiques.
R
eto.
35206
8vo.
Sociological Society.
Sociological review.
Manchester, 1908,
28386
8.
THEOLOGICAL
collections.
Alcuin Club.
-
Alcuin Club
tracts.
London, 1899,
etc.
4to and
8vo
7955
R7955
Alcuin Club
American
American
Edited by the Divinity Faculty of the Univer8vo. 5369 Chicago, 1897, etc. Analecta Bollandiana. Ediderunt Carolus de Smedt, Gulielmus van Hooff et Josephus de Backer Paris, Bruxelles, 1882, [and others].
sity of
Chicago.
R R
etc.
8vo.
3457
94
Analecta Franciscana sive chronica aliaque varia documenta ad historiam Ad Claras Aquas (Quaracchi), 1885, Fratrum minorum spectantia.
4to.
7756
Analecta Gallicana.
1910, etc.
Revue
8vo.
d'histoire
de
1'eglise
de France.
etc.
Paris,
Bruxelles, 1905,
8vo.
R 21 607 R 12350
R
:
fur Religionswissenschaft.
...
11.
Band
[etc].
Leipzig [1907-]
8vo.
16179
Archives de
la
France monastique.
Revue Mabillon.
la
Archives de
1'histoire religieuse
de
France.
R
:]
12033
. .
.
Arminian magazine.
[Continued as
[1778],
etc.
[Continued as
The Methodist
magazine.
magazine.
. . .
:]
London
8vo.
[Publicationsl
.
13179
London
[1909, etc}.
8vo.
R 21237
Transactions.
.
1908-1909
[etc].
London
[etc.].
[1908,
etc.].
8vo.
R
Biblical world.
.
21237
etc.
New
. .
series.
Vol.
30
Chicago,
etc.,
1907,
8vo.
14246
8vo.
Bibliotheca sacra.
1844,
etc.
R505
British
[Publications.]
Aberdonice, 1908.
R
Buddhist
8vo.
etc.
14547
review.
Buddhist Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Vol. 3 [etc.]. London, 1911, etc. 8vo.
Bullettino critico di cose francescane.
The
Firenze, 1905,
.
.
R 24777 R 12036
etc.
Catholic
Record
Society.
Publications.
London,
1905,
8vo.
R
The
.
10892
Sacred Study.
8vo.
1900-1906
.
(Cambridge)
[]
\9\Q,etc.
R
R
9 W-] 24479
Official
of Christ,
Volume 29
of
. .
[etc.].
Boston,
Mass. [1911,
etc.].
8vo.
28696
Chronicle of Convocation.
See England
Church
.
England.
1861 [etc]. [AfterChurch Congress. Report of the proceedings. wards styled :] The official report of the Church Congress. R 1840 Cambridge, [afterwards] London, 1862, etc. 8vo. Church of England. See England Church of England. R 566 Church quarterly review. London [1 875-] 1876, etc. 8vo.
.
Congregational 8vo.
Historical
Society.
[Publications].
London,
1903,
etc.
9463
LIST
95
13511
Congregational Transactions.
Constructive quarterly
:
London
[1901], etc.
8vo.
dom.
London, 1913,
and thoughts
of Christen-
33833
Deutscher Verein zur Erforschung Palaestinas. Mittheilungen und Nachrichten des Deutschen Palaestina-Vereins. Leipzig, 1895, etc.
. . .
8vo.
Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palaestina-Vereins.
. .
.
6322
etc.
Leipzig, 1878,
8vo.
Dublin review.
London, 1836,
etc.
8vo.
R 6322 R 11770
. . .
11868
England: Church
etc.
-
England.
journal
.
The
of
official
year-book.
8vo.
:
Synodalia
a
. .
Convocation.
as
:]
Edited
Warren.
[Continued
:]
The
journal of
;
[Continued as
. . .
The
chronicle of Convocation
proceedings of the Convocation of Canterbury from London [1852 -] 1853, etc. 8vo. 1847.
November
19th,
R
York,
8822
1861,
The York
etc.
journal
of Convocation.
[1859, etc]
8vo.
.
R 8822 R 568
[1889],
Edinburgh
[etc.].
etc.
4to.
R5315
The
etc.
journal.
1903-04
Philadelphia [1903],
-
8vo.
etc.
[Publications.]
London, 1907,
Issued
. . .
8vo.
R R
R
London, 10063
10063
in
36800
of rare
Henry Bradshaw
Hibbert journal
. .
.
Society,
:
founded
... 1890
for
liturgical texts
:
[Publications].
London, 1891,
etc.
R R
6097
London
a quarterly review of religion, theology, and philosophy. 8vo. 9466 [1902-]! 903, etc.
Holborn review.
Huguenot Society
8vo.
-
London.
Proceedings
etc.],
Publications.
[Lymington,
.
.
Edinburgh, 1912,
etc.
8vo.
R
Interpreter.
.
.
29697
11438
Altrincham
[1905], etc.
8vo.
England:
[Publications].
96
1893-94
[etc.].
London
[1895], etc.
4to.
R7838
Jewish quarterly review.
Edited by
8vo.
I.
Abrahams and
G. Montefiore.
London, 1889,
Journal of Convocation. Journal of religious
aspects.
. .
etc.
R
of Biblical Literature
:
5372
See Society
and Exegesis.
See England
:
Church
its
of
England.
psychology including anthropological and sociological Vol. 5 [etc.]. 8vo. Worcester, Mass. [1912, etc].
.
London
Udgivne
Kjtfbenhavn, 1849-52, etc. Archives de la France monastique. Liguge Abbey. 8vo. Ligugt, Belgique ; Paris, 1905, etc.
:
8vo. 5373 [1899-]! 900, etc. af Selskabet for Danmarks Kirkehistorie. 8vo. 3510
R 34097 R R
Revue Mabillon.
R
Vol. 5),
11772
[etc.].
London
:
quarterly
review.
etc.
Vol. 95.
(New
Series.
London, 1901,
.
.
8vo.
R 8216
Revue
d'histoire ecclesiastique.
R9170
Messager des fideles petite revue benedictine paraissant a 1'abbaye de Maredsous. [Continued as :] Revue benedictine. Messager VII me [etc.], annee. des fideles. Abbaye de Maredsous [1890], 8vo. etc. R 11497
:
. . .
Musee Guimet.
-
Paris, 1880,
8vo.
etc.
4to.
R8253
Bibliotheque d'etudes.
etc.
R
etc.
10415
Revue de
1'histoire
des religions.
Paris, 1880,
8vo.
R5539
Palestine Exploration Fund. and 8vo.
-
[Publications].
London, 1879,
etc.
Fol,
4to.
R
.
32231
482 London [1869], etc. 8vo. Quarterly statement. Primitive Methodist quarterly review. Vol. 22 [etc]. New series. Vol. 42 from the beginning. [Continued as :] The Holborn review.
. .
London, 1900,
Quest
Society.
etc.
:
8vo.
6313
[etc.].
The
quest
etc.
a quarterly review.
8vo.
October, 1909
London, 1910,
mensile.
.
R R
1906,
19818
Pubblicazione
Roma
[1902],
etc.
.
8974
8vo 12243
Review
of
theology
and philosophy.
Edinburgh,
etc.
Revue Revue
benedictine.
biblique trimestrielle publiee sous la direction des professeurs de 1'Ecole pratique d'tudes Bibliques etablie au Couvent Dominicain Saint-Etienne de Jerusalem. [Continued as :] Revue biblique
. .
.
Internationale.
Paris, 1892,
etc.
8vo.
R8717
LIST
Revue Revue Revue Revue Revue
97
2764
Recueil mensuel.
des religions.
Paris, 1854,
8vo.
e tc.
8vo.
de
de
1'histoire
1'orient chretien.
Paris, 1896,
R 25842
6 me annee
[etc.].
Le
R 32463
de
Revue Revue
de
1'eglise
de France.
See
d'histoire ecclesiastique.
Louvain
Universite Catholique
Louvain.
Revue Mabillon.
Scotland
:
See Liguge
of the
Abbey.
Church
of Scotland.
The
of
General
Assembly
]639,etc.
Kirk
Scotland
1638
[etc].
Edinburgh,
Fol.
7712
Societe de 1'Histoire
du Protestantisme
Frangais.
Bulletin.
Paris,
\S53,etc.
8vo.
:
R2662
Societe des Etudes Juives. Revue des etudes juives publication trimestrielle de la Societe des Etudes Juives. 8vo. Paris, 1880, etc.
12429
Society
of
Biblical
Archaeology.
Transactions.
London,
etc.
.
.
1872-93.
9
-
vols.
8vo.
Proceedings
of
1878
[etc.].
(London), 1879,
8vo.
.
R 3441 R 17877
Society
Journal Exegesis. including the papers read and abstract of proceedings for June and December, Middle1881, etc. [Continued as :] Journal of biblical literature. 8vo. 9464 town, Conn, [afterwards Boston, Mass.], 1882, etc.
Biblical
Literature and
Studien und Mittheilungen aus dem Benedictiner- und dem CistercienserOrden. See Wissenschaftliche Studien und Mittheilungen aus dem Benedictiner-Orden.
.
.
Theologisch Tijdschrift.
etc.
8vo.
Theologische Literaturzeitung.
Leipzig
1876,
[etc.].
etc.
Fol.
R 5500 R 5360
Theologische Rundschau
8vo.
...
8.
Jahrgang
Hamburg,
etc.
8vo.
.
. .
5343
Theologischer Jahresbericht herausgegeben von B. Piinjer [and others]. Leipzig, [afterwards] Braunschweig, and Berlin, 1882, etc.
.
.
8vo.
R
Proceedings.
.
6265
Wesley
1898,
- Publications.
London
1896,
etc.
R 9938 R 9937
98
Wissenschaftliche Studien und Mittheilungen aus dem Benedictiner-Orden. [Continued as :] Studien und Mittheilungen aus dem Benedictiner-
Wien, 1880,
Wyclif Society.
8vo.
York
journal of
London, 1883, etc. 8vo. [Publications]. See England Church of England. Convocation.
:
R 10764 R 1590
Zeitschrift des
Deutschen Palaestina-Vereins.
Erforschung Palaestinas.
Zeitschrift
fiir
Herausgegeben von
8vo.
Bernhard Stade.
Zeitschrift
fiir
Giessen, 1881,
etc.
5341
die
neutestamentliche
etc.
Wissenschaft
. . .
Urchristenthums.
Herausgegeben von
8vo.
.
. .
Giessen, 1900,
Zeitschrift
fiir
Kirchengeschichte.
, .
und die Kunde des Erwin Preuschen. R 5378 von Theodor Herausgegeben
.
Brieger
Zeitschrift
fiir
[and others].
Gotha, 1877,
.
etc.
8vo.
6221
wissenschaftliche
. .
Hilgenfeld. 8vo.
Theologie. Herausgegeben von A. Jena, [afterwards] Halle, and Leipzig, 1858, etc.
.
.
5342
ABKKUKKN
KORAN
(xxxiv. ^o).
l'<
'
()
'
TI-I-:KI
TKANSI.A IONS
i
(XlVii.-XVm
CI-NT.)
MANCHESTER
VOL.
2
APRIL, 1915
No. 2
AT
readers.
the January meeting of the Council of Governors the fifteenth annual report was presented, consisting of a review of the
work
1914, and
it
may
not be
out of place in these pages briefly to summarize such portions of the information contained therein, as are likely to be of interest to our
At
to
this
manship
London,
upon
his
retirement
from
the
COUNCIL.
Vice- Chancellorship
gret not only of the
of the University of
Governors but of
all
Alfred Hopkinson had occupied the position of chairman for upwards of eleven years, and the Council took the opportunity of
Sir
We
are glad to
be able
Alfred
is
by no means
is
severing his connection with the library, since he retains his seat on the
also a
Sir George Watson Macalpine, J.P., a Representative Governor, and a Life- Trustee, who has already rendered inestimable service to
the library, as
mittees,
Chairman
of the
Com-
was
The
Treasurer
Sir
Changes
year.
the personnel of
The Rev. A. W. H.
J.P., as Honorary Secretary. the Council occurred during the Streuli resigned the seat PERSONNEL
as a Co-optative
Governor
since
COUNCIL,
8
100
to
E.
Roberts,
M.A., B.D.
the 7th of October the library sustained a great loss through the death of Mr. Stephen Joseph Tennant in the seventy-second year of
his age.
On
of the late
Mrs. Rylands,
and was closely associated with the institution from its inception. As one of the original Trustees, as a Life-Governor, and as Honorary Treasurer, he served the library with untiring devotion and ability
from the date of
death.
its
inauguration
until
appoint a Representative Governor to succeed Mr. Tennant was vested in the Standing Committee of the Manchester
The
right to
Diocesan Conference,
who
appointed
Professor
C.
E. Vaughan,
M.A.,
staff
SERVICE
recruits.
The Governors
volunteer,
at their succeeding
members
MAJESTVS
FORCES,
and
at
:
tion
That members
the
"
41
who
or
Red
Cross,
shall
have
their
positions
kept open,
and
shall
44
salaries as the
Emergency Com-
mittee
44
may
paid be
less
"
determine, provided (a) that in no case shall the amount than half, and (6) that no member of the staff shall
staff
are
now
either
on
full
active service,
J. SUTTON, is serving in Egypt as First Lieutenant in the 9th Battalion of the Manchester Regiment.
MR. OLIVER
MR. T. MURGATROYD, MR. E. C. SCHWEMMER, and MR. ENRIGHT have joined the Public Schools* Battalion.
MlSS
B.
WOODCOCK
is
in training for
is
Red
Cross Work.
SERGEANT A. COOK
the
staff,
members
of
from various causes are ineligible for military the service of the library has been duty, efficiently maintained, without
extra assistance.
most of
whom
101
cause for great satisfaction in reviewing the work of the the report, inasmuch library during the period covered by ^SIEMADE that from whatever point of view it is regarded, there are LIBRARY,
The
continues year
to
being accomplished by the consistent various departments and activities along the lines
this result is
fruitful of
good
results, rather
than in
new developments
again to
of outstanding importance.
It is
therefore gratifying
be able
by
all
classes of readers.
which have been employed throughout the year develop the resources of the library, and to reduce the GROWTH number of lacunae upon its shelves, have met with gratify- cOLLECefforts
The
to
ing success.
acknow-
ledge the valuable assistance which they have received from readers who, in the course of their investigations, have often been able to call
attention to the library's lack of very important authorities.
In most
instances
it
in the case of
works
of rarity,
which are not readily procurable through have been taken to obtain them
It is
with the
of
improvement of the efficiency any kind, which have and equipment of the library, are not only welcomed, but are cordially invited, and receive prompt, careful, and sympathetic consideration.
for their object the
It
may
which
officials
upon
to render to
LIBRARY
SERVICE,
scholars
library
and
by personal
attention in the
but also in response to requests from various parts of the world, through the medium of correspondence, with the occasional aid
itself,
Such
services cannot
be reduced
to
any
reliable
statistical
acknowledgments
which often
find ex-
and prefaces
of published works.
The
umes
include
numbered 4964
vol-
of printed
many
rare
and
interesting items of
Huth
collection,
the enrichment of a
102
already noteworthy ; a very useful collection of Portuguese literature, which has strengthened our collections " Colon a side hitherto somewhat weak a much needed set of the
section of the library
;
a number of William Salt Archaeological Society" books from the library of the late Colonel Fishwick early printed " Peintures antiques des two important works of Millingen on the " " Collection des Vases Grecs," publiee Vases Grecs Lamberg's " Hunterian Club Publications," in a set of the par A. Delaborde
lections of the
; ;
; ;
16 vols.
Cohen's
vols.
"
;
Description des
in
Romain," in 8 42 vols. a
;
a set of the
"
"
Revue des
the
cours et conferences,"
"
Societe Linguistique de
et
Paris," in 18 vols.
in
d'Enfantin,"
47
vols.
;
Phillips'
"General State
46 vols.
a large collection of
Europe" (1688-1733), in Commonwealth News-sheets and two of 498 and 508 respectively, which
;
of
and importance.
The manuscript purchases include a collection of Letters and Documents relating to Lancashire (1576-1760); a thirteenth century " " a of Petrus Lombardus Sententiae manuscript commentary of the
;
Nebuchadnezzar
cylindrical
proclamation
of
unusual
shape
five
Charters relating to the Church of Plympton, Devon (1 180-1317) ; " Queen Elizabeth's List of New Year's Gifts," 1559, in the form of
a long vellum roll bearing the Queen's signature several times over
three Syriac
;
MSS.
of the Peshitta
New
Testament
"
a collection of
Staffordshire Deeds,
1508-1616
and a collection
of
Law
Tracts in
Parvus Hyngham,"
the
etc.
Charta Edwardi
addition of the
of
year was
Syriac
manuscript
the
"
Solomon," which the library was enabled to acquire through the generosity of Dr. Rendel Harris, and which was described in the
pages of our
last issue.
of the
works added
and importance
In the
of the accessions
random, but they furnish some idea of the character which are constantly being obtained.
have, in the
accompanying list of donors, which contains 109 names, we 555 volumes so generously presented, fresh GIFTS TO
proof of the sustained and increasing practical interest in LIBRARY. the library. Several of the gifts have been offered as marks of
103
both by reason
and
inspiration
which the
library,
atmosphere and contents, has so often afforded. The Rev. D. A. de Mouilpied's welcome gift of 26 volumes of Huguenot literature,
1
some
of
which are
of considerable rarity,
was
of this character.
Mr.
and Mrs. Bentham presented 80 volumes of miscellaneous literature, including some useful additions to the Oriental section of the library,
in
memory
of the late
Canon Atkinson.
items,
which are
is
in his personal
Of
edition
private circulation.
There
is
by Mrs. Widener,
New
York,
in
memory
the
"
treasures, including
" an unique copy of the first issue of Bacon's Essays". " The volume consists of a Catalogue of an important collection of the books and manuscripts of Robert Louis Stevenson in the library of
the late
is
considerable,
of the
first
of out-
gifts equally deserving of mention, but in a short summary of the report, such as the present, it is not possible to do more than refer to one or two which seem to call for special notice.
In the name of the Governors we take this opportunity of renewing the thanks, already expressed in another form, to the donors of these
generous
gifts, and also of assuring them that these expressions and goodwill are a most welcome source of encouragement.
of interest
DONORS,
Mr. and Mrs. Bentham.
1914.
Dr. E. Crous.
Marco
Besso, Esq.
W.
K. Bixby, Esq.
Bodley's Librarian.
A.
Miss Broadbent.
Professor Carleton Brown.
Professor
J.
Dr. Alan
H Gardiner.
Feuillerat.
S. Gaselee, Esq.
Capart.
Professor Dr.
G. A. Gerhard.
104
Trustees
of
W. Gibb
Dr.
S.
H. Omont.
Partmgton, Esq.
Memorial.
Dr. F. LI.
Griffith.
W.
W.
Dr.
B. Grimaldi, Esq.
Thomas Hardy,
J.
Esq.
Rendel Harris.
Esq.
The Rev.
E.
A. Hutton.
Sachse, Esq.
Miss EL C. Knappert.
Trustees.
H. Sotheran
&
Co.
Monsieur P. Le Verdier.
Librarian.
W.
The Rev. C.
Sir
S. Macalpine.
G. Thomas, Esq.
H. Yates Thompson,
Dr. Paget Toynbee.
Esq.
Esq.
The Rev. D. A. de Mouilpied. W. T. Vincent, The Rev. Professor Dr. J. H, Mrs. Widener.
Moulton.
Aberdeen
Aberystwyth.
Barcelona.
Biblioteca
de Catalunya.
Kommission
fur der
Bryn
Mawr
Cambridge University
Carnegie Endowment
Carnegie Foundation.
Peace.
Copenhagen.
Bibliothek.
Cornell University.
105
Durham
Gand.
Bibliotheque de 1'Universite.
Rijks-Universiteitbibliotheek.
Groningen.
Academia das
British
Sciencias.
London.
London. London.
Museum.
Guildhall Library.
Jews' College.
London. London.
London.
Museum.
Manchester.
Chetham
Library.
Manchester.
Manchester.
New
York.
Paignton.
Petrograd.
The
Imperial University.
Andrews
University.
St. St.
Anselm's Society.
Louis Public Library.
Sheffield.
Hunter Archaeological
Society.
Societe Asiatique.
Stockholm.
Strassburg.
Kongelige Bibliotheket.
Kaiserl.
Universitats-
und Landes-Bibliothek.
Washington.
Washington.
Washington.
Congressional Library.
Smithsonian
Institution.
106
Mo.
Clark University.
Yale University.
Interest in the public lectures,
to
be regarded as
institutions of
PUBLIC LECTURES,
very exceptional interest have been dealt with by acknowledged authorities, in the course of which new theories have been advanced, which are calculated to impart a new stimulus to study
Many
of these lectures, in
pages of this
an amplified form, are to appear in the of the BULLETIN, and we take this
opportunity of thanking the respective lecturers for so generously and readily acceding to our request to allow them to be published in this
form.
The
lecture
of
The Origin of the Cult of Dionysos," appears in the January on Unfortunately the personality of the lecturer, and present number.
the brilliant flashes of
"
humour and
fessor
The same remarks apply with " Con way on The Youth of
Mediaeval Burglary," and of Professor Egypt and its influence on the Far East
ever, in being allowed
Smith on
"
Ancient
We
are fortunate,
how-
the investigations
Of each
issues will
of
to give permanence to the interesting results of which the preparation of these lectures involved. these lectures a small number of separately printed
be published.
These
will
at sixpence each.
to the
Encouraged by the enthusiastic welcome which has been accorded BULLETIN in its revival, we shall endeavour to THE FUit
give to
greater
permanence as a
literary organ,
by the j H "BULLETIN
which appear in the present issue. shall not lose sight of the original and primary object of the periodical, which is to call attention to the possibilities of usefulness which the library offers, by the
regular publication of
lists
We
of accessions,
and
special reading
lists
and
107
can also serve a useful purpose by the form of literary and inviting communications, which may take
but
believe
historical notes
we
we
and
queries.
much
is
often
same work
in ignorance of
Might
we
by affording in our pages an opportunity for circulating information respecting bibliographical and other work which may be in progress, and in so doing render a service to scholars which would
directly tend to the
advancement
of
knowledge
of
?
it is
We repeat what we
make
and
of the
our ambition to
BULLETIN a
its
medium
communication between
number
of students
its
world
who
are interested in
welfare.
By
other,
means each might be enabled to profit by the experience of the and a feeling will be fostered that all are engaged in a common
in its effects.
no
article or
communication will
judgment,
be admitted
which does
add something
One
famous
library,
was
to call
LOUVAIN
VERSITY
LIBRARY,
and sympathetic
ing foundation.
Many
we were
unable to
in
authorities.
We
ventured, therefore, to
make an appeal on
behalf of
of
our readers to
Dr.
A. Carnoy,
the
Louvain Professor
Zend,
at present resident in
Cambridge,
its
and
contents.
The
request
was
transmitted to Dr. L.
Van
we
in
which appears
may
the authority of first-hand knowledge. interest readers to learn that Professor Van der Essen has
all
at the University
108
of Chicago,
on the History of Belgium, and has now been appointed to the faculty for the remainder of the academic year. of thanking Professor Van der Essen and take this
We
opportunity
also Professor
Carnoy
Accompanying
feel
the article
we
We
an
many
to their sympathy with the opportunity of giving practical expression authorities of the University, by joining us in the steps which we are
taking,
library.
of the
The
whom we
"
An
Old
Turki Manuscript in the John Rylands Library (Dr. A. Mingana) is one of the foremost authorities, not only on the Arabic language and literature, which is his native
tongue, but on Syriac
AN OLD
MANU'
of languages in general,
and
their literatures.
Dr. Mingana
was
Mrs. Agnes
Smith Lewis, for the publication of that interesting and important " Leaves from Three volume which appeared last year under the title, Ancient Qur'ans, possibly Pre-'Othmanic, with a list of their variants".
These leaves, recovered from a composite palimpsest, some pages of which are double palimpsest, purchased at Suez by Mrs. Lewis in 1895,
present us with portions of a text differing so
much from
the
Textus
criticism of the
Other
articles
future issues
from Dr. Mingana's pen may be looked for in of the BULLETIN, since the Governors of the Library
have been fortunate enough to secure his services in connection with the preparation of an exhaustive catalogue of the large and important
collection of
Syriac
manuscripts in
the pos-
numbering upwards and including many texts not to be found elsewhere. The second volume of the " Catalogue of Greek Papyri in the Johr. Rylands Library" is upon the point of publication. GREEK
In
of twelve
hundred volumes,
P APY FU-
associated with
him Mr.
J.
M.
Demy
109
Magdalen College, and Dr. Victor Martin, of Geneva. The volume which runs to upwards of 500 pages deals with nearly 400 papyri, consisting mainly of non-literary documents of an official or
legal character extending
Roman
period.
The
well
others of
These papyri were found, says Dr. Hunt, as the same group in various European collections,
without doubt in the ruined building in Thmuis (Tell Timai), partly excavated by the expedition of the Egypt Exploration Fund during
892-3, whose chambers were found choked by a medley of decayed rolls, and it is interesting to learn that the documents printed in this volume form the largest body yet published from this source.
the season
1
The
notes
texts,
A
is
number
dealt with.
Byzantine period remain to be These will form the subject of a future volume, which it
of
documents
of the
hoped will appear at no very long interval. Another thin quarto volume which is also upon the point of " publication, consists of a Description of 58 Sumerian SUMERIAN ETS Tablets comprising Temple and other records from FROM
Umma ".
These
tablets
were acquired
UMMA
some three years ago, at the suggestion of the late Prof. Hogg and Canon C. H. W. Johns. They have been transcribed, transliterated,
translated,
in
and described by the Rev. C. L. Bedale, M.A., Lecturer The volume will be Assyriology at the University of Manchester.
it
Umma.
the editor very valuable assistance in
and
is
adding to the
many
which he has already rendered to the library, by contributing an interesting foreword, in which he describes the nature of the transactions recorded.
There may be some of our readers yet unfamiliar with the character of such documents who would be interested to learn something
about these dainty
little
clay tablets.
we
reproduce
some
of the paragraphs in
scribed them.
110
and
all
of
them
it
may
be, are
what are
usually
called
temple monasteries and other religious houses in organized much as were the our Middle Ages. They had large estates which they managed
themselves.
yearly,
accounts.
The
ancient
From
these
;
and the
gifts
large revenues
of
number
persons
There were a mostly in natural products. attached to the temple, priests, officers, and
who
food, temple stewards were bound who had a customary claim on the other allowances to the persons They were also bound to keep account of what they temple.
The
amounts
of
and
received
and furnished
in
this
way.
Also the
servants,
slaves,
shepherds, and husbandmen on the wages and for the maintenance of the
It
estates
flocks
to write
down
behalf of the temple, and the stewards or the scribes gradually accumu-
memoranda, which they used to enter up periodically on large tablets, many of which survive, and may be regarded as ledgers giving both receipts and expenditure for months or
lated vast
of these
years together.
From
we
we
life in
Babylonia.
Anyone who
monasteries in our
the difficulties of
own
even
when
read with
which are
often insoluble.
The
to those versed in
nor with regard to literary rules with a view to conveying an intelligible meaning such accounts. Local names for commodities, local
many
Yet another
issue, consists
which
is
of a
FACSIMILES
INGS
eight early engravings which are preserved In addition to its fine Rylands Library.
The John
-
collection of
printed books of the fifteenth century, the library contains a small but
that
were
numbers
Two
of these
woodcuts are
of exceptional
interest and importance, and have been known and celebrated for a century and a half, but have not hitherto been reproduced in a satisfactory and trustworthy manner, by any of the modern photomechanical " " The two woodcuts referred to, represent St. Christopher processes.
and
"
The
Annunciation
".
The
by reason
of the date
first
(1423) which
bears,
to
it
the
position of the
dated woodcut.
Since the discovery in 1 845, at Malines, of another woodcut re" The Virgin and Child," and bearing the date 1418, which presenting was afterwards acquired for the Royal Library at Brussels, and has it
is
to
St.
its
some
seriously in dispute.
if
There
is
a strong
the
not
added
later, since
character of the lettering in the date differs entirely from that found in
scrolls,
itself.
be dealt with by
Mr. Campbell Dodgson, Keeper of the Prints and Drawings in the Museum, a recognized authority on such matters, who has kindly supplied a descriptive letterpress and introduction. " " The " St. Christopher and " The Annunciation have been reproduced
in the exact colours of the originals,
and
also in
monochrome.
other engravings, including an unusually fine dotted print, have been reproduced in monochrome. The price at which the portfolio
will
The
be sold
will,
it is
Another
and
"
is
interesting piece of
been completed
ENGLISH through press, Catalogue of English Incunabula in the John Rylands ABULA. Library ". It will be, if we mistake not, the first catalogue of the kind
at
present
passing
the
to
consist of a full
biblio-
English
books printed before 1501, including, of course, those printed by William Caxton. It will furnish full collations, and will be illustrated
by
facsimiles of pages
the collection.
112
we
must
re-
them
for
some
future occasion.
the full list of the most imimpossible to print to the library, without portant of the recent accessions LIST^OF in the present SIGNS, unduly increasing the number of pages
We
have found
it
issue.
We
list
for
when
it
will
be accompanied by an
both parts. alphabetical author index to The classification of the items in this
list
"
Decimal System
in
originally
devised by
Melvil
Dewey
1873,
and
in
the
it
who may
may be
method
The
from an alphabetical one, is that it preserves the unity of the subjects, and by so doing enables a student to follow its various ramifications
Related matter is thus brought together, and with ease and certainty. the reader turns to one sub-division and round it he finds grouped
others
it.
In this
way new
is
lines
One
with
it.
that
it is
easily capable of
comprehension by persons previously unacquainted Evidence of the recognition of its merit is to be found in
approval
the general
of
England and the United States. Primarily it was constructed for the arrangement of books on the shelves, but it is now very widely applied
to the construction of catalogues.
The
system
is its
employment
of the ten
digits, in their
symbols
The sum
Dr.
of
activity has
been divided by
Dewey
into ten
0,
2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
These
1
separated
00
An
000
sections,
which
can be
still
further sub-divided
Places for
new
subjects
may be
provided
113
any point of the scheme by the introduction of new decimal points. For the purpose of this list we have not thought it necessary to carry
which
list
will
be found
in the
"
Order
"
of Classification
which precedes
the
THE
BY
J.
ORIGIN OF
THE CULT OF
DIONYSOS.
ETC.,
doing
much
MODERN
tation, the
Mythologies.
gods
of
Olympus
;
are fading
away
come up again into view the Thunder-god goes back into the Zeus Thunder-man, or into the Thunder-bird or Thunder-tree
;
life,
of the Oak-tree, or
if
he must
be
flesh
Other and
when we have
Zeus-worship at all events, we can see two forms of deity standing side by side, one coming on to the screen before the other has moved off the zoomorph or animal form co-existing and
Sometimes,
in the
;
hardly displacing the phytomorph or plant form. One of the prettiest instances of this co-existence that
have
I
dis-
covered came to
my
was
making
bee, for
was easy
:
to see that
the primitive
human
thinker
it
he had found
in the
same
ex-
So he devised
in the
body
of
or killed
1
and shut up
in a
building,
Ry lands
"4
THE
ORIGIN OF
115
full of
story of
of a lion.
We
will not,
Samson, eating honey from the carcase however, go to ancient literature, but to
something
peoples.
much more
and
folk-lore of existing
For
instance, there
is
woman who
:
is
baking,
and upon
"
re-
woodpecker or an owl
".
This
which
not
difficult,
is,
The
old
woman
in
In the
wound
found a
little
The
story-teller
next passed that way, there was an abundance of honey in the tree. Bees had been produced out of the Lord's head. In another form of the story, as told in Poland, Jesus is travelling with Peter and Paul, and asks for hospitality for the night from an
old
woman.
is
Instead of a
stones
thrown
at
them,
and Paul
putrified,
As
the weather
was
hot, the
wound
wound and
maggots were produced, which Jesus took from the placed in the hollow of a tree. good while after, they that way again, and Jesus directed Paul to look in the tree passed hollow, where to his surprise he found bees and honey sprung from
and
his
the story
is
the old
and Paul walk through the woods together. and Peter extracts the troublesome maggot
in
and puts it in a hollow tree. Result as before. Sometimes the peasant says that the bee- larva was found
hole in the
God, either an artificial hole made in his forehead, or elsewhere, from which it is removed into a corresponding hole in the tree, where bees are to be found.
body
of
In all these stones the oak in whose holes the bees are found has been externalised into the body of God in which the bees exist in The Thunder-man is seen to be the externalisation of germ-form. 9
116
the
by
is
side,
and each
of
each
the Thunder.
phytomorph and the anthropomorph standing them being read in terms of the other, for Christ as the thunder-man has, in fact, stepped
;
off
and
easily
way
it
back.
Now
is
this
method
of regarding the
oak as
an external and
visible incarnation,
may lead us to important results in other parts of ancient mythology. When, for example, we read that Athena sprang from the brain of
Zeus, and was actually liberated from that temporary prison by the axe of Hephaestus, we have only to remember that Athena is the owl, and that, from the habits of the owl and its dwelling-place in
the hollow tree,
it
though, for
against the
want
from
of sufficient colour-credentials,
Woodpecker.
this point of
Zeus
and
is,
Thunder-bird into human form, while Hephaestus with his axe (the thunder-axe of which we may see the wide diffusion in popular beliefs and in surviving cult-monuments) is himself an artificial
of the
double of the thunder-god, and in some respects nearer to the thunder than Zeus himself. Athena is the daughter of Zeus, because she
is
and she
struck oak.
We
sos,
are
now
it
because
going to spend a little time over the myth of DionyIn Athena's suggests a parallel to the birth of Athena.
is
case,
the case of
of the intercourse of
his
thigh of Zeus,
Olympian lover, and being born again from thence became the type of the twice-born man. It is natural, then, to enquire whether any explanation of the relations between Zeus and Dionysos can be made
in
mother had perished in the fiery embrace Dionysos himself underwent gestation in the
some
of
of
mythology of the Dionysos-cult furnishes the most obscure and intricate problems in the whole history
well
that the
religion.
known
was Dionysos ? What is the meaning of his name ? Why is he born of Zeus and Semele ? And why reborn of Zeus ? How does he become a god of wine and take the
Greek
Who
THE
ORIGIN OF
?
117
can there
wild ecstasies upon the mountains Thracian Dionysos with the Phrygian Sabazios
How
come
revellers
become
what
is
the mean-
of the questions
Apollo at which engage more or less the students of Greek religion. Indeed,
only after the enunciation of a series of inadequate hypotheses that the ground is cleared for one that harmonises and colligates the
known
it is
facts
and
traditions.
Without
for
moment
suggesting that
in
and customs, and the place of the god in Greek religion, we may perhaps be forgiven if we say that, up to the present, the solutions offered have failed because they did not go far enough
of Dionysos-cults
and because they were not sufficiently simple. Suppose, try and verify this statement by a hypothesis which goes down to the lowest stratum of religious ideas, and
back into primitive
religion,
then,
we
is
as simple as
it is
primitive.
make such a hypothesis, we recall the direction in which we were taken by Mr. A, B. Cook and others with regard to the character of the European Sky-God. He was found to be also
In order to
a Thunder-god,
who
oftenest struck),
and
whose
bolts in the
not actually in
its
Moreover, as we have shown, the common belief that the thunder existed in bird-form, and could even be recognised as thunder
by
his
Last of
all, it
was evident
that bees
The oak is struck thrice as often as the pine, more than ten times as often as the beech. For the proof of this see my note in " Boanerges,"
was written without knowledge that the same result had been " G. B.," VII, II. 298, from Warde Fowler in " Archiv given givei in Frazer, fur Religionswissenschaft," XVI (1913), pp. 318 sqq.
392, which
p.
118
and honey, from being commonly found in hollow thunder-struck trees, had acquired a close affinity with the thunder-god, whether in
bird-form or in his later
in
any case
but
rifled
it
human guise. The relationship was natural was emphasised by the observation that the
These
things being so,
Woodpecker
thunder
If
:
we
find
this
be
true,
we
makes everything that thunder touches into man, the axe. must ask a further question if the tree and its
:
associated animate
shall
?
is
we
Are
In the
case of the mistletoe, the evidence for an affirmative reply " Golden Bough," and piled very high by Dr. Frazer in the
being
we have
no need to repeat
ous
facts.
The
is
arguments, or gather over again his multitudinmistletoe, however, is not the only oak- parasite.
his
We
which
is
grows
on the oak
^also thunder,
and
that
name
of the
Dionysos.
is
In
ivy,
other words,
stance, he
gestion,
belief,
is
first
in-
When we make
that sugreligious
it
we have gone
it
and
will
we
is
one of extreme
In
simplicity.
some
not
at
new
made
it,
and
we
this identification is also (I, XXXI. 6) they honour an Ivy- Dionysos the goal towards which a number of modern investigators have been
There has been a general feeling that in order to solve the origins of Dionysos and of Dionysiac worship, we must go behind the vine and the cult of the vine. Miss Harrison tried to do this when,
tending.
in her
"
theory that
Greek Religion," she started the behind the Thracian wine-god, there was a beer-god.
With
great ingenuity she replaced the Dionysian-goat by spelt (Tragos) Thus title Bromios from oats (Bromos).
we
is
lose
the goat-song,
far as
and the
thunder
traditional connection of
Miss Harriit,
and
the four
titles
Braites,
THE
haps
it
ORIGIN OF
119
hastily for
was short-lived, and perEven a hypothesis redecency. an a priori I mean that it had
which commends
our
it
when one
it is
thinks
meant
in the history of
all
own
ancestors,
and what
it
in almost
difficult to
how
the
of divinisation.
After
all,
there
is
a subterranean connection
Bible.
The
his cult,
fact
is,
to explain
Dionysos and
though they
to
may
easily
way
to the
i.e.
recognition of a
wine-god.
So one
"
first
steps forward,
backward,
that
is
deny
that
Dionysos
Cultes et
Mythes du Pangee,"
of
wine ".
He
then suggested that Dionysos might be the ivy, but gave the wrong reason, affirming that Dionysos was the god who presided over vegetable life, and for that reason his symbol was the evergreen, whose
persistence in the winter attests that the death of nature
is
only an
appearance.
Dionysos
is
not a true
the real reason for the identification of Dionysos vegetation-god with the ivy is that the ivy is the thunder, not, in the first instances, the symbol of any vegetable life, whatever vegetable connections may
ultimately be developed.
Yet on
!
how
close Perdrizet
2
came
"
to the identification
Here
an admirable summary
which
he makes
II
croyable que dans les temps tres anciens la lierre passait aux yeux des Thraces pour la residence de leur divinite, probable* ment meme etait-il un de leurs totems ainsi s'explique que pendant
est
:
au
signe de
ent,
la feuille
de
lierre
et
que
les
femmes, quand
112)
la
lierre et
le
elles cellbrai*
comme
Passion de
en mangeaient
taureau, etait
les feuilles
le lierre,
;
comme
la faon, le
chevreau ou
un forme de Dieu et comme ces animaux, il servait aux repas de communion qui formaient le mystere par excellence de la Bacchanale."
1
I.e., p. 64.
1.
c.,
PP 65, 66.
.
120
was
referring
to the attempts
made
it
to introduce the
upon Egyptian Jews, Ptolemy Philopator that the Jews should be "branded with the ivy-leaf, the emblem of Bacchus"
and
in
Greek
and
to force
(3 Mace.
this
II.
29
cf.
2 Mace.
VI.
7).
compulsory Hellenisation than Antiochus Epiphanes, who had required the Jews to take part in Bacchic processions, carrying thyrsi
he will have them take the totem-mark of the god. twined with ivy It was not meant to be a degradation, for he was tattooed himself with
:
The
mental
and eating
;
manner
is
also
very
instructive
it
the
god that
flesh
is
raw
with
which we are
and
in the
Bacchic
revels in particular.
What
was the
:
identification
it
He
off
the oak
if
he had seen
on the oak, the whole matter would have been much clearer to him. And^we are inclined to think it might have been clearer for consider
:
how
connected with the thunder, not only by his closely Dionysos miraculous birth from the thunder-smitten Semele, but also by the
is
titles
and
descriptions
given
to
poets.
Miss
Harrison tried to get Bromios away from the thunder, but she ad" mitted that throughout the Bacchae Dionysos is in some degree a god of thunder as well as thunder-born, a god of mysterious voices,
of strange confused orgiastic music,
"
".
In
the
When we
Toi9 Se aTroypa&ofjLevovs ^apda-aeaOai, KCU Sia 619 TO <TWfj,a Trapao-Tjpto AIOVIHTW Ki(roro(f)v\\(i) 3 Mace.
ycvo/jLewrjs 8e Aiovvcrlutv eoprfjs rjvay/cd^ovTO
II.
29.
2 Mace. VI.
7.
See further on the totem-marks of Dionysos in Miss Harrison's review of Perdrizet, "Classical Review," December, 1910. Miss Harrison, "Prolegomena," p. 429, misses the meaning of the chewing of the ivy and suggests that "the Maenads chewed ivy leaves for
"
god
".
They
ate the
*Ibid. p. 415.
121
to
it
it,
is
well established
now
that
Semele
means
earth),
becomes
intelligible.
The
tree is the
thunder and
parasites and
phenomena
:
To
begin with
Simply because the first vines were trained on trees, as indeed so that the transference from ivythey long continued to be Dionysos to vine-Dionysos was easy and natural. The ivy, however,
why
place in the cult, in spite of the predominance given to it will continue to be the new-comer. It will stay on the thyrsus
never loses
its
the totem
side.
mark
of the god.
Thus
grow
side
by
They
are on the
same oak.
mythology they
2
In both grow over the ruins of the thunder-struck palace of Semele. Euripides, Bacchae, 41 f., it is the vine that so spreads itself: in
Euripides, Phoenissae,
65
it is
the ruined house, and the scholiast has a note to the effect that the
when
Kadmean
ground
palace was
pillars so
struck
as to hide
by and
On
it is
god
is
by the Thebans.
is
The
Even the
is
probably a misunderstanding of an
of
Perkunios,
the
This is, I suppose, the explanation of the legend of Dionysos-statues with faces painted red. According to Pausanias the Corinthians made two images of Dionysos out of a tree, and the images had red faces and gilt bodies (Paus., II, II. 6; Frazer, "G. B.," II. 161). So also at Phigaleia,
were images of Dionysos, covered with leaves of ivy and laurel, through which it was possible to see that the fetish had been smeared with vermilion (Paus., VIII, XXXIX. 6). Farnell thinks (" Cults of the Greek " in these cases the idol's face was smeared with States," V, 243) that, red is a red, no doubt in order to endow it with a warm vitality, for surrogate for blood, and anointing idols with blood for the purpose of animWe have shown that ating them is a part of old Mediterranean magic ". " " there is another explanation of red as the colour of the thunder, and that this is a widespread and fundamental conception in the growth of cults. See " Boanerges," c. 4. 2 We may compare the story which Philostratus ("Imagg.," II. 19) tells of a certain savage Phorbas, who dwelt under an oak tree, which was regarded as his palace, whither the Phlegyae resorted to him for judgment.
there
'
'
122
and
As
word for oak, which answers to the Latin Quercus, they For once mythology in a naturally made Perkunios into Perikionios.
the
minor point
was a
by
disease
of language.
The
transfer
of
names
repre-
was
invited
commonly
sents a tree.
When we
over another,
use the
word
parasite of a plant
which grows on or
we
word
in a
botanical sense.
of that tree
Any
is
a parasite
and shares
fortunes
as
and partakes
part of the
farther
:
of
its life.
To
the
was
much a
oak as the
mistletoe.
The
matter
may be
taken a
little
creeping plants which are found in the cult of Dionysos, and have a For instance, there is a plant called smilax similar origin to the ivy.
(jnilax of the Attic speech), which (whatever be
equivalent) turns up
its
exact botanical
the ritual of
side
the vine
in
Dionysos.
by
the ivy, and the vine are found in the garlands of the Bacchae.
Thus
Athenaeus
smilax.
tells
Ptolemy
crowned with
ivy, vine-leaves,
and
And
this
Maenads
are
garlanded with
ivy,
oak,
and
Then
With
ivy,
-A.
The same
is
S.
WAY.
conjunction of ivy, oak, and smilax together with the addition of pine-branches is in Bacchae, \ 04 sqq., but this time the
smilax
creeper
fair fruits :
so
it
is
probably a
whose
red berries.
We
have
with the thunder has been assisted by its traces, also, of another creeper, the Clematis
:
in the inscriptions
litas,
is
p.
-
198 E.
123
So we have a Clematis- Dionysos, to set with K\7j parts. the ivy- Dionysos, and with the smilax- Dionysos. The case of the smilax ought not to be dismissed too hastily for
:
the question arises whether it is not something group of creepers associated with the oak-tree. the Ptolemaic times
it
of
evident that in
has acquired sanctity, and become the subject of regulation on the part of those who have charge of the Dionysian revels. May it not be that smilax has a sanctity of its own, apart
from the tree as well as upon it ? The suggestion has been made that
we may
with the wild briony, or some similar climbing- plant with red berries. Here is a pasLet us see what Pliny says on the plant in question. " " Natural History (H. N. XVI. 153-155) sage from the " Similis est hederae e Cilicio quidem primum profecta, sed in
:
Graecia frequentior,
spinosis
quam
ramis
frutectosa
vocant smilacem, densis geniculata caulibus, fert racemos labruscae modo, non
. .
.
...
id volgus ignorans
,
plerumque
festa sua
hederam existimando
omnino
scit
sicut
" quibus coronentur ? Pliny is clearly describing the smilax as used festivals he thinks the plant has no business there
Sileno, quis
:
in poetis
in
:
the Bacchic
it is
not a true
In-
been mistaken
differs
for
cidentally
!
it
Yes but perhaps the vulgar and the poets knew more about the matter than the natural philosopher. are grateful for the mention of the red berries. They help us to identify the plant with the
We
thunder.
At
in
this point
we have
if
an exact parallel
its
in the
Its
Rowan-tree,
is
which
is
red berries.
redness
em-
phasised
name
is
any confirmation
in its berries,
:
Kalevala will be
sufficient
Thou
Holy Holy
it.
is
On its boughs the leaves are holy And its berries yet more holy. -" Kalevala," tr. Kirby,
Note
further that
XXIII. 221-226.
124
called Rauni,
1
and
is
regarded as
Thunder-god (Ukko).
it is
think
it
is
likely that
vine and the ivy, which must surely be vegetable cult symbols, that we owe the cult animals, the goat and the fawn. For if these creatures eat the green plants that climb over the oak,
god, just as the Maenads do when they chew the ivy, or when at a second remove they eat the flesh and drink the blood of the animal
that has eaten the sacred plant.
the men are clad in a large place in the ritual of Bacchic religion and the women in fawn-skins they are pretending to be goat-skins,
;
them
It
helps
them
to
annex
and
animal,
tattooed with
leaves
If
:
for the Maenads are very near to the origin of the cult fawn marks, just as the male worshippers are with ivy-
and the fawn are probably primitive symbols. fawn only comes in
because
ivy.
It
has eaten the ivy, or one of the companion growths of the might be that both the goat and the fawn had been eating the
These considerations
tree from
how much
is
gained for
to the
which
it
originally derived
sanctity.
how
his
We
is
Goodman-god language Eastern Europe, and that amongst his special cares must be reckoned the care of bees. He is himself the discoverer of honey. It is through the bees that Aristaeus comes into the circle of thunder- animisms, his
daughters are the McXtcrcrat, or Bee-maidens,
1
the
of
who
will ultimately
"
To Rauni
were consecrated
;v/,
cf.
The
especially
berries, as sacred.
the mountain-ash in their courtyards, and The idea that the Ukko and Rauni were
husband and wife finds its explanation in the close relations which both Teutons and Litu-Slavs believed to exist between the thunder and the oak." Kaarle Krohn in Hastings, "Diet. R. E.," s.v. Finns.
THE
become
than a
ORIGIN OF
125
priestesses of
Demeter
He
himself
is little
glorified
shepherd,
if
made famous by
the discovery of
of olive oil
Now
is
find
that
Medea
turn to Apollonius Rhodius, IV, 1 132, we " " sacred grot of Makris, the wedded in the
we
honey and oil it was daughter took to her breast the infant Dionysos and touched his baby
of Aristaeus, the finder of
;
she
lips
who
with
honey.
Here
is
the passage
avTovv)(l fcovprj daX.a/jLtJLOv evrvor evvyv civrpto ev rjyadeq), roOi 8tf TTOTC Md/cpis evaiev,
KovpT) 'Apio-raioLo /jbeXitypovos, 09
pa
pya
7roKvKfjbr}TOi6 r'
7rd/j,7rp(0Ta
evroaOev 'A/3avri,8os w evi KOI IJL\I,TL fypov Trepl %eXo evre /jU,v 'Epfj,eia<; (frepev K Trvpos
f
'
And
And
The The
the
here
is
of
it
self- same
of the
bride,
In a hallowed cave, where of old time Makris wont to abide, child of the Honey-lord, Aristaeos, whose wisdom discerned toils of the bees, and the wealth of the labour of olives learned.
the first that received and in sheltering bosom bore Nysaian of Zeus, on Euboea's Abantian shore, And with honey she moistened his lips when the dew of life was dried, When Hermes bare him out of the fire.
And
she
was
The
child
So
of the
it
Bee- Maidens,
first
to
one
".
whom we may
call
the
tall
Miss
Goodman
They
is
Thus
to Dionysos in the
same
bring
the honey to
him
for
baby-Thunder
honey.
Dionysos
really
Moreover, the connection of the Ivy-god with the Oak-god, and with the Oak-god's bees, helps us to see how in certain quarters he usurped the functions of Zeus-Aristaeus and became himself BeeMaster.
Accordingly,
first
responsible
first
finding of the
Liba deo
Gaudet
et a
Colligit errantes et in arbore claudit inani Liber : et in vend praemia mellis habet.
"Fasti,"
in.
735-744.
126
It is
even possible that the Satyrs who accompany Dionysos and the Maenads are originally a group of Kuretes, and that the Maenads
may have
"
"
arisen out of
This
Dionysos.
Orphic Hymns,
for ex-
ample, Dionysos
invoked
(Hymn
xxx) as
This connection between Dionysos and Honey is even more striking here we have the god adorned with a in the great vase of Hieron The god himnecklace of honey -combs strung on sprays of ivy.
:
self
is,
as
in a ritual
garment, that
a tree-pillar.
We have,
is
grows on the
It
tree,
found
will
be seen that
we
some
of the ques-
word or two with regard to his name. The old-fashioned explanation was a geographical The modern exone, he was from his birth-place Nysa or Nysaios. 2 = a son or young planation is that of Kretschmer who makes vvcros
tions
Now for a
man.
According to
this explanation,
I
Dionysos
is
simply a Thracian
form of Dioscouros.
am
we have
got
holds the
field.
Dionysos as the ivy and the identification of the ivy with the thunder helps us to understand why the ivy is used
explanation of
in
The
making fire by friction of two sticks. One stick, at least, of the two should have the thunder in it, for how can one get fire out of that 3 which has not fire in it ? Frazer points out that both Greeks and
Indians preferred to
make one
one
of the fire-sticks
and suggests
union
of
the
the borer,
being
male,
and the
other female, and the parasite which embraces the tree, being considered male. That fire-sticks are male and female is evident, but the
reason for the selection of the ivy or wild-vine for a fire-stick lies, not in the sex attributed to the plant, but in the thunder which it contains.
Moreover, of
parasitic
plants
employed
in
making
of
fire,
it
is
not
Frazer himself
"
Prolegomena,"
p. 429.
Aus
"
der Anomia," p.
9.
11.251.
127
has pointed out that in Vedic times the male fire- stick was cut by preference from a sacred fig-tree which grew as a parasite on a sand or
female
tree.
So the question
fig
is
raised
may
in
Does the
is
wild-fig ever
it,
does, there
stick.
thunder
If
it
fire-
The
While
point deserves, perhaps, a closer investigation. talking of fire-sticks, it occurs to me that it is perhaps in
we
androgynism
times
ance.
of Dionysos.
The
artistic
Greek
we
have
and appear-
We
think,
for instance,
in the Bacchae, dressed he may spy out the revels the aniconic period are often draped and their
of
Pentheus
when
"
Museum, he
says,
which are
"
soft
Dionysiac types".
Again,
certainly
An
girl,
behind him
is
Zeus holding the divine babe attired Poseidon and Hermes goes before and this
see
:
we
as
is
:
a direct illustration of the story preserved by Apollodorus ". Again " Effeminacy in the forms renders it difficult at times to distinguish a head of Bacchus from one of Ariadne ". Again " In the larger (Per:
gamene)
frieze
Dionysos
is
These quotations
will
show how
decided was the tradition of a feminine element in the idea of Dionysos. could such a conception have arisen ? What was there in the
How
efflorescence
solution.
It is
in
Greek
am
going to
hazard
a speculative
known
for
is
one
out of which
by rapid
rotation of
one
stick in
another
fire
example, ivy and laurel were conjugate the male and the laurel the female. being Now,
;
duced
fire-sticks,
if
we
imagine an
128
earlier stage, in
were made
of ivy-wood, as
might easily have been the case, as soon as it was recognised that the fire had gone into the ivy, then we should have not only a male Dionysos but a conjugate female Dionysos, and one way of expressing this
is
to say that of
this
Dionysos
is
androgyne.
We
firmation
explanation
in
is
the following
may way
I
get
:
some conof
one
:
the
the
a piece of nut-wood
in
1
when
told
need-fire
was
last
made
in
Westmoreland
848,
was
by an
took part in the ceremony, and put the cattle through the smoke of the new fire, that the said new fire had been produced
old
man who
by the
friction of
nut-wood.
Now
Servius
tells
us that in Laconia,
that he turned
really the
Dionysos loved a maiden named Caroea (a Miss Nutt, that is), and As usual in such cases, it was her into a nut-tree.
nut-tree that
is
was turned
Her
relation to
Dionysos
it
happened.
As
have
said,
this is
explanations possible.
The
may have
grown
We should,
direction.
some other
There
may
who
The
or
We
self is
have
now
established our
main point
probability
meaning
of
lesser
child.
Zeus, and through the ivy, a kind of Dioscure, or ZeusThis simple and elementary belief has been combined with
other nature-cults, roughly described as Thracian or Phrygian, and Bacchic or Orphic, and the outcome is the god Dionysos, the last
recruit to the
Olympian
family,
and one
whole crowd.
Servius, "Eel,"
VIII. 29.
.xxxvn. 34-35).
PI-.KSIAX
AND Oi.n Ti
KKI
'1
KANSI ATIONS
(XIVTH-XVTH CENT.)
IN
MINGANA,
D.D.
IN
the Eastern parts of the country from which the actual Turks came, the inhabitants spoke the Uighur language of the Kudatku
Bilik,
This language has but old Turki. with the Osmanli Turkish used by the Turks in their slight affinity The modern Turkish official acts from the fifteenth century onwards.
or the so-called
known as Chaghatai, constituted in a literary form principally by the poet Mir 'AH Shir (906 A.H.). Even this last language a Turk of our days would hardly understand. The most common words are generally very different in their morphohas a nearer ancestor in the language
logical
form and
in
For
instance, the
word used
)j*=*
to express
"
God
"
is
in
I
modern Turkish
districts
or
the
Arabic
<*MI,
but
word (^^J
of the Chaghatai.
At
the time
when
Minor and
pushed forward their success until the Byzantine hegemony was definitively overthrown in Stambul and in the lands situated in the
South-western parts of the surrounding seas, a thick mist of ignorance enThe constant intercourse with veloped their most enlightened circles.
ci\ilized nations occasioned,
however, among them a progressive and salutary feeling towards scientific questions which gave their neighThe first step in this direction bours an unapproachable superiority.
was taken on the ground of their ancestral literature, and the poems of Mir 'Ali Shir and of Baber became the subject of the studies of
many
a Turkish patriot.
interest in
it
among
classic Persians,
the
language of Sa'di.
Many
129
useful
written
by Persians
130
to
which they were so curiously inclined. The catalogue of the British Museum and of other public libraries of Europe contain many Persian" see Ch. Rieu's Mus. Brit. Chaghatai dictionaries and grammars
;
Catalog."
Add. 6646;
16,
404,
etc.
The Turks
themselves, attracted
began, possibly towards the end of the fifteenth century, to devote themselves to the study of their mother-tongue, and some libraries
'ortunately
Brit.
the
a small Turki dictionary compiled chiefly from 'Ali Shir and explained in classic Turkish by an
anonymous Turkish writer. The book is generally known under the " title of Abushka," which forms the first word explained in it. Its
full
title is
<U^x*J!
A copy
of
it is
found
in
Munich (No. 221), dated 960 A.H., and another one Petrograd (No. 594) with the date of 967 A.H.
in
This language
Orientalists.
it,
is
on
its
broad
lines
fairly
well understood by
and
for
The Persians have smoothed the path of our access to this we are grateful to them. On this subject, the lexicoVambery, Zenker, and
difficult
words, are
their successors.
Of
the old
Uighur language
who
inhabited
to the
known, owing
literary
It
is,
inscriptions
and
of
historical
and
compositions
sense,
in a strict
country which gave birth to the famous Gengis Khan, who destroyed the Arab Empire of the East and stifled for a long time
the attempts at domination of upstart descendants of
some Kurdish
As
Tatars, Uighurians are very obscure, some useful purpose might be served by an attempt to throw a ray of light on the point which constitutes the aim of this article.
our historical knowledge goes, we may assert that the Uighurians did not found an Empire, but having quickly followed the Mongols in their attempt to conquer the old world stretching from
far as
1
1
So
Cf.
N. Ellas'
"The
131
the North-eastern parts of India as far as the valley of the Euphrates, they are justly incorporated in history with their Eastern conquerors,
Western branch of these Uighurians and counted as one of them. led by Tughrul and 'Othman occupied step by step the whole of Asia Minor, with all the Eastern provinces of the Roman Empire,
and
their
successors
Southern parts of defeat checked their audacious advance under the walls of Vienna
were dreaming to add to their conquests the Italy and the whole of Austria, when a complete
than two hundred and
years earlier,
(1683
A.D.).
More
fifty
some
provinces had
clans, the old and begun to have the new, the Mongols and the Turks, and a fratricidal war (1402 A.D.) brought them to a premature exhaustion, the conclusion of which
prejudicial results
was
Empire
of Persia.
It
be out
remark that
we
settle so firmly
round the
littoral of
Black Sea,
if
more
had not
inflicted
Empire
Turks
of
the Seljuks
(1300).
The
had
left
Osmanli
The inhabitants of Eastern Uighuria and of Mongolia were some few years before Gengis Khan hardly more civilized than the antedilu" vian men They were dressed in the skins of dogs and wolves they
: ;
and
promulgated by the famous Gengis, the creator of the Tatarian " Asiatic Huns 'V Empire, will enhance the natural virtues of these When you have to send a letter or a messenger to some rebels,
'
greatness of your
*
If
and
if
you
rise,
we
you submit, you will find goodness will not be responsible for what will
'.
the Eternal
God
In
way your
made
manifest,
and you
will win.
1
Barhebraeus,
"
Chron. Syr."
edit.
10
132
"
who
and wise
honour
and princes many titles of The man sitting on the throne should Khan, and his brothers and relatives
of their birth.
When
to hunting,
you are at peace with your enemies, give yourselves up and teach also your children how to hunt beasts. In this
in warfare,
you
and
you
will
and
pity, as
wild beasts.
"
If
man
possessions,
dies amongst you without a legitimate heir, all his and even his wife, should be given to the man who
to him.
was attending
The
People brought up under such legislation could not fail to subjugate some decadent nations, worn out by intestine divisions and
mutual
strife.
From
importsucces-
by storm, and some years later, the fall (1258 A.D.) put an end to the Arabo- Persian domination and threatened the Turkish possessions in the North.
These Mongols had no
Uighur had so
wider
language to
1
Baghdad
South
in the
adopted the
easily subjugated.
field
By
this
of
extension than
it
language
itself,
many
in its
literary
compositions are
known
to-day, and
is
is
by
that their
own
history
to
be sketched
most
striking lines.
Between the
old
and
imperfectly
known
language
of of
the
the Bilik poem, and the Chaghatai, ancestral- tongue Osmanli-Turkish, there is an intermediary language which so far has not been very accurately studied in its general morphological features
Kudatku
and
in
its
distinct
relations with
It
is
the
two
dialects
between which
it
found
in the British
well represented by which a fourteenth century good MS. is Museum (Add. 7851) and it has been carefully
of
Barhebraeus,
"
Chron. Syr."
ibid. p.
410.
133
The edition (1859) of described by the skilled hand of Dr. Rieu. Ilminsky from another MS. belonging to the Imperial Library of
Petrograd is not found in the public libraries of this country, and as Dr. Rieu says "is extremely rare, and no copy is accessible for About the value of Rabghuzi's work, purposes of comparison".
Dr. Rieu writes (ibid. p. 271) " The early date of Rabghuzi's work gives it a great linguistic It forms an intermediate link between the old Turki, or sovalue.
:
called
Uighur, and the Chaghatai of Mir 'Ali Shir and Baber. Although written two centuries and a half after the former work, it
much
of
its
archaic vocabulary.
may be
its
lineal descendant,
and a
care-
ful
study of
which, in spite of the brilliant Prof. Vambery, still remain in the earliest document of the Turkish
language."
not the only
can guide us safely in our investigations of the language of nations which played so ima role in the history of the world. portant
Happily Rabghuzi
is
man who
A
tains
the
manuscript in the John Rylands Library of Manchester context of the Kuran with a literal translation into this
Rabghuzi dialect, distant only a few steps from the Uighuric tongue. This MS. numbered cod. 760-773 consists of fourteen volumes of
355
300 mm.
Nearly all the volumes are unfortunately truncated at the beginning and at the end, and all of them have many leaves missing in the
middle, whilst the margins of many of the remaining leaves which were injured by worms have in consequence disappeared for ever. But what is most to be regretted is the clumsiness of the last
binder
arranged the volumes in the present order. Many leaves which properly belong to the beginning are placed at the end and several leaves which contain verses of a Surah and should have
;
who
been bound
for instance in
prehensible blunder in
description of
tion
:
volume 766, are bound through an incomvolume 770, etc. The following partial
will give a fair idea of the
volume 772
of the
whole
to
collec-
XXVIth
LI,
juz'
XLVI,
a,
1,
is
Surah
30
which
half-torn
134
away
Surah
the
middle
[^]UH
,j~"*^>
Ji>^
/=*,
at
the
title
top
of
cJlfi^JI
and
at the
bottom
&
Folio 26b,
XLVIII.
title.
Folios
large illuminated
in
52b and 53a, beginning of Surah XLIX called the two pages are completely illuminated. I^-J^ Folios 67b and 68a end with Surahs XLIX and L respectively, and In folios 50b and 5 a, in both cases with some curved Surah titles.
Surah
Folios
the
MS.
a blank.
Folio
74b,
Lacunae.
leaf,
Folio
one
therefore,
at the top,
which contained the introductory words and at the bottom is lost. and Folio Ib ends
^^
(XLVI,
from
verses
2-20
XLVI, 20-22
83
The next six leaves containing (w^J^). and 22-29 are wrongly bound as folios 84 and 79volume 766.
Folio 3b, the
last
respectively, of the
two
verses of
Surah XLVII.
:
At
is
"In
the
As
the
MS.
stands to-day,
if
it
thirty
volumes
instead of fourteen
there
were no lacunae
The MS.
preserved his
"
'
seems to come from a country in which the Arabic was The last owner of the MS. has
in his seal
name
of
volume 765
"
the
Abdul -Baki
Arab
".
We
to the Oriental
if
Arab
"
he were
living in
Arab
country.
One
MS.
is
Turki and
do not correspond always with the Arabic one word is above the other, beginning
If
the Persian
with the Arabic and ending with the old Turki. and the old Turki translations were
we
mistake not,
years
made
several
before the transcription of the Arabic sacred text, and the task of the scribe was in this case simply to transcribe from another MS. a translation
already
:
in
existence.
Two
reasons
make
this
view highly
probable
I
.
There are Arabic sentences which do not give the same meanthat
of the
ing as
translation.
This
fact
would be very
surpris-
135
we suppose that the divergence extends only to some very easy such as pronouns, and preformative letters of the Aorist. words, know that in early times, and before the invention of the diacritical
did
We
points in the
different
Arabic language, there were in the Muhammadan world schools which read, for instance, the word Ja& as Naktulu^
"we kill," or Yaktulu, "he kills," or Taktulu, "thou killest". When the context did not condemn one of these readings to death,
they were generally admitted by the most rigid commentators ; and the Kutubul-Kira at have preserved scores of such words read in a dif'
ferent
way.
In the
MS.
with which
we
are dealing
it
when
"he
"
kills
we
kill ".
even more
In volume 760, amazing than a usual variant of a diacritical point. last line of fol. 1, the Arabic words of Surah III, 1 16 ^) are
\)
and
in
^^ L~J
^%.
The Arabic
text
means
"
and
if it
befall them,"
the old Turki signify and if it befall you ". The old Turki and the Persian translations are therefore made from a copy of the Kuran " which exhibited the reading of Fliigel's edition, and if it befall
you
".
volume 771, folio 68a, the word "God is omitted in the Arabic text in verse 8 of Surah XLV, but it is rendered, in spite of
2.
"
In
into
This omission
means
was
in
He
word
the
transcribing from two different MSS. question in one of his transcriptions, but
transcriptions.
he has inserted
in
two other
Here we
find a
curious coincidence to
In the
which
we
book
entitled
was
printed
Cambridge, the
of the
some few months ago at the University Press of word Allah which occurs in the above quoted verse
or
<-^UJl
"a blow".
was not
but the palimpsest which belongs to Dr. Agnes S. Lewis did not permit me to read the word otherwise. The letter is distinct and does not seem to suffer the existence of
quite satisfied
another word,
to find a
more
scribe
suitable
of our Everything considered, appears havpresent MS. found himself face to face with the same difficulty been unable to substitute another good vocable for the one that ing
word.
that
the
136
entirely.
The
hypothesis will
become more
taken,
plausible,
all
if
we
throughout
he writes it always in gilt has indeed profusely lavished all his skill letters in a curiously waving form, forms its letters, and sometimes he
In any case such an omission in the text resembling a coarse zigzag. of the Kuran while both translations, the Old Turki and the Persian,
are exact,
is
worthy
of
The
Arabic
note
text has
deficient
as
to the
provenance of the
the probable hypothesis that the translation was undertaken several years before the transcription of the Arabic text, the old Turki
dialect
On
becomes
of an exceptional importance.
itself
latest,
is
very probably
linguistic
stories.
many
decades
Our MS.
therefore,
from a
point of view,
Rabghuzi's apocryphal second reason which seems to establish a superiority of our MS. over Rabghuzi's work, is the facility with which it may be used
Being simply a literal and while the Old Turki word is Kuran, placed immediately under the Persian and the Arabic words explained, it affords a most valuable field of investigation for the student who is
for critical studies or scientific researches.
interlinear
translation of the
by
this
method enabled
to
Uighur language.
Dr. Rieu (ibid. pp. 27 1 -2) has gathered from Rabghuzi's book some stray words that he has compared with those of the Uighur of the
Kudatku
these
Bilik
poem
we
compare some
character
of
of
our
MS.
The
the
Rabghuzian and even pre-Rabghuzian of the language of our MS. and the importance that it deserves will then perhaps appear more As is easily noticed from the following list, the dialect used striking.
in
our
letter
MS. corresponds, with a slight and explicable change of the ^> into ^, with the oldest form of the Uighur language. The
dialect, ancestor of the actual Turkish, has lost the majority
in the case of the
Chaghatai
of the
few which
it
137
has softened to a simple vowel the strong consonants which characterise them. Let us take as our examples three words " " from the list the word which means after has a ^ in the dialect
:
of our
MS. and
eliminated in
in
Uighur, but both consonants have been simply Likewise the word meaning "foot" is Chaghatai.
a
in
Chaghatai JJ^J,
and
the
as
in
modern Turkish.
A.
Rabghuzi
dialect
B.
and
Uighur
of the
MS.
foot (vol. 763, fol. 60a).
Kudatku
Bilik.
0^1
151
fol.
7b).
to create (vol. 763, fol. 58a). to send (vol. 771, fol. 47a).
fol.
23b).
763,
fol.
12b).
good
(vol.
771,
fol.
105a).
fol.
33b).
g.J^
to establish
There
which seem
over that used by ex. gr. the particle of dative- accusative is in our MS. Rabghuzi, always the letter JJ followed by a paragogic Alif, for instance
I*
MS.
^s~>y
to
Moses,
\*
f***>^\ to
letter is
Abraham
(vol.
771,
fol.
8a)
in
Rabghuzi
this archaic
as in
Chaghatai, v. gr. i*j^J to God. As a mere curiosity for students not accustomed to peruse an Old Turki MS. we may mention the fact that the word "Arab" or
translated by the word Tari, ex. gr. volume 771, folios 3b and 37a, the words U-J^ llly> an Arabic Kuran are translated into Persian a nd in Old Turki l^U ^;K ^y.
is
"Arabic"
^)
We
cannot conclude
this
Shaw
1.
in his
work
entitled,
"A
p.
Sketch
of the
Turki Language"
of the
(Lahore, 1875).
"de56):
138
40b).
cf.
fol.
about the pronouns in general, Against the rules found on p. 8 how the Arabic word *J> to it (IX. 57) is translated ;l*ol (ibid.
2.
4
3.
a).
Against what
cf.
is
said (pp.
72-75) about
post- positions
is
and con-
junctions,
how
meaning or
translated twice
by
^1
4.
(ibid.).
The
is
3) obsolete in the
Old
Turki, studied
by Shaw,
MS.
and grammatical Shaw's Grammar and that
our short study of the
On
many
lexicographical
similarities
between the
dialect exhibited in
used in our
MS.
but these
similarities, so far as
do not seem
all
to
exceed
in preponderating pro-
number
of these similarities
and
dissimilarities
and
to
know
the epoch in
which they have been gradually introduced by the general public whose
linguistic
into a
form of speech. could lay more stress on some grammatical peculiarities of this dialect, but we think that this short notice is sufficient to give an
We
MS. and
who by
make
a careful study of
be
in
substantial additions to the information published from time to time regarding the Turco-Tatar languages. It should also be pointed out that in certain catalogues mention is made of a Kuran cum Versione Turcicd ; l but since it is not
position to
clearly stated
we
infer that
this
misleading term,
the time
At
when
such catalogues were prepared, few scholars were familiar with the Old Turki. These MSS., consisting of a single volume, cannot be
We
thirty
cherish the
hope
MDCXIII
of L,< d.
Mus.
Rrit. 1846, p.
p.
XLHI
privee
de bibliotheque publique.
affectees
Durant
une periode
furent astreints a
recourir
aux "librairies"
II
aux.nombreux
a cette lacune
elles possedaient
de
dans cette
dehors.
il
notamment defendu
au
Quant
En
Le
fut
suivi
d'un second,
fait
Celui-ci, fils du celebre mathematicien Jacques Romanus, en 1635. transmit a TUniversite la bibliotheque de son pere, bien Romanus,
y ajouta
:
ses
propres livres de medecine. En ce moment, etait recteur le celebre Cornell le Jansenius ce fut lui qiii organisa ce premier noyau de la bibliotheque. Le depot
de
aux halles
3 7
1
universitaires
1'ancienne
1
Halle aux
Draps, datant de
1'auditoire
et qui fut
cedee a 1'Universite en
432
dans
de
la faculte
de medecine.
139
somme
140
tion
bibliotheque.
La garde
des
livres
fut
confiee
au
Valere
Le
et
du depot
livres
publia en cette
meme
762
legues
par Beyerlinck et Romanus. la mort de Valere Andre la bibliotheque fut malheureusement En cette derniere annee, laissee a 1'abandon, de 1635 a 1719.
1'attention fut
Snellaerts,
de nouveau appelee sur elle par un don de Dominique chanoine d'Anvers (fl720) qui lui legua les 3500
il
volumes qu*
possedait.
la construction d'un nouveau local. geste genereux necessita Celle-ci fut entreprise par le recteur Rega, homme de grande initiative,
Ce
Rega
Une
direction
nouvelle
aile
fut
:
ajoutee
aux
vieilles
halles,
dans
en
1
la
du Vieux Marche
730.
nouvel element de progres fut apporte par radministration de C. F. de Nelis, qui devint bibliothecaire en 1752. Son premier
acte fut d'inviter le
('obligation
la
Un
gouvernement a imposer aux imprimeurs beiges d'envoyer au moins un exemplaire de leurs publications a
Inutile
bibliotheque universitaire.
de dire de combien
accumules.
cette ex-
cellente initiative
augmenta
la
Sous radministration de Jean Francois Van de Velde (1771-1 797), Les livres furent achetes aux bibliotheque acquit 12,000 volumes.
de
la
com-
En
1
outre,
Van
de Velde
fit
entrer
4573
livres
nouveaux.
795, sous le regime franc^ais, les commissaires de la Repuenleverent environ 5000 volumes, parmi lesquels les manuscrits blique
les plus precieux.
En
sation
tion,
de
faire
En 797, De la Serna Santander obtint 1'autoriun choix de tous les ouvrages qui, d*apres son estima1
Bruxelles.
pouvaient etre utiles au depot de 1'ecole centrale etablie a Apres un triage qui dura dix jours le commissaire fran^ais
1
Ou ne les a jamais restitues. emporta 7 8 volumes. Par decret imperial de Napoleon, en date du 12 decembre 1805, la bibliotheque de 1'Universite de Louvain devint la propriete de la
ville.
Cependant, en 1835,
lors
du retablissement de TUniversite a
le
precieux depot a
la
de
f Alma Mater.
141
contenait
"
de Belgique
direction
nombre
etait
reel
de
livres.
Sous
la
actuellement occupe a reEn ventonant d'une viser le catalogue, deja ancien et defectueux. maniere systematique la section de theologie, on decouvrait presque
du
professeur
Del annoy, on
journellement des tresors inconnus, qui avaient dormi depuis deux Les premieres publications des siecles sous une couche de poussiere.
premiers reformateurs et les pamphlets politico-religieux etaient parti-
culierement nombreux.
fique collection
de plus
au cours de 1'inventaire
dans
Tout aussi precieux que la collection des incunables etait un ensemble unique de Jesuitica, publications emanant de ou relatives aux Jesuites tant des Pays-Bas que des diverses contrees de
El les provenaient des achats faits a la fin du XVIII 6 siecle par Jean- Francois Van de Velde. II en existait un catalogue une collection de Jansenistica, De plus, soigneusement dresse.
T Europe.
ou publications
relatives
Le
au jansenisme doit ici etre mise hors de pair. de Louvain dans 1'histoire du jansenisme
la
du temps de Louis
et
XIV
1'experience
m'a appris
de
la littera-
notamment des
traites
du genre
La
de
des tresors
de 950 manuscrits.
y avait
la
plusieurs manuscrits
du XII
siecle,
de
fut,
heureusement, public
e manuels liturgiques du XIII 6 XIV e et siecle. Plusieurs de ces codices contenaient de magnifiques enluminures et des miniatures
XV
142
en pleine page.
versite.
manu-
Deja en
445
archives frappait quates pour la conservation de ces ceux qui detenaient chez eux des lettres adressees au studium. Pour de pouvoir consulter ces documents, il fallait une permission speciale
elle. Dans la presence de temoins delegues par e seconde moitie du XVHI siecle, les documents concernant I Alma
une amende
1'autorite
et
la
Mater
taires.
sont
nombreux
et conserves
en
Les catalogues qui en furent alors dresses nous sont parvenus Lors de 1'invasion franchise en 794, Jean-Francois Van partie.
1
de Velde
tion
reussit a soustraire
les
la confisca-
ordonnee par
commissaires de la Republique.
La
partie des
aux archives
reussit
Celle que
Van
de Velde
acquisitions
diverses mortuaires, une bonne depuis partie de la collection des manuscrits de la bibliotheque de Louvain.
faites
lors
en
On
y trouvait
notamment
de
la
plusieurs
listes
d'immatriculation,
celle
une
de
de medecine, une
collection
de
certificats delivres
propos de nominations aux benefices, un nombre considerable de pieces se rapportant aux privileges de 1'Universite, enfin plusieurs
manuscrits de cours et d'ouvrages rediges par des professeurs celebres
de 1'ancienne
une
Alma Mater.
Recemment,
et
j'avais
moi-meme
retrouve
president
du College du
Saint- Esprit,
Van
lumiere nouvelle sur 1'histoire de 1'Universite a 1'epoque de la revolution franchise. Enfin, tous les visiteurs de la bibliotheque connaissaient le
fameux manuscrit olographe de Thomas a Kempis, et " De 1'exemplaire sur velin du fameux ouvrage d* Andre Vesale " humani corporis fabrica qui fut offert a la bibliotheque par Charles
Quint lui-meme.
En
le
soixante-
de fondation
originale,
143
en 425, et qui etait conservee depuis pape Martin 1'epoque de Napoleon au grand Seminaire de Haren (Brabant SepN'oublions pas de signaler ici que 1'unique manuscrit tentrional). d'un concerto compose par le grand pianiste De Greef, professeur au
1
et
salle reservee
Dans la belle de Louvain possedait encore d'autres tresors. aux livres d'histoire, se trouvaient diver ses armoires
collection sigillographique interessante,
On
une collection numismatique de tres grande valeur pour I'histoire de TUniversite, un ensemble assez complet d'anciennes reliures en cuir, des mappemondes et des globes geographiques de 1'epoque de Mercator,
un exemplaire de la reproduction du fameux Breviarium Grimani. Enfin, Ton y conservait aussi une collection de signatures autographes
d'il lustres visiteurs
de
la bibliotheque
et
ceux de Victor
Hugo
comme
veri-
Dans
table
plus
la salle
se trouvait
un
musee
illustres
professeurs
On pour Thistoire des Pays-Bas. humaniste Juste- Lipse, d'Erasme, d'Ericius Guteanus, de Jansenius, de Vesale. Dans la salle de lecture, debouchait 1'acces a la salle des
promotions.
C'est dans cette salle que, depuis 1834,
Ton
conferait les
Les
de 1'ancienne
Au
rez-de-chaussee,
Ton
et
avait installe,
de temps
auditoires
de theologie
de
deux
Spoelbergh.
Des
lors,
du rez-de-chaussee des
halles
furent destinees a la
bibliotheque.
En
restaurant
ces
salles,
on
decouvrit, en dessous de la couche de platre qui les recouvrait depuis le XVII e siecle, d'anciennes sculptures et des colonnes appartenant aux
halles primitives
la
place de reunion
portrait
ces salles, connue comme du senat academique, se trouvait un magnifique contemporain du pape Adrien VI, ancien professeur de
de 1317.
Dans Tune de
144
Louvain
et
Ce portrait a ete reprofondateur du College du Rape. a Rome par le comte Pasolini duit dans 1'ouvrage recemment public
sous le
avril
dans
le
brasier
livres, ces
ou disparu.
et
En
quelques
heures les soldats allemands ont brutalement aneanti ces tresors qui
n'etaient pas seulement le patrimoine
de Louvain
de
la Belgique,
les
civilise.
Ce
et
rues adjacentes a la bibliotheque au-dessus desquels Ton peut difficilement grimper, ce ne sont
feuillets
que des
de
livres et
le feu.
Des
ou Ton gardait
les
de reunion des
et celui
facultes, le cabinet
il
du
recteur, le
bureau du vice-recteur
de
ne reste plus que des colonnes solitaires et noircies par rarchiviste, le feu, des amas de pierres et de briques, des poutres a moitie consumees, des murs et des pans de murs, branlants et
s'abattre.
mena^ant de
forfait n'ont
leguee par les siecles et qui s'etalait en inscription sur les murs vieux batiment Sapientia cedificavit sibi domum.
:
du
11
de communiquer, en terminant,
le fait
que j'ai pu sauver, en quittant Louvain, et cela par suite du hasard, le manuscrit 906. il contient la Je Tavais chez moi en consultation
:
correspondance
environ.
fiques tresors
1
officielle
de
1'universite
depuis
momentdes magni1
de
la
Dans
certains journaux, et
les
notamment dans des journaux de Chicago, Allemands ont fait des efforts pour sauver la
J'oppose a cette affirmation
dementi
le
plus categorique.
STEPS
AT
It
some
practical
sympathy with the authorities of the University of Louvain, in the irreparable loss which they have suffered, through the barbarous destruction of the University buildings
library.
was
the form of a
stock of duplicates in
sympathy should take books to be selected by the librarian from the the possession of the library, which have gradually
accumulated through the purchase en bloc, from time to time, of large and special collections. The latter almost inevitably contain a certain
proportion of works of which copies are already to be found upon the Together with such duplicates it was agreed to present library shelves.
set of
by
this
institution.
A
gift,
works forming the first instalment of the proposed and numbering upwards of two hundred volumes, was drawn up
list
of the
to
accompany
this offer,
when it was made to the authorities of the medium of Professor Dr. A. Carnoy, and it
Governors
to
was a source
learn that
"these volumes"
own words
"will
ones which have been effectually to the future University Library in Louvain. Your donation given
will
since
have an important place in the reconstitution of our University, it is one of the very first acts which tend to the preparation of our
the University
is
revival."
As
at present
we have
new
it
library, until
such
time as the
new
146
well as private
proposed
by
We
for the
may be
entrusted to us
propose to institute a careful register of the names and addresses of the donors of such works, together with an exact record of
their
gifts,
We
for
permanent
record of this modest attempt to demonstrate to the people of Belgium our grateful and heart- felt appreciation of the heroic sacrifices which
they have
made
in their
may be
classified
and catalogued
of
life
better than a
mob
of books,
and
is
of as little real
service as a
body devoid of the vitalizing power with endows it. Therefore it has been decided to
it
may
by
by
classifying
it
Dewey Decimal
its
Classification,
and
also
furnishing
with a
its
carefully
compiled catalogue,
so
it
that
when
transference to
new home,
may be
pared
Van
which accompanies
so sorely deplore acter of the
whose
loss
we
to the char-
works required for the rehabilitation of the library on lines which it has been consistently developed since its
would
appeal
regard
it
as a favour
if
those
who
decide to respond
list
to
this
would,
send to him a
whether any
The names
of the donors,
gifts,
will
be
BULLETIN.
147
library's
first
ACCADEMIA
della Crusca.
.
Quarta impressione
729-38.
vols.
Fol.
AFF6
dal
.
(Ireneo)
.
.
Memorie
.
Raccolte
4to.
1.
Aff6
Parma,
1789-1833.
7 vols. in
9.
ALGER
life.
(William Rounseville)
With
...
x,
1864.
8vo, pp.
bibliography 914.
la
the
subject.
Philadelphia,
ANGERS.
public
pp.
Ixiv,
Cartulaire noir de
cathedrale
.
.
.
par 517.
...
Ch.
Urseau.
ARGELLATI
opere volgarizzate d'autori, che scrissero in lingue morte prima del Coll* secolo XV. F. Argelati Opera postuma del addizioni, e correzioni di Angel o Teodoro Villa. Milano, 1767.
...
5 vols.
4to.
ARISTOTLE.
with
pp.
. .
.
The
notes
.
metaphysics of Aristotle, translated from the Greek; London, 1801. 4to, By Thomas Taylor.
. . .
Iv,
467.
ARISTOTLE.
The rhetoric, poetic, and Nicomachean ethics of Aristotle, translated from the Greek. London, 1811. By Thomas Taylor.
. . .
ATHENIAN ORACLE.
of all
The Athenian
...
4
...
London,
1703-10.
vols.
8vo.
BAILLY
la
(Jean Louis Armand) Notices historiques sur les bibliotheques anciennes et modernes suivies d'un tableau comparatif des produits de
;
presse de 1812 a 1825, et d'un recueil de lois et ordonnances concernant les bibliotheques. 8vo, pp, ij, 210. Paris, 1828.
BARBIER (A. A.) and DESESSARTS (N. L. M.) Nouvelle bibliotheque d'un homme de gout. 5 vols. 8vo. Paris, 1808-10.
.
. .
BERENGER
ment a
la
et
]
789.
BERGER
Etude sur les plus (Samuel) La Bible francaise au moyen age. anciennes versions de la Bible ecrites en prose de langue d'oil. Paris, 1884. 8vo, pp. xvi, 450.
.
Isaiah.
.
A new translation,
Cheyne
. .
T. K.
8vo.
1 1
148
BIBLE.
1860.
du Nouveau Testament.
Traduits
. . .
d'apres le
...
Paris, Gen&ve,
BIBLE.
Nouum Testamentum
Graecum,
. . .
cum
.
BIBLE.
Antilegomena die Reste der ausserkanonischen und urchristlichen Ueberlieferungen herausgegeben und Evangelien \Giessen, 1901. iibersetzt von Erwin Preuschen. 8vo, pp. vi, 175.
APOCRYPHA.
BIBLE.
APOCRYPHA.
Die
iibersetzt
The Englishman's Hebrew and Chaldee conBIBLE. APPENDIX. cordance of the Old Testament [Edited by G. V. Wigram]. 2 vols. 8vo. Second edition. London, 1860.
. . .
.
BlBLIOGRAPHISCHE
ADVERSARIA.
6
vols.
Bibliographische
8vo.
adversaria.
BLANC (Ludwig
Gottfried) Saggio di una interpretazione parecchi passi oscuri e controversi della Divina commedia Trieste, 1865. 8vo, pp. xxiv, 365.
.
filologica
.
di
L'inferao.
Discorsi
4to.
di
V.
Borghini.
vols.
BOYCE
ecclesiastical,
(William Binnington) Introduction to the study of history and literary. London, 1884. 8vo, pp. xxxvi, 632.
:
civil,
BRINKMAN
(C. L.) Alphabetische naamlijst van boeken, platt- en kaartwerken, die gedurende de jaren 1833 tot en met 1849 in Nederland Amsterdam, 1858. 4to, pp. 7, 792. uitgegeven of herdrukt zijn.
.
BRUCKER
.
(Johann Jacob)
\
I.
Bruckeri
Editio secunda.
Lipsice,
766-67.
vols.
4to.
CARLI
Delle antichita
italiche.
Milano,
Miscellania Ceriani. Raccolta di scritti originali A. M. Ceriani. per onorare la memoria di Milano, 1910. 8vo, pp. xvi, 810.
. . . . . .
CLEMEN
(Carl Christoph) Religionsgeschichtliche Erklarung des Testaments. Die Abhangigkeit des altesten Christentums von
.
Neuen
nicht-
pp
viii,
301.
COLVIN
1695.
(Sir Sidney) Early engraving and engravers in England, 1545With facsimiles. London, 1905. Fol., pp. viii,
. . .
. . .
149
(Francois Charles Louis) and DUNOYER (Charles Barthelemi) 12 vols. 8vo. censeur europeen. Paris, 1817-19.
COOK
viii,
Aramaic
inscriptions.
Cam-
CORTONA.
. .
.
Accademia
Saggi di dissertazioni accademiche pubblicamente lette nella. etrusca. Eoma, etc., 1738-91. 9 vols. in 5, 4to.
. .
DAIRE
(Eugene) and MOLINARI (Gustave de) Melanges d' economic Precedes de notices historiques sur chaque auteur et (. E. Daire et G. de par accompagnes de commentaires 8vo. 2 vols. Paris, 1847-48. Molinari.)
politique.
.
DANTE
media.
ALIGHIERI.
. .
Le
Roma,
1817.
DENINA
1809.
occidentale.
Torino,
DOBSCHUETZ
beitet
.
. .
Kommentar
iiber
ment.
10.]
Gottingen, 1909.
DUVAL
(Paul Rubens)
La
litterature
Deuxieme
edition.
Anciennes [Bibliotheque de 1'Enseignement de 1'Histoire Ecclesiastique. Litteratures Chretiennes. 2.] Paris, 1900. 8vo, pp. xvi, 444.
SegurodeTordesillas.
Segunda
Madrid, 1784.
FORTEGUERRI
Garteromaco.
Ricciardetto di Niccolo (Niccolo) Bishop of Ancyra. Milano, 1813. 3 vols. 8vo. [With portrait.]
FOSCOLO
pp. 325.
London, 1823.
.
8vo,
GESENIUS
.
. .
(Friedrich Heinrich Wilhelm) Guilielmi Gesenii. linguae Hebraeae et Chaldaeae Veteris Testamenti. 1835-40. 2 vols. 4to.
.
thesaurus
Lipsiae,
GODWIN
(Francis) successively
and memorable
actions.
HASAN.
Hasan and Husain, collected from oral Revised with by Pelly, K.C.B. notes by Arthur N. Wollaston. London, 1879. 2 vols. 8vo.
miracle play of
Sir
tradition
The
...
Lewis
HERZOG
etc.,
und Kirche
1854-68.
Herzog.
Hamburg
Christian
HOLMES
(Thomas
Scott)
The
origin
&
development of the
first
London, 1911.
150
HOLZINGER(R)
Freiburg
i.
B. und
HUMBOLDT
(Friedrich
et
Fol., pp. 4.
.
INCHAUSPE
iNGHIRAMl
Le verbe basque Ouvrage public par ( ) AbbS. Louis Lucien Bonaparte. Bayonne, 1858. 4to, pp. xii, 511. prince
.
.
le
Rome
mores
indicantur
pp. 324.
INGLEBY (Clement
Second
1882.
edition.
. .
Mansfield)
.
Shakespeare's centurie
of
prayse.
London, [1879]. 4to, pp. xxiii, 470. Mil Illustrationen. KOESTLIN Oulius) Luthers Leben
.
.
Leipzig,
LA HARPE
moderne.
LUNA
sion.
A. de Luna.
Segunda impre-
Madrid, 1784.
MAFFEI
. . .
MAHABHARATA.
poem
:
Bhagavadgltd.
. . .
The
Bhagavad-gita
or a discourse
A Sanskrit philosophical
. .
notes
Hertford,]&5.
MANCHESTER.
.
The
Manchester, 1909-10.
vols.
4to.
MEULEN
(Rimmer van) Repertorium op Brinkman's catalogussen, bevattende in alphabetische orde de onderwerpen benevens een beknopte titelbeschrijving der boeken, plaaten kaartwerken, die gedurende de jaren
;
1850-1882
pp.
vii,
in
Amsterdam,
[1883?].
8vo,
526.
al
MONTI
Voca-
NORDENSKIOLD
in the
An account of a copy [now (Nils Adolf Erik) Baron. John Rylands Library] from the 5th century of a map of the world engraved on metal, which is preserved ... at Velletri. [With map.] Stockholm, 1891. 4to, pp. 29.
1
OCHOA Y RONNA
espanoles,
.
romanceros y cancioneros y otros, recogidos y ordenados por E. de Ochoa, y adicionado con el poema del Cid romances, por J. R. y otros Barcelona, 1840. 8vo, pp. xvi,
los
historicos,
.
moriscos
664.
151
la
magia.
[Rome], 1892.
8vo.
PASSERI (Giovanni
de Etruria
.
. .
illustrantur.
in Battista) J. B. Passerii regali paralipomena, quibus tabulae Luca, 1767. Fol., pp. xxii, 339.
...
PINEDA
Suero de (Juan de) Libro del passo honroso, defendidopor edicion. Madrid, 1783. 4to, pp. vi, 68. Segunda Quenones
.
PRASEK
ischen
(Justin
Eroberung.
2 vols.
V.) Geschichte der Meder und Perser bis zur makedonGotha, [Handbiicher der Alien Geschichte.]
8vo.
1906-10.
QUERARD
RACINET
(Joseph Marie) La France litteraire, ou dictionnaire bibliographique des savants, historiens et gens de lettres de la France. 8vo. 10 vols. Paris, 1827-39.
.
Cinq cent planches. (Auguste) Le costume historique. A. Racinet avec des Recueil public sous la direction de 6 vols. Fol. notices explicatives. Paris, 1 888.
.
REN AN
572.
Paris, 1869.
RENAN Q
8vo, pp.
se pn Ernest)
lix,
Vie de
Jesus.
Dixieme
edition.
Paris, 1863.
462.
Sebon. en Francois par Michel, Seigneur de Montaigne 8vo, pp. 891. edition, reueue & corrigee. Paris, 1611.
.
.
Traduite Derniere
SANTI BARTOLI
nati,
etruschi, trovati in
(Pietro) Gli antichi sepolcri, ovvero mausolei romani, ed Roma ed in altri luoghi celebri Raccolti, diseg. . .
ed
intagliati
da P. Santi
Bartoli.
Roma,
.
.
727.
.
SCHUMACHER
trations.
(Gottlieb)
Transactions of the
Translated
from the
illus-
With
maps and
London, 1888.
8vo, pp. 78.
xi,
304.
SCHUMACHER (Gottlieb)
1888.
London,
SHAKESPEARE
Shakspeare Society.
Some 300 fresh allusions to [Appendix.] 694 A.D. Gathered by members of the New London, 1886. 4to, pp. xliv, 372, xii.
;
.
SMITH
(Joseph) Bibliotheca anti-Quakeriana or, a catalogue of books adverse to the Society of Friends together with the answers which have been given to some of them. London, 1873. 8vo, pp. 474.
.
. . .
SMITH
.
. .
(Joseph)
books, or
books
written by
called Quakers.
SOCRATES,
2a)ofj,evov
KK\r)o-iaa-TLKr)
textum
collatis
. .
illustravit.
/ecu 2'X\a<TTi,Kov Epfjaov Henricus Valesius Graecum mss. codicibus emendavit, Latine vertit, annotationibus Fol., pp. 818, 203. Moguntice, 1677.
la-ropia.
&
152
SPINOZA
tary,
his (Bencdictus de) Spinoza's short treatise on God, man, Translated and edited, with an introduction and commenwell-being.
A. Wolf.
[With
plates.]
London,
1910.
STEWART
essays.
Third
edition.
Edin-
TASMAN
1896.
(Abel) Abel Janszoon Tasman's journal Diemens Land and New Zealand being
.
. .
. .
of his discovery of
. .
Van
facsimiles of the
. .
original manuscript
Fol., pp.
Amsterdam,
163,21.
TAYLOR
(Thomas)
1812.
dissertation
on the philosophy
of Aristotle.
London,
577.
SeoBayptrov
eTricr/coTrov
.
.
.
THEODORETUS, Bishop
Evayptov 2%o\a(TTtKov
Graeca ex mss.
illustravit.
. . .
of Cyrus.
Kvpov
/cat,
e/crc\ricri,aaTitcr} lo-ropia.
Henricus Valesius
&
annotationibus
VENTUR1
(Giovanni
Quinta edizione
rifalta.
italiana
VOSSIUS (Gerardus)
WlLDEBOER
(Gerrit)
The
origin of the
. .
An
historico-critical
. .
.
enquiry.
182.
Translated by
Bacon.
1895.
... George
Moore.
Wisner London,
8vo, pp.
ZELLER
(Jules) Histoire
de
1'Italie
nos jours.
Paris, 1853.
MANCHESTER.
The
.
Catalogue of the printed books and manuscripts 3 vols. 4to. John Rylands Library. Manchester, 899.
.
With
-
English Bible in the John Rylands Library, 1525 to 1640. facsimiles and engravings. [Manchester], 1899. Fol., pp. xvi, 275.
.
.
Rylands Library.
-
Catalogue of the Coptic manuscripts in the collection of the John By W. E. Crum. Manchester, 1909. 4to, pp. xii, 273.
.
.
.
Catalogue of the Demotic papyri in the John Rylands Library, Manchester. With facsimiles and translations. By F. LI. Griffith. 3 vols. Manchester, 1909. 4to.
1
Volume
in the
Manchester, 1911.
vol.
4to.
153
classified catalogue of the works on architecture and the the principal libraries of Manchester and Salford. Manchester, 1909. 8vo, pp. xxv, 310.
in
RUSSELL (J orin ) Bishop. Propositio Johannis Russell. Printed by William Caxton circa A.D. 1476. Reproduced in facsimile from the Manchester, 1909. copy preserved in the John Rylands Library.
.
booke in Englysh metre, of the great DlVES PRAGMATICUS. " 1563. marchaunt man called "Dives Pragmaticus Reproduced in facsimile from the copy in the John Rylands Library. Manchester,
. . .
1910.
-
litil boke the whiche traytied KNUTSSON (Bengt) Bishop. and reherced many gode thinges necessaries for the ... pestilence Reproduced in facsimile from the copy in the John Rylands Library. Manchester, 1910. 4to, pp. xxvi.
. .
. .
Library,
Manchester: a brief
historical
de-
scription of the library and its contents, with catalogue of the selection of early printed Greek and Latin classics exhibited . . October,
.
MCMVI.
Manchester, 1906.
Library, Manchester.
Catalogue of an exhibi-
tion of Bibles illustrating the history of the English versions from Wiclif to the present time. . Manchester, 1907. 8vo, pp. vii, 55.
of
The John Rylands Library, Manchester catalogue books and broadsides illustrating the early history of
:
of the selection
printing.
Manchester, 1907.
of
. .
8vo, pp.
v,
34.
:
The John Rylands Library, Manchester catalogue of an exhibition illuminated manuscripts, principally biblical and liturgical, exhibited October, MCMVIII. Manchester, 1908. 8vo, pp. vii, 62.
.
Library, Manchester
works
of
works
xii,
of
Dante Alighieri
Library,
MCMIX.
:
8vo, pp.
55.
an analytical catalogue English garner," compiled Man1903-04. by Edward Arber, 1877-97, and rearranged chester, 1909. 8vo, pp. vi, 221.
of the contents of the
Manchester
"
two
editions of
An
Library, Manchester
classics.
.
the
principal
English
Manchester, 1910.
xv, 85.
154
MANCHESTER.
The John Rylands Library, Manchester : a brief historical description of the library and its contents, with catalogue of a selection With illustrations. of manuscripts and printed books. Man8vo, pp.
x,
chester, 1912.
143.
:
Library, Manchester
catalogue of an exhibition
.
.
.
book covers.
Manchester,
Library, Manchester
contents, illustrated.
and
its
October, 1914.
Vol.
2, no.
1 ,
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
The
accordance with
Dewey Decimal System," and in the who may not be familiar with the system, it
"
may be
method
The principal advantage of a classified catalogue, as distinguished from an alphabetical one, is that it preserves the unity of the subject,
and by so doing enables a student to follow its various ramifications Related matter is thus brought together, and with ease and certainty.
the reader turns to one sub-division and round
others
it
he
finds
grouped
lines
it.
In this
way new
One
of
is
that
it is
easily capable
it.
The
distinctive feature is
its
employment
all
other symbols
hence the
The sum
Dr.
of
activity has
,
been divided by
Dewey
into ten
0,
2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
These
1
00
An
000
sections,
which and
can be
still
the nature
subjects may be provided at any point of the scheme by the introduction of new decimal points. For the purpose of this list we have not thought it necessary to carry
Places for
new
the classification beyond the hundred main divisions, the arrangement " " of which will be found in the Order of Classification which
follows
:
155
156
LIBRARY ECONO GENERAL CYCLOPEDIAS. GENERAL COLLECTIONS. GENERAL PERIODICALS. GENERAL SOCIETIES.
NEWSPAPERS.
SPECIAL LIBRARIES.
PHYSICS.
POLYGRAPHY.
BOOK
RARITIES.
600
610 620
130 140
150
1
60
80
CHEMISTRY. GEOLOGY. PALEONTOLOGY. BIOLOGY. BOTANY. ZOOLOGY. Useful Arts. MEDICINE. ENGINEERING. AGRICULTURE.
170
1
ETHICS.
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHERS.
MECHANIC TRADES.
BUILDING.
190
MODERN PHILOSOPHERS.
690
710 720 730 740 750 760 770 780 790
8 10
CHURCH.
INSTITUTIONS.
WORK.
ENGRAVING. PHOTOGRAPHY.
Music.
AMUSEMENTS.
AMERICAN.
ENGLISH.
300 Sociology.
310 320 330 340 350 360 370 380 390 410 420 430 440
45
800 Literature.
820
GERMAN.
FRENCH.
ITALIAN.
SPANISH.
LATIN.
GREEK.
400 Philology
COMPARATIVE.
ENGLISH.
GERMAN.
FRENCH.
ITALIAN.
SPAN LA GREEK.
i
MINOR LANGUAGES.
990
157
BIBLIOGRAPHY: GENERAL,
AUNGERVILE
"
Marco Besso. II (Ricardus d') Bishop of Durham. " Testo note illustrative traduzione di R. de Bury. Philobiblon Eoma, e documenti. Accompagnato da ... tavole iconografiche. 36444 1914. 4to, pp. liii, 159.
.
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY.
vols.
[Publications.]
London,
1912-13.
By T.
4to.
bibliography of the writings in prose and verse of S. T. Coleridge.
J.
Wise.
R
A
35208
Richard Schilders and the English puritans. paper read before the Bibliographical By J. D. Wilson. [With illustrations.] 1912. Society, October 17, 1910.
32587
22
Publication
mensueile.
Premiere
etc.].
annee 1891
[-etc.].
[With
plates.]
Paris,
[1891,
vols. 8vo.
-
In progress.
[With plates and
illustrations.]
R 21 779
etc.
Supplement.
4to.
Paris, 1909,
8vo and
In progress.
Table des matieres contenues dans les vingt premieres 4. Revue des Bibliotheques. Par E. Deville. 191 1 . annees, 1891 -1910, de la Revue des bibliothfcques. Table alphabetique des noms propres cites dans les Memoires relatifs a 9. France. 1'histoire de France pendant le XVllIe siecle public's de 1857 a 1881 . . . par . . . F. Barriere et de Lescure. Dressee par A. Marquiset. 1913.
10. Seville.
Catedral.-Biblioteca Capitular.
.
La
Colomb.
11.
Par Jean Babelon. .. 1913. Hanoteau (J.) and Bonnot (E.) Bibliographic des
1913.
de tous
Lepreux (Georges) Gallia typographica, ou repertoire biographique et chronologique imprimeurs de France depuis les origines de rimprimerie jusqu'a la revolution. Serie departementale. X me IV. Province de Bretagne. 1914. 13. Duporlal (J.) Etude sur les livres a figures edited en France de 1601 a 1660. 1914.
12.
les
.
. .
WASHINGTON
of living
Library of Congress.
and
.
.
.
prices.
Meyer.
Compiled under the direction of Hermann H. B. R 22931 Washington, 1912. 8vo, pp. vi, 120.
of references
Select
list
on the conservation
.
of natural resources in of
Meyer.
Hermann H.
B.
R
8vo,
33661
By
93.
Washington,
R
on federal control
.
.
pp.
33508
Third
ton, 1913.
-
33888
Select
of references
Hermann H.
for cities.
. .
Com-
Washington, R 33887
158
BIBLIOGRAPHY: GENERAL.
list
WASHINGTON
Slade.
.
.
.
Select
of
references
Compiled by Hermann H.
B.
Meyer
Washington, 1913.
on the monetary question. and William Adams R 34048 8vo, pp. 247.
. .
.
Calendar of the papers of John Jordan Crittenden. Prepared from the original manuscripts in the Library of Congress by C. N. Feamster. 8 vo, pp. 335. 34077 ll'a*hin</ton 1913.
t
Catalogue of early books on music, before 800. Prepared under the direction of O. G. Sonneck. 1913. 8vo, pp. 312.
1
list
of
by Charles
American doctoral dissertations printed in 1912. Prepared A. Flagg. 8vo, pp. 106. Washington, 1913.
. .
.
R
BIBLIOGRAPHY: SPECIAL TOPICS.
BOSTON.
Public
Library.
36156
oio
ARCHITECTURE.
Catalogue
of
books
relating to architecture, construction, and decoration in the public library of the city of Boston. Second edition, with an additional section on
city
[Subject
Catalogue, no.
10.]
Boston,
1914.
8vo,
R
SCHWAB (MoTse)
1'Institut
.
36524
ARISTOTLE.
couronne par
de France.
33735
STRANGER.
1'oeuvre
de P.-J. de
1'indication
Beranger, contenant
vignettes,
etc.,
description de toutes
le
les editions,
Paris, 1876.
BEAUMARCHAIS
Beaumarchais.
CORDIER
U3.
33736
SPARKE (Archibald) Bibliographia Boltoniensis being a bibliography with biographical details of Bolton authors, and the books written by them from 1550 to 1912; books about Bolton; and those printed and published in the town from 1785 to date. Man:
13.
R
COWAN
33 145
iJSJ? !*
-1
[Reprinted from the publications of the Edinburgh Bibliographical Society.] 34951 Ktlinl.urgh, 1913. 4to, pp. 48.
644.
40
P^ m
is
Thit copy
no. 9.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
oio
RECENT ACCESSIONS
ARNOLT
(William Muss-)
:
159
a history of transprayer among the nations of the world of the Church of England and of the Protestant lations of the prayer-book study, based mainly on the Episcopal Church of America. ... London, 1914. 8vo, pp. collection of Josiah Henry Benton.
common
A
.
xxi,
473.
R
.
36 174
:
BOOKSELLING.
MUMBY
(Frank Arthur)
The romance
of bookselling
. .
illustrations.]
BORROW.
1914.
WISE (Thomas James) bibliography of the writings in and verse of George Henry Borrow. [With facsimiles.] [The prose London : printed for private circulation only, Ashley Library.]
4to, pp. xxii, 316.
100 copies printed.
36223
%*
BROWNING.
collections.
BROWNING (Robert Wiedemann Barrett) The Browning Catalogue of oil paintings, drawings and prints autograph letters and manuscripts books statuary, furniture, tapestries, and works of art the property of R. W. B. Browning including many relics of ... Robert and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Which will be sold Pictures, etc. by auction by ... Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge. 1st May, 1913. 2nd May. Books Autographs, etc. 5th May, and two following days. Works of art ... 8th May.
;
[With prices realized and purchasers' names and portraits.] 4to, pp. [London, 1913.]
in
MS.]
161.
[With facsimiles
viii,
33079
CRUIKSHANK.
COHN
(Albert Mayer)
A bibliographical catalogue of
London, 1914. R 35550
del
siglo
George Cruikshank.
CUBA.
TRELLES
Matanzas, 1911-13.
XIX.
33986
*** 200 copies printed. 1. 1800-1825. 1911. 2. 1826-1840. Seguida de una relaci<?n de periodicos publicados en Cuba en el siglo . F. Uaca, y unas noticias curiosas referentes i escritores de los xx, por siglos xvii y xviii, por ... M. Perez Beato. 1912. 3. 1841-1855. 1912. 4. 1856-1868. 1913. 5. 1869-1878. 1913.
. .
DOUAI.
DUTHILLOEUL (H. R.) Bibliographic douaisienne, ou catalogue historique et raisonne des livres imprimes a Douai, depuis 1'annee 1 563 jusqu'a nos jours (jusqu'en 1853) avec des notes bibliographiques et
litteraires.
.
.
Douai,
1842-54.
-
vols.
R
.
.
33740
;
edition
Duthilloeul Bibliographic douaisienne de de 1842. Par Emile Neve. Extrait du tome VII du " Bulletin du Bibliophile Bruxelles, 1850. 8vo, pp. 23 beige ".
.
.
Appendice
33740
160
DOUAI.
DuthilNouvel appendice a la Bibliographic douaisienne de Extrait du tome Par Ch. de Chenedolle. de 1842. Bruxelles, 1851. 8vo, pp. VIII du "Bulletin du Bibliophile beige".
.
loeul; Edition
(27-)36.
33740
ENGLISH LITERATURE.
Edited and compiled by Robert Alexander Peddie Waddington. London, 1914. 8vo, pp. 655.
and Quintin
5319
ENGRAVING
LEV1S (Howard C.) descriptive bibliography of the most important books in the English language relating to the art and and the collecting of prints. Supplement and index. history of engraving
1
London, 1913.
vol.
4to.
30771
EUCLID.
SOMMERVILLE (Duncan M.
Y.) Bibliography
of non-Eucli-
dean geometry including the theory of parallels, the foundations of of n dimensions. [University of St. Andrews.] geometry, and space 35439 London. 191 1. 8vo, PP xii, 403.
.
FREEMASONRY.
fore
1
75
1 .
With
of English references to, and works on address given to the brethren of the
London, 1913.
4to,
33809
FREEMASONRY.
ischen Literatur.
(August) Bibliographic der freimaurerHerausgegeben auf Veranlassung und mil Unterstutzung des Vereins deutscher Freimaurer, vieler deutscher und Freimaurer auslandischer Grosslogen, Logen und einzelner
.
. .
WOLFSTIEG
Register.
[Burg
b.
M.], 1913.
1vol.
8vo.
31092
GREEK LITERATURE.
de
la
MASQUERAY
.
litterature
Paris, 1914.
35409
ICELAND.
CORNELL UNIVERSITY.
1
Islandica
an annual relating to
Iceland and the Fiske Icelandic collection in Cornell University library. In progress. vol. 20305 8vo. /, N.Y., 1913.
6.
With
list
of
IMITATIO CHRISTI.
le livre
BACKER
De
imitatione Christi.
(Augustin de) Essai bibliographique sur 8vo, pp. viii, 257. Litge, 1864.
R
INDO CHINA.
In progress.
15. 16. Cordier
relatifi
33630
8vo.
cOLE FRANCHISE
d'extreme-Orient.
Publications de
Paris,
1912-13.
vols.
35824
a la
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
oio
RECENT ACCESSIONS
DUBLIN.
and
161
IRISH
.
. .
of Ireland
Dublin, 1913.
307.
35200
ITALIAN LITERATURE.
1
Bibliografia [Societa* Bibliografica Italiana.] delle stampe popolari italiane. [With facsimiles.] Bergamo, 1913.
. .
.
vol.
1
.
4to.
In progress.
R. Biblioteca nazionale
33565
Marco
di
italiane della Bibliografia delle stampe popolari 1 9 1 3. Per cura di A. Segarizzi. Vol. I. Venezia.
di S.
JAPAN.
CORDIER (Henri) Bibliotheca Japonica. Dictionnaire bibliographique des ouvrages relatifs a 1'empire japonais ranges par ordre Suivi d'un appendice renfermant la liste chronologique jusqu'a 1870. des principaux ouvrages parus de 1870 a 1912. [Ecole alphabetique e des Langues Orientales Vivantes. Paris, 1912. Serie, vol. 8.] 338 15 4to, pp. xii, col. 762.
MACCHIAVELLL GERBER
schriften,
. .
.
(Adolph) Niccolb Machiavelli, die Handund Ubersetzungen seiner Werke im 6 and 7. Ausgaben Mit Faksimiles und zahlreichen Ausziigen. Eine Jahrhundert. kritisch-bibliographische Untersuchung. [Gotha and Munchen printed :] Im Selbstverlage des Verfassers (1912-1 3). 2 vols. 4to. R 35235
1
MISSIONS.
students.
sionaries.]
WEITBRECHT
London, 1913.
(H.
V.) Board
A
of
vi,
bibliography
for
missionary
Study
141.
for Preparation of
8vo, pp.
Mis33762
PALESTINE.
GOLUBOVICH (P. Girolamo) Biblioteca bio-bibliografica della Terra Santa e dell' Oriente francescano Con carte.
.
.
.
vol.
1913.
8vo.
13641
Addenda
PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
Cumulated.
of
READERS' guide
to periodical literature.
list
.
and the Readers' guide to periodical 1900- 1904 (-1905-1 909). Minneapolis, 1907-10.
periodicals
.
1
vols.
8vo.
In progress.
-2.
R
HAMY
33988
Edited by A. L. Guthrie.
PORTOLAN CHARTS.
of the
including an Italian portolan chart of the early XVth century, Italian portolan chart drawn by Gabriel de Vallsecha, 1447, the King portolan chart of the world, the second known map containing America, circa 1501-1502, Dutch portolan chart of the early XVIth century showing Newfoundland, etc., fully described and annotated. With facsimiles. To be sold by auction November 19, 1912 at the galleries of the Anderson Auction Company York.
.
.
E.
Hamy
New
[New York,
1912.]
4to.
32650
162
PRINTING.
fifteenth
in
the
century
[Edited by A.
gress.
3.
W.
Pollard]
Pforzheim.
Germany: Leipzig
1913.
PRINTING.
fifteenth
Lists
of
By Members
of the
Society.]
[Edinburgh
107.
Bibliographical
35186
PRINTING.
en
ESTRADA
Montevideo,
(Dardo) Historia y bibliografia de la imprenta 1810-1865. Montevideo, 1912. 8vo, pp. 318.
33156
PRINTING. PERRINS (Charles William Dyson) Italian book-illustrations and early printing a catalogue of early Italian books in the library of C. W. Dyson Perrins. [With an introduction by Alfred W. Pollard.] R 36890 London, 1914. 4to, pp. xiii, 255. [With facsimiles.]
:
PRINTING.
.
.
REICHLING
.
Monachii, 1914.
8vo.
10973
PRINTING.
Con
SONNINO (Guido) Storia della tipografia ebraica in Livorno. introduzione e catalogo di opere e di autori. Lavoro premiato " A. Belimbau ". Estratto dalla Fondazione livornese di studi ebraici " II Vessillo Israelitico ". dalla rivista Torino, 1912. 8vo, pp. 104.
33313
PRINTING. WELLER
und fingirten Druckorte. (Emil) Die Repertorium der seit Erfindung der Buchdruckerkunst unter falscher Firma erschienenen deutschen, lateinischen und franzosischen Schriften.
falschen
. .
Leipzig, 1864.
2 vols.
8vo.
Zweite
. .
.
R
Auflage.
20075
Enthaltend die deutschen und lateinischen Schriften. 2. Enthaltend die franzosischen Schriften.
1.
MARTIN
;
(John) bibliographical including those of the Bannatyne, of the private presses at Darlington,
Auchinleck, Lee Priory, Newcastle, Middle Hill, and Strawberry Hill. Ln'ln, 1834. 8vo, pp. xiv, [With frontispiece and illustrations.] 563. 35639
-
Second
edition.
[London,] 1854.
R R 35640
Bibliographies on educational
[By the
members of the seminary in education at Clark Edited by W. H. Burnham. [Publications of the Clark
3, v.]
University Library.
8vo, pp.
ii,
44.
34099
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
oio
RECENT ACCESSIONS
:
163
REQNfiER.
%*
200
CHERRIER
copies printed.
Mathurin Regnier.
Paris, 1884.
33744
SAN MARTIN
general
.
. .
SALAS (Carlos 1.) Bibliografia del (Jose de). Jose de San Martin, y de la emancipacion sudamericana. Publicada bajo los auspicios de la Honorable Comision del Centenario
de
la
[With
portraits.]
R
.
33998
STEVENSON.
WlDENER (Harry Elkins) catalogue of the books and H. E. manuscripts of Robert Louis Stevenson in the library of Widener, with a memoir. By A. S. W. Rosenbach. Philadelphia, 36309 4to, pp. xi, 266. privately printed, 1913.
. .
%*
This copy
is
No. 111.
:
VERLAINE.
con. .
tribution critique a 1'etude des literatures etrangeres et comparees. . Preface de F. Piquet. [Collection bibliographique. pour servir a
1'histoire
du mouvement
litteraire
contemporain.
1.]
Leipzig, 1912.
32369
VITICULTURE.
of
SIMON (Andre L.) Bibliotheca vinaria a bibliography books and pamphlets dealing with viticulture, wine-making, distillation, the management, sale, taxation, use and abuse of wines and spirits. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. viii, 339. 35204 One of 180 copies for sale.
:
WALES.
Celtica
ABERYSTWYTH. National Library of Wales. Bibliotheca a register of publications relating to Wales and the Celtic peoples and languages for the year 1911. Aberystwyth, 1913. 8vo.
:
R
CATALOGUES.
the
.
24686
BANKIPUR.
.
Catalogue of
Arabic and Persian manuscripts in the Oriental Public Library at Bankipore. (Prepared for the Government of Bengal under the supervision of E. Denison Ross. Calcutta, .) [With plates.] 1908-12. 4 vols. 8vo. In progress. R 23072
.
. .
1-] 3.
.
Persian poets.
Prepared by Prepared by
BlBLIOTHEQUE NATIONALS. Departement des manuscrits. Catalogue sommaire des manuscrits indiens, indo-chinois and malayopolynesiens, par A. Cabaton. Paris, 1912. 8vo, pp. ii, 319.
.
32882
BRITISH MUSEUM. catalogue of the Armenian manuscripts in the British Museum. Frederick Cornwallis Conybeare. ... To By which is appended a catalogue of Georgian manuscripts in the British Museum. ByJ. Oliver Wardrop. London, 1913. 4to, pp. viii, 410. R 36870
.
. .
12
164
CATALOGUES.
ment
I
Supple-
to
and
Caius College.
vol.
8vo.
John's College.
Cambridge,] 91 4. R 14975
CAMBRIDGE.
manuscripts James.
.
historical and descriptive catalogue of the CLARKE (Adam) .A. Clarke. European and Asiatic manuscripts in the library of Illustrated by facsimiles London, 1835. ByJ. B. B. Clarke.
. .
A
.
8vo, pp.
xi,
236.
35636
Marsh's Library. Catalogue of the manuscripts remainMarsh's Library. Dublin. Compiled by John Russell Scott. Edited by Newport J. D. White. 8vo, pp. Dublin, [1913].
ing in
. .
DUBLIN.
137.
-
34670
MADRID. Escurial. Catalogo de los codices latinos de la Real Biblioteca del Escorial. Vol. II Por Guillermo Antolin Madrid, 1911-13. 2vols. 8vo. In progress. R 24435 (-III).
.
Catalogue du fonds de Bellecombe, legue et consuivi d'un index de la collection de portraits. [With a memoir of A. de Bellecombe.] Par G. Tholin. 28775 Auch, 1902. 8vo, pp. xxxvii, 309.
serve aux archives departementales de Lot-et-Garonne
;
BELLECOMBE.
LONDON LIBRARY.
.
.
St.
J.
James's
Purnell.
and C.
35721
Middle Temple. catalogue of the printed books in Middle Temple. Alphabetically arranged, with an index of subjects by C. E. A. Bedwell under the direction of the R 361 90 8vo. 3 vols. Masters of the Bench. 1914. Glasgow,
.
.
LONDON.
1-2.
3.
Author catalogue.
Subject index.
the library of
Index-catalogue of Surgeon-General's Office. Surgeon-General's Office, United States Army. Authors and subjects. Second series. Vol. XVIII. HW///I0-
WASHINGTON.
the
1913.
vol.
8vo.
In progress.
11012
CATALOGUES
(SALE). COPE (Sir Anthony) Catalogue of ... books and manuscripts recently the property of Sir Anthony Cope, Bt., selected from the library at Bramshill Park, Winchfield, Hants, including early English manuscripts on vellum, chiefly from the monasteries of Americana ... a few French Waverley and Winchelcombe
.
.
first and early editions of XVIIIth century the dramatic Which will be etc. writings of George Chapman sold by auction by ... Wilkinson & Hodge ... on Sotheby,
illustrated
books
of the
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
oio
RECENT ACCESSIONS
:
165
BIBLIOGRAPHY
of
SPECIAL TOPICS.
March, 1913. ... [With purchasers' names and 4to, [London, 1913.] [With frontispiece.] MS.]
3329
CATALOGUES
(Alfred H.) Catalogue of the famous autograph letters, and collected by Henry Huth, and since maintained and augengravings The printed books and mented by his son Alfred H. Huth.
(SALE).
HUTH
Third portion which will be sold by auction ... Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge ... on ... 2nd of June, by 1913, and four following days, and on ... the 9th of June, 1913, and three following days. [With purchasers' names and prices realised.]
illuminated manuscripts.
.
.
[With
-
plates.]
[London, 191
(John Eliot)
3.]
1vol.
4to.
30994
The J. E. Hodgkin collections. Catalogue formed by comprising J. E. Hodgkin illuminated & historical manuscripts, a early printed and rare books Which collection of firework books & engraved firework displays. will be sold by ... Sotheby, Wilkinson and Hodge ... on 2th May, 1914, and three following days, and on ... 18th May, and following day. [With prices realized, and purchasers' names in MS.]
of the valuable library
. .
.
. .
HODGKIN
[With
facsimiles.
London, [1914].
36224
Catalogue (John Eliot) The J. E. Hodgkin collections. of the trade cards, book-plates, broadsides, &c., including trade cards, admission and invitation tickets; French, German, and English book-
HODGKIN
plates
illustrative of
broadsides, proclamations, ballads, news-sheets, pamphlets, &c., English history, 1 553-1 797 ; German and other broadsides,
1480-1706; papal indulgences, &c., 1455-1816; and early English 1623-1728. Which will be sold by ... Sotheby, Hodge ... on ... the 27th of April, 1914, and following day. [With prices realized, and purchasers' names in MS.] R 36224 London, [1914]. 4to, pp. 94. [With facsimiles.]
.
.
catalogue of the (George) Marquis. books of prints, and manuscripts, of ... George, Marquis of Which Townshend, &c. brought from his house at Richmond. will be sold by auction by Leigh and Sotheby ... on Monday, May 11, 1812, and fifteen following days. [With prices realized in MS.]
library,
.
TOWNSHEND
...
[London, 1812.]
8vo.
33542
020
LIBRARY ECONOMY.
Practical
handbook
of
modern
library catalog-
Baltimore, 1914.
R R
36883
GIBSON
1914.
[With
plates.]
Oxford,
362 40
166
LIBRARY ECONOMY.
fur Bibliotheksbenutzer mit einer
GRAESEL
stellung
(Arnim) Fiihrer
Zusammen-
Von
Arnim Graesel
xii,
Zwcitc
Auflage.
Leipzig, 1913.
8vo, pp.
265.
34713
GREEN
1
(Samuel Swett) The public library movement in the United States, 853- 893. From 876, reminiscences of the writer. [With portrait] Boston, 1913. 8vo, pp. viii, 336. [Useful Reference Series, 8.]
1 1
35358
;
MACRAY
(William Dunn) Annals of the Bodleian Library, Oxford with a notice of the earlier library of the University. . Second edition
.
.
[With
plates.]
Oxford,
36443
NAUDE
Presente a (Gabriel) Ad vis Povr Dresser Vne Bibliotheqve. A Paris, Chez Francois Monseigneur le President de Mesme. 9 Targa, au premier pillier de la grand Salle du Palais, deuant les
.
Consultations.
M.DC.XXVII.
[1].
35673
RICHARDSON
(Ernest Gushing) Classification, theoretical and practical. Together with an appendix containing an essay towards a bibliographical history of system of classification. By Ernest Gushing Richardson. The New York State Library School Association Alumni Lectures, 1900-1901. New York, 1912. 8vo, pp. Reprinted with additions.
. .
.
xvi, 149.
R
BOOK RARITIES
:
34590
090
PAL/EOGRAPHY, ETC.
ARNDT
(Wilhelm) Schrifttafeln zur Erlernung der lateinischen PalaeoVierte, erweiterte Auflage besorgt von Michael Tangl. graphie.
Berlin,
[1903-]!
904 [-06].
9824
BAUCKNER
unterricht
(A.) and
. . .
HOESL
.
Schrift
Mit
Lichtdrucktafeln.
1914.
BERGER
plates
(Philippe)
and
illustrations.]
Beaux- Arts.]
Publique
des
23138
CERETELI
litteris
(G.) and SOBOLEVSKI (S.) Exempla codicum Graecorum minusculis scriptorum annorumque notis instructorum. Ediderunt Gregorius Cereteli Sobolevski. et Sergius M.naHo no nocTaHoiueniio Coetia MocnoBHCKaro ApxeojioniecKaio [II'
.
.
Ilm-iuiyTa.]
Motqua,
2.
1913.
1vol.
Fol.
1913.
:
29706
Codice Petropolitani.
COCKERELL (Sydney
a manuscript of Carlyle) The Gorleston psalter the beginning of the fourteenth century in the library of C. W. Dyson Perrins. Described in relation to other East Anglian books of the
period.
[With
facsimiles.]
London, 1907.
35831
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
090
RECENT ACCESSIONS
:
167
BOOK RARITIES
.
.
PALAEOGRAPHY, ETC.
sui papiri ercolanesi, letto alia
COMPARETTI
(Domenico) Relazione
.
Reale
Boma,
1880.
4to,
R
Zweite
.
33330
GARDTHAUSEN
Zweiter Band
1913.
.
(V.)
.
.
Griechische
palaeographie.
.
.
(Mit
1vol.
8vo.
Tafeln).
R 25844
Avec
.
Auflage. Leipzig,
GUIGUE
moyen
(Marie Claude)
age.
De
I'origine
de
la
signature et
de son emploi au
.
.
planches.
Principalement dans les pays de droit ecrit Paris, 1863. 8vo, pp. xiv, 96.
R
texts.
35637
[With
HALL
(Frederick
plates.]
34854
HOHMANN
Kaiserzeit.
Romische
[With
Berlin, 1911.
33096
KOHLER
von
.
.
Bericht, erstattet (Wilhelm) Die karolingischen Miniaturen. Wilhelm Kohler. Verein fur Kunstwissenschaft [Deutscher Sonderabdruck aus dem zweiten Bericht iiber die Arbeiten an den Denkmalern deutscher Kunst] 4to, pp. 52-77. [Berlin, 1912.] R 32986.
.
.
* * #
The
title is
LOEW
(E. A.) The Beneventan script: a history of the south Italian minuscule. Oxford, 1914, 8vo, pp. xix, 384. [With facsimiles].
R R
36249
MACLER
MARTIN
* * #
vies du Christ, peintures (Frederic) Miniatures armeniennes e au XVII e siecle Planches. . ornementales, Paris, 1913. 35 195 4to, pp. 43.
:
(F.
Khamsah
1
Amir Khusran]
text.]
printed.
date
1485.
4to.
[A
explanatory
Munich, 1892.
R 32893
.
50 copies
MELY
4to.
Paris,
1913.
In progress.
(Adolf) Die Buchmalerei
in
St.
MERTON
MUNICH.
.
.
.
elften Jahrhundert.
R 33104. Hof- und Staatsbibliothek. Miniaturen aus Handschriften Kgl. der Kgl. Hof- und Staatsbibliothek in Miinchen. Herausgegeben von 5 vols. 4to. In Miinchen, [1912-14]. Georg Leidinger. R
6
[With
facsimiles.]
progress.
1.
29855
III.
[1912.]
Flanders. Flamischer Kalender, cod. lat. 23638. [1912.] Turnierbuch Herzog Wilhelms IV von Bayern. [1912.] 4. Armenia. Dreiarmenische Miniaturen-Handschriften, cod. erlautertvon . . E. Gratzl. [1913.]
2.
3.
.
armen.
cod.
lat.
1,
und
8,
5.
Bible.
Latin.
NT.
II,
4452.
[1914.]
168
MUNICH.
der K. HofVerbffentlichungen aus der Papyrus Sammlung Tafeln. Mit Leipzu Munchen und Suats bibliothek In progress. 35404 2vols. 4to, and Fol. 1914. zig, Berlin, Herausgegeben von A. Heisenberg und L. Wenger I. Brzanlmische Papyri
.
. . .
.
PARIS.
au
taire
Musee dcs Arts decorarifs. Miniatures persanes Musee des arts decoratifs, juin-octobre 1912. Preface
.
exposees
et
commen1913.
par
Fol.
1
Georges Marteau
This copy
is
et
Henri Vever.
Paris,
vok
' .
35261
50 copies ponied.
no. 88.
PETROGRAD.
Monuments de la notation ekde 1'eglise grecque. Expose documentaire phonetique et hagiopolite des manuscrits de Jerusalem, du Sinai, et de 1'Athos, conserves a la Par Jean-Baptiste Thibaut Bibliotheque imperiale de Saint-Petersbourg.
Bibliotheque Imperiale.
[With
148, II*
facsimiles.]
Saint-Petersbourg,
1913.
4to,
pp.
xvi,
34979
SCHUBART
Briefe aus (Wilhelm) Ein Jahrtausend am Nil. Altertum verdeutscht und erklart von Wilhelm Schubart. Mil Lichtdrucktafeln und Berlin, 1912. Textabbildungen.
. .
.
dem
. .
.
8vo,
PP
Ixiv,
127.
33658
SHAW
(Henry)
The handbook
8vo.
of
mediaeval alphabets
London, 1853.
STAERK
Fol.
I
,
miniatures.
(Antonio) Collection de reproductions photo-typiques textes et 1914. Par ... A. Staerk Kain-lez-Tournai,
.
In progress.
i.
R
celtique
36754
.
Monuments de 1'abbaye
de Bulfestra ou
Buclcfast.
Pe'riode Savinienne
-1914.
THOMPSON
the library of
(Henry Yates) Illustrations from one hundred manuscripts in vol. 4to. H. Y. Thompson. London, 1914. In progress. R 16416
.
Xlllh
MSS.
of
XVth
TORONTO.
now
University.
Theban
ostraca.
mainly in the Royal Ontario Museum of Archaeology, Toronto, and the Bodleian Library, Oxford. Part 1. Hieratic texts by Alan H. Gardiner. Part. II. Demotic texts by Herbert Thompson. Part
:
Part IV. Coptic texts by Herbert by J. G. Milne. note by C. T. Currelly.) [With facsimiles.] Thompson. [With prefatory London, 1913. 4to, pp. 214. [University of Toronto Studies.]
III.
Greek
texts
R 341
18
VIENNA.
palaeographica Vindobonensia. Denkmaler der Schreibkunst aus der HandscriftenUnter Leitung des sammlung des habsburg-lothringischen Erzhauses. Direktors des K.K. Hofbibliothek von Karabacek. Josef, Hitter von Rudolf Beer. Leipzig, 1913. Herao^gegeben [With facsimiles.]
1
Kaiserl.
Konigl. Hofbibliothek.
Monumenta
vol.
Fol.
24461
169
BOOK RARITIES
by R.
PALEOGRAPHY,
The romance
of
ETC.
of
"
Kynge Apollyn
[Translated Copland Thyre". Reproduced in facsimile by Edmund Wm. original, printed by Wynkyn de Worde, 1510, in the library of ... London-, for private circulation, 1870. the Duke of Devonshire. R 32745 4to, ff. 100.
.
from the
RENOUVIER
(J u l es )
Des
portraits d'auteurs
dans
les livres
.
.
du
XV
e siecle.
Duplessis.
Paris,
1863.
33745
100
JANET
PHILOSOPHY
Academic
GENERAL.
Revue
(Paul) Histoire de la science politique dans ses rapports avec la morale. Ouvrage couronne par I'Academie des sciences morales et
.
politiques
et
par
1*
francaise.
Quatrieme
edition.
d'apres les notes laissees par 1'auteur et precedee d'une notice sur la vie et les travaux de P. Janet par G. Picot. 2 vols. Paris, 1913.
8vo.
33928
LINDSAY
(A.) Encyclopaedia of the philosophical English edition under the editorship of Sir Henry Jones. In progress. 1vol. 8vo. 34075 London, 1913-
1.
Logic.
By A. Ruge,
and N. Losskij.
W.
J.
no PHILOSOPHY: METAPHYSICS.
BRADLEY
(Francis Herbert) Essays on truth and reality. 8vo, pp. xvi, 480.
Oxford, 1914.
R R
35610
of individuality : a course of four lectures delivered before the University of London in October,
London, 1914.
130
8vo, pp.
ix,
84.
36 96
1
BESANT
(Annie) Theosophy and the Theosophical Society four lectures delivered at the thirty- seventh annual convention of the Theosophical Society, held at Adyar, Madras, on December 27th, 28th, 29th and 30th, 1912. Adyar, Madras, 1913. 8vo, By Annie Besant.
PP.112.
R
to
34603
Through storm
peace
the story of
my
life.
[Extract from
The
Weekly Sun,
1893.]
London, 1893.
Fol.
34498
170
BODIN
Des Sorciers. Monseignevr M. (jean) De La Demonomanie Paris, Chez Chrestolfc de Thou Cheualier Seigneur de Coeli. Libra ire lurk, a la Samaritaine, M.D. LXXX. facques 'i
.
.
4to/tf.
Diane de
armorial
33750
:
On
du
the binding
biblio hilr
is
a cipher
commonly
first
names
1
of
Henry
Poictier*.
reproduced as the
illustration
on page 9 of Vol.
of
Guigard
II and Nouvel
Io.
Bodini Andegavensis
loannis
De Magorum Demonomania
Jon.] 4to, pp. [32], 488.
Libri
IV.
VVieri
Du
[Printer's
device beneath
title.]
BasUea, 1581.
34883
COLVILLE (W.
vii,
J.)
psychology.
Boston, 1900.
365.
Spiritualism.
.
R 25732
.
.
.
8vo, pp.
With
[With
plates.]
New
34239
Tenth
edition.
1866.
2.
Fourth edition.
.
.
1855.
FREUD
M.
W.
Authorised English translation by (Sicmund) With an introduction by D. Elder from the second German edition. R 3605 L. Mackenzie London, [1914]. 8vo, pp. xxxii, 110.
dreams.
.
On
MAURY (L
Etudes psychologiques sur F.) Le sommeil et les reves. ces phenomenes et les divers etats qui s'y rattachent suivies de re:
cherches sur le developpement de 1'instinct et de rintelligence dans leurs rapports avec le phenomene du sommeil. Quatrieme edition, revue et
considerablement
augmentee.
Paris,
1878.
8vo,
pp.
vii,
476.
34901
L'archeometre,
. .
de toutes les religions & de toutes les sciences de I'antiquite, reforme synthetique de tous les arts contemporains. Accompagne de planches ... & de ... figures. [Edited by the friends of the 4to, pp. 331. Marquis de Saint-Yves d'Alveydre.J Paris, [1911].
.
. . .
33577
SCHRENCK-NOTZING
mene.
.
.
(Albert von) Freiherr. Materialisations- phaenoEin Beitrag zur Erforschung der mediumistischen Teleplastie Mit Tafeln. Miinchen, 1914. Abbildungen und
. . .
.
.
8vo, PP
xi,
523.
36433
SEYMOUR
8vo, pp.
(St.
vii,
Irish witchcraft
and demonology.
WEAVER
(Edward E.) Mind' and health with an examination of some With an introduction by G. Stanley Hall. systems of divine healing. dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Clark University, Worcester, Mass., in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of doctor
:
A
of
accepted.
New
York, 1913.
8vo, pp.
xv,
33000
171
REMOND
TUERCK
(A.)
and VOIVENEL
Le
genie
litteraire.
de Philosophic Contemporaine.l
Paris, 1912.
32878
of
genius.
German by George
Tamson.]
London, 1914.
:
36879
WUNDT
gress.
3.
der eine Untersuchung (Wilhelm M.) Volkerpsychologie Mit von Sprache, Mythus und Sitte Entwicklungsgesetze Abbildungen im Text. Leipzig, 1908-14. 3 vols. 8vo. In pro.
1 1
761
Auflage.
. .
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.
4, 5.
Auflage.
vols.
1910-14.
170
PHILOSOPHY: ETHICS.
BURY
history
of
freedom
London,
[1913].
[Home
33983
CARPENTER (Edward)
study
Intermediate
types
among
primitive
folk.
in social evolution.
:
London, 1914.
R 36245 R
Love's coming-of-age
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a series of papers on the relations of the sexes. 35354 London, 1913. 8vo, pp. 193.
la
.
.
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DOLE
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De
R 33751
vii,
(Charles F.)
The
by which
civilization
proceeds.
London,
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8vo, pp.
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PlCCOLOMINI (Alessandro) De La Institvtione Di Tvtta La Vita De L'Homo Nato Nobile E In Citta Libera. Libri X. In Lingva Toscana. Dove E Peripateticamente e Platonicamete, intorno a le cose de 1'Ethica, Iconomica, e parte de la Politica, e raccolta la somma di quanto principalmente puo concorrere a la perfetta e felice uita di quello. Composti dal S. Alessandro Piccolomini, a benefitio del Alessandro Colobini, Lavdomia Forteguerri. Al pochi giorni innanzi nato, figlio de. Qvale, Havendolo Egli Sostenuto a battesmo, secondo I'usanza de i Compari de i detti Libri fa dono. [With a dedicatory epistle by O. 8vo, Venetijs apud Hieronymum Scotum. M.D-XLIII. Scoto.]
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Nato Nobile, Et
172
PHILOSOPHY
ETHICS.
"
PRACTICE.
The
et ecclesia".
By the author of practice of Christianity. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xix, 291.
RAND
Selections illustrating ethics (Benjamin) The classical moralists. from Socrates to Martineau. London, Compiled by B. Rand.
. . .
1910.
35869
ROWNTREE
Goseph) and SHERWELL (Arthur) The temperance and social reform. Eighth edition, revised and enlarged. problem and plates.] London, 1900. 8vo, pp. xxxi, 777. [With maps
.
.
35834
180
BACON
Fasc
HI.
communium
Steele.
Oxonii, 1911.
R R
28826
in
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.
BEVAN (Edwyn
Four lectures delivered Robert) Stoics and sceptics. Oxford during Hilary Term 91 3 for the Common University Fund.
1
.
Oxford, 1913.
34850
BlGG
Being the (Charles) The Christian Platonists of Alexandria. with some addition s Lectures for the year 1 886. Reprinted Bampton
. . .
and
corrections.
Oxford, 1913.
philosophy. 1914.
:
.
35628
London,
vol.
CHARLES
d'apres
sa vie,
.
ses
Paris,
R
:
25769
GOMPERZ
in
das Bildungsideal des e# \eyeiv (H.) Sophistik und Rhetorik seinem Verhaltnis zur Philosophic des V. Jahrhunderts. Leipzig, 34645 1912. 8vo, pp. vi, 291.
GUTHRIE
His life, times, (Kenneth Sylvan) The philosophy of Plotinos. and philosophy. (Selections from Plotinos's Enneads in Greek text and
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.
London,
[1910].
pts.
in
vol.
8vo.
R
von Emesa.
seinen
35012
Quellenforschungen
Jhr/in,
Anfangen
bei Poseidonios.
148.
36232
. .
.
WULF
(Maurice
.
Planches.
de) Histoire de la philosophic en Belgique 36213 8vo, pp. x, 376. Bruxelles, Paris, 1910.
His
toire
de
la
philosophic medievale.
6.]
[Cours de 636.
Philosophic.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
190
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173
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Un
BERTH ELOT
pragmatiste.
(Rene)
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2vok
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191
1.
BRANDES
(Georg Morris Cohn) Friedrich Nietzsche. from the Danish by A. G. Chater.] [With portrait.]
8vo, pp. 117.
:
[Translated
[1
London,
91 4].
R 36322
CHAMBERLAIN
.
. .
a com(Houston Stewart) Immanuel Kant a study and Descartes. parison with Goethe, Leonardo da Vinci, Bruno, Plato and . Authorised translation from the German by Lord Redesdale.
.
the translator.
8vo.
With
portraits.
36329
CROCS
by R.
-
Translated (Benedetto) The philosophy of Giambattista Vico. G. Collinewood. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xii, 317.
.
R 35210
the Italian
xxxix, 591.
...
economic and ethic. Translated from London, 1913. 8vo, pp. by Douglas Ainslie.
:
. .
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CRU
(R. Loyalty) Diderot as a disciple of English thought. University. Studies in Romance Philology and Literature.] 1913. 8vo, pp. xiii, 498.
:
New
[Columbia York,
R 34841
.
GERRARD
(Thomas J.) Bergson an exposition and criticism from the of view of St. Thomas Aquinas. point By Thomas J. Gerrard. London and Edinburgh, [1913]. 8vo, pp. xii, 208. 35247
.
.
HEGEL
(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich) Lectures on the philosophy of religion. Together with a work on the proofs of the existence of God. Translated from the second German edition by E. B. Speirs and J. Burden Sanderson. The translation edited by E. B. Speirs. [The English and Foreign Philosophical Library.] R 36050 London, 1895. 3 vols. 8vo.
.
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IBSEN (Sigurd) Human quintessence. Authorized H. Janson. London [1913]. 8vo, pp. 303.
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translation
by M.
35868
JAMES
(William) Essays philosophical and psychological in honor of W. James, Professor in Harvard University, by his colleagues at Columbia New York, 1908. 8vo, pp. viii, 610. University. [With portrait.]
35003
KANT
Zum
.
ewigen Frieden.
1
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174
PHILOSOPHY: MODERN.
LOUVAIN,
etudes. Les philosophes beiges. Textes Universitt de. Collection publiee par 1'Institut superieur de philosophic de 1'universite 1 vol. de Louvain sous la direction de M. de Wulf. Louvain, 1913.
4to.
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&
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de Courtrai. Par G. Wallerand.
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ine'dits.
.1913.
MACMILLAN
(R.
A.
C.)
London, 1912.
8vo,
R R
pp.
33040
McTAGGART
MARITAIN
477.
Cambridge, 1896.
(J.)
(John McTaggart Ellis) Studies in the Hegelian dialectic. 35266 8vo, pp. xvi, 259.
La
philosophic bergsonienne
10.]
etudes-critiques.
[Biblio-
Paris,
1914.
R
R
8vo, pp.
35191
NIETZSCHE
The
first
(Friedrich Wilhelm) The complete works of F. Nietzsche. Edited by ... complete and authorised English translation.
Oscar Levy.
18.
vol.
8vo.
19898
Index.
Compiled by R. Guppy
1913.
SHAW
(Charles
1913.
its
place
in
the
world.
London,
523.
35102
200 RELIGION
BARDENHEWER
.
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GENERAL WORKS.
Zweite.
Auflase.
(Otto) Geschichte der altkirchlichen Litteratur. Freiburg im Breisgau, 1913. 1 vol. 8vo.
gress.
In pro34898
ARMINIUS
(Jacobus) lacobi Arminii Veteraqvinatis Batavi S.S. Theologiae Contenta post Praefationem, vide. Doctoris eximii, Opera Theologica. device beneath title.] Lvgdvni Batavorvm, Apud Gode[Printer's
xxix.
966.
:
33476
BAXTER
plain, pure, (Richard) Richard Baxter's Catholick theologie peaceable: for pacification of the dogmatical word-warriours, who, (1) By contending about things unrevealed or not understood, (2) And by have long been the shame of the taking verbal differences for real Christian religion. ... In three books I. Pacifying principles, about
.
...
II.
.
&c.
1
III.
Pacifying disputations
. .
some
Bk. 1,2.
real
errors
which
4
?
hinder
vol.
reconciliation.
[With
London, 1675.
No
pts. in
Fol.
35430
more published
175
RELIGION
GENERAL WORKS.
BAXTER
1
(Richard) Methodus theologiae Christianas, \ congrua Naturae rerum, conformis 2. Sacrae Scripturae,
.
j-
3.
.
Praxi,
plate. 1
adaptata.
[With a folding
There
is
Londini, 1681.
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Fol.
36047
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Including the chief part of the government of Christian most troubling controversies princes and popes, and a true account of the and heresies till the reformation. London, 1680. 4to, pp. 331 47 488.
. .
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his departing spirit to Christ to be received by him. funerals of Mary the widow first of Francis Charlton
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The
XI.
1
. . .
The
.
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By
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vi,
(Richard)
The
poetical fragments.
182.
-
R 324 12
A
.
sermon preached at the funeral of that faithful minister of Christ With his true and exemplary character. London, John Corbet.
R
list
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of
treatise of justifying righteousness, in two books I. treatise imputed righteousness, opening and defending the true sense, and
:
many
.
of
...
to
.
peace, and me
II. 1.
with an
answer
.
...
His animadversions on
my
3. reply to the summe of the exceptions against that answer. All published instead of a controversies agitated in those exceptions. fuller answer to the assaults in ... Tullies Justificatio Paulina.
.
.
My
London, 1676.
5 pts. in
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8vo.
:
R
R
3241
BENETT (W.)
values.
Oxford, 1913.
a contribution to the philosophy of Religion and free will 8vo, pp. 345. 35841
Bibliotheca
BlBLIOTHECA.
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ecclesiasticorum, postrema Lugdunensi longe locupletior atque accuratior. Andreae Gallandii. Cura 14 vols. Venetiis, 1765-81.
.
.
Fol.
R
Bibliotheque de l'cole des hautes etudes. In progress. 2 vols. 8vo. Paris, 1913.
Etude
. .
35225
BlBLIOTHEQUE.
religieuses.
aux He
B.
et
Sciences
7245
critique des
I He siecles. Par E. de Faye .1913. Le " De civitate Dei," source principale du Par G. Hardy 1913. Bossuet].
.
. .
"
BUGENHAGEN
Interpretatio,
title.]
phon :] M.D.XXIIII.)
(Johann) lo. Pomerani Bvgenhagii In Librvm Psalmorvm [Printer's device beneath Vuittembergae publice lecta. Mense Avgvsto. ([ColoNvremberga, Anno M.D.XXIIII. Norembergce, Apvd lo Petreium, Mense Augusto Anni
8vo,
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32529
les
CALVIN
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Prophetes
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Ascavoir,
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&
qu'ils
la
&
sur
discipline
de
1'eglise
1'histoire
particuliers,
. . .
&
des martyrs.
Par
des
Remy
Ceillier.
principaux articles qui se trouvent dans 1'Histoire litteraire de la France, donnee paralleles Cette table par les ... Benedictins de la Congregation de S. Maur. 24 vols. a ete redigee par Laur. Et. Rondet Paris, \ 729-82. .)
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Avec
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CORPUS.
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. .
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55.
S.
Hilberg.
E. 1912.
Hieronymi
opera,
sect,
sect,
i,
pars
In
ii,
Epistulae
Ixxi.-cxx.
Recensuit
libri
59. S. E.
Hieronymi opera,
1913.
ii,
pars
Hieremiam prophetam
.
sex.
Re-
censuit S. Reiter.
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A. Augustini
opera, sect,
opera.
viii,
pars
1913.
psalmi
cxviii.
Pars
quinta
Expositio
Recensuit
CROWN THEOLOGICAL
39.
LIBRARY.
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.
Knowledge and
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vol.
.
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.
T. Jones.
R
DELCOURT
.
. .
.1913 35098
(Joseph) Essai sur la langue de Sir Thomas More d'apres ses oeuvres anglaises. Paris, 1914. 8vo, pp. xxviii, 471. 35803
DlCTIONNAIRE.
Dictionnaire de theologie catholique, contenant 1'expose la theologie catholique, leurs preuves et leur histoire. Commence sous la direction de Vacant continue sous celle de E. Mangenot . avec le concours d'un grand nombre de
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Paris [1908-]! 91
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DISCOURSE.
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.
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20320
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GENERAL WORKS.
of her cloud, or, Baxter-
EDWARDS
from a literal transcript of ... Baxter's, and the judgment of others, in the most radical doctrines of faith compar'd with those of the orthodox, both conformist and Nonconformist and transferr'd over by way of test, unto the Papist and Quaker. 36045 London, 1699. 4to, pp. viii, 431.
ianism barefac'd.
Drawn
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Exhortatio ad fr Epistola Nvncupatoria ad Carolum Caesarem. studium Euangelicae lectionis. Paraphrasis in Euangelium Matthaei, per aedita. D. Erasmu Rot. nunc primum nata, Epistola ad R. D.
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In a contemporary
124.)
R
FOISSET
se ph Theophile)
33400 27958
of the
Vie du
Lacordaire.
[With
Paris, 1870.
vols.
8vo.
R
St.
portrait.]
pRAZER
dead.
(James George)
The
belief in immortality
The
8vo.
Gifford
Lectures,
Andrews,
1913.
I.
In progress.
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the aborigines of Australia, the Torres Straits Islands,
The
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:
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religion.
Third
R
2
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14912
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7.
-
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Psyche's task : a discourse concerning the influence of superstition on the growth of institutions. Second edition, revised and enlarged, to
which
is
London,
8vo, pp.
xi,
186.
34597
HARRISON
(Jane Ellen) Ancient art and ritual. [With illustrations.] [Home University Library.], London,[\9\3]. 8 vo, pp. 256. R33982
HARTLAND
religion.
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R
ethics.
. .
.
36172
HASTINGS
. .
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.
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prog,
In 15788
179
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HURTER
von) Nomenclator literarius theologiae catholicae Edidit et exhibens, aetate, natione, disciplinis distinctos. theologos Editio tertia, emendata et aucta. commentariis auxit H. Hurter.
(Heinrich
.
Oeniponte, 1903-13.
5 vols. in
6.
8vo.
:
R
its
33996
33647
.
JORDAN
A lecture.
Quellen
der
origin
and
outlook.
KOENIGLICHE
der
GESELLSCHAFT
der
Wissenschaften,
[Goettingen]
Religions-Geschichte
Gottingen.
:
herausgegeben
Gottingen.
im Auftrage der
1913.
des
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progress.
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iibersetzt
R
. .
.
In 34990
Dighanikaya von
das
.
.
buddhistischen
Ubersetzt von
.-
A. Hillebrandt
1913.
4939
Leben des Lucian von Antiochien und den von Herausgegeben J. Bidez
. . .
Werke.
Fiinfter
Band.
Herausgegeben
-1913.
23. Eusebius
Werke. Sechster Band. Die Demonstrate evangelica. Herausgegeben A. Heikel. .1913. Eusebius Werke. Siebenter Band. Die Chronik des Hieronymus. Hieronymi
I.
. .
Chronicon.
Herausgegeben
1913.
von
R. Helm
Erster
Teil.
Namenregister.
Annees 1835
(-1851.)
Paris, 1847-51.
vols.
8vo.
passees.
R
8vo,
36959
pp.
x,
Paris,
1913.
R R
3381 3
LOOFS
doctrine.
(Friedrich) Nestorius and his place in the history of Christian 35901 8vo, pp. vii, 132. Cambridge, 1914.
(Philipp)
[Selections, etc.] Argvmentorvm Et Obiecdoctrinae Christianas, cum Responsionibus,
MELANCHTHON
tionvm,
thonis,
. .
De praecipuis articulis
quae passim extant in scriptis Reuerendi viri Domini Philippi MelanchPars Prima. Collecta studio industria Christophori Pezelii.
&
[Printer's device
.
beneath
.
title.].
Seconda Pars
Authore
Neapoli
Christophoro Pezelio.
title.]
M.D.LXXXII.
(-M.D 33406
180
RELIGION
GENERAL WORKS.
MOBERLEY
their
Some aspects of (Robert Campbell) Reason and religion. mutual interdependence. London, 1896. 8vo, pp. xi, 156
R
MOULTON
of
:
34705
religion,
(James Hope) Religions and religion a study of the science [The 43rd Fernley Lecture.] pure and applied.
. . .
London,
[1913].
34589
33012
.
.
NAU
8vo.
Paris, 1912.
In progress,
I.
La didascalie dei douze ap6tres. Traduite du syriaque ... par F. Nau traduction de la Didache' des douze apo'tres, de Deuxieme edition, revue et augmentee deja Didascalie de I'apo'tre AddaF et des empechements de manage pseudo apostoliques. 1912.
la
Bonn, 1913.
Religionsgeschichte. 8vo.
:
Clement
viii,
1914.
8vo, pp.
329.
Alexan36151
...
To
discoverer discover'd. By way of answer Baxter his pretended discovery of the Grotian religion. which is added an appendix conteining a rejoynder to diverse
.
things both in the Key for catholics, and in the book of Disputations about church-government and worship, etc. Together with a letter Hickman and to ... Heylin, concerning Bagshaw. R 33432 London, 1659. 4to, pp. 309.
.
.
QUEST
8vo.
SERIES.
Edited
byG.
R. S. Mead.
London, 1913.
.
3 vols.
In progress.
By
J.
.
J.
T. Hyslop.
.
1913.
The
By
L. Weston
.
.-1913.
Jewish mysticism.
By
J.
Abelson
.1913.
R R R
RELIGION.
buch
in
HandworterDie Religion in Geschichte und Gegen wart. Unter Mitwirkung von gemeinverstandlicher Darstellung. Hermann Gunkel und Otto Scheel herausgegeben von Friedrich Michael Schiele und Leopold Zscharnack. Vierter(-Fiinfter) Band.
.
.
Tubingen, 1913.
8vo.
In progress.
his
life,
16440
. .
REYBURN (Hugh
London, 1914.
letters,
and work.
376.
ROLLE
the
The fire of love or melody of love and (Richard) of Hampole. Translated by Richard Misyn mending of life or rule of living. " " De Emendatione Vitae" of from the Incendium Amoris" and the R. Rolle, hermit of Hampole. Edited and done into modern English With an introduction by Evelyn Underby Frances M. M. Comper.
bill
With
a frontispiece.
London,
[19141.
8vo, pp.
Ixii,
278. 361 28
181
RELIGION
GENERAL WORKS.
RoYE
(William) William Roye's dialogue between a christian father and Nach dem Einzigen auf der Wiener K. K. Hofbibliothek befindlichen Exemplare herausgegeben von Adolf Wolf. [Aus dem Marzhefte des Jahrganges 1874 der Sitzungsberichte der phil.-hist. Classe der kais. Akademie der Wissenschaften besonders abgedruckt] 33780 Wien, 1874. 8vo, pp. 88.
his stubborn son.
SAMMLUNG
progress.
theologischer
in
Lehrbiicher.
Tubingen,
1912.
8vo.
In
Von
das Alte Testament. Mit eiriem Anhang liber die ApokrypCarl Steuernagel 1912. .
. . .
.
32654
In
SANDERS
(Nicolas)
De
Visibili
Monarchia
Ecclesiae,
Libri Octo.
quibus diligens instituitur disputatio de certa perpetua Ecclesiae Dei turn Successione, turn Gubernatione Monarchica ab ipso mundi initio Deinde etiam Ciuitatis Diaboli per saepe interrupta vsq3 ad finem.
progressio proponitur, Sectaeqj contra veram fidem emerserunt.
eius
:
&
omnes
&
adulterina Diaboli Ecclesia, copiose tractatur. deq3 vera Dei Si quid praeterea difficile & scopulosum vel in Pontificum Romanorum id ipsum ex Historia, vel in Conciliorum Generalium ratione accidit
;
&
& membris
Personarum Avctore Nicolao Sandero, Sacrae Theologiae Professore. device beneath title]. Lovanii, Sub Capite [Printer's Deaurato. loannis Fouleri euro, & impensa excudebat Eeynervs M.D.LXXI. Fol. Velpivs Typ. Ivr. pp. [12], 844, [16]. R 33635
proposito discutitur
locuplete.
. .
&
examinatur.
Cum
Indice
Rerum
&
SIMPSON
Second
(Patrick Carnegie)
edition.
The
London, 1913.
35127
TAYLOR
of prophesying.
discourse of the liberty Beo\oyia e/c\,/cTiKr). Shewing the unreasonableness of prescribing to other mens faith, and the iniquity of persecuting differing opinions. London, 1647. R 33422 4to, pp. 48, 267.
(Jeremy)
the sacred order, and offices of episcopacy, by divine institution, catholike practice. apostolicall tradition, Together with their titles of honour, secular employment, manner of election, delegation of their
Of
&
power, and other appendant questions, asserted against the Aerians, and 33424 Acephali, new, and old. 4to, pp. 386. Oxford, 1642.
THEOPHYLACTUS.
c Theophylacti Archiepiscopi Bvlgariae in quatuor iam nunc multo diligentius, turn exactius, q * loanne Oecolampadio antea, reuisas atq3 recognitae. Interprete Anno M.D. XXXII. ([Colophon:] Coloniae Apvd Heronem
Euangelia enarrationes,
. . .
Alopecium,
Hittorpij.
cere
impensa
Martio.
integerrimi
Mense
Anno MD.XXXII.)
358
33420
182
RELIGION
GENERAL WORKS.
"
THOMAS,
Aquinas.
Summa
8vo.
"
Theologica
of
St.
Thomas
Literally translated
.
by fathers
of the English
Province.
London, 1911-14.
In progress.
Dominican R 36438
suoi tempi,
VlLLARI
2
vols.
(Pasquale)
8vo.
La
storia di
narrata da P.
Firenze, 1861.
27956
WlFFEN
(Benjamin B.) Life and writings of Juan de Valdes, otherwise With a translation Valdesso, Spanish reformer in the sixteenth century. from the Italian of his Hundred and ten considerations, by John
Belts.
[With portrait]
London,
1865.
8vo,
pp.
xiii,
590.
R
London. 1913.
first
35034
WVCLIF SOCIETY.
[Publications.]
8vo.
In progress.
R1591
Johannis Wyclif opera minora. historical notes by ... J. Loserth
Now
. .
.
critical
.
and
.1913.
ZWINGLI
breuis
&
clara expositio,
[i.e.
Regem
Christianum
Francis
nemine excusa
lucem aedita M.D.XXXVI. H. Bullingerus.] [With a prefatory note subscribed ([Colophon :] Anno M.D.XXXVI.) Tigvri Apvd Christophorvm Froschovervm.
&
King
:
nunc primum
in
8vo,
if.
43.
33465
De Vera Et Falsa Religione, Huldrychi Zuinglij Commentarius. Indicem capitum totius operis inuenies in fine libri. Tigvri in <zdu Anno M.D.XXV. Mense Martio. Christophori Froschouer.
.
.
446
33464
In Evangelicam Historiam De Domino Nostro lesv Christo, Per Matthaevm, Marcvm, Lucam, & loannem conscriptam, Epistolasqj aliquot Pauli Annotationes. H. Zvinglii per Leonem ludae exceptae & aeditae. Adiecta est Epistola Pauli ad Hebraeos, & loannis Apostoli
. . .
Epistola per
.
Gasparem Megandrum.
title.]
Tigvri Exevdebat Christophorvs Froschou [With portrait] Mense Augusta, An*ot M.D. XXXIX. Fol., pp. [52,] 599
.
[1].
34880
220
BIBLE
BIBLE
gelis.
CATALAN.
Codex
del
Una
Palau.
per ... Joseph Gudiol y Cunill. 8vo, pp. xii, ff. 121.
*.* 100 copies printed.
[With
facsimile.]
Vich, 1910.
33056
183
BIBLE
COPTIC.
Edited by E. A.
Museum.]
Coptic Biblical texts in the dialect of Upper Egypt. Wallis Budge. With plates. [British 33076 London, 1912. 8vo, pp. Ixxxv, 349.
.
.
The
the British
earliest
Upper Egypt,
London, 1898.
known Coptic psalter. The text, in the dialect of edited from the unique papyrus codex Oriental 5000 in
E. A. Wallis Budge.
.
. .
Museum by
[With
facsimiles.]
34724
BIBLE
ENGLISH.
The Holy
Bible,
according
;
to
the authorized
with emendations of the version, arranged in paragraphs and sections text, also with maps, chronological tables, and marginal references to
parallel
New
in
1
and illustrative texts. [Old Testament edited by F. W. Gotch, Testament edited by G. A. Jacob.] London, [1868-71]. 6 pts.
4to.
vol.
33720
The Holy
Bible.
Translated from the Latin vulgate and diligently editions in divers languages. Douay, A.D. 1609 ; Published as revised and annotated by authority.
With a
preface by the Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster [i.e. F. This edition contains Bishop Challoner's notes, newly comBourne].
Also Pope Leo XIII. 's piled indices, tables, and verified references. Encyclical on the study of the Holy Scriptures, and a new series of
maps.
London,
[1914].
pts. in
vol.
8vo.
37681
The Holy
Latin Vulgate,
diligently
compared with the Hebrew, Greek, and other editions, in divers languages, with annotations, references, and an historical and chronological index.
A
1
new
vol.
edition, published
by
authority.
London, [191-
].
pts. in
8vo.
:
R 34700
The layman's Old Testament comprising the major part of the Old Testament, with selections from the Apocrypha arranged from the Revisers' version and edited with brief notes by M. G. Glazebrook. With maps. Oxford, [1913]. 2 vols. 8vo. 3521 5
.
The book
illustrated after
of Genesis.
Now
F.
drawings by
Cayley Robinson.
of
Press], 1914.
%*
500 on paper.
Job.
. . .
Translated in the metre of the original by 4to, pp. xii, 116. Cambridge, 1914.
R 35562
1913.
prepared
viii,
by
...
:
Sir
corrected.
.
The
London,
8vo, pp.
598.
R 34868
a
new
translation.
London,
[1914].
8vo, pp.
184
BIBLE
GREEK.
Selections from
Septuagint,
according to the
Stock.
.
text of
Swete, by F. C. Conybeare
and
St.
George
Greek Authors.]
Boston,
[1905.]
8vo,
pp.
vi,
35351
(Charles manuscripts in the of Michigan Studies. Freer collection. [University [With facsimiles.] Humanistic Series, 9.] New York, 1912. 4to. In progress. 33574 1. The Washington manuscript of the four gospels. By H. A. Sanders
FREER
The resultant Greek Testament, exhibiting the text in which the majority of modern editors are agreed, and containing the readings of Stephens, 1550, Lachmann, Tregelles, Tischendorf, Lightfoot, Ellicott, Alford, Weiss, the Bale edition, 1880, Westcott and Hort and the
Revision Committee. With an introduction
By ... Richard
by
Fourth impression.
Francis
Stewart
Weymouth. Perowne
[191-]
Bishop of Worcester.
xxv, 643.
London,
8vo, pp.
12198
BIBLE
LATIN.
Breviario perpetuo et concordantiis aucta adnotatis etiam locis qui in monumentis fidei sollemnioribus et in liturgia Romana usurpari consueverunt. Curavit Aloisius Gramatica. Mediolani, 1914.
editio.
.
8vo, pp.
-
xii,
1152,20.
Wirceburgensium.
R
E
36089
Par
palimpsestorum
Ernestus
graphicae.
34000
BIBLE: SPANISH.
anotada conforme
al
La Biblia vulgata latina traducida en espanol y, sentido de los santos padres y expositores catholicos
Valencia,
por lOvols.
.
1790-93.
33902
220 BIBLE:
ANSTEY
(Martin) The romance of Bible chronology an exposition of the meaning, and a demonstration of the truth, of every chronological statement contained in the Hebrew text of the Old Testament. ... By Martin Anstey. C. Morgan.] [With foreword by 35248 London, 1913. 2 vols. 8vo and Fol.
. .
.
.
BLASS
.
(Friedrich)
Grammatik des neutestamentlichen Griechisch. Vierte. Gottingen, 1913. Auflage besorgt von Albert Debrunner.
.
.
34070
BUHL
Text des
Allen Testamentes.
Leipzig, 351 18
CHEYNE (Thomas
1914.
8vo, pp.
176.
London, 361 95
185
CLAY
of the northern Semites; a (Albert Tobias) Amurru, the home that the religion and culture of Israel are not of Babystudy showing 8vo, pp. 217. lonian origin. Philadelphia, 1909. [With map.]
R 36781
R
ILTUDES
bibliques.
Paris, 1907-08.
re'cente.
2 vols.
8vo.
.
.1907.
34040
.
.
Les douze
petits
prophetes.
Traduits
comments.
-1908.
R
:
34039
HEATON
their
(William James) Our own English Bible its translators and Third edition. With facsimiles work, the manuscript period.
and
illustrations.
London,
1913.
R 23082
Puritan Bible and other contemporaneous Protestant versions. " Our own English Bible its translators and their work". Illustrated. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xv, 345.
The
R 23082
JASTROW
(Morris) Lectures delivered
enlarged.
The Haskell Babylonian traditions. Oberlin College in 1913, and since revised and 36219 London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xv, 376.
Hebrew and
at
the
Old Testament.
of
Was
the
Old
[Library
Historic
Theology.]
212.
its
R 34858
and
its
PEAKE
(Arthur Samuel)
The
Bible
origin,
its
significance,
abiding worth.
London, 1913.
34719
PINCHES
(Theophilus Goldridge) The Old Testament in the light of the and legends of Assyria and Babylonia. Third edition, revised 35212 [With plates.] London, 1908. 8vo, pp. 597.
historical records
POOLE
(Reginald
1882.
Stuart)
The
xii,
cities
of
Egypt.
[With map.]
London,
8vo, pp.
215.
36810
Testa8vo,
ROBERTSON
ment
pp.
xl,
(Archibald Thomas)
New
research.
London, [1914].
1360.
37549
[With
TOMKINS (Henry
plates.]
of
Abraham.
London,
(G.)
36822
WlLDEBOER
The
hi storico- critical
enquiry.
An
. .
... George
Moore.
London,
1895.
182.
35371
186
CURSUS
Knabenbauer,
Parisiis,
F.
de
1912-13.
R
I.
7235
1913.
Psalmos, auctore
s.
Knabenbauer
1912.
I.
in
Knabenbauer.
KlTTEL
(Rudolf)
Beitrage
zur
Herausgegeben von R.
1
Kittel.
14984
AlMestamentliche Studien R. Kittel zum 60. Geburtstag dargebracht von A. Alt, G- Beer, F. Bohl, G. Dalman, J. Herrmann, G. Hblscher, M. Lohr, O. Procksch, F. 1913. Puukko, W. Rothstein, E. Sellin, W. Staerk, C. Steuernagel, F. Wilke.
3.
Die altesten punktierten Handschriften des Alten Testa15. Masoreten des Ostens. ments und der Targume, herausgegeben und untersucht von P. Kahle. 1913.
.
.
16.
Beilagen 1914.
17.
I.
Gberarbeitet oder einheitlich ? von G. Kittel Mit 2 II. Syrische Konkordanz der Oden Salomos. Bibliographic der Oden Salomos.
. .
.
ersten
Rom und die Hasmonaer. Untersuchungen zu den judisch-romischen Urkunden im Makkabaerbuche und in Josephus' jiidischen Altertumern XIV, von O. Roth. 1914.
:
ein Beitrag zur Rhythmologie, Kritik und Exegese des Alten 18. Hebraische Poesie 1914. Testaments, von J. W. Rothstein.
SCHRIFTEN
Gegenwart
f/ress
1,
i.
des Alten Testaments in Auswahl neu iibersetzt und fur die erklart In pro8vo. Gottingen, [19 10-] 1911.
. .
R
Gunkel.
.
. .
21
596
Die Urgeschichte und die Patriarchen, das erste Buch Mosis, ubersetzt, erklart und mil Einleitungen in die fiinf Biicher Mosis und in die Sagen des ersten Buches Mosis versehen
vonH.
[1910-] 1911.
SELLIN
von
.
.
(Ernst)
.
E.
Sellin.
1.
Die Genesis
ubersetzt
und
erklart
von
O. Procksch.
. .
1913.
.
.
13.
Die Psalmen
1914.
ubersetzt
und
erklart
von
R.
Kittel
Erste und
zweite
Auflage.
WELLHAUSEN
historische
(Julius)
Biicher
Mit Nachtragen.
Die Composition des Hexateuchs und der Alten Testaments. Zweiter Druck. R 34995 Berlin, 1889. 8vo, pp. 361.
des
.
SKINNER
pp.
viii,
(John) 303.
The
divine
names
in Genesis.
London
[1914].
8vo,
36459
PALMER (Abram
religion.
[With
London,
1913.
JAHN
(Gustav) Die elephantiner Papyri und die Biicher Esra-Nehemja. Mit einem Supplement zu meiner Erklarung der hebraishen Eigennamen. R 34646 Leiden, 1913. 8vo, pp. 106.
ZENNER
und
K.) Die Chorgesange im Buche der Psalmen. Form nachgewiesen von J. K. Zenner Titelbilde. Frcilurif im Breisgau, 1896.
(J.
Ihre Existenz
.
.
ihre
Mit einem
vols.
4to.
33964
2.
Texte.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
220 BIBLE:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
187
ROBOTHAM
commonly
772.
(John)
called
exposition on the whole booke of Solomons song, Wherein the text is explained and the Canticles.
An
thereupon.
London, 1651.
of
4to, pp.
R 34949
the
FlNDLAY (George
historical
Gillanders)
.
The books
[Books
prophets
in
their
succession.
1900[-07].
3vols.
8vo.
In progress.
:
London, R 35352
HOELSCHER
PEISER
[With
schichte Israels.
(Gustav) Die Profeten Untersuchungen zur Religionsge35799 8vo, pp. viii, 486. Leipzig, 1914.
(Felix E.)
text
Hosea
philologische Studien
zum
alten Testament.
and
translation.]
[With
plate.]
Leipzig, 1914.
8vo,
36428
220
BIBLE
COMMENTARIES
NEW
TEST.
ALLEN
(Willoughby Charles) and GRENSTED (Laurence William) Introduction to the books of the New Testament. Edinburgh, 1913.
8vo, pp.
viii,
302.
R 34856
Neue Testament.
.
HARNACK
6.
R
its
12667
Die Enistehung des Neuen Testaments und die wichtigsten Folgen der neuen Schb'p-
MACCLYMONT
results.
(James A.) New Testament criticism London [1913]. [The Baird Lecture, 1911.]
:
history
and
viii,
8vo, pp.
363.
35904
SODEN (Hermann
4
vols.
1.
von) Die Schriften des Neuen Testaments in ihrer Hergestellt auf Grund ihrer Textgeschichte von H. Freiherr von Soden. Gottingen, 1911-13.
altesten erreichbaren Textgestalt.
.
8vo.
. .
.
R
Zvveite, unverandeite Ausgabe.
33943
2.
vols.
1911.
1913.
WlNDISCH
von
.
.
(Hans) Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament herausgegeben H. Windisch. In pro8vo. Leipzig, 1912-13.
. .
gress.
1.
R
Die synoptische Grundschrift
Spitta.
in
33674
ihrer
Uberlieferung
durch
das
Lukasevangelium.
VonF.
2.
1912.
:
Diatheke
1913.
Von
E. Loh-
meyer.
3.
der Synopse.
Quellengeschichte
das
Problem
ihrer
gegenseitigen
Charis
Von G.
P. Wetter.
188
COMMENTARIES:
NEW
.
.
TEST.
ZAHN (Theodor) Kommentar zum Neuen Testament unter Mitwirkung K. Horn E. von ... P. Bachmann ... P. Ewald von T. G. Wohlenberg herausgegeben Riggenbach In progress. 8vo. R 9914 Zahn. Leipzig, 1913.
.
3,
ii.
ausgelegt von
T. Zahn.
-1913.
14.
Der
Brief an die
E. Riggenbach.
1913.
.
CLARK
(Albert Curtis) The primitive text 8vo, pp. vii, 112. Oxford, 1914.
of the gospels
ALEXANDER
LEWIS (Agnes
[With
(William)
London, 1898.
Third
edition.
35135
plates.]
Smith) Light on the four gospels from the Sinai palimpsest. 35126 London, 1913. 8vo, pp. ix, 226.
WENDLING
logische
(Emil) Die Entstehung des Marcus-Evangeliums. 8vo, pp. Tubingen, 1908. Untersuchungen.
Philovi,
246.
21
R
DA VIES
pp.
:
282
(Edward O.) The miracles of Jesus a study of the evidence. London, 1913. 8vo, Being the Davies Lecture for the year 1913.
xi,
240.
R
St.
35340
HEADLAM
(Arthur Cayley)
MONTEFIORE
St.
Paul.
Two
essays.
London, 1914.
35910
MUNTZ
The
(William James Stephens) Rome, St. Paul and the early church. Roman law on St. Paul's teaching and phraseology and on the development of the church. London, 1913. 8vo, pp.
influence of
xvi, 227.
34853
KENNEDY
London,
St.
8vo, pp.
xviii,
311.
34864
RAMSAY
[1913].
The
present day.
The Deems
xi,
Lectures in
New
York
University.
8vo, pp.
450.
London, 34675
.
.
KUEHL
(Ernst) E. Kuril.
.
.
Der
.
Rcmer.
xiii,
Ausgelegt von
W ATKINS
KLOEPPER
in
Leipzig, 1913.
8vo, pp.
511.
35233
Eine
(Charles Harry)
urn Galatien.
Untersuchung.
Tubingen, 1913.
121.
R
R
34929
Kritisch untersucht und (Albert) Der Brief an die Colosser. seinem Verhaltnisse zum paulinischen Lehrbegriff exegetisch und 22230 8vo, pp. 553. Berlin, 1882. biblisch-theologisch er6rtert.
NAIRNE
the
(Alexander) The
epistle of priesthood
Hebrews.
Edinburgh, 1913.
8vo, pp.
446.
34863
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
220 BIBLE:
189
HOSKIER (Herman
C.) Concerning the date of the Bohairic version, coverof the Apocalypse and a review of ing a detailed examination of the text some of the writings of the Egyptian monks. London, 1911. 8vo,
pp.
vii,
203.
R 28348
34869
CHARLES
(Robert Henry)
[Home
Testaments. Religious development between the Old and the New London, [1914]. 8vo, pp. 256. University Library.]
R 36439
.
BURKITT (Francis Crawford) Jewish and Christian apocalypses. The Schweich Lectures, 1913. [The British [With facsimile.]
.
Academy.]
London, 1914.
8vo, pp.
vi,
80.
36325
230 RELIGION
DOCTRINAL THEOLOGY.
GENERAL.
.
COHU (John Rougier) Vital problems of religion. With an introduction by the ... Bishop of S. Asaph [A. G. Edwards]. 35903 Edinburgh, 1914. 8vo, pp. xiv, 289.
.
.
Stuttgart,
8vo, pp.
vii,
665.
.
35401
GRUNDRISS
8vo.
II.,
1.
. .
Tubingen, 1905-14.
In progress.
Bd. Einleitung
.
Cornill
in die kanonischen Biicher des Alten Testaments von C. Siebente neubearbeitete Auflage der "Einleitung in das Alte Testament.'
-1913.
R
II.,
33836
Auflage.
3.
.
Bd.
Israel.
Von H.
1914.
Guthe.
Dritte
Mit
Karten.
R
III.,
I.
.
.
36271
und
sechste
Bd. Einleitung in das Neue Testament von Zweiter . Abdruck. 1913. Auflage.
. .
... A.
Jiilicher
Fiinfte
R
Bd. Biblische Theologie des Neuen Testaments. Urchristentums. Von H. Weinel. Zweite . verbesserte
III.,
3401 5
2.
Auflage
_ 1913 R
R
33897
IV.,
Auflage.
I,
Bd.
Dogmengeschichte von
... A. Harnack
Vierte verbesserte
1905.
33837 33838
34941
''
iono 909.
1
^'
^8mati
Ethik.
'c
von
J-
Kaftan
Fiinfte
und
R
V., 2. Bd.
Fiinfte Auflage.
1913
R
1
'
PraktischeTheoIogievon
E. C. Achelis
1912
33839
190
DOCTRINAL THEOLOGY.
faith
.
HAERING
lated
(Theodor) The Christian from the second revised and George Ferries. Dickie
.
.
.
a system of dogmatics.
Trans-
R
and immortality.
.
35218
TYRRELL
M. D.
in
(George) Essays on
faith
Petre.
London, 1914.
Arranged by R 35634
CHRISTOLOGY.
the
light
BROWNE
modern
8vo, pp.
vi,
of
criticism.
bridge, 1913.
R
The
historical Christ
;
35217
CONYBEARE
(Frederick Cornwallis)
.
.
or,
an investi.
J. M. Robertson ... A. Drews, and gation of the views of B. Smith. Issued for the Rationalist Press Association, Limited.
. .
.
W.
London, 1914.
8vo, pp.
xi,
235.
life.
R
R
36220
DlNSMORE
[1906].
London, 34600
FERRIER
Christ
the world as Jesus the and teachings being recoveries by the writer through illuminations, visions and experiences, wherein are set forth the inner meanings of the Master's teachings, and the nature of his Jesushood and
(J.
:
His
Christhood.
Paignton, [1913].
35440
HAMMER
Studien zur Frage (Heinrich) Traktat vom Samaritanermessias der Existenz und Abstammung Jesu. Bonn, 1913. 8vo, pp. 101.
.
.
35143
LYTTLETON
London,
London,
(Hon.
1905.
Edward)
8vo, pp.
x,
Studies
in
the
392.
sin.
R
[Studies
in
33880
MACKINTOSH
1
91 3.
Theology.] 3521 9
Or, a preciousness of Christ unto believers. wherein the absolute necessity, the transcendent excellency, the supereminent graces, the beauty, rarity and usefulness of Christ is opened R 34950 London, 1669. 8vo, pp. 259. andapplyed.
(Albert) Die psychiatrische Beurteilung Jesu. Tubingen, 1913. 8vo, pp. vii, 46.
Darstellung
SCHWEITZER
und
Kritik.
STALKER
(James)
. .
Imago Christi
.
the
example
of
Jesus
Christ.
Sixth edition.
London, 1891.
R
.
37278
Second 35001
nine-
THOMPSON
edition.
Mark.
WE1NEL
(Heinrich)
and
WlDGERY
R3590"
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
230 RELIGION:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
191
DOCTRINAL THEOLOGY.
in Colos-
WALKER
sians
(William Lowe) Christ the creative ideal: studies and Ephesians. Edinburgh, 1913. 8vo, pp. vii, 236.
34867
: an investigation into the attributed to Our Lord in the gospels, together eschatological teaching with an estimate of the significance and practical value thereof for
own
time.
Edinburgh, 1913.
8vo, pp.
viii,
415.
R 34862
ESCHATOLOGY.
doctrine
of a
CHARLES
life
(Robert Henry)
critical 'history of
the
future
New
x,
Christianity or Christian eschatology from pre-prophetic times till Testament canon : being the first Jowett Lectures
in Israel, in Judaism,
in
and
898-99.
Second
edition, revised
and enlarged.
1913.
8vo, pp.
484.
London, 35364
JACKSON (Henry
8vo, pp.
xviii,
Latimer) 378.
The
eschatology of Jesus.
Vorstellungen vom Antichrist im spateren Mittelalter, Luther und in der konfessionellen Polemik. Ein Beitrag zur Theologie Luthers und zur Geschichte der christlichen Frommigkeit Tafelbildern. Mit 21 170 8vo, pp. x, 295. Leipzig, 1906.
.
CREEDS.
faith
:
BRINGS
(Charles
Augustus)
The
fundamental
Christian
the origin, history and interpretation of the Apostles' and Nicene creeds. 34587 Edinburgh, 1913. 8vo, pp. x, 332.
R R
Theological symbolics.
[International Theological
Library.]
Edinburgh, 1914.
8vo, pp.
x,
429.
3561 9
APOLOGETICS.
science.
CUNNINGHAM
London, 1914.
MACFARLAND
(Charles S.) The Christian ministry and the social order. Lectures delivered in the course in pastoral functions at Yale Divinity Edited by C. S. Macfarland. New Haven, School, 1908-1909. Conn., 1909. 23254 8vo, pp. vi, 303.
240
RELIGION
of
DEVOTIONAL.
Edinburgh,
1912.
COATS
(Robert
xi,
Hay) Types
English piety.
8vo, pp.
284.
34857
CRESPET
(Pierre)
Vierge Chrestienne,
continente
. . .
La Pomme De Grenade Mystiqve, Ov Institvtion D'Vne & de 1'Ame deuote, qui fait profession de la vie
pour se disposer a 1'aduenement de son Espous lesus Paris, Chez Guillaume de la Nove, rue S. laques,
Christ
au nom de
lesus.
M.D.
LXXXVI.
8vo,
ff.
[20,]
250, [141.
35222
192
RELIGION: HOMILETICS.
the
modern mind.
[Second
8vo,
pp.
edition.]
xi,
London, [1912].
245.
R R
33901
preacher
[1912].
his life
and work.
vi,
Yale Lectures.
London,
8vo, pp.
245.
34586
PARKHURST
Lyman Beecher (Charles H.) The pulpit and the pew. Lectures delivered 1913, before the Divinity School of Yale University. 35 2 New Haven, 1913. 8vo, pp. 1 95.
Du MOULIN
MUSSARD
(Pierre)
the
Elder.
Cinquieme
decade de
sermons.
Charenton, 1642.
(Pierre)
R 35490
Sermons
sur
Geneve, 1673.
35500
260 RELIGION
LECKIE
238.
Edinburgh, 1909.
8vo, pp. x,
R
(Francis)
35008
of
PAGET
Bishop of Oxford.
An
introduction to the
.
.
.
fifth
book
Hooker's
Oxford,
treatise of the
1907.
Second
edition.
R
:
34851
PARKER
omnes
Ecclesiastica
Christi
de eadem controversies, summo cum judicio & doctrina methodice Pertractantur XXI. [n.p.], Anno Domini, M.D.C. 2 pts. in R 33402 vol. 4to.
. .
RICHER (Edmond) De
Ecclesia,
est
Politia
Ecclesiastica Et Politica Potestate, Liber vnus. Monarchica, ad finem supernaturalem instituta quod omnium optimum & naturae conuenientissimum
:
Domino
[By E. Richer.] (Decreta Sacrae Facvltatis Theologies Parisiensis, De Potestate Ecclesiastica, Primatu Romani Pontificis, contra Sectaries huius seculi Petri Hardivilerii Parisini, Academies Rectoris.
&
Actio Pro Academia Adversvs Presbyteros & Scholasticos Collegij Die Habita In Senatv Parisiensi, Anno Domini 1611. 2. Parisiis, Apud loannem Petis-pas, via lacobaa, Decembris.) sub scuto Venetiarum. M.DC.XII. 12mo, pp. [6] 96.
Claromontani.
R
SAN DAY
:
33462
papers reprinted (William) The primitive church and reunion from the "Contemporary Review". 8vo, pp. 142. Oxford, 1913.
34861
193
DIVINE WORSHIP.
8vo.
In progress.
Church
of the
irreducible
the of England. Prayer book revision [Common Prayer.] Hickleton conference, showing the proposed rearrangement of the Edited with an introduction, notes order for holy communion, together with further suggestions. 1911. and an appendix containing the canons or anaphorae of other rites, by A. Riley. 1913. 10 Wooley (R. M.) The bread of the eucharist.
9. Liturgies.
minimum
11.
use
1913.
Alcuin Club
1
London,
Newly
translated
1913.
8vo.
In progress
R7955
1 .
The Sarum
missal in English.
by F. E. Warren.
vols.
Alcuin Club.
8vo.
3.
In progress.
Baylay (A.
M.
.[1913.]
(V.) The manual acts prescribed of the eucharist, according to the Anglican rite.
4. Staley
.
prayer of consecration
[1913.]
BARNES
(Arthur S.)
The
With illustrations. study in Christian archaeology. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xx, 223. Library.]
35105
2
vols.
BlBLIOTHEQUE
8vo.
2.
liturgique.
R 8906
XVIIe
XVIIIe
et
Poesie liturgique traditionelle de 1'Eglise catholique en Occident ou, recueil d'hymnes usitees au moyen age et distributes suivant 1'ordre du bre'viaire et du missel, par 1894. . . U. Chevalier. [With illustrations.]
de proses
16.
et
siecles
d'hymnes
missel, par
de proses
.
usitees a cette
.
epoque
1912.
et
du
U. Chevalier.
BOCK
(Franz) Geschichte der liturgischen Gewander des Mittelalters, oder Entstehung und Entwicklung der Kirchlichen Ornate und Paramente in Riicksicht auf Stoff, Gewebe, Farbe, Zeichnung, Schnitt, und rituelle erlautert Bedeutung nachgewiesen und durch Abbildungen Mit einem Vorworte von Georg Miiller, Bischof von Minister. 34767 Bonn, 1859-71. 3 vols. 8vo.
. . . . . . . . .
BUMPUS
and explanation
dictionary of ecclesiastical terms; being a history used in architecture, ecclesiology, music, cathedral constitution, etc. ritual, London, [1910]. 8vo, pp. 323.
(John S.)
of certain terms
R 35829
GAVANTO
hac vltima editione varie locupletata. (Enchiridion, seu manuale Pro decretis in visitatione & synodo de quacumque re episcoporum. condendis. 34725 Lugduni, 1669. 4 pts. in vol. 4to.
.
GOGOL
(Nikolai Vasil'evich.) liturgy. mystical interpretation of the rite of the holy euchanst as celebrated in the eastern orthodox churches. Translated by L. Alexeieff. Published
. . .
Meditations
on the divine
for the
Anglican and Eastern Orthodox Churches Union. 16mo, pp. xi, 101. [1913].
London, 33870
194
GROSART
(Alexander Balloch) Songs of the day and night ; or three centuries of original hymns for public and private praise and reading. The life- story of Jesus Christ a cantata with other sacred
:
[Edinburgh]
xxviii,
509.
of
1
37276
%* One
00
LECLERQ
jusqu* au
(Henri) Manuel d'archeologie chretienne depuis les origines VIII e siecle. 2 vols. Paris, 1907. [With illustrations.]
8vo.
R
:
.
33985
M EARNS
before
Qames) Early Latin hymnaries an index of hymns in hymnaries With an appendix from later sources. 1 1 00.
.
.
facsimile.]
Cambridge, 1913.
.
R
4to.
[With 34845
Parisiis, 1913.
ss.
In progress.
R8938
Relliquiae liturgicae vetustissimae ex
selectae
. .
monumentis
Lerclercq.
.
et
publici
.
.
uiris
.
Sectio altera.
1913.
NEALE
With (John Mason) Essays on liturgiology and church history. an appendix on liturgical quotations from the isapostolic fathers, by ... Second edition, with preface by Gerard Moultrie. R. F.
.
.
Littledale.
London, 1867.
Exon.
34723
]
[Edited
by H.
E.
Reynolds
Fol., ff. 80. [Exeter?, 1881-84.] %* The title is taken from the wrapper.
33643
la
ROHAULT DE FLEURY
passion de
[1883].
(Charles)
Memoire
and
sur les
instruments de
N.
S. J. C.
[With
plates
illustrations.]
Pa rift, 1870
4to.
pp.414.
R R
35420
Pi MONT (S. G.) Les hymnes du Breviaire remain: etudes critiques, litteraires et mystiques. 36758 Paris, 1874-84. 3 vols. in 1. 8vo.
.
Kalendarii
Rationem,
Et
Gregorii XIII. Pont. Notationes atque Tractatio de Max. Ivssv Editvm. Martyrologio Romano Avctore Caesare Baronio Sorano, Congregationis comOratorii Presbytero. Secunda editio ab ipso auctore emendata
:
Historiae
Veritatem Accesservnt
Restitvtvm.
&
Antverpiae, [With engraving.] phori Plantini, Architypographi Regij. M.D. xxxv, [1] 576 [56].
pluribus aucta.
Ex qfficimi LXXXIX.
du
roy.
C/ir,
Fol.
R
En
Latin
pp.
334 17
OFFICE de
Francois.
la
Conforme-
en parisien. des ceremonies de 1'eglise, et des instruc1'explication offices que Ton courtes reflexions sur les mysteres tions, prieres Nouvelle celebre dans cette sainte semaine. de Bellegarde. Par edition. Pa //*, 1741. 8vo. pp. xvi, 632. [With frontispiece].
messels remain
&
&
&
Avec
&
&
V With
33987
XV on
the binding.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
260 RELIGION:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
The
195
SACRAMENTS.
sacrifice.
BREVINT
(Daniel)
By way
of discourse, meditalion
parts,
London, 1739.
pp.
x,
133.
33167
KNOX
(Edmond Arbuthnot) Bishop of Manchester. Sacrifice or sacrament? Which is the teaching of the Anglican Communion Office? R 35626 London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xii, 210.
MISSIONS.
studies in
DENNIS
some
.
(James
.
call
of missions:
.
.
of the
New
York
[191 3]
36072
AOY
(Cecilia
. .
.
M.) Pius
II,
With
illustrations.
London, [19131.
8vo, pp.
xiii,
367.
R 35335
R 6523
dits
BlBLIOTHEQUE
des
sous les auspices du Ministere de 1'instruction publique. In progress. 1903-11. 4to. Troisieme serie. Lettres communes des papes d' Avignon.
2bis.
Benoit XII,
1334-1342. Lettres communes, analyse'es d'apres Vatican par J. M. Vidal. ... 3 vols.
les
registres
BONWETSCH
(G. Nathanael) and SEEBERG (Reinhold) Neue Studien zur Geschichte der Theologie und der Kirche. Berlin, 1907-13. 8vo.
In progress. W. Capito
1 .
7653
1907.
Von ...
des
.
Christentums.
Ein
Beitrag
zur
.1907.
13. J.
Arndt
Von W. Koepp.
16. Die Synode von Antiochien im Jahre 324/25 von Nicaa. Von E. Seeberg. .1913.
. .
17.
Die
I.
Von
H.
S. Alivisatos.
1913.
18.
in
Jahrhunderte.
Von A.
1913.
:
CLARKE
CRESPIN
la
(William
monasticism.
Kemp Lowther) St. Basil the Great Cambridge, 1913. 8vo, pp. ix, 176.
study in
35658
Histoire Des Martyrs, Persecvtez Et Mis mort pour de 1'Euagile, depuis le temps des Apostres iusques a Tan 1597. Reueue, & augmentee en Comprinse En Dovze Livres. ceste Edition, des deux derniers Liures. Con[By J. Crespin.
verite
. . .
. . .
G ean )
tinued
by
S. Goulart.]
[Printer's device.]
[Gen&ue,]
M.D. XCVII.
R
14
35466
196
EOMUNDSON
logy,
The church
in
Rome
in the
first
century
an exthe
its
history, chrono-
university of
and Oxford
traditions.
Eight lectures
. . .
preached
before
London, 1913.
8vo, pp.
296.
sive
34842
EUBEL
documents tabularii praesertim Vaticani Collecta,>digesta, edita perConradum Eubel. In progress. R 33671 4to. Editio altera. Monasterii, 1913. Ab anno 98 usque ad annum 43 perducta.
series
.
summorum
.
.
pontificum,
I .
JANUS, pseud,
the
council.
[i.e.
By
Second
edition.
The pope and Johann Joseph Ignaz von Doellinger.] Authorized translation from the German. Janus. R 37277 London, 1869. 8vo, pp. xxix, 425.
in
JOURDAN
the
early
XVI
century.
"London,
1914.
8vo,
pp. xxxi,
336.
R
LUTHER
.
37448
Weimar, 1914.
40. Abt. 2.
J.
Luther.
1914.
50. Edited by K. Drescher, O. Clemen, O. Brenner, O. Reichert, E. Thiele, G. 1914. Kawerau, F. Cohrs, G. Koffmane, P. Diels and J. Luther.
Die deutsche
5.
Bibel.
Text der Vulgata-Revision von 1529. 1914. Luther, and Eberhard Nestle.]
[Edited by K. Drescher,
Erwin Nestle,
J.
MANN
9.
lives of the
plates.]
London, 191 4.
1914.
10.
1
8vo.
153-1198.
:
In progress.
1914.
[With
9787
ed
1130-1159.
Roma,
1913.
Con
tavole
R
middle ages.
1913.
33994
SMITH
Ford
delivered
at
and Oxford
in the
The
8vo,
in
1905.
Oxford,
pp.245.
R
(Heinrich
Gottlieb)
.
.
3491 7
.
.
TZSCHIRNER
Der
Fall
des
.
Heidenthums
.
von
C.
Wilh.
Niedner.
Leipzig,
1829.
R
?
36839
MONASTIC ORDERS.
Analecta Franciscana, sive chronica aliaque varia Edita a patribus documenta ad historiam Fratrum Minorum spectantia. G. Bonaventurae. Ad Claras Aquas, Quaracrhi, 1912. collegii In progress. 8vo. R 7756 5. De conformitate vitae beati Francisci ad vitam BarDomini Jesu. Auctore
.
tholomaeo de Pisa.
Liber
II.
Liber
III.
1912.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
270 RELIGION
:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
:
197
RELIGIOUS HISTORY.
a brief account of
BARRETT
(Michael)
The
the houses which existed in Scotland, before the Protestant reformation, for monks following the rule of St. Benedict. [With map.] Edinburgh,
1913.
35657
BlBLIOTHEQUE
gress.
1 .
benedictine.
Paris,
1913.
8vo.
R
Richelieu et
preface de
. . .
In pro33090
Le
. . .
cardinal de
la
reforme des
.
Denis
Avec une
G. Hanotaux
monasteres 1913.
. .
be'ne'dictins.
Par ... P.
DELATTE
Solesmes
Commentaire sur la regie de Saint Benoit par 1'abbe de (Paul) 35164 P. Delatte]. Paris, [1913]. 8vo, pp. vii, 569. [i.e.
DESTUTT DE TRACY
chartreux
1
;
(Bernard) Vie de
fondateur des
Paris, 1785.
2mo, pp.
xviii,
470.
33846
DU yiVIER
Instituteur
(Claude) Vie Et Miracles de Lordre des Freres Minimes. (Traicte De La Canonisation De Sainct Francois de Paule). Receiullie et Composee par Claude du Viuier. 8vo, pp. [38], 888 [error for Paris, 1609.
Sainct Francois de Paule
. . .
.
De
808], [20].
346 11
ESSAI. Essai de 1'histoire monastique d'Orient. Par * * * * de la Paris, 1680. 8vo, Congregation de saint Maur [i.e. L. Bulteau]. 35850 pp. 909.
GONZAGUE
Premontre.
(Louis de) Esquisse de 1'histoire litteraire de 1'ordre de 2 pts. in 1 vol. 8vo. 33741 Paris, [1884].
GOOVAERTS
Premontre.
[1903].
artistes
et
savants de 1'ordre
Bruxelles,
de 1899-1902 R 33 742
HOWELL (Alan
on
trations.
S. Bernardino in art
George Ferrers) S. Bernardino of Siena. With a chapter illusby Julia Cartwright (Mrs. Ady) and R 34915 London, [1913]. 8vo, pp. xv, 373.
. . .
HUYSHE
the
(Wentworth) Dervorgilla, Lady of Galloway, and her abbey Sweet Heart. With illustrations by F. Fissi and the author.
.
of
. .
Edinburgh, 1913.
8vo, pp.
xii,
157.
R 34575
Cam34846
MARSDIN
Lerins,
(Arthur
1913.
the monastery,
S.
Honorat.
bridge,
PRUEM, Abbey
lass
Die Abtei Priim in der Eifel. Festschrift aus Anof. der Fertigstellung des Abtei-Um- und Erweiterungsbaues, 1912. Sonderabdruck aus den Jahrbiichern des Vereins von Altertumsfreunden im Rheinlande. Heft 122. Bonn, [With plates and illustrations.] 1912. 32887 8vo, pp. v, 39.
SMITH
[With
her life and legislation. (Ernest Gilliat) Saint Clare of Assisi London d Toronto, 1914. 8vo, pp. xiii, 305. portrait.]
:
R 37494
198
WADDING
ordinis
and SBARALEA
(Joannes Hyacinthus)
Scriptores
minorum quibus
eodem ordine
.
Priores atramento, posteriores pro fide Christi fortiter occubuerunt. L. Wadsanguine Christianam religionem asseruerunt, Recensuit
.
.
dingus. Francisci a
.
(Supplementum et castigatio ad Scriptores trium ordinum s. Waddingo, aliisve descriptos cum adnotationibus ad syllabum
.
Opus
Fol.
Jo.
Hyacinthi Sbaraleae.
.)
Roma,
1806.
vols.
R
R
33936
1,
--
Editio novissima.
Eomce, 1906-08.
2 vols.
2.]
33945
WORKMAN
earliest times
(Herbert Brook) The evolution of the monastic ideal from the down to the coming of the friars a second chapter in the
:
London,
[1913].
R
ENGLAND.
parish.
.
34840
BEAMONT
.
(William)
The
of the
[With
plates.]
Warrington, 1878.
ix,
229.
R 34085
facsimiles
BUCKFAST, Abbey
of Buckfast
of.
Abbey.
Ancient monuments
.
[With
and
plates.]
Kain-lez-Tournai, 1914.
:
Fol.
36335
THE CANTERBURY
and York Society General editor F. N. Davis. and York Series. London, [1906-]! 3. Canterbury [With plates.] In progress. 8vo. R 11947
. . .
9.
MCCCXXVII-MCCCXLIV.
.
.
A.D.
The register of John de Halton, Bishop of Carlisle, A.D. 12, 13. Carlisle, Diocese of. 1292-1324 . Transcribed by W. N. Thompson, with an introduction by T. F. Tout. 2 vols. [1906-J13.
. . .
Extra volume. Lincoln, Diocese of. Cooper Bishop of Lincoln, A.D. 1571 -[I912-J13.
.
. .
to
FOX
(John) Commentarii Rervm In Ecclesia Gestarum, maximarumq5, per totam Europam, persecutionum, a Vuicleui temporibus ad hanc usq} eetate descriptio. Liber primus. Autore loanne Foxo Anglo. Hiis
In
Calce
quibusdam, Reginaldi Pecoki Episcopi Cicestrensis. Item, Oirwrfpafta it Vuendclinu* quaedam ad Oxonienses. Argentorati 1'. 34916 lius Anno M.D.LIIII. 8vo. ff. [7], 212 [error for 219].
Games) Lollardy and the reformation in England an historical Vol. III. (Vol. IV. Edited by William Hunt ____ ) London, survey. R 15726 1911-13. 2 vols. 8vo.
:
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
270 RELIGION
:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
199
RELIGIOUS HISTORY.
LEGO
(John Wickham) English church life from the Restoration to the Tractarian movement, considered in some of its neglected or forgotten With frontispiece. London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xix, 428. features.
.
.
R 361 75
LINCOLN
ecciesie Consuetudinarium CATHEDRAL. Lincolniensis, tempore Richardi de Gravesend episcopi, A.D. 1258-1279, redactum. Edited by With introductory notes by Christopher Wordsworth. 1885. Herbert Edward Reynolds Fol., pp. [Exeter printed],
. . .
xlviii,
29.
29832
McKlLLIAM
[With [With
(A. E.)
portraits.]
London, 1913.
OSMOND
(Percy H.)
life
of
plates.]
London,
[1913].
of
Calverley parish
of
church,
Hall,
and
its
the
Old
Calverley,
Esholt Priory and Hall, and the daughter churches of Pudsey, Idle and 35187 [With plates.] Leeds, [1913]. 4to, pp. 313.
R
R
STORR (Vernon
F.) The development of English theology in the nineteenth century 1800-1860. 35104 London, 1913. 8vo, viii, 486.
TATHAM
THOMAS
a study in the power (Geoffrey of the English church from 1640 to 1660. history Cambridge, 1913. 35840 8vo, PP vi, 282.
:
.
Bulmer) The
Puritans in
The history of the (David Richard) Esgobaeth Llanelwy. of St. Asaph, general, cathedral and parochial. new, 3 vols. 8vo. Oswestry, 1908-13. enlarged and illustrated edition.
diocese
R
TURNER
35024
(George Lyon) Original records of early Nonconformity under Transcribed and edited by ... G. Lyon persecution and indulgence. Turner. 256 13 London, Leipsic, 1914. 8vo. In progress.
. . .
3.
Historical
and expository.
WARD
ix,
Men
and matters.
London, 1914.
R 35609
(Eleanor) Primate Alexander, Archbishop of
portraits.
8vo, pp.
IRELAND.
Armagh.
1914.
:
ALEXANDER
memoir.
With
Third impression.
London, R 35347
(William P.) The Irish priests in the penal times, 1660the state papers in H.M. Record Offices, Dublin and London, the Bodleian Library and the British Museum. Waterford,
1760.
1914.
BURKE
From
8vo,
PP
vii,
491.
R
London,
[1913].
35833
SCOTLAND.
in Scotland.
MACEWEN
[With map.]
In progress. R 35103
200
INDIA.
LUCAS
(Bernard)
.
. .
Our
task in India
shall
we
proselytise
or evangelise India?
London, 1914.
Hindus 35632
plates.]
RAE
[With
8vo, pp.
xii,
388.
R 29893
:
SOUTH AFRICA.
father in God (Michael Henry Mansel) West Jones Archbishop of Capetown With an introducand Metropolitan of South Africa, 1874-1908. W. H. Hulton. London, tion by [With maps and plates.]
.
WOOD
1913.
35617
FRANCE.
. . .
LE COMTE
8.
[Vol.
1665-83.
-
8vols.
35795
ARCHIVES de
8vo.
. . .
France monastique.
et
1912-13.
13, 16.
In progress.
Par
J.
Depoin
15.
Beaunier
a Benedictine Monk.
abbayes
.
Abbayes
et prieure's
et prieures
de Tancienne France
.
de France.
Tome
sixieme
Par
J.
M.
Besse.
1913.
BARNARD (Howard
.
.
Clive)
The
little
schools
x,
of
Port-Royal.
[With
plates.]
(
Cambridge, 1913.
Pouille
8vo, pp.
263.
34598
de
LUGO
Vannes.
-
Abbe.
historique
de
1'ancien
diocese
Benefices s^culiers.
Vannes, 1884.
35526
SANDERS
(E.
1576-1660.
With
theque Nationale.
K.) Vincent de Paul, priest and philanthropist, reproductions from engravings in the BiblioR 35202 London, [1913]. 8vo, pp. xxiii, 419.
.
. .
GERMANY.
MAINZ, Archbishopric
of.
Mainz von 1289-1396. Auf Veranlassung und aus Mitteln der Johann Friedrich Bohmerschen Nachlassadministration. Herausgegeben von Goswin Freiherrn von der Ropp. 1289-1353 bearbeitet von Ernst
Vogt. 1354-1396 bearbeitet von Fritz Vigener.
1
vol.
-
4to.
In progress.
ROST
Katholiken.
-
(Hans) Die wirtschaftliche und kulturelle Lage der deutschen R 34647 Koln, 191 1. 8vo, pp. vi, 219.
(Emil) Die evangelischen Kirchenordnungen des XVI. / 1911-13. 2 Vierter (-Fiinfter) Band.
.
. . . .
SCHLING
.
Jahrhunderts.
vols.
4to.
In progress.
. . .
8981
RUSSIA.
Band.
GRASS (Carl Conrad) Die russischen Sekten Zweiter Die Weissen Tauben oder Skopzen nebst Geistlichen Skopzen, vol. 8vo. Bilde. Neuskopzen u.a. Mit Lcip:i(), 1914. R 14119
.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
270
RECENT ACCESSIONS
201
RELIGION
RELIGIOUS HISTORY.
1812-1900, Orne d'un
1913.
8vo,
SWITZERLAND.
portrait
.
et
de
gravures.
Paris,
Neuchatel,
PP
xvii,
570.
33625
PARAGUAY.
church in the wilds: the GRUBB (W. Barbrooke) remarkable story of the establishment of the South American Mission amongst the hitherto savage and intractable natives of the Paraguayan Chaco. illustrations With Edited by H. T. Morrey Jones.
. . . .
. .
& ...
.
maps.
[Library of Missions.]
8vo,
PP 287.
34860
:
NEW GUINEA.
. . .
CHIGNELL (Arthur Kent) Twenty-one years in Papua a history of the English Church mission in New Guinea, 1891-1912. With illustrations and a map. London, [1913]. 8vo, pp. xv, 157. 361 32
. .
280 RELIGION
CHRISTIAN CHURCHES.
(Albert) Histoire 8vo, pp. vii, 458.
ROMAN CATHOLIC.
catholique.
-
HOUTIN
du
modernisme
Paris, 1913.
R 32874
PASTOR (Ludwig von) Geschichte der Papste seit dem Ausgang des Mittelalters. Mit Benutzung des papstlichen Geheim-Archives und vieler anderer Archive bearbeitet von L. von Pastor. Freiburg im
Breisgau, 1913.
6.
8vo.
In progress.
5327
Geschichte der Papste im Zeitalter der katholischen Reformation und Restauration Julius III, Marcellus II, und Paul IV, 1550-1559. Erste bis vierte Auflage.
-
statistica
STREIT (Carl) Atlas hierarchicus descriptio geographica et s. Romanae ecclesiae turn occidentis turn orientis juxta statum
:
praesentem.
historicae
. .
graphicae
Fol., pp.
Elaboravit
C.
Streit.
128,35.
361 10
ANGLICAN.
tional
[1910].
-
(Frederic Dennison) The legal and constitubetween church and state in England. London, relationship
8vo,
BRUCE
PP
.
197.
R 34945
CROSSE (Gordon)
8vo, pp.
xi,
[1906].
-
London,
R 34944
MAKOWER
(Felix)
Berlin, 1894.
BAPTISTS.
[1913].
Baptist
Historical
London,
8vo.
:
In progress.
R 21237
for the
Baptists in Yorkshire, Lancashire, Cheshire, and Cumberland. Augmented edition of two association volumes (The Baptists of Yorkshire : being the centenary memorial volume of the Yorkshire Baptist Association. Second edition. Baptists of North-West England, 1649-
1913.
Prepared
for the
Lancashire and Cheshire Association by W. T. Whitley vol. [With plates and illustrations.] 2 pts. in [1913.]
.
.
.)
202
CHRISTIAN CHURCHES.
BAPTISTS.
England,
WHITLEY (William Thomas) Baptists of North-West 1649-1913. Prepared for the Lancashire & Cheshire Association by W. T. Whitley. [With frontispiece and illustrations.] 34920 London, Preston, 1913. 8vo, pp. 367.
.
METHODISTS.
.
.
WESLEY (John) The journal of ... John Wesley. from original mss., with notes from unpublished diaries, Enlarged Edited by Nehemiah Curnock, annotations, maps, and illustrations. assisted by experts. Vol. V. Standard edition. London, [1914]. 8vo. R 20221
.
HUSTON (Robert) life and labours of ... Fossey Tackaberry with notices of methodism in Ireland. Second edition, revised and 35476 London, 1860. 8vo, pp. xii, 274. improved.
;
. . .
la vie d'
;
A.
,Ollivier, predicateur
de
avec des extraits de sa corre1'evangile dans la Societe wesleyenne spondance, et ses pensees sur quelques sujets de religion et de morale. St. Helier, 1861. 8vo, [With a preface by Philippe Ollivier]. 35501 pp. x, 240.
. . .
SWEDENBORGIAN.
practical nature
of
the theological writings of Emanuel Swedenborg, in a letter to ... the ... Archbishop of Dublin [R. Whately], occasioned by his observations on that subject in his Essays on some of the peculiarities of
the Christian religion.
.
Second edition.
London, 860.
\
8vo,
pp. xxi,
501.
R
R
36413
FRIENDS.
Second
2
vols.
-
HARE
edition.
(Augustus John Cuthbert) The Gurneys of Earlham. London, 1897. [With portraits and illustrations.]
8vo.
35426
:
SHORE (W.
Teignmouth) John
Woolman
his life
&
our times
[With map.]
mony
(George) The christian-quaker, and his divine testivindicated by scripture, reason and authorities against the injurious attempts that have been lately made by several adversaries, with manifest
;
WHITEHEAD
to
design
society.
parts.
The
first
more
civil
The
Fol.
second
more
particular.
{London},
pts.
in
vol.
R
(William)
33403
WHITEHEAD
for the principles
malicious
practices of the people call'd Quakers, against the aspertions, erronious doctrines, and horrid blasphemies of
in their
&
(George)
and PENN
serious apology
{London}, 1671.
pp.207. R 33427
203
RELIGION
OAHSPE.
CHRISTIAN CHURCHES.
Oahspe: a new bible
in
MINOR SECTS.
Jehovih and
the
words
of
sacred history of the dominions of the higher and lower heavens on the earth for the past twenty-four with the new commandments of Jehovih to man of thousand years With revelations from the second resurrection. . the present day.
his angel
embassadors.
[By
4to,
-
J.
Ballou.]
.
[With
illustrations.]
1882.
PP
xii,
890.
R 35993
Illustrated.
290 RELIGION
NON-CHRISTIAN.
.
. .
CURTISS (Samuel
Orients
:
Ursemitsche Religion im Volksleben des heutigen Deutsche Forschungen und Funde aus Syrien und Palastina Karten nebst einem Ausgabe. Mit Abbildungen und Vorwort von Wolf Wilhelm Graf en Baudissin. Leipzig, ] 903. 8vo,
Ives)
.
.
.
R
in
24787
east.
GEDEN
the
religions
of
the
R
east series.
34839
WISDOM OF THE
Cranmer-Byng
Field (D.).
.
1914.
8vo.
Edited by L. In progress.
The
1914.
R 35876
Translated from the Chinese,
Giles (L.) Taoist teachings from the book of Lieh Tzu. with introduction and notes. 1912.
R 29396
R8715
KUHN
von
8vo.
2.
(Franz Felix Adalbert) Mythologische Studien Herausgegeben Ernst Kuhn. 1 vol. Giitersloh, 1912. [With portrait.]
.
(Paul)
Paris, 1914.
FOWLER
Fund.
(William Warde)
:
lectures delivered in
London, 1914.
etc.
ideas of deity in the last century before Oxford for the Common University 8vo, pp. vii, 167. 36197
Roman
HINDUISM,
Translated
xii,
London, 1913.
8vo, pp.
33023
8vo 34865
FARQUHAR
PP- 469.
(J.
of
Hinduism.
Oxford,
1913
HOWELLS
(George) The soul of India. An introduction to the study of Hinduism, in its historical setting and development, and in its internal and historical relations to Christianity. [With map.] [Angus Lectureship.]
London, 1913.
34866
204
NON-CHRISTIAN.
NOBLE
Nivedita,
artists
By the Sister (Margaret E.) Myths of the Hindus & Buddhists. (Margaret E. Noble) of Ramakrishna-Vivekananda and
Ananda K. Coomaraswamy.
With
illustrations
... by
. .
Indian
under the supervision of Abanindro Nath Tagore. 1913. 8vo, pp. xii, 399.
London,
3481 6
PALI GESELLSCHAFT.
schaft.
3.
Breslau, 1911.
Pali-Buddhismus
:
in
dem Kammavacam.
Aus dem
Texte aus dem buddhistischen Pali-Kanon und nebst Erlauterungen von K. Seidenstiicker.
191
1.
Mahabodhifeier.]
R R
34272
;
TANTRAS.
translation
33864
PARSEEISM.
MOULTON (James Hope) Early Zoroastrianism. Lectures delivered at Oxford and in London, February to May 1912. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. [The Hibbert Lectures. Second Series.] 35099 xviii, 468.
JUDAISM.
BACHER (Wilhelm) Die Agada der babylonischen Amoraer. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Agada und zur Einleitung in den Zweite durch Erganzungen und Berichtibabylonischen Talmud vol. gungen vermehrte Auflage. Frankfurt a. M., 1913. 2 pts. in 8vo. R 33677
. . .
CORN ILL
readers
(Carl Heinrich) History of the people of Israel from the earliest times to the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans. Written for lay
Chicago, 1909.
W.
H.
Carruth.
Fourth edition.
35350
GEMOLL
Tom
Der historische Kern der Sage Nebst einem Anhange: IndoLeipzig, 1913.
8vo, pp.
v,
R
:
36876
[Publications].
Edinburgh, R 36252
.
. .
The
St. J.
letter
of Aristeas.
.
.
notes by
H.
Thackeray
Translated into English with an introduction and Reprinted from the "Jewish Quarterly Review".
-1904.
Henriques (H. S. Q.) Jewish marriages and the English law.
1909.
R R
.
36254
36250
. .
.
B.) Baron Macaulay. Essay and speech on and . . Edited, with an introduction and notes, by I. Abrahams edition. 1910. (With facsimile and portrait.]
Macaulay (T.
Jewish
.
disabilities
. .
S.
Levy
Second
in
Anglo- Jewish
history.
1913.
R 36252 R 36251 R
JUSTER
economique
leur condition juridique, (Jean) Les Juifs dans Tempire romain et sociale. 36284 8vo. 2 vols. Paris, 1914.
:
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
290 RELIGION
:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
NON-CHRISTIAN.
205
RUPPIN
Translated from the German by (Arthur) The Jews of to-day. Margery Bentwick. With an introduction by Joseph Jacobs. R 34844 London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xxii, 310.
.
MAIMONIDES.
perakim.
University 104, 55.
The
eight chapters of
Maimonides on
treatise.
I.
ethics.
Shemonah
.
by Joseph
Garfinkle.
[Columbia
New
York,
1912.
8vo,
R
343.
pp.
xii,
33527
MEINHOLD
. . .
Israels in
viii,
Leipzig, 1908.
(S.
MELAMED
MEYER
jiidischen geistes.
Volker-und
Kultur-Psychologie.
Berlin, [1913?].
8vo, pp.
ix,
224.
:
R R
34668
Halle 36850
(Eduard) Die
und
ihre
Nachbarstamme
alttestament-
Mit Beitragen liche Untersuchungen. . a. S., 1906. 8vo, pp. xvi, 576.
:
PICK (Bernhard) The Cabala its influence on Judaism and 8vo, pp. 109. Chicago, London, 1913.
Jesus in the
Christianity.
R 35724
R
35725
Talmud
and
his sayings.
WAITS
(Arthur Edward)
its
The
a study of the
Zohar and
connections.
With
illustrations.
London, 1913*
R 35 172
Was
Israel
WRIGHT
YELL1N
tions.]
tradition.
London, 1895.
8vo, pp.
(Isaac)
1.]
(David)
and ABRAHAMS
Series.
Maimonides.
[With
illustra-
[Jewish Worthies
London, 1903.
177.
36253
MOHAMMEDANISM.
Studien.
GOLDZIHER
2
(Ignacz)
Halle
a. S., 1889-90.
vols. in 1.
8vo.
Muhammedanische R 22224
Second
Series.
MARGOLIOUTH
The
vii,
early development of
Mohammedanism.
and June 1913.
University of London,
May
London, 1914.
265.
R
(August)
4.]
8vo pp
35624
.
MUELLER
lungen,
II.
Der
Islam im
. . .
Morgen-und Abendland.
Mit
MINOR RELIGIONS.
image, and
;
DU BOSE
the
;
(Hampden
C.).
... The
;
three religions
of
China
dragon, Confucianism,
of the Chinese.
[With
illustrations.]
206
JEREMIAS
.
1913.
34710
SPENCE
tions
Peru. With (Lewis) The myths of Mexico mainly by Gilbert James and William Sewell London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xiii, 366.
.
&
illustra-
ABERDEEN
KORAN,
n. 144-147
(XVIrH CENT.)
MANCHESTER
VOL.
2
JULY-SEPTEMBER,
1915
No.
THE
does
response to the appeal on behalf of the Library of the University of Louvain, which we made in our last
\JBRARY
SCHEME.
issue,
it
widespread
is
the desire to
at least in
which has
the resources of
and
study.
Already upwards
of three
received or definitely promised, and we have pleasure, elsewhere in the present issue, in recording the names of the donors, together with the description of the gifts which had actually reached us, at the end
of June.
It
may be
foundations of the
it
new
library
but
we
must see to
monument worthy
by our
it
overwhelming
is
hordes of barbarians which were hurled against her and which intended to signalize.
We are glad
employed
ing
direction
is
to hear that
an International Committee
is
in process
of formation, with a
view
to co-ordinate the
many
being
in this country,
and
of
also
on the continent,
devastated
to assist in bring-
the
library.
Under
the
and
scheme
the
more than
assured.
The
ensuing
will
arranged
lecture
for
session.
first
COM[NG
be given towards the end of September, and not SERIES on the second Wednesday of October as is usually the TURES.
case
:
207
15
208
"The
coveries
in
Crete."
(Illustrated
with
Lantern
By
Ronald
'
Burrows, D.Litt., Principal of King's College, London. Wednesday, 10th November, 1915. "Armageddon: a Study
Revelation of S. John the Divine
'."
M.
of the
By Arthur
S.
Peake,
M.A.,
sity of
Wednesday,
Service in the
December,
1915.
F.
"The
Tout,
English
Civil
14th Century."
By T.
M.A., F.B.A.,
Bishop Eraser Professor of Mediaeval and Ecclesiastical History in the Victoria University of Manchester.
Wednesday, 12th January, 1916. "The Modern View Warren Hastings." By J. Ramsay B. Muir, M.A., Professor
of of
Modern History
Manchester.
Influence
of
1916.
"The
the
M.D., F.R.S.,
Manchester.
By G. Anatomy in the
Elliott
Smith,
M.A.,
Victoria University of
The
commemora-
tion of the
(Illustrated
Playhouse." with Lantern Pictures.) By William Poel, Founder and Director of the Elizabethan Stage Society.
Tercentenary of the Death of Shakespeare "The Globe Wednesday, 19th April, 1916.
Artist
of
Moulton, M.A., Ph.D., Professor of Literary Theory and Interpretation in the University of Chicago.
Friday,
28th
April,
'
1916.
Thinker
Illustrated
by
Romeo and
AFTERNOON LECTURES
Tuesday,
Apollo."
12th October,
J.
(3 p.m.).
1915.
"The
By
Litt.D.,
LL.D., Director
of
Studies at the
Woodbrooke
Settlement, Birmingham.
209
National and International Ideals Tuesday, 4th January, 1916. the English Poets." By C. H. Herford, M.A., Litt.D., Professor
English Literature and Language in the Victoria University of
of
Manchester.
It
will
be noticed that
of
we
for the
Tercentenary of the Death of Shakespeare, the actual date of which falls upon Easter TENARY Sunday (23rd April). Many of our readers will welcome SHAKESthe opportunity of listening to such an authority upon
commemoration
the
we
take
make a
of
special journey
from London
for
the purpose.
Professor Richard
recommendation.
tion
They
we
from year to year by the regular members of our audience, and would suggest to them that they should be early in their places
they do not wish to suffer disappointment. In connection with this commemoration it has been decided to
if
next April,
arrange an exhibition in the library of the works of Shakespeare and his Contemporaries, in which we shall make a point of calling attention
books which influenced Shakespeare. deavour to find time to prepare a small descriptive and
to
of the
some
We
shall enillustrated
We
upon
Kuran.
for
of
Dr.
and
One
Eighty- Fifth Meeting of the British Association is to be Manchester commencing on Tuesday, 7th SepR th September. tember, and ending on Saturday, The ASSOCIA-
The
held in
customary duration of the meeting will be thus shortened, in consequence of the war. The ordinary excursions will
IIS
MAN. CHESTER
be abandoned, and the evening entertainments will be given up. In order, however, to give the members an opportunity of meeting each other the City Council have invited the Association to visit the
School of Technology on the evening of Wednesday, 8th September, when the buildings, machinery, and equipment will be shown. On
210
1887,
It
the
was not
yet even
contemplated.
has been
many
of the
members
visiting
welcome an opportunity
special treasures as
of
Manchester next month, who would inspecting the library and such of the
To
this
placed on exhibition for the purpose. end the Governors are issuing invitations to about three
may
be
hundred and
fifty
members
to
meet them
at
the library on
the
afternoon of Thursday, 9th September at 4 o'clock. Since the publication of our last issue, a large number of interesting manuscripts have been acquired for the library.
fortunately the
Un- MANUADDI-
are such as to
We
preclude anything but the briefest possible reference to them, must therefore reserve the fuller description for a sub-
On the Oriental side there are nearly a hundred sequent occasion. Pali and other manuscripts on palm leaf, metallic lacquer, or paper,
including a
number
of rare
and unpublished
texts,
together with a
small group of
unknown works
in Bali character,
beyond Java.
Professor
These were acquired through the instrumentality of Rhys Davids, and are the fruits of upwards of thirty years' assiduous collecting by a scholar, who was in constant intercourse
with other scholars in various parts of the East who alone could have assisted him in getting together such a remarkable collection.
Syriac manuscripts there are thirty consisting of Biblical, patristic, and liturgical works, several of which are of great rarity and importance,
Of
acquired
through
or
the
generous
help
of
Dr.
Rendel
a col-
Harris.
Of Western,
volumes
is
Latin and
English manuscripts
of
lection of eighty
of records
which
a volume of the
Abbey, which has been lost sight of for some time, and apparently was unknown to Dodsworth, Dugdale, and the later editors *' of the Monasticon". Two volumes of the Cartulary are in the
Fountains'
British
Museum, and
is
a third
is
in the possession of
Lord Ripon.
It
The
present volume
in
contains nearly
500
folios
of vellum,
and
still
retains
its
interesting
15th
century
The
Papers such as
Close
Rolls, Patent
211
original documents which may prove to be of considerable historical importance, such as Court Rolls, an Ancient Rent Roll of Oswestry,
Book
of Offices
etc., etc.
Hospital,
We
have found
list
portion of the
sions to the
issue.
impossible to redeem our promise to print the F most important of the recent accesj^?JE library which remained over from the last SIGNS,
it
of the
We have had
October
issue.
The
by
Prof.
and
suggestive lecture
on
"The Youth
of Vergil," delivered
Conway
and appreciative O?
"THE U
VERGIL."
lecture, in separate form,
limited
number
of reprints of this
have been
sixpence.
issued,
of
the
usual
agents for
Readers will be glad to learn that our next issue will include an " Mediaeval Burglary," OUR expansion of the lecture entitled
Prof.
Tout
in
January
last.
The
ISSUE.
be
illustrated
by
three facsimiles.
Of
limited
number
of reprints will
be obtainable
Those
of our readers
who were
session.
Tout on the
of a further lecture
by
THE YOUTH OF
BY
R. S.
VERGIL.^
LiTT.D.
CONWAY,
IN
THE UNIVERSITY OF
made
view
MANCHESTER.
other lectures delivered in this Library an attempt has been
IN
which the poet gives us of different sides of human experience, such as the relation of Man to Nature, or the conception of an ideal Our inquiry was then based upon what he wrote at the sovereign.
time of his
fullest
power
the
and published
and the
Aeneid having been left unfinished at his death ten years later. The object of the present lecture is a more difficult, and, in seeming,
perhaps a
less fruitful
endeavour, to frame,
if
we can, some
he
set
picture
of the
himself to any
the great difference between the Georgics on the one side, and almost all the poet's work that
preceded them on the other. Both the two great poems have national, or more than national scope. All those which precede them if we
exceptions which we shall see are in a sense really prove the rule because they mark a transition
except the
IV and
Eclogues,
very reason the poems of date have an interest of their own, just because in them Vergil had that greater freedom which belongs to an artist not yet widely
private performances.
just for this this
Yet
known.
Youth has
its
moods
shifting
between daring invention and gentle, playful loitering in old ways, between fervent outpouring, where the new spirit breaks into vehement
almost violent utterance, and studies modelled humbly upon the work
1
Lecture delivered
it
I
in the
1914.
of
my
am deeply
John Rylands Library on December 9, indebted to the kind and searching criticism
212
W.
B. Anderson.
213
where the
of
is
to represent in a
new
Such a period is difficult to material the work study, because one is apt to judge the work of early years by the work of the artist's maturity, and hence to think little of passages admirable enough in themselves, because they fall short of what came
some older master.
later.
Another
difficulty _ must
be faced
who,
Vergil or Shakespeare, so far outshone in the end every one of his contemporaries that the student finds it difficult to believe that his
like
work may have been* deeply indebted to the encouragement and example of some of the very writers whose fame was destined to be
early
completely eclipsed by
Vergil ambitions
in his
his.
full
of poetic
Varius,
own
bosom-friend Gallus,
;
Varus, Tucca, Pollio, and Vergil's mention no others, were all writers ^to
of verse
away every
it
had come
friend.
we have,
as
we
shall see,
Vergil's
silence.
work with
We know nothing of
whom
poems bound up with some genuine ones in what is called the Appendix Vergiliana^ Nor do we even know (I wish we did) the
Vergil has represented in some of his earlier poems as If we did, we should begin conversing or competing with himself. to understand the Eclogues ; and if we only understood them, they
people
of Vergil's
That
Franz Skutsch
two
lived long
enough
to
open an entirely
who new
died
path
meaning of two of the most difficult of the Eclogues, VI and X, and indeed VIII as well. He showed 2 that as continuous poems they had practically no meaning at all, just as much and as little as the bibliography of a poet in a
for study
by explaining
catalogue.
1
In
what follows
Ellis' text.
Aus
214
in the desperate effort to discover a story where a series of subjects of stories, and a romance in what only is and the only a description of the plots of many romances unfortunate schoolboy, fed upon such husks, naturally deemed the
hammering away
there
needed the incredible explanations offered to him a creature past finding out and certainly not worth finding. Well, we may hope that no more schoolboys will be tormented with
author of the
stuff that
VI and
metrical catalogues of the different poems which Gallus had written. But the rather sorry story of the study of these two poems must warn
no
means
of interpretation than
we
at
present possess.
In the
Eclogue, for
notion
example, what
credible
who
Amaryllis was,
or
who
Galatea,
why
Tityrus should be represented as having been set free from slavery after he became the possession of Amaryllis instead of Galatea, or
what kind
of possession of
they were creatures of l example of a well-known passage of three lines which is totally but which has been interpreted and translated with unintelligible
;
him was ever claimed by these ladies, if Here we have an flesh and blood at all.
sublime stupidity for some nineteen centuries by people not confess their ignorance.
who would
We
which
wholly
will
far
Vergil's poetic
is
life
we
now
to consider
It
not
show that the work that Vergil needs a good deal of study, and it published before he was thirty
irrelevant.
will
at least
also
serve to
explain
why
this
lecture
will
invite
attention
work
between
his sixteenth
and
we
can view
this in its
But we must proceed with caution, because in the bundle of poems in which this juvenile work of Vergil is included, there are a certain number which it is quite certain cannot
of that
may
tell
possibly
himself.
poem addressed
c/.
1.31-3.
215
for
Maecenas
Maecenas,
by
his
name and
Vergil's,
argument all the poems except those which fulfil two conditions they must bear some distinctive trace of Vergil's manner, and they must contain no passage which for any clear reason it is
any
serious
;
difficult to attribute to
him.
These
tests
still
leave us,
think,
some
four or five
poems which
"
;
Farmer's Salad," a curiously interesting genre picture of rustic * three charming little epigrams on Priapus, the god of gardens
less
charming autobiographical poems, which if they were not written by Vergil were certainly written by some poet trained Of in precisely the same style and breathing the same gentle spirit.
is
known
for
its
the most important, and the internal evidence Vergilian authorship, I confess, seems to me rather difficult to
as the
Copa,
is
disregard.
Beyond and after these stands the delightful poem of the transition, the climax to which Vergil's earliest poetic ambitions brought him, This only to disclose that even so he had barely realized his power. 3 was, of course, the IV Eclogue, which partly by accident but more
by nature blossomed into a peculiar sanctity and lent to its author the 4 Some of the title and influence of an inspired Christian teacher.
chief features of the poetry of this
Eclogue
we
shall
be
able,
think,
to trace in course of
growth
and
Mr.
"
The
Mackail writes of this (Class. Rev. XXII. (1908), p. 72) : J. internal evidence for the Vergilian authorship is so good that it
W.
would require but little external support ". 2 See below, p. 26. 3 This dates from 40 B.C. The Fifth was written some two years sooner, probably at the celebration of Julius Caesar's memory on his birthday in
July, 42.
The mourning
of
Rome
is
represented by
the sorrow of the rivers and the forests for the fair shepherd Daphnis. Did ever a young poet approach a grave theme by steps more shy ?
4
&
Conway
907).
216
ful
poem
Let us take, as a kind of background to our view, the poem already mentioned, once attributed to Vergil but now clearly shown to
be the work of
This miniature
epic,
called the
540
lines, is
This lady, as the poet points out to be carefully distinguished from the more
famous Scylla
who was
way
it
whose
upon
gentle
the neighbour of the whirlpool Charybdis and was to lie in wait in the cliffs of Sicily to prey
This, the Homeric Scylla, is of course they passed. but the only some old-world sailor's picture of a tropical cuttle-fish who is the subject of the Ciris was the daughter of Nisus, Scylla
sailors as
:
whom
Nisus held his throne by a tenure which a modern monarch would think peculiar, but which is familiar to us in the folkwar.
this
Now
lore of
many
lands.
He
of hair
in
the
middle of
also
his head,
and so long
to remain
in love
kingdom
his
only with the invader, King Minos, though how daughter Scylla she came to set eyes upon him the poem does not tell us, beyond the
fell
was
destined
Unluckily
for
him,
that
Juno
sent
Cupid
Book
of the
which the growth of the passion of Dido for the stranger king way /Eneas is traced. But in Gallus' poem, however Scylla's love bein
its
hopeless victim
a bacchante or a priestess of Cybele, not stopeither to perfume her hair or put on slippers ping or necklace, but continually making excuses to go to the walls to watch
like
we
are told
the Cretan army, of which Minos is in command. She cannot spin or weave or play the psaltery ; her cheeks lose all their colour, and
she
is
kill
her.
She
death
But creeping over her flesh/ so the poet describes her condition. she at once thinks of the expedient of cutting off the fatal lock from
The di82). per uiscera mortem (1. absurd in Latin than in the nearest rendering possible in English, but it is every whit as undignified.
Tabidulamque videt
adjective
is
labi
minutive
perhaps
less
217
of intro-
to
Minos
as a
means both
ducing
l
herself to
him and
Here
the poet
inserts
a few lines of prudent but (where they stand) rather prosaic that perhaps after all she was ignorant of the digression, suggesting fatal effect that the cutting of this lock would have upon her father's
fortunes
this, it
but he does not stay to consider why, if she did not know should ever have occurred to her to send such a curious present
;
to the prince
whom
Young
Without
ladies
are not
wont
of their affection,
this difficulty the
so far as
my
experience goes.
solving
poet proceeds, in fifteen lines, to prophesy the ultimate fate of Nisus and Scylla, viz. to be changed into birds. And
of relief to this
he
calls
upon
all
who
ride
upon the
pretty
pair,'
to
number
is
to
Nisus and Scylla, for they will augment the number of princely their own rank who have been turned
from human beings into birds, of whom particular specimens are mentioned. Why the birds, whether originally human or not, should
there
be so pleased about the new arrivals, does not appear but apparently was no doubt about it in the poet's mind, because he repeats the
;
word Rejoice
is
thoroughly in the
Alexandrine
of
showing
his
knowledge
of mythical ornithology,
and
linking
up
his
own
particular myth with several others of the same kind, a process with which, on a vast scale, most of us are tolerably familiar in Ovid's
Metamorphoses. Coming back to his story, the poet proceeds to another type of composition beloved of Alexandrine and later poets, namely an interview between a heroine and her confidante. Scylla
rises at night, scissors in
but she
'
is
caught on the
way by
who
'
twentysaffron-
chilly-little
Scylla's
they are
cannot resist the suspicion that these lines (185-89) are Vergil's; marked by most Vergilian pauses (see below, p. 9 footnote) and some Vergilian diction. If so, were they written by him as a suggested In 1. 190 Tu must surely be right beginning for a new turn to the story?
l
for the
Heu
of the
(XV-cent.) codices.
218
coloured night-dress and after another 1 00 lines of conversation puts her back into bed, taking care to extinguish the light by turning its wick upside down. Then she stays gently patting Scylla to quiet her,
and
'
up beside her all night bending over her chilly-little eyes, propped up on her elbow '. This thrilling scene has filled altogether 50 lines. In the morning the nurse persuades Scylla to try magic
sits
1
arts in the
hope
of persuading Nisus to
lines,
make
peace.
They, however,
breakneck speed
are
all
exhausted in thirty
plot.
But
in
Nisus
is
city captured, and Scylla carried off (presumably by Minos, though we are not told how) and dragged through the sea by a rope attached to
one of the
manner.
ships.
This passage
is
most characteristic
of the author's
Again, therefore, Scylla becomes the foe of her father's head ; then the lock of hair which blossomed with Tyrian purple is cut then is taken and the oracles of the gods made good then the maiden, Megara
;
'
daughter of Nisus, suspended in strange fashion from the dragged through the blue sea.'
tall
ships, is
Clearly our narrator can make up for lost time when he chooses. Having got his heroine thus speedily into the water, what does it occur
to
him
to say next ?
No
1
guess.
in
'A
team
the
great
number
of
the water.
Father
Ocean admires her, and fair Tethys, and Galatea, hurrying her eager sisters The nymph, too, who is wont to traverse the great seas with a along.
of fishes,
little
and a sea-green car of two-footed horses, Leucothea, and Also the two gods whose Palaemon beside his divine mother.
;
destiny it is to live alternate days, the dear offspring of Jupiter, his great * sons, the children of the daughter of Tyndareus they too admire the
But
this
admiration
lifts
is
quite platonic
not one of
all this
menagerie
of sea-gods
That
climax
a word
is how the poet of the Ciris comports himself at the tragical Indeed "runs" is too weak he simply runs away from it. he bolts. And then he takes refuge behind a whole ware-
This
stuff serves to
fill
sixteen lines
That
Complures, the most prosaic of all possible epithets. is, Castor and Pollux, described in only four different ways.
219
we come
No
or
piece of
need
to
be told
who
wrote these
lines
frigid
why we have
Alexandrine fantasy.
of
some
fifty
lines,
the variations in
which are hardly less remarkable. Scylla begins with a request to the winds to keep quiet for a little while she speaks and then turns to a careful account of her own kinship with them according to the best
;
mythology.
Minos
is
we
then denounced for having broken his bargain have never been told when the bargain was
a few lines (418-24) of penitence naturally and feelingly worded, succeeded by rhetorical self-reproaches in which she dwells on the luxury and artistic adornment of her father's palace,
sacrificed
'
Then come
by her
in order to befriend
Minos.
The
and
tear-like
rich palace with its delights did not move me, with its frail coral gems of amber, nor all the crowd of attendant nymphs of
what would he not have contemples will not now be moist with rich myrrh, nor will nor will my bedthe bridal pine-torch kindle for me its chaste flame stead be of ivory nor spread with Assyrian purple rugs. These are great
age.
my own
quered
My
;
nor will even the earth, common mother of complaints her foster-child with a handful of sand/
all
things,
bury
and
Gallus clearly flattered himself on a knowledge of feminine taste at the critical points of the tragedy, here as before, 2 he leaves
;
room
grave matters of
toilet
and
furniture
When
twenty
the speech
is
ended
we
The
sea-eagle.
1
Aen.
ii.
made more
pointed, with
improvements. 2 LI. 167-70 see above, p. 5. The detail is thoroughly Alexandrine, as Prof. W. B. Anderson reminds me cf. Apoll. Rhod. III. 828 ff.
slight
; ;
two other
220
Even
poem
will,
impossible
in fact
not to prove, that it is quite to attribute any but occasional parts of it to Vergil and
to suggest,
;
we
have
definite
ground
'
it
was
not written
by him but by
For
in a note
on Eclogue
46) Servius remarks that all these lines/ presumably those in the context, are taken from the poems of Callus and a little
(1.
'
farther
in the
on
(11.
58,
59)
we have two
striking phrases
which appear
Ciris
(11.
Eclogue VI, which, no less than the Tenth, as again 2 Skutsch has shown, is a catalogue describing a number of different
poems, there are four lines allotted to Scylla, the daughter of Nisus. More than three of them are taken up with distinguishing her from the
And
Homeric
Scylla
directly
These lines in the sixth Eclogue which the poet is instructed to sing about on which Servius remarks that Grynean grove
two
in
'
this
the poems of the Alexandrine writer, Euphorion, which Callus translated into Latin '. know that the poems of
the
title
was
of
We
worked up
into miniature
1 Let me add two confirmatory points of a definite nature which to some minds may be more convincing than any general estimate of poetic The first is the use of several words which appear nowhere character. in the works certainly attributed to Vergil, e.g. the two diminutives frigidulus (11. 251, 348) and tabidulus (1. 182): the Greek words sophia thallos (I. 376); and the colloquial use of nulla (1. 4), peplos (1. 21), for nunquam. The second point is one which will appeal 77) (I. especially to those who have been through the discipline of composing
1
Latin hexameters, the remarkable frequency of long stretches of the Ciris with no pauses, or very few, anywhere except at the end of the line. Thus in the first eleven lines there are no pauses at all elsewhere in the in the next twenty only five. next ten only three, and those very slight Similarly in 11. 72-88 there are very few except at the end of a line, and The same monotony there is a pause at the end of every one of them. in Catullus' hexameters. But even in the most youthful work of appears
;
is marked, and in fact this part of Vergil's technique is not the least beautiful of his gifts to Latin poetry. And in the lines which we noted in the Ciris as being possibly, for
other reasons, due to Vergil (4 8-24) there are no less than seven pauses at other points than the end and so in 403 and in 1 85-89.
1 ;
See
p.
2 foo'note.
221
;
of the type
and
this
it
is
quite
poems from
book, the
almost wholly in the Ciris (51). Servius has been made by Skutsch the basis of a careful and convincing analysis of several of the Eclogues of Vergil
which have
to
do
The practice of with Gallus and contain quotations from the Ciris. complimenting a poet by summarizing his poem and giving a line or
two from
it
was
and
II
poem on
Tibullus
(A mores
9) and Before
Statius' birthday
we
poem on Lucan (Silvae II. 7). leave the Ciris it is worth while to notice some
of the
made
in the lines
he took over.
is
The
treatment
to sailors
compact
line,
marching
of the fact.
But when
into
is
timidos a
new
suddenly introduced. ) we have another change to exactly the same purpose in the sub-
note of both dramatic and pathetic intensity And in the same Eclogue (1. 8 1 = Ciris, 1.
an adjective
of
On
among
the other
hand
among
Georgics, because their connexion with the context in which they stand is implied rather than indicated the lines describing the pursuit
of the osprey
by the
I.
sea-eagle,
pursuit of Scylla
of signs of fine
weather (Georgics
the conclusion of
These examples,
besides their intrinsic interest, give valuable evidence of the priority of the Ciris ; and there are a great number of others. 1
1 I may be permitted to quote here a few sentences in which Mr. J. W. Mackail (Class. Rev. XXII. 1908, p. 69), expresses his own conclusions
is the work of Gallus, to something of the same exEclogues are the work of Vergil, we cannot, I think, in view of the whole evidence reasonably doubt. But the two young poets were not
tent as the
222
From
panion
is
we
poem
survey of the work of Vergil's friend and comturn to the earliest poem of Vergil himself. The Culex of 413 lines, which, according to a strongly confirmed
tradition (Donatus,
Vita Vergilii,
7),
years old,
i.e.
in the year
54
B.C.
Before testing
of the poem.
The
the story of a gnat (or mosquito), a curious theme for a poet even
in his teens.
But no one
who
swallows and
mice and moles, will think it strange that the boy's imagination should have been caught ty so common a feature of shepherd's life in Northern Italy as the
flycatchers, ants
and
bees,
field
swarms
*
of gnats that
forest
to take
(Culex, 22).
an
and
a pretty
conceit
airy
movements
and
own
humble
subjects natural
common
. .
They worked
at their art
together.
Coleridge
years gave a statement of what he had contributed to Wordsworth's pieces, The poems came into and Wordsworth to his, in the Lyrical Ballads. their authors being through the interpenetration of genius between the two were the Wordsworth who was influenced by Coleridge, and the Cole. . . :
ridge
who was
influenced by Wordsworth.
And this would be true even if the relation between Vergil and Gallus. it were the case that the sensuous, brilliant, erratic Gallus was as far below Coleridge in essential poetic genius as the brooding, solitary Vergil was
above Wordsworth.
"...
We may trace,
think, in the
the
common
.
case
.
shoots ahead, but soon comes to its limit. The author of the Ciris seems to write with ease and to have a great The Ciris begins natural gift of imitating the style of his predecessors. with four lines which are pure Catullus, followed by a dozen which are lines are indeed throughout a brilliant The first Lucretius.
.
pure
fifty
Then the Verexercise or variation in a synthesis of these two styles. which gilian note comes in for the first time, in half a dozen lines (48-53)
It is as R.S.C.], Vergilian phrases [and of Vergilian pauses. himself had sat down by Gallus and guided his pen, or as though Vergil though Gallus had suddenly felt and begun to reproduce Vergil's own
are
full of
223
by the Here
stars.
We
have played
in verse, Octavius,
be
cobweb now the play is done. so shall the line its name
;
praise.
to the
lines).
These forty lines exhibit in their structure a rather interesting parallel exordium of the Georgics, which is of much the same length (42
In both Prefaces the passage invoking the help of rustic deities of both 18 lines in the Italian origin (12 lines in the Culex,
Greek and
Georgics) is put in the middle, between passages which to a modern reader seem more directly relevant. For in each case the opening lines (11 in the Culex and 5 in the Georgics) give the name and purpose and the of the poem with the name of the person to whom it is dedicated lines in the Culex and 19 in the Georgics) concluding passage (17 explains the special claim of the subject to the help of the chosen
;
This parallelism is of particular interest to me, because if we are I hope we shall be, of the Vergilian authorship of the Culex, it a confirmation of the interpretation which I have suggested supplies (Class. Association Proceedings, Manchester, 1906, p. 35) for the address to Caesar in this part of the Georgics. It is the passage in which the question is asked what kind of deity Caesar will assume whether he will be a god of earth or heaven or sea or of the underworld, and this has some commentators, indeed, have turned their own given great trouble The puzzle becomes puzzlement into an excuse for deriding the poet. clear, I venture to think, so soon as one sees that the four alternatives are that is to say, the question which the poet of the Georgics really literary is really asking is what kind of subject he shall choose for the poem which Caesar is to patronize. Shall he write on Astronomy or Agriculture or Exploration oversea or the life of the After-world? All were subjects on
patron.
satisfied, as
; ; ;
which other authors of his time were busy, and the last was that to which he himself felt a paramount attraction all through his life, and to which at length he devoted the greatest Book of the Aeneid. Now in the dedication of the Culex to a boy whose name is Octavius, the first paragraph, as we have seen, mentions him by name only, but, just as in the Georgics, the third paragraph tells us also what other subjects the poet might have chosen, but does not think fit for a poem dedicated to him he will not write of war, such as that between Zeus and the giants, or that of the Centaurs; nor of the feat of Xerxes in a canal through cutting Mount Athos or building a bridge over the Hellespont nor of the invasion of Greece by the Persians. Is not this parallelism of structure remarkably
; ;
close ?
16
224
We
will account
In both his
to blame the Muse's jest, him lighter than the Gnat name and person. But one day
This playful Muse will speak in deeper tones, Pruning her poems to be worth your heed, If changing times can make my toil secure.
Lusimus, Octavi, gracili modulante Thalia, tenuem formauimus orsum haec propter Culicis sint carmina dicta, lusimus omnis ut historiae per ludum consonet ordo
atque, ut araneoli,
: ;
doctumque uoces, licet inuidus adsit. quisquis erit culpare iocos Musamque paratus, pondere uel Culicis leuior famaque feretur.
notitiae
:
posterius grauiore sono tibi Musa loquetur nostra, dabunt cum secures mihi tempora fructus,
ut tibi
rustic
drama,
is
introduced to
us,
When the shepherd the sunny sward covers the spreading hills *. appears the sun has just risen, filling the sky with wonderful colours,
and
midday the flock find their way down into the valley, with its many-hued and many-scented plants pleasant for the reader to some of the sheep take the imagine and for the sheep to nibble
at
;
opportunity of watching their reflexions in the stream beneath them. The details of the scene bear many resemblances to the description
of the shepherd's retreat in
the lines
and Georgics (467-74) that follow (57-97) are quite clearly an early study of the
II
Book
of the
whole passage
of the
in the
Georgics (458-531) in which the happiness contrasted with the unhealthy and pretentious
lines will
show
its
purpose
good the shepherd's blessings if untaught uncorrupt, he scorns not humble ways I Dreams that no luxury knows refresh his sleep And laugh at cares that wring the miser's heart.
How
And
bona pastoris, si quis non pauperis usum mente prius docta fastidiat, et probet illi
somnia luxuriae spretis incognita curis quae lacerant auidas inimico pectore mentes.
225
we
midday watering
The wandering
Move
slowly
at his
summons
to the shoal
Beneath the whispering spring, the clear blue pool Under green banks asleep in mossy shade.
revels in colour.
When
the
from the sun, the shepherd finds a place for his own the wood, we learn, was that in which a queen of tragedy siesta rested after the terrible madness in which she had slain her own son,
all safe
Pentheus
it is
nymphs
river
of the trees
itself
and
of the springs in
Peneus
stops to listen
its
dance and song, so that the to them. Every one of the trees
has
its
colour and
story,
and
different colours
and shapes
if
I
of decoration which,
his description of
am
(Enone's bower.
of
The wood
is full its
of birds
their
twitterings,
echoes,
and the
of the whispering
;
breeze in the tree-tops, all lull the shepherd to sleep the epithets are intentionally repeated from the describing his careless slumber But now the plot begins to thicken ; passage describing rustic life.
the shepherd asleep, the second character appears.
A great serpent
comes
to cool himself in
all
furnished with
some soft pool. I need hardly say that he is the colours that the most respectable, indeed dis;
He is indignant that tongue quivers, some man has come to a pool which he counted his own, and he The sleeper's hours seem numbered, .but help poises to attack him.
and
his crest
is
splendidly erect.
is
at
hand.
little
planting her
if
sting
full in
gnat in pity rouses him to escape the danger, the middle of the shepherd's forehead
;
the shepherd corrupt line but in anger, and kills the gnat. Then seeing the serpent he wakes, at first retreats, but soon plucks a bough from a tree and beats the snake to death so ends the first half of the poem. But that night
that
is
;
my
conviction
that in English
gnat
226
when
fallen
he
is
visited
who
re-
proaches him
of the
Because I counted your life dearer than my own I am now the sport winds in empty places. You are resting at ease in happy sleep, saved from bitter calamity but my form is driven across the waves of Lethe by the powers of the world below.
;
After
this brief
all
advantage of the Shepherd's sleeping hours to give him a picture, in 50 lines, of the underworld to which she is now condemned. One
1
little
creature has
made
for
having only
left
is
prepared to lecture with eloquence and feeling on all the things and persons that are to be found in the region This incongruity once granted, we must, I she has newly entered.
ten o'clock at night she
think,
is
skill
and with
which give promise of the power with which on handled the same themes. First of all come Tisi; ;
then the penalties of the wicked on which the gnat naively remarks that the sight of other people's misery makes her forget her own, a touch which, if it is boyish, is also thoroughly
The gnat adds, if the text and its apparent interpretation can be trusted, that she is willing to suffer the penalty again if she
Vergilian.
criminals
of the
1
Among
the
for whom later on Vergil found no a brief transition to Elysium, where Persepass by place. phone leads a procession of maidens in honour of the noble women
Then we
who
abide there.
It is
an interesting feature
the Blessed
there are
women among
;
Alcestis,
Penelope, Eurydice.
he admitted women, properly qualified of course, to the full franchise of Elysium but, alas, after thirty years' experience he could
sixteen
find
to
At
no
women whom
of
any part
And
full
then follows the story of Eurydice in a brief twenty-five lines, of points which both remind us of the richer treatment of the story
1
Otus and Ephialtes are added, Sisyphus and the Danaids, Medea and Procne, Eteocles and Polynices.
227
Fourth Book of the Georgics and disappoint us in the comand yet lines, I venture to say, which if they had not been parison
so far transcended
worthy
*
of a true poet.
The
passage
Let
described as
faithfully carrying out the bidding of the gods and not moving her eyes or but Orpheus was more cruel, who in his hunger for a dear kiss speaking broke the divine command. 'Twas a love that claimed forgiveness, a gentle
;
fault,
if
peccatum
Here we have
cum
subito incautum dementia cepit amantem, ignoscenda quidem, scirent si ignoscere Manes.
A
Then we
Telamon,
lover,
Worthy
pass to the manly heroes, first the Greeks, Peleus and then Ulysses and his comrades, and then many Trojans,
avoid the Greeks even in Elysium. This abiding enmity is a feature reproduced from the Homeric underworld but in Vergil's
;
who
it
is
is
Limbo
The
is
Elysium mention of
all
enmity
in
there
is
Agamemnon
be a
little
were shipwrecked,
beginning to
some twenty
But by
this
ashamed,
concludes her revelation by a ten-line-catalogue Here again we have anticipations of the Sixth
Aeneid, and one or two figures for whom later on had no room, such as Horatius, Curtius, and Mucius Scaevola. Vergil Last of all come the Scipios
Whose
Beneath
conquering name the walls of ruined Carthage their doom of weeds still shudder at.
And
happy
lot
of these
immortal heroes
misfortune and again reproaches the shepherd for his cruelty, finally, however, invoking upon him not, like most other I ghosts, a curse, but a gentle blessing. depart never to see thee more but do thou dwell happy beside thy stream and the green
to her
' ;
own
forest land
After so kind a
visit
the shepherd
is
228
tomb
of earth
and
honour of the gnat, planting it with a crowd of wonderful flowers, setting upon it an inscription saying that the shepherd offers to the
So the poem gnat this tomb in gratitude for her having saved his life. ends in a garden of colour and fragrance, warm with the gratitude paid by a human member of creation to a tiny non-human creature
who had
Georgics,
sacrificed
herself
for
his
sake.
of the
I wonder, venture to say that all this is not Vergil and through ? through " But perhaps some hard-headed critic may reply, After all, can
this
boyish
stuff,
however playful
its
master-poet
Need we
was
weak
lines, so
many
many
first
Let
me
;
then
remind you that Vergil himself did all he could to suppress the and then Culex, and indeed the whole of his youthful work
of
Tennyson,
who
suppressed
So we
who
in his
lines.
other
think,
is
specimens a
to reproduce
poem two
called
Anacaona.
worth while,
which
Warbling
Stepping
liana,
lightly flower-laden,
By
gay,
cocca-shadow'd coves,
sunbright Xaraguay,
Of
Who
was
so
happy
as
Anacaona,
All her loving childhood Breezes from the palm and canna Fann'd this queen of the green wildwood,
Lady of the green Savannah All day long with laughing eyes, Dancing by a palmy bay,
;
He
mentions in a
letter,
quoted
in the
Biography
(p.
10),
one boyish
229
The Indian queen, Anacaona, Dancing on the blossomy plain To a woodland melody
;
The
dragon-fly and scarlet crane, Beneath the papao tree Happy, happy was Anacaona, The beauty of Espagnola, The golden flower of Hayti
!
!
Muse grew into the power which Arthur and In Memoriam. Passing of
Yet
If
this
facile
inspired
The
turn to the positive evidence for the authenticity of the In the Culex, no reasonable person can, I think, remain in doubt. 1 " the external evidence Mackail rightly says, first place, as Mr. J.
we
W.
is
tions
it
Martial twice
attri-
butes a
poem
of this
name
and XIV,
185).
Suetonius in his
Lucan
his
comparing
Life of
;
own
youthful
work
to
the
Culex ;
Donatus
in his
Vergil, states that Vergil wrote it when he was sixteen years old and then goes on to describe the story of the poem just as we have it,
quoting the
II.
two lines. Statius makes Calliope prophesy (Siluae 7, 73), that Lucan will write his poem on the death of Pompey at a younger age than Vergil's when he wrote the Culex ; and in
last
the Preface to
this
Book
of the Siluae,
*
poem, saying that there is not preluded his works by some compositions in lighter style *. Mr. " Mackail adds justly that in a matter of this sort, Statius, who was
not only a scholar and poet but a profound student and positive That the poem worshipper of Vergil, could hardly be mistaken.
1
230
known
there
No
less
Vergil's acknowledged work have been Miss Elizabeth Jackson, Faulkner Fellow of the Univerby Manchester and even that list does not exhaust the points
;
Let me quote here a few examples have carried absolute conviction to resemblance which
that might be cited.
started with great unwillingness to regard the
of the kind of
my
mind.
poem
as Vergilian, mainly
which
is
wonderful
(
1
nee
faciles Ditis
(Cul. 275.)
iudice sedes.
(Aen.vi 431.)
pulsatus equorum.
(Cul. 33.) qui nimbos et non imitabile fulmen acre et cornipedum p u 1 s u simularat equorum.
demens
(3)
si
non
(Aen.Vl 590-1.)
alba neque
(Cul. 62.)
s s
465.)
The whole
blances
;
passage
relation
in
and the
the Georgics shows repeated resembetween the two, and their common kin(II,
1
ff.)
by Miss
Jackson
(I.e.).
(4) et
et
pige
aurato
procedit Vesper
ab Oeta.
(Cul. 203.)
inuito processit
t
Vesper
Olympo. (Ed.
uix
VI. 86.)
(5) ad S
y g
reuoc
atus aquas,
ultimus amni
(Cul. 240.)
extat nectareas
escas.
mnemque
seuerum
aspicies.
163.
231
(Cut. 262.)
hmereasque
lit
in
r r
e faces.
(Aen. VII. 337.) caespite terram (7) gramineam iam memor inceptum peragens sibi cura laborem congestum cumulauit opus.
uiridi foderet
de
(Cut. 393.)
pauperis et tuguri
congestum caespite
culmen.
(Ed.
"
i.
68.)
soft echoes of sound are peculiarly important they would occur to a mere imitator, but they might well linger in the hardly mind of the poet who first conceived them. If Vergil did not write
Such
the Culex,
it
it
would seem
known
by heart for a long period of years 'V That the preface of the poem was written before 44 B.C. is be2 yond doubt, and we shall soon see that 50 B.C. is a more probable
date.
It
it
doubted poems
(which are
all later
be due to imitation
but must imply an
part
of these
poems by
Culex on the
of Vergil himself.
may
poem
those
is,
who
quite
of course,
unworthy
it
of his
maturity
been
poem
so careful, in
fact, as to
have learnt
inclined to differ
No one, I think, will be almost by heart. from Dr. Warde Fowler, perhaps the weightiest and
:
most conservative authority in this country on the study of Vergil, when he writes 3 "It seems to me to have been proved by Miss Jackson that the poem is an early work of Vergil ".
Being
of this
now in possession of the general content and poem we may turn to the interesting biographical
its
character
questions
The
composition and its dedication 4 third part of the Preface (11. 24-
Miss E. Jackson,
I.e. p.
69.
See, e.g. Skutsch, Aus Vergils Fruhzeit^ p. 134. Class. Rev. XXVIII. 1914, p. 119.
The
2 footnote.
232
'
And do you in whom my confidence is fixed, if only what is written be worthy enough, revered child of the Octavian house, come like some Come innocent boy, for this bird of good omen to speed my attempt. to you of no dire warfare like the conflict between Jove and page sings
the giants.'
Who
him, and
It
is
was
this
Octavius
Why
was
the
poem
dedicated to
why especially on the ground of its having a peaceful subject ? be a gentle theme told in unambitious verse, fit for his own powers if Phoebus will but guide him that is to say, in the language of prose, the poet is choosing a subject which most people would
to
;
The
a shining crown upon his forehead, that he a place in a home of honour and affection (sede
like
pia), and that the unharmed life of security, which is his due, may be the theme of men's gratitude through many happy years shining
in
prosperity.
We
may
'
fairly ask
in
that age,
of the
word
for
;
would have composed such a blessing ? The lucens, shining is a mark of Vergil's taste
'
repetition
;
and the
not
less
desire
the child,
that he should
be
in
pia
sede,
is
Vergilian
is
the
upon the
whom
at least
Elysium, those
who by good
have made
memores
aliquos fecere
merendo
(Aen.V\.
664).
'
Dr.
Warde
is
Fowler's conclusion
the
can hardly be
resisted.
The
Octavius to
whom
poem
is
dedicated
was
There
edition,
one other possible candidate for the honour (see Leo's p. 22), but there is an almost universal agreement that the
language of these lines forbids us to think of any boy but the nephew
of the dictator Julius Caesar."
follows from
this.
Let
me
quote Dr.
"All
this
dedication seems to
strict
me
was
He
is
asked to
233
His
is,
poem because
before him
:
the theme
is
whole
life is
and
;
nay,
the poet seems to suggest a hope that he may live to be a man of I cannot think that such a poem, with such a dedication, peace. could have been addressed to Octavius after he had taken his toga
virilis.
epithets
The That event took place on October 8, 48 B.C. sanchcs and uenerandus are mainly suggested by the tender
l
I am age and innocence of the boy. ready to accept the view that they are rendered still more appropriate by the fact that this boy was the
nephew
Gaul, to
with the poet's family beyond doubt among them, had long been
looking up as their political champion. " . If we could be sure that the two boys had already met when the dedication was written, we should also be justified in seeing a
. .
words
for Octavius,
if
we
may
trust the
young creatures was marked Euryalus, Lausus, has any poet ever touched with such pure tenderness of feeling I am the most beautiful types of boyhood in portraits such as these ?
poet's love for all
Pallas
and Octavius may actually have met in the year 50 B.C., when the elder was about twenty and the younger thirteen. At the end of the eighth book of the De Bello Gallico
inclined to think that Vergil
*
'
came
to Cisalpine
;
Gaul
in the province
also that
he was received
in
We
Romans
like
But Octavius was the one hope of the family, and Cicero and Caesar felt tenderly towards the boys in
whom
"It
1
they placed their hopes, and wished to see them after long absence, like our Indian parents of to-day.
is
pleasant to think
to
it
may have
seen
to render completely untenable the view suggested Rev. X. 1896, p. 182) that the poem dated from 4544. But the very interesting links between the scene of 11. 109-156 and the Thesprotian region, with which Robinson Ellis was mainly concerned in that article, deserve fuller investigation. 2 Cum liberis omnis multitude obuiam procedebat.
This appears
me
by Robinson
Ellis (Cl.
234
any
case,
would
50
B.C.
is
earlier,
tells
perhaps when
was only
Donatus
us
To
this
venture to add a few lines from the postscript which me to append to the article just quoted " It
:
seems most probable, indeed almost necessary, to suppose that in the Transpadane country Caesar would have met so able and important
a landowner as Vergil's father.
Anyone who
must realize what a sweep of country is described in the Ninth 1 Speaking from memory, I should think that this Eclogue (7-9).
would mean an
of the
compass the
may be
located.
The
support of such a
man, especially
his
as
prosperity
knowledge of agriculture and of bee-keeping and his enthusiasm for learning, was just such a source of strength as the enlightened and knowJulius would be most anxious to draw to his own side
;
ing what we do of the relation between Vergil and his father, from almost every book of the Aeneid, who can doubt that the old man
would have
and lovable
genius of the lad into as close touch as he could with the great and
god-like patron of the Transpadanes ?
"
Altogether
it
appears to
me
Fowler conjures up of the big boy Vergil taking the little boy Octavius round the Mantuan farm and showing him, to their common delight, all the creatures and places to which he himself was equally
attached as boy, farmer, and poet,
is
one
too
emperor was fifteen years old. Let us turn in conclusion to two of the poems (VII and
1
X)
in the
qua
se
subducere colles
incipiunt mollique
iugum demittere
cliuo
usque ad aquam.
This argument
connecting the
of
modern
course depends on the trustworthiness of the tradition Pietole with the ancient Andes.
235
Katalepton ". These two have been almost universally acknowledged as genuine, although it must be confessed that some of their surroundings in the collection are quite
as the
known
"
un- Vergilian.
sopher, Siro,
Both
of
whom we know
of the
whom
;
he regarded with veneration. The later of the two poems sprang from the misfortune that befell Vergil and his father in the Civil War for when they were expelled from their own ample estate they
took refuge in the small country house with the modest ground attached that had once belonged to Siro, and by him had been counted
*
great riches
'.
The
other,
which
is
worth considering
history.
It
in full,
marks
an
interesting
pressions with
of education
epoch which he
in the poet's
left
inward
two branches
viz.
chief
vogue
at
Rome,
rhetoric
and also how it seemed his duty to bid good-bye, or almost good-bye, to his chief delight, that of writing poetry, because he felt it laid upon him to be a philosopher.
and grammar
rhetorum ampullae,
tuque, o
uale,
mearum
;
Sabine
iam
ualete, formosi.
nos ad beatos uela mittimus portus, magni petentes docta dicta Sironis,
uitamque ab omni uindicabimus cura. ite hinc, Camenae, uos quoque ite iam, sane nam fatebimur uerum, dulces Camenae dulces fuistis et tamen meas chartas reuisitote, sed pudenter et raro.
; :
The
stuff that
rhetoricians teach,
;
Big words by Attic wit ungraced And you, dull tribe of ample waist, Whose barren joy it is to hammer Young heads with ding-dong rules of grammar You too, my friend of friends, good-bye No more to your fair class come I But setting sail 'neath sterner skies, And seeking havens of the wise,
!
;
236
And
lofty lore
life
now and
then.
In this boyish
poem we
first
a love directed to a very different side of that protean creature from the severe and sober Stoicism which claimed him in the end. One
boys
lines bidding farewell to his fellow- schoola farewell which refers merely to the end of their daily com-
were very likely written when Vergil was fresh panionship in study from reading the whole of Lucretius' poem, De Rerum Natura, in which, as we all know, the poet-philosopher, while embracing the
ethical
teaching of Epicurus,
worked out
his
heroic
and
attempt at a
setting
forth of the
its
author's
55
B.C.,
This poem was published after when Vergil was fifteen and in
;
B.C.
we may
the
the
more
technical part,
and had
fills
felt
the
glow
of admiration if or the
now
mind
difficult
of every reader
who comes
thusiasm
is
first
can doubt problems. does when his enyoung philosopher kindled, that he might live to out-do his master and
Who
himself to penetrate
somehow
to the great
'
That
wise
is
*.
what he means by
beatos portus
But
how was
this
?
to
be done
What
the date
philosopher to
follow
Remember
55
to
50
B.C.
the
years of a steadily darkening horizon in the political world, the shadow of the most gigantic of the Civil Wars that even
when
Rome
had
suffered
active
was deepening month by month the politicians went about Italy, sometimes even
;
years in which
in
Rome, with
and
on
their
1
opponents
237
Now,
as
think
Warde Fowler
of
for
philosophy
has pointed out, the day-to-day, hand-to-mouth pleasure, which says "eat and drink as happily as
you may,
to-morrow
we
shall
much
favour
among men
except in epochs
when
the framework of
society has
family-ties,
and
been loosened and when regular occupation, property, In such times life itself have all become precarious.
men's working faith in the steadiness of the universe, in the existence and old-fashioned principles corresof a good providence, is shaken
;
life in settled
the
Copa,
1.
and impossible.
The
is very clear all through Lucretius* amidst the horrors of political life, nature still provides her poem simple pleasures for anyone who will take them without question and without vain dreams of avarice and ambition or cruel dreams of
;
It is under the influence of power. soon after his poetry begins. very
we
find Vergil
The charming
is full
elegiac
poem
called Copa, or
x
Mine
Hostess, which
language and scenery, gives us a vivid creed at its best. I had hoped to be able to picture of the Epicurean but time forbids. Notice only the endinclude some account of it
of Vergilian beauties of
;
ing.
rest
in the
garden of her
dusty wayfarer come and ends with a brief and sudden touch of solem-
Mors aurem
4
uellens, Viuite,
ait,
uenio.
cries,
Live now,
come
*.
After
text of
and
it is
a
it
grow
rather tired
such stimulus as
gives
1
is
In the
agony
of the Civil
Wars
the youth
Among the more formal points of Vergilian style may be mentioned the half-plaintive introductory question Quid iuuat (1. 5, cf. Aen. II. 776) ; the repetition of *r/(ll. 20-21, cf. Georg. IV. 387, Aen. VI. 792, IX.
205); and among more substantial likenesses rumpunt arbusta cicadae (1. 27, cf. Georg. in. 327) prolue uitro (1. 29, cf. Aen. I. 739) and the construction suaue rubentia (1. 19, cf. e.g. Aen. VI. 201). The riddle which Mr. J. W. Mackail leaves unsolved (Latin Literature, p. 105) may perhaps be answered in some degree by regarding the poem as a study of the Epi; ;
curean creed.
238
of
through an even crueller though less ennobling discipline than that to which the youth of Europe has now suddenly been
Childish things were put away because, in the end, they must be, and with them the pleasure-philosophy of Epicurus. The
called.
Rome went
first
encouraged
had crushed
it
by
sheer weight
of misery.
Epicurean view of life proved an empty consolation But at the end of those to hearts broken by anarchy and carnage.
B.C. the
50-40
some
the Octavius to
In
whom
the hope of a new and peacebe governed by the offspring of Vergil's boyish poem had been dedicated.
faint
hope
travail, to
Eclogue IV,
which was
to celebrate
ition
Augustus, a poem written in Vergil's thirtieth year, we find a transfrom the materialistic despondency of Lucretius to a combinasense of the intrinsic beauty
and sweetness
of
more
ethical
of
work within
it.
Read from
this point
But there is a wellEclogue will be found to possess new interest. in which Vergil takes a step farther the great lines passage (Georg. II, 458-540) written probably some time between his
known
thirty- third
and thirty-ninth
which he expresses his still adLucretius, but goes on to declare his own new
years, in
time the Epicurean teaching holds He will take all the definitely the second place in Vergil's thoughts. but the key to life is not there knowledge that its science can give
By
this
it is
superhuman wonder, wonder at the undying mystery smiling and frowning skies, of love and pain, of life and death.
all, in
in piety, in
hard work,
in gratitude to mysterious
Happy indeed is he whose skill can find The cause of each and all things, mastering
that other, who has learnt the sacred creatures of the woods,
so
Fear and stern Fate, and hearing undismayed The hungry roar of Death's advancing flood.
To know
Pan with
And
all
Nought
his pipe, and hoary old Silvanus the fairy sisterhood at play. cares he for the pomp of crowds and courts.
Rome
rises, kingdoms fall, he works unmoved. views the rich and knows no pang of envy, Succours the poor without a grudging thought.
He
239
Peace without
cliffs
Cool mountain
valleys,
NOTES UPON SOME OF THE KURANIC MANUSCRIPTS IN THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY.
BY THE REV. A. MINGANA, D.D.
which THERE
text,
and fourteen
All Islamic compositions referring to Hadith or oral traditions concerning the life and the sayings of the Prophet are excluded from the above heading.
I.
Among
mend
the
first
series of
themselves
to
the palaeographer
very ancient date (VHIth cent.) or the peculiarities of their script. More than one specimen of the writing which they exhibit is wanting
in
Palaeographical
similar works.
There are
letters of
also three
to
end
in
gold,
which by reason
would appear
that the
many
of the
amongst the
belonged
It
examples extant.
One
to Caussin of Perceval
was regarded
exhibition of 1867,
colour in
M.
one of the most noteworthy exhibits in the Paris and several of its pages 'have been reproduced in " Prisse d'Avesnes' Art Arabe ". ;2 Furthermore, it has
as
:
Kuran known
to exist, measuring
rolls
of
paper
241
when
the paper
rolled up,
1
1
scrolls,
is
ft.
mm.
3J
respectively.
in.
The
rolls consist of
series of
ous and sometimes interrupted, whose lines of demarcation are the The Surahs are introduced by the Basmalah, but there sacred text.
Many such textual ornaments eye to find them. The words are text itself is in black. are shaped in red ink, but the so skilfully, but also so fantastically interwoven in the small blank spaces,
is
no help
to the
that
it
Kuran
that
it
The out where a given verse is placed. seems to have been written in this curious manner, in order
is
difficult to find
may make a good amulet to be worn by a Muhammadan Some few other libraries contain cunosltatis causa one of prince. these rolls, but so far as we can judge from the descriptions given by the scholars who catalogued them, they differ somewhat from those now in Manchester.
1
There
Crawford
is
which
is
that
numbered Cod. 52
Bland
collection.
in the
It
in the
is
written in an
thick
horizontal strokes.
We
of the
Kuran
written
Kuran
that
we have
ever met
it
contains
of spelling attributable
perhaps to
for instance, in
Suratul-Bakarah, from
66
for
to verse 80,
we
1$*;
which may
Jl
what we might
;
call
a mistake.
of
|>ll
omitted;
for
v=-O^
^ ^*
first
for
;
&?
^^ ^
of
v.
alif
the second
member
f^^-f
is
repeated twice.
The
particle
characteristic
mark
of this manuscript
that
together, ex.
^~~J
(^
for
is
r*
Jj.
The
letter
as
is
the case in
is
other manuscripts,
1
written like a
but a small
many
it
formed over
scrits
Arabes de
"
la
Bibliotheque Nationale
(1883-1895).
242
to distinguish
from the
last
letter.
In case of
is
first
one
often
JH.
The
times
it
text exhibits
sometimes archaic spelling to be put side by Kuran that we possess, and some-
which, by their undoubted internal value, and by their simultaneous homogeneity with the other kindred languages, Would point to a very early period in Arabic literature. On the
other hand, the manuscript dating only from
give
rise
XHI-XVIth
cent,
may
of
by
its
carelessness to
some
perplexities
on the ground
orthodoxy.
large number of passages have been either erased or covered over with thin pieces of paper, throughout the volume, which numbers 882 pages, with eleven lines to the page, and measures 223 x 70
1
mm.
As
no
later
it
for the
purpose
of readjusting
lines
its lines
occupied by the
it
in blank,
would perhaps
Generally,
obliterated,
they occupied is, as stated above, left at times a word or two, have been added by a later hand at the beginning and at the end of this space, to harmonize the text with
the textus
copyist
receptus
is
of the
Kuran.
It
is
not,
therefore,
the
first
who
The
following four
There
is
one
of
addition
to that
which perhaps contained a the Kuran, since the end of the line
of
the
other
line
after the
blank
Fol. 42a.
line
III,
the
last
word
of the
;
blank space
is
(&**
first
word
&**j~
letter
w aw stands alone
is
and ought
be joined with
This preceded by the blank line. the probability of one line and a half having been purposely
obliterated.
Fol. 43b.
Two
lines
and a
half
the last
243
is
(f*^*
III,
91)
the
first
word
of the other
found
in the
line,
leaving
room
for
three or four
Fol.
1
more words.
ated
words between ^^
;
09b.
One line in
many
obliter-
(VII, 30), so that other words moreover some letters appear from the
and
&
erased words which cannot be safely supplied. It may not be out of place here to remark that in the
of
al-Mukni*
(d. A.H. 444), there are some interesting variants of the Kuran about which, as is commonly admitted, al-Baidhawi maintains
If
ad-Dani
silence.
the hope, expressed by a few scholars, for a critical edition book of Islam, is some day to be realized, Dani's com-
will
be found
useful.
manuscript under notice reveals three variant readings not mentioned by al-Baidhawi
:
fol.
Jty
instead
>".
Surah X, 23
;
our MS.,
fol.
(j&*l
instead
of
f^*~4.
Surah XLII, 29
;
our MS.,
fol.
instead of
II.
Among
ful ones.
If
the second series of manuscripts there are some very usewe mistake not, some of them are very rare and three
unique, since they are not represented in the catalogue of the rich Berlin collection compiled by W. Ahlwardt (1887-1899) and consisting of ten large
volumes.
Bibliotheque Nationale," compiled (1883-1895) by Baron de Slane, nor in the two catalogues of the British Museum, by Cureton (1846), and by Dr. Rieu (1872 and 1894). They are also absent from the Library of Gotha, whose descriptive catalogue is due to
of the
"
Dr.
W.
perial Library of
finally
we
shall
MSS
numbered
respectively
244
1 r
**,
in
"
Proof of Islam".
It is
written in a clear Naskhi, and deals with the good writing and the
pronunciation of the
headings.
plains the
"
Kuran, arranged
is
sections
The
aim
I
author
called
Muhammad
which
Badrul-Islam,
who
:
ex-
of his
book
in sentences
we
translate thus
many people have neither the leisure nor the wish to peruse detailed books treating of the transcription of the Kuran, I compiled, in an abridged form, a small book, from such renoticed that
liable compositions as the
When
Mudakkik
which
of meditation to
*
thought.
entitled
it
Imam.
"
It
'
Gabriel
peace be
with
him
said
Recite
'.
the
sufficient
and
efficient
Kuran in seven letters, each one being Ibn Mas'ud said that this Kuran came down
*
in seven letters,
each one having an apparent sense and one requiring If you What does (Dhahrun wa Batnun). say
:
letters ?
shall
.
.
that.
answer that many opinions have And Abu 'Ubaidah said The
*
:
mean
found
does not imply that there are seven ways in which a letter may be this has not been heard of at all, but it does mean that these
;
Some
them are
in the dialect
of Kuraish,
some
of
them
in
the dialect
Hawazen, some of them in the dialect of Hudhail, some of them in Yaman, some of them in the dialect of Dus, and some of them in the dialect of Tamim. Some say that these seven letters are the seven readings that the seven Imams have adopted one of these is 'Asim b. Abin-Nujud, and the name of his mother is Bahdalat, and
of
the dialect of
he
is
called
'Asim son
;
of
Bahdalat
is
the second
b.
is
Hamzah, son
Kisa'i
b.
;
of
Habib az-Zayyat
three
1
the third
'AH
Hamzah
is
al
all
these
The
fourth
'Abdallah
Kathir, the
The Imam
is
the Caliph
was
finally
compiled.
245
fifth
;
is
the sixth
is
is
'Amr.
b. al-'Ala',
the
al-'Arian
= (
;
the naked) b.
imam 'Ammar
of
b.
and
his
surname
Abu 'Amr
the seventh
is
'Abdallah
'Amer, the imam of Damascus. "... Authors differ as to the number of the copies that 'Othman sent to various countries. It is a well-known tradition that
five
;
they were
b.
Daoud,
;
referring to
'Othman sent four copies b. " Hatim of Sijistan say He wrote seven copies that he sent to to Damascus, to Yaman, to Bahrain, to Basrah, and to Maccah, Kufah and he retained one in Madinah, and it is found at present
: :
;
Hamzah
in the
reports that
the amanuensis
of
al-'As wrote to (the caliph) 'Umar may Allah be pleased with him Bismillah, without forming distinctly the (letter) Sin,
'Amr.
and 'Umar
may Allah be
struck
him
he has
?
been asked, with what did the Amir said He struck me with a Sin."
:
you
he
B.
The
title
of
Cod. 601
is
^^J1
^ V-K
of
"
Glosses on Alof
Baidhawi
the
".
The volume
hand
of
:
consists of glosses
on part
Anwdrut-
Tanzildt. al-Baidhawi.
MS.
"
in the
Three rhymed lines are found at the end of a man weakened by age, with a note which
finished
we
translate as follows
by the hand
its
writer
Ahmad
Shihabud-Din
Muhammad
is,
al-Misri
may God
The
There
is
it
manuscript
therefore,
in
an inscription
an autograph of the first author. Turkish which shows that at the time
the author
when
the
we
sum
of a
of seven piastres
and
mention
made
of this
is
Shihab as author
Baidhawi.
said to
He
have died
in
A.H. 1069.
The
246
be
the
identified
first
words
An edition of the manuscript independent works by the same writer. at Cairo was printed at Bulak (A.H. 1283) with Al-Baidhawi's text.
From
"
fol.
7b and
fol.
8a we
About
(al-Baidhawi's) saying
'This
is
stoned two Jews '(the Prophet) prayer and peace be with him he (al-Baidhawi) refers to what is in al-Bukhari who quotes
'
Abdallah
b.
'Umar
The Jews came to God's Prophet a man and a woman from amongst them had comGod's Prophet said to them What do you find
as saying
:
' :
'
'
:
'
Salam
stoned
'.
'
said
You have
lied
it
is
be
They brought the Torah, and they opened it, and one of them put his hand on the verse containing the stoning. Then 'Abdallah b.
his
Salam
said to
him
'
'
Lift
up your hand
and he
lifted
up
it.
in
Then
they said
it
'.
It
is
true,
Muhammad,
is
found in
stoned."
be
C.
The
may
script
title
of
Cod. 337
is
<5*^ y*
"
f
Sea
of
Love".
This
title
is
simply a commentary
is
on
The
author's
name
not given.
was
written in Lahore,
by a
certain Haidar,
Some
And God
the
that he
would
send Gabriel with a message containing greetings and the information that God would reward him on account of Jacob his father. And
Gabriel reached him before the she-camel, and offered him condolence
as
ordered him.
And God
the
till
she
And God
the
to speak.
And
is
she
not
From
words
Cod. 255).
247
Hebrew and
Peace be with you, Joseph, your of the Resurrection, and he is pleased day you He was much afflicted with that, and he mourned during
said
:
in the
My
Lord,
The Thou
Then (Joseph) said she-camel wept on Jacob. hast given me power, and thou hast taught me the
:
interpretation of hadiths
my
sent
should
Moslem*.
He
asked
for
death at that
'
time,
and
God
God
the
Most High
says that
you
your
child's child,
life
and from your child, and from your you may count six hundred (persons). At that time,
will end.'
Then he
Egypt
into
Islam."
D.
The
of
title
of
Cod. 729
is
*bjM
C^ ^
>**,
"Treasury
margins are
Worshippers in a Commentary on the Awrads ". Written in a rough Naskhi, about A.D. 1630.
so also are
The
the text itself. many generally injured by worms, The last four leaves are supplied in a modern hand. The Awrads are the familiar citations from the Kuran occurring
letters of
in
some invocations
of daily worship.
upon them by the celebrated doctor 'Umar b. Yahya as-Suhrawardi. present work is a commentary by 'Ali b. Ahmad al-Ghuri, in mingled Arabic and Persian, upon the commentary of Suhrawardi.
The
mentioned by Haji Khalifa {Haji Khalfae Lexicon Encyclopaedicum et Bibliographicum ; edit. Flugel, Vol. V,
is
A similar work
254-255
;
pp.
Library of the
India Office
(cf.
364
in
Loth's Cat.).
From
work
it
"
heading
Kuranic
literature".
On
it
page
the
is
list
From
following
titles of
a few chapters,
will
general "
chapter on sneezing.
chapter on greetings.
A chapter
THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY on forgiveness. A chapter on the traveller's prayer. A chapter on A chapter on marriage. Dhikr in the month of Sha'ban. usury. A chapter on what spoils the Dhikr in the month of Ramadhan. A chapter on the prayer of Friday, ..." etc. fasting.
248
On
"
If
fol.
75b.
we
:
'
God and say Praise be to be to God in all events he is God, the Lord of the worlds praise not to say other things. People who are present ought to say on you then the sneezer will say 'May May God have pity God forgive me and you, or, lead you in the right way and make
some one
sneezes, he
must thank
;
'
good
said
your condition
' :
'.
He
things.
In
the
'Awdrif^
be to
"
It is
in the thirtieth
He who
in
all
chapter (the Prophet) peace be with him " Praise sneezes or experiences a yawn and says
:
God
events,"
God
is
will take
which
elephantiasis.
written in the
if
Hadith
of prayer
he praises
let
God when
:
sneezing.
If
his
companion has
prayed
for
him,
him say
'May God
way
and make good your condition '. In the Hadith also it is written that he who sneezes three consecutive times, faith is solid in his heart.
It is
if
times,
may
If
you can utter a prayer for him if you like, and if you like you peace be dispense with it. ... It is reported that the Prophet
'
with him
said
Sneezing
is
from
is
from Satan.
his
'
some one from amongst you yawns, let him put mouth and if he says Ah, ah, Satan will laugh
; :
hand on
in his belly
(or)
'
within him
Fol.
'
'.
139a:' :
'Abdallah b. 'Umar is reported to have said that to swear by a thing other than God is an infidelity. He said also Nobody is allowed to swear except in case of necessity '. It is written in the Shir'ah He who wishes to swear in truth, let him swear by God
' :
and be
or
quiet.
An
God
life
is
a hidden
infidelity.
by the
;
of
somebody,
by
the Ka'bah, or
by
because he
if
who
(title
and
he swears
him
'.
In the
Hiddyah
Title of a
249
name
An
*
also
(the
Prophet)
He who
God, God
will get
fol.
1
him
:
"
swears falsely by
From
"
'
46a
is
one of the ways of acting in Islam. enters, as a guest, the house of his brother who is a thousand blessings and a thousand mercies enter with him.
Hospitality
If
man
a
first
believer,
The
man who
him.
received guests
He
had
built
is the Beloved One of God peace be with a house with four gates looking in the four direcHe used to go one mile or two miles in search of
l
a guest. He did not eat (or, did not go away) except with a guest. He did not show, in his hospitality, any preference to the rich, by He used to know his guests with accuracy one excluding the poor.
day
or
his invitation.
He
family
the
they were
to his knowledge, grown up. ... He would cause uneasiness to the other guests." On fol. 56a we read the following passage written about Surah XXXIII, v. 9 sqq. :-
never invited a
man who,
"
The
When
the Prophet of
God
may God
pray on him and give him peace returned from a certain conflict with one of the brave of Madinah, he made a covenant with Bani
him
but
b.
Hayya
stirred
that they should not be for him nor against broke their engagement in the following manner they Akhtab rode to Maccah with some of his companions and
:
to
up Abu Sufian to fight against the Prophet. Then he went Ghatafan and bani Kinanah and incited them also for the battle.
way he formed seven armies which numbered, it is said, fifteen thousand men, who came and alighted near Madinah. Then (b. Akhtab) came to Bani Kuraidhah who had for chieftain Ka'b b.
In this
I have brought you all Kuraish, and Ghatafan break, therefore, the covenant which exists Kinanah, between you and Muhammad'. He did not cease until (Ka'b)
Asad.
He
went
to
him and
;
'
said
The MS.
has
]
MS.
J^
j^k
but
but this
may be
a mistake for
fol.
56b
250
'
who
con-
sulted his
companions
them and
to leave
Madinah.
you want
with him
of
Then Salman
us,
up and
said
when
horses frightened us ?
Do
to
not
dig
Prophet of
God
peace be
of
with you
trenches round
Madinah?'
Then
the Prophet of
God
peace be
took a pickaxe in his hands Prophet peace be with him and said the formula In the name of God with whom we began
' :
God
if
we had
them.
we
'.
They dug
of
back
b.
They
in that
fought seven
killed
;
From
the
Infidels
'Amr
'Abduwaihi was
tains.
It is
their chief-
time that the Prophet of God peace be with him of his prayers, on account of his occupation in the missed four war.
,
STEPS
THE
This
a most encouraging response from all classes of the community, not only in this country but in many parts of the world, even as far away as Natal.
result has
assist-
ance which has been rendered by the press, in giving to our appeal a publicity it would have been impossible to secure in any other way.
Already upwards
offers of assistance.
of three
re-
fresh
These
yet,
gifts
it
new
library,
when
is
numbered nearly a quarter of a million of volumes, it will be evident that if the work of replacement which we have undertaken is to be accomplished, very much more remains to be done.
stroyed at Louvain
It is
true that
is
much of
those
and elsewhere
at
in
Belgium
may
It is
be remedied or
least mitigated
by
who
feel
self-
hour of her
we renew
endeavour
of the crippled
be
in readiness for
the
home.
We find
it
"
The
be to relieve Germany of an obligation which she should be forced to fulfil on the conclusion of peace.
On
the contrary,
do more
252
than anything else to keep the attention of the public and also of the authorities alive to the justice of insisting, when the time is ripe, that
only disgorge everything which she has looted, in defiance of the rules of civilized warfare, but that she shall replace
Germany
shall not
from German
deliberately
It is
libraries
so
and
senselessly destroyed.
we
should be able
destroyed or
thousand manuscripts which were either That equivalent must be exof a toll
by means
collections at
true in respect
of manuscripts applies
many
of
which may
It must, however, be actually replaced from the collection at Berlin. be carefully borne in mind that the object of this toll is to make It must on no account be allowed to develop into actions of amends.
reprisal.
Even assuming
a
sufficient
be restored
in this
way,
is
that
reason
why we
hope
its
work
We
entertain the
that
and more
glorious than
predecessor
is
and
we
to
end we welcome the statement made by Sir Frederick Kenyon, that a Committee is in process of formation under the leaderthis
To
Academy,
to
tional
co-operate with the Institut de France in the formation of an InternaCommittee for the restoration of the Louvain Library. This,
as Sir Frederick points out, will provide for the co-ordination of the
efforts
which are apparently being put forth in many directions to bring about the same result. It may not be out of place to explain, that when we made our
appeal
we were unaware
and
in
several societies
announcements
had been made by no definite steps or public institutions, although For example the respect of them had been made.
that similar proposals
Classical Association
to
its
members
to assist in
253
the reconstruction of the classical side of the library, whilst the Uni-
to set aside
set of
the publications
with a considerable'number of duplicates from the Christie Library, proposing at the same time to invite the co-
For various reasons definite action operation of other universities. was postponed for a while, and in the meantime we, unconscious
ventured to launch the present scheme, which originated in the manner described in our appeal. cannot regret our action, since it has revealed to us how very
of
these
decisions,
We
widespread
is
of the high
and
affectionate regard in
which
we
r
hold them,
for their
remain true to
listen to
little
pledges of neutrality, by indignantly refusing to infamous proposals. owe more to that great Germany's nation of Belgium than we can ever repay, and it is fitting that
We
we
by making good, as far as in us lies, one of the crimes of which the German army has been guilty.
humanity
We
our
cannot refrain from quoting a few passages from the letter Van der Essen, the
of Louvain,
which appeared
issue,
who
Cambridge, revealing
has but recently returned from Chicago to as it does the attitude of gratefulness and
Here appeal is made. are our correspondent's own words Writing as a professor of the of Louvain let me thank you for all that you have done University
appreciation of those in
interest this
whose
"
crime of Louvain.
It
is
how
alas
!
the scholars of
the countries
their
the
central
empires excepted,
to us
have manifested
friendship,
and proved
by
so
scientific
interna-
tional solidarity
is still
alive.
work, and among that work I rank your most if not the most effective. I had,
one of the
in
indeed,
opportunity
what your appeal was bringing forth, and how by kind intermediary practical help was being prepared. It is noble your work you are doing, work that will have a fine result, and I can assure
to see
America
you that never will the University of Louvain forget that the appeal went out from Manchester. ... I hope to have the pleasure to come
254
<.
our poor library, on the very soil of Kultur has destroyed the your splendid and glorious country. it is a fact full of consequence that what has treasures of Lou vain
.
and
been destroyed, will have been restored by the kind intermediary of one of the celebrated centres of English culture."
Belgian Minister of Justice, accompanied by Count Goblet d'Alviella, on the occasion of a visit which they paid to Manchester in order to speak words of comfort and confidence to the large number
of their refugee compatriots
The
who have
visit
pay a
pleasure
how
very
much
surprised
to find in
new
Lou vain
At
the
half yearly of
National
Librarian,
Wales our scheme was explained by the Library and a resolution was passed commending it, and referring
Committee with a request
assist,
consider
how
far the
and
directing that
of the
movement be
sent to all
members
Court.
ing in
manner the Lisbon Academy of Sciences, at its meetJune, decided, on the motion of Mr. Edgar Prestage, whose
In like
name
will
be known
to
many
by
sending not only a set of their own publications, but any others which might be entrusted to them for the purpose.
of the
notified
accompanied by
as a
first
The
University of
fifty
Aberdeen, volumes of
their duplicates. The Committee of the Liverpool Press have promised a set of their publications, numbering University The University of Durham have upwards of a hundred volumes. allowed us to make a selection from their duplicates, and we have
taken
full
advantage of the permission by marking some hundreds of of a character it would be difficult to acquire in
Numerous offers have been made by private indiany other way. The viduals, and in most cases have been gratefully accepted. names are too numerous to quote, but they will be recorded in due
course
when
We must
not
omit
to refer to
one other
gift,
255
we
;
have as
it
yet,
unable
to
deal
is
a collection
some hundreds
of
volumes
W.
Sutton.
This report has lengthened out far beyond the dimensions to which we had intended to restrict it, and yet not half the story has been
told.
is
of our readers
we have
decided to reserve
all further
our next
issue.
we have
of the
given a
list
of the
works actually
of
names
whom
in
the
name
of the
we renew
the expressions
in
another form.
The
following
gifts
issue of the
appeal
of
Bowdon.
Enchiridium una cum Cebetis tabula Grace, et Lat. Cum et aliorum. A. Berkelius textum recensuit. Delphis Batavorum, 1683. 8vo.
Wolfii
. . .
PHAEDRUS.
.
.
et
Fabularum Aesopiarum libri V. Cum integris commentariis Curante P. Burmanno. excerptis aliorum. Lugduni-in8vo.
(Publius)
Batavis, 1728.
TERENTIUS AFER
Amstelaedami,
Comoediae
sex.
Ex
recensione Heinsiana.
[n.d.].
12mo.
of
MISS
E.
M.
BARLOW,
Marple.
CABASSUTIUS
canonum.
(Joannes) 'Notitia ecclesiastica, historiarum, conciliorum et Secunda [ed.] in Germania. Bambergae, ] 754. Fol.
PERCY E. BATES, Bart., of Hinderton Hall, Neston. CHAUCER (Geoffrey) The Works. Edited by F. S. Ellis. Ornamented
SIR
with
pictures
Hammersmith,
Burne-Jones
(Kelmscott
Press).
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE EARL BEAUCHAMP, K.G. HENRY VIII, King of England. Songs, ballads, and instrumental
'
. .
pieces
composed by King Henry the Eighth. Reproduced from the Brit Mus. MS. 31922. Collected by the Lady M. Trefusis [Roxburghe
Club].
Oxford, 1912.
4to.
18
256
Pocket Dictionary of French and English, English and Revised by A. Beljame. edition. London, 12mo. Gloucester, 1911.
Second
and enlarged by
Dictionary of French and English, English and French. Second edition. his son W. Bellows. 8vo. [Gloucester printed], 1914.
letters
Revised
London,
and memoir. Edited by his wife (E. Bellows). London, [Gloucester printed], [1905]. 8vo.
BELLOWS (Max)
Second
edition.
Dictionary of
German and
of
German.
edition.
MACLAREN
PRICE (M.
(Ian)
The days
8vo.
Auld Langsyne.
[1912].
Second
London, 1895.
Philips) Siberia.
London,
Quaker
8vo.
STEPHEN
London, 1907.
strongholds.
Fourth
edition.
MR. and MRS. J. LAIRD BUSK, of Westerham, Kent. BIBLE. GERMAN. Der erste psalm Davids. Nach
. . .
der dolmetz-
schung D.
M.
Luthers.
Wittemberg, 1524.
CI. Psalm.
4to.
BIBLE.
GERMAN.
GERMAN.
Der
Wittemberg, 1534.
BIBLE.
Ausgelegt durch
4to.
Das siebed
Capitel
M.
Luther.
Wittemberg, 1523.
guldin
harpffen.
Augsburg
CELLINI (Benvenuto) Vita di Benvenuto Cellini orefice e 4to. tino, da lui medesimo scritta. [Naples, 728]
1
.
scultore Fioren-
[KLOPSTOCK
3 vols. in
-
2.
(Friedrich 8vo.
Gottlieb)]
Der
Messias.
Halle
im
M.,
im M.?].}75\. 8vo. LUTHER (Martin) Ain Sermon .von dem gebeet un procession in der Creiitzwochen. [Augsburg! 1520?] 4to. THOMPSON (B.) Count Bumford. Essays, political, economical and
an Gott. [Halle
. . .
Ode
philosophical.
The
first
American
edition.
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8vo.
(Lillian
MATTHEWS
Ruth)
Women
8vo.
in
Trade Unions
in
San Francisco.
MULLER-LYER
chritts.
(F.) Phasen der Kultur und Richtungslinien des Forts8vo. Miinchen, 1908.
(J.
NETTLEFOLD
London, 1910.
8vo.
NEW YORK
OLIVER
(F.
STATE.
S.)
London,
[1906].
OWEN
(Sir Hugh) The Elementary Education Acts, 1 870-80, with introSixteenth edition. duction and notes by H. Owen. London, 1884. 8vo.
notes
The Elementary Education Acts, 1870-91, with introduction and by H. Owen. Seventeenth edition. London, 1891. 8vo.
unrest
PAPERS on
Members
don, 1911.
among
of Parliament at
the working classes read to a few Unionist Oxford, 19th to 23rd October, 191 1. Lon-
8vo.
The National Committee to promote the The Minority Report. London, 1909.
;
poverty to plenty
or, the
REINSCH
colonies.
(Paul
Samuel)
English
common |law
8vo.
in
the early
American
ROWNTREE
and SHERWELL (Arthur) Public control of the being a review of the Scandinavian experiments. . . London, 1903. 8vo.
liquor traffic
..
270
ROWNTREE
The
London,
reform.
900.
8vo.
edition.
temperance
8vo.
problem and
social
Ninth
London, 1901.
ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL
ing the Proceedings.
SOCIETY.
[January,
1
The Geographical
893
-
Journal includ-
December, 1902.]
London,
1893-1902].
20vols.
8yo.
SARGENT
(Arthur John) Anglo-Chinese commerce and diplomacy (mainly Oxford, 1907. 8vo.
F.) Insurance against unemployment.
SCHLOSS (David
8vo.
London, 1909.
SHAO-KWAN CHEN.
Dynasty, 1644-1911.
The
New
SMITH
(Charles
W.) Commercial
The
living
SNOWDEN
London,
(Philip)
wage.
With
[1912].
8vo.
London,
[1913].
8vo.
STETSON
1898.
(Charlotte Perkins)
relation
Women
and Economics.
.
study of the
economic
Boston,
U.S.A.,
8vo.
STUBBS
facts
record of (Charles William) The land and the labourers. and experiments in cottage farming. London, 1884. 8vo.
.
. .
SUTHERLAND
tion
(Hugh) Ireland
by
J.
E. Redmond.
SUTHERLAND
London,
[1907].
8vo.
TAYLOR
1908.
London,
it
TEBB
(William
edition.
Second
London,
teaches.
THIERS
1846.
Revolution Fran^aise.
Leipzig,
London, 1912.
G.) Socialism
Jessel.
Vol. V.
Australasia,
TOWLER (W.
Local Government.
1908.
8vo.
With
introduction
by Captain H. M.
8vo.
London,
Canada and
the Empire.
[Toronto,
WALTER
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271
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8vo.
WILLIAMS
London,
R. H.
disciplinary,
civic
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McCREA,
by A.
OSTWALD
. . .
(Wilhelm) The principles of inorganic chemistry. Translated Second edition. London, 1904. 8vo. Findlay.
London.
Society Reprints.
M ALONE
W. W.
SOCIETY.
Greg].
The Malone
[General editor,
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44
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4to.
H.
MILLS,
of
Oxford.
III.
Our own
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---
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Yasna
.
. .
I.
XXVIII, published
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in its Sanskrit equivalents, in sequence to those of in the Festgruss of the late Professor R. von
Yasna
Roth,
Leipzig, 1910.
4to.
--
YASNA XXIX in its Sanskrit equivalents. YASNA XXXI in its Sanskrit equivalent
Louvain, 1912.
;
4to.
XXXI
1914.
4to.
Zara#ustra, Philo, The Achaemenids and Israel. 1906. 2 Parts in 1 vol. 8vo.
Leipzig, 1905-
Creed
of
Piers
Ploughman.
2 vols.
... by
T. Wright.
Second
edition.
London, 1883.
EDMUND OGDEN,
[With an
A. T.
atlas.]
Edited by
A.
W.
8vo.
Ward.
Cambridge, 1904-12.
14 vols.
Amsteldam,
770.
19
272
de rebus
Belgicis.
Amstelaedami,
HENRY
6
vols.
SYNNOTT,
Esq., of Glenageary,
Co. Dublin.
Mediolani, 1806-1808.
OVIDIUS NASO
Fol.
(Publius) Opera.
Parma and
GEORGE THOMAS,
BONOMI
(Joseph)
Nineveh and
8vo.
palaces.
Second
edition,
revised.
London, 1853.
CAMBRIDGE.
tonianae:
1750
Musae Sea1.
8vo.
vols.
COWPER
Verses.
(William)
The
poetical works.
London,
1839.
8vo.
life
London, 1707.
8vo.
The
adventures of Tele1774.
London,
fall
2 vols.
of the decline
and
of the
Roman
Empire.
8vo.
their relation
GOSSE
(Philip
to the
Word
Henry) The monuments of ancient Egypt, and of God. London, 1847. 8vo.
GUY,
of
Earl of
Warwick.
The
Guy
Earl
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HACKETT
2
London,
all
1757.
KNIGHT
1851.
nations,
NORDEN
757.
vols. in
Translated 8vo.
.
of Flanders, in
... August
8vo.
in ancient
London, 1777.
2 vols.
PERROT
Egypt.
8vo.
history of
2 vols.
ROLANDI
1822.
Londni
SAVARY
8vo.
London,
786.
2 vols.
SCOTT
(Sir
With
life
of the author.
London, 1841.
273
India in 1880.
of the
London, 1880.
and
of the
8vo.
Barham) Egypt
Pharaohs
Khedive.
London, 1873.
8vo.
Esq., M.P., F.S.A., of Preston
CHARLES THOMAS-STANFORD,
Manor, Brighton.
ARISTOTLE.
Aristoteles
Academia Regia
Borussica.
Aristotelis Ethica
Nicomachea.
suis
Oxonii, 1871.
scholiis
8vo.
et
CALLIMACHUS.
[Paris], 1577.
Hymni (cum
4to.
Graecis)
Epigrammata.
CATULLUS
etc.
Catulli,
Tibulli
et
Propertii
4to.
Opera.
8vo.
:
Cantabrigiae, 1702.
Opera.
Birminghamiae, 1772.
commentariis.
. . .
ClCERO (Marcus
P. Pincius], 1496.
cum
[Venice
De
Parisiis, 1562.
4to.
CURTIUS RUFUS
et digessit 4to.
(Quintus)
De
H. Snakenburg.
JUVENALIS (Decimus Junius) Satirarum libri quinque. Ex recognitione Lutetiae Parisiorum, 1747. S. A. Philippe. 16mo. PAUSANIUS. Commentarii Graeciam describentes. [Greek.] Venetiis :
Aldus.
1516.
Fol.
PlNDAR.
[Greek
and
Latin.]
Recensuit
SALLUSTIUS CRISPUS
on Vellum.
1450.
(Caius) 8vo.
De
bello Katilinae.
Italian
Manuscript
SOPHOCLES.
etc.
Annotationes H. Stephani,
[Paris], 1568.
MESSRS. CHARLES THURNAM & SONS, of Carlisle. WlLLOT (Henricus) Athenae orthodoxorum sodalitii Franciscani.
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8vo.
BAUR
(Ferdinand Christian) Paul the apostle of Jesus Christ, his life and Second edition. Edinburgh, \ 875Edited by E. Zeller. work. 2 vols. 8vo. 76.
.
BIBLE.
3
vols.
ENGLISH.
by the
8vo.
The Holy
late
translation
Rev. C. Wellbeloved.
London, 1859-62.
lectionibus.
BIBLE.
HEBREW.
Edidit B. Kennicott.
CHANNING
DRIVER
FUERST
Third
(William Ellery)
The
works.
vols. in 3.
Old
8vo.
(Julius) edition.
lexicon to the
Old Testament.
8vo.
Translated by S. Davidson.
Leipzig, 1867.
Translated
HENRY
H.
(Paul)
The
and times
of
John Calvin.
8vo.
... by
Oxford^
York,
2
Stebbing.
London, 1849.
Stanley)
vols.
JEVONS (William
1849.
The
8vo.
Essays, philosophical and theological. 8vo.
its
MARTINEAU Qames)
1875.
New
2 vols.
A
vols.
Oxford, 1888.
8vo.
.
.
Types
of ethical theory.
Oxford, 1885.
vols.
MlLL
(John Stuart) system of logic ratiocinative and inductive. London, 1872. 2 vols. 8vo. Eighth edition.
PALEY
(William)
The complete
works, with
...
vols.
life
of the author
by
the Rev. R.
Lynam.
London, 1825.
8vo.
. . .
SPINOZA
H. E. G.
(Benedictus de) Opera quae supersunt omnia. 2 vols. 8vo. Paulus. lenae, 1802-1803.
Ed.
etc.
THOMSON
treatise
(William) An outline of the necessary laws of thought on pure and applied logic. London, 1875. 8vo.
(Robert) Antitrinitarian biography
:
WALLACE
London, 1850.
3 vols.
8vo.
contents and origin of the Acts of the Apostles Translated by J. Dare. London, 1875-76.
. .
2 vols.
8vo.
M.A.,
J.P., of
Cornbury Park.
TO
in
accordance with
divisions of
the
"
who
Dewey Decimal System," and in the may not be familiar with the system, it
The
and by
that
it
various ramifications
Related matter is thus brought together, and with ease and certainty. the reader turns to one sub-division and round it he finds grouped
others
it.
In this
way new
that
it is
lines
One
Its
employed
of
is
easily
it.
capable of
distinctive
the
employment
the ten
digits,
in their
symbols
hence the
The sum
Dr.
of
activity has
been divided by
Dewey
into ten
2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
These
1
An
can be
still
Places for
new
subjects
by
the introduction of
we have not thought it necessary to carry the classification beyond the hundred main divisions, the arrangement " " of which will be found in the Order of Classification which
For the purpose
of this
list
follows
275
276
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
LIBRARY ECONOMY.
MATHEMATICS. ASTRONOMY.
PHYSICS.
POLYGRAPHY.
BOOK
RARITIES.
600 100 Philosophy. 610 1 10 METAPHYSICS. 620 120 SPECIAL METAPHYSICAL TOPICS. MIND AND BODY. 630 130 PHILOSOPHICAL SYSTEMS. 140 640 MENTAL FACULTIES. PSYCHOLOGY. 650 150
1
CHEMISTRY. GEOLOGY. PALEONTOLOGY. BIOLOGY. BOTANY. ZOOLOGY. Useful Arts. MEDICINE. ENGINEERING. AGRICULTURE.
60
170 1 80 190
LOGIC. ETHICS.
660
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHERS.
670 680
DOMESTIC ECONOMY. COMMUNICATION AND COMMERCE. CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY. MANUFACTURES. MECHANIC TRADES.
BUILDING.
MODERN PHILOSOPHERS.
690
710 720 730 740 750 760 770 780 790 810 820 830 840 850 860 870 880
CHURCH.
INSTITUTIONS.
WORK.
270 280
290
310 320 330 340 350 360 370 380 390
ENGRAVING. PHOTOGRAPHY.
Music.
AMUSEMENTS.
AMERICAN.
ENGLISH.
300 Sociology.
POLITICAL SCIENCE. POLITICAL ECONOMY.
800 Literature.
LAW. ADMINISTRATION.
ASSOCIATIONS AND INSTITUTIONS.
GERMAN. FRENCH.
ITALIAN.
SPANISH.
LATIN.
EDUCATION.
GREEK.
400 Philology.
410 420 430 440 450 460 470 480 490
COMPARATIVE.
ENGLISH.
GERMAN. FRENCH.
ITALIAN. SPANISH. LATIN.
GREEK.
MINOR LANGUAGES.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
300
BRANFORD
cdxxiv.
RECENT ACCESSIONS
:
277
SOCIOLOGY
GENERAL.
:
and tendencies
contemporary society.
London, 1914.
35865
Economics and
Arias (H.)
Political
Science.
progress.
The Panama Canal
:
191
1.
R 361 14
Ball en
introduction by Sir
(D.) Bibliography of road-making and roads in the United Kingdom. G. Gibb. . .1914.
.
With an
35203
Carter (G. R.) The tendency towards industrial combination : a study of the modern movement towards industrial combination in some spheres of British industry ; its forms and 1913. developments, their causes, and their determinant circumstances. 35870
Hall (H.) select bibliography for the study, sources, and literature of English mediaeval economic history. Compiled by a seminar of the London School of Economics under
the supervision of
H.
Hall.
.1914.
:
R 36] 18
. .
War
With
Hobson
(C. K.)
The
export of capital.
4.
R 361 15 R 36276
A
history of factory legislation.
1.
Second edition
revised, with a
new
chapter.
191
R 361 16
to
history of emigration from the United Kingdom Johnson (S. C.) Thesis. . .1913. . . 1763-1912.
. .
North America,
R 35345
a preface by Sidney
Jones (R.)
The
nature and
first
principle of taxation.
With
Webb.
.-1914.
(J.
R 35726
The
origin of property
Lewinski
S.)
village
community
Rivers
1914.
R 36069 R 36142
.
Slater (G.)
The
common
fields.
With an
introduction
by
...
.1907.
R
.
36066
a preface
an account of English private bill Spencer (F. H.) Municipal origins with a chapter on private bill procedure. to local government, 1740-1835
;
legislation relating
.
.
With
bySirE.Clarke.-19H.
R
Paris, 1913.
36067
ALLARD
ANGELL
8vo,
R
polity.
34626
of international
[1914].
235.
London, R 35807
BODIN
Plus 1'Apologie de Repvbliqve. responses du mesme autheur aux Paradoxes du Sieur de Malestroit sur le rehaussement diminution des
. .
.
De La
Rene Herpin.
Auec vn
discours
&
&
monnoyes,
&
278
320 SOCIOLOGY: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ELYOT (Sir Thomas) The boke named The gouernour. from the first edition of 1531 by Henry Herbert Stephen London, 1883. 2 vols. 4to.
FIGGIS
(]o\in
Edited
.
Croft.
R
xi,
24304
edition,
Neville)
The
divine right
of
kings.
Second
Cambridge, 1914.
of
8vo, pp.
406.
R
R
R
35826
parliamentary papers
1801-1900
Jones.] 361 13
a
few
of
earlier date.
vols.
[Compiled by
H. V.
London, [1904-12].
4to.
KlRCHENHEIM
travers
les
Etude du socialisme
ages.
Paris, 1897.
LA SERRE
discours
Par
Svr Les pernicieux (Le Sieur de) Remonstrace au Roy, A Paris, au liure de la Republique de Bodin. Federic Morel Imprimeur ordinaire du Boy, 579. 8vo, pp. 38. R 33748
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1
MACDONAGH
illustrations.
(Michael)
The Speaker
[1914].
of the
House.
387.
London,
8vo, pp.
xviii,
With R 35889
.
SMITH (Hugh
and
its
influence in America.
VEBLEN
404.
an economic
8vo, pp.
viii,
New
York, 1912.
R
R
35359
WOOLF
his position in (Cecil Nathan Sidney) Bartolus of Sassoferrato the history of medieval political thought. The Thirlwall Prize 35896 Cambridge, 1913. 8vo, pp. xxiv, 414. Essay, 1913.
:
.
330
8vo, pp. 359.
ESPINAS (Alfred)
Paris, [1891].
22673
HARVARD
1913.
9.
1
UNIVERSITY.
vol.
Harvard economic
of
studies.
Published under
Department
Economics.
Cambridge [Mass.],
[With map.]
8vo.
history of the grain trade in
France, 1400-1710.
36131
HOBSON Oohn
1914.
Atkinson)
Work
and wealth
human
valuation.
Lon
R R
1914.
36290
MALLOCK
delusions
(William Hurrell) Social reform as related to realities and an examination of the increase and distribution of wealth
to 1910.
from 1801
London, 1914.
Poverty and
8vo, pp.
.
xii,
391.
36182
8vo,
WITHERS
PP.
ix,
(Hartley)
waste.
London,
180.
36965
279
CHAPMAN
in continuation
of Earl Brassey's
(Sydney John) Work^ and " " Work and Wages and
.
.
With an
1914.
Foreign work and English wages ". Part HI. Social betterment introduction by Earl Brassey [With diagrams.] London,
. .
.
8vo.
:
16858
DUNLOP
(O. Jocelyn) English apprenticeship & child labour a history. With a supplementary section on the modern problem of juvenile labour London, 1912. by O. J. Dunlop and Richard D. Denman. 36071 8vo, pp. 390.
. . .
LAVOLLEE
Etudes sur leur (Rene) Les classes ouvrieres en Europe. morale Deuxieme edition revue et completee Paris, 1884. [With table.] d'apres les documents les plus recents R 28933 8vo. 2 vols.
situation materielle et
.
.
MAHAIM
MONEY.
Lecons professees a la (Ernest) Le droit international ouvrier. Paris, 1913. Faculte de droit de 1'Universite de Paris en Fevrier 1 912.
viii,
8vo, pp.
385.
R 33 194
Les Paradoxes Dv Seignevr De Malestroict, Conseillerdu Roy, de ses comptes, sur le faict des Monnoyes, presentez Auec la responce de a sa Maieste, au mois de Mars, M.D. LXVI. A Paris, Chez lacques du Puys lean Bodin ausdicts Paradoxes. Libraire iure, rue S. lean de Latnan, a I'enseigne de la Samari-
taine.
1578.
8vo.
ff.
[87].
33924
EMERY
stock and produce exchanges United States. [Columbia University Studies in History, EcoNew York, 1896. 8vo, pp. 230. nomics and Public Law, 7, ii.]
of the
. . .
34985
FlSHER
(Irving) The purchasing power of money : its determination and relation to credit, interest and crises. By I. Fisher, assisted by Harry
G. Brown.
SOCIALISM.
introduction
New York, 1911. 8vo, pp. xxii, 505. CROCE (Benedetto) Historical materialism
. .
. . .
33180
by A.
and the ecoTranslated by C. M. Meredith with an D. Lindsay. London, [1914]. 8vo, pp. xxiii,
. .
.
188.
R
:
36391
. .
.
DAY
(Henry C.) Catholic democracy individualism and socialism. a preface by ... Francis Cardinal Bourne, Archbishop of Westminster. R 36054 London, [1913]. 8vo, pp. viii, 296.
With
SlMKHOVICH
[1913].
Marxism versus
socialism.
London, R 34702
WARSCHAUER
munismus.
1
.
(Otto) Geschichte des Socialismus und neueren Kom3 pts. in 1 vol. 8vo. 36262 Leipzig, 1892-96.
.
2.
3.
Saint-Simon und der Saint-Simonismus. Fourier. Seine Theorie und Schule. . Louis Blanc.
.
280
ECONOMY.
Saint-Simon
et
WEILL
precurseur du socialisme.
x,
son ceuvre.
247.
R
1887-88
to
35852
35344
FINANCE.
MALLET
London, 1913.
Second
1895.
edition,
1912-13.
R
: .
partly
R
Farrer.
34953
x, 189.
FREE TRADE
versus
fair
Free trade
trade.
London, 1882.
8vo, pp.
R
R
30805
HlGGINSON
outline of practical tariff (John Hedley) Tariffs at work. administration, with special reference to the United States and Canada. 36150 London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xiv, 136.
An
340
SOCIOLOGY: LAW.
publications of the Selden Society.
Vol. VI.
.
SELDEN SOCIETY.
don,
. . .
The
Lon1
91 4.
4to.
In progress.
4 Edward
.
.
R
.
.
7809
Edited
26.
II.
A.D. 1310-1311.
C. Bolland.
.
30. Select
bills in
eyre,
A.D. 1292-1333.
curiales
;
Edited
by
W.
the
1914.
or
tables
of
superior courts
of
Westminster Hall, showing the judges who sat in them from 1066 to 864 with the attorney- and solicitor-generals of each reign from the institution of those offices. To which is prefixed an alphabetical list of all the the same period. London, 1865. 8vo, pp. judges during
. . .
vi, xlvii,
93.
35270
:
ENGLAND.
Notes
in
A
the
Collection
of
in
use
With
Margent and References to the Book cases and Books of Entries and Registers, where they be treated of. Together with an Abridgement of the residue which be expired, repealed, altered, and worn out of use, or doe concern private Persons, Places, or Things, and not the whole Common- wealth. Also a necessary Table, or Kalender, is annexed hereunto, expressing in Titles the most materiall Branches of those Statutes in use, and practice. By Fardinando Pulton of Lincolnes Inne, And Now in this last Impression the faults in the Table exactly Esquire. corrected and amended. London, Printed by M. FlesJur and li.
Young, Assignes of
1464, [86].
I.
More Esquire,
1640.
Fol.
pp.
[8],
V
la
35763
Black
letter.
GLASSON
de
civiles et judiciaires
(Ernest Desire) Histoire du droit et des institutions politiques, de 1'Angleterre, compares au droit et aux institutions France depuis leur origine jusqu'a nos jours. Paris, 1882-83.
8vo.
Yols.
34770
HYAMSON
With (Moses) Mosaicarum et Romanarum legum collatio. introduction, facsimile and transcription of the Berlin codex, translation, notes and appendices. R 33862 Oxford, 1913. 8vo, pp. Ivi, 300.
281
LAW.
HOUARD (David)
et
des questions
de
Dictionnaire analytique, historique, etymologique, critique la coutume de Normandie, ou l'on trouve la resolution
du
droit civil
&
ecclesastique de cette
350
SOCIOLOGY
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
life
DAWSON
. . .
and government
in
With
London, 1914.
Germany. R 37352
HAVERFIELD
and
illustrations.]
[With
plates
35373
WATERHOUSE
:
(Paul)
and
needs also the town extension plan being the Warburton Lectures for 1912 delivered. [Manchester University Lectures, Nos. 13 and 14.]
[With
plans.]
Manchester, 1912.
32850
360
SOCIOLOGY
ASSOCIATIONS.
London, 1869
.
.
BOSANQUET
1914.
in
to
1912
a history of
With
frontispiece.
8vo, pp.
420.
London, 35827
MACKEY
(Albert Gallatin) An encyclopaedia of freemasonry and its kindred sciences. Comprising the whole range of arts, sciences and literature as connected with the institution. By Albert G. Mackey. edition prepared under the direction, and with the assistance This Illusof ... William J. Hughan ... by Edward L. Hawkins New York and London, 1912. 2 vols. 8vo. trated.
.
R
JACK (Alexander Fingland) An introduction
London, 1912.
8vo, pp.
xii,
34891
263.
35023
370
SOCIOLOGY: EDUCATION.
GENERAL.
BOLTON
York, [1910].
292.
New
38066
viii,
R
R
DAVIDSON (Thomas)
A history of education.
London, 1913.
8vo,
34585
middle
GRAVES
xv,
(Frank Pierrepont)
transition to
A history
modern
times.
New
York, 1914.
328.
8vo, pp.
37926
.
MONROE
Edited by P. Monroe (Paul) cyclopedia of education. with the assistance of departmental editors and individual conNew York, 1911-13. 5 vols. 4to. tributors. 25201
.
MONTESSORI
Italian
by
diagrams.
(Maria) Pedagogical anthropology. With Frederic Taber Cooper. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xi, 508.
illustrations
and 34120
282
O'SHEA
1913.
teaching.
London, 34584
REVUE
UNIVERSITAIRE.
de
Revue
universitaire
et
Vingt-deuxieme annee
Paris, 1913,
etc.
8vo.
In progress.
mental and physical 8vo, pp.
life
xii,
[etc.]
35086
34054
SANDIFORD
With
(Peter)
The
of
school
children.
illustrations.
London, 1913.
346.
R
.
SCHULZE
.
(Friedrich) and SSYMANK (Paul William) Das deutsche Zweite Studententum von den aeltesten Zeiten bis zur Gegenwart. R 34726 2 pts. in 1 vol. 8vo. Leipzig, 1910. Auflage.
. .
. .
VlLLEY
Locke
(Pierre) L'influence
et
de Montaigne sur
les idees
xii,
pedagogiques de
de Rousseau.
Paris, 1911.
8vo, pp.
270.
36454
8vo,
WELPTON (W.
pp. xix, 252.
London, 1913.
R
R
34583
WHITEHOUSE
bridge, 1913.
Cam34982
UNI VERSITY.
1914
[etc.].
England. The year book of the universities of the empire, Edited ... for the Universities Bureau of the British
[1914,
etc.}.
By
W.
H. Dawson.
8vo.
In 35828
CRUCHET
Camille Jullian.
XX
xiv,
e siecle.
Preface de
450.
studies.
36208
ABERDEEN:
1914.
Aberdeen University
Aberdeen,
of the shires of
66. Johnstone (J. E. K.) concise bibliography of the history, topography, and institutions Aberdeen, Banff, and Kincardine.
R
67. Burnet (G.) Bishop of Salisbury. Bishop Thoughts on education with notes and life of the author.
37569
being his
G.
Bur-net as educationist
J.
By
Clarke.
37568
:
CAMBRIDGE
The book of matriculations and degrees a University of. catalogue of those who have been matriculated or been admitted to any degree in the University of Cambridge from 1544 to 1659. Compiled
:
by John Venn
xxx, 760.
and
J.
A. Venn.
Cambridge, 1913.
8vo, pp.
R
R
34596
.
. .
GHENT
University
4to.
of.
Universite de Gand.
Liber memorialis.
Gand, 1913.
[1.1
In progress.
.
.
.
36063
Notices biographiques.
:
vols.
1913.
GLASGOW
4to,
University
.
. .
of.
of the University of
.
to 1858.
PP
xiv,
607.
33948
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
MANCHESTER:
In progress.
RECENT ACCESSIONS
Manchester, 1913.
283
Publications.
8vo.
1913.
languages.
. . .
R
1913. 1913.
35575
On
vowel
alliteration in the
Old Germanic
Gill (C.)
The
[With maps.]
R 35576 R 35577
. .
Lewis (T.)
R 35578
R
33727
With a
Ellis.]
Sidgwick (E. M.) University education for women. Presidential address delivered to the Education Society, Manchester University, on 21st November, 1912. . . . 1913.
from the Manchester (University Magazine, 1868-1912. . preface by Sir A. Hopkinson. [Edited by H. B. Charlton and O. C. de C.
selection of verses
. .
1913.
R 35579
MONTPELLIER
Public sous
:
University
auspices
of.
les
du
[With
gress.
facsimiles.]
Montpellier, 1890-1912.
vols.
UNIVERSITY. Studies in history, economics Edited by the Faculty of Political Science of Columbia New York, 1912. 8vo. In progress. University. Brehaut (E.) An encyclopedist of the dark ages, Isidore of Seville. .1913. 48,
and public law.
i.
. .
R 33895
54,
iii.
in colonial
United States.-1913.
55,
ii
The
1913.
R 35863 R 35865 R
36404
8vo.
1
KEPPEL
ST.
[With
plates.]
and University
New
of.
[American College
Oxford, 1913.
1
York, 1914.
Publications.
ANDREWS:
.
University
R8
of the adverbs of Plautus.
43
By
J.
Isaac) history of university reform from 1800 A.D. to the present time : with suggestions towards a complete scheme for the Cambridge, 1913. 8vo, pp. xiv, 392. University of Cambridge.
R 34876
390
DEMAY
1880.
Paris*
R 34765
.
. .
and
illustrations.]
R 34764
284
PlTON
Le costume
de
.
civil
en France du XIII e au
. .
.
XIX*
siecle.
illustrations
d'apres
les
documents du
temps
Paris, [1914].
Ernest)
35418
17767
CRAWLEY
marriage.
(Alfred
The
London, 1902.
8vo, pp.
study of
primitive
WESTERMARCK
London, 1914.
strictures
in
422.
Morocco. R 36125
:
WOLLSTONECRAFT
on
political
vindication of the rights of woman (Mary) and moral subjects. London, 792. Vol.
1
with
8vo.
1 .
R
SOCIOLOGY: FOLK-LORE.
folk-lore.
35093
398
GASMEN
[With
(William)
portrait.]
Manx
[With introduction by
8vo, pp.
xvii, 77.
S. Morrison.]
Douglas, 1912.
32866.
CONYBEARE
HARRIS (James Rendel) and Ahikar from the Aramaic, Syriac, Arabic, Armenian, Ethiopic, Old Turkish, Greek and Slavonic versions. Second edition, enlarged and corrected. 8vo, Cambridge, 1913. R 35343 pp. c, 234, [72].
(Frederick
Cornwallis),
story of
LEWIS (Agnes
Smith)
The
FOLK-LORE SOCIETY.
relics of
The Folk-Lore
. . .
gress.
71.
R
County Folk Lore.
Printed extracts, nos.
ix, x, xi.
2460
Examples
. .
of printed folk-lore
Kinross-Shires.
.
Collected by
MS.
1914.
The .handbook
of folklore.
New
. . .
edition.
Monographs.
1914.
London,
1914.
8vo.
R
:
35437
gypsy bibliography.
IM
Yl RYUK. Korean folk tales imps, ghosts and fairies. Translated from the Korean of Im Bang and Yi Ryuk by James S. Gale. R 35137 London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xi, 233.
Translated into (Sophie) Folk-ballads of Southern Europe. English verse by S. Jewett. [With a preface by Katharine Lee Bates.] New York and London, 1913. 8vo, pp. x, 299. 35893
BANG and
JEWETT
LOTH
Avecune
edition.
(Joseph) Contributions a 1'etude des romans de carte. 8vo, pp. 126. Paris, 1912.
Paulin) Legendes du 8vo, pp. iv, 291.
la
table
ronde.
R
age.
32876
moyen
Quatrieme R 33192
PARKER
translated
2, 3.
Collected and
8vo.
vols.
ogress.
In 30737
285
Edited from manuscripts in the British Museum. of Washington, 74.1 Washington, 1913. 4to.
6.
R 22172
Artus.
1913.
Les aventures ou
la
La mort
le roi
410
BOPP
prenant
et
le
PHILOLOGY: COMPARATIVE.
le
zend, 1'armenien,
le
grec, le latin,
la
le lithuanien,
Traduite sur
.
seconde edition
.
precedee,
d'introductions
par
5vok
%*
Vols.
1
8vo.
and 3 are
of the
R 34772
second edition.
SlUCKEN
. .
.
Leipzig, 1913.
35402
420
PHILOLOGY: ENGLISH.
embracing English, American, and Anglo-Indian slang, pidgin English, tinkers* jargon, and other irregular phraseology. [Edinburgh], printed for subscribers only at the
cant
;
&
(Charles Godfrey)
2 vols.
:
4to.
R 34733
PETTMAN
8vo, pp.
(Charles) Africanderisms
of
xviii,
a glossary of South African colloquial London, 1913. place and other names.
R 34580
W. W.
especially
SKEAT
Skeat.
by A. L. Mayhew.
Oxford, 1914.
R 35613 R
THOMMEREL
(J.
1'anglo-saxon.
P.) Recherches sur la fusion du franco-normand et de 35029 Paris, 1840. 8vo, pp. 115.
WRIGHT
folk-lore.
Oxford, 1913.
34847
with a
WVLD
(Henry
Cecil
short
history
lists
of
English
bibliography of recent books on the subject, and London, 1914. 8vo, pp. 240.
of texts
and
editions.
R 37474
Ten
430
PHILOLOGY: GERMAN.
taal.
.
GlNNEKEN
gebruike
1.
(Jacob van) Handboek der Nederlandsche aan hoogescholen en voor taalleeraars. Nijmegen, 1913-14. 4to. In progress.
2.
[With
plates.]
35527
De De
sociologische structuur der Nederlandsche Taal I. sociologische structuur II, met medewerking van
1913.
W.
Kea.
1914.
286
PHILOLOGY: GERMAN.
.
LEXER
als
(Matthias) Mittelhochdeutsches Handworterbuch. Zugleich Supplement und alphabetischer Index zum Mittelhochdeutschen Worterbuche von Benecke-Miiller-Zarncke. Leipzig, 1872-78.
.
3 vols.
8vo.
.
. .
R 35079
. .
PAUL (Hermann) Grundriss der germanischen Philologie HerausDritte verbesserte und vermehrte Auflage. gegeben von H. Paul. In progress. 8vo. 16142 Strassburg, 1913.
.
2.
1913.
SCHILLER
buch.
(Carl)
(Nachtrag.)
B re men,
4
1875-81.
STEIN MEYER (Emil Elias) and SlEVERS (Eduard) Die althochdeutschen Glossen. Gesammelt und bearbeitet von E. Steinmeyer und E. Sievers.
.
Berlin, 1879-98.
vols.
8vo.
R 34971
440-450
ADAMS
PP
.
Provencal.
[University of
Michigan
xvii,
Humanistic Series,
New
York, 1913.
8vo,
607.
)
R
Grand
.
.
34671
.
.
(Vol. tennine
2,
Gran
Continue dizionario italiano-francese e francese-italiano.) Basti et Cerati. 2 vols. . Paris, 1838-39. par.
.
. .
4to.
27830
BRUNOT
4.
(Ferdinand Eugene) Histoire de la langue francaise des engines In progress. a 1900. 8vo. 11762 Paris, 1913.
. .
La
langue classique.
1660-1715.
vol.
1913.
LARCH EY
Septieme edition (Loredan) Dictionnaire historique d'argot. des Excentricites du langage, considerablement augmentee et mise a la hauteur des revolutions du jour. 8vo, pp. xlii [error for Paris, 1878.
xliii],
377.
26748
470
von
ROMANTISCHE ARBEITEN.
.
Carl Voretzsch.
Halle a
S., 1914.
8vo.
3.
Schwartz (W.) A.
1914.
W.
Schlegels
Verhaltnis
zur
spanischen
und
Literatur.
4.
Dichtungen in den romanischen Literaturen des 1914. des XIII. Jahrhunderts. 5. Stiefel (H.) Die italienische Tenzone des XIII Jahrhunderts und ihr Verhaltnis zur 1914. provenzalischen Tenzone.
Mittelalters bit
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Beihefte.
Halle,
In progress.
R 2736
. . . .
.
32. Honoratus. Saint. Die Vita sancti Honorati. Nach drei Handschriften herausgegeben von B. Munke. Nebst Untersuchungen uber das Verhaltnis zu Raimon Feraut, von W. Mit. Faksimile und Schafer, und ober di Ortsnamen beider Texte, von A. Krettek. Landkarten. 1912.
.
287
34. Remppis (U.) Die Vorstellungen von Deutschland im altfranzosischen Heldenepos und Roman, und ihre Quellen. 1912.
37.
La
Juilliere (P.
Rom.
in
-1913.
47. Borron (R. de) Die Abenteuer Gawains, Ywains und le Morholts mit den drei die Fortsetzung-des HuthJungfrauen aus der Trilogie, Demanda, des pseudo-R. de Borron Merlin. Nach der allein bekannten Hs. Nr. 112 der Pariser National Bibliothek heraus1913. gegeben von H. O. Sommer.
:
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1914.
Paetz (H.) Uber das gegenseitige Verhaltnis der venetianischen, italienischen und der franzosischen gereimten Fassungen des Bueve de Hantone.
51. Juret (C.) Glossaire 52. Pistoleta.
der franko1913.
du
patois
de Pierrecourt, Haute-Saone.
Pistoleta.
1913.
Der Trobador
Herausgegeben von
1914.
E.
Niestroy.
Der
Trobador G. Magret.
54. Schmidt (W. F.) Die spanischen Elemente im franzb'sischen Wortschatz. 1914. 55. Gerhards (J.) Beitrage zur Kenntnis der prahistorischen franzosischen Synkope des
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58.
1913.
:
die (J. U.) Zur Bildung des Imperfects im Frankoprovenzalischen V-losen Formen, mit Untersuchungen liber die Bedeutung der Satzphonetik fur die Entwickder Verbalformen. 1914 lung
Hubschmied
SPELMAN
barbara,
(Sir
continens
Latino;
novatae signification! s vocabula peregrina, obsoleta, quae labefactatas a Gothis Vandalisq3, res Europaeas, in ecclesiasticis, post profanisqs scriptoribus5 variarum item gentium legibus antiquis municipalibus, chartis,
in
&
& formulis
occurunt.
Scholiis
& commentariis
. .
.
illustrata
quibus prisci ritus quam plurimi, magistratus, dignitates, munera, consuetudines enarrantur. officia, mores, leges ipsae, [Edited by Sir W. Dugdale. With a dedicatory epistle by C. Spelman.] Londini, 1664. Fol., pp. 576. 35635
&
THESAURUS.
Thesaurus linguae Latinae. Editus auctoritate et consilio academiarum quinque Germanicarum, Berolinensis, Gottingensis, LipOnomasticon. siensis, Monacensis, Vindobonensis. Volumen II. C.
4to.
Lipsiae, 1907-1913.
In progress.
R6503
490
Berlin,
:
etc.,
1872-1913.
.
20 vols. 8vo.
Siebente, sorgfaltig
Strack (H. L.) Hebraische grammatik verbesserte und vermehrte Auflage. 1899.
2.
mit (Jbungsbuch.
R 32506
;
Petermann
cum
. .
.
glossario.
H.) Brevis linguae Chaldaicae grammatica, litteratura, chrestomathia In usum praelectionum et studiorum privatorum. Edidit J. H. Petermann!
(J.
1872.
D 32639
;
Petermann
In
cum
glossario.
4.
(J. H.) Brevis linguae Samaritanae grammatica, litteratura, chrestomathia usum praelectionum et studiorum privatorum. 1873. D
:
32507*
Vierte.
J^
325QQ
20
288
Socin (A.) A. Socins arabische grammatik Paradigmen, Literatur, Ubungsstiicke und 1909. Sechste Auflage: neu bearbeitet yon K. Brockelmamn. Glossar. 32509
R R
Nestle (C. E.) Brevis linguae Syriacae grammatica, litteratura, chrestomathia cum 1881. In usum praelectionum el studiorum privatorurn. glossario. 32505
5.
;
5.
Glossar.
6.
Auflage.
1912.
R 32872
Armemacae grammatica,
studiorum privatorum.
.
Petermann
In
litteratura,
. .
cum
glossario.
usum praelectionum
et
data.-1872.
Praetorius (G. F. F.) Alhiopische und Glossar. 1886.
7.
R
Grammatik mil Paradigmen,
32640
32510
Literatur, Chrestomathie
R
R
(E. O. A.) Chrestomathia Targumica quam collatis libris manu scriptis antiquissimis Tiberiensibus editionibusque impressis celeberrimis ad codices vocalibus Babylonicis Edidit adnotatione critica et glossario instruxit A. Merx. 1888. instructos. 3251 1
8.
Merx
10.
Delitzsch
.
.
(Jbersicht.
11.
mit
Ubungsstlicken
R
R
32512
Mueller (A.) Turkische Grammatik mit Paradigmen, Literatur, Chrestomalhie, und Unter Mitwirkung von H. Gies. Glossar . 1889. 32641
. .
Salemann (C. H.) and Zhukovsky (V. A.) Persische Grammatik mit Literatur 889. Chrestomathie und Glossar. 32513
12.
1
3.
carmina
selegit et edidit
T.
1
R
Chrestomathie,
325 4
und
Literatur.
15.
(G.) Zweite. .
Wo'rterverzeichnis
R
Schrifttafel,
32516
und
1
Literatur,
Lesestucken
Worterverzeichnis.
16.
894.
325 8
;
Bruennow (R. E.) R. Brimnowsiarabische Chrestomathie aus Prosaschriftstellarn in zweiter Auflage neu bearbeitet und herausgegeben von A. Fischer. 1913. 34712
; . . .
R
R
18. Marti (C.) Kurzgefasste Grammatik der biblisch-aramaischen Sprache, . Zweite. 191 1. Paradigmen, Texte und Glossar. . Auflage.
. . . .
Literatur,
32642
zum
19.
Selbstunterricht.-1904.
R 32520
R
21. Brockelmann (C.) Kurzgefasste vergleichende Grammatik der semitischen Sprachen : (Elemente der Laut und Formenlehre. 1908. 32643
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY.
Edited by A. V. Williams Jackson. In progress. York, 1914. 8vo. 1. New York, City Metropolitan Museum of.
.
;
series.
New
of Art. catalogue of the collection of Persian manuscripts, including also some Turkish and Arabic, presented to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, by A. S. Cochran prepared and edited by A. V. W. Jackson ... and A. Yohannan. . 1914. 36385
.
.
vornehmlich
8vo, pp.
viii,
in
seinem
224.
35230
FEIST (Sigmund) Kultur Ausbreitung und Herkunft der Indogermanen. Mit. Tafeln. 8ro, Berlin, 1913. Textabbildungen und R 3471 5 PP xii, 573.
.
. .
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
490 PHILOLOGY:
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MINOR LANGUAGES.
289
zur Sprach -und Culturgeschichte der In progress. 8vo. 2766 Volker. Strassburg, 1913. germanischen 1913. 121. Naumann (H.) Notkers Boethius Untersuchungen iiber Quellen und Stil.
WILLIAMS
practical grammar of the Sanskrit (Sir Monier Monier-) with reference to the classical languages of Europe, language, arranged Fourth edition. for the use of English students. Enlarged. 35374 Oxford, 1877. 8vo, pp. viii, 417.
.
Sanskrit- English dictionary, etymologically and philologically arranged, with special reference to cognate Indo-European languages. New edition, greatly enlarged and improved, with the collaboration of and other scholars. C. Cappeller E. Leumann
.
.
.
Oxford, 1899.
R 35375 R 35005
CHILDERS
(Robert Caesar)
impression.
London, 1909.
Fourth
SOANE
[Luzac's (E. B.) Grammar of the Kurmanji or Kurdish language. Series 6.] Oriental Grammars. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xvi, 289.
36222
et les
DOTTIN
1 .
(Georges) Manuel d'irlandais moyen. Para, 1913. 2 vols. 8vo. Pays Celtiques.]
.
[La Bretagne
35277
Grammaire.
2.
Textes
et glossaire.
LOCHMER
rjecnik.)
(Englesko-hrvatski-
112.
34606
36093
DELITZSCH
xxvii,
Leipzig, 1914.
295.
R
An
Assyrian manual
. :
8vo, pp.
LVON
(David Gordon)
the study of the Assyrian language. 1892. 8vo, pp. xlv, 142.
Second
New
R
Chicago, 1886.
36803
LANSING
(John Gulian)
An
Arabic manual.
8vo,
xv, 14-194.
R 36798
pp
STERLING
8vo,
PP
xi,
London, 1904.
14711
SPIRO
(Socrates)
An
of Egypt, containing the vernacular idioms etc., etc., used by the native Egyptians.
R 3391 4
KERESTEDJIAN
[With
(Bedros) Quelques etymologique de la langue turque.
portrait.]
materiaux
. .
.
pour
.
un
. .
dictionnaire
Edite par.
1
Haig.
Londres, 1912.
pts. in
vol.
8vo.
35150
35614
WlNSTEDT (R
Malay grammar.
Oxford, 1913.
290
NATURAL SCIENCE
:
BALCH
(Herbert E.)
. .
.
With an
Hassall
1914.
introduction
cave dwellers
.
J.
R 36527 R 35342
COFFEY
.
.
(George)
The bronze
age
in Ireland.
With
107.
plates
and
illustrations.
Dublin, 1913.
8vo, pp.
xi,
MONTELIUS
.
. .
(Gustaf Oscar Aug.) Die vorklassiche Chronologic Italiens. Text (Tafeln.). 2 vols. 4to. R 33934 Stockholm, 1912.
[MUNRO LECTURES
in anthropology and prehistoric archaeology in connection with the University of Edinburgh.] [With maps, plates and Edinburgh, 1914. 8vo. In progress. illustrations.] 1913. Geikie (J.) The antiquity of man in Europe. 1914.
. .
.
R
HARRIS
424.
361 71
Cambridge, 1913.
R
civilizations series.
34852
HANDBOOKS to ancient
London,
and Mayan
[With
plates
and
illustrations.]
1914.
8vo.
In progress.
: . . .
Joyce (T. A.) Mexican archaeology an introduction to the archaeology of the Mexican civilizations of pre-Spanish America. 1914.
R 36246
.
Mit
ihre
vols.
8vo.
33935
D'apres
les ecrivains
de
Seconde
collaboration de
edition corrigee et . augmentee par 1'auteur, avec la . . G. Dottin. 2 vols. 8vo. Paris, 1889-94.
.
R
CODRINGTON
: .
36420
(Robert Henry) The Melanesians studies in their anthroWith illustrations. Oxford, 1891 8vo, pp. pology and folk-lore. 3501 5 xv, 419.
.
.
.
CUREAU
. .
(Ad.) Les
. .
figures
planches
Avec
8vo,
PP
xii,
420.
:
33 193
DlXON
(Joseph K.) The vanishing race a record in picture and story of the last great Indian council together with the story of the lives of eminent Indian chiefs, as told by themselves, their speeches, their folk-lore tales
&
their
solemn farewell.
8vo, pp.
xviii,
With
illustrations.
1914.
231.
London, 37434
291
With an
introduction
by
J.
D. Ander-
Published under the orders of the Government of Eastern Bengal and Assam. [With map and plates.] [Edited by P. R. T. Gurdon.]
.
.
London,
191
35013
HODSON
Published under the Manipur. [With map authority of the Government of Eastern Bengal and Assam. R 35022 and plates.] London, 1911. 8vo, pp. xiii, 212.
(T. C.)
tribes of
.
The Naga
POSNANSKY
[In
German and
1.
(Arthur) Thesaurus ideographiarum americanarum. 8vo. Berlin, 1913. [With plates.] Spanish.]
.
progress.
Das Treppenzeichen
1913.
in
In 34605
auf Tihuanacu.
den amerikanischen Ideographien, mit besonderer Rticksicht (El signo escalonado en las ideograh'as americanas con especial referenda a
Tihuanacu).
SlRET
. (Louis) Questions de chronologic et d'ethnographie iberiques. Preface de mile Cartailhac. Paris, [With plates and illustrations.]
.
.
1913.
1.
8vo.
In progress.
du quaternaire
a la
f.n
33930
De
la fin
du bronze.
1913.
SPENCER
tribes
of
Australia.
With
illustrations.
London, 1914.
R
R
36330
TREMEARNE
London,
(Arthur John Newman) The ban of the bori With demon-dancing in west and north Africa.
.
demons and
illustrations.
[1914].
37441
WEEKS
(John H.)
Among
the primitive Bakongo. record of thirty the Bakongo and other tribes of equatorial
Africa, with a description of their habits, customs religious beliefs. . With illustrations a map. London, 1914. 8vo, pp. 318.
. .
. . .
&
&
:
35618
630
USEFUL ARTS
(Carl
J.)
BENZIGER
tinerstifte
Geschichte des Buchgewerbes im fiirstlichen BenedikEinsiedeln. Nebst einer bibliographischen Darstellung der schriftstellerischen Tatigkeit seiner Konventualen und einer Zusammenstellung des gesamten Buchverlages bis zum Jahre 1 798.
U.L.F.
v.
Mit
Abbildungen
und
Einschaltbildern.
Einsiedeln,
R
Milano, [1913
4to, pp. 173.
34900
BERTIERI
con
portrait
Studio di R. Bertieri (Raffaello) L'arte di Giambattista Bodoni. una notizia biografica a cura di Giuseppe Fumagalli. [With
and
facsimiles.]
?]
R 35189
:
COUPER (W.
a
Millers of Haddington, Dunbar and Dunfermline J.) record of Scottish book selling. [With plates and illustrations.]
[1914].
The
London,
36176
GED
W. Ged
including a particular
account of his progress in the art of block-printing. [Edited by J. N., i.e. J. Nichols. Second edition, with advertisement by T. H., i.e. T. 35142 Newcastle, 1819. 8vo, pp. vi, 48. Hodgson.]
292
650
USEFUL ARTS PRINTING, PUBLISHING, ETC. GRAND-CARTERET 0hn) Papeterie & papetiers de 1'ancien temps.
corporations
Les
en-
Les boutiques
pains
Les marchandises
Notices sur
les
le papier a lettres, veloppes, 1'encre, les encriers, les plumes, les crayons, a cacheter, les portefeuilles la cire, les Copies d'ecrilures
Bibliographic
d'autrefois.
Enseignes, etiquettes
et
Avec
illustrations
R
& Andrew
viii,
361 53
MURRAY
STRAUS
With
xiv,
.
(David) Robert
of the
Glasgow
Press, with
some account
Glasgow Academy
144.
;
Fine Arts.
[With
Glasgow, 1913.
4to, pp.
R 34873
.
plates.]
poet, publisher
&
portrait
and
illustrations.
London, 1910.
407.
36243
WEINZ1EHER
XV.
bis
XVII. Jahrhundert.
700 FINE
ARS ASIATIC A.
1914.
1.
ARTS
:
GENERAL
sous
la
Ars Asiatica
direction de Victor
4to.
Goloubew.
Musee
[With
plates.]
Bruxelles et Paris,
In progress.
.
35196
Par Chavannes et R. Cernuschi, avril-juin 1912. Petrucci. (Catalogue sommaire des peintures chinoises exposees au Muse'e Cernuschi en de Tizac et V. Goloubew.) 1914. Redige par H. d'Ardenne avril-juin 1912. 2. China. Six monuments de la sculpture chinoise. Par E. Chavannes. 1914.
peinture chinoise au
. . .
La
FENOLLOSA
(Ernest Francisco) Epochs of Chinese Japanese art an outline history of east Asiatic design. [Edited by M. Fenollosa.] New and revised edition, with notes by ... Petrucci. [With
:
.
&
plates.]
London, 1913.
vols.
4to.
35625
HAMERTON
(Philip Gilbert) The graphic arts : a treatise on the varieties of drawing, painting, and engraving in comparison with each other and with nature. London, 1882. 4to, pp. xvi, 384. [With plates.]
R
COOK,
of
34743
of.
&
catalogue of the
.
. .
elsewhere
in the collection of
plates.]
1.
London, 1913-14.
By T.
schools.
Fol.
R
Tart
[With 35294
Italian schools.
Boranius.
2.
By
J.
O. Kronig.
1914.
PERROT
(Georges)
. .
1'antiquite.
Paris, 1914.
10.
Histoire de
dans
...
et
...
gravures.
19453
La Grece
RlCCI (Seymour de) Description raisonnee des peintures du Louvre. Avec une preface par Joseph Reinach 8vo. Paris, 1913.
. . .
progr,
I.
R
cole
In 34068
eVangerei
Italic et
Eipagne.
1913.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
VASARI
tects
.
RECENT ACCESSIONS
GENERAL.
293
archi(Giorgio) Lives of the most eminent painters, sculptors Newly translated by Gaston Du C. De Vere. With
.
.
&
illustrations.
6.
London, 1913-14.
4to.
In progress.
30712
1913. Fra Giocondo to Niccolo Soggi. 1914. Tribolo to II Sodoma. 1914. 8. Bastiano to Taddeo Zucchero.
7.
VENTURI
7.
italiana.
Con
incisioni in
fototipografia.
Milano, 1913-14.
8vo.
In progress.
8458
La
720 FINE
ARTS
ARCHITECTURE.
BELL
early
(Gertrude Lowthian) Palace and mosque at Ukhaidir. Mohammadan architecture. [With maps, plates and Oxford, 1914. 4to, pp. xix, 180.
A study in
illustrations.]
R 36189
. .
BOND
(Francis) An introduction to English church architecture, from the With illustrations eleventh to the sixteenth century. . 4to. 351 16 2vols. Oxford, 1913.
. . . .
GAUCKLER
%*
series of plates
(Paul) Basiliques chretiennes de Tunisie, 1892-1904. Fol. with descriptive letterpress.] Paris, 1913.
[A
34634
300 copies
printed.
This copy
is
No. 46.
JACOB
details
(Sir Samuel Swinton) K.C.I.E. Jaipur portfolio of architectural Prepared under the supervision of ... Sir S. Jacob, K.C.I.E. London, 1913. Fol. [With descriptive letterpress.]
.
In progress.
12.
18022
1913.
RICHARDSON
Britain
(A. E.) Monumental classic architecture in Great and Ireland during the eighteenth & nineteenth centuries Illustrated in a series of photographs taken by E. Doekree, & measured drawings with descriptive text. London, [1914]. Fol., R 36 152 pp. xvi, 123.
. . . .
.
RlVOIRA (G.
derivatives.
.
.
.
its origin, development and T.) Lombardic architecture Translated by G. McN. Rushforth. With illustrations. 37553 London, 1910. 2 vols. 4to.
:
.
RODIN
.
. .
la
France.
Avec
planches.
Paris, 1914.
4to,
164.
R
xxii,
pp.
cix,
361 20
WHARTON
[With
(Edith)
and
CODMAN
of houses.
plates.]
London, 1898.
8vo, pp.
34132
SCULPTURE,
COLLEZIONI
.
. .
[With
6.
Le
archeologiche e numismatiche dei palazzi pontifici. 9443 Milano, 1913. 1 vol. 4to. In progress. plates.] monete e le bolle plumbee pontificie del medagliere vaticano descritte ed illustrate da
artistiche,
C.
Serafini.
Volume
terzo.
1913.
294
BULLE
.
.
Tafeln u. Griechen. Zweite neu bearbeitete Auflage. Abbildungen. [Der Stil in den bildenen Kuensten und Gewerben aller Zeiten. Muenchen und Leipzig, 1912. Herausgegeben von G. Hirth, I, 1.] R 33 105 4to. 2vols.
des Koerperideals bei Aegyptern, Orientalen,
. .
. .
REINACH
plates
[With (Salomon) Recueil de tetes antiques ideals ou idealisees. R 34939 and illustrations.] Paris, 1903. 8vo, pp. vii, 230.
WALDSTEIN
appendix.
(Sir Charles) Greek sculpture and modern art. delivered to the students of the Royal Academy of London
Two lectures
.
with an
[With
etc.
plates.]
Cambridge, 1914.
8vo, pp.
xii,
70.
35712
CARVING,
BULLOCK
peers. Illustrated by ... phototypes of the principal carvings in the churches With other of Saint James's, Piccadilly and Saint Paul's Cathedral.
illustrations in the text.
London,
191 4.
4to.
35 173
plates
JONES
and
(E. Alfred)
illustrations.]
The
[With
of
Dames
America.] 566.
R 35209
New
34638
OSBORNE
mental intaglios, ancient and modern. York, 1912. 4to, pp. xiii, 424.
With
plates.
NUMISMATICS.
.
. .
COHEN
communement appelees medailles imperiales. (Continuee par Feuardent.) Deuxieme edition. [With illustrations.] 36258 8 vols. 8vo. Paris, 1880-92.
frappees sous 1'empire remain,
BURNS (Edward) The coinage of Scotland illustrated from of Thomas Coats ... of Ferguslie and other collections.
:
the cabinet
[Completed R 35252 by G. Sim.] Edinburgh, 1887. 3 vols. 4to. ITALY. Corpus nummorum Italicorum. Primo tentative di un catalogo generale delle monete medievali e moderne coniate in Italia o da italiani in altri paesi. Roma, 1913. 4to. In j [With plates.]
. .
27086
4.
1913.
LAHORE.
Punjab Museum. Catalogue of coins in the Panjab Museum, Lahore. By R. B. Whitehead. Oxford, [With maps and plates.] 1914. 2 vols. 36181 8vo.
. . .
1.
2.
POTTERY, PORCELAIN,
. .
etc.
ATHENS.
'EOviicov
Movaclov.
. .
Catalogue des vases peints du Musee national d'Athenes. Supplement avec une preface de Maxime Collignon par Georges Nicole de Parait sous les accompagne d'un album planches.
. .
.
auspices de la Societe auxiliaire des sciences et des'arts de Geneve. 1911. 2 yds. 8vo and 4to.
Pa ris,
35432
293
SCULPTURE,
(Sir
etc.
CRAMER-COGHILL,
afterwards
COGHILL
.
. .
xx, 48.
36294
.
.
HODGSON
plates
With . (Mrs. Willoughby) Old English china. Janet Leveson-Gower, and the by Mrs. Dudley Forsyth Arts Co., Derby, and illustrations. London, 1913. 4to, pp. xix, R 34983 201.
.
LAMBERG
.
.
.
Collection des vases grecs de le von) Graf. ( comte de Lamberg. Expliquee et publiee par Alexandre de La Borde. Fol. R 36470 2 vok in 1. Paris, 1813-24.
. . .
%* The
title-page of vol.
is
engraved.
MlLLINGEN
tirees
(James V.) Peintures antiques et inedites de vases grecs, de diverses collections, avec des explications. Rome, 1813. Fol.,
84,
viii.
pp.
xiii,
36295
MORGAN
lection.
(John Pierpont) Byzantine enamels in ... P. Morgan's col[A series of plates.] By O. M. Dalton. With a note by London, 1912. Roger Fry. [Reprinted from the Burlington magazine.]
33044
printed.
This copy
is
No. 47.
peints, grecs et etrusques.
.
REINACH
Avec
1 .
bibliographiques.
Compte-Rendu de
Paris, 1899-1900.
R 34937
St. Pe'tersbourg, les
le
Monu-
menti, Annali et iMemorie de 1'Institut de Rome, 1'Archaeologische Zeitung, le Napolitano, le Bullettino Italiano, rEphemeris, 1883-1894, le Museo Italiano. . . .
2.
Bullettino
1899. Peintures de vases grave'es dans les recueils de Millingen, Coghill, Gerhard, Auserl, Vasenbilder, Laborde, Luynes, Roulez, Schulz, Amazonenvase, Tischbein, Tomes I-V. . . 1900.
attische Lekythen nach Adolf FurtBearbeitet von W. Riezler. Mit Beitragen von wanglers Auswahl. Rudolf Hackl. Herausgegeben mit Unterstiitzung der ThereianosStiftung der Koniglich Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Text (Tafeln). 35280 Munchen, 1914, 2 vols. Fol.
.
.
DECORATION.
GUIFFREY
(Jules Joseph) Histoire de la tapisserie depuis le moyen age a nos jours. Tours, 1886. jusqu* [With plates and illustrations.] 34766 4to, pp. viii, 533.
R
R
HAWLEY
.
. .
plates
With
35825
New
York, 1913.
BUSH NELL
a traveller's
introduction to the study of old church glass, from the twelfth century to the Renaissance, especially in France. With maps and illustrations.
. .
1914.
8vo, pp.
xi,
338.
37357
296
ARTS DECORATION.
:
DUN LOP
plates.]
(Madeline
Anne Wallace)
[1883].
London,
8vo, pp.
[With
31512
LANGLOIS
(Eustache Hyacinthe) Essai historique et descriptif sur la moderne, et sur les vitraux les plus resuivi de la marquables de quelques monumens frangais et etrangers Orne de biographic des plus celebres peintres-verriers. 34737 Rouen, 1832. 8vo, pp. xvj, 300. planches.
peinture sur verre ancienne et
;
. . .
.
MORIN
.
verrerie en Gaule sous 1'empire remain. de chronologic. Ouvrage illustre de morphologic Preface de Ernest Babelon. de planches.
(Jean)
La
Essai de
.
et
gravures,
.
1913.
4to,
pp.
xi,
306.
Paris, 35 194
.
SHERRILL
.
(Charles Hitchcock)
illustrations.
London, 1913.
R R
With 34568
34639
XVI
furniture.
[A
London,
[1913.]
750 FINE
ARTS: PAINTING.
et
BNZIT
(Emmanuel Charles Louis) Dictionnaire critique des peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs graveurs de tous
documentaire
&
les
temps
et
de
Par un groupe d'ecrivains specialistes francais et etrangers, tous les pays. Avec sous la direction de E. Benezit. reproductions hors texte
. . .
Paris, 1913.
8vo.
In progress.
[With
plates]
.
271 18
DA VIES
(Randall).
[1914].
London, 36287
MEIER-GRAEFE
Kunst.
[1914].
(Julius
.
Zweite.
4to.
A.)
R
.
36166
de
la
REINACH
renaissance,
Repertoire de peintures du moyen age (Salomon). 1280-1580. Contenant gravures. 1905-10. 3vols. 8vo.
. .
. . . .
et
Paris,
R
R
34936
351 70
:
dictionary of Irish
artists.
Portraits,
vols.
8vo.
WARD
.
modern painting from (James) History and methods of ancient the earliest times to the beginning of the renaissance period, including the methods and materials of the painter's craft of ancient and modern times.
. .
&
With
illustrations.
London,
1913.
8vo,
pp.
x,
250.
R
LAURIE
With With
34637
(Arthur Pillaus) The pigments and mediums of the old masters. a special chapter on the microphotographic study of brushwork. 35631 London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xiv, 192. plates.
.
R
R
HAMERTON
.
With
etchings and
illustrations.
London, 1885.
34744
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
RECENT ACCESSIONS
:
:
297
750 FINE ARTS PAINTING. BIN YON (Robert Laurence) The art of Botticelli an essay in pictorial criticism. [With plates.] London, \9\ 3. 4to, pp. xi, 166. R 35295 %* 275 copies printed.
CROWE
(Sir
history of painting in Italy : Umbria, Florence and Siena. Battista) Edited by Tancred From the second to the sixteenth century
. . .
A
.
Joseph
Archer)
and
CAVALCASELLE
In progress.
(Giovanni
Borenius.
5.
Illustrated.
16532
6. Sienese
1914. of the fifteenth century. 1914. Florentine masters of the sixteenth century.
CUNDALL
[With
R.W.S.
[Edition de Luxe.]
4to. pp. xx, 216.
plates
and
illustrations.]
London, 1906.
19516
This
is
No.
by B. Foster.
[With
plates.]
London, 34739
.
.
FROMENTIN
Belgique-Hollande. (Eugene) Les maitres d'autrefois. R 21 376 Dixneuvieme edition. Paris, 1910. 8vo. pp.418.
.
HOUSSAYE
MENPES
[With
portrait.]
36955
Luxe.] 1 95 1 5
(Mortimer) Whistler as I knew him. [Edition de London, 1 904. 4to, pp. xxvi, 153. [With plates.]
*% 500 copies
works
Cust.
printed.
This
is
No. 147.
MOLMENTI (Pompeo
. .
Gherardo) and
.
of Vittorio Carpaccio.
.
With
illustrations.
LUDWIG (Gustav) The life and Translated by Robert H. Hobart London, 1907. 4to, pp. xxxi, 248. 361 27
.
With
engravings
and
illustrations.
London,
1890.
%*
Fol., pp. xi, 152. One of 100 copies printed on large paper.
J.
R 34740
This copy
is
No.
5.
PlLON (Edmond)
XVIIIe
PP. 96.
siecle.
B. Greuze, peintre de la femme et la jeune fille du L'edition d'art. Paris, [1912.] 4to, [With plates.]
32877
\* 300
copies printed.
.
. .
SPARROW
\*
With a preface (Walter Shaw) John Lavery and his work. a duplicate set of plates.] by R. B. Cunninghame Graham. [With R 34663 London, [1913]. 2 vols. Fol.
160 copies printed.
This copy
is
No. 136.
4to.
34051
298
TOYNBEE
(Paget Jackson) Chronological list, with notes, of paintings and drawings from Dante, by Dante Gabriel Rossetti. [Reprinted from Scritti varii di erudizione e di critica in onore R. Renier.] [Torino, R 3301 8 Fol., pp. 135-166. 1912.]
\* The
title is
Wu
TAO-TZCJ.
Lagenwelt Chinas.
Obi. 4to.
Tao-tze aus der Gotter-und Zeichnungen nach von F. R. Martin. Munchen, 1913. Herausgegeben
Wu
35223
760 FINE
ARTS
Paris.
ENGRAVING.
BlBLIOTHEQUE NATIONALS,
Le Departement des Estampes. departement des estampes a la Bibliotheque nationale. Notice historique, suivie d'un catalogue des estampes exposees dans les salles de ce Par le v te Henri Delaborde. Paris, 1875. 8vo, departement. 442. R 36457 pp.
.
BRITISH
Catalogue of engraved British portraits preserved in and drawings in the British Museum. By Freeman O'Donoghue. Vol. iv. London, 1914. 8vo. In
prints
. . .
MUSEUM.
progress.
R 25238
CARRINGTON
(Fitzroy)
Prints
and
their
.
makers
.
essays on engravers
With
illustrations.
GRAPHISCHEGESELLSCHAFT.
Veroffentlichung.
. . .
Graphische Gesellschaft.
Fol.
XVI.
(-XVIII.)
In progress.
R
.
. .
12555
Springer.
16.
vols.
Seghers.
Herausgegeben von
J.
V.
Stoss
Herausgegeben von
Heraus-
E. Baumeister.
1913.
.
. .
18. Leinberger (H.) Nachbildungen seiner Kupferstiche und Holzschnitte. 1913. gegeben von M. Lossnitzer.
HAMERTON
plates.]
&
etchers.
Third
edition.
London, 1880.
R
XV.
[With
34742
HEITZ
[A
Fol.
Einzelbilder des
Jahrhunderts.
series of facsimiles,
%* 400
copies printed.
No.
143.
.
KRISTELLER
(Paul) Die lombardische Graphik der Renaissance. Nebst einem Verzeichnis von Biichern mil Holzschnitten. Mit Lichtdrucken und 4to, Berlin, 1913. Textabbildungen.
. .
pp.
viii.
171.
35080
et
(Eustache
.
Hyacinthe)
Essai
. . .
historique,
philosophique
.
. . .
.
pittoresque sur les Danses des morts. planches Accompagne de et de vignettes dessinees et gravees par E. H. Langlois suivi d'une lettre de Breviere et Tudot Esperance Langlois.
. .
.
299
ARTS
. .
ENGRAVING.
sur le
Depping
meme
sujet.
Ouvrage
. .
Andre
in
Pettier
...
et
Alfred
vols. in 1.
8vo.
34736
. . .
Salzburger Bibliotheken.
Mit
1913.
*%
[Gesellschaft der Miinchner Bibliophilen.] 26. 8vo, pp. 120 copies printed. This copy is No. 87.
Miinchen,
R 33997
780 FINE
ARTS
MUSIC.
SCHURIG
Sein Leben und sein (Arthur) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Grund der vornehmlich durch Nikolaus von Nissen gesammelten biographischen Quellen und der Ergebnisse der neuesten 2 vols. 8vo. Leipzig, \\9\3. [With plates.] Forschung dargestellt.
Werk
auf
R 35232
790 FINE
ARTS: AMUSEMENTS.
portrait.]
BOADEN
of authors
and
actors.
[With
London, 1827.
theatre
R
anglais
a
19046
sous
la
BORGERHOFF
restauration.
(Joseph Leopold) Le
Paris
xi,
[With
plates.]
Paris, [1913].
8vo, pp.
245.
R
. . .
34649
18404
FITZGERALD
1874.
London,
MENOU
la Pratiqve (Rene de) methode qu'il doit tenir poui mettre son cheual a la raison, & le vraye rendre capable de paroistre sur la carriere, obeissant a 1'ordre des plus iustes proportions de tous les plus beaux Airs & Maneges. [Printer's A Paris, Chez la Vefue M. Gvillemot, & S. device beneath title.] MD.C.XIV. TJiibovst, au Palais, en la gallerie des Prisonniers.
II
.
La
Dv
Cavalier.
Par
Ov
Est Enseigne
8vo, pp.
[8,]
148.
R 35757
Du theatre,
.
MERCIER
ou nouvel
Amsterdam, 1773.
R
The
life
361 02
MOLLOY
and adventures of (Joseph Fitzgerald) 1787-1833. London, 1888. 2 vols. 8vo. tragedian,
history of chess. (Harold James Ruthven) 8vo, pp. 900. Oxford, 1913.
of
Edmund Kean
R
[With
19010
MURRAY
plates
and
illustrations.]
18421
Nance
Oldfield.
With
portraits.
R
Greek
ideal.
. .
.
19032
WATTS
(Diana)
The
renaissance of the
Illustrated.
London,
[1914].
36049
300
LITERATURE
of
GENERAL.
:
BjORKMAN
(Edwin) Voices
to-morrow
critical
studies of the
new
spirit in literature.
London,
[1913].
R
.
36328
CAZAMIAN
Paris, 1913.
R
:
34630
COWL
(R. P.) The theory of poetry in England its development in doctrines and ideas from the sixteenth century to the nineteenth century. 36410 London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xiv, 319.
FAGUET
(Auguste Emile)
Initiation
into
literature.
With
additions
Translated from the French specially written for the English edition. Gordon, Bart. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xi, 220. by Sir
Home
R
GUENTHER
(Georg) Grundziige der tragischen Kunst. der Griechen entwickelt. Leipzig, Berlin, 1885. 543.
(Ricarda) Die Romantik.
1.
. . .
34703
28203
8vo.
HUGH
2.
Leipzig, 1912-13.
vols.
R
Funfte Auflage. Bliitezeit der Romantik. 1913. Dritte Auflage. Ausbreitung und Verfall der Romantik. . .
.
36984
1912.
MOUTON
MURET
1
.
livre,
de I'imprimer,
et
^e
le publier.
R R
.
26448
Paris^
[191- -14].
8vo.
A.
. .
36205
K.
Strindberg.
S. Lagerlof.
E.
de Handel-Mazzetti.
Schifeherr.
2.
191
-.
S. Michaelis
L. Zuccoli. E. Corradini. T. Mann. L. Reymont. M. Twain. & L. Tolstoi. B. Bjbrnson. J. V. Jensen. 1914.
.
.
F. Dostoievsky.
SANCTIS (Francesco
R
SCHLEGEL
(Carl Wilhelm Friedrich von) Lectures on From the German. literature, ancient and modern. Edinburgh and London, 1846. 8vo, pp. viii, 423.
.
36229
the history of
New
edition.
31041
TURNER
(Leslie Morton) Du conflit tragique chez les Grecs et dans These pour le Doctoral d'universite presentee a la Faculte Shakespeare. des Lettres de 1'Universite de Paris. [Universite [With illustrations.] de Paris. Faculte des Lettres.] 34633 Paris, 1913. 8vo, pp. 268.
810
LITERATURE: AMERICAN.
COOK
(Elizabeth Christine) Literary influences in colonial newspapers, 1704-1750. [Columbia University Studies in English and Comparative
Literature.]
New
York, 1912.
8vo, pp.
:
xi,
279.
351
DE SELINCOURT
London, 1914.
(Basil)
Walt Whitman
.
a critical study.
[With portrait]
8vo, PP 250.
35564
30 f
LITERATURE: AMERICAN.
a critical
study.
HUEFFER
portrait.]
London, 1913.
R 35211
R
[With
MlLLER
(Cincinnatus Heine) The building of the city beautiful. By Cambridge d Chicago, Joaquin Miller, [i.e. Cincinnatus Heine Miller]. 34128 1893. 8vo, PP iv, 196.
.
%*
This
is
No. 12
of
820
DELATTRE
anglaise.
.
(Floris)
. .
essais
de
litterature
Paris, 1913.
R 33925
ENGLISH ASSOCIATION.
English Association.
a review of art and ideas at eighteen nineties . the close of the nineteenth century. London, 1913. [With plates.]
: .
.
R 34701
MAIR (George H.) Modern English literature from Chaucer to the London, 1914. 8vo, pp. ix, 310. present day ... with portraits.
R R
37373
ROBERTSON (John
Library.]
[Home
University
36440
8vo,
SHORTER
pp.
viii,
London,
1907.
R 35286
literature.
WALKER
(Hugh) and
(Janie) Outlines of
viii,
Victorian
Cam34604
bridge, 1913.
8vo, pp.
224.
821
GENERAL.
Allot,
ford.
1
by R.
600. Edited from the original text in the Bodleian Library and with the two copies in the British Museum by Charles Crawcompared
With
xliii,
and indexes.
von
Oxford, 1913.
8vo, pp.
559.
R
Herausgegeben
1883-1890.
;
34720
Eugen.
ALTENGLISCHE BIBLIOTHEK.
Kolbing.
1.
.
...
8vo.
Heilbronn,
etc.,
5 vols.
33657
2.
Quelle. 1884. [Also a Latin version.] 3. Octavian, Emperor, Hero of Romance. Octavian, zwei mittelenglische Bearbeitungen der Sage. . 1885. . G. Sarrazin. Herausgegeben von 4. Arthur, King of Britain. Arthour and Merlin nach der Auchinleck-Hs. Nebst zwei Beilagen. 1890. Herausgegeben von E. Kolbing. 5. Libeaus Desconus. Libeaus Desconus die mittelenglische Romanze vom schotien Unbekannten. Nach sechs Handschriften kritisch herausgegeben von M. Kaluza. . . 1890.
: . . . . ;
:
Bokenam (O.) O. Bokenam's Legenden. Herausgegeben von C. Horstmann. 1883. Amis, Hero of Romance. Amis and Amiloun zugleich mit der altfranzosischen Herausgegeben von E. Kolbing. Nebst einer Beilage Amicus ok Amih'us rfmur.
302
HAMILTON
Being a history of (Walter) The poets laureate of England the office of poet laureate, biographical notices of its holders, and a collection of the satires, epigrams, and lampoons directed against them.
8vo,
London, 1879.
PP
xxv, 308.
lyric.
ix,
35567
SCHELLING
(Felix
[The
335.
times.
English Literature.]
London,
(Grace
E.)
1913.
8vo, pp.
Types of R 33857
EARLY
SKEAT
HADOW
Chaucer
and
his
University Library.]
London-, [1914].
R
. . .
[Home
36228
(Walter William) The Chaucer canon, with a discussion of the works associated with the name of Geoffrey Chaucer. Oxford,
1900.
8vo, pp.
(Jessie
xi,
167.
R
vision
36382
WESTON
Laidlay) Romance,
&
satire.
English
alliterative
poems of the fourteenth century. Newly rendered London, 1912. 8vo, pp. viii, 336.
R
Edited from the
facsimiles.]
35108
WYATT
1913.
(Sir
Thomas)
4to.
the Elder.
The
poems.
.
MSS.
[With
London, R 35436
ELIZABETHAN.
BOEHME
[Palaestra 93.]
30089
HARPER
(Carrie Anna) The sources of the British chronicle history in dissertation presented to the faculty of Spenser's Faerie Queene. Bryn Mawr College for the degree of doctor of philosophy.
[Bryn
Mawr
College Monographs.
8vo, pp. 190.
Monograph
Series,
7.]
Phila-
deli>hi'i,
1910.
R R
34967
HERBERT
tions.
.
The temple. Sacred poems and private ejacula[With portrait.] London, 907. [Edited by G. Sampson.] 36292 4to, pp. 243.
(George)
.
SPENSER (Edmund)
[With
portrait.]
.
Poetical works.
original
The
and
. .
and
selected,
by Francis
8vo.
Child.
Boston,
. .
[n.d.]
3 vols.
34825
Amoretti.
et notes
Traduits en sonnets avec introduction, texte anglais 35554 Paris, 1914. 4to, pp. 140.
The minor poems from the autograph manuscript with introduction and notes by Eloise Robinson. [With R 35612 London, 1914. 4to, pp. xliii, 463. portrait.]
(Joseph)
BEAUMONT
1616-1699.
Beaumont
Edited
COWLEY
press.
those which
(Abraham) The works of ... A. Cowley. Consisting of were formerly printed and those which he design'd for the
:
Now
life
with a
1668.
published out of the authors original copies. of the author by T. Sprat.] [With portrait.]
[Edited
Fol.
London, R 35693
303
DUCK
[With an account of the (Stephen) Poems on several occasions. author by J. Spence.J 33064 London, 736. 4to, pp. xl, 334.
MlLTON
(John) Areopagitica a speech to the Parliament of England, for the liberty of unlicensed printing. With prefatory remarks,
:
.
To copious notes, and excursive illustrations, by T. Holt White. which is subjoined a tract Sur la liberte de la presse, imite de 1'Anglois de Milton, par le comte de Mirabeau. London, 1819. 8vo, pp. 35389 cxlix, 311.
. .
.
Edited with introduction The tenure of kings and magistrates. thesis presented to the and notes by William Talbot Allison. ... of the graduate school of Yale University in candidacy for the faculty
.
New
35387
The
.
.
.
shorter poems.
With
London, 1889.
AODISON
Paradise
pp.
148.
lost.
R 35399 Hon. Joseph) Notes upon the twelve books of (Right " Collected from the Spectator ". London, 1719. 12mo, R 35386
Fol., pp. xx, 124.
by Samuel Palmer.
Milton's prosody
an examination of
of
notes.
1893.
w -
Oxford, R 33 137
No. 196.
complete concordance to the (Charles Dexter) London, 867. 8vo, pp. viii, 308. poetical works of John Milton.
1
35398
DOUGLAS (John) successively Bishop of Carlisle and of SalisMilton vindicated from the charge of plagiarism, brought bury. him by ... Lauder, and Lauder himself convicted of several against In a letter addressed forgeries and gross imposition on the public.
.
to the
-
...
Earl of Bath
London, 1751.
35396
ORCHARD
Paradise 288.
of
"
(Thomas
. .
.
lost ".
viii,
-
Nathaniel) Milton's astronomy the astronomy With illustrations. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. 35 101
PRENDERGAST (Guy
works
of
*
Lushington)
the poetical
**
Milton.
Madras, 1856-57.
35394
The
title is
RICHARDSON
the
lost.
Younger.
(Jonathan) the Elder, and RICHARDSON (Jonathan) Explanatory notes and remarks on Milton's Paradise
life of
By J. Richardson, father and son. With the and a discourse on the poem. By J. R., sen.
*
the author,
[With
London, 1734.
-
SAMPSON
R
R
portrait.]
35570
New
York, 1886,
35388
21
304
LITERATURE: ENGLISH POETRY. MlLTON SAMPSON (Alden) Studies in Milton, and an essay
London,
1914.
1914.
on poetry.
36289
37690
THOMPSON
New Harcn,
R
of J.
Milton, containing, besides the TOLAND (John) The of his works, several extraordinary characters of men and books, history [Subscribed I. T., i.e. J. Toland.] sects, parties, and opinions. 33 1 39 London, 1 699. 8vo, PP 1 65
. .
VERRALL
Lectures
on
.Edited
by
vii,
271.
35561
ALLINGHAM
W.
Allingham
selected
Dundrum
Dun
Emer
Press, 1905.
33977
BARRETT
(Elizabeth) afterwards BROWNING (Elizabeth Barrett) The London : enchantress and other poems. [Edited by T. J. Wise.] 34001 printed for private circulation, 191 3. 8vo, pp. 28.
R
.
\*
-
30 copies
printed.
. .
.
Edited by
Edmund
Gosse.
[With
a prefatory note subscribed T. J. W., i.e. T. J. Wise.] printed for private circulation, 1913. 8vo, pp. 19.
London:
R
J.
34002
i.e.
%*
T.
J.
30 copies
printed.
Leila;
tale.
W.,
Wise.]
30 copies
circulation, 1913.
8vo,
pp. 35.
34003
%*
BROWNING
. . .
Browning.
-
(Robert) New poems by R. Browning and Elizabeth Barrett With Edited by Sir Frederic G. Kenyon, K.C.B. 37599 London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xxix, 184. portraits.
.
. .
Dramatic
idyls.
First series.
Second
edition.
8vo,
-
PP
143.
idyls.
Dramatic
Second
series.
London, 1880.
works
of
R
The
.
34619
37472
BLUNT
poetical
London, 1914.
Poetical works,
vols.,
London, 1898-1905.
6 vols., 33980
other
for the bicentenary commemoration of Henry Purcell, with poems and a preface on the musical setting of poetry. [The R 34617 London, 1896. 8vo, pp. 43. Shilling Garland, 2.]
Ode
DOWDEN
E. D. Dowden.]
(Edward) Poems. [With preface subscribed E. D. D., i.e. London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xx, 244. [With portrait.] R 35362
305
GALE
xii,24l.
8vo, pp.
36393
GORDON (Adam
.
.
in Lindsay) Adam Lindsay Gordon and his friends and Australia. By Edith Humphris and Douglas Sladen. England other illustrations. London, sketches by Gordon and With
.
1912.
R
R
35427
MACDONAGH
Dublin, 1913.
35363
V
89.
-
500 copies
MASEFIELD
The
0^n
The
everlasting mercy.
London, 1911.
109.
portrait
daffodil fields.
London, 1913.
.
8vo, pp.
.
.
R 33979 R 34682
by William
8vo, pp.
Philip the
Strang.
With a
117.
.
37362
MORRIS
With introductions by his (William) Collected works. daughter May Morris. [With plates.] London, 1913. 8vo. In 23840 progress. Child Christopher. Old French romances. 1913. 17. The wood beyond the world. 18-19. The well at the world's end. 2 vols. 1913. 20. The Water of the Wondrous hies. 1913. 21. The sundering flood. Unfinished romances. 1914.
. .
.
Lectures on art and industry. 22. Hopes and fears for art. 1914. 23. Signs of change. Lectures on socialism. 1915. 24. Scenes from The fall of Troy, and other poems and fragments. 1915.
ROSSETTI
With a memoir (Gabriel Charles Dante) His family- letters William Michael Rossetti. facsimile and portraits.] [With by
.
vols.
8vo.
34886
SHELLEY
(Percy Bysshe)
The
life
of P. B. Shelley.
By Thomas Medwin.
introduction
and
left
unpublished
at his death.
. . .
With an
[With
by and
commentary by H.
1913.
Buxton Forman.
plates.]
R
:
Oxford,
34849
C. Swinburne to Stephane
.
London
printed for
34014
%*
30 copies
printed.
TRELAWNY
and Byron
(Edward John)
. . .
Recollections
of
[With
plates].
London, 1858.
Second London, 1879.
8vo, pp.
viii,
304.
35096
and
208.
TENNYSON
enlarged.
edition revised
[By R. H. Shepherd.]
8vo, pp.
viii,
R 32854
306
BAKER
of Alfred,
concordance to the poetical and dramatic works (Arthur E.) " Life Lord Tennyson, including the poems contained in the and the "Suppressed poems," 1830-1868. of Alfred, Lord Tennyson"
printed], 1914.
. .
London [Edinburgh
36525
CHOISY
Alfred Tennyson
. . .
illustrations.
4to, pp.
289.
(Francis)
33091
THOMPSON
Meynell.l
[With
life
portraits.]
The
plates.]
of
Francis
By Everard Meynell.
360.
.
. .
London, 1913.
[With
34836
8vo,
Par K. Rooker.
London, 1913.
R
The
collected
33867
.
WOODS
With
(Margaret Louisa)
a portrait.
. . .
poems
of
M.
L.
Woods
London,
1914.
8vo, pp.
viii,
351.
R R
35341
1
WORDSWORTH
London, 1822.
822
820.
riii,
103.
34623
LITERATURE ENGLISH. DRAMA AND FICTION. GENERAL. MALONE Society reprints. [General editor, W. W. Greg.]
[With
The
facsimiles.]
[Oxford printed,}
1911-14.
4to,
In progress.
R
1
i
13851
Greg.]
birth of Hercules.
for
my
[Edited by
W. W.
Bethsabe.
[Edited by
W. W.
Greg.]
The resurrection of our Lord. [Edited by J. D. Wilson and The two angry women of Abington, 599. [By H. Porter.]
1
B. Dobell.] [Edited by
1912 [1913].
W. W.
The
[Edited by
W. W.
Greg.]
1912 [1913].
1912 [1913]. Wily beguiled, 1606. [Edited by W. W. Greg.] Clyomon and Clamydes, 1599. [Edited by W. W. Greg.] -191 3.
The
[Edited by
1913.
W. W.
Greg.]
Look about you, 600. [Edited by W. W. Greg.] 1913. The wit of a woman, 1604. Edited by W. W. Greg.] 1913. E.G. The tragedy of Mariam, 1613. (Written by that learned E. Gary, Viscountess Falkland.]) [Edited 1914. by A. C. Dunstan.]
[
.
[Edited by
W. W.
Greg.]
Ladie, E.G.
[i.e.
An
8vo, pp.
261.
37488
371 72
MOORE
1907.
Lon
R
of
SCHELLING
Literature.]
[The Channels
London, 1914.
English
37493
307
the
Tudor
age.
[With
facsimiles.]
Oxford, 1914.
8vo, pp.
x,
414.
R
1903.
36460
HERTZ
8.]
8vo,
35144
SCHELLING
of the
history Emanuel) Elizabethan drama 1558-1642. England from the accession of Queen Elizabeth to the closing of the theaters, to which is prefixed a resume of the earlier drama Boston and New York, 1910. 2 vols. from its beginnings.
(Felix
in
drama
8vo.
35894
ACHESON
sonnets.
(Arthur) Mistress Davenant, the dark lady of Shakespeare's Demonstrating the identity of the dark lady of the sonnets, and the authorship and satirical intention of Willobie his Avisa. With a reprint of Willobie his Avisa, in part, Penelope's complaint, An elegie, Constant Susanna, Queen Dido, Pyramus and Thisbe, The
London, 1913.
shepherd's slumber, and sundry other poems by the same author. 34602 8vo, pp. v, 332.
. .
BERZEVICZY
.
le theatre
R
R
BROOKE
1913.
Ten more
plays of Shakespeare.
London, 33952
CHEFFAUD
(P. H.) George Peele, 1558-1596? [Bibliotheque de Paris, 1913. 8vo, pp. 194. Philologie et de Litterature modernes.]
. . .
R 34631
.
DEMBLON
des
portrait.]
mysteres
(Celestin) devoile,
.
Lord Rutland
8vo, pp.
viii,
est
le
.
plus grand
.
Paris, 1912.
559.
.
R
.
[With
32886
36082
GER VI N US
1862.
8vo.
:
HAMLET,
Prince of Denmark. Corpus Hamleticum Hamlet in Sage und Dichtung, Kunst und Musik. Herausgegeben von J. Schick. R 33157 Berlin, 1912. 8vo, In progress.
.
1. 1.
Abteilung.
Sagengeschichtliche Untersuchungen.
:
orientalische Fassungen.
.
Von J.
Schick.
1912.
MASSON
242.
36388
plates.]
399.
et
34888 36096
la
superstition
shakespearienne.
308
822
DRAMA AND
FICTION.
ROWLEY
(William) William Rowley: his All's lost by lust, and a With an introduction on Rowley's place in Shoemaker, a gentleman. the drama by Charles Wharton Stork. [University of Pennsylvania.
Series in Philology
and
Literature, 13.]
Philadelphia, 1910.
8vo,
pp. 287.
R
. .
34692
SAXO*S Amleth.
**
Translated by Oliver Elton. Shakespeare's Hamlet. And Milton's Areopagitica. [With Edited by Sydney Humphries. 34955 London, 1913. 3 pts. in 1 vol. 8vo. portraits.]
.
10 copies printed.
SCHELENZ (Hermann)
der
Shakespeare und sein Wissen auf den Gebieten In vol. 8vo. Arznei-und Volkskunde. Leipzig, 1914. R 36201 progr(
1
SEAGER
(Herbert West) Natural history in Shakespeare's time being Made by H. W. illustrative of the subject as he knew it. Also pictures thereunto belonging. London, 896. Seager. 29796 8vo, pp. viii, 358.
:
extracts
STALKER
reader.
.
(James)
. .
read Shakspeare a guide for the general London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xi, 292. [With portrait.]
to
:
How
R35100
STORES
London, 1913.
(Charlotte Carmichael) Burbage and Shakespeare's stage. 34871 8vo, pp. xvi, 272.
. .
.
R R
Shakespeare's environment.
London, 1914.
8vo, pp.
xii,
369.
37666
PALMER Qohn) The comedy of manners. R 35134 London, 1913. 8vo, pp. vii, 308. GRISY (Remain Ambroise de) tude sur Thomas Otway. These presentee
POST- ELIZABETHAN.
[With
plates.]
de Paris.
Paris, 1868.
R
R
36760
WILSON
The
et
Public d'apres un manuscrit inedit, avec des notes par Albert Feuillerat. Paris, 904.
Swisser.
.
.
36474
:
igTH
. .
tragedy, in
.
performed
at
Second
edition.
;
London,
statue
:
a Lalor) Adelaide the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden. 1816. 35912 8vo, pp. 72.
SHEIL (Richard
Evadne
or, the
a tragedy, in
five
acts
as
performed
vi,
at
Covent Garden.
London, 1819.
8vo, pp.
Irish
86.
R35911
BOURGEOIS (Maurice) John
[With
plates.]
plates.]
London, 1913.
theatre.
R
R
34817
[With 35611 [With 35004
CHADWICK
Brontes.
CROSS (Wilbur
plates.]
The
life
and times
of
Laurence Sterne.
New
York, 1909.
8vo,
PP
xv, 555.
309
DICKENS
" " Dora C. Dickens and Maria Beadnell, private correspondence between C. Dickens and Mrs. Henry Winter, nee " David CopperMaria Beadnell, the original of Dora Spenlow in " " and Flora Finching in Little Dorrit ". Edited by ... George field Pierce Baker. [With preface by Henry H. Harper.] [Second edition with a preface subscribed W. K., B. i.e. W. K. Bixby.] [With Saint Louis, Mo. : privately printed for William portraits and plates.] K. Bixby, 1908. 8vo, pp. xxx, 152. 36272
(Charles)
:
. .
.
LITERATURE
ENGLISH.
DRAMA AND
FICTION.
V
.
25
P ies
printed.
This
is
No. 79.
:
GREGORY (Augusta) Lady. Our Irish theatre New York and London, Illustrated.
. .
R
R
35244
tales,
HARDY
(Thomas) changed man, the waiting supper, with the romantic adventures of a milkmaid. concluding
piece and map.] The half-title
and other
[With
frontis-
London, 1913.
reads
34837 8vo, pp. vii, 412. "Thomas Hardy's works, The Wessex edition Volume XVIII."
. .
.
HOUGHTON
Edited with (William Stanley) The works of S. Houghton. London an introduction by Harold Brighouse. [With portraits.] 1914. 3vols. 8vo. 364 12
t
R
.
KlNGSLEY
portraits.]
1-4.
(Charles)
The
life
and works
19 vols.
of
C. Kingsley.
life.
London, 1901-03.
his letters
8vo.
of his
R
;
[With
37436
wife
[i.e.
Charles Kingsley:
and memories
Edited by h
F. E. Kingsley]. . . . 4 vols. 1901-02. or the voyages and adventures of Sir Amyas Leigh, Knight, of 5-6. Westward in the county of Devon, in the reign of Her Most Glorious Majesty Queen Burrough,
Ho
Rendered into modern English. ... 2 vols. 1902. Alton Locke, tailor and poet an autobiography. With a prefatory memoir by 2 vols. 1902. T.Hughes. 9-10. Hypatia, or new foes with an old face. ... 2 vols. 1902. " Last of the 11-12. Hereward the Wake . 2 vols. 1902. English ". 13-14. Two years ago. 2 vols. 1902. . 15. Yeast: a problem. . .1902. .1902. 16. Poems.
Elizabeth.
7-8.
: . .
. .
17. 18.
At
last
a Christmas in the
West
.
Indies.
1903.
Prose
idylls
new and
:
old.
.1903.
The
heroes, or
19.
The
.
water-babies
.
Greek
my
children.
.1903.
8vo, pp.
xxiii,
Illustrated.
London,
R 34877
[MANNING
(Libellus a (Anne)] 'The household of Sir Thos. More. Margareta More, quindecim annos nata, Chelselae inceptus. [Really With an introduction by W. H. written by Anne Manning.]) and illustrations by John Jellicoe and Herbert Railton. Hutton
. .
MELMOTH.
8vo.
34125
of
a
.
tale.
By
the
author
C. R. Maturin.]
Edinburgh, 1820.
:
vols.
R R
35877
35861
MURRAY (George Gilbert Aime) Andromache a London, 1914. 8vo, pp. vii, [Revised edition.]
play in
104.
three acts.
310
FICTION.
8vo, pp.
viii,
34818
. .
genius
& teaching.
London, 1913.
R
.
.
.
8vo, pp.
34565
in
SCOTT
Scottish history
drawn from
8vo, PP
.
various sources.
[With
frontispiece.]
London, 1897.
vi,
SHARP
1912.
7.
(William)
edition.
Fiona Macleod of (W. Sharp). [With plates.] by Mrs. William Sharp. Arranged
The works
363. "
34131
"
Uniform
London,
32221
WATT
. .
With
a frontispiece.
London, 1913.
R 34677
vii,
WILSON
148.
Cambridge, 1905.
8vo, pp.
36242
824
CARLYLE
Edited
(Thomas) The love letters of T. Carlyle and Jane Welsh. With illustrations. by Alexander Carlyle. London New York, 909. 2 vols. 8vo. [Second edition.]
.
. .
.
R
COOPER
[With
acters or the language of forms.
illustrations.]
.
.
36270
Cambridge, 1914.
R R
35895
1845.
CROMWELL
dations by
with eluci-
Thomas
Carlyle.
[With
portrait.]
London,
8vo.
vols.
8vo.
35084
GOSSE (Edmund)
I.
Collected essays.
1913.
London, 1913.
In progress. R 34119
KURE
(Jens)
Thomas
af
gennemgang
vaerdig
til
[Denne afhandling er
af
Med
Kfybenhavn,
1912.
4to,
pp.
xi,
308.
R
.
.
33365
plates.
READE
gress.
///
R
connexions and
illustia'ive
20931
life.
*.* 350 copies printed. Notes on Dr. Johnson's ancestors and 1909.
.
of his early
2.
-1913.
311
THOMAS
London,
study.
[With
91 3.
8vo, pp. 23
R R
portrait.]
34661
[With 36323
:
THOMPSON,
afterwards
MEYNELL
frontispiece.]
London, 1914.
THRALE
afterwards PlOZZI (Hester Lynch) Mrs. Piozzi's Thraliana with numerous extracts hitherto unpublished. By Charles Hughes.
.
London,
1913.
R 36406
WELSH
of J.
New letters and memorials (Jane Baillie). Annotated by Thomas Carlyle and edited by Alexander Carlyle, with an introduction by Sir James Crichton-Browne. London and New York, 1903. 2 vols. illustrations. With
afterwards
CARLYLE
W.
.
.
Carlyle.
8vo.
R 36269
826
LITERATURE
ENGLISH
LETTERS.
DOWDEN
to
(Edward) Fragments from old letters. E. D. [i.e. E. Dowden] W. [i.e. E. D. West, afterwards Dowden], 1869 to 1892. With portrait and illustrations. London, 1914. 8vo, pp. ix, 206. R 36866
E. D.
-
Letters
of
Elizabeth D.
portraits.]
[Edited
facsimile
London, 1914.
by and 36327
TRELAWNY
plates.]
(Edward John) Letters of E. J. Trelawny. Edited with a brief introduction and notes by H. Buxton Forman. [With portraits and
.
.
Oxford, 1910.
WOLLSTONECRAFT,
afterwards
GODWIN
Letters to Imlay, with prefatory memoir by C. London, 1879. 8vo, pp. Ixiii, 207. portraits.]
35094
828
LITERATURE
ENGLISH
MISCELLANY.
BORROW
Little Danneved and (George Henry) T. J. Wise.] London : Trost, and other ballads. Swayne [Edited by R 35309 4to, pp. 26. printed for private circulation, 1913.
[i.e.
W.
Christian]
35310
%*
-
30 copies
printed.
35311
The Dalby bear and other ballads. [Edited by T. J. Wise.] London: printed for private circulation, 1913. 4to, pp. 20.
34004
%*
30 copies
printed.
312
LITERATURE: ENGLISH
MISCELLANY.
BORROW
by T.
[Edited (George Henry) Ellen of Villenskov and other ballads. London : printed for private circulation, 1913. J. Wise.]
R3400
printed.
:
Ermeline
a ballad.
London
printed
R
%*
Wise.] 1913.
30 copies printed.
35313
T.
The
fountain of
[Edited by
J.
R
. .
353 14
%*
-
30 copies
printed.
.
troduction
circulation, 1913.
353 5
1
The end
of
London
R R
353 6
1
30 copies printed.
:
Hafbur and Signe a ballad. [Edited by T. J. Wise.] 4to, pp. 23. printed for private circulation, \9\ 3.
London :
34006
%*
-
30 copies
printed.
other ballads.
fight
J.
between the
lion
Wise.]
circulation, 1913.
**
R
:
3531 7
King Hacon's death and Bran and the black dog two ballads. London: printed for private circulation, R 34007 %* 30 copies printed.
The king's wake and other ballads. [Edited by London: printed for private circulation, 1913. 4to,
%*
-
J.
Wise.]
pp. 23.
R
30 copies
printed.
34008
Letters to his mother, Ann Borrow, and other correspondents. London: printed for private circulation, [Edited by T. J. Wise.] 8vo, pp.38. 353 18 1913.^ **
30 copies
printed.
Letters
to
his wife,
Mary Borrow.
private,
R
30 copies
printed.
34009
313
LITERATURE
ENGLISH
:
MISCELLANY.
BORROW
%*
(George Henry) Little Engel a ballad, with a series of epiLondon : printed from the Persian. [Edited by T. J. Wise.] grams 35319 4to, pp. 27. for private circulation, 1913.
30 copies printed.
Marsk
Stig: a
printed.
ballad.
by
J.
Wise.]
London:
34010
Marsk
Stig's daughters
Wise.] pp.21.
J.
T.
London
printed.
and other songs and ballads. [Edited by printed for private circulation, 1913. 8vo, R 34011
30 copies
Mollie Charane, and other ballads. [Edited by T. J. Wise.] London: printed for private circulation, 1913. 4to, pp. 28.
*** 30 copies printed.
R 35320
35321
%*
30 copies
printed.
The
nightingale.
The valkyrie and raven, and other ballads. London : printed for private circulation,
35322
30 copies
printed.
The bard and the dreams, and other ballads. T. J. Wise.] London : printed for [Edited by [With a facsimile.] 35323 4to, pp. 29. private circulation, 1913.
Queen Berngerd.
%*
30 copies
printed.
The return of the dead and other ballads. [Edited by T. J. Wise.] London: printed for private circulation, 1913. 4to, pp. 21.
R 34012
\*
30 copies
printed.
The serpent knight and other ballads. London: printed for private circulation,
%*
30 copies
printed.
3401 3
The song of Deirdra, King Byrge and his brothers, and other ballads. London: printed for private circulation, [Edited by T. J. Wise.] 1913. 4to, pp. 28. 35324
**
30 copies
printed.
The
%*
songs
of
Ranild.
[Edited
by T.
J.
Wise.]
London:
35325
314
BORROW (George
inspired
supplementary chapter to The Bible in Spain, Henry) " by Ford's Hand-book for travellers in Spain ". [Edited by T. J. Wise.] [With a facsimile.] London: printed for private circuR 35327 lation, \9\3. 4to, PP 46.
.
\*
by T.
30 copies
printed.
Young Swaigder or the force of runes, and other ballads. [Edited London: printed for private circulation, 1913. J. Wise.] 4to, PP 27. R 35328 %* 30 copies printed. EMELIAN. Emelian the fool a tale. Translated from the Russian London : printed for by George Borrow. J. Wise.] [Edited by
.
35312
\*
TlM.
30 copies
printed.
The
Borrow.
Tim. [Edited by T.
story
of
printed.
Translated
J.
Wise.]
London
circulation, 1913.
35326
%*
30 copies
SHORTER
(Clement King) George Borrow and his circle, wherein may be found many hitherto unpublished letters of Borrow and his friends. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xix, 450. [With plates and illustrations.]
R
HARVEY
. . .
34826
Collected and edited (Gabriel) Gabriel Harvey's marginalia. G. C. Moore Smith. by Stratford-upon-Avon, [With plates.] 1913. 3491 4 8vo, pp. xvi, 327.
830
LITERATURE: GERMAN.
New
and Shaftesbury. [Columbia 8vo, pp. xii, 143. York, 1913.
University
ELSON
(Charles)
Wieland
Germanic
Studies.]
35113
:
GOEDEKE
(Carl) Grundrisz zur Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung aus den Quellen zweite ganz neu bearbeitete Auflage. In progress. Zehnter Band. 1 vol. 8vo. Dresden, 1913.
.
R
KRUEGER (Herman
und Anders) Deutsches Literatur-Iexikon
:
10747
biographisches
bibliographisches Handbuch mil Motiviibersichten und QuellenR 36108 nachweisen. Munchen, 1914. 8vo, pp. vii, 483.
NADLER
chaften.
(Josef)
.
.
[With
facsimiles
and maps.]
Regcnsburg,
vols.
1.
4to.
1913.
35147
Die Altstamme, 800-1600. 1912. Die Neustamme von 1300, die Altstamme von 1600-1780.
in the
(Gilbert) The literary relations of England and Germany seventeenth century. 8vo, pp. xx, 190. Caml>rifl</f, 1914. 361 80
315
LITERATURE: GERMAN.
:
GOETHE
(Johann Wolfgang von) Faust a dramatic poem by Goethe. Translated into English prose, with remarks on former translations, and " Of the vocation of our age for notes, by the translator of Savigny's and jurisprudence" [i.e. A. Hayward]. London, 1833. legislation 35 751 8vo, pp. Ixxxvii, 291.
Faust
logical,
a tragedy.
With
pp.
viii,
R 267 11 R 34644
die Entwicklung des modernen Lebensideals. Berlin und Leipzig, 1913. 8vo, pp. ix, 509.
HELM RICH
.
(Elsie Winifred) The history of the chorus in the German New York, drama. [Columbia University Germanic Studies.] 1912. 335 15 8vo, pp. ix, 95.
.
Lachmann.
besorgt 8vo.
Dritte,
Auflage,
21 vols.
durch
Schriften. Herausgegeben von aufs neue durchgesehene und vermehrte Franz Muncker. Stuttgart, 1886-1907. R 33801
SCHILLER
(Johann
Christoph
Friedrich
von)
Sammtliche
Schriften.
Ausgabe. Im Verein mit A. Ellissen, R. Kohler, W. Miildener, H. Oesterley, H. Sauppe und W. Vollmer von Karl 15 vols. in 16. Goedeke. 8vo. R 33631 Stuttgart, 1867-76.
Historisch-kritische
.
KUEHNEMANN
Biiste
von
Mit einer Wiedergabe der Schiller(Eugen) Schiller. Dannecker Dritte Auflage. Munchen, 1908.
. . .
. .
R 34896
:
839
LITERATURE
4.]
MINOR TEUTONIC.
Eduard
Sievers.
HELIAND.
Herausgegeben von
[Germanistische
Handbibliothek.
Halle, 1878.
33275
BAECKER
(Louis
de)
Chants historiques de
Lille, 1855.
Flandre
400-1650.
34759
Mit Kopenhagen,
einer Karte
1833.
8vo,
372.
R
CAMPBELL
in
34061
(Oscar James) The comedies of Holberg. [Harvard Studies Comparative Literature, 3.] Cambridge, [Mass.], 1914. 8vo, pp. ix, 363. R 36 130
316
LITERATURE
MINOR TEUTONIC.
LEGRELLE
pp.
viii,
These presentee a
(Arsene) Holberg considere comme imitateur de Moliere. la Faculte des lettres de Paris. Paris, 1864. 8vo, R 28551 382.
theatre d'Ibsen.
BERTEVAL (W.) Le
portraits.]
Pans,
1912.
R R
[With
34629
SHAW
The
London, 1913.
Now completed to the quintessence of Ibsenism. 34566 8vo, pp. xix, 210.
840
ALEXANDRE
;
(Roger)
conversation
repertoire
de
modernes, curiosites litteraires, historiques et avec une indication precise des sources. Paris, 1 892.
R
XV* SIECLE.
[With
plates
3 1270
BlBLIOTHEQUE DU
1906-13.
1.
and
facsimiles.]
Paris,
In progress.
du,XVe
siecle.
24746
Contribution a 1'histoire de J. 1906. Edition critique d'une interpolation originale 2. Champion (P.) Cronique Martiniane. 1907. pour le regne de Charles VII restitute a J. Le Clerc. 3. Champion (P.) Le manuscnt autographe des poe'sies de Charles d'Orleans. Etude. 1907. siecle. 4. Chatelain (H.) Recherches sur le vers fran$ais au Rimes, metres et 1908. trophes. 1908. 5. Champion (P.) Charles d'Orleans, joueur d'echecs. 908. 6. Langlois (E.) Nouvelles franchises ine'dites du quinzieme siecle. 7. Champion (P.) Le prisonnier desconforte du chateau de Loches poeme inedit du 1909. siecle, avec une introduction, des notes, un glossaire. 8. Doutrepont (G.) La litte'rature franchise a la courdes dues de Bourgogne Philippe le 1909. Hardi Jean sans Peur Philippe le Bon Charles le Teme'raire. 9. Documents nouveaux sur les moeurs populates et le droit de vengeance dans les PayPubliees et commentees par Bas au siecle. Lettres de remission de Philippe le Bon.
Champion
d'Arc,
et a I'etude
de
XVe
XVe
XVe
les
relations
XVe
de Lyon avec
le
Maconnais
et la
Bresse au
siecle.- 1909.
I 1
.
Champion 2voU.-19IO.
12. 13. 14.
(P.)
La
librairie
de Charles 1'Orleans.
Avec un album de
1910.
191
1.
fac-similes.
XVe
siecle.
Champion (P.) Vie de Charles d'Orleans, 1394-1465. Oulmont (C.) La poe'sie morale, polilique et dramatique
1911.
,
a la veille de la renaissance.
P. Gringore.
15.
16.
Oulmont (C.) Etude sur la langue de P. Gringore. 191 1. Laigle (M.) Le livre des trois Vertus de C. de Pisan
et
litteVaire.-l912.
Etude glneVale. Publication du manuscrit de Paris. Con1912. Aragonais de Naples, par A.- A. Messer. 18. Mirot (L.) Une grande famille parlementaire aux XI Ve et XVe siecles. Let 1913. d'Orgemont leur origine, leur fortune. Le Boiteux d'Orgemont. 19. Graves (F. M.) Quelques pieces relatives a la vie de Louis I, due d'Orle'ans, et de Valentine Visconti sa femme. 1913. 20. 21. Champion (P.) F. Villon, sa vie et ion temps. ... 2 vols. 1913.
1
7.
Le Codice Aragonese.
3t7
LES GRANDS
1913.
8vo.
Alembert
Balzac.
[With
. . .
portraits.]
Paris,
^In progress.
d;)
188910531
(J. le
Aubigne (A.
1889.
ParE.
Faguet.
1913.
Par A. Hallays. 1897. Par G. Lanson. Troisieme edition. 1906. Boileau. Par A. Re'belliau. Deuxieme e'dition. 1905. Bossuet. 906. Par A. Bossert. Calvin. Chateaubriand. , Par M. de Lescure. Quatrieme e'dition. 1912. 1902. Che'nier. Par E. Faguet. Par G. Lanson. Troisieme edition. 1909. Corneille. Par J. Simon. Cousin. Quatrieme e'dition. 1910. Par A. Fouillee. "Deuxieme e'dition. 1906. Descartes. 1894. Par J. Reinach. Diderot. Troisieme La Fayette (Mme. de) Par Is comte D'Haussonville. Deuxieme edition. 1903. Par P. Janet. Fenelon. Par E. Faguet. Troisieme e'dilion. 1913. Flaubert. 905. Par A. Laborde-Milaa. Fontenelle. Par M. Darmesteter. 1894. Froissart. Troisieme e'dition. 1907. Gautier (T.) Par M. Du Camp. 1894. Par ... A. Bardoux. Guizot. Hugo. Par L. Mabilleau. Quatrieme edition. 1907.
Beaumarchais.
1 .
e'dition.
1908*
La
1904. Par. P. Morillot. Bruyere. . Par d'Haussonville. Lacordaire. Quatrieme edition. Troisieme edition. 1910. La Fontaine. Par G. Lafenestre. . Par R. Doumic. 1912. Lamartine. La Rochefoucauld. Par J. Bourdeau. 1895. Par E. Lintilhac, 1893. Lesage. 1 894. Maistre (J. de) Par G. Cogoi dan.
. . .
. .
1911.
Malherbe. Marivaux.
Par le due de Broglie. .1897. Par G. Deschamps. Deuxieme edition. 1907. Par A. Filon. 1898. Merime'e. Par E. Rousse. Mirabeau. Par G. Lafenestre. Moliere. 1909. 1905. Montaigne. Par P. Stapfer. ^ 1912. Montesquieu. Par A. Sorel. Quatrieme edition. Musset (A. de) Par A. Barine. Sixieme edition. 191 1. Par Pascal. Boutroux. Quatrieme edition, revue. 1907. Par R. Millet. Troisieme edition revue. 191 1. Rabelais. Par G. Larroumet. Racine. 1911. Quatrieme edition. 1913 Ronsard. Par J. J. Jusserand. ; Rousseau. Par A. Chuquet. Quatrieme edition revue. 1913. Par E. Spuller. 1895. Royer-Collard. Par L. Cle'dat. Deuxieme e'dition. 1909. Rutebeuf. Deuxieme edition. 1904. Saint-Pierre (B. de) Par A. Barine. Par G. Boissier. Deuxieme edition. 1899. Saint-Simon. Sand (G.) Par E. Caro. 1910. Quatrieme e'dition. 1909. Sevigne (Mme. de) Par G. Boissier. Septieme edition. Stael (Mme. de) Par A. Sorel. -r-1890. Par E. Rod. Troisieme edition. 1911. Stendhal [i.e. M. H. Beyle]. Thiers (A.) Par P. de Re'musat. .1889. Par L. Say. Deuxieme e'dition. 1891. Turgot Par M. Pa'eologue. Deuxieme edition. 1909. Vauvenargues. Vigny (A. de) Par M. Paleologue. Troisieme edition. 1908. Deuxieme e'dition. 1910. Villon (F.) Par G. Paris. Par G. Lanson. Deuxieme edition. 1910. Voltaiie.
. . . . . . . .
textes frangais.
[Publications.]
Paris, 1912-13.
R
sotties.
32030
Tome
3.
1912.
Chansons et descorts de Gautier de Dargies. Publics par G. Huet. 1912. Entree d'Espagne chanson de geste franco-italienne. Publie'e d'apres le manuscrit de Venise par A. Thomas. 2 vols. 1913.
318
DOUMIC
1.
[Sixieme
E.
edition.]
Paris,
1902-09.
O. Feuillet. E. Augier. V. Sardou. 1902. Zola. A. Daudet. J.-J. Weiss. G. dc Maupassant. P. Loti. J. Lemaitre. 2. P. Bourget. E. Lavisse. F. Fabre. J.-M. de Here'dia.-1909.
R
et J.
34627
E.
de Goncourt.
F. Brunetiere.
E. Faguet.
CH1NARD
448.
(Gilbert) L'Amerique et le reve exotique dans la litterature francaise au XVII* et au XVIII* siecle. Paris, 1913. 8vo, pp. viii,
R
(Eusebe Henri Alban) Etudes sur
1'histoire litteraire
35 162
GAULLIEUR
. .
.
de
la
Suisse franchise, particulierement dans la seconde moitie du xviii e siecle. 35853 8vo, pp. 318. Geneve, 1856.
HEUMANN
MANSUY
xvii*
(Albert) Le mouvement litteraire beige d'expression francaise Preface par ... Camille Jullian. Paris, 1913.
.
.
R
.
.
.
34628
siecles.
e(Abel) Le mon de slave et les classiques francais aux xvi Preface de Ch. Diehl. Paris, 1912. 8vo,
.
.
pp.
viii,
493.
R
Le romantisme en France au
. .
.
34653
MORNET
xviii e siecle.
Ouvrage
Paris, 1912.
32190
PARIS (Gaston) Melanges de litterature francaise du moyen age. Publics La litterature francaise au moyen age 1'epopee par Mario Roques.
le
roman
1'histoire
la
poesie
siecle.
la
viii,
litterature
710.
du quinzieme R 29065
litteraire
ROBERT
France.
(Ulysse) Documents inedits concernant 1'histoire 79. 4to, pp. Paris, 1875.
1
.
de
la
R
R
34730
STROWSKI
Tableau de la litterature francaise au xix e siecle. (Fortunat) 34624 Paris, 1912. 8vo, pp. ix, 538.
. .
VlANEY
et
(Joseph)
Le petrarquisme en France au
Serie Litteraire,
3.]
xvi e siecle.
[Travaux
Memoires de Montpellier.
841
ANTHOLOGIE
sous
la
de
direction
de Ad.
poesie francaise des origines jusqu'a nos jours. Publiee Van Bever. Parix, 1913. 1 vol. 8vo.
frai^aise
et
R R
35329
16454
B^DIER
3.
recherches sur
8vo.
la
formation des
In progress.
de Charlemagne et 1'histoire de Charles Martel. Les chanson* de geste et le Pelerinage de Compostelle. La Chanson de Roland. De 1'autorite* du manuscrit d'Oxford pour I'e'tablissement du texte de la Chanson de Roland.
319
Richard de Normandie dans les chansons de geste. Gormond et Isembard. Salomon de Bretagne. L'abbaye de Saint-Denis. Renaud de Montauban. Quelques legendes de Les pretendus modeles merovingiens des chansons de geste. L'histoire dans les I'Ardenne. Les legendes localisees. La legende de Charlemagne, etc. chansons de geste,
Blancandin
et I'orgueilleuse
par H. Michelant.
36469
BORODINE
afterwards LOT (Myrrha) Le roman idyllique au moyen age. 35408 8vo, pp. 271. Paris, 1913.
CRITTONIUS
(Georgius) Georg. Crittonii Lavdatio Fvnebris, Habita In Exeqviis Petri Ronsardi apud Becodianos, cui praeponuntur Eivsdem Ronsardi Carmina partim a moriente, partim a languente dictata. Virvm Vere Primarivm loannem Gallandivm. [Printer's device
Ad
beneath
Hilarij.
title.]
Lvtetice.
Apud AbrahamumD'auuel
4to, pp. [8,] 32.
&
M.D.LXXXVI.
DES COGNETS
inedits
(Jean) La vie interieure de Lamartine d'apres les souvenirs de son plus intime ami G.-M. Dargaud et les travaux les plus
recents.
Paris, 1913.
34934
DES PORTES
impression.
de Polongne.
Au Roy de France & Reueues, corrigees, & augmentees en ceste derniere A Lyon. Par les [Printer's device beneath title.]
du Fenix,
[158-].
16mo,
33752
FARAL (Edmond)
courtois du.
Recherches sur
age.
les
moyen
Paris, 1913.
sources latines des contes et romans 35193 8vo, pp. xi, 431.
FlDAO-JuSTINIANI
Avec un
e (J. E.) L'esprit classique et la preciosite au xvii siecle. discours et un dialogue inedits de Chapelain sur I'amour et sur la gloire. 35553 Paris, 1914. 8vo, pp. 232.
GASTE
miere
Publiees pour la pre(A.) Chansons normandes du MSS de Bayeux et de Vire, avec notes et introduction.
8vo, pp.
printed.
xliii,
xv e siecle.
Caen, 1866.
146, 28.
is
R
1
35028
".
%*
200 copies
This copy
one
of
HABERT
(Isaac) Complainte Fvnebre, Svr La Mort De Monsievr De Ronsard. A Paris, Chez lean [Printer's device beneath title.] Richer, rue Sainct, lean de Latran, a Venseigne de I'arbre Ver4to, pp. 10.
doyant, 1586.
R
. . .
3461 4'2
LA FONTAINE
[Edited by
Paris, 1696.
LAMARTINE DE PRAT
Lamartine.
Nouvelles confidences.
(Marie
Louis
Alphonse
8vo.
de)
Oeuvres
de
Paris, 1909-13.
1909.
5 vols.
Raphael
pages de
la
vingtieme anne'e.
[Nouvelle Edition.]
1910.
R R
34907
34926
22
320
Le manucrit de ma
1911.
Let confidences.
Graziella.
[Nouvelle edition.]
3.
191
1.
LAMARTINE DE PRAT
deLamartine.
Jocelyn
:
Paris,
(Marie Louis Alphonse de) Oeuvres poetiques 6 rols. 8vo. 909R 33085
1
chez un cure de village. 1909. La mort de Socrate. 1909. Premieres meditations poe'tiques, avec commentaires. La chute d'un ange episode. 1910. Le dernier chant du pelerinage Nouvelles meditations poe'tiques, avec commentaires. 1910. Chant du sacre. d'Harold.
e'pisode, journal
trouve'
. . . :
Harmonic*
poe'tiques et religieuses.
Recueillementi poetiques.
-
191
1.
Correspondance
de
Lamartine.
Publiee
par
Valentine
8vo.
de
Lamartine.
Deuxieme
inedits
edition.
Paris, 1881-82.
vols.
R
Memoires
pp. x, 304.
34977
8vo,
deLamartine, 1790-1815.
Paris, 1909.
R
. .
.
34931
Cours familier de litterature. Un Cours Familier de Litterature. Par A. de Lamartine. Paris, 1856-69. 28 8vo. R 34993
Paris. 191
(Pierre de) Les engines et la jeunesse de Lamartine, 7901 34932 8vo, pp. xi, 282.
1
.
LACRETELLE
1812.
MASSON
(Jean Papire) Petri Ronsardi Vindocinensis, Nobilis Poetae Elogivm. ([Colophon :] Parisiis, Ex Typographia Dionysij a Prato, via Amygdalina, ad Veritatis insigne, 1586.) 34614*6 4to, pp. 4. \* Sig Ai [title page ?] is wanting. The title is taken from the caption.
POTEZ
(Henri) L'elegie en France avant le romantisme, de Parny a 34991 Lamartine, 1778-1820. 8vo, pp. xvi, 488. Paris, 1898.
REMI (Philippe de) Sire de Beaumanoir. Philippe de Remi, Sire de Beaumanoir jurisconsulte et poete national du Beauvaisis 1246-1296.
:
(Biographic.
Oeuvres poetiques.)
Paris, 1869.
1
[With map
and
plates.]
vol. in 2.
34058
\*
200
copies printed.
RONSARD
Ronsard les poetes du xix siecle vers, suivis (Pierre de) d'une etude sur P. de Ronsard par P. Blanchemain. [Extrait des (Euvres faisant partie de la Bibliode P. de Ronsard completes Au chateau de L(jn</<J<>nt, 1867. 8vo, theque Elzevirienne. .]
:
.
V One
4to,
R
50 copies.
.
34654
of
De Pierre De Ronsard. [With preface by A Paris, Chez Galr'ul device beneath title.] Binet.] [Printer's Buon, an, civs Bruneau, a V image sainct Claude. M.D.LXXXVI.
-
PP
13, [1.]
34614-5
321
ROUSSEAU
edition.
(Jean
Nouvelle
35505
[Printer's device
Lvtetia.
R 3461 4-3
f
TVARD
Bissiani,
Ponti Thyardei, (Pontus de) Bishop of Chdlons-sur-Saone. Ad Petrvm Ronsardvm, De Coelestibvs Asterismis Poematium.
Antonio Bletonnieraeo. [Printer s loannem Bicherium, via D. device beneath title.] Parisiis, Apud loannis Lateranensis, sub Arbore virescenti, 1586. 4to, ff. [8].
Gallicis Versibvs
Expressvm
Ab
34614-1
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par
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de
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de
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842
Paris, 1858.
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BENGESCO
xviiie siecle.]
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.
DELTOUR
et
Academic
francaise.
Deuxieme
edition,
revue
R 31313
[Extrait
.
GlLLET
E.)
.
Angleterre,
royale
Memoires
.?
de
1'
Academic
1660-1670. de Belgique
des
Paris, 1913.
1913.J
34652
PARIGOT
(Hippolyte)
.
etude dramatique,
sociale et litteraire.
Paris, 1899.
R 34927
PlN VERT (Lucien) Jacques Grevin, 1538-1570: etude biographique et litteraire. 1899. Paris, Ouvrage contenant gravures.
.
.
R
.
34694
RAYNOUARD
Guise.
actes et en vers
(Francois Juste Marie) Les etats de Blois, tragedie en cinq . precedee d'une notice historique sur le due de
.
[With portrait]
Paris, 1814.
.
.
.
R 35854 R 35800
les
templiers.
precedee d'un precis historique sur Paris, 1805. 8vo, pp. Ixxxii, 118.
suivie
de
1'extrait
[translated
into
French] de
Avec.
tragedie espagnole des Templiers, par Perez de Montalban. 35855 8vo, pp. 140. portrait: Paris, 1815.
322
FLAUBERT
8vo.
(Gustave) Correspondance.
Paris, 1910-13.
vols.
R
(Pierre) pseud,
[i.e.
33622
LOTI
.
.
Sixieme edition.
(Louis)
Louis Marie Julien Viaud.] Fantome d'orient. Paris, 1892. 26524 8vo, pp. 234.
sur 1'influence
Le roman historique a 1'epoque romantique. Essai de Walter Scott. Nouvelle edition. Paris, 1912.
.
8vo, pp.
vii.
247.
29787
MARGARET [D*ANGOULME],
Navarre.
Queen Consort of Henry II, King of Contes de la reine de Navarre [i.e. L'Heptameron. Nouvelle edition revue avec soin et accomMargaret d'Angouleme]. de notes explicatives. Paris, [18 ]. 8vo, pp. xii, 468. pagnee R 28235
:
MARIE
le poete, 1'homme. (Aristide) Gerard de Nerval D'apres des Suivi d'une bibliographic et de notes. manuscrits et documens inedits. Orne d'un portrait et de Paris, 1914. 8vo, planches.
.
.
PP.
vi,
436.
(Pierre) 8vo, pp. 311.
R
Le roman
realiste
37365
Paris,
MARTINO
1913.
R R
34823
MlCHAUT
Paris, [1913].
34625
MOULINET
(Nicolas de) Sieur du Pare, pseud, [i.e. Charles Sorel]. L'Histoire Comiqve De Francion. [By N. de Moulinet, pseud., i.e. C. Sorel.] Nouuelle edition reueue & augmentee de beaucoup. A Rouen, Chez Adrian Ovin, (in[Printer's device beneath title.] premier degre de la montee du Palais. M. DC. XXXII. 8vo, pp. ^ R 35791 [20,] 8 12.
. .
.
Le livre du PHILIP, of Burgundy, Son of Jane ii, Countess of Artois. tres chevalereux comte d' Artois et de sa femme, fille au comte de
Boulogne.
plates.]
Paris, 1837.
[by
J.
Barrois].
[With
34741
POITEVIN Qean d e la Lande) L' Anti-Roman Ov L'Histoire Dv Berger Par lean De La Lande Lysis, Accompagnee De Ses Remarqves.
Poiteuin
title.]
.1
[i.e.
C. Sorel].
/'</n'.s',
[Printer's device
ru'6 tininrt
[I],
1
beneath
Espies meurs.
M.DC. XXXIII.
1136.
R
R
33777
8vo,
REYNIER
pp.
x,
realiste.
Paris, 1912.
3301
--
Le roman
au
XVII e siecle.
Paris, 1914.
3641 6
323
URFE
Comte de De Messire Honore D'Vrfe. Par Plvsievrs Histoires, Et souz personnes de Bergers, & d'autres, sont deduits les diuers effets de 1'honneste Amitie Dediee Av Roy Tresenrichie de Figures en taille douce. Chrestien Henry Le Grand. Imprimee d Bouen, d se vend [Vol. 1.] A Paris, Chez Avgvstin Covrbe, dans la petite Salle du Palais, a A Paris, Chez Avgvstin Covrbe. la Palme. ([Vols. 2-4.] Chez Anthoine De Sommaville, au Palais, dans la petite [Vol. 5.] R 33051 5 vols. 8vo. Salle.) 1632-47.
(Honore
d') L' Astree
.
. .
Chasteau-neuf
Ov
%*
1.
2.
3.
There is also an engraved title in each vol. Reveue & corrigee en cette derniere Edition. Reveue & corrigee en cette derniere Edition.
H.
Reveue' & corrigee, en cette derniere Edition. 1633. Conclvsion Et Derniere Partie. . Composee Svr Les Vrais Memoires de [5.] La 1632. d'Vrfe. Par Le Sr Baro. Troisiesme Edition, reveue & corrigee.
4.
. .
neuf.
De Messire Honore D'Vrfe. Conte de ChasteauA Paris, Chez [Dedicatory epistle subscribed I. Aubery.] lean Micard, au Palais, en la gallerie allant d la Chancellerie, 24mo. ff. [4] 66 [1]. 1604. 33778
Le
.
Sireine
.
BONAFOUS
d'Urfe.
1'
Astree
et
sur
Honore
R 33196
849
LITERATURE
PROVENCAL.
BARTSCH
et
(Karl) Chrestomathie provengale accompagnee d'une grammaire d'un glossaire. 34059 Cinquieme edition. Berlin, 1892. 8vo.
GOUDELIN
(Pierre)
Avec
.
traduction
J.
M. Cayla
&
Toulouse, 1843.
36302
NOSTREDAME
Les vies des plus (Jean de) Jehan de Nostredame. Nouvelle edition, accompagnee celebres et anciens poetes provencaux. d'extraits d'oeuvres inedites du meme auteur, preparee par Camille et publiee avec introduction et commentaire par Joseph . Chabaneau
.
Anglade.
[With
plate.]
Paris, 1913.
R35192
850
LITERATURE: ITALIAN.
Giulio)
II
GENERAL.
MlGNON
:
BARRILI (Anton
Lezioni universitarie.
Genova, 1890.
italiano.
2 7951
:
Catherine de Sienne (Maurice) Etudes de litterature italienne. Les lettres et les arts a Florence La comedie italienne de la renaissance Carlo Goldoni Musset et 1'Italie Giosue Carducci Giovanni
:
Pascoli.
Paris, 1912.
(Bonaventura)
R
Firenze,
34822
1894.
ZUMBINI
R 27964
324
LITERATURE
ITALIAN.
POETRY.
ARIOSTO (Lodovico) Orlando Fvrioso Di M. Lodovico Con le Tvtto Ricorretto, Et Di Nvove Figvre Adornato. Annotationi, gli Auertimenti, & le Dichiarationi di leronimo Ruscelli. La Vita dell'Autore descritta dal Signer Giouan Battista Pigna. Gli Scontri de' luoghi mutati dall 'Autore doppo la sua prima impressione. La dichiaratione di tutte le Istorie, & Fauole toccate nel presente Hbro, Di Nvovo Aggivntovi Li Cinque Canti, fatta da M. Nicolo Eugenico. Et una tauola de' principij di tutte le Stanze. del medesimo Autore.
Ariosto,
Con
altre cose
utili,
& necessarie.
Fol.
Valgrisi,
M.D.LXXII.
(Paolo)
BELLEZZA
CARDUCCI
Curiosita
dantesche.
Milano,
1913.
8vo,
33734
Dello svolgimento (Giosue) Studi letterari di G. Carducci. Delle rime di Dante. Delia varia fortuna
di Dante. Musica e poesia nel mondo elegante italiano del secolo xiv. Seconda edizione. Livorno, 1880. 8vo, pp. 441. R 30444
CARPENTER
of Dante.
The (William Boyd) Bishop of Eipon. London, 1914. 8vo, pp. [With plates].
spiritual
xi,
message
250.
35623
CASSOLA
(Luigi) Madrigali Del Magnifico Signer Cavallier Lvigi Cassola Piacentino . [Edited by G. Betussi.] [Printer's device beneath In Vinetia Appresso Gabriel Giolito di Ferrarii, MDXLIIII. title.]
.
.
R
II
33 188
CASA
(Giovanni della)
Galateo Di Messer Giovanni Delia Casa, o vero Modi che si debbono tenere, 6 schifare nella
Con
1'aggiunta della
dal
Lapmo.
title.]
la restitutione di
[Printer's device
Bernardo Givnti,
MDLXI.
8vo,
72.
[error for 71
.]
33 85
1
M.
si
Giovanni
Della
Casa,
debbono
uersazione.
Con
Appresso 1'Orazione
title.]
1'aggiunta della Tauola nuouamente fatta dal Lapino. del medesimo M. Giouanni a Carlo Quinto
Imperadore, sopra la restituzione di Piacenza. [Printer's device beneath In Fiorenza, Per Filippo Givnti, MDIIC. 8vo, pp. Ill, [9].
33184
li
Rime, Et Prose Di
epistle
M. Giovanni
Della Casa.
.
Riscontrate con
.
by G.
1
Spini.]
MDC.XVI.
2
pts. in
-
Per Gio
8vo.
.
.
Compagni.
vol.
R
:
33 186
Rime
di
secondo
1'idee
Gio della Casa sposte per M. Aurelio Severino d'Hermogene, con la giunta delle spositioni di Sertorio
.
325
LITERATURE
ITALIAN.
Date in luce da Antonio Quattromani,et di Gregorio Caloprese. [With portraits.] [With a preface by F. A. Gravina.] 4to. Napoli, 1694. pt. The spositioni extend to Sonetto XXI. No more published. R 33 87
.
V
.
CLAUDIO
.
(Luca) San Domenico e la sua leggenda in rapporto a Dante. 36379 8vo, pp. xviii. 144. Molfetta,<]9\0.
ro COLON N A (Egidio) L'Espositione Del Egidio Colonna Romano La Canzone D'Amore Di Gvido Cavalcanti Eremitani. Sopra Degli Fiorentino. Con alcune breui Annotationi intorno ad essa. Di Celso Insieme con vna sua succinta descrittion Cittadini Accademico Sanese.
Rime
di esso Caualcante.
In Siena.
afterwards
Appresso
Saluestro Marchetti,
1602.
8vo,
pp. 100.
R
(Vittoria)
33 189
COLONNA,
II
D'AVALOS
Marchesa di Pescara.
codice delle rime di Vittoria Colonna, Marchesa di Pescara, appartenuto a Margherita d'Angouleme, regina di Navarra. Scoperto ed. illustrate da Domenico Tordi. Pistoia, 1900. 8vo, [With plates.]
pp.
vi,
56.
R 34656
35743
DANTE
Dante and
Rossetti.
. .
his
.
Convito
London,
The
1914.
Divine Comedy.
Translated by E.
M. Shaw.
London,
R 35566 R
Edited and translated by Charles Quaestio de aqua et terra. Lancelot Shadwell. 35007 8vo, pp. iv, 74. Oxford, 1909.
.
.
GARROD
By H.
(Herbert Baring) Danie, Goethe's Faust, and other lectures. Edited by Lucy F. Garrod. With an intromemoir by Geoffrey Garrod. London, 1913. ductory [With portrait.] 33830 8vo, pp. xii, 386.
B. Garrod.
.
GUARINI
II Pastor Fido, Tragi(Giovanni Battista) The Younger. Cavaliere Battista Gvarini comedia Pastorale, Del Aggiontoui di nouo in questa Impressione le Rime dello stesso Autore, & di
. .
title.]
In
Venetia, MDCXXI. 8vo, Appresso Giouan Battista Ciotti. 35752 pp. [8,] 329, [error for 429,] [7]. LAMBERT (Franz A.) Dante's Matelda und Beatrice. Eine Skizze. 33942 Miinchen, 1913. 8vo, pp. 206.
NARDI
filosofia
(Bruno) Sigieri di Brabante nella Divina commedia e le fonti della " di Dante. Rivista di filosofia neo-scolatica," Estratto dalla e ottobre 1911, febbraio e aprile 1912. Spianate, Pescia, aprile
1912.
8vo, pp.
viii,
70.
R
. .
.
3285 7
TOYNBEE
pp.
viii,
(Paget Jackson) Concise dictionary of proper names and notable matters in the works of Dante. 8vo, Oxford, 1914.
568.
R 36 178
326
LITERATURE: ITALIAN.
Opera omnia Latine
scripta,
SANNAZARO
In
Et
De Partv Virginis Libros Valentini Odoricii Vtinensis Commentaria, Cum multis insignioribus ex Vergilio, quos Poeta imitatus est
Tres
vt
emandatis erroribus, adductis locis, nee paucis in his aliorum notatis, Addito preterea in fine Comment, ipsius ex Indice facile patebit.
&
Odoricii Poemate de incendio Veneto, in quo incendia omnia, & nauales Venetoru victories a condita Vrbe vsq; ad hanc diem continentur. Et in fine operis Elegia de foelici victoria a Christianis contra Turcas parta, & alijs lectu non indignis. Cum Indice rerum memorabilium locupletissimo. Venetiis, Apud Franciscum [Printer's device beneath title.] de Franciscis Senensem, 1593. R 36235 8vo, ff. [20], 207.
.
Del Parto Delia Vergine Del Sanazaro Libri Tre, Tradotti in Toscani da Giovanni Giolito de* Ferrari. Al Ser mo Sig r Don Vicenza Gonzaga, Duca di Mantoua, e di Monferrato, &c. In Venetia,
-
versi
Appresso I
Gioliti,
M.D.LXXXV.
:
4to,
ff.
[74].
R
R
36046
SERBAN
essai
de
litterature
comparee.
35410
hills-
TUSCANY.
folk
London,
1914.
305.
R
(Francesco) La Fida Ninfa Fauola
. .
35892
DRAMA.
Di
F.
CONTARINI
Contarini.
.
Pastorale.
M.D.CIII.
[Printer's device beneath 12mo, pp. 851 [error for 185] [1].
title.]
In Venetia, R 34657
RlCCOBONI
comedie
avec un catalogue des tragedies et comedies italiennes imprimees depuis Tan 1500, jusqu'a 1'an 1660, et une dissertation sur la 1vol. 8vo. tragedie moderne. [With plates.] [Paris, 1728]. ** The Vol. 2 is wanting. title-page is engraved. 35695
latine
FICTION.
vento
:
GUERRAZZI
.
.
retta dall'autore.
battaglia di BeneEdizione nuovamente rivista, e corR 31446 Firenze, 1852. 8vo, pp. xvi, 588.
. . .
(Francesco Domenico) La
HAUVETTE
ESSAYS.
vetro
. .
biographique
et
litteraire.
36209
colla
.
. .
vita
portrait.]
[With
33475
. .
.
MACCHIAVELLI (Niccol6) The works of ... N. Written ... in Italian, and from thence newly The third edition, carefully English [byH. Nevile].
.
Machiavel.
.
.
translated into
corrected.
L
35481
O720.
Fol., pp.
543.
327
LITERATURE
COLECCION de
escritores castellanos.
.Madrid, 1880-1914.
8vo.
R
.
27511
126, 127, 130, 134, 138. Cro'nica de Enrique IV (Guerra de Granada) escrita en latin A. Paz y Melia. 5 vols. 1904-09. por Alonso de Palencia. Traduccio*n castellanaipor Con la vida y obras del autor por 128, 139. Obras de A. J. de Salas Barbadillo. 1907-09. E. Cotarelo y Mori. ... 2 vols.
.
.
132, 133,
135, 144,
140, 146,
145, 147,
151. 148,
.
F. Caballero.
149,
. .
Obras completas
VIII(-XIII.)
teatro
1907-11.
141,
coleccio'n
142,
150,
156.
La
.
.
poesia
.
lirica
en
el
antiguo
edicioVi.
1909.
ARGENSOLA B. L. De
(Bartolome Leonardo de) Rimas De Lvpercio I Del Dotor [Edited by G. Leonardo de Albion y Argensola. En Zaragoza, En el Hospital Real, i General de Argensola.] 33651 nuestra Senora de Gratia, Ano 1634. 4to, pp. [30], 502.
. .
MENA
(Juan de) Todas las obras Del Famosissimo Poeta luan de Mena con la glosa del Comendador Fernan Ninez sobre la trezientas agora
:
En
ff.
Martin Nucio
An.M.D.LII.
8vo,
Anvers. 343.
En
casa de
37032
HERRERA (Fernando de) Versos De Fernando De Herrera. Emendados Don Caspar De Guzman, I Divididos Por El En Tres Libros. of Guzman beneath title.] Conde de Olivares. [With [Arms Ano, 1619. Impresso en Sevilla, Por Gabriel Ramos portrait.]
Vejarano.
4to, pp.
[28],
447,
[21].
33650
CERVANTES SAAVEDRA
(Miguel de) Lesnouvelles de M. de Cervantes Saavedra. Traduites et annotees par Louis Viardot. Nouvelle edition. 27979 8vo, pp. iv, 482. Paris, 1875.
KELLY
(James Fitzmaurice) Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra a memoir. 8vo, pp. xx, 228. Oxford, 1913. [With portrait and folding table.]
:
R35114
Tercentenary
British
***
of
"
Don Quixote
".
Cervantes
8vo, pp. 19.
in
England.
Academy.]
The
title is
London. [1905].
in
[The
37143
BELL (Aubrey
8vo, pp.
xviii,
F.
G.) Studies
Portuguese
of
literature.
Oxford, 1914.
247.
35338
PALMERIN
original
of England.
of
Palmerin
[The version
A. Munday.] (Corrected by Robert Southey, from the R 37037 London, 1807. 4 vols. 8vo. Portugueze.)
870
LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARY. The Loeb Classical T. E. Page ... and W. H. D. Rouse.
8vo.
London,
. .
Edited by 1913-14.
.
In progress.
Roman
history.
Appian's
With an
English translation by
H. White.
IV.
1913
32578
328
DC
With an English
et
translation
by A. G. Peskett.
.1914.
R
Cicero.
.
37652
De
finibus
bonorum
malorum.
With an
English translation by
..-1914.
Cicero. Cicero.
Deofficiis.
H. Rackham. 3641 5
With an
English translation by
W.
Miller.
1913.
R R
.
35276
.
Letters to Atticus.
With an
English translation by E.
O. Winstedt
II.
1913.
R
Cassius.
Dion
Dio's
Roman
history.
With an English translation by E. Cary. Baldwin Foster. ... 1914. 3 vols. With an
R R
32690 On 35274
. . . . .
Horace.
The
35275
By
1914.
The works
II.
of the
Emperor
Julian.
With an
English translation.
w.
c. Wright.
1913.
R
With an
33497
Ovid.
R
Petronius.
37653
With an
With an English translation by Michael Heseltine. Seneca Apocolocyntosis. London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xxii, 418. English translation by W. H. D. Rouse. .
. .
3461 5
Plato.
With an
vol.,
-i
-1914.
H. N. Fowler and an
introduction
by
W. R. M. R 35884
2
vols.
Plutarch's lives.
With an English
translation
by B. Perrin
Volumes
(II).
R
With an English
translation
37652
In
by H. B. Dewing.
1914.
R
.
.
37655
.
John Damascene.
With an
English translation by
G. R.
.1914.
J.
With an
English translation by
C. Rolfe.
... 2
vols.
1914.
R 35885 R 35273
R
by
Dialogus (translated by
W.
Peterson), Agricola,
Gennania
(translated
M.
Hutton).-1914.
35883
In pro-
Xenophon
dress.
Cyropaedia.
With an
English translation by
W.
Miller.
1914.
R
W.
Miller
. . .
36414
1914.
Xenophon: Cyropaedia.
With an
English translation by
II.
R
1912-13.
3641 4
PHILOLOGISCHE UNTERSUCHUNGEN.
ling
und U.
v.
Wilamowitz-Moellendorff.
In progress.
R
:
7547
Unter-
21. Aischines von Sphettos. Studien zur Literaturgeschichte der Sokratiker. 1912. suchungen und Fragmente von H. Dittmar. 23. A. C. Celsus Von M. Wellmann. 1913. eine Quellenuntersuchung.
CHASSANG
1'histoire
f
(Alexis) Histoire du roman et de ses rapports avec dans I'antiquite grecque et latine. Ouvrage couronne par l Academic des Deuxieme edition. I'd r is, et belles-lettres. inscriptions R 15277 1862. 8vo, PP iv, 473.
.
A.
J.
Stewart.
romances by
S.
329
R. J. E. D. Godley. Collected by G. S. Gordon. [Lectures delivered in Oxford at the invitation of the Board of R 32814 8vo, pp. 252. Oxford, 1912. English Studies, 191 1-12.]
VERRALL
(Arthur Woollgar) Collected literary essays, classical and modern. Edited by M. With Bayfield ... and J. D. Duff. a memoir. 1913. 8vo, pp. cxiv, 292. Cambridge, [With portrait.] R 33861
M. A.
pp.
vi,
Bayfield
... and
J.
372.
33860
870
LITERATURE: LATIN.
.
.
BERN HARDY
Bearbeitung.
Fiinfte
R 31259
Seneca to R 34581
BUTLER
Juvenal.
(Harold Edgeworth) Post-Augustan poetry from 8vo, pp. viii, 323. Oxford, 1909.
COJJRBAUD (Edmond)
Etude
Horace, sa vie et sa pensee a 1'epoque des Epitres. Paris, 1914. 8vo, pp. viii, 368.
R 36206
1913.
LEO
8vo.
(Friedrich)
1.
Geschichte
Literatur.
der
romischen
Literatur.
Berlin,
In progress.
Die archaische
1913.
R 34609
la
PATIN (Henri
edition.
poesie Latine.
Quatrieme
33779
SlHLER
(Ernest Gottlieb) Cicero of Arpinum: a political and literary biography. Being a contribution to the history of ancient civilization and a guide to the study of Cicero's writings. New Haven, 1914. 37689 8vo, pp. xi, 487.
.
.
&
Libri
III.
De Re
Rvstica.
M.
Catonis.
Lib.
Lib. XII.
Eiusdem de arboribus
: :
factum fuerit
liber separatus ab alijs, quare aute id ostenditur in epistola ad lectorem. Palladii Lib. XIIII.
;
De duobus dierum generibus simulq de umbris, horis, quae apud Palladium, in alia epistola ad lectorem. [By A. P. Manutius.] Georgij Alexandrini enarrationes priscarum dictionu, quae in his libris Catonis Yarronis Columellae. Anno. [Revised by J. Jucundus.]
:
:
&
M.D. XXVIII. ([Colophon :] Excusa sunt hcec opera Tiguri per lacobum Mazochiu, Anno salutis. M.DXXVIII.) 8vo, ff. [37], 391. R 32537
330
LITERATURE
Ivlii
/
LATIN.
CAESAR
(Caius Julius) C.
Caesaris Commentariorvm.
Pompeiano,
lib.
I.
lib. III.
I.
De
Bello
lib.
I.
Galliae, ac Hispaniae
in
Rheno
explanata. [Printer's Caesaris Clariss. Rom. Imp. ComCivili. Henrici Glareani, Poetae Lavreati mentaries De Annotationes. Apvd Seb. QryjMom [Printer's device beneath title.]) 2 vols. in 1. 8vo. 1547. Lvgdvni, ([Vol. 2] 1546.]
uetera,
Populorum romina
turn
device beneath
(In
Ivlii
C.
maps.]
lulii
A.
Oxford, 1914.
[With
35622
Gai Ivli Caesaris commentarii rerum in Gallia gestarum VII. Ex recensione T. Rice Holmes. Accedit Auli Hirti commentarius. [Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Riccardiana.] Londini, [Riccardi
Press,]
91 4.
**
8vo, pp.
printed.
xi,
249.
is
R 35267
537 copies
This copy
No. 64
of
525 on paper.
CATULLUS
(Caius Valerius) Index verborum Catullianus. By Monroe New Haven, 1912. 8vo, pp. vii, 15. Nichols Wetmore. 3501 7
.
FESTUS
quae supersunt
(Sextus Pompeius) Sexti Pompei Festi de verborum significatu cum Pauli epitome. Thewrewkianis copiis usus edidit Wallace M. Lindsay. Lipsiae, [Bibliotheca Teubneriana.] 1913. 33649 8vo, pp. xxviii, 573.
.
.
.
Lucani Pharsalia.
With an
Edited with W. E.
34582
MART1ALIS (Marcus
Martialis
.
M. V.
36144
by
W.
J.
Courthope.
London, 1914.
8vo, pp.
xxiii,
107.
PERVIGILIUM VENERIS.
Venus. Edited with facsimiles of the codex Salmasianus and codex Thuaneus, an introduction, translation, apparatus criticus, and explanatory notes. By Cecil Clementi. R 33845 Oxford, 1911. 4to, pp. xv, 52.
vigil of
.
The
Compiled
on
.
33844
PETRONIUS ARBITER
critical
W.
Edited with (Caius) Petronii cena Trimalchionis. and explanatory notes, and translated into English prose by
. .
.
D. Lowe.
Cambridge, 1905.
8vo, pp.
xii,
182.
34579
331
LITERATURE: LATIN.
With
vi,
PROPERTIUS
(Sextus Aurelius) Sexti Properti opera omnia. London, 1905. 8vo, pp. commentary by H. E. Butler.
.
415.
R 35264
SALLUSTIUS CRISPUS
Catiline
The English.] (Caius) [Two or more Works. and Jugurtha of Sallust. Translated, with historical notes and Second edition, revised. introductions by Alfred W. Pollard. R 37519 London, 1901. 8vo, pp. xxx, 274.
.
.
STATIUS
translated with intro(Publius Papinius) The silvae of Statius duction and notes by D. A. Slater. 8vo, pp. 214. Oxford, 1908.
:
. . .
37438
VERGILIUS
MARS (Publius) An English version of the Eclogues of [Edited by Samuel Palmer. With illustrations by the author. Virgil R 34762 Fol., PP xv, 102. by A. H. Palmer.] London, 1883.
.
ROYDS (Thomas
naturalist's
Fowler.
beasts, birds, and bees of Virgil : a Fletcher) to the Georgics. With a preface by W. Warde 35337 8vo, pp. xix, 106. Oxford, 1914.
The
handbook
880
LITERATURE: GREEK.
la litterature
CROISET
Paris,
1.
1
grecque 3641 9
. . .
Homere
Lyrisme
Hesiode.
Par
M.
Croiset. Croiset.
et
augmented.
2.
Premiers prosateurs
:
Herodote.
Par A.
et
1914. augmentee. 3. Periode attique comedie tragedie edition revue et augmentee. 1913.
:
genres secondaires.
philosophic.
Par
M.
Croiset.
Troisieme
4. Pe'riode attique histoire eloquence edition revue et corrigee. 1899. Par A. Croiset. 5. Periode alexandrine.
Par A.
Par
Croiset. Croiset.
Deuxieme
Pe'riode romaine.
M.
Deuxieme
edition.
1901.
AUTENRIETH
colleges.
(Georg)
the
An
Homeric
of
. .
and
G. Autenrieth. with additions and corrections, by Robert P. Keep. London, 1908. 8vo, pp. 337. [With illustrations.]
From
German
Translated,
impression.]
[New
37347
. .
.
CORN FORD
London, 1914.
Macdonald) The
xii,
origin of
Attic comedy.
252.
35872
and
DECHARME
GOMPERZ
1865-66.
1.
illustrations.]
(Paul) Euripide et I'esprit de son theatre. Paris, 1893. 8vo, pp. iv, 568.
[With
plates
36954
33332
1865.
[With
plates.]
vol.
8vo.
Leipzig,
Philodem iiber Induktionsschlusse nach der oxforder und neapolitaner Abschrift. Der Text. 1866. 2, i. Philodem iiber Frommigkeit %* No more published.
.
GuiZOT
sur
la
etude historique et
. .
litteraire
332
LITERATURE
.
.
GREEK.
[With a French version
frontispiece.]
1*
Academici franchise.
8vo, pp. 467.
Nouvelle
edition.
Menander.]
[With
of
Paris,
1866.
28228
influence
Isocrates
on Cicero,
thesis presented to the faculty of the in candidacy for the University degree of doctor
New Haven,
Euripide
1913.
et
8vo, pp.
.
xii,
.
72.
36394
8vo,
MASQUER AY
PP. x, 406.
(Paul)
ses idees.
Paris, '1908.
R
Joseph Guillaume) Etudes sur
36983
. .
PATIN (Henri
Paris, 1913.
Eschyle.
vols.
8vo.
(2 vols.).
:
36982
des
Sophocle.
Euripide.
RlCHEPIN
G ean ) L'ame athenienne conferences Annales. 2 vols. 8vo. Paris, [1912]. 1. De TOlympe a 1'Agora. [5me Edition.]
. . .
faites a 1'Universite
R 33083
2.
D'Eschyle a Aristophane.
[4me
edition.]
SHEWAN
Iliad,
Dolon, the tenth book of Homer's lay some notes on its language, verse and contents with remarks by the way on the canons and methods of Homeric criticism. London,
of
:
(Alexander) The
1911.
8vo, pp.
xl,
290.
poets.
.
R
.
.
36976
SMYTH
(Herbert
[New
impression.]
London, 1906.
564.
35360
36332
THOMSON
1914.
Oxford,
R
R
VERRALL
(Arthur Woollgar) Euripides the rationalist a study in the history of art and religion. Cambridge, 1913. 8vo, pp. ix, 280.
36402
the
. .
ARISTOPHANES. The Acharnians of Aristophanes. Edited from MSS. and other original sources by Richard Thomas Elliott.
Oxford, 1914.
8vo, pp.
xliii,
241.
R 36248
ARISTOTLE.
[Bibliotheca
Aristotelis
Ps-Aristotelis
.
de
.
.
spiritu
Teubneriana.]
8vo, pp.
xxi,
64.
33808
Les Politiqves D'Aristote, Esquelles est monstree la science de le genre humain en toutes especes d'estats publiques. Traduittes de Grec en Francois, auec expositions prises des meilleurs Autheurs, specialemet d' Aristote mesme, & de Platon, conferez ensemble oil les occasions des matieres dont les par eux trainees s'offroient
gpuuerner
:
obseruations
&
&
exemples anciens
&
modernes,
recueillis
Royaumes, Seigneuries, & Republiques qui furent oncques, & dont a peu auoir la cognoissance par escrit, ou le fidele rapport d'autruy.
des plus
illustres
Empires,
Ion
Du
333
LITERATURE
GREEK.
la
Par Loys Le Politique. de France & de Poloigne,, Roy Roy Diet Paris, Par Michel de Vascosan Imprimeur Henry III. dudict Seigneur, demeurant en la rue sainct lacques, a Venseigne de M.D.LXXVI ____ Fol. pp. [20], 454 [42]. R 33746 la Fontaine.
commencement, progrez,
&
excellence de
Au Regius. du Nom. A
Treschrestien
ATHENAEUS,
translated
Naucratita. by C. D. Yonge.
The
.
. .
With an appendix
of poetical fragments,
rendered into English verse by various authors, and a general index. 8vo. 37440 3vols. 1854-1909.
DEMOSTHENES. Demosthenes against Androtion and against Timocrates. Second With introductions and English notes by William Wayte. R 36399 edition. Cambridge, 1893. 8vo, pp. li, 264.
.
.
--
Demosthenes against Midias. With critical and explanatory notes and an appendix by William Watson Goodwin. Cambridge, 906.
. . .
8vo, pp.
vii,
188.
36398
EURIPIDES.
The Iphigeneia among EvpiTri&ov 'IQiyeveta >; eV Tavpois. Edited with introduction and critical and the Tauri of Euripides. London, 1911. 8vo, pp. explanatory notes by E. B. England.
.
xxxi, 260.
34688
HERMOGENES,
the Ehetorician. Hermogenis opera. Edidit Hugo tabulae. Rabe. Adiectae sunt Teubneriana. [Bibliotheca Rhetores Graeci. 6.] 33367 8vo, pp. xxviii, 467. Lipsiae, 1913.
. . .
HOMER.
Homeri
'carmina.
Cum
J.
prolegomenis,
.
notis
.
.
criticis,
com-
mentariis exegeticis.
Edidit
van Leeuwen.
Lugduni Bata-
vorum, 1912-13.
Ilias.
.
8vo.
In progress.
R 37561
With
]
1912-13.
ISAEUS.
735.
lo-cuos.
The
speeches of Isaeus.
. .
.
critical
tory notes
by William Wyse.
Cambridge,
904.
R 37351
PHOENIX,
Phoinix von Kolophon. Texte und Unterof Colophon. Gustav Adolf Gerhard. Mit einer Tafel in suchungen von Lichtdruck und einer Skizze. Leipzig und Berlin, 1 909. 8vo, pp. 36 107 vii, 302.
.
PlNDAR
.
critical,
.
.
New
Isthmian odes, with notes explanatory and and introductory essays, by C. A. M. Fennell. Cambridge, 1899. 8vo, pp. xvi, [With plate.]
275.
odes, with notes explanatory introductions, and introductory essays, by C. A. M. Fennell.
edition.
.
R
.
34685
critical^
.
and
.
New
Cambridge, 1893.
Philebus of Plato.
R 34686
PLATO.
The
Cambridge, 1897.
R 37477
8vo, pp.
334
LITERATURE
GREEK.
critical notes
1 .
PLATO. The Symposium of Plato. Edited with introduction, . . and commentary by Robert Gregg Bury. Cambridge,
pp.
Ixxi,
909.
8vo,
179.
R 37443
PROCOPIUS, of Caesar ea. Opera omnia. Recognovit Jacobus Haury. Opus ab academia regia Bavarica praemio zographico ornatum. [Bibliotheca In progress. 8vo. Lipsiae, 1906-13. Teubneriana.]
.
. .
11802
1913.
3, 1. 3, 2.
1906.
VI
de
aedificiis
cum duobus
indicibus et appendice.
SAPPHO.
The poems
English by
-
of
An
interpretative
frontispiece.]
rendition
into
[With
[Maine], 1910.
Portland R 35842
Sappho
memoir,
renderings and a
.
literal translation.
Second
edition.
[With
plates.]
36146
THEOCRITUS.
Wendel.
.
Scholia in Theocritum vetera. Recensuit Carolus Adiecta sunt scholia in technopaegnia scripta. [Bibliotheca R 36298 8vo, pp. xl, 407. Lipsiae, 1914. Teubneriana.]
890
LITERATURE
[With
MINOR LANGUAGES.
Cambridge, 1911-13.
HORAE
4to.
SEMITICAE. In progress.
facsimiles.]
R
...
.
. .
4 vols. 10436
in
5, 6, 7, 10.
and English.
The commentaries of Isho'dad of Merv, Bishop of Hadatha Edited and translated by M. D. Gibson. 191 1-13.
Syriac
vol.
8vo.
SOCIETY. In progress.
.
.
[Publications.]
London, 1913.
R8015
Edited
Euphemia and the Goth, with the acts of martyrdom of the confessors of Edessa. 1913. by F. C. Burkitt. [Syriac and English.] [With plates.]
.
DUVAL
edition.
Anciennes
[BibliotheLittera-
R 34902
Akademie
CHWOLSON
Literatur in
Uberreste der
.
altbabylonischen
Ubersetzungen.
[Kaiserliche
der Wissenschaften, St. Petersburg. Aus den Memoires des savants St. Petersburg, 1859. etrangers, T. VIII. besonders abgedruckt.]
4to, pp. 195.
32703
HlRSCHFELD
With
in
.
Hebrew
characters.
NOGUCHI
(Yone) The
series.
of
.
spirit
East Series.]
London, 1914.
names and
.
.
of the
INDIAN TEXTS
Vedic index
Berriedale Keith.
London, 1912.
subjects.
2 vols.
R R
36268
34997
and Arthur
[With map.]
1912.
335
London, 1914.
8vo.
In 10046
Edited by
[attributed to
SCHROEDER
pp.
xiii,
Indians Literatur
(Leopold von) Reden und Aufsatze, vornehmlich und Kultur. Leipzig, 1913. [With portrait]
iiber
8vo,
430.
33932
[India
TAGORE
...
play
in
one
act.
Society.] %* 500
London,
copies printed.
1913.
35272
The
author.
crescent moon.
With
illustrations .....
London, 1913.
8vo, pp.
xii,
82.
34981
The
The
-
gardener.
[With portrait]
the author.
London, 1913.
34662
chamber.
London, 1914.
;
Sadhana
the realisation of
life.
London, 1913.
London,
.
8vo,
164.
R 35124
TEXTS SOCIETY:
[Publications.]
pp.
xi,
IRISH
1914.
vol.
8vo.
In progress.
15.
R
. .
9092
.
Keating
(G.)
(The
history
of
Ireland
1914.
OSSIANIC SOCIETY.
(-VI.)
.
Dublin, 1857-61.
Vol.
III.
27778
3. UOfUl 15tl e,ACh t)hl.At\tYm 0,A A^tJf J^T^ 1165 or the P^suit after Diarmuid O'Duibhne, and Grainne the daughter of Cormac Mac Airt, King of Ireland in the
third century.
(p^tlAlt Cf\AOlt)tie CtlOjAtn,A1C 1T1111C AlfAC Airt got his branch. CAO1T>tl Olf\1T1 A t1-T)1xM5tl HA femtie Oisin after the Fenians.) Edited by S. H. O'Grady. .1857.
. .
How
:
Cormac Mac
lamentation of
The
4.
6.
or,
Fenian poems,
edited
by
J.
O'Daly.
The land of youth edited by B. O'Looney. ITlAC-5nimA|At-A pitlTl ITlAC CutnxMtt. The boyish exploits of Finn Mac Cumhaill. Edited by J. O'Donovan.
.
.)
vols.
1859-61.
or,
5.
trndieACllU nA C^onTOtlxMmtie;
an appendix
of
stitution, [with
poems,
etc.,]
edited by
...
Connellan
860.
CUALNGE.
Irish of the
.
. .
The
book
cattle-raid ".
Now
ancient Irish epic tale Tain bo Cualnge, the Cualnge for the first time done entire into English out of the
of Leinster
"
and
allied manuscripts.
By Joseph Dunn.
.
. .
1914.
R R
London, 36048
QUIGGIN (Edmund Crosby) Prolegomena to the bards 1200-1500. From the Proceedings
.
Vol. V.
***
London, [1913].
title is
34578
The
23
336
1913.
8vo.
[With In progress.
R7448
Poems
burgh.
MS.
in the
MABINOGION.
variantes
Les Mabinogion du Livre rouge de Hergest avec les du Livre blanc de Rhydderch. Traduits du gallois avec une Par J. introduction, un commentaire explicatif et des notes critiques.
Loth.
.
.
.
Edition
entierement
revue.
Paris,
1913.
vols.
8vo.
R
Musical and poetical relicks of the Welsh bards
:
33938
added
collec-
WALES.
by
preserved
tradition
and
manuscripts.
... To
.
variations for the harp, harpsichord, violin, or flute with tion of the pennillion and englynion
. .
with a
...
English translations. Likewise, a general history of the bards and druids. ... To which is prefixed a ... dissertation on the musical instruments of the aboriginal
Britons.
. .
.
A new edition
augmented.
London, 1794.
183.
primitive
British
34760
;
WALES.
other
.
The
.
.
bardic
;
museum,
of
literature
and
forming the second volume of the Musical, poetical, drawn from and historical relicks of the Welsh bards and druids with English translations and historic illustrations documents likewise the ancient war-tunes of the bards ... to these national with variations for the harp, or harpmelodies are added new basses
rarities
:
.
.
sichord
piece.]
violin,
or flute
... by Edward
Fol., pp. xx, 112.
Jones.
[With
frontis-
London, 1802.
R R
34761
LlRONDELLE (Andre) Le
[With
portrait.]
Paris, 1912.
I'homme et 1'oeuvre. poete Alexis Tolstoi 34666 8vo, pp. xi, 677.
:
TOLSTOI (Leo
Nikolaevich)
Count.
L. Tolstoy.
Plays.
Translated
by Louise and Aylmer Maude. Complete edition including the posthumous plays. London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xi, 413. [With portrait.]
35873
russe.
VOGUE
Onzieme
Le (Marie Eugene Melchior de) Vicomte. edition. 8vo, pp. Iv, 351. Paris, 1912.
roman
34933
ABERDEEN
MANCHESTER
VOL.
2
OCTOBER-DECEMBER,
1915
No. 4
third
list
of contributions
to the
new
r
library
i
for the
University of
Louvain, which we
.
print elsei
where
the
present
issue,
rurmshes
rresh
of the generous
and widespread
Already upwards
of five
This
is
an excellent
we
if
remains to be done
pointed out in our last issue, very much more the work of replacement which we have in-
augurated is to be accomplished. It is with the utmost confidence, therefore, that phasize our appeal for help.
We are glad
of the
announce that three of the publications library which have been for several years in CATALOGUE
to
state of preparation, are
to
be able
an active
culation,
now
OF GREEK
PAPYRI,
actually in cir-
appear on the cover of the Bulletin," or The most important of the three is
:
CATALOGUE OF GREEK PAPYRI in the JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY. By A. S. Hunt, Litt.D., J. de M. Johnson,
M.A., and Victor Martin, D.
ments of the Ptolemaic and
456).
4to,
es L.
Volume 2
Periods
".
"
:
Docuof
Roman
with
(Nos. 62plates
pp.
xx,
487,
twenty-three
facsimiles.
This volume
is
(Price one guinea, net.) the result of more than five years of persistent labour
on the part of Dr. Hunt and his two associate editors. The volume, which runs to upwards of 500 pages, deals with nearly 400 papyri consisting mainly of non-literary documents of an official or legal character, extending from the Ptolemaic to the Roman as disperiod,
337
24
338
tinguished from the literary documents, forming the subject-matter of the first volume, which appeared in 191 1.
The
These papyri were found, says Dr. carbonized papyri of Thmuis. as well as others of the same group in various Hunt, European collections, without doubt in the ruined buildings of Thmuis (Tell Timai), partly excavated by the expedition of the Egypt Exploration Fund
1892-3, whose chambers were found choked by a medley decayed rolls, and it is interesting to learn that the documents printed in this volume form the largest body yet published from
during the season
of
this source.
of
New
much
carefully sifting the material as the sheets passed through the press, succeeded in obtaining
that
is
of interest.
Professor
H. Moulton, by
"
his
forthcoming
Vocabulary
of the
Greek
Testament**.
this
The
taxation in
documents themselves, but in the exhaustive and illuminating notes by which they are accomWhilst to the pal geographical student the excellent facsimiles panied.
of extremely useful information, not only in the
with the typographical transliterations should prove of great service. The texts which are printed in extenso are accompanied by translations,
extensive notes
and commentaries,
rate indexes.
not be out of place, whilst calling attention to our own OXYRHYNCatalogue of Greek papyri, briefly to refer to the new
It
may
of
volume
of
the
"
Oxyrhynchus
Papyri,**
the publication
PAPYRI,
which synchronises with our own. This eleventh volume, issued by the Graeco- Roman Branch of the Egypt Exploration Fund, and edited by Dr. B. P. Grenfell and Professor A. S. Hunt, consists, with
one exception, of literary pieces of considerable importance, found at " various dates since 1897. The exception is one of the most interesting documents concerning the early Egyptian Church," furnishing as
it
does a
of services at various churches on Sundays, festivals, and on other days, of five months in a particular year, which apparently can be definitely fixed as A.D. 535-6. Other theological fragments
list
339
The
classical
by two
substantial
some twenty-four elegiacs from the Aetia" cent.); a passage on the nature of justice by
;
"
Sicyon (3rd
cent.).
Of
are papyri of parts of Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes, and others, but the most important are portions of Thucydides VII (2nd-3rd
cent.), furnishing
new
be much appreciated by
Thucydides.
The
sure,
is
feature of this
greatest plea-
name
of Dr. Grenfell
upon the
title
page.
Dr. Grenfell,
and we hope
that for
we are glad to learn, has made a splendid recovery, many years he may be permitted to continue
which he and
his colleague,
his researches in
Dr. A. S. Hunt, have so peculiarly made their own, and that their researches may be crowned with new successes not unworthy of comparison with those which they have already to their credit.
The
pearance
just
made
its
ap-
SUMERIAN
UMMA
.
literated,
M.A.
With
a Foreword
by Canon C. H.
W.
Johns,
M.A.,
Litt.D.
fifty-eight
tablets,
by the library
The
work
taken
of cataloguing
and
by
Professor
enter
seriously to
Hogg, but death intervened before he was able Mr. Bedale, one of Professor Hogg's upon it.
students,
who
of
Manchester, very gladly and readily stepped into the versity breach, and with the assistance of Canon Johns has produced a piece
of
340
The volume
for study the
first
of considerable interest,
since
it
makes available
site at
Umma,
and that interest has been further enhanced by the Foreword contributed by Canon Johns, in which he describes the nature of the
transactions recorded.
The
in the
third
publication to
make
its
appearance
is
a portfolio of
WOODCUTS
FIFTEENTH
IN
THE CENTURY.
in
facsimile.
RYLANDS
LIBRARY.
Reproduced
With an
by Campbell Folio. Ten plates, of which two are in Dodgson, M.A. colour, and 16 pp. of text, in a portfolio. (Price seven
shillings
introduction and
descriptive notes
and
its
sixpence.)
fine collection of
In addition to
woodcuts and metal cuts that were issued separately in large numbers in the early part of the same period, chiefly as aids to devotion.
Two
of these
woodcuts are
of exceptional interest
for
modern photo-mechanical
"
St.
to represent
of
Christopher
and
which has acquired a great celebrity by reason which it bears, and which, until recently, gave to
position of the
first
423)
the unchallenged
dated woodcut.
Since the discovery in 1845, at Malines, of another woodcut representing "The Virgin and Child," and bearing the date 1418,
for the
some
This view
authorities
print has
who
shared by Mr. Dodgson, but there are other have a strong suspicion that the date in the Brussels
is
if
been faked,
not added
later,
since
lettering in the
ribbon
scrolls,
date differs entirely from that found in the untouched containing inscriptions, in the picture itself.
These and many other points of great interest have been dealt with by Mr. Campbell Dodgson, Keeper of the Prints and Drawings
341
Museum,
who
kindly undertook to write the introduction and descriptive notes, and in so doing has greatly added to the value and importance of the
publication.
The
"
"
St. Christopher
and
"
The Annunciation
"
have been
re-
as well as in
mono-
experienced in obtaining satisfactory results in the coloured reproductions, accounts, to some extent, for the delay
Facsimiles
".
The water-colour
sketches,
which
formed
direction of
were prepared under the Mr. Richard Glazier, the Principal of the Manchester
School of Art, to
our grateful thanks. In the course of the examination and description of the library's
offer
whom we
collection of
Arabic manuscripts, numbering upwards 800 volumes, upon which Dr. Alphonse Mingana is
present engaged,
of at
AN UNREAPOLOGY
many
of
new
graphical
and
textual interest
"
which they have been found to possess. " attention has been called to copies Bulletin
likely to excite considerable interest
"
with
In our next issue regard to the text of the Mohammedan scriptures. we shall publish a further article from the pen of Dr. Mingana, in
which he
Moslem beliefs and practices. Babawaih al-Kummi, There is a glamour of romance and humour surrounding many of the
dealing with
stories translated
tion
by Dr. Mingana, which, together with the informaregarding the rewards for good deeds, and the punishments for
Mohammed,
will
make
interesting
and
instructive reading.
is
The
most recent, and certainly the most important of Dr. Mingana's finds. The manuscript referred to is a volume of modest appearance and dimensions, the provenance of which it is now impossible to determine,
since there
is
no record
of
it
came
Crawford, from
1
whom
It
it
was
902.
consists of
an apology of
by a learned
Muhammadan
doctor,
named
'Ali b.
Rabban
at-
342
by Dr. Mingana.
marked by numerous works by Christians and Muhammadans, who lived not apologetic far from Baghdad, the capital of the 'Abbaside dynasty of the Eastern
ninth century of the Christian era
caliphate.
The
The names
among
of
Abu Nuh,
Ishak al-Kindi,
in oriental learning.
Christian apologists are known by all interested " In particular the Apology of the Christian Faith/*
or
by
But, as far as we are any educated Christian living with Muslims. hitherto no such an apology of Islam of so early a date and aware, of such outstanding importance, by a Muhammadan has been known
to
exist.
It
is,
therefore, a source of
to that of
it
must
have an
follows
Al-Kindi,
contains
The work
30 long
Arabian prophet.
author called
These quotations follow the Syriac Version of the have been translated by an unknown
Interpreter".
in the
If
"
Marcus the
this
Marcus mentioned
"
among the writers preceding the time of the Prophet, the book would become of paramount importance for many questions dealing with " the redaction of the Kur'an. the The Syriac word Mshabbha,
Glorious," wherever occurring in the
Old Testament,
is
translated in
Arabic by the word Muhammad. It is possible, therefore, that the heard this word pronounced, wrote (S. vii, 56, etc.) Prophet having that his name was found in the Sacred Books of the Christians and
1
the Jews.
The writer is the physician and moralist 'AH b. Rabban at-Tabari, who died about A.D. 864 He wrote his book at the request of the
Caliph al-Mutawakkil (847-861), at Baghdad
in the
The
is
manuscript
is
and
existing in
our days.
343
have
text,
is
in
accompanied by an English
at present actively engaged.
translation,
If it
true, that every faithful follower of Muhammad will desire to a copy of this manual as soon as it is brought to his notice, as possess we are assured will be the case, our printers and publishers are likely
be
to
be kept busy
In
for
some time
to
come.
the
present issue
thirteenth
we
an interesting description
of
of
an
Latin
the
SUMMARY
two volumes, which OF PETER LOMBARD. , found here and there in the
at
Camborne,
in
one time to the Cistercian Monastery It was later and until the Diocese of Cambray.
of
Maidenhead, and
in
1913,
passed into the custody of this library. Hitherto the manuscript appears to have escaped the attention of
it
scholars,
and
we
Raymond M.
which should be
Martin,
O.P.,
and
who
mediaeval theology. Father Martin, a Professor of Louvain, has been in England since the occupation of Louvain by the Germans, but he has now returned, feeling that his duty
is
amongst
his
own
people, to succour,
and
to minister to such of
them
of materials for
For some time Father Martin has been engaged in the collection an edition of the works of the mediaeval ROBERT DE
MELUN. philosopher and theologian, Robert de Melun, which he has in contemplation. Robert de Melun, who is little known to-day,
was born
an early age he proceeded to Paris, to In course of study under Hugues de Saint Victor, and Abelard. time he was made professor, and taught, first at the Ecole de Saintein
England.
At
In
which
office
he occupied
until his
344
"
subject
:
1913, and
La
necessite
de
croire.
Le
sur le
Robert de Melun," 1913, copies of which he has Other articles on the works of this author presented to the library. " Revue des Sciences are to appear in the forthcoming numbers of the " Revue d'histoire ecclesiastique," and philosophiques et theologiques,"
Trinite, d'apres
l<
La
Ciencia Tomista".
Louvain, he requested us
be most grateful for any information, based upon manuscript sources, as Needless to say we bearing upon Robert de Melun and his works.
shall 'be glad to receive
may
wish to
make, and
to transmit
any communications that any of our readers them to Father Martin when the
opportunity occurs. Amongst the most recent accessions to the library, we have received the two first fasciculi of a magnificent work by REIMS
M.
"
comprise 225 plates excellently reproduced in heliogravure, accompanied by an historical and descriptive introduction, and a bibliography, together
architecture et sculpture," which,
DR
L.
state of the
damaged
It is
French architecture.
fortunate that the collection of materials for this great work had been completed before the Vandals had commenced their work of studied demolition, and that we have had preserved for all time a
pictorial record of this truly national sanctuary,
richest
example
of
Gothic art at
of
its
example
work
to the public
nous voudrions que ce livre-ci fut surtout et d'abord un hommage pieux au chef d'ceuvre, victime d'un attentat odieux,
. .
qu
il
fixat a
fiant celles,
jamais le souvenir des parties qui ont etc ravagees, glorinombreuses heureusement, qui ont echappe a la devasta-
tion
et
345
another work amongst the recent accessions, which is of the deserving of notice at a time when the thoughts which SITY. intellectual world turn in sympathy to Louvain, " has been appropriately described as the martyr city," and which will be welcomed by many of our readers, especially by those who
have
responded to our appeals for help in our efforts to The work to assist in the repair of one corner of that devasted area. " Conferences donnees L'Universite de Louvain which we refer is
so generously
:
:
reproduces the Professor and Librarian of the University of Louvain, delivered at the
indicates
it
College de France, to large and enthusiastic audiences, in the early The author has sketched for us, in a brief, but most part of the year.
manner, the principal episodes of the history of the University from its foundation in the fifteenth century to the present time. He tells us that it was reckoned amongst the most vital intellectual
attractive
and was
at the
of the
most ardent
centres of patriotism.
Under
J.P., of Stockport,
THE
SO-
a young man, which without reasonable evidence has GRAFTON " " been described as the Graf ton Portrait of Shakespeare In accepting the bequest we are under no illusions as to SPEARE.
the iconographic value of the painting.
Since, however,
it is it it
has already
it
as well that
will
should be
some public
institution,
where
themselves as to the fallacy of the attribution. The story of how the picture came into the possession of Mr. Kay, and of his subsequent efforts to identify the portrait with Shakespeare,
is
told in a
little
the
Shakespeare with an account of the sack and destruction of the Manor of Graf ton
title
:
"
just
made
its
appearance, under
:
The
of
Regis,
1643".
is
By Thomas Kay.
a piece of special pleading, in which there is little evidence to justify the deductions arrived at. The Keeper of the
National Portrait Gallery, to
The book
whom
it
the panel
346
Mr. Kay, warned that gentleman of the cool and vain attempts which had been made from time to time to identify the
to the notice of portrait
However,
"
in his
self-evident that
Mr. Kay
conscientiously believed
no
The
exhibition of manuscripts
show
of
visit
September
last,
March
next,
PR/NTED^
be replaced by a selection of the works of BOOKS. Shakespeare and his contemporaries, to commemorate the tercentenary of the death of our national poet.
when
it
will
may be
and
craft
of
and western manuscripts, illustratthe scribe and the illuminator during the
which also the library by means of this exhibito
Side by side with these are examples of the blockearliest type-printed books, in
so well equipped.
Indeed,
it is
possible,
tion, to trace
been employed
from the
earliest
times
down
and transmission
of
knowledge
render
We
also,
by means
this exhibition, to
some
assistance to the
in their
efforts to
provide means of instruction for the scholars who have been dislodged through the taking over by the military authorities of so
many
to serve as hospitals.
of
The
been to
groups
upon portions
may
around the show cases, to their respective classes. In this way a large number of young people have been brought into touch with the library,
and
it is
may
result
from these
visits,
affording, as they
do
in
so
many
cases,
new
interest
and
reality
to
their
studies.
LIBRARY NOTES
AND NEWS
347
Since the publication of our last issue, another of our colleagues has joined His Majesty's forces, in the person of Mr. THE LIBS.
O.
Moffet,
M.A., one of the senior assistants. He ROLL OF Motor Transport Branch of the Army HONOUR.
is
We
tenant
O.
J.
Sutton,
who are on active service are all safe. Lieuwho received his commission immediately after
sent back
the declaration of war, accompanied the 9th Manchester Regiment to the Dardanelles, and
service.
was
wounded,
is
He
We
and
by
Sir Ian
Hamilton
is
star,
recommended
The
list
of the
^^E^E AC
CESSIONS.
library,
department of History, accompanied by the promised combined author index to all three sections.
Of
"
a limited number
published, and
BURGLARY.
so that
may With
be had
we
shall
the volumes
have there- OUR NEXT may not be too unwieldly. fore included in the present and concluding part of the ISS ^ E second volume a title page with table of contents, to enable those of
-
We
our readers
who may
to
bind them.
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY.
BY T.
F.
TOUT, M.A., F.B.A., BISHOP FRASER PROFESSOR OF MEDIAEVAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER.
burglary, about
THE
tempting
which
have
to speak to-night,
did not
of
discover
mediaeval crime.
came
happened when
so
was at-
But
human a
story did
it
something up weary on to you in the hope that you will not find
the
paths of
absolutely wanting
the burglary of
in instruction
and amusement.
Now my burglary
was
the
king's treasury, or
more
The
was 24 April,
account,
it
303.
More precisely,
own
of that
burglar effected an entrance into the king's treasury, from which, he tells us he escaped, with as much booty as he could carry, on the morning
of
26
April.
Who
had committed the burglary is a problem settled, even by the trials which followed the
trials
though these
at
least.
some
half a
it
dozen people
But
was still maintained in some quarters that the burglary was committed by one robber only, though charges of complicity in his guilt were in
common fame extended to something in this case common fame was not, I
I
like a
hundred individuals.
And
think, at fault.
wish
first
meaning
which I spoke of my burglary as that of the robbery of the treasury of the king's wardrobe within Westminster
1
West.
South.
North.
T HE KINGS
IHE
NC^
HALL
NOUS
1o\^EfT"E?C>feQuER
RDE N
^R V E^R- E T H A
I
JHOJUSES
M E S^
BRIDGE-
East.
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
Abbey.
to
349
For
this [purpose
the
Westminster was then what Kensington was in the eighteenth or early nineteenth century, a court suburb, aloof from the traffic and business of
the great city of London.
Now the
which
the king's palace and the adjacent Benedictine Abbey. The rough plan, I am permitted to print on the opposite page, will show the close
two great groups of buildings. It was much closer in many than the relations between the Houses of Parliament, the modern ways If representative of the old palace, and the present abbey buildings.
relation of the
many
destructive
alterations in de-
ancient
site,
we
must remember
that there
was nothing
broad modern road that separates the east end of the abbey wall enclosed from Westminster Hall and the House of Lords.
like the
went westwards
of
St.
to within a
few
feet
of the
Margaret's
Church.
The
abbey on the east side of the south tran" poet's sept through the door by which you can still go into corner," having the chapter house on your left and Henry VI Fs chapel
existing
access to the
on your
right,
was
The
space be-
tween the abbey and the palace wall was occupied by the churchyard
The parish church or rather its successor still St. Margaret's. This churchcrouches beneath the shade of the neighbouring minster. yard covered the ground now taken up by Henry VII's chapel, which
of
of course
was not
and
its
as yet in existence.
monks
Westminster, with
its
its
flying
erected
by the
Westminster
substantially
Henry III. was founded by Edward the Confessor, and Abbey refounded by Henry III, who had shown immense care
pious zeal of
and lavished large sums on a grandiose scheme for the rebuilding of the great house of religion which contained the shrine of his favourite saint,
whose honour he had given his son the name of Edward. The rebuilding* went on into the reign of Edward I, who was not much
in
inferior to his father in his zeal for the church,
to
honour
his father's
memory
own
patron
saint.
350
Eld ward
I
The
king
now
found himself
dragged into enormous expenses by He was perforce turned from church-building to get men and wars.
money
The finances of England under Edward I were less elastic than under
Mr. Lloyd-George, and modern
very infancy.
the most
Edward
I,
and banking were then in their though he imposed taxes which would make
credit
to-day quiver, soon found himself hopeTo meet his burdens the king constantly employed lessly in debt. differentiated taxation, but the differentiation was calculated by rather a
stalwart militarist of
different
method from
It
was
differentiation
according to status,
not expected to
The
clergy,
who were
fight,
were expected
to
laymen.
to
how
pay more heavily than the things were then done the
districts
taxes levied in
294 when
were
called
pay a tenth of their moveables in taxation, and the wealthier and upon more peaceful towns were asked for a sixth. From the clergy a tax
equal,
I
think, to a
pound,
Paul's
If
is
said that
when
fell
the dean of
St.
unprecedented impost, he
I
dead on the
spot.
such
in
heroic efforts
mean
were necessary
stress ?
1294
date
are
at the beginning of
1
things
By this
Edward I's finances were indeed in a bad state. Historians only now gradually beginning to realise how embarrassed the great
was
in the last years of his reign,
fill
king
of his attempts to
his exchequer.
The whole
though
century
his
Edward's declining years were not equally strenuous, Before the end of the old finances steadily grew worse.
of
Edward had
He
therefore determined to devote himself with characteristic energy to " " Since therefore Scotland now Scots. the conquest of the rebel
became
Edward made
his
headquarters in the
north of England.
those days,
to
where the king lived there the For though England in be found.
the thirteenth century had centralised institutions, those institutions were not centralised in a local capital. It is true that one English city was
all
the
rest.
London,
in the thirteenth
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
as in the eighteenth century,
351
Of course than is the case nowadays. greater and more important Edward I's London to our eyes would be quite a little place, but at
a time when there was, outside London, perhaps no town of more than 10,000 inhabitants and very few of that population, a city four or five
times that size
was something
commercial
"
portentous.
Yet
this greatness of
London
it
to
its
activity,
"
capital
of the country or
seat of government.
In reality
was no
capital in the
modern
was
that the government should follow the king. ally that the governing machinery of the land
in Westminster or
London.
towards making the great city, or rather its neighbouring court suburb, a centre of permanent administrative offices, a capital in the modern
sense.
Thus
the Court of
Common
since
had
Henry
II.
These were,
however,
The
office of
the Chancery
of state
secretarial office
So
administration which
of
all, to
depended on the
first
In
be the machinery for the government of the king's household. the middle ages no distinction was made between the king and
If the king had devised a useful machine for the kingdom. governing his household and estates, he naturally used it for any other purposes
for
which he thought
offices
it
would be
useful.
We
find,
court
of
administration
offices,
by
side
affairs,
but
in the actual
work
The
king's
was
Wardrobe.
Wardrobe was,
in
were the
which the king hung up his clothes, and the staff belonging to it valets and servants whose business it was to look after them.
this
From
king's
organ-
Exof
chequer
in
their dealings
officers
number
and general
352
".
In
war
time, then,
it
was
far
it
periods
away from London, at or near the scene of fighting. In such became the great spending department, while the Exchequer
at
Westminster collecting the revenue of the country, and forwarding the money to the Wardrobe which spent it. For five years before 303 the king had thrown his chief energies into the
normally remained
1
Under these circumstances London and Westconquest of Scotland. minster saw little of him. Moreover, he found it convenient to have
near him in the north even the sedentary offices of government.
ingly in
1
Accordand
298 Edward
to York.
law
courts,
the Chancery
From
298,
then, to
303 York,
rather than
Westminster, might have been called the capital of England, and the The king's appearances to the south were few and far between.
visits was make arrangements with his
occasion of such
generally his desire to get money, and to creditors. From such a short sojourn the
1303.
Despite
was only
in that
year that
his
main
place,
king,
for
court,
and government
years.
to
York
over five
Under
mediaeval conditions the eye of a vigilant task-master was an essential It condition of efficiency. followed then that during Edward's
long absence things at Westminster were allowed to
extraordinary state of confusion and
disorder.
drift
into
an
Affairs
were made
to choose
worse by the
their
fact
free
own
In
servants.
Thus
was
in
There was nothing strange about the middle ages such offices were frequently held by hereeverybody takes up his father's business Earl Curzon once pointed out to the
still
Oldham
hereditary
tailors,
who
work very well. However this may be with tailors in the East and legislators in the West, the hereditary keeper of Edward's palace of Westminster did not prove to be a very effective custodian of
did their
his master's property.
keeper of the king's palace at Westminster," and also the keepership of the Fleet prison, in right of his wife Joan, who had inherited both from her father. Thus in
that of
"
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
addition to the keepership of the palace John Shenche
353
"
kept" the
London.
in
As
a rule, John
and
his wife
Joan had
their habitation
at Westminster an underling, John, therefore, employed as his deputy certain William of the Palace, who kept, or rather did not keep, a
for
1
him the
303, John
abode
in the City
However, early in the year where his wife remained, and Apparently the prison was not so
officer to live in as
the palace.
Perhaps, too, the domestic restraints imposed upon Shenche in the city to him. Certainly gay times now ensued in the Soon John and William, in the absence of the higher deserted palace.
were burdensome
seem
authorities,
companions of One conduct were soon notorious throughout the neighbourhood. element in this band of revellers was, I regret to say, a certain section
of the
have gathered together a band of disreputable boon both sexes, whose drunken revels and scandalous misto
monks
of
of the king
were, so also
a deeper and
more
The
enthusiasm,
III.'s
effort,
Abbey had now period of Henry Mediaeval man, though zealous and full of ideas, was died down. It is a commonplace of history that when the first seldom persistent.
reconstruction of Westminster
new
order or a
new
foundation
religious activity
was followed by a
but that time of
strong reaction.
The
its
reconstitution
under Henry
III,
worked
well as
reconstruction
and the abbey had gone to sleep. The work of had stopped from lack of funds the royal favour as the royal presence was withdrawn gradually from the abbey.
itself out,
;
monastic
and only
It
till
just
if
church.
buildings
looks as
their
spared the chapter house and the abbey the monks had to camp out in half-ruined
restored.
home could be
All
laxed the reins of discipline, the more so since the abbot, Walter of Wenlock, was an old man, whose hold on the monks was slight,
and some
of the chief
officers
of the abbey,
the obedientiaries,
as
25
354
they were called, were singularly incompetent or unscrupulous persons. It followed naturally that many of the fifty monks became slack beIt was both from yond ordinary standards of mediaeval slackness. and common monks that John Shenche and William of obedientiaries There the Palace secured the companions for their unseemly revels.
the scene a
new
life
figure,
in fact,
as a clerk,
clergy for the more profitable calling of a wandering trader in wool, cheese, and butter. England's economic position in those days reminds
us of the state of things
now
than that
in
modern
industrial
England.
She had
little
to
sell
abroad save raw materials, especially wool, which was largely exThis traffic took ported to the great clothing towns of Flanders.
Pudlicott to
in
1298,
of
when Edward
France.
had
his
allied
with the
Flemings against king trading adventures were as unsuccessful as the king's military efforts in Flanders. Moreover,
luck to be
after the king's return to
But
ill
among
Low
Countries.
This
a method of mediaeval
which may be recommended to our alien enemies, but was so bad that we can hardly blame the Flemings whether for leaving no stone unturned to obtain payment of their debts succeeded I do not know. Before long Richard escaped from his they
Edward's
credit
Flemish gaol, leaving his property in Flanders in the hands of his captors. Nursing a grievance against the king, and with dire poverty facing him, he took lodgings in London, where, like many bankrupts, he seems
have generally had enough money to indulge in gratifications that he had a special mind to practice.
to
all
It
the personal
seems that
in
the pursuit of his disreputable pleasures, Pudlicott was brought into contact with John Shenche, William of the Palace, and the other merry-
makers, lay
and
ecclesiastical, in
Westminster. Hall.
He
was
haunting Westminster
He
courts for
he says himself seeking a remedy in the king's the property he had lost in Flanders. How he could find one,
when
these courts
of
were
at
York,
cannot say.
But, as
we
shall see,
many
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
facts.
355
However, Edward himself soon came to Westminster, but withdrew after a short stay, leaving Pudlicott unpaid. We have seen how near was the palace to the abbey, and how
the palace keeper's monastic friends formed a living bridge between One result of these pleasant social relations was that the two.
Abbey of Westminster soon became familiar ground to One day, when disturbed at the hopelessness of getting his
the
redressed by the king, he
Pudlicott.
grievances
cloisters of the
abbey,
and noticed with greedy eyes the rich stores of silver plate carried in and out of the refectory of the monks, by the servants who were waiting
on the brethren
to
at meals.
The happy
"
Thus
the king's
made
to
pay the
king's debts.
Westminster, Pudlicott found a ladder reared up against a house near He put this ladder against one of the windows of the
chapter-house ; he climbed up the ladder ; found a window that opened by means of a cord opened the window and swung himself by the
;
same cord
refectory,
off
and secured a
and
sell.
was
end
living
and we may believe surely this part of his the proceeds of the sale of the silver cups and had been eaten up. No doubt the loose life he
revels with the keepers of the palace involved a
constant need
of
1
ready cash. Anyhow by the 302 Richard was again destitute, and looking out for someIt was, doubtless, dangerous to rob the monks thing more to steal. more, and perhaps the intimacy which was now established any between him and his monastic boon companions suggested to Richard
a more excellent
way of restoring
his fortunes.
the king's treasury, and his success seemed assured since, as he tells us,
knew the premises of the abbey, where the treasury was, and how he might come to it ". How he profited by his knowledge we shall soon " consee, but first we must for a moment part company with Pudlicott's
he
fession,"
"
which up
to
now
hesitation.
But
for
it is
356
Before
his tale,
it
can with advantage explain why we can no longer would be well for us to state what this treasury was and
at.
trust
how
could be got
In the fourteenth century Let us begin with the word treasury. meant simply a storehouse, or at its narrowest a storehouse of treasury " To us the " treasury is the government department of valuables. finance, but under Edward I the state office of finance was the Ex-
chequer, which, as
since
1
we
298
"
"
treasury
that
it
Westminster the Exchequer had a or storehouse there also, yet in its absence it is not likely
at
York.
When
at
But side by side kept either valuables or money at Westminster. with the state office was the household office of finance, the Wardrobe,
and, though the wardrobe office was itinerating with the king, it still kept " a treasury'' or storehouse at Westminster, and this, for the sake of
greater safety,
cincts of the
less
for
some years
From the monastic point of view, it was doubtabbey. an inconvenience that nearness to the royal dwelling compelled
to offer their premises for the royal service.
them
Accordingly, kings
to use
its
not infrequently
the
abbey
buildings.
Thus
the chapter house became a frequent place for meetings of parliament, and at a later time it was used and continued to be used till the nineteenth In the century, for the storage of official records.
as
same way Edward secured the crypt underneath the chapter house one of the storehouses of his Wardrobe. When the crypt was first used for this purpose I do not know, but records show us that it was
of the
was newly paved. It was " There was another treasury the Wardrobe. Tower of London, but this was mainly used
it
bulky
of
articles,
and the
like.
Most
crypt,
what we should
call treasure
was deposited
still
in the
list
Westminster
and
we
extant a
of the jewels
itself
preserved there in
when
plate
were
notably a store of
Florence," the only gold coins currently used in England at a time when the national mints limited themselves to the coinage of silver. But I do not think there could have
"
there also,
gold
florins of
for
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
policy too
357
Westminster to
be a hoard
at
money,
Spandau, which,
we now
rejoice to
becoming rapidly
Whatever its contents, Edward estimated that their value depleted. was 00,000, a sum equivalent to a year's revenue of the English state in ordinary times. Unluckily mediaeval statistics are largely mere
1
But the amount of the guess at least suggests the feeling guess-work. that the value of the treasures stored in the crypt was very considerable.
The
because
is
one
of the
It
most interesting
is
I
portions of the
it is
abbey
I
buildings at
Westminster.
little
known
not,
think, generally
shown
to visitors.
am
indebted
to the kindness of
my
It is
delightfully
it
comseems
The
chief
new
thing about
me
that
it
was
within living
1
29
1 .
memory pavement had replaced the flooring of Numerous windows give a fair amount of light to the apartment
;
some
thirteen feet,
it
was
The
which
radiates
the high soaring vaults of the chapter house above, alone breaks the
present emptiness of the crypt.
cut
away to form a series of neatly made recesses, and there are recesses within these recesses, which suggest in themselves careful devices for secit
would be easy
to conceal them by the simple and there where the masonry had
should
in
not like to
say
that
is
these
curious
store-places
already
existed
1303
fit
but
there
no reason
why
Certainly they
One
admirably with the use of the crypt as a treasury. other point we must also remember about the dispositions of
in
this crypt.
only one access to it, and that is neither from the chapter house above nor from the adjacent cloister, but from the church
is
There
itself.
low, vaulted passage is entered corner of the south transept of the abbey,
special burial place for poets, eminent
by a door
at the south-east
now
for
many
centuries the
and otherwise.
This passage
descends by a flight of steep steps to the crypt itself, and the flight doubtless as another precaution against originally seems I am told
,
358
robbery
to
sumably spanned by a short ladder, further barred access to the crypt. must remember, too, that this sole access to the treasury was within
We
The
sacristy
was
the chapel
it
where the
sacrist kept the precious vessels appropriated to the service of the altar.
Altogether it looks as if the crypt were originally intended as a storehouse for such church treasure as the sacrist did not need for his im-
mediate purposes.
From
this
use
it
was
diverted, as
we
have
is
seen, to
Nowadays
the sacristy
called
used for purposes of private devotion. must not forget the close connexion in our period of the sacristy and the crypt. The connexion becomes significant when we remember
is
Faith and
We
among Pudlicott's monastic boon companions at the palace-keeper's lodge was the sacrist of the abbey, Adam of Warfield. Pudlicott had made up his mind to steal the king's treasure. The practical problem was how to get access to it. If we examine
that
we
two
dis-
crepant accounts as to
is
the robber effected his purpose. The one warranted by the testimony of a large number of sworn juries of re-
how
ward
in the city of
of every
like
much
rather
is
general tendency
is,
make
various
officers
his ac-
Of
was
Palace seems
to
while of the
many monks
Adam
Warfield
both
Adam
But the proved share and William was based largely on the discovery of
the crime
how
may
The
make
that
But
it
suggests
in of
so that
some breaking
it
was attempted, and in particular churchyard was the thoroughfare through which
the structure
their booty.
suggests
that
the
own
confession,
that remarkable
details,
though
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
seldom without a word of warning.
that the best
359
According
to his confession,
to the conclusion
came
way
to
was
the wall of thirteen feet of stone that supported the lower story of the
chapter
house.
For
so
colossal
a task time
was
clearly
needed.
and early
He
attacked
the building from the churchyard or eastern side, having access thereto But the churchyard was open to the parish and the from the palace.
thrifty
churchwardens of
St.
Margaret's had
it.
let
to a neighbouring
Now
the butcher
was
passers-by
were
sent
round
by another path. This was a precaution against the casual wayfarer To hide from the seeing the hole which was daily growing larger.
casual observer the great gash in the stonework, Richard tells us that
he sowed hempseed
in the
this
grew
hemp
but provided cover for him to hide the spoils he hoped to steal from the When the hole was complete on 24 April, Pudlicott went treasury. through and found to his delight that the chamber was full of baskets,
chests,
and other
and
gold
florins of
Florence.
treasure surrounding
24 April
26 April. Perhaps he* found it impossible to much wealth or perhaps the intervening day, being the feast of St. Mark, there were too many people about, and too many services in the abbey to make his retreat secure. However, he managed on the morning of 26 April to get away, taking with him as much as he could carry.
;
to the
seems to have dropped, or to have left lying about, a good deal that he was unable to carry, possibly for his friends to pick up.
He
Such
there
is
Pudlicott's story.
It
is
who
But
and
is
proud
to declare
"
I
alone did
it
".
was a touch of heroism and of devotion in our hero thus taking on himself the whole blame. He voluntarily made himself the scapeof an offence for which scores were charged, and in goat particular he
took on his
own
shoulders the heavy share of responsibility which bemonks of Westminster. as to the credibility
Now
we
360
dence that corroborated some parts of it. Sworn men declared their belief that masons and carthat the crypt was approached from the outside
that the churchyard was the business penters were employed on to the butcher who rented the closely guarded, and access refused, even
;
grazing.
It
is
was
is
There
hemp
winter. must allow too that it is vegetable growth in an English certain that Warfield had not the custody of the keys of the pretty though he was doubtless able to give facilities for tampering crypt Yet Pudlicott's general story rewith the door or forcing the lock.
;
We
mains absolutely
incredible.
It
was
surely
impossible
to
break
would account
wall -piercing operations being unnoticed, when carried on in the midst of a considerable population for three months on end. Some of
Pudlicott's lies
were inconceivable
in
their
crudity.
Is it
likely that
would, before the end of April, afford cover to hide the hole in the wall, and to secrete gleamgreen articles of silver within its thick recesses ? And how are we to ing believe that there was a great gaping hole in the wall of the crypt
at Christmas-time,
sufficient
hemp, sown
when
nothing
was heard
weeks
after
its
per-
petration,
and no
were known
until
two months
the door of
the treasury
and examined
contents ?
A more
me
to
artistic liar
would have
like
made
this.
his confession
more convincing.
to
What
I
really
happened seems
have no doubt that Pudlicott got into the treasury by the simple process of his friend, Adam of Warfield, giving him facilities for He remained in the forcing the door or perhaps breaking a window.
crypt a long time so that he might hand out its contents to confederates who, as we learn from the depositions, ate, drank, and revelled till
midnight for two nights running in a house within the precincts of the Fleet prison, and then went armed and horsed to Westminster, returning towards
in
revellers
Shenche's headquarters, but many monks, many abbey servants, the custodians of the palace, the leading goldsmiths of the city, and half the neighbours must have been cognisant of, if not participating in, the crime. It well for honour thieves, that it was not speaks
among
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
until
361
deplorable indiscretions were made in the disposal of the booty that any news of the misdeed reached the ears of any of the official
custodians of the treasure.
Suspicion of the crime was first excited by the discovery of fragments of the spoil in all sorts of unexpected places. fisherman,
plying his craft in the then silver Thames, had evidently been the property of the king.
Passers
by found
cups,
tombstones
and
other
Margaret's Churchyard. Boys rough hiding-places playing in the neighbouring fields found pieces of plate concealed
in
St.
Such discoveries were made as far from Westunder hedgerows. minster as Kentish Town. Moreover, many other people lighted upon similar pieces of treasure trove. Foreign money found its way into the
hands
remote
of the
parts.
money-changers
The
city
London, York, and Lymm, and other goldsmiths were the happy receivers of large
at
I
amounts of
silver plate,
among them,
skill in
William Torel,
such an abiding
too, scan-
mark
loose
it
abbey church.
There were,
dalous
life
One of them was that a woman of whispered abroad. explained her possession of a precious ring by relating that
by
was
given her
Dom Adam
made
the sacrist
"
become
Such
tales soon
common
property.
At
last
it
came
and
encamped
On
20
made
lost
into
inspected.
an inventory of the treasures and the treasures found which Droxford drew up, and which may
result
is still
The
to
now be
It is
studied in print.
of the treasure,
by the time Droxford went to work much which had been scattered broadcast, was being brought more was soon to follow. The first investigations as to
had been
carried led to fruitful results.
where the
deal of
it
treasure
good
362
Still more was found in the lodgings of palace and of his assistant. Adam the sacrist, and some of his mistress. Richard Pudlicott and
his brother
monks and
their servants,
were discovered
to
be
in possession
finished his Altogether, inventory, a large proportion of the articles which had been lost were reclaimed. Ultimately it seems that the losses were not very severe.
of other
missing articles.
Wholesale
arrests
prehended on 25 June, and William of the Palace soon experienced Before long the connexion which the monks had had the same fate.
with the business seemed so well established that the whole convent,
including the abbot and forty-eight monks,
sent to the
Tower, where they were soon joined by thirty- two other persons. This time the king's net had spread rather too widely, and the indiscriminate
arrest
of
guilty
of
The majority of the clerical prisoners sympathy, even for the guilty. were released on bail, but some half-dozen laymen and ten monks
were
still
kept in custody.
demanding and
The
first
juries
collecting evidence.
serious that in
November a
second royal commission was appointed to hear and determine the matter. The members of this second commission were chosen from
among
common
of the
two
judicial commissions.
how
juries
were
empanelled from every hundred in the counties of Middlesex and Surrey, and from the wards of the city of London and from Westminster.
The
I
details
of
treatment than
picture of
the loose-living,
casual,
and
must, however, be
of Pudlicott
Richard
was found
Various other people, including William of the guilty. Palace, and certain monks, were declared accomplices, while Adam
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
363
Warfield was shrewdly suspected to be at the bottom of the whole More than a year was spent in investigations, and it was business. not until March, 304, eleven months after the burglary, that William
1
of the
Palace and
The
without adding
of the church,
other lay culprits were comfortably hanged. the clerical offenders great problem was how to deal with to the king's difficulties by rousing the sleeping dogs
five
always ready
to
bark
when
of all
clerks to
be
tribunals.
Accordingly Richard
in his youth,
It
Pudlicott,
as
and ten
monks were
seen,
Pudlicott,
we have
was probably now that Pudlicott nobly tried to shield his monastic allies by his extraordinary His heroism, however, availed him nothing. But whatconfession. ever his zeal for the church, Edward I was upon adequate occasion
as did the monks, benefit of clergy.
clerical
privileges,
and he always
trying to
any attempt of a culprit, who had lived as a layman, shield himself on the pretext that he had been a clerk in his
chief justice,
youth.
His corrupt
sought to
become a
knight,
country squire, Weyland's subdiaconate did not save him from exile and loss of land
of a family
of landed gentry.
But
and goods.
character
had even
less
power
for
to preserve him.
He
his misdeed.
But
it
was
him
alive in prison
after the
The
hung
in
in the
balance
when
in the spring of
demands
of
pity on
and
Only a few months after the burglary, the news of the outrage on pope Boniface VIII at Anagni had filled all Christendom with horror. At the instance of Philip the Fair, king of France,
should be respected.
and
pope was
"
Dante,
seized, maltreated,
and
insulted.
In the indignant
words
of
Christ
was again
crucified in the
364
The
wanton a
was
ingeniously used in
Among
two
to write,
two
eulogy of Edward,
opinion, kept the
my
set
official
abbey from
302
to
326,
view very effectively in the well-known forth the Westminster version of the chronicle called Flores Historiarum, the original
point of
given account of Richard's burglary. The robbery of the king of England was a crime only comparable to the robbery of the treasure of Boniface VIII, six months later at The chronicler is most indignant at the suggestion that the Anagni.
as the official
manuscript of which
is
now
in the
Chetham
Library.
In this
is
do with the matter, and laments passionately He relies in long imprisonment and their unmerited sufferings.
to
The
burglary
was
effected
by a single robber.
So
lacking in
annalist that
he did
not scruple to borrow the phraseology and the copious Scriptural citations " of a certain Passion of the monks of Westminster according to John/*
the
whole
text of
which
is
unfortunately
not extant.
"
may "
say,
Passion
was
and
is
and fourteenth
skill in
centuries,
extraordinary
parodying the
words
mock
heroic vein
some
incident of
more or less undeserved suffering. For profanity, grim humour, " and misapplied knowledge of the Vulgate the passions" of this period have no equal. They are a curious illustration of the profane humour
mediaeval ecclesiastic
in his lighter
of the
moments.
The Westminster
chroniclers took
Other monastic
It became the accepted up and accepted his story. monastic doctrine that one robber only had stolen the king's treasure, and that therefore the monks of Westminster were unwarrantably
accused.
One writer added to his text a crude illustration of how, it was imagined, Pudlicott effected his purpose. You may see opposite
page
his
this
rude
"
"
one robber
kneeling
ra
mwettdttpfftpulao
itent
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
on the
grass in the churchyard,
365
and picking up by a hand and arm exBut tended through the broken window the precious stores within. arm must have been longer than the arm of justice to Pudlicott's and must have been twice or
thrice the length
of
tall
man.
the parallel
now
Westminster, under
recognised between the sufferings of the monks of their unjust accusations, and the passion of pope
by
the
as well as of
far
must give a picture of the Anagni outrage How the orthodox version of the Westminster burglary.
He
gather from the rude sketch figured on Not only does he give us so vivid a picture of pope the opposite page. Boniface's sufferings from the rude soldiery that the drawing might well be used as a representation of a martyrdom, like that of St. Thomas of
may
Canterbury.
His sketch
the
common motive
desire
of
Anagni
to
and her
scandals.
ministers into
He leaves us to draw the deeper moral unhallowed laymen to bring holy church discredit was the ultimate root of both these
;
with his Scottish campaign he was behe was pleased to know that a great deal of the lost treasure had been recovered and he was always anxious to avoid scandal, and to minimise any disagreement with the monks of
satisfied
; ;
Edward was
He,
therefore,
all
remedy.
restored
He
soon released
to his
the
monks from
He
even
Shenche
Richard of Pudlicott alone was offered up to vengeance. palace. In October, 305, Richard was hanged, regardless of his clergy.
1
after
these
events.
of
Walter
able
There was much quarrelling among the monks. Wenlock died. There were disputes as to his succession
;
amount
The
and
is
was shown
equally
One
result of the
366
of the
transferred to the
Tower
but
I
of
London.
but not un-
Some
picturesque story
generalisation
I
will forbear
from
printing
them.
One
will,
way
of conclusion.
of the slack-
by
trial is
one
The middle and the easy-going ways of the mediaeval man. do not often receive fair treatment. Some are, perhaps, too ages apt to idealise them, as an age of heroic piety, with its statesmen,
saints, heroes, artists,
brilliant exceptions.
and thinkers
The
but such people are in all ages the age of St. Francis of Assisi, of Dante, of
;
Edward
in
I,
of St.
Thomas Aquinas,
the age
world were made, was a great But the middle ages were a period of Shining virtues and gross vices stood side by side. strange contrasts. The contrasts between the clearly cut black and white of the thirteenth which the
greatest buildings of the
its
great men.
century are attractive to us immersed in the continuous grey of our own times. But we find our best analogies to mediaeval conditions
in those
which are nowadays stigmatised as Oriental. Conspicuous them was a deep pervading shiftlessness and casualness. among Mediaeval man was never up to time. He seldom kept his promise, not through malice, but because he never did to-day what could be
off
till
put
Pudlicott then
He was doubtless a
whom
Of
exceptions.
But Edward
in the
I,
with
his gift
middle ages, and even Edward I found it conexceptional type venient to let things slide in small matters. Thus on this occasion Edward began his investigation with great show of care and determination to
sift
but
when he found
that thorny
first
he determined
time
dogs
and
We
scandal.
must
not,
theory on this
however, build up too large a superstructure of petty story of the police courts, plus a mild ecclesiastical
too
much
from the signs of slackness and negligence shown in mediaeval trials. I become more and more averse to facile generalisation about the middle
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
ages or mediaeval man. On the one side tions.
scholars,
367
They may,
we
century of the
bishop Stubbs, that the thirteenth century was the greatest middle ages, the flowering type of mediaeval Christianity
and
from
so on.
is
tion of
students,
my
friend
St. Francis to
days of faith were the days of unrestrained criminality and violence. but neither are really convincing. Both these views can be argued
;
They seem
only.
to
me
to
be obtained by looking
doctrine
so very
is
more
vices
fruitful
mediaeval
virtues
men were
not
unlike ourselves,
and
that their
and
humdrum
virtues
and
NOTES.
I.
NOTE ON AUTHORITIES.
the
robbery of the king's treasury in the Chronicles are vitiated by the obvious desire of the writers, who were mainly monks, to minimise the scandal to "religion" involved
of
The
accounts
This
is
seen
even in the moderate account originating at St. Alban's Abbey, and contained in William Rishanger's Chronicle (Rolls Series), pp. 222 and 225, and also in the other St. Alban's version in Gesta Edwardi Primi,
its
The bias is naturally at published in the same volume, pp. 420-1. worst in the Westminster Abbey Chronicle, printed in Flores HisIII. 1 15, 17, 121, and 131 (Rolls Series), which is more valuable perhaps as an index of Westminster opinion than as a disThe chief manuscript of this chronicle passionate statement of the facts.
1
toriarum,
is
preserved in the
1
Chetham
67
2].
1
It
was
certainly written
[MS. Chetham No. by a Westminster monk, and, perhaps Reading, who undoubtedly was the author
Library, Manchester
Edward
II.
If
of
the robbery,
should be remembered that he was one of the forty-nine monks indicted and sent to the Tower on a charge of complicity in it.
it
There are
useful
Annales
368
Londonienses in Stubbs' Chronicles of Edward I and Edward II, These date the robbery I. 130, 131, 132, and 134 (Rolls Series).
on 2 May.
we must
of
go
for
our main
many
accessible in print.
Palgrave's
251-99 (Record Commission, 1836), publishes the writs chequer, the two commissions of enquiry and the verdicts of the juries appointing The writs are also in Rymer's Fcedera, I. 956, empanelled by them.
The
is
H.
Ex-
chequer, pp. 25-8, and also in L. O. Pike's History of Crime in England, Vol. I. The French original can be read in Exchequer Accounts,
Records (Record Commission, 844) prints the indenture in which Droxford, the Keeper of the Wardrobe, specifies Some entries in the Calendar of the jewels lost and recovered. Calendar of Close Rolls usefully supplement Patent Rolls and the
R., 332/8.
Cole's
1
K.
There are
several
fairly
full
modern
That
in
accounts,
the majority of
satisfactory.
Dean
Stanley's
of Westminster Abbey
is more eloquent than critical. " on the crypt of the chapter house LXIV. 375, Archaologia, at Westminster," is valuable for its clear identification of the crypt
Memorials H. Harrod's
under the chapter house with the scene of the robbery. Equally use" ful is J. Burtt's important paper in connexion with On some discoveries
the ancient treasury of Westminster," published in
G. G. Scott's GleanWestminster Abbey, pp. 18-33. The two fullest ings from modern accounts are in L. O. Pike's History of Crime in England, 199-203 and 466-7, and Hubert Hall's Antiquities of the E#>
I.
The latter is perhaps the better because, though chequer, pp. 18-33. the story in a book dealing with the exchequer, it recognises telling that the treasury robbed was the treasury of the wardrobe. There
are,
critical narrative
than has
hitherto
been attempted.
II.
NOTE ON THE
ILLUSTRATIONS.
192d
of a
Manuscript Chronicle
Museum [MS.
Cotton,
A MEDIAEVAL BURGLARY
Nero, D.
ii\.
369
The
first,
opposite p.
" robbery of the treasury of the wardrobe by a single robber," which this chronicle, following the Westminster version, adopts. The second,
opposite p. 20, depicts the outrage on Boniface VIII by the agents of
Philip the Fair at Anagni, in September,
attack on the
1
303.
the sympapope emphasizes the thetic monastic writers between the scandal of Anagni and the analogous outrage on the church by the imprisonment of the monks of Westminster.
comparison made by
The
permission
of
the
Museum by
Limited.
rough plan of Westminster Abbey and the adjoining royal palace is taken from that published in Hall's Antiquities of the ExI am indebted to chequer, p. 3 my friend Mr. Hubert Hall and
1 .
The
to his publisher,
Mr.
26
''FIUAMAGISTRT
UN ABREG DES SENTENCES DE PIERRE LOMBARD
NOTES SUR UN MANUSCRIT LATIN CONSERV A LA TH!:QUE JOHN RYLANDS X MANCHESTER,
PAR
BIBLIO-
RAYMOND
M.
MARTIN,
O.P.,
Dunn, de Woolley
latins
composes
la
La
date a
quelle
Conforme-
ment a une note que Ton trouve au bas du premier folio et frequemment au cours du volume, elles virent le jour dans un monastere
liber sancte marie de camberone, que Ton croit etre 1'abbaye cistercienne de Cambron, fondee en 48, du vivant de S. Bernard, et situee S-O d'Enghien, dans 1'ancien comte de Hainaut, diocese de
1 1
Cambrai. 1
Je dois a Taimable obligeance de M. H. Guppy, bibliothecaire, pu prendre connaissance de ces manuscrits, qui depuis de longues annees avaient etc enfermes dans le secret d'une bibliotheque
d'avoir
privee.
Dans le premier de ces volumes, dont aucun n'est au folio 74 r une Somme de Sentences, par ces mots
quatuor paradisi flumina
dans cette collection
et
.
.
pagine,
:
commence
I'dut
Quoniam
en constitue
fait
element.
II
1'objet
de
cette note.
merite 1'atten-
Cistercienses, in
4,
t.
I,
p.
113.
Vindobonae, 1877.
FILIA MAGISTRI
tion
371
medievale.
;
de tous ceux
qu'interesse 1'histoire
1
de
la theologie
J*ai
la diffusion
de
cette oeuvre
2 d'en
et la place qu'elle indiquer le contenu, les caracteres qui la distinguent 3 d'en rechercher d'autres travaux du meme genre
occupe parmi
1'auteur et la date
de composition.
1.
Le
n'est
pas
II
seule copie
de
cette ceuvre,
qui
le
soit
parvenue jusqu'a
S.
nous.
en existe d'autres.
Deja en 1885,
1
attribuait cette
Somme de
Sentences au dominicain
Hugues de
Cher,
230, en avait signale sept dont deux sont conserves en Allemagne, trois en France, manuscrits, 1 un en Autriche, et un en Belgique. Recemment, j'en ai trouve deux
autres en Angleterre
Cambridge, Trinity College, cod. B. 4, 6 3 Oxford, Bodleian Library, Canoniciana, cod. 208 tous deux datent du
:
XV*
siecle.
Tous
Les uns
Liber sententiarum
nage, sans doute, des liens etroits qui rattachent cette oeuvre a Pierre
Lombard, portent
la gracieuse etiquette
Le MS.
II
constitue
ecrit
au XIII
siecle.
est
de
meme
;
lettres
gothiques noires
;
millim.
J
les lettres
a hastes en mesurent
4 J.
Les
Cfr.
filr Litteratur
(a S.
(Berlin,
1885):
4)
:
Hugo
sind
Caro)
lat.
mon. 21048 und 5307; Paris, 3423 und 16412; Laon, n. 321 Briigge, 82 (ceci est une faute d'impression, il s'agit du n. 80) Lambach, n. CXXXVII. 2 Cfr. Dr. M. R. JAMES, The Western Manuscripts in the Library of Trinity College, Cambridge. descriptive Catalogue. Cambridge, 1900. T.I, p. 409. 3 Le Dr. M. A. G. LITTLE 1'avait deja signale dans son ouvrage Initia operum latinorum quae saeculis XIII. -XIV. attribuuntur 1 vol. in 8?, p. 21 1. Manchester, 1904.
.
(note
Hss
Codd.
;
.-
372
de 5
sur 6.
et le texte
du
folio
Ce
pas tous la
qui est plus important a noter, c'est que ces divers MSS. n'ont meme ampleur. D'aucuns n'ont pas la preface, ni la
division des matieres qui se lisent en d'autres exemplaires, et commenVeteris ac nove legis conticent directement par le premier Livre
:
meme de
1'autre
;
ces Sentences,
fut
il
est
il
Le
texte
du MS. de
la
bibliotheque John
Ry lands
la
n'est
pas des
"
plus sommaires.
J'ajoute
etait
"
Filia
Magistri
Le
catalogue du prieure S.
Martin a Douvres en signale trois autres Tractatus super librum sententiarum, Glosa super sentencias, Liber sentenciarum (ce dernier sans pro:
logue).
Ces
diffusion
details
le
fait
de
la
de
cette ceuvre,
XV
nous montrent egalement sous quelles Encore au repandue dans les Ecoles.
d'en augmenter
le
siecle,
on trouvait
utile
nombre d'exem-
plaires.
2.
ANALYSE ET CARACTERES.
que 1'ouvrage qui nous occupe
traite
est
Deja,
il
a ete
dit,
une
Somme
de Sentences.
theologiques.
J'ajouterai qu'il
A
est
ni table
part la preface,
il
est
divise en quatre
il
successivement question de Dieu et de la T. S. Trinite, de la II n'y a ni Creation, de la Redemption et des Sacrements. epilogue,
de matieres.
livre se
:
Chaque
A
1
de
suite qu'il
ne
Dover.
V. Dr. M. R. JAMES, The ancient Libraries of Canterbury and vol. in 8, p. 443, n. 77 p. 441, n. 51. 'Camp. 493, n. 436
\
;
;
bridge, 1903.
FILIA MAGISTRI
s'agit
373
pas d*une composition originale, mais d'un resume du Livre des Sentences de Pierre Lombard.
Dans
Les notes constituent un element parfaitement distinct du texte. le present MS. elles sont ecrites en petits caracteres et placees de
n'y a pas
moyen de
les
les
confondre avec
le texte
ce qui
dans tous
folios
un
petit
nombre de
Les notes ne sont pas suivies, et Elles sont en ne comportent pas de notes.
differents.
MSS.
Les unes
tres breves,
en deux mots
une opinion,
;
et
sont
interlineaires.
longues
texte
liere le
empietent sur 1'espace destine d'abord a recevoir le et s'alignent d'une fac.on tres reguqui, par suite, se retrecit
elles
Ce sont long du passage qu'elles sont appelees a completer. des exposes d'opinions nouvelles, parfois des notes exgeneralement
plicatives.
donne a
existe,
en
effet,
divers groupes
voici
d'abreges des
classification
:
Sentences de
Pierre
1 .
Lombard.
En
un
essai
de
La
II
2.
du
Lombard
3.
j'y reviendrai.
D'autres
2
ne presentent
qu'un
les
plus
interessantes.
1
dont quelques uns avaient sujet de ces abreges en vers, but d'aider la memoire, cfr. J. DE GHELLINCK, S.I., Mediaeval pour Theology in Verse, dans The Irish Theological Quarterly, 1914, p. 336. Outre les MSS. dont il y est fait mention, je signalerai encore trois autres
:
Au
cod. 6628 de la John's College, Cambridge, cod. F. 18, f 101-121 bibl. Harley au British Museum, f 188-205.' debut et a la fin, cet La question d'authenticite est ouvrage est attribue a S. Bonaventure. discutee par les Editeurs du Docteur Seraphique S. Bonaventuri opera
St.
;
Au
:
omnia
vol.
f
I,
praef. gener.
:
Harley 6628,
distinctiones
206V -208
xv.
dictiones patefacientes fragment de cette derniere oeuvre se retrouve aussi, toutefois avec des variantes, a Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, n. 524, f 91 ^-93^.
per singulas
Un
Cfr.
20),
f
:
l-43 a
Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, n. 518 (Elbing MSS., N. Questiones sententiarum ; Pembroke College, cod. 101, f
:
41-46
374
4.
tableaux synoptiques
voire
6.
7.
ou
4
reduit a
meme
II
alphabetique.
Chose
livre
;
etrange,
certains
abreviateurs ont
6
omis tout
le
premier
n'ont abrege
que
ou seulement
le
deuxieme.'
Parmi ceux qui abregent d'une maniere suivie tout le texte du Lombard, nous en trouvons qui ne sont rien de plus que de simples L'abreviateur n'a rien ajoute du sien, ni notes explicatives, abreges.
8. ni textes d'autres auteurs.
Par
contre,
il
1'abreviateur
s'est
departi
du
texte
des Sentences,
n'a
Lombard
une legere critique du texte, soit On peut les appeler des abreges mixtes. portee de certains passages. II arrive le lecteur n'est pas averti de ce surplus de matieres la que
;
Dublin, Trinity College, cod. 275, f 119-129. Oxford, Balliol 4- 24. College, n. 230. Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, cod. 459, f Dans la premiere de ces copies, ce lexique est attribue a Roger de SalesExpliciunt verborum significationes super librum sententiarum bury secundum magistrum Rogerum de Salesbures. * Cfr. British Museum, bibl. reg. cod. 9 B. VI, f 2'-3v 19v-24.
1
1
Ibid. fol.
4 r-16v.
articles.
comparer, Balliol College, Oxford, cod. 3. 4 British Museum, bibl. reg. cod. 9, B. VI, f 17'M9 ibid. cod. 9 B. VIII, f 337va (fragment, qui s'arrete au mot Baptismus autre .) b unes de ces fragment Brit. Museum, cod. 18899, f 2 v -3 Quelques tables ont etc attributes a Robert de Kylwardby, O.Pr. Je ne sais de
;
quel droit.
5
Oxford,
des
New
1'abrege
Sentences
CXLV,
sententiarum magistri Gandulphi, Bamberg, Kgl. Bibliothek, cod. B. IV, 29, f 126v -142 r sont des extraits de 1'abrege de Pierre Lombard par Gandulphe de Bologne. Certains exemplaires de la Filia Magislri. 6 Le Dr. M. GRABMANN, Geschichte der Scholast. Methode, t. II
,
comme
II cite (191 1), p. 389, a le premier, attire 1'attention sur cette particularite. example, Paris, bibl. nationale, cod. lat. 15747. 7 Cfr. Dr. GRABMANN, loc. cit., ou sont mentionnes, Paris, bibl.
nationale,
cod.
lat.
627
et
u.
Staatsbibl.
cod.
lat.
2596.
FILIA MAGISTRI
375
a eu soin de signaler ce qui plupart du temps cependant 1'abreviateur 1 constitue son oeuvre personnelle. " " La Filia Magistri rentre dans cette derniere categoric d'abreges. Cest un abrege mixte. L'auteur a eu en vue deux choses fournir
:
un
texte succinct
de
1'oeuvre
de Pierre Lombard,
et indiquer la
marche
des idees theologiques depuis la publication des Sentences jusqu'a II a voulu rajeunir une oeuvre deja 1'epoque oil il ecrit lui-meme.
ancienne, tout en
lui
conservant
les
traits
essentiels d'origine.
les
C'est
to date,
;
mais
elements nouveaux
relief.
ils
1.
et le loc.
il faut ramener les divers abreges qui suivent Les Sententie de Gandulphe de Bologne. H. DENIFLE, O.P., Cfr. Grabmann, Dr. GRABMANN en ont retrouve plusieurs copies.
:
cit.
Le
DE GHELLINCK,
.
.
S.I.,
Le Mouvelat.
ment theologique au
2.
XII siecle,
pp. 191-223.
.
9652
Paris, Mazarine, n.
f
168.
(La
Bruxelles, bibl. royale, n. 1485-1501, notice consacree a cette Somme de Sentences par J.
694 (917);
VAN
214,
DEN GHEYN,
1112.
3.
S.I.,
etc.,
T.
I,
p.
t.
96,
n.
a besoin de corrections.)
MlGNE,
Patrologie
latine,
CXCII, 965-
Cambridge, Corpus
Cambridge, St. John's College, cod. E. 17, f 3-7O. Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, cod. 461. British Museum, bibl. reg. 9 A. XI, sous le titre Questiones super libros sententiarum. S. Bonaventure est cite dans 9 A. XI, Cet abrege est posterieur a 1248. au fo 77.
4.
5.
:
Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, cod. 273. Breviarium sententiarum : British Museum, bibl. reg. 7, F. XIII, fo 129. Oxford, Magdalen Paris, Mazarine, n. 984 (1049) fo 1-132. n. 40; Bodleian Library, Laud. misc. n. 513. Dublin, Trinity College, Dans cette derniere copie, 1'abrege est attribue College, n. 275, f 1-118. a Simon de Tournai. 8. Troyes, bibl. de la ville, cod. 1371, fo 88-1 h egalement attribue a Simon de Tournai. II m'a etc impossible d' examiner le MS. 560 de la bibliotheque de I'universite de Gand, signale par J. de Ghellinck, op. cit. p. 165, n. 2. Je ne saurais dire s'il constitue un abrege distinct de ceux enumeres cidessus. Je dois dire la meme chose au sujet du cod. Paris, bibliotheque nationale, MS. lat. 14534. D'apres N. Valois, Guillaume d* Auvergne, p. 187, Paris, 1880, il renferme un esume tres libre du texte des Sentences. Ce resume est attribue a Guillaume de Paris (|1249) on ignore avec quel
6.
7.
1
;
fondement.
376
Pierre
la
"
Filia" qui porte son nom. Le texte de la Preface et de la division des Matieres pouvant
je le
public ci-apres
Quoniam
libri
sententiarum hortum
mater
fastidii, prolixitas
compendio temperetur per quod evitetur dictorum tamen ordo, librorum et continentia
Igitur,
nomine ihesu
christi,
notulas magistrates
apponam
ab'quas ut excepta
clarius elucescant.
Divisio librorum
Scriptura
creatoris.
tionis
(car. roug.).
et
sacra
de duobus
agit,
de creatore
opus
scilicet
opere
Opus autem
opus
in
creatoris dividitur in
retributionis.
gessit
creationis et recrea-
et
ultime
Item,
dividitur
opus
quod
in
propria
incar-
Eleganter ergo
in
distinxit
magister opus
suum
in quatuor
volumina, ut
primo ageret de creatore, in secundo de opere creationis, in tercio de opere recreationis quod gessit in propria persona, in quarto de opere recreationis quod gerit ecclesia mediante, scilicet de sacramentis
;
La
debattue
constitue un probleme.
la
est
au
moins approximativement
absolument vierges de toute information au sujet de les MSS. de Bruges (XIII siecle), Manchester (XIII
1'auteur.
s.),
Tels
Cambridge
Le MS. de
:
la
inscription
sententiarum.
du
XV
siecle
hugonis in 4 libris Mais il faut se rappeler que cette copie ne date que le temoignage qu'elle rend en la matiere n'est done
Incipit prologus fratris
du
Dans
les
MSS. on
FILIA MAGISTRI
377
XHI e
qui
siecle.
me
J'ai
Les nombreux ouvrages theologiques de cette epoque, sont tombes sous la main, demeurent silencieux au sujet de
cet abrege des Sentences.
1'auteur
de
O.P.
resume, 1'oeuvre de
Hugues de
de
S.
Cher.
Le
toutefois pas indique les sources qui lui avaient permis d'attribuer a ce
Filia Magistri". d'un maitre tel que le P. Denifle, merite 1'opinion Lud. a Vallioleti (t 436) rapporte que d'etre prise en consideration. l il est de S. Cher a fait un certain abrege des Sentences Hugues " " rater Hugo certain aussi que le dont parle le MS. Bodl. 208
la paternite
Docteur de Paris
la
"
Neanmoins
le
/Vvr^-precheur de ce nom.
Examinons done,
permet de maintenir cette affirmation. Nous savons par ailleurs que Hugues de S. Cher a compose un Commentaire des Sentences. 2 a t-il dans cet abrege des elements de
Inutile, dans cet examen, de nous en rapporter au texte de 1'abrege. II est comme nous avons dit, un pur resume des Sentences, sans alliage. Nous devons examiner les notes qui encadrent le texte. Or, a comparer ces notes avec le Commentaire des Sentences par Hugues de S.
absolument evident qu'elles ont ete tirees de ce commentaire. Elles en reproduisent exactement les passages correspondants. Comme exemples frappants de ce fait nous pouvons citer les
Cher,
il
est
endroits suivants
Livre
I,
chap, sur
les
.
.
Notions dans
.
la Trinite
De
nocionibus
Ces
dans le quel
in
1
elles se suivent,
du Commentaire de H.
"
de
S.
Ch.
Libr. dist.
la
XXVI.
du peche
tercia opinio" sur soutenue par Etienne Langton)
originel, la
Liv.
la notion
II,
dans
question
de ce peche
et
(c. a. d. 1'opinion
Ap. QUETIF
ECHARD,
p. 202.
Une tres bonne copie de ce Commentaire est conserve a Canterbury, Chapter Library, cod. A, 12. Je m'en suis servi en i'occurrence.
378
a litteralement
meme
expose dans
le
Commentaire,
1.
II, dist.
XXX.
deux
La
les
endroits.
L.
le
IV. qu.
I,
la
difference entre le
bapteme du Precurseur
et
bapteme du
memes
termes et
les
memes
details
A continuer
;
la
comparaison,
on
finit
" " et la Close des Sentences composee Filia Magistri y a entre la par Hugues de S. Cher, une dependance tres etroite, des liens d'une
qu'il
que
le fait est
general
et la conclusion s'impose,
parente irrecusable.
Ces
1'auteur
faits
de
la
le
II
nous autorisent-ils a affirmer que Hugues de S. Cher " " ? Filia Magistri
pense pas. dans
est
Je ne
solution.
Et
voici la
difficulte
est dit
la preface,
notas magis-
apponam.
absurde
Hugues de
ses propres
II
de magistrales
serait
meme de
suffire
le supposer.
Et
cette consideration
me
semble amplement
nite
la pater-
de
cet abrege.
D'autre part, ces faits m'amenent a conclure que certainement du a un des disciples de Hugues de S.
Cher.
Ce
fut
dit,
disciple,
de
dire
Quel
Cela
tive
ce disciple ?
la
date approxima-
de
la
composition de
S.
Cher
ecrivait
sa
Close des
annees
1
1230-1232.
La
il
Filia
est
Magistri n'a
done pas vu
le jour
avant
232.
D'autre part,
d'admettre que
1'abreviateur se soit
mis a
1'oeuvre
Un
la
moins
etait necessaire et
pour
faire apprecier la
Close de Hugues de
S.
Cher
d'autres.
Paris en
245,
et la
la
ment
eclipser
gloire
Hugues de
S.
le
Cher. Je puis
Grand
a Paris, Ton
ait
FILIA MAGISTRI
encore
extraits
379
songe a annoter un abrege du Livre des Sentences par des Avec Albert le Grand s'ouvrait a de Hugues de S. Cher.
composition de 1'abrege des Sentences en question tombe done vraisemblablement entre les annees 1232 et 1245. " " Filia Magistri fut, dans son genre, Je note en terminant que la
La
de resumer
un des derniers abreges de Pierre Lombard. Apres 250, au lieu le texte des Sentences, on se plut davantage a abreger les Commentaires de cette oeuvre ou a resumer la doctrine theologique
1
dans des Compendiums et des Breviloquia qui se rattachent cependant toujours intimement au Livre
alors
professee
1
dans
les
Ecoles,
des Sentences.
Hugues Ripelin de Strasbourg, O.P. (f 1268), Compendium Gerard de Prato, Compendium seu Gerardi de Prato super libros Sententiarum magistri breviloquium fr. Petri Lombardi. Cfr. Grabmann, op. cit. p. 370. Gerard de Prato,
veritatis theologies, et le franciscain
Un des MSS. de son oeuvre, non pres Florence, vivait vers 1278. se retrouve dans le cod. 862 (91 5) de la bibliothesignale par Grabmann,
que Mazarine a de rimpression.
Paris,
f
1-83.
les
honneurs
STEPS
This third list of contributions to the new Library for the University of Louvain, furnishes fresh and unmistakable evidence of the generous and widespread sympathy which our appeal on behalf of the crippled University has called forth. Already upwards of five thousand
help which have yet to materialize. These gifts form an excellent beginning of the new Library, yet, as we pointed out in our last issue, when it is realized that the collection of books so ruthlessly destroyed at Louvain numbered nearly a quarter of a
million
of volumes,
it
will
which
we
mains to It is with the utmost confidence, therefore, that our appeal for help.
be evident that if the work of replacement, is to be accomplished, very much more re-
we renew and
emphasize
take this opportunity for renewing the expressions of thanks, already forwarded in another form, to the donors whose names are here recorded, for their prompt and generous response to our appeal.
We
of
Altrincham.
The
4to.
civil
and
literary
chrono-
logy of Greece, from the LVth to the edition, with additions. Oxford, 1827.
CXXIVth
Olympiad.
Second
COLANI
8vo.
les
et
LOWTH
Trans(Robert) Lectures on the sacred poetry of the Hebrews. by G. Gregory. London, 787. 2 vols. 8vo.
1
NICOLAS
siecles
les
deux
et
chretienne.
Deuxieme
edition
revue
augmentee.
Paris, 1867.
8vo.
SMITH (Adam) An
nations.
With
life
inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of of the author, and a view of the doctrine of Smith.
Edinburgh, 1835.
8vo.
380
381
HARRINGTON ARDLEY,
GREEK.
et
. .
Esq., of
BIBLE.
turn
ac tandem Crisis Perpetua ... ad XLIII Canones numerus examinat G. D. T. M. D. [i.e. Gerardus de Trajecto Mosae Doctor.] Amstelaedami, 1735. 8vo.
ClCERO (Marcus
des notes
coste.
. .
.
Tullius)
Les Offices
Bois.
M. Du
8vo.
avec
le
Latin a
COCCEIUS
et commentarius sermonis Hebraici et (Joannes) Accedunt interpretatio vocum GerChaldaici Veteris Testamenti. manica, Belgica ac Graeca ex LXX. interpretibus. Amstelodami, 669.
1
Lexicon
Fol.
R.
BARON,
2,
Esq., of Blackburn.
(Justin)
J.
MACCARTHY
[Vol. 8vo.
A history
J.
by
and
The
reign of
Queen Anne.
London, 1905.
Written
8vo.
MACCHIAVELLI
1680.
Fol.
K.Q.
(Ralph) catalogue and succession of the Kings, Princes, Dukes, Marquesses, Earles, and Viscounts of this Realme of England, since the Norman Conquest to this present yeare, 1619. [London], Fol. 1619.
%* MS.
note at foot of
title
page
Padua
ff.
minor. Hibern.
Lovanij 1760.
THE REV.
MlRANDULA
1563.
M. BERLIN,
of
Manchester.
(Octavianus) 12mo.
Illustrium
poetarum
flores.
Antwerpiae,
London,
762.
4to.
HOBBES (Thomas)
&
The
text edited
MACDONELL
1913.
8vo.
(Arthur A.)
RUST
funeral sermon, preached at the obsequies of ... (George) who deceased at Lysburne, August Jeremy Lord Bishop of Down
:
13th, 1667.
London, 1668.
Fol.
382
TAYLOR
course of sermons for all the Sundays of the year. (Jeremy) of ten sermons preached since his majesties restaurWith a supplement Whereunto is adjoyned, a discourse of the divine institution ation. 1667-68. 4 vols. in 1. Fol. London, of the office ministerial.
.
Socialist
movement
in
England.
Second
8vo.
ANTHONY W.
et
S.
BROWN,
HORATIUS FLACCUS
cum
notis
works, with the principal illustrations of various commentators, to which are added, some account of the life of Spenser ... by the Rev. H. J. Todd. London, 1805. 8 vols. 8vo.
Esq., J.P., of
WILLIAM CARPENTER,
BOETHIUS
phise
libri
(Anicius Manlius Torquatus Severinus) Consolationis philosoV. ... Renatus Vallinus recensuit et notis illustravit. Lugd. Batavorum, 1656. 8vo.
CAESAR
(Caius Julius)
The Commentaries;
edition.
1
W.
Duncan.
Second
London, 779.
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2
principles of soch'ogy.
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haeuser.
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Catalogue of a series of specimens in the^British Museum (natural history) illustrative of the more common forms of native silica arranged and described by J. Ruskin. Orpington, 1884. 8vo.
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;
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St.
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".
Ex-
Rock Honeycomb
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Ten
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relation
1-6:
The
the
Seventh of between Michael Angelo and Tintoret. on sculpture delivered at Oxford, 1870-71.
Mark's Rest.
few
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travellers
who
still
The history of Venice written for the help of the care for her monuments. Orpington, 1877-79.
The
Fol.
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New edition.
on
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Second
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Report of a lecture delivered in Literary and Scientific Institute " from the Kendal Mercury". Kendal, Reprinted
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;
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BRAND
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.
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notis
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F. et
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Lugduni Bata1.
GUILLIM
A display of heraldrie.
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interpretatio
X.
(Novum Testamentum graecum cum vulgata interpretatione Pagnini. loca insigniora Romanae correctionis in Latinis Bibliis Latina, etc. Fol. 2 vols. in 1. observata a F. Luca. [Geneva], 1618-19.
.
BlBLE.
.
GREEK.
.
edidit L. Bos.
Novum Testamentum
secunda.
Graece.
Recensuit
et
J.
J.
Editio
Halae Saxonum
Londini, 1796-1806.
Griesbach. 2 vols.
8vo.
BIBLE.
LATIN.
Biblia sacra
417
operibus omnibus F. Socini, J. Crellii, J. Slichtingii a Bucowietz et J. L. Wolzogenii, quae omnia simul juncta totius Novi Testamenti explicationem Irenopoli et Eleutheropoli [Amsterdam], post A. D., complectuntur.
1656.
9vok
in 6.
Fol.
BLACKSTONE
Sixth edition.
laws
of
England.
BOILEAU DESPRAUX
2 vols.
Oeuvres.
Paris,
an
VII (1800),
12mo.
BURKE
A
et
new
]
edition.
London,
8vo.
1808-13.
8vo.
BURNET (Gilbert)
BUXTORFIUS
Londini, 1646.
London, 753.
Chaldaicum.
4 vols.
Hebraicum
Editio sexta.
CAESAR
J.
Goduinus
(Caius Julius) Quae exstant, interpretatione et notis in usum Delphini. Londini, 1693. 8vo.
illustravit
CATULLUS
Birming-
CICERO (Marcus
Delphini.
Tullius) Opera, cum delectu commentariorum in 9 vols. 4to. Editio novissima. [Venice], ] 7 72.
usum
De
-
oratore ad
notae, quas in
Interpretatio ac Dialogi, seu libri tres. edidit J. Proust. 8vo, Oxonii, 1723.
Orationes quaedam selectae, cum interpretatione et notis, quas in Editio septima, emendatior, Delphini edidit C. Meroiiille. Londini, 1750. 8vo.
usum
CONCORDANTIAE
editae.
. .
[By
Testamenti Novi Graecolatinae. Nunc primum plenae H. and R. Estienne and others.] [Paris], 1594.
Fol.
CURTIUS RUFUS
digessit
(Quintus)
De
Curavitet
H. Snakenburg. Delphis et Lugd. Bat., 724. 4to. EURIPIDES. Quae extant omnia. Opera et studio J. Barnes. [Greek
and
Latin.]
Cantabrigiae,
694.
pts. in
vol.
Fol.
EUSEBIUS.
Eusebii Pamphili, Socratis Scholastic! Hermiae Sozomeni, Theodoriti et Evagrii, item Philostorgii et Theodori lectoris quae extant historiae ecclesiasticae Graece et Latine. H. Valesius Graecum textum emendavit, Latine vertit, et illustravit, G. Reading novas elucidationes 3 vols. Fol. Cantabrigiae, 1720. adjecit.
I
GROT
US (Hugo) De
J.
Notulas denique
8vo.
addidit
Barbeyrac.
Amstelaedami,
720.
vols.
HALLAM
of
(Henry) The
3 vols.
8vo.
constitutional history of
Henry VII.
to the death of
George
II.
1829.
29
418
JUSTINIAN
I.
Emperor of
the East.
J.
F. Bockelmanni
Compendium
institutionum Justiniani, sive elementa juris civilis, in ordinem redacta. Editio novissima emendatissima.
1710.
STO.
Junius)
JUVENALIS (Decimus
...
in
usum Delphini.
(Jean) Opera philosophica in quatuor volumina digesta. (T. Editio tertia auctior et emendatior. Philosophia orientalis.) Amstelodami 1704. Vols. 1,2. 12mo.
Stanleii
CLERC
ad studia linguarum Latinae, Graecae, et Editio quarta auctior et emendatior. (Epistolae criticae, et ecclesiasticae, in quibus ostenditur usus artis criticae, cujus
critica
Ars
in
qua
Hebraicae munitur.
possunt haberi.)
Amstelaedami, 1712.
3 vols.
12mo.
de rebus corporeis libri II. posteriores. Operum Physica, philosophicorum tomus IV. Editio tertia auctior et accuratior. Amstelo12mo. dami, 1704.
sive
LINNAEUS
malia,
(Carl)
Fauna Svecica,
sistens
animalia
Sveciae regni
mam-
Genera plantarum eorumque characteres numerum, figuram, situm, et proportionem omnium Editio quinta. Holmiae, 754. 8vo.
1
naturales
secundum
fructificationis partium.
eorumque
et
J.
characteres
naturales,
secundum
Curante
vols.
1789-91.
8vo.
- Materia Editio altera auctior. medica per regna tria naturae. 8vo. Curante J. C. D. Schrebero. Vindobonae, 1 773.
rite
digestas.
1764.
8vo.
rite
L. Willdenow.
Tomus
IV.
Berolini, 1805.
8vo.
Supplementum plantarum
tertiae,
Generum plantarum
editionis secundae.
Brunsvigae,
781
8vo.
cum
tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, Editio characteribus, differentiis, synonymis locis.
decima
tertia.
Vindobonae, 1767-70.
vols. in 4.
8vo.
419
(Carl) Systema naturae sistens regna tria naturae in classes et Editio multo auctior et emendation ordines, genera et species redacta. Lugduni Batavorum, 1756. 8vo.
Systema plantarum
Europae.
Coloniae-Allobrogum,
1785-86.
vols.
8vo.
.
. .
Systema plantarum secundum classes, ordines, genera, species Curante J. J. Reichard. novissima. Francofurti Moenum, 1779-80. 4 vols. 8vo.
Editio
.
ad
now
first
published from
:
the original manuscript journal of the celebrated Linnaeus Smith. London, 1811. 2 vols. in 1. 8vo.
by
J.
E.
selection of the correspondence of Linnaeus and other naturalists, from the original manuscripts. By Sir J. E. Smith. London, 1821. 2 vols. 8vo.
MACCHIAVELLI
(Niccolo) Tutte
le
opere.
Genevae, 1550.
in twelve
4to.
MlLTON (J^n)
edition.
Paradise Lost.
poem
books.
The
1
third
London,
678.
8vo.
OviDIUS NASD
notis
;
studio
(Publius) Opera omnia, cum integris N. Heinsii, variorum B. Cnippingii. 3 vols. Lugduni Batavorum, 1 670.
8vo.
PLINIUS
CAECILIUS
SECUNDUS
(Caius)
Epistolae
et
panegyricus.
Londini, 1722.
12mo.
PLUTARCH.
Apophthegmata regum et imperatorum, Apophthegmata, Laconica, antiqua Lacedaemoniorum instituta, Apophthegmata Lacaenarum. Londini, 1741. 4to. [Greek and Latin.]
Lives.
Translated
with notes,
.
critical
. .
and
historical,
and a
.
and
W.
Langhorne
vols.
8vo.
QUINTILIANUS (Marcus
Avi
et
M. Fabii Fabius) Declamationes undeviginti. cum variorum notis. Lugd. Calpurnii Flacci declamationes Batav. et Roterodami, 1665. 2 vols. 8vo.
. . .
SALLUSTIUS CRISPUS
notis illustravit
(Caius)
D. Crispinus,
3
vols.
in
Opera omnia quae extant, interpretatione et usum Delphini. Londini, 726. 8vo.
1
of.
Characteristicks.
SUETONIUS TRANQUILLUS
et
(Caius)
extant, interpre-
notis
illustravit
A.
Babelonius
...
ad usum
Delphini.
Londini, 1718.
8vo.
of Norwich.
The Hebrew
manner
concordance, adapted
of Buxtorf.
London,
420
TERENTIUS AFER
recensita.
ex editione Westerhoviana
VELLEIUS PATERCULUS
selectis
(Caius)
Historiae
et
XENOPHON.
tertia
-
Cyri expeditione libri septem, a T. Hutchinson. 8vo. Cantabrigiae, 1 777. nuper recognita.
Cyri institutione
libri
De
De
octo
son.
Editio septima.
Recognovit Londini,
IV.
T. Hutchin8vo.
773.
Recensuit B. Simpson.
LIBRARY.
list is
in
accordance with
"
who
Dewey Decimal System," and in the may not be familiar with the system, it
The
and by
that
it
various ramifications
Related matter
is
and
he finds grouped
it.
In this
way new
that
it is
lines
One
capable
Its
system employed
of
is
easily
it.
of
distinctive
the
employment
the ten
digits,
in their
hence the
The sum
Dr.
of
activity has
been divided by
Dewey
into ten
0,
1 ,
2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
These
ten classes are each separated in a similar manner, thus making 1 00 extension of the process provides 1 000 sections, which divisions.
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can be
still
and
Places for
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For the purpose of
this
list
of
which
:
will
be found
in
the
"
Order
"
of Classification
which
follows
421
422
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
LIBRARY ECONOMY.
MATHEMATICS. ASTRONOMY.
PHYSICS.
POLYGRAPHY.
BOOK RARITIES. 090 600 too Philosophy. 610 no METAPHYSICS. 620 1 20 SPECIAL METAPHYSICAL TOPICS. MIND AND BODY. 630 130 DOMESTIC ECONOMY. PHILOSOPHICAL SYSTEMS. 640 140 1 MENTAL FACULTIES. PSYCHOLOGY. 650 COMMUNICATION AND COMMERCE. 50 660 1 60 LOGIC. CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY. ETHICS. MANUFACTURES. 670 170 680 1 80 ANCIENT PHILOSOPHERS. MECHANIC TRADES. MODERN PHILOSOPHERS. BUILDING. 690 190 200 Religion. 700 Fine Arts. NATURAL THEOLOGY. 210 LANDSCAPE GARDENING. 710 220 BIBLE. ARCHITECTURE. 720 DOCTRINAL THEOL. DOGMATICS. SCULPTURE. 730 230 DEVOTIONAL AND PRACTICAL. 740 240 DRAWING, DESIGN, DECORATION. HOMILETIC. PASTORAL. PAROCHIAL. 750 PAINTING. 250 260 CHURCH. INSTITUTIONS. WORK. ENGRAVING. 760 RELIGIOUS HISTORY. PHOTOGRAPHY. 270 770 280 CHRISTIAN CHURCHES AND SECTS. Music. 780 NON-CHRISTIAN RELIGIONS. AMUSEMENTS. 290 790 800 Literature. 300 Sociology.
310 320 330 340 350 360 370 380 390
410 420 430 440 450 460 470 480 490
STATISTICS.
8 10
CHEMISTRY. GEOLOGY. PALEONTOLOGY. BIOLOGY. BOTANY. ZOOLOGY. Useful Arts. MEDICINE. ENGINEERING. AGRICULTURE.
AMERICAN.
ENGLISH.
LAW. ADMINISTRATION.
ASSOCIATIONS AND INSTITUTIONS.
GERMAN. FRENCH.
ITALIAN.
SPANISH.
LATIN.
EDUCATION.
GREEK.
400 Philology.
COMPARATIVE.
ENGLISH.
GERMAN. FRENCH.
ITALIAN. SPANISH. LATIN.
GREEK.
MINOR LANGUAGES.
423
GENERAL.
Prize essays.
and
Fifth
Washington,
Monarchy men
in
In progress.
(L. F.)
Brown
The
1912.
R 35907
.
Gwatkin.
8vo.
rise of the
bridge, 1913.
P. Whitney.
The
1913.
juridica.
....
1870.
England from the Conquest to the present time, 1066-1870. [With an introductory note by J. C. Robertson.] London,
8vo, pp. xv, 792.
R 34060
.
GlNZEL
(Friedrich Carl) Handbuch der mathematischen und technischen III. Band Chronologic das Zeitrechnungswesen der Volker. 1 vol. 8vo. Mit Tabellen Leipzig, 1914. Figuren.
:
.
12666
HEUTERUS
historica
omnia
(Pontus) Ponti Heuteri, Delfii, praepositi Arnhemensis, opera Burgundica, Austriaca, Belgica De rebus a principibus
; :
Burgundis atque Austriacis, qui Belgis imperarunt, pace belloq5 praeclare Insertus est eiusdem De vetustate et nobilitate families gestis.
Habspurgicae
et
Accessereq
De
veterum ac
duo
aliaque.
Nunc primum
atque industria viri docti [i.e. J. Coppenius] recensita, Lovanii, 1649. 3 pts. in 1 vol. Fol.
JESSOPP (Augustus) Arcady, for better, London, [n.d.] 8vo, pp. xxv, 251.
for worse.
Seventh edition.
R 35659
historic essays.
.
.
The coming
impression.
-
of the friars,
and other
Seventeenth
London, 1913.
R 35660
Second
edition.
Simon Ryan, and other papers. [With portrait.] London, 1907. 8vo, pp. viii, 296.
Frivola,
R 35661
. . .
Studies by a recluse
edition.
in cloister, town,
and country.
Third
London,
trials of
[n.d.]
R 35663
London,
The
1909.
[Fifth impression.]
R 35664
1913
and
H.
rogues
Firth and
Oxford,
[With
8vo.
1.
In progress.
Elizabethan
R 34690
and vagabonds.
1558-1565.
By
F. Aydelotte.
.
.
facsimiles
The House
of
Lords
in the reign of
1913.
424
HISTORY
GENERAL.
" phonikischen Ursprung des
'*
kretische
Alphabets. Die Wanderungen und Wandlungen der Siindflutsage. Der Mit einer herrschende Rassebegriff u. die Tatsachen der Erfahrung. 34714 1913. Schrifttafel. 8vo, pp. 213. Leipzig.
TOUT
Britain.
state of mediaeval studies in Great address delivered to the mediaeval section of presidential the International Historical Congress at London, April 4, 1913.
From
[The
British
Academy.]
London,
title
>8
[1914].
T*1*
talcen
R
Yale
35862
YALE UNIVERSITY.
tions.
. . .
Department
of History.
historical publica-
from the
Published under the direction of the Department of History income of the Henry Weldon Barnes Memorial Fund.
1914.
8vo.
New Haven,
I
.
In progress.
:
the last phase of the P.) The colonising activities of the English puritans Elizabethan struggle with Spain. . . . With an introduction by C. M. Andrews. [With
Newton (A.
m.p.j-1914.
37372
910
HAKLUYT
8vo.
SOCIETY. In progress.
Second
of
Series.
London, 1913-14.
R
Quito;
1913.
:
1828
31. Cieza de
edited by Sir
34.
New
light
on Drake
of circumnavigation,
1577-1530.
and
plates.
JAYNE
With
325.
illustrations
Gama and his successors, 1460-1580. and map. London, [1910]. 8vo, pp.
xix,
371
68
MANDEVILLE
Kt.
:
(Sir John)
of Sir J.
Maundevile
and
. .
being his voyage and travel which treateth of the way to Jerusalem of the marvels of Ind with other islands and countries. Edited and
illustrated
Grant.
by Arthur Layard, with a preface by John Cameron R 37009 Westminster, 1895. 8vo, pp. xxx, 414.
(Henri Emmanuel) Histoire de 1'ecole cartographique
WAUWERMANS
beige 1895.
2vols.
et anversoise
du
XVI e
siecle.
[With
plates.]
Bruxcf
8vo.
36078
913
HISTORY: ARCH/EOLOGY.
BRUSSELS
Musees Royaux du Cinquantenaire. Catalogue des sculptures monuments lapidaires, des Musees Royaux du Par Franz Cumont. Cinquantenaire. [With illustrations.] 1913. R 36077 8vo, pp. xii, 268.
:
&
inscriptions antiques,
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
913
RECENT ACCESSIONS
425
HISTORY: ARCH/EOLOQY.
1913-14.
of the
In progress.
:
Goodall (A.) Place-names of south-west Yorkshire that 1913. Riding as lies south of the Aire from Keighley onwards.
Roberts (R. G.)
is,
of so
much
West
The
place-names of Sussex.
1914.
R 34599 R 37435
.
.
With
illustrations.
1906.
R 33976
[With
plates
to ancient civilizations
series.
and
illustra-
London, 1912-15.
S. P.)
8vo.
In progress.
:
Handcock (P.
Mesopotamian archaeology
1912.
:
an introduction
to the archaeology of
30772
an introduction to the archaeology of the Joyce (T. A.) South American archaeology 1912. South American continent with special reference to the early history of Peru.
R 30766
Barnett (L.
D.) Antiquities
of
India
Hindustan.
.1913.
:
R 34895
an introduction to the archaeology of prehistoric
Greece.-1915.
R 37499
929
HISTORY
HEYDEN REICH
.
(Eduard) Handbuch der praktischen Genealogie. Von Otto Freiherrn von ... in Verbindung mit Mucke Otto Forst-Battaglia Karge Dungern und anderen GeK. Robert Somraer Armin Tille Karl Lamprecht lehrten Mit Mit einer Einleitung von
. .
E. Heydenreich
.
Auflage der Familiengeschichtlichen Quellenkunde.) [Zentralstelle fur Deutsche Personen und Familien2 vols. 4to. R 34928 Leipzig, 1913. geschichte.]
.
.
.
Tafeln.
(Zweite
BAILDON
family.
tions.]
... By William
300 copies
printed.
Paley Baildon.
1vol.
[With
plates
and
illustra-
[London:] [1910-13].
Histoire de la maison des
. . .
4to.
In progress.
R 22268
%*
BAUX
vi,
Baux
Ouvrage accompagne de
226.
planches.
No. 270.
.
.
.
Paris, 1913.
R
is
4to, pp.
36422
%*
300 copies
:
printed.
This copy
CAMPBELL
.
The Clan Campbell. formed by Sir Duncan Campbell Prepared and edited by
. . . .
From
of Barcaldine
.
Henry
4to.
R 33882
Abstracts of entries relating to Campbells in the Sheriff Court Books of Perthshire and in the particular registers of Homings and Inhibitions for that county. 1914.
426
CAMPBELL
The Argyle
Edin35 184
burgh, 1834.
V
:
57 copies printed.
R
By George
vi,
CECIL
The house
of Cecil.
Ravenscroft Dennis.
plates.]
London, 1914.
of
8vo, pp.
Duffs.
327.
[With 35888
the
[With
portraits
and
HAIG
pp.
The Haigs
plates
of
Bemersyde
[With
and
illustrations.]
a family history.
xiii,
:
496.
of Inglis of
35786
[With
plates.]
Auchindinny and Redhall. ... By John Edinburgh, 1914. 4to, pp. 236. R 35654
:
LA TREMOILLE
of the
From the Crusades to the French Revolution a history La Tremoille family. By Winifred Stephens. [With plates.]
:
London, 1914.
35890
LLOYD
and pedigrees of the Lloyds of Allt yr Ffos y Bleiddiaid, Gilfach Wen, Llan Llyr and Odyn, Hywel, Waun Ifor. Compiled and edited by Lucy E. Lloyd Theakston John Davies. With an introduction by George Eyre Evans. Oxford, 1913,
:
Some
family records
Castell
&
pts. in
:
vol.
4to. of
34080
LYSTER
Memorials
an ancient house
or Lyster.
By ... Henry
:
Illustrated.
Edinburgh, 1913.
34918
WANDESFORDE
Castlecomer.
Story of the family of Wandesforde of Kirklington Compiled from original sources. With a calendar of
&
historical manuscripts.
plates
and
illustrations.]
London, 1904.
R
R
[With 18424
of Somerset.
vii,
Bristol, 1914.
origin
8vo, pp.
373.
JOYCE
and
history of Irish
names
of places.
8vo.
of
R
R
WEEKLEY
xiv,250.
(Ernest)
The romance
names.
London, 1914.
8vo, pp.
929 HISTORY
HERALDRY.
ALBON, Marquis
le
d'
Cartulaire general de 1'ordre du Temple, 1 1 19 ?-l 1 50. et des bulles relatives a 1'ordre du Temple forme par
J.
.
note by the' Marquis M. R. marquis d'Albon. [With a prefatory " R. A. d'Albon, and an *' avertissement Avec by J. Beyssac.J portrait et 4to, pp. xxiii, 468. Paris, 1913. planches.
. . . .
. .
200
copies printed.
Thii copy
i.
No.
55.
33834
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
RECENT ACCESSIONS
HERALDRY.
.
427
929 HISTORY:
BURKE
genealogical and heraldic history of the (Sir John Bernard) Revised by A. Twelfth edition. landed gentry of Great Britain. C. Fox-Davies. [With illustrations.] London, 1914. 8vo, pp. R5344 viii, 2102.
.
BURKE
genealogical and (Sir John Bernard) and (Ashworth Peter) the peerage and baronetage, the Privy Council, London, Seventy- seventh edition. knightage and companionage.
heraldic history of
1915.
8vo.
R5298
CLAY
(John William)
The
.
. .
extinct
counties of England.
and dormant peerages of the northern London, 1913. 8vo, pp. vi, 255. R 34573
COKAYNE
Ireland,
(George Edward) The complete peerage of England, Scotland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom extant, extinct, or dormant. By G. E. C. [i.e. G. E. Cokayne.] New edition, revised and much enlarged. Edited by the Hon. Vicary Gibbs, with the assistance of H. Arthur Doubleday. London, 1913. 4to. In progress.
. . .
3.
Canonteign to Cutts.
R 22839
(Joseph) Les Hospitaliers a
8vo, pp.
DELAVILLE LE ROULX
Rhodes
vi,
jusqu'a la
37469
DOUGLAS
The Scots peerage, founded on Wood's (Sir Robert) Bart. R. Douglas's Peerage of Scotland containing an historical and genealogical account of the nobility of that kingdom. Edited by Sir Balfour Paul. Vol. IX. Index. James Edinburgh, 1914. 8vo.
edition of Sir
; . .
.
10412
HONORS,
tions
[i.e.
Blaise Vauzelle].
Disserta-
historiques et critiques sur la chevalerie, ancienne et moderne, seculiere et reguliere, avec des notes. Paris, 1718. [With plates.]
35755
JEWERS
Edited by A. J. (Arthur J.) Grants and certificates of arms. 8vo, Exeter, 1913. Reprinted from "The genealogist".
35580
LOEBE (Max)
Wahlspriiche, Devisen und Sinnspriiche deutscher Fiirsten8vo, pp. geschlechter des xvi und xvii Jahrhunderts. Leipzig, 1883. 37589 xvi, 267.
MANGO
plates.]
DI
CASALGERARDO
Palermo, 1912.
4to.
Sicilia.
[With
33501
PERKINS
Bath
1913.
:
(Jocelyn Henry Temple) The Most Honourable Order of the a descriptive and historical account. London^ [With plates.] 8vo, pp. xii, 259. 34872
428
HERALDRY.
.
.
RlETSTAP (Johannes Baptist) Armorial general. Paris, 1904-14. Rolland. [With illustrations.]
Supplement par V.
2
vols.
8vo.
10759
(Augusto) Archive heraldico-genealogico contendo noticias historico-heraldicas, cartas de brazao d'armas, das familias que em genealogias e as requereram e obtiveram, e a explica^ao das mesmas familias Portugal em um indice heraldico. Com urn appendice de cartas de brazao passadas no Brazil depois do acto da independencia do imperio. R 32869 2 vols. 4to. Lisboa, 1872 [-73.]
.
Visconde.
STEVENSON
of
. .
(John
Home) Heraldry
'
practice of heraldry in
[With
plates.]
Scotland including a recension Scotland 'by ... George Seton. 361 45 Glasgow, 1914. 2 vols. 4to.
in
:
STODART
(Robert Riddle) Scottish arms being a collection of armorial Reproduced in facsimile from contemporary bearings A.D. 1370-1678. With heraldic and genealogical notes. Edinburgh, manuscripts.
:
1881.
vols.
Fol.
R 34876
930
der
HISTORY
ANCIENT
GENERAL.
[With maps and
in
DEUTSCHE ORIENT-GESELLSCHAFT.
ungen
6,
7,
Wissenschaftliche Veroffentlichillus-
Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.
Leipzig, 1905-13.
Fol.
14. Abusir.
trations.]
8,
In progress.
R9312
Abusir
11,
5 vols.
.2
vols.
Assur.
Assur.
vok
12.
1909-13.
Habu
suchung
13.
1
1910.
in
Petra
1910.
7.
2vol,.-l911.
18. Tell
el-Amarna.
.
in
Tell
el-
Amarna.
19.
1911.
:
Von O.
-1912.
.
20. Reuther (O.) Ocheidlr. Nach Aufnahmen von Mitgliedern der Babylon-Expedition der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft dargestellt von O. Reuther. 1912.
.
die;;
25.
in
1913.
HANDBUECHER.
1
0.
8vo.
I.Ser.
5.
. . .
Gotha, 1906R 33 4
1
1
Meder und
Eroberung
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
930 HISTORY:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
429
ANCIENT: GENERAL.
earliest times
MATTINGLY
and
plates.]
(Harold) Outlines of ancient history from the Roman empire in the west, A.D. 476. Cambridge, 1914. 8vo, pp. xi, 482.
:
[With maps
R 36880
R
MORGAN
toire et
(Jacques de) Les premieres civilisations etudes sur la prehishistoire jusqu'a la fin de 1'empire macedonien. [With maps 19090 and illustrations.] Paris, 1909. 8vo, pp. xii, 513.
1*
TORNIELLI
condito
ad
eumdem
Christi
. .
passionis additis
.
redemtum.
Quos nuper
.
commentariis
4
:
vols.
Fol.
R 35226
:
perficere
932
HISTORY
ANCIENT
.
.
EGYPT.
ALEXANDRIA
Musee d'Alexandrie.
In progress.
R 32092
.
Nos. 1-624.
1912.
La
necropoli di Sciatbi.
Per E. Breccia
Testo.
(Tavole.)
vols.
BERLIN
lung.
Koenigliche Museen.
. .
illustrations.]
progress.
2.
R 36109
. .
.
band.)
Von.fW. Weber
Textband.
(Tafel-
Egyptian scarabs,
plate
etc., in
the British
[With
and
illustrations.]
London,
R
. .
36521
1.
RoyalyScarabs.
A
. .
and
With Sculpture. plates guide to the Egyptian galleries. illustrations. [London], 1909. SYO, pp. xxii, 351.
.
. . .
.
R 31301
3
Hieroglyphic
texts
from
.
.
Egyptian
.
stelae,
&c.,
in
the
British
vols.
Plates.
London, 1912-14.
R 29685
:
BUDGE
a repro(Ernest Alfred Thompson Wallis) The papyrus of Ani duction in facsimile edited, with hieroglyphic transcript, translation and London, 1913. 2 vols. introduction, by E. A. Waflis Budge
.
8vo.
35097
BUTLER
Cairo.
36397
Paris,
CHARMES
1891.
R 28360
430
CAIRO
du,
Musee du Caire. Catalogue general des antiquites egyptiennes Musee du Caire. [Service des Antiquites de [With plates.] R 9699 Le Caire, etc., 1901-13. 4to. In progress. 1'Egypte.]
:
Nos. 25001-25385.
Ostraca.
1901.
No.
Gauthier.
Montou.
Par
H.
Nos. 4798-4976
1913.
5034-5200.
Models
of ships
and
boats.
Par
J.
Maspero.
Tome
DlKAlOMATA.
in
Ausziige aus alexandrinischen Gesetzen und Verordeinem Papyrus des Philologischen Seminars der Universitat nungen Mil einem Anhang weiterer Papyri derselben Halle, Pap. Hal. 1. Mit Herausgegeben von der Graeca Halensis. Sammlung.
. . .
Lichtdrucktafeln.
Berlin. 1913.
R 33776
Moluk.
14315
Davis* excavations
Biban
el
[With
plates
and
illustrations.]
London, 1912.
Fol.
In progress.
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of
Hannhabi and Touatankhamanou. The discovery of the tombs, by T. M. Davis. King Harmhabi and Touatankhamanou, by Sir G. Maspero. Catalogue of the objects Illustrations in colour, by L. Crane. 1912. discovered, by G. Daressy.
The tombs
EGYPT
Ministry of Finance Survey Department. The archaeological In of Nubia. 4to. Cairo, 1910. Report for 1907-1908. survey 33690 progress.
:
by G. A. Reisner. Volume of plates accompanying. 2 vols. 2. Report on the human remains, by G. E. Smith 2 vols.
1.
Archaeological report
and F.
W.
Jones.
(Plates.
.)
1'
Egypte.
Publications.
Le
Caire,
R
of
18318
.
The tomb
Hesy.
1913.
.
.
Millet.
Preface de
G.
la
Nubie.
vols.
1912.
[Publications.]
[With
.
plates.]
4to.
Inprogress.
The
cemeteries of
1
London, R 8460
.
W.
Abydoi.
Abydos.
By
E. Naville.
(By T. E.
L. S. Loat.)
3 vols.- 1 9 3- 1 4.
Archaeological
plates.]
21.
Survey
of
Egypt.
4to.
[With
London, 1913.
.
. .
Edited by F. Inprogress.
LI.
Griffith.
8460
Davies (N. de G.) Five Theban tombs, being those of Mentuherkhepeshef, User,
1913.
of
Meir.
Part.
I.
1914.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
932
RECENT ACCESSIONS
431
LETRONNE
(Jean Antoine)
I'etablissement
d* Alexandra.
des Grecs
conquete
Academic
des Inscriptions
et Belles-Lettres,
7,
i.]
[Paris,
847.]
15344
%* The
title is
MARIETTE
(Francois Auguste Ferdinand) Choix de monuments et dessins decouverts ou executes pendant le deblaiement du Serapeum
Memphis.
Paris, 1856.
de de 15224
Identification
des dieux
.
d'Herodote avec
les
Lettre inedite
1
Revue
archeologique.]
885.
5227
%* The
OTTO
(Walter Gustav Albrecht) Priester und Tempel im hellenistischen Agypten ein Beitrag zur Kulturgeschichte des Hellenismus. Leipzig und Berlin, 1905-08. 2 vols. 8vo. R 36090
:
ROTH
illustrations.
(Henry Ling) Ancient Egyptian and Greek looms. Second series, [Bankfield Museum Notes.
.
With
2.]
Halifax,
1913.
R 34562
in
the wrapper.
SlEGLIN (Ernest von) Expedition Ernst von Sieglin. Alexandria unter Leitung von Theodor Schreiber. In progress. Fol.
2.
Ausgrabungen
.
.
Leipzig, 1913.
17459
Herausgegeben von E. von griechisch-agyptische Sammlung E. von Sieglin. Bearbeitet von R. Pagenstecher ... 3 Teil. Die Gefasse in Stein und Ton Sieglin. Knochenschnitzereien. 191 3.
Die
SMITH
contribution to the study of mummification in (Graf ton Elliot) with special reference to the measures adopted during the time Egypt, of the XXI dynasty for moulding the form of the body. [With plates.] [Memoires Presented a 1'Institut Egyptien, 5, i.] Le Caire, 1906. 4to, 32701 pp. 53.
R R
Studien.
[With
facsimiles.]
4to.
In progress.
Leip15375
Egypt.
Bearbeitet von
Die beiden Totenpapyrus Rhind des Religion. G. Moller. ... 2 vols. 1913.
:
Museums zu Edinburg.
TORR
(Cecil) Memphis and Mycenae an examination of Egyptian chronology and its application to the early history of Greece Cambridge, 1896. 29782 8vo, pp. x, 74.
.
WEIGALL
Queen
410.
of
Egypt
maps and
illustrations.
The life and times of Cleopatra, Roman Empire. With and London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xix, Edinburgh
R 36288
432
HISTORY
ANCIENT
MEDO-PERSIA.
ABEL
(Ludwig) and
WlNCKLER
ASSYRIOLOGISCHE BlBLlOTHEK.
Paul
Haupt.
[With
plates.
R 21
Weisbach.
10.
Die altpersischen Keilinschriften in Umschrift und Ubersetzung. F. H. Weissbach und W. Bang. [1893-11908.
18. Beitrage zur Kenntnis der assyrisch-babylonischen Medizin. 1904. Ubersetzung und Kommentar von F. Kiichler.
. . .
21.
Huber
(E.)
Die Personennamen
1907.
in
BALL
Oxford, 1913.
xxiii,
R
Adab
.
4to, pp.
35365
BANKS (Edgar
: a story of advenJames) Bismya or the lost city of ture, of exploration, and of excavation among the ruins of the oldest of Field Director of the buried cities of Babylonia. By E. J. Banks.
. .
Fund
of the University of
Chicago
to Babylonia.
With
illustrations.
don, 1912.
35837
BONAVIA
comes.
(Emanuel) The flora of the Assyrian monuments and its outWestminster, 1894. 8vo, pp. xxvi, 215. [With illustrations.] R 36771
Catalogue of the cuneiform tablets in the Kouyunjik Museum. Supplement. By L. W. King. R 15951 London, 1914. 8vo.
.
.
BRITISH
MUSEUM.
.
.
With
plates.
The
facsimiles.
Museum;
with
with an introduction and sum[Edited by C. Bezold mary by C. Bezold and E. A. T. W. Budge.] [London], 1892. 4to, R 36773 pp. xciv, 157.
.
DELITZSCH
Des (Friedrich) Das babylonische Weltschopfungsepos. XVII. Bandes der Abhandlungen der philologisch-historischen Classe
. . .
der Konigl. Sachsischen Gesellschaft der 8vo, pp. 160. Leipzig, 1896.
Wissenschaften.
No.
II.
R 336%
R
22264
DHORME
Conferences donnees (Paul) La religion assyro-babylonienne. a Tlnstitut catholique de Paris. [Etudes Palestiniennes et Orientales.)
8vo, pp.
x,
Paris, 1910.
319.
FRANCE:
MeMinistere de 1'Instruction Publique et des Beaux- Arts. moires de la Mission archeologique de Susiane. Tome XIV. Textes avec la elamites-semitiques. Cinquieme serie. Par V. Scheil
.
. .
[With
plates.]
Paris, 1913.
4to.
9452
433
HlNCKS (Edward) On
actions of the
Khorsabad
inscriptions.
From
II.
. .
the Trans.
Royal
Irish
Part
1850.
R
.
Dublin, 32702
.
HOMMEL
Mit Geschichte Babyloniens und Assyriens. Geschichte in Einzeldarstelund Karten. [Allgemeine Abbildungen R 36848 Berlin, 1885 [-88]. 8vo, pp. vi, 802. lungen, I. 2.]
(Franz) Assyrien und Babylonien, nach den neuesten Entdeck.
. .
KAULEN
ungen. Karten.
Fiinfte Auflage.
Mit
Illustrationen
und
im
Bibliothek der Lander-u. Volkerkunde.] Breisgau, 1899. 8vo, pp. xiii, 317.
[Illustrierte
Freiburg
36849
KOHLER
(Josef) and UNGNAD (Arthur) Assyrische Rechtsurkunden in Umschrift und Uebersetzung nebst einem Index der Personen-Namen 34717 und Rechtserlauterungen. Leipzig, 1913. 4to, pp. 467.
KUGLER
(Franz Xaver) Die babylonische Mondrechnung. Zwei Systeme Auf Grund der Chaldaer iiber den Lauf des Mondes und der Sonne. mehrerer von J. N. Strassmaier copirten Keilinschriften des Mit einem Anhang iiber chaldaische PlaneBritischen Museums
. . . . . .
tentafeln.
33692
MAHLER
v.
(Eduard) Zur Chronologic der Babylonier. Vergleichungstabelund christlichen Zeitrechnung von Nabonassar, 747 Besonders Abgedruckt aus dem LXIL Ch., bis 100 v. Ch.
.
Bande der Denkschriften der mathematisch-naturwissenschaftlichen Classe der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Wien, 1895. 4to r R 32704 pp. 24.
MEISSNER
(Bruno) Assyrisch-babylonische Chrestomathie fur Anfanger. R 34029 Leiden, 1895. 4to, pp. xxv, 68.
MORGAN
(Jacques de) Histoire et travaux de la Delegation en Perse du Ministere de 1'instruction publique, 1897-1905. Paris, 1905. 8vo, 3 1961 pp. viii, 178.
PINCHES
(Theophilus Goldridge) Inscribed Babylonian tablets in the posHenry Peek, Bart. Translated and explained by T. G. Pinches. London, 1888. 4to, [With plates and illustrations.]
session of Sir
. .
.
pp.
vi,
96, 2*.
R
. .
.
32706
ROGERS
(Robert William) Cuneiform parallels to the Translated and edited by R. W. Rogers. [With Oxford, [1912]. 8vo, pp. xxii, 567.
R
.
35130
SMITH
(George) History
;
of
by G. Smith. Edited by ... A. H. Sayce. [With appendices by J. W. Bosanquet.] [With folding plate.] London, 1878. 8vo, pp. iv, 182. R 368 15
inscriptions
30
434
ANCIENT: MEDO-PERSIA.
.
.
TELLO.
Harerford Library collection of cuneiform tablets, or documents Edited by G. A. Barton. from the temple archives of Telloh. 4to. R 34042 Philadelphia, Pa., [1905].
.
THUREAU-DANGIN
xvi,
ff.
(Francois) Recueil
de
tablettes
chaldeennes.
[A
Paris, 1903.
155.
R
:
8vo, pp.
32860
937
HISTORY
.
ANCIENT
.
ITALY.
:
CLEMENT
(Clara Erskine) The eternal city. Illustrated. ments, literature and art. 8ro.
.
Rome
its
religions,
monuvols.
London, 1901.
26205
COMPARETTI
dei
Pisoni
. . .
Con
(Domenico) and PETRA (Giulio de) La ville ercolanese suoi monumenti e la sua biblioteca. Ricerche e notizie. tavole. Fol. R 33502 Torino, 1883. vi, 294. pp.
i
di
Pompei.
Napoli, 1875.
3 1491
GUENTHER
Naples.
the imperial villa near (Robert Theodore) Pausilypon a description of the submerged foreshore and with observations on the tomb of Virgil and on other Roman antiquities on With illustrations. and Oxford, Posilipo. plates, R 255 10 1913. 8vo, pp. xii, 294.
With
. .
HAVELL
and
563.
institutions
(Herbert Lord) Republican Rome her conquests, manners and from the earliest times to the death of Caesar. [With maps
:
illustrations].
[Great Nations.]
London, 1914.
8vo, pp.
xxiii,
R
der
36477
vom Vesuv
verschiitteten Stadte
Nebst einer Abhandlung iiber die antiken WandmaTafeln lereien in technischer Beziehung von Otto Donner. Mit und einem Atlas. 2 vols. 8vo, and 4to. Leipzig, 1868. R 32979
.
.
LLOYD
of the
Roman
i
people.
London, 1914.
8vo, pp.
136.
Storia critica di
R R
36881
.
. .
PAIS (Ettore)
Roma
durante
Roma,
1913.
2 vols.
8vo.
33474
SANDYS
edition.
Second companion to Latin studies. 1913. 8vo, pp. xxxv, 8' [With illustrations]. Cambridge, R 34595
. .
.
TOMASSETTI
moderne.
gress.
3.
. .
(Giuseppe)
.
Con
Vic Cassia
1913.
...
cura di F.
Tomassctri.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
938
RECENT ACCESSIONS
:
435
HISTORY
ANCIENT
.
.
GREECE.
BAUER
173.
(Adolf) Themistokles.
36334
BLUEMNER
Kiinste
bei
]
^Leipzig, %* Vol.
. .
.
(Hugo) Technologic und Terminologie der Gewerbe und Mit Holzschnitten. Griechen und Romern. 4 vols. 8vo. R 33636 879- 1912.
. . . . . .
1
is
of the
second edition.
.
BCSANQUET
illustrations and With Days in Attica. R 35620 London, [1914.] 8vo, pp. xiv, 348. BURY (John Bagnell) of Greece to the death of Alexander the history Great. With maps and plans. London, [Second edition.] 1913. R 35887 8vo, PP xxv, 909.
(Ellen S.)
plans.
FURTWAENGLER
Tafelnund
.
(Adolf) Kleine Schriften. Herausgegeben von Zweiter Band. Mit Johannes Sieveking und Ludwig Curtius
.
Textillustrationen.
>Munchen, \9\3.
of
8vo.
R 28783
GARDNER
1911.
(Ernest Arthur)
A
of
.
handbook
Greek
sculpture.
illustrations.]
[Handbooks
HlLL (George
Francis) Sources for Greek history between the Persian and Peloponnesian wars. Collected and arranged by G. F. Hill. Second issue. R 36380 8vo, pp. xii, 439. Oxford, 1907.
. .
MlCHEL
-
Preface par B. (Charles) Recueil descriptions grecques. Haussoullier. 32721 8vo, pp. xxvi, 1000. Paris, 1900.
.
descriptions
grecques.
Supplement.
Bruxelles,
R
Antiques du
. .
32721
PANOFKA
(Theodore)
cabinet
.
du comte de Pourtalesplates.]
[With
Paris,
834.
R R
35647
.
.
.
POLAND
(Franz)
1
Geschichte
des
griechischen
Vereinswesens.
Preisschriften. 38.]
Leipzig,
909.
341
Paris, 1883-84.
vols.
8vo.
.
.
Deuxieme R 34752
illus-
[With
34938
%* Vols.
-
and 2 are
of the
second edition.
reliefs
grecs et remains.
4to.
1912.
its
[With
illustrations.]
R 20028
illustra-
Les ensembles.
Afrique
lies
909.
2.
Britanniques.
WELLER
tions].
monuments.
New
[With
York, 1913.
35243
436
ANCIENT: GREECE.
:
MlNNS
a survey of ancient history (Ellis Hovell) Scythians and Greeks and archaeology on the north coast of the Euxine from the Danube to the Caucasus. [With plates and illustrations.] Cambridge, 1913. R 33951 4to, pp. xl, 720.
939 HISTORY:
ARABIA.
Nach Abklatschen Epigraphische Denkmaler aus Arabien. Von und Copieen des D. H. Julius Euting in Strassburg. Tafeln. Mit Miiller. [Denkschriften der phil.-hist. Cl. xxxvii. Bd. Abhandl. von Nichtmitgliedern.] 4to, [Wien, 1889.]
.
pp. 96.
34037
%* The
title is
AXUM.
und
.
.
verwaltung
.
Deutsche Aksum- Expedition. Herausgegeben von der Generalder Koniglichen Museen zu Berlin. Tafeln (Mit 4 vols. in 5. Fol. Berlin, 1913. Textabbildungen.)
. . .
R
1 . :
.
.
33944
Littmann (E.) Reisebericht der Expedition Topographic und Geschichte Aksums. Unter Mitwirkung yon T. von L'upke. . . 2. Krencker (D.) Altere Denkmaler Nordabessiniens. ... Mit Beitragen von T. von . . Text (Tafeln). 2 vols. Liipke und einem Anhang von R. Zahn 3. Luepke (T. v.) Profan-und Kultbauten Nordabessiniens aus alterer und neuerer Zeit. Unter Mitwirkung von E. Littmann und D. Krencker. .
.
BATES
(Oric)
The
eastern
Libyans
illustrations.]
London, 1914.
PP
v, 127.
BOUCHIER (Edmund
1913.
8vo,
.
letters in
Roman
Oxford,
R
Lectures.
34870
1
BRITISH
8vo.
191
ACADEMY.
1.
The Schweich
A.
S.)
London,
and
1913.
vol.
Macaiister (R.
The
Philistines
their history
civilization.
1913.
R
roi
35370
de
Moab 896
plates.]
[With
Paris, 1870.
R
.
34036
P<
GSELL
1913.
1.
R
La
35 65
1
Les temps
primitifs.
colonisation
TOURNEBIZE
1'Armenie. leur dernier
.
(Henri Francois) Histoire politique et religieuse de Depuis les origines des Armeniens jusqu'a la mort de Avec cartes. Pans, [1900.] 8vo, roi, Tan 1393.
. .
PP .872.
243 15
VlAUD
.
(Prosper) Nazareth et ses deux eglises de 1'Annonciation et de Saint-Joseph, d'apres les fouilles recentes pratiquees sous la direction du P. Viaud [With illustrations.] Pans, 1910. 4to. pp. xiii, 200. 23 102
.
437
HISTORY
MODERN EUROPE.
:
ALLEN
(Percy Stafford)
The age
of
Erasmus
universities of
Oxford, 1914.
36381
ALLGEMEINE STAATENGESCHICHTE.
recht.
. .
Gotha, 1913-14.
:
8vo.
Erste Abteilung Geschichte der europaischen Staaten. Heeren, F. A. Ukert, W. v. Giesebrecht und K. Lamprecht.
Geschichte Baierns.
Dritte
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:
Von
S. Riezler.
Siebenter Band.
Von
1651-1704.
1913.
Deutsche Landesgeschichten. Herausgegeben von Abteilung Widmann (H.) Geschichte Salzburgs . . Dritter Band . . .1914.
.
A.
Tille.
BRYCE
new
pp.
(James)
edition
Viscount Bryce.
enlarged
. . .
empire.
...
A
:
with
maps.
London, 1912.
8vo,
lix,
571.
37349
FLETCHER
.
(Charles Robert Leslie) The making of western Europe being an attempt to trace the fortunes of the children of the Roman In progress. 8vo. London, 1914. Empire [With maps.]
. .
R 28921
2.
The
first
renaissance, 1000-1
190 A.D.
1914.
HlLL (David
ment
3.
of
Jayne) Europe.
A history of
. . .
diplomacy
in the international
tables.
London, 1914.
develop8vo.
1
In progress.
The diplomacy
of the age of absolutism.
R
University Library.]
3223
1914.
SlCHEL
[1914.]
[Home
London,
R
R
36441
SOREL
(Albert)
iv,
La
question d'Orient au
Pologne
8vo, pp.
et le traite
de Kainardji.
le
.
.
288.
35 168
941
HISTORY
(James)
CAMPBELL*
plates.]
Balmerino
and
its
...
A new edition.
Abbey:
R 2421 7
GOUDIE
work.
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%* 250
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HENDERSON
annals of Dunfermline and vicinity from A.D. 1069-1878. present time. Interspersed with explanatory notes, memorabilia, and engravings. 29837 Glasgow, 1879. 4to, pp. xii, 782.
(Ebenezer)
The
438
941
MODERN
:
LUMSDEN
Hammermen
organisation.
(P. Henderson) History of the a study typical of Scottish craft life and 4to, pp. xxv, 446. Paisley, 1912. [With plates.]
and AlTKEN
Glasgow
34592
MACDONALD
plans,
and
...
With map, (George) The Roman wall in Scotland. Glasgow, 1911. 8vo, pp. xv, 413. plates.
.
. .
R
Scotland and the French Revolution.
8vo, pp. xix, 317.
35909
Glasymc, R 3501 6
OMOND
.
(George William Thomson) The lord advocates of Scotland, from the close of the fifteenth century to the passing of the Reform Bill (Second series, 1834-1880). Edinburgh and London, 18838vo. 3vols. R 36395 1914.
. .
SCOT
(Sir John)
Lord
Scotstarvet.
The
one hundred years, viz., from 1550-1650. from an original manuscript. Edinburgh, published
statesmen, for
pp. xxxiv, 190.
Now
first
1754.
8vo,
35 199
.
.
The
.
8vo, pp.
v,
143.
SCOTLAND.
An
index,
drawn up about
.
.
many records
.
. .
between the With an introduction, giving a state years 1309 and 1413. of the ancient records of Scotland, which were in that kingdom in the To which are subjoined indexes of the persons and places. year 1292.
of charters, granted
by the
... By
1%.
William Robertson
Edinburgh, 1798.
4to, pp.
liii,
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historical
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33491
monuments and
.
Scotland.
and
illustrations.]
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[With
8vo.
I.
R
.
.
plates
26644
1909.
19!
I.
2.
... ...
Inventory of monuments and constructions in the county of Berwick. . Inventory of monuments and constructions in the county of Sutherland.
Publications.
[With
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In progress.
:
Edin2465
of the
Rentale Sancti Andree Series, 4. being the chamberlain and granitar accounts Archbishopric in the time of Cardinal Betoun, 1536-1546. Translated and edited by R. K. Hannay. 1913.
New
WlLLCOCK Oohn)
being
life
and
times of Archibald 9th Earl of Argyll, 1629-1685. KtUnburgh, 1907. 8vo, pp. xix, 448. portraits.]
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
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RECENT ACCESSIONS
439
HlLL (George) An
commencement
4to, pp. ix, 622.
R
Office series of early statutes.
34989
IRELAND.
1914.
3.
The
8vo.
Dublin,
R 23260
King
Edward
Statute rolls of the Parliament of Ireland, first to the twelfth years of the reign of . the Fourth. . Edited by H. F. Berry. .1914. .
.
MORGAN
an exposition and (John Hartman) The new Irish constitution some arguments. London, [1912]. 8vo, pp. xiii, [The Eighty Club.] 490. R 30621
:
VENEDEY
Qacob)
Irland.
Leipzig, 1844.
vols.
8vo.
28371
942 HISTORY:
GENERAL.
Charles.
.
BAKER
of the
.
.
(Sir Richard)
Romans government
&
Faithfully collected out of authors ancient and moderne ; into a new method. London, 1643. 4 digested [With portrait.] Fol. 33370 pts. in 1 vol.
engraved.
London, 1912-13.
Third
22.
of
[Publications of the late Camden Society, continued of the Royal Historical Society.] In progress. 8vo. 4271
The
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Edited
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Tower
archives in possession of
B.
W.
23. English merchants and the Spanish Inquisition in the Canaries. Extracts from the ... the Marquess of Bute. Edited . . . by L. de Alberti and A. 1912. Chapman. . . [Spanish text with English translation.]
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...
A.
Edited
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4
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Calendar
.
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Vol.
1
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3544
Richard
-
II.
1377-1381.
negotiations
Calendar of letters, despatches, and state papers, relating to the between England and Spain, preserved in the archives at
.
.
Vienna
and elsewhere.
London, 1914.
8vo.
In progress.
R2828
Vol. 10
. . .
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Edited by R. Tyler.
rolls
London, 1914.
III.
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Henry VII.
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1
:
R
1485-1494.
3543
Edward
Vol.
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440
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Vol.19.
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Regesta regum Anglo- Normannorum.
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.
Edited with
.
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et
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1
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In proR 34570
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War and
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London,
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To
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Britain
Second
xii,
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12595
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. .
General
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10976
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By
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OXFORD SURVEY
. . .
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R
The great roll of A.D. 1184-1185.
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John
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R
Archbishop
In pro
3337York,
of
of.
The
register of
1286-1296.
Parti.
[Edited by
W.
Romeyn
Brown.]
[1913.]
SYNGE
(Millington
.
.
sketch.
On
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A
xl,
military
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335.
R 24327 R
Oxford,
ANGLO-SAXON.
Anglo-Saxon
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and
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35109
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. . .
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Cambridge, 1913.
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.
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Le
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[With
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442
STUBBS
(William) Select charters and other illustrations of English conhistory from the earliest times to the reign of Edward the Ninth edition revised throughFirst arranged and edited by W. Stubbs. out by H. W. C. Davis. 8vo, pp. xix, 528. Oxford, 1913.
stitutional
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.
. .
RAMSAY
With
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:
34691
KlNGSFORD
fifteenth
With an appendix of century. chronicles and historical pieces hitherto for the most part unprinted. 34640 8vo, pp. xvi, 429. Oxford, 1913.
literature
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WYLIE
1914.
Fifth.
Cambr
R R
35552
TUDOR.
LUMSDEN (Carlos B.) The dawn of modern England: being a history of the Reformation in England, 1509-1525. London, 1910. 35435 8vo, pp. 303.
(Frank Arthur) Elizabeth and
Illustrated.
.
MUM BY
1914.
Mary
Stuart
the beginning of
the feud.
8vo, PP
London, 35891
POLLARD
ary
Pollard.
sources.
.
The
. .
reign of
.
Henry
an
with
introduction
1913-14.
vols.
[University of 8vo.
London
Historical Series.
Low R 348 15
TROUP
1913.
(Frances Rose)
rebellion of 1549: an account of and Cornwall against religious innovaWith illustrations. Lon< Edward VI. R 35 138 520.
.
.
The western
USHER
(Roland Greene) The rise and 8vo, pp. 380. Oxford, 1913.
fall
of
the
WILLIAMSON
maps and
plates.]
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(Charles)
R
R
[With
35366
in
STUART.
BASTIDE
The Anglo-French
London, 1914.
entente
the
xiii,
[With
plates.]
8vo, pp.
35 133
BlRCH (Thomas) The life of Henry Prince of Wales, eldest son of King James I. Compiled chiefly from his own papers, and other manuscripts. 35198 London, 1760. 8vo, pp. 552.
The Stanhope
essay 1913.
Osborne, Earl of Danby and Duke of 8vo, pp. 107. Oxford, 1913.
361
49
443
;
942
CHARLANNE
:
en Angleterre au XVII e tude sur les relations sociales la vie sociale, la vie litteraire. siecle et litteraires de la France et de 1'Angleterre surtout dans la seconde
moitie
du XVIIe
s iecle.
Paris, 1906.
33015
Fol.
ENGLAND.
Memorials and
letters
The second edition, corrected and enlarged. Dalrymple]. 1 766. 8vo, pp. xxx, 191.
Glasgow, R 32861
MACAU LAY
(Thomas Babington) Baron Macaulay. The history of England from the accession of James the second .... Edited by Charles Harding Firth. London, [With plates and illustrations.] In progress. R 34984 8vo. 1913-15.
. . .
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.
War
vols.
in
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8vo.
the
36523
VAUGHAN,
the
first
afterwards HALFORD (Sir Henry) Bart. An account of what appeared on opening the coffin of King Charles the First, in the vault of King Henry the Eighth in St. George's chapel at Windsor, on
of
April,
MDCCCXIII.
.
London, 1813.
4to,
pp.
19.
331 73
WADE
1912.
[With
portraits.]
London, 34569
WlLLCOCK
[With
portraits.]
Henry Vane the younger, statesman & London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xxi, 412. R 34594
HANOVER.
of
CARTWRIGHT
(John) Major.
. .
Edited by
F.
CESTRE
a pioneer of democracy and social (Charles) John Thelwall reform in England during the French Revolution. [Social Science 34943 London, 1906. 8vo, pp. 204. Series.]
:
JURIEN DE
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MEUCHE DE LOISNE
(Charles)
Le gouvernement
et
la
constitution
historique.
Paris,
1868.
R 28937
E.)
his
[With
portrait.]
London, 1888.
8vo.
R 35095
444
942
TREVELYAN
:
George the Third and Charles (Sir George Otto) Bart. Vol. II. Fox the concluding part of The American revolution. R 7358 London, 1914. 8vo.
.
.
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The Wellesley (Richard Colley) Marquis Wellesley. life and correspondence of R. C. Wellesley, Marquess papers. " By the editor of The Windham papers". Wellesley, 1760-1842. R 35874 ... [With portraits.] London, 1914. 2 vols. 8vo.
The
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The
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William
191 3.
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London,
vols.
With
34986
VICTORIA
The
With
illustrations.
London, R 36226
.
COOK
(Sir
life
of
Florence Nightingale.
8vo.
.
portraits.]
2 vols.
R R R
[With
34894
34632
DOLLEANS (douard) Le
Paris, 1912-13.
Chartisme, 1830-1848.
8vo.
:
[With
portraits.]
MACCOLL
Edited by
don, 191 4.
(Malcolm)
correspondence.
a portrait.
Lon36882
:
MAXWELL
the
Victoria's]
.
reign.
Illustrated, chiefly
London,
[1897].
4to,
pp.
xii,
from 239.
341
06
MONYPENNY
of
Benjamin
With
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Earle) The life Vol. III. 1846-1855. London, 1914. 8vo. In progress.
.
.
.
BUCKLE (George
R 23218
:
OXFORD
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history
of
ShAND
life of
. .
portraits [and
lur.jJi <ind
L.mdnn, 1895.
:
vols.
R
:
Edin31483
942
HISTORY
BERKSHIRE.
The
READING
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University College.
of
"liny, 1913.
In progress.
Abbey
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By
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M.
1913.
34591
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
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445
BERKSHIRE.
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CAMBRIDGE.
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R 6482
191
1.
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Second
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Edited by G.
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The riot at the great gate of Trinity College, February, 43. Cambridge, University of. 1610-1 1. February 1 1th, 1610. byll of (The record of the Vice Chancellor's Court complaynt exhibited by the fellows and schollers of St. Jhons Colledge agaynst certayne iniuryes and outrages committed agaynst them by the stagekeepers of Trinity Colledge att ther two last 1906. By J. W. Clark. .) comedyes.
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.
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iv,
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title
%* There
is
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R 29808
Chester in the Plantagenet and
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MORRIS
?].
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SOCIETY.
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Volume
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. .
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In progress.
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R
. .
662
and
Devon
...
Edited by
O.
J.
Reichel
.1912.
history
. .
.
DURHAM.
plates
LONGSTAFFE
illustrations.]
The
xii,
[With
and
Darlington,
854.
8vo, pp.
374, cxxxiv.
36923
GLOUCESTER.
WORCESTER (William) [An extract relating to Bristol from the Itinerarium Willelmi de Worcestre, edited by James Nasmith. With printed and manuscript additions by James Dallaway.] [Cantabrigice, 1778.]
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R 34777
.
HAMPSHIRE
DAVIES
(John
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history
of
Southampton.
.
.
Partly from the MS. of Dr. Speed, in the Southampton archives. Southampton, 1883. 8vo, pp. xvii, 535. [With inserted plates.]
-
R 29778
FREEMAN
London,
R 38069
446
942
HAMPSHIRE.
The
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SOUTHAMPTON RECORD
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SOCIETY.
Publications.
Southampton, 1912.
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In progress.
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Black book of Southampton, transcribed and edited from the MS. translation, introduction, notes, etc., by A. B. W. Chapman 1414-1503. 1912.
the
.
Audit
II.
Vol.
\23S5
HEREFORD.
;
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;
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With
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361 48
KENT.
OVLER (Thomas
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&
. .
inscriptions
.
32889
RECORD
SOCIETY.
The Record
Society for the publication of original documents relating to Lancashire and Cheshire. In progress. 1838 8vo. [Manchester], 1913-14.
66. Lancaster.
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in the
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Also a
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proved
in the peculiar of
Edited by
of
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now
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Liverpool Public
By
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Brownbill.
With an appendix
same
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. .
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containing a calendar of a further portion Liverpool School of Local History and Records,
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'
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-
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St.
Mary. .The
Edited
W.
BEAMONT
edition.
(William) Winwick
its
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and
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Second
-
Warrington [1875
abbey
printed.
?]
34086
Furnesienses.
quities
the
of
Furness.
[With
plates
and
illustrations.]
London, 1844.
403,
cxi.
250 Copies
R
the honor
33683
(William) The court rolls of Translated and transcribed from the original county of Lancaster. rolls preserved in the Public Record Office, London, and at Clitheroe Manchester and Edinburgh, 1897-1913. Castle, by W. Farrer. 3 vols. 23 168 8vo.
. . .
FARRER
of Clitheroe in the
HENN
.
(John)
Memoir
in
of
Richard Hanby
...
;
a scholar, teacher,
and superintendent
. .
Saint John's
of
Sunday school
xii,
house
governor
Chetham's Hospital,
8vo, pp.
plates.]
Manchester, 1886.
35816
447
An
To
.
.
of Whalley, and Honor of Clitheroe. history of the original parish an account of the parish of Cartmell. . . . The fourth which is
Ponsonby A. Lyons.
1872-76.
Edgar) Bygone Liverpool. Ilby ... plates reproduced from original paintings, drawings, manuscripts and prints with historical descriptions by H. S. and H. E. Liverpool, Young and a narrative introduction by Ramsay Muir. R 34968 1913. 4to, pp. xlix, 97.
lustrated
. . .
LEICESTER. DYSON (A. H.) Lutterworth: John Wycliffe's With illustrations. Edited by Hugh Goodacre. London,
. .
town.
1913.
8vo, pp.
ix,
195.
34689
LINCOLN.
1913.
4.
Publications.
Lincoln,
8vo.
Speculum
Part
II.
I.
R 25223
&
Stow.
. .
1723.
Archdeaconries of Lincoln
G.
Wake
A.D. 1705. .
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1913.
6. Rotuli
Volume
MCCIX-MCCXXXV.
English
literature.
MIDDLESEX.
[With
-
BOYTON
Chicago,
(Charles
(Percy
[1
H.)
London
xii,
in
plates.]
91 3].
8vo, pp.
346.
the
R 34924
Guild
of
CLODE
Matthew) The
early history of
of the Fraternity of St. John the Baptist, with notices of the lives of some of its eminent members
facsimiles.]
-
Merchant Taylors
London, 1888.
(Peter
:
vols.
8vo.
of
R 35306
904.
4to, pp. xv, 354.
London, [With
DlTCHFIELD
their
.
Hampson) The
and
.
R 35299 R
36227
GOMME
illustrations.]
-
(Sir George Laurence) London. London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xiv, 381.
HAZLITT
:
.
London
(William Carew) The livery companies of the city of development, and social and political
.
plates
and
illustrations.
London, 35303
By an
chat about the Broderers' Company. (Christopher) old boy and past master [i.e. C. Holford.] [With plates.] 35298 London, 1910. 8vo, pp. x, 314.
HOLFORD
NOBLE (Theophilus Charles) brief history of the Company With an appendix containing Ironmongers London A.D. 1351-1889. some account of the Blacksmiths' Company. With illustrations by George Cruickshank and others. London, 1 889. 8vo, pp.
. .
.
of
viii,
74.
35302
448
942
NORFOLK.
pp. v,
RYE
(Walter) Norfolk
families.
Norwich, 1913.
8vo,
1108.
34952
NORTHUMBERLAND.
COMMITTEE.
illustrations.]
NORTHUMBERLAND
of
COUNTY HISTORY
Northumberland.
gress.
10.
-
R
The
parish of Corbridge.
6301
By H. H. E.
Craster.
1914.
WALKER O*11168 )
Corpus
Christi,
armorial
bearings of the several incorporated companies of with a brief historical account of each company
of
Newcastle-upon-Tyne,
the
or miracle plays,
anciently performed
trading societies of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. the technical terms used in the work. [With plates.] 8vo, pp. x, 64.
Newcastle, 1824.
35297
[With 1048
illus.
OXFORD.
plates.]
62.
OXFORD HISTORICAL
Oxford, 1909-13.
8vo.
Flemings in Oxford
of
:
The
Vol.2.
63.
being documents selected from the Rydal papers in Oxford men, 1650-1700. Edited by J. R. Magrath.
A subsidy collected
.
in the diocese of
Lincoln in 1526.
Edited by
. .
... H.
. .
Salter.
1909. 64.
of Balliol College.
Edited by
;
H. E.
Salter.
1913.
WILLIAMS
in
(William) Oxonia depicta sive collegiorum et aularum Oxoniensi ichnographica, orthographica, & scenotabulis aeneis expressa a Guilielmo Williams
.
.
[Oxford,
732-33.]
R
maps
and
35771
SOMERSET.
HISTORY
Chubb
1914.
[Publications.]
[With
plates.]
Taunton, 1914.
(T.)
In progress.
list
R
1575-1914.
17765
. . .
of the printed
maps
of Somersetshire,
STAFFORD.
Abbey.
-
FORTESCUE (Mary
plates.]
Teresa)
The
history
of
Calwich
[With
London, [1914?].
8vo. pp.
viii,
212.
R
1913.
37650
8vo.
Collections for
history
i
Staffordshire.
[With
plates.]
London,
In prog
saint at
R
.
35178
SUFFOLK.
DAHL
Burgh Castle
the Irish
With
illustrations.
'hn. 1913.
8vo, pp.
xii,
248.
35629
SUSSEX.
cal
.
Sussex archaeologi.
.
collections,
General
to the history and antiquities of the county. index to vols. xxvi-1. Compiled by L. F. Salzmann.
://it;n,
1914.
11904
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
942 HISTORY:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
449
WARWICK.
HUTTON
in
Shakespeare's country.
With
illustrations
by Edmund H. New.
8vo, pp. xvi, 448. 361 73
Series.]
London, 1914.
LEE
With
illustrations
pp.77.
R
&
by 36972
Comantiquities. (Benjamin) Coventry: its history B. Poole, from authentic publications, ancient manuscripts and piled by Fred. Taunton. Illustrated by charters records.
POOLE
. .
W.
R 36970
papers on the history and antiquities Coventry comprising the churches of St. Michael, Holy the Grey Friars' monastery, St. St. Nicholas, and St. John Trinity, John's Hospital and Free Grammar School Jesus Hall, Bablake Hall, and St. Mary's Hall. From original documents. . Reprinted from an original copy. With corrections, additions, and a brief memoir
SHARP
(Thomas)
Illustrative
of the city of
of the author,
[With
portrait
and
plans.]
36971
WILTSHIRE.
Frances) Life in an English village: an economic and historical survey of the parish of Corsley in Wiltshire,
DAVIES (Maude
plates.]
London, 1909.
8vo, pp.
xiii,
319.
R
WORCESTER.
of
36070
WORCESTER.
of
the Hospital
;
S.
Worcester
Frederick
Thomas Marsh.
...
1890.
[With
plates.]
Worcester,
R
(Louis)
33956
of
YORKSHIRE.
AMBLER
The
old halls
&
manor houses
Yorkshire, with some examples of other houses, built before the year XX Illustrated by ... plates from photographs specially taken by Horace Dan and others and . . illustrations. .
.
London,
-
[1913].
35125
HALL (T. Walter) Sheffield, 1297 to 1554. catalogue of the ancient charters combelonging to the twelve capital burgesses monalty of the town and parish of Sheffield, usually known as the church burgesses, with abstracts of all Sheffield wills proved at York prior to 1554. ... Prepared by Hall. [With plates.] Sheffield, 1913. 8vo, pp. vii, 148. 33852
&
T.W.
LAMBERT
.
. .
outline of
times
Qoseph Malet) Two thousand years of gild life or an the history and development of the gild system from early together with a full account of the gilds and trading com; .
panies of Kingston-upon-Hull from the 14th to the 18th century [With plates.] Hull, 1 891 4to, pp. xi, 414. 35305 31
450
YORKSHIRE.
Saxon
burial
MORTIMER
mounds
and a description of the ancient entrenchments on a section With illustrations from Wolds. drawings by Agnes Mortimer. [Edited by T. Sheppard.] London, 1905. 4to,
discoveries,
of the Yorkshire
.
PP
Ixxxvi, 452.
35429
Leeds,
alien
Benedictines of York;
being a
[With
plates.]
R
R
35010
Series.
Record
[Worksop], 1913-14.
8vo.
In progress.
20328
49. Index of wills, administrations, and probate acts, in the York registry, A.D. 1660 to 1665, and also of the unregistered wills and the probate acts, August 1, 1633 to July 31, 1634, " " re infecta and B. and of the wills, and the wills in bundles [Edited by E. W. Crossley.J
Yorkshire deeds.
Vol.
II.
Edited by
of.
.
W.
Brown.
1914.
WALES.
GLAMORGAN, Lordship
vols.
4to.
R
1.
35271
2.
3.
4.
records
,
HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF WEST WALES. West Wales historical the annual magazine of The Historical Society of West Wales
:
..
1910-1 \(-etc.).
1 ,
Carmarthen, \9\2,
etc.
8vo.
In progress. R 33642
Snowdonia
a
etc.
Edited by F. Green.
mediaeval boroughs of
1
study of the rise and development of the municipal element in the ancient principality of North Wales down to the Act of Union of 536. ... Thesis
approved for the degree of Doctor of Science (Econ.) in the University of London. Series of [With maps.] [University of Wales. London, 1912. 8vo, pp. xviii, Literary and Historical Studies, I.]
. .
.
320.
-
R
VAUGHAN
"
34577
(
matter of Wales.
for
Preliminary
)\3.
volume:
8vo, pp.
Cymru
192.
name
Wales".
C<>
viii,
R
:
33 182
943
HISTORY
vii],
MODERN GERMANY.
:
.
ALLEN
(John William)
London, 1914.
8vo,
R
R
37921
.
BERNHARDI
(Friedrich A. J. von) Germany and the next war. Translated by Allen H. Powles. Thirteenth imPopular edition. 37268 I...n>l,m, 1914. 8vo, pp. 288. pression.
.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
943 HISTORY:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
Eduard
Leopold
von)
451
MODERN: GERMANY.
(Otto
BlSMARCK-SCHOENHAUSEN
Bismarck
:
Fuerst.
statesman, being the reflections and reminiscences of Otto Prince von Bismarck, written by himself after his
the
man and
office.
the
retirement from
[Edited by
H. Kohl.]
Butler.
.
German under
and a facsimile
-
the supervision of
of handwriting.
A.
.
J.
.
..
With
2
portraits
London, 1898.
vols.
8vo.
R
.
.
37361
Die politischen Reden des Fiirsten Bismarck. Historisch-Kritische Mit einem portrat. Gesammtausgabe besorgt von Horst Kohl. 14 vols. 8vo. R 35231 Stuttgart, 1892-1905.
. .
.
Imperial
Eighth impression.
portrait.]
A. Lewenz.]
Prince of Hohenlohe-WaldenburgPrince Chlodwig of HohenloheEdited by Friedrich Curtius for Prince Alexander of Schillingsfuerst. Translated from the first German edition Hohenlohe-Schillingsfuerst. and supervised by George W. Chrystal. [With portraits.] R 37360 London, 1906. 2 vols. 8vo.
Memoirs
of
CRAMB
A. C.
137.
(J.
England.
With a
Bradley.
[New
impression.]
London, 1914.
R 37271
London, 1914.
8vo, pp.
viii,
295.
is
37685
?
.
DAWSON
(William Harbutt)
8vo, pp.
of,
xii,
What
227.
London, 1915.
38080
FUGGER, Family
Studien
zur Fugger-Geschichte.
1.
Leipzig, 1907-13.
vols.
8vo.
32930
1907. Jansen (M.) Die Anfange der Fugger, bis 1494. 2. Lill (G.) H. Fugger, 1531-1598 und die Kunst. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der 1908. Spatrenaissance in Snddeutschland. ... Mit einem Titelbild und ... Tafelbildern. 3. Jansen (M.) J. Fugger der Reiche. Studien und Quellen 1. 1910. 4. Duevel (T.) Die Gutererwerbungen J. Fuggers des Reichen, 1494-1525, und seine 1913. StandeserhShung. Ein Beitrag zur Wirtschafts und Rechtsgeschichte. [With 'a map.]
GERMANY.
iiber
dem
Reichstag vorgelegten
R 37407
HUMBOLDT
(Friedrich Heinrich Alexander von) Freiherr. Briefe von aus den Jahren 1827 bis
1858. Nebst Ausziigen aus Varnhagen' s Tagebiichern, und Briefen von Varnhagen und Andern an Humboldt. [Edited by L. Assing.] Zweite Auflage. Leipzig, 1860. 8vo, pp. xv, 400. R 31508
452
MODERN: GERMANY.
Herausgegeben von Ludwig von Pastor. In progress. 8vo. R 6802
Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte dei Jesuitendramas
.
JANSSEN
.
.
Freiburg im Breisgau,
i,
91 3.
9.
ii.
J.
1912. iii. Die Berner Jetzertragodie im Lichte der neueren Forschung und Kritik. G. Schuhmann. 1912. T. Murner. Von 9. iv, v. Der Franziskaner . T. von Liebenau.
Deutschland.
Von ... A.
in
Von
1913.
ROSE
(John
Holland) The
origins of the
war
...
Cambridge, 1914.
problem.
37686
37923
Achte,
SAROLEA
London,
(Charles)
[1914.]
The Anglo-German
8vo, pp. 384.
[With
frontispiece.]
SCHERR
neu
(Johannes) Deutsche Kultur-und Sittengeschichte. Mit dem Bildniss des durchgeschene Auflage. 8vo, pp. xii, 664. Leipzig, 1882.
(Paul) Geschichte der Stadt Danzig.
Verfassers.
R 31474
plates.]
SlMSON
1 .
36265
his life
(by
.
A. Hausrath) and
. .
first
time.
[With
portrait.]
London, 1914.
37551
WATSON
(Robert William Seton-) The war and democracy. By R. W. Seton- Watson Dover Wilson, Alfred E. Zimmern and Arthur J. Greenwood. London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xiv, 390. [With maps.]
.
37924
WUERTTEMBERG.
von
dem
1913.
Herausgegeben Wirtembergisches Urkundenbuch. Koniglichen Staatsarchiv in Stuttgart Elfter Band. Stuttgart, In progress. 6805 4to.
943
HISTORY
siecle.
MODERN
CHERADAME
XX
fac-similes
(Andre) L'Europe et la question d'Autriche au seuil du et de cartes Ouvrage accompagne de de documents. Paris, 1901. 8vo, pp. xvi, 452. R 36997
.
. .
GRIBBLE
[With
(Francis
plates.]
life
of
the
HUNGARY.
Published by order of the Royal Hungarian Minister of Edited ... by Albert Kain. [With Hungary. 35180 Budapest, 1910. 4to, pp. 400. illustrations.]
Commerce.
KOHL
the
(Johann Ceorg) Austria, Vienna, Prague, Hungary, Bohemia, and Galicia, Styria, Moravia, Bukovina, and the military frontier. [Translated from the German.] London, 1843. 8vo, pp. 532.
Danube
31652
453
KOHL,
Reise nach
Dresden,
85
1 .
R 31 640
London,
91 4.
The
R 36274
monarchy.
944
HISTORY
MODERN FRANCE.
:
BARTON
With
portraits
(Dunbar Plunket) Bernadotte: the first phase, 1763-1799. and illustrations. London, 1914. 8vo, pp. xv, 532. R 37476
. .
BARRUEL
. .
Londres, 1793.
la revolution franchise.
R
fac-simile.
36080
BERNARD
1839.
du Forez au
(Auguste Joseph) Les d'Urfe XVIe et au XVIIe siecle. 8vo, pp. vi, 500.
foires
. .
Avec
Paris,
R 33 195
illustrations.
Sciences, Belles-Lettres et
386.
e et XVI e siecles de Lyon aux (Ouvrage couronne par 1* Academic des Arts de Lyon). Paris, 1914. 8vo, pp. R 36074
.
.
XV
BREUIL (A.
L. de) La France grandes verites historiques sur 2 vols. 8vo. Paris, 1822.
il
les
R 22746
.
. .
BROADLEY
With an
(Alexander Meyrick) Napoleon in caricature, 1795-1821. introductory essay on pictorial satire as a factor in Napoleonic With illustrations. London, history by J. Holland Rose. R 36183 2 vols. 8vo. 1911.
.
Vicomte, and LACROIX (Albert) Histoire illustree de la France depuis les plus lointaines origines jusqu'a 31420 lafinduXIX* siecle. Paris, 1900[-01]. 2 vols. 8vo.
.
1 .
2.
La La Gaule
France avant
1'histoire et la
Gaule independante.
romaine.
CHATEAUBRIAND
tombe.
(Francois
[With
portraits
and
Paris,
[n.d.]
DAUMET
8vo.
la
domination anglaise.
Arras, 1902.
pp.211.
Regeste dauphinois, ou repertoire documents imprimes et manuscrits
.
DAUPHINY.
lytique des
relatifs
Dauphine, Chevalier
Par des origines chretiennes a 1'annee 1349. 3 vols. 4to. Valence, [191 2-] 1913-14.
.
V. 32936
.
454
MODERN: FRANCE.
prehistorique,
celtique et
DECHELETTE
gallo-romaine progress.
(J
.
se ph)
.
.
Manuel d'archeologie
illustrations.]
[With
Paris, 1910-14.
vols.
8vo.
In
R
3
.
15331
2. Ardie'ologie celtique
ou protohistorique.
1910-14.
DlGONNET
DUPLEIX
(Felix)
Le
8vo.
palais
des
papes d* Avignon.
[With
Avignon, 1907.
pp. 423.
plates.]
3541
(Scipion) Inventaire Des Errevrs, Fables Et Desgvisemens Remarqvables En L'Inventaire general de 1'histoire de France de Ian de A Paris, Chez Lavrent Serres. [Printer's device beneath title.]
d Compas
d'or
M.DC.
la ville
XXV
R
35459
35414
FORNERY
(Joseph) Histoire du
portrait.]
printed.
Comte Venaissin
et
de
d'Avignon.
Avignon, [1909].
vols.
8vo.
%* 400 copies
FRANCE.
ments.
for
France and the European war. Full text of diplomatic docuAuthorised translation by the Paris correspondent of the Times the French government of the documents relating to the negotiations
which preceded the declaration of war by Germany to Russia, August 1st, 1914, and to France, August 4th, 1914. [London,] [1914.] 8vo, R 37661 pp. xxxvii, 182.
GAULLIEUR (Henri) The paternal state in don and New York, 1898. 8vo, pp. xv,
GLEIG (George Robert) The
London, 1853.
8vo, pp.
viii,
R R
Lon27999
31480
Leipsic 262.
lie
campaign.
New
edition.
Avec un
. .
Mon ambassade de) Vicomte. avant-propos et des notes par Andre Deuxieme edition. Paris, 1906. 8vo,
R
Frenchmen
:
36998
.
.
HAMERTON
London, 1878.
five biographies.
[V. Jacquetnont,
H.
Perreyve, F. Rude,
J. J.
Ampere, H. Regnault.J
R R
24363
HlLLEBRAND
(Carl) France and the French in the second half of the nineteenth century. Translated from the third German edition.
. . .
London, 1881.
29908
1
HOOPER
and
(George)
1800.
The Italian campaigns of General Bonaparte, 796-7 ... With a map. London, 1859. 8vo, pp. iv, 247.
31
497
d')
Comte.\
Autour d'une
Sixieme
edition.
Avec
gravures.
revolution, Pa.'
8vo, PP x, 338.
.
31481
455
MODERN: FRANCE.
of
1
35551
4
vols.
JULLIAN
8vo.
Paris, 1909-14.
In progress.
Vols.
1
36418
%*
and 2 are
KAISER (Simon)
Franzosische Verfassungsgeschichte von 1789-1852 in und systematischen Entwickelung. 31488 8vo, pp. xii, 678, cii. Leipzig, 1852.
KARCHER
LACOMBE
(Theodore) Les ecrivains militaires de Londres, 1866. 8vo, pp. viii, 348. illustrations.]
(Paul)
la
France.
R 31299
de Paris
et les
[With
La premiere commune
Paris, 1911.
revolutionnaire
Assemblies
nationales.
8vo, pp.
xiii,
389.
R 27045
LA NOUE
Militaires
Discovrs Politiqves Et (Francois de) called Bras-de-Fer. Dv Sievr De La Nove. Recueillis mis en lumiere par le
&
Sieur
De
Nom.
dediez au Roy tres-Chrestien Henry III1, de ce Fresnes, Derniere Edition enrichie de deux Indices, dont le premier est
&
Le second, des des Sommaires & argumens sur chasque Discours. choses plus notables contenues en tout 1'oeuure. [With portrait.] 12mo, pp. [Geneva] De rimprimerie de lacob Steer. M.D.XCVI.
[32], 1019, [37].
33749
LlLLE. Coustumes et usages generaux de la salle, bailliage, et chastellenie de Lille, confirmees et decretees par sa majeste catholique [Philip II]. Augmentees des coustumes localles de la viscomte de Haubourdin, & Ammerin. Ensemble, la declaration, ratification, confirmation, & renouuellement du priuilege d'exemption de confiscation es villes & chastellenies de Lille, Doiiay, & Orchies. Lille, 1652. 4to, pp. 139. R 3461 3
. . .
LORRAIN (M.
8vo, pp.
xii,
F.)
Le probleme de
la
France contemporaine.
Paris,
879.
350.
R
au
31
336
LOTH
de notre
(Joseph) L' emigration bretonne en Armorique du ere. Paris, 1883. 8vo, pp. 260.
Histoire d' Abbeville Troisieme edition.
.
V
et
.
VII e siecle
R
[With
35801
LOU ANDRE
du comte de
8vo.
plates.]
32883
LOUIS XL, King of France. Histoire De Lovys Vnziesme, Roy De France, Et Des Choses Memorables aduenues de son Regne, depuis
Fan
1 460. Avtrement Dicte la Chronique Scandalevse. iusques a 1 483. Escrite par vn Greffier de 1'Hostel de ville De Paris [i.e. J. de Roye]. [Ornament beneath title.] [With a portrait.] [Paris ?] Imprimee Sur
le
may
Original,
M.DC.XI.
8vo, pp.
[4,]
34610
456
MODERN: FRANCE.
.
.
LOWTH
by the
(George T.) The wanderer in western France. Hon. Eliot Yorke. London, 1863. 8vo, pp.
Illustrated
viii,
360.
R R
31
673
LUCHAIRE
(Denis Jean Achille) ... La societe frangaise au temps de Deuxieme edition. [Edited by Louis Halphen.] Philippe-Auguste. 22912 1909. iii, 459. 8vo, pp. Paris,
(Francis John) The contemporary English view of Napoleon. 35656 8vo, pp. viii, 311.
MACCUNN
London, 1914.
rois
MAUGIS (douard)
Valois a
la
Histoire du
d* Henri
mort
34905
1.
Periode des
rois Valois.
MOENS
(William John Charles) Through France and Belgium, by river " and canal, in the steam yacht Ytene ". [With frontispiece.] London, 310. R 31664 1876. 8vo, pp. xii,
:
PARIS
Ecole des
Charles.
Memoires
et
la
Paris, 1900.
In progress. R 36300
3. Morel (Octave) La grande chancellerie royale et 1'expedition des leltres royaux, de 1900. 1'avenement de Philippe de Valois a la fin du XlVe siecle, 1328-1400.
London, 1868.
Baif,
1496?- 1547.
Paris,
1900.
R 34695
.
PONTHIEU.
Le
cartulaire
Ernest Prarond.
d' Abbeville.]
du comte de Ponthieu. Public et annote par ... des Memoires de la Societe d' Emulation R 32800 4to, pp. 545. Paris, 1898.
[Extrait
.
.
%*
50 copies
printed.
PRAROND
(Ernest) La topographic historique et archeologique d* Abbeville. 3 vols. 8vo. 32801 Paris, Abbeville, 1871-84.
--
Histoire d' Abbeville. Abbeville aux temps de Charles VII, des dues de Bourgogne, maitres du Ponthieu, de Louis XI, 1426-1483. Paris, 1899. 8vo, pp. xi, 418.
R
Abbeville avant
la
Histoire
d* Abbeville.
Paris, 1891.
R
.
32722
R. de
RABUTIN (Roger
Rabutin,
Les memoires de
portrait.]
comte de Bussy.
4to.
[With
Paris,
16%.
37 179
vols. in 1.
RANKE
(Leopold von) Ursprung und Beginn der Revolutionskriege 1791 und 1792. Leipzig, 1875. 8vo, pp. x, 379. R 22734
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
944 HISTORY:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
vie
et
457
MODERN: FRANCE.
ses
RAYEUR
RlGAULT
(I.
A.) Mirabeau:
sa
oeuvres.
Moulins, 1892.
R 281 84
(Abel) Le proces de Guichard, eveque de Troyes 1308-1313. Memoires et [Societe de 1'Ecole des Charles. [With facsimiles.] 34065 Paris, 1896. 8vo, pp. xii, 313. Documents, 1.]
ROBINSON (George Thomas) The betrayal of Metz being a new and " The Fall of Metz," with a postscript containing a revised edition of
:
summary
.
. .
With
a map.
.
London, 1874.
ROMIER
Paris, 1913-14.
R 33626
1555-1559.
. . .
1.
Henri
II. et ritalic
1547-1555.
2.
La
fin
de
la
magnificence exteVieure.
les protestants,
1914.
ROUSSET
de
f
Histoire generate (Leonce) La seconde campagne de France. guerre franco- allemande, 1870-71. (Ouvrage couronne par Academic fra^aise.) Paris, [1895] -1900. 6 vols. 8vo. 37369
la
. . .
SOdT
de
DE L'HlSTOIRE DE FRANCE.
de France.]
et
Thistoire
R2485
.
.
.
G.
Du
Bellay.
Public's
...
. .
par
.
V. L.
Bourrilly et F. Vindry.
Memoires du
appartenant a 1909.
.
.
mare'chal
le
de Turenne. Publics d'apres le manuscrit autographe marquis de Talhouet-Roy, par P. Marichal. Tome premier, 1643-1653.
Les grandes chroniques de France. Chronique des regnes de Jean II. et de Charles V. Tome premier, 1350-1364. [Attributed to P. d'Orgemont.l Publie'e . . . par R. Delachenal. 1910. Me*moires du marechal d'Estrees sur la re'gence de Marie de Me*dicis, 1610-1616, et sur
celle
Lettres
d'Anne d'Autriche, 1643-1650. Public's ... par P. Bonnefon. 1910. du due de Bourgogne au roi d'Espagne Philippe V. et a la reine
. . . .
[i.e.
. .
Mary
Tome Louisa of Savoy.] Publiees par ... A. Baudrillart et L. Lecestre. 1912. premier, 1701-1708. Memoires de P. Prevost de Beaulieu Persac, capitaine de vaisseau, 1608-1610 et 1627. Publics ... par C. de La Ronciere. 1913. Henry [de La Tour d'Auvergne,] Viscount of Turennz. Memoires du marechal de Turenne. Public's le marquis de d'apres le manuscrit autographe appartenant a 1914. Talhouet-Roy par P. MarTchal. Tome deuxieme, 1654-1659.
. .
.
SOREL
9
(Albert) L'Europe et
8vo.
la revolution fran^aise.
vols.
VlLLEPREUX
(Louis de) Eleonore de Guyenne. fitude biographique. Ouvrage couronne par F Academic imperiale des sciences, belles-lettres et arts de Bordeaux dans sa seance du 21 Janvier 1861. Paris, 1862.
.
.
R 22 194
Ferdinand)
8vo, pp.
xi,
WlLLERT
(Paul
Mirabeau.
230.
[Foreign
Statesmen.]
London, 1898.
R 26566
458
HISTORY
MODERN
ITALY.
. .
DA VI DSOHN
Berlin,
1.
18%-
2.
vols.
1908.
e civile degli
. .
.
Italiani.
Seconda edizione, corretta e accresciuta nuova avvertenza. Brusselle, 1845. 8vo, pp.
coll
cdlii,
HEYNEN
(Reinhard) Zur Entstehung des Kapitalismus in Venedig. [Miinchener Volkswirtschaftliche Studien, 71 .] Stuttgart und Berlin, R 341 16 1905. 8vo, pp. 129.
:
R6033
49,
50.
*
Romana.
cura di
A.
Crivellucci.
... 2
vols.
1912-13.
MAZZINI
editi vols.
e inediti.
8vo.
[With
portrait.]
Roma,
R
R R
30677
.
.
(Pier Desiderio) Conte. Ravenna e le sue grandi memorie. Roma, 1912. 8vo, pp. vi, 407. [With plates and illustrations.]
33672
.
Con
Genova, 1914.
37466
285
bis
304.
i.]
Leipzig, 1899.
guilds
of
Florence.
London, [1906].
8vo, pp.
xxiii,
622.
35304
VALERI
plates
(Francesco Malaguzzi)
privata e 1'arte a
Milano
nella seconda
and
illustrations.]
:
il Moro. La vita meta del quattrocento. [With Milano, 1913. 4to, pp. xvi, 766. R 33993
La
corte di Lodovico
946 HISTORY
Portugaliae monumenta historica saeculo octavo post Christum usque ad quintumdecimum iussu Academiae In Fol. scientiarum Olisiponensis edita. Olisipone, 1856 [-97].
progrc
Leges
et
34070
consuetudines.
Vol. I.-1856[73].
1888[-97J.
Inquisitiones.
Vol.
I.
1843.
London, 1844.
vols.
:
8vo.
R 23135
DOZY
(Reinhart Pieter Anne) Spanish Islam a history of the Moslems in Spain translated with a biographical introduction and additional notes by Francis Griffin Stokes. [With frontispiece and map.]
.
. .
London, 1913.
R 352%
459
HISTORY
With
illus-
by A.
S. Forrest
graphs.
London, 1907.
and
KOEBEL
1909.
illustrations
(William Henry) Portugal: its land and people. by Mrs. S. Roope Dockery and from photographs. 8vo, pp. xvii, 405.
With
London, R 37153
LANZAS
estudio.
(Pedro Torres) Independencia de America: fuentes para su Catalogo de documentos conservados en el Archive general de Indias de Sevilla. Primera serie. Madrid, 1912. 6 vols. 8vo.
R
OMAN
.
.
.
33660
A history
of the Peninsular
War.
illustrations.
Oxford, 1914.
8vo.
In progress* R 29384
5.
1914.
RODRIGUEZ VILLA
historico.
(Antonio)
La
[With
portrait
and
facsimile.]
Loca
estudio
R 27558
R 37162
WHITE
(George Frederick)
[1909].
1788-1898.
London,
8vo, pp.
415.
:
947
HISTORY
MODERN
RUSSIA.
.
ALEXINSKY
(Grigory)
La Russie moderne.
Paris, 1912.
[Bibliotheque de Phi-
losophic Scientifique.]
R
:
33084
BRYCE
map.]
(James)
Viscount Bryce.
London, 1877.
Transcaucasia and Ararat being 1 876. [With frontispiece and 31635 8vo, pp. x, 420.
GERTSEN
(Aleksandr Ivanovich) Le monde russe et la revolution memoires de A. Hertzen, 1812-1835. Traduits par H. Delaveau. Illustrations de A. Schenk. Seule edition autorisee par 1'auteur. Paris,
1860.
8vo, pp.
xviii,
356.
R 24320
R 29954
KLYUCKEVSKY
C.
J.
Hogarth.
A history of Russia.
3
vols.
Translated by
8vo.
KOHL
(Johann Georg) Russia, St. Petersburg, Moscow, Kharkoff, Riga, Odessa, the German provinces on the Baltic, the Steppes, the Crimea, and the interior of the empire. [Abridged from the German.] [With
map.]
London, 1842.
(James)
8vo.
rise
iv.
.
.
R 31 769
[1914].
MAYOR
2
vols.
1 .
An
fall
economic history
bondage
right.
of Russia.
London,
R
Industry
:
37437
The
&
of
2.
&
revolution.
London, 1885.
Russian revolt its causes, conditions, and pros31418 8vo, pp. 269.
460
MODERN: RUSSIA.
OLIPHANT
of
of 1852, with a
the
(Laurence) The Russian shores of the Black Sea in the autumn voyage down the Volga and a tour through the country Second edition revised and enlarged. Don Cossacks.
.
.
.
illustrations.]
1853.
8vo,
31
380.
764
RAMBAUD
(Alfred Nicholas) Histoire de la Russie depuis les origines Ouvrage couronne par 1'Academie francaise. Sixjusqu'a nos jours. ieme edition revue et completee par Emile Haumant [Histoire 36207 8vo, pp. 963. Paris, 1914. Universelle.]
. . .
SEYMOUR
(Henry Danby) Russia on the Black Sea and Sea of Azof Crimea and bordering provinces and commercial resources of those With map, &c. London, 1855. 8vo, pp. xxiv, 361 countries. R 31 766
:
SPOTTISWOODE
in the
(William)
autumn
of 1856.
London, 1857.
8vo,
pp. x, 258.
R 31 768
VOGUE
Czarevitch of the (Marie Eugene Melchior de) Vicomte. and other studies in Russian history. Transeighteenth century, lated from the French by C. Mary Anderson. [With portraits.]
.
London, 1913.
R R
35336
WILLIAMS
of
(Charles)
in
1877, 366.
31
425
949
HISTORY
de
la
(Guillaume) Archives ou correspondance maison d'Orange Nassau. Recueil public par G. Groen van Prinsterer. Leyde, \9\4. 8vo. In progress. R 9725
. .
.
Par T. Bussemaker ... 4. 1759-1766. 1914. Quatrieme sene. 2. 1779-1782. 1913. Cinquieme s^rie. ... Par ... F. J. L. Kramer ...
. . .
MARSH
B.)
Walks
\
in
Belgium.
London, 3 660
1
SAROLEA
With a preface (Charles) How Belgium saved Europe. Count Goblet d'Alviella and a map of Belgium. London, by R 37925 8vo, pp. x, 226. [1915].
.
VARENBERGH
de Flandre
et
(Emile) Histoire des relations diplomatiques entre le comte BruxtU<>s, 1874. 8vo, 1'Angleterre au moyen age.
PP
vii,
600.
34935
CHEEVER
[1847].
(George Barrell) Wanderings of a pilgrim in the shadow of the Jungfrau Alp. Glasgow, [With frontispiece.] R 22 198 8vo, pp. x, 367.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
949
6
RECENT ACCESSIONS
461
HISTORY
GENEVA.
fevrier
Du 26 fevrier 1409 au Registres du conseil de Geneve Du 26 fevrier 1487 au 5 fevrier 1492. 1461. ... ( .)
. . . .
de Geneve.]
8vo.
1.
In progress.
. . .
1900. Public par E. Rivoire. 2. [Publi^ par les soins de L. Dufour-Vernes 3. [Public par les soins de I;. Barbey, L. Micheli 191 1. 4. [Public par les soins de E. Rivoire.]
et
V. van Berchem.J
et
V. van Berchem.J
1906. 191 1.
SlMLER Vero
Describitvr Repvblica Helvetiorvm Libri duo. non tantum communis totius Heluetiae politia, & singulorum pagorum respub. verumetiam fcederum omnium origo & conditiones exponuntur, & res gestae a temporibus Rodolphi Imp. vsque ad Carolum V. Imp. breuiter narrantur, ita vt primus Liber sit Epitome historiae Heluetiae ab inito foedere. Tigvri Excvdebat Christophorus
(Josias)
.
.
De
In
His
libris
Froschouerus, 1576.
8vo.
ff.
[8],
205,
[6].
R 36239
THOMMEN
Urkunden zur schweizer Geschichte aus b'sterIm Auftrage der Allgemeinen Geschichtforschenden Gesellschaft der Schweiz und mit Unterstiitzung des Bundes 2 vols. Basel, 1899-1900. herausgegeben von Rudolf Thommen. 4to. R 35523
(Rudolf)
reichischen Archiven.
DUMONT
pp.
Les Bulgares
(Charles Albert Auguste Eugene) Le Balkan et 1'Adriatique La vie et les Albanais. L'administration en Turquie.
:
Le
panslavisme
et
I'hellenisme.
Paris, 1873.
8vo,
31
R
Ce
251.
qu'il
642
JARAY (Gabriel Louis) Au jeune royaume d* Albanie. Ce qu'il est. [With map.] Paris, 1914. 8vo, pp.
a ete
37366
LA JONQUIERE
Universelle.]
Histoire de 1'empire ottoman depuis nos jours. Nouvelle edition entierement refondue cartes hors texte. [Histoire Ouvrage renfermant 3641 7 2 vols. 8vo. Paris, 1914.
MANATT
1913.
8vo, pp.
With illustrations.
London,
R 361 79
.
TAFRALI
Diehl.
.
Preface de Ch.
8vo,
pp.
xxvi,
312.
33931
Topographic de Thessalonique.
Avec
220.
figures
planches.
Paris,
R
.
33628
CUNIBERT
(Barthelemy Sylvestre) Essai historique sur les revolutions et 1'independance de la Serbie depuis 1804 jusqu'a 1850. [With 2 vols. 8vo. 37368 Leipzig, 1855. portrait.]
.
.
462
MODERN: MINOR COUNTRIES OF EUROPE. ELIADE (Pompiliu) La Roumanie au XIXe siecle. Paris, 1914. 8vo. R 362 10 2vols.
949 HISTORY:
.
1.
2.
1914. Les premiers princes indigenes, 1821-1828. 1914. Les trois presidents pleni potent iaires, 1828-1834.
GUERIN (Honore
Samos.
Victor) Description de Tile de Patmos et de File de 34903 [With maps.] Paris, 1856. 8vo, pp. iii, 328.
GUERIN (Honore
. .
.
carte.
Seconde
edition.
Avec.
R
:
34904
950
HISTORY
MODERN
ASIA.
GENERAL.
HERBELOT (Barthelemy d') Bibliotheque orientale, ou dictionaire universel, contenant generalement tout ce qui regarde la connoissance des peuples de 1'Orient. [With a preface by A.
.
Galland.]
-
Paris, 1697.
(Isabelle
plates.]
Fol.
pp. 1059.
34032
PHIBBS
8vo, pp.
viii,
238.
R
R
.
33783
WEEKS
. .
.
India.
Illustrated
437.
the Black Sea through Persia and author. London, 1896. 8vo, pp. xii, 31 956
CHINA.
of
BACKHOUSE (E.) (]. O. P.) Annals the court of Peking, from the 16th to the 20th century. trated. London, [1914.] 8vo, pp. x, 531.
-
and BLAND
&
.
memoirs
.
Illus-
35246
:
CARRUTHERS (Alexander Douglas Mitchell) Unknown Mongolia a record of travel and exploration in North- West Mongolia and DzunWith three chapters on sport by J. garia by Douglas Carruthers. and a foreword by ... Earl Curzon of JCedleston. H. Miller
. . .
.
With
illustrations
and
maps.
1913.
2vols.
8vo.
London, 34679
chinois
CHAVANNES
(Edouard
Emmanuel)
Les
. . .
documents
decouverts par Aurel Sjein dans les sables du Turkestan oriental. Publics et traduits par Edouard Chavannes. [With facsimiles.] 34698 Oxford, 1913. 4to, pp. xxiii, 232.
Turkistan:
bei
Bericht iiber archaologische Arbeiten von 1906 bis 1907 Kuca, Qarasahr und in der Oase Turfan von Albert Grtinwedel. Herausgegeben mit Unterstiitzung des Baessler-Instituts in Berlin. Tafel und Mil [Koniglich Preussische TurfanFiguren.
.
. .
Expeditionen.]
Berlin, 1912.
33334
14332
:
ARABIA.
-
Milano, 1913.
and the
vol.
4to.
In progress.
their empire.
R
[The Chandos
their
history
and
fall of
Classics.]
London, [1873].
36790
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
950
RECENT ACCESSIONS
:
463
HISTORY
MODERN
ASIA.
.
. .
ARABIA.
INDIA.
of the
IMBAULT-HUART
Ac-
R 301 88
etc.,
With
8vo.
Ethel Bruce Sainsbury. an introduction and notes by William Foster. Oxford, 1913.
In progress.
R 25953
.
The
ments
in
calendar of docu.
.
Office
... by William
1
Foster.
frontispiece.]
-
Oxford, 1914.
vol.
8vo.
In progress.
R 25952
[With
HALL
The
passing of empire.
London,
1913.
-
8vo, pp.
307.
34681
(Sir Thomas Henry) Provincial geographies of General editor: Sir T. H. Holland. [With maps and Cambridge, 1913. 8vo. In progress. illustrations.]
India.
. .
.
HOLLAND
states
by E. Thurston.
35136
historical
official
record of the imperial visit to India, 191 1. records under the orders of the Viceroy and
of
India.
[With
portraits
and
plates.]
London,
4to, pp.
xii,
457.
R 37563
In pro-
London, 1913,
etc.
8vo.
gress.
Vestiges of old Madras, 1640-1800 : traced from the East India Company's records preserved at Fort St. George and the India Office, and from other sources by H. D. Love. . . . With maps and illustrations. 1913. 34572
JONES
York, 1908.
-
(John P.) India, its life and thought. 8vo, pp. xvii, 448.
[With
plates.]
New
.
R 35006
With
RAWLINSON (Hugh
and a map.
illustrations
-
studies.
xiii,
229.
R 35108
.
VALBEZON
[With maps.]
Tlnde
nouvelles etudes.
8vo.
R 28361
TURKEY
Sitten
. .
.
IN ASIA. OHNEFALSCH-RlCHTER (Magda H.) Griechische und Gebrauche auf Cypern, mit Beriicksichtigung von Naturkunde
Fortschritte unter englischer Herrschaft.
. .
Abbildungen
sowie mit
Karte.
Berlin, 1913.
R 35234
SANDWITH (Humphry)
:
months' resistance by the Turkish garrison under General Williams to the Russian army together with a narrative of travels and adventures in
six
with remarks on the present state of Turkey. 31492 London, 1856. 8vo, pp. ix, 348.
464
HISTORY
nativite
MODERN
[With
ASIA.
Marie) plates and
. . .
TURKEY.
le
(F.:
Bethleem
sanctuaire
1
.....
illustrations.]
Paris,
91 4.
4to, pp. x,
6.
36200
WlGRAM (William Ainger) and (Edgar T. A.) The cradle Illustrated from sketches mankind life in Eastern Kurdistan. and photographs by Edgar T. A. Wigram. London, 1914. 8vo, pp.
of
xii,
373.
R
.
36396
.
-.
.
.
YUSUF
Shadddd.
Vita
Saladini.
Nee non
excerpta ex Historia
easdem res gestas, reliquamque historiam temporis, Itemque specimen ex Historia majore Saladini compendiose exhibentia. Ex mss. Arabicis conscripta ab Amadoddino Ispahanensi. academiae Lugduno-Batavae edidit ac latine vertit Albertus Schultens. Accedit index commentariusque geographicus ex mss. ejusdem bibliothecas contextus. Lugduni Batavorum, 732. 2 pts. in vol. Fol.
universal! Abulfedae,
1
R
SIBERIA
. .
34026
NANSEN
Translated by
(Fridtjof) Through Siberia, the land of the future. Arthur G. Chater. Illustrated. London, 1914.
R
MODERN: AFRICA. SERIES. Edited by G. W.
8vo.
fcy alien
37471
960 HISTORY:
CAMBRIDGE HISTORICAL
[With maps.]
Prothero.
H. H.
Cambridge, 1913.
the colonization of Africa
In progress.
races.
A
New
history
of
By
Sir
Johnston.
edition, revisedjhroughout
1913.
34913
(Brodie) Eighteen years on the Gold Coast of Africa, including an account of the native tribes, and their intercourse 31938 with Europeans. London, 1853. 2 vols. 8vo.
DRUM MONO
pRAZER
illustrations.
-With
Africa.
x,
228.
:
31929
among
.
peoples of
.
.
(Donald) Winning a primitive people sixteen years* work Ngoni and the Senga and Tumbuka Central Africa. With an introduction by John R. Mott. illustrations & ... maps. [Library of Missions.] London,
.
.
--
1914, [1913].
34859
travels of the
pROBENIUS (Leo) The voice of Africa being an account of the German inner African exploration expedition in the years
With plates London, 1913. 2 vols.
. . .
. . . . .
1910-12.
Blind.
illustrations.
Translated by Rudolf
4to.
:
R
&
34921
ruines antiques, eveches (J.) L'Afrique chretienne les manuscrits de Toulotte et les decouvertes archeologiques d'apres
les plus recentes.
MESNAGE
1912.
[With maps.]
xii,
8vo, pp.
592.
32719
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
960 HISTORY:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
MODERN: AFRICA.
465
EGYPT.
Sea
:
CROSSLAND (Cyril) Desert and water gardens of the Red being an account of the natives and the shore formations of the coast. Cambridge, 1913. 8vo, pp. [With plates and diagrams.]
xv, 158.
35334
DlCEY (Edward James Stephen) The London, 1902. 8vo, pp. xv, 539.
-
story
of
the Khedivate.
R 36787
.
(Jean Jacques) gypte, depuis la conquete des Arabes . Sous la a la domination fransaise, par J. J. Marcel. . jusqu'
.
MARCEL
Amedee Ryme.
et
Sous
la
domination de
Mehemet
Aly,
par
...
P.
H.
les
[With
Peuples.]
plates.]
Tous
Paris,
37428
:
SOUTH AFRICA.
illustrations
CORY
rise of
South Africa
its
a history of the origin of South African colonisation and of ment towards the east from the earliest times to 1857.
develop.
(With
8vo.
and
maps.)
London, 1910-13.
year 1820.
vols.
R
1910.
35106
1.
2.
STUART
.
Dinuzulu's arrest,
. .
trial
illustrations.
history of the Zulu rebellion, 1906, and of and expatriation. With and maps R 34593 London, 1913. 8vo, pp. xvi, 581.
.
WORSFOLD (William Basil) The reconstruction of the new colonies under Lord Milner. London, 1913. 2 vols. 8vo. [With map.]
R 35355
970 HISTORY
MODERN AMERICA.
:
NORTH.
Tross.
8vo.
-
LESCARBOT (Marc)
la
Histoire de la Nouvelle-France.
Suivie
des Muses de
Nouvelle France.
.
Avec
cartes
35228
.
BRYCE
(George)
Canadian people.
91 4.
illustrated.
London,
8vo, pp.
xiii,
621
37439
(Elfrida)
A handbook of United
8vo, pp. 320.
Minneapolis, 1910.
R 33989
[With
civilization,
plates.]
New Haven,
2 vols.
8vo.
35633
32
466
MODERN: AMERICA.
history of Louisiana.
. .
NORTH.
luxe.]
FORTIER
(Alcee)
plates.]
New
York, 1904.
vols.
[Edition de 8vo.
36442
Early explorers and the domination of the French, 1512-1768. 2. The Spanish domination and the cession to the United States, 1769-1803. 1803-1861 (1861-1903). 2 vols. 3,4. The American domination
1.
.
.
America,
1907.
-
of
a reaction.
8vo.
London, R 36464
in
LINCOLN (Abraham)
[Lincoln
letters.
From
originals
the
possession of
[St Louis,
-
[Bibliophile
R
Smith.
Society.]
35283
. .
MAHAN
critical history of
. .
.
the late
With an
M. W.
of
R
work
31
373
MORGAN
378.
(James)
The
life
Edward A. Moseley
York,
1
in the
ix,
service of humanity.
[With
plates.]
New
91 3.
8vo, pp.
35616
37928
STRAUS
(Oscar Solomon)
8vo, pp.
The American
379.
spirit.
[With
portrait.]
viii,
(Arnold Henry Savage) Across unknown South illustrations. maps plates, and R 34887 London, [1913]. 2 vols. 4to.
. . .
With
KOEBEL
Paraguay.
. .
(William Henry) In Jesuit land the Jesuit missions of With an introduction by ... R. B. Cunninghame
:
.
Graham.
Illustrations.
London,
[1913].
R
990
34998
HISTORY
MODERN OCEANICA,
:
ETC.
Entwurf einer
. . .
K.RAEMER
(Augustin
Friedrich)
Die Samoa-Inseln.
Monographic mil besonderer Berticksichtigung Deutsch-Samoas. Herausgegeben mil Unterstiitzung der Kolonialabteilung des AuswarMil Karten und. Tafeln tigen Amis. Textfiguren. R 36296 2 vols. 4to. Stuttgart, [1901-] 1902-03.
. .
KROUT
(Mary Hannah) Hawaii and a revolution. The personal experiences of a newspaper correspondent in the Sandwich Islands during the crisis of 1893 and subsequently. [With plales.] London, 1898. 8vo, 31 823 pp. xiv, 332.
MURRAY
With (John Hubert Plunkett) Papua or British New Guinea. an introduction by Sir William MacGregor illustrations. and 34576 London, 1912. 8vo, pp. 388.
. .
. . . .
STEFANSSON
London, 1913.
My
ix,
life
Illustrated.
538.
35171
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
990 HISTORY:
RECENT ACCESSIONS
ETC.
.
. .
467
MODERN: OCEANICA,
last expedition.
. . .
SCOTT
journals
R. F. Scott
the scientific journeys the surviving members of the expedition. Arranged by Leonard Huxley. With a preface by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B. . . With .
.
. .
&
Vol. I. being the Vol. II. being the reports of the work undertaken by ... E. A. Wilson and
sketches
...
by
...
E.
A. Wilson
and
illustrations
London, 1913.
2 vols.
8vo.
R 34893 R
WlSE
1
(Bernhard Ringrose) The making of the Australian commonwealth, a stage in the growth of the empire. 889-1 900 London, 1 91 3. 8vo, 34855 pp. xiii, 365.
;
CLASSIFIED LIST OF
RECENT ACCESSIONS TO
IN
THE PRESENT
ABDUL MUQTADIR,
163.
Abel (F. M.), 464. Abel (L.), 432. Abelson (J.), 180. Aberdeen University Studies, 282.
),
290.
Abrahams
Acheson
(I.),
204, 205.
458.
Aristophanes, 332.
Aristotle, 332.
Adams
Ady
303.
Arminius (J.), 174. Arndt (W.), 166. Arnolt (W. Muss-), Ars Asiatica, 292.
159.
Ashbee
Ainslie (D.j, 173. Aitken (P. H.), 438. Alberti (L. de), 439.
169. 159.
Albon
Alexander (E.), 199. Alexander (W.), 188. Alexandre (R.), 316. Alexandria Musee, 429.
Alexeieff (L.), 193. Alexinsky (G.), 459. Alivisatos (H. S.), 195. Allard (P.), 277. Allardicc (J. T.), 283. Allen (J. W.), 450. Allen (P. S.), 437. Allen (W. C.), 187.
Assyriologische Bibliothek, 432. Athenaeus, Naucratita, 333. Augustine, Saint. Bishop of Hippo, 177. Aungervile (R. d') Bishop of Durham, 157. Autenrieth (G.), 331.
Avalon
(A.), 204.
Axum,
436.
163.
Azlmu'd-Dln Ahmad,
BABELON
(E.), 296.
Bachmann Bachmann
(P.), 188.
(W.), 428.
Backer (A. de.), 160. Backhouse (E.), 462. Allgemeine Staatengeschichte, 437. Bacon (B. W.), 185. Allingham (W.), 304. Allison (W. T.), 303. Bacon (R.), 172. Allot (R.), 301. Baecker (L. de), 315. Alt (A.), 186. Baildon, Family of, 423. Baildon (W. P.), 425. Altenglische Bibliothek, 301. Ambler (L.), 449. Baker (A. E.), 306. Baker (G. P.), 309. Ambrose, Saint, Bishop of Milan, 177. Am rican College and University Series, Baker (Sir R.), 439.
283.
423.
Balch (H. E.), 290. Baldwin (C. S.), 306. Baldwin (J. F.), 441.
Ball (C. J.), 432. Ballen (D.), 277. Ballou (J.), 203.
Anderson (C. M.), Anderson, (J. D.), 291. Andrae (W.), 428.
1
AngeIl(N.),
Bang
Bankipur
Banks
468
INDEX
Barberi
(J.
469
(M.), 157.
Ph.), 286.
174.
Besso
Bevan
Bezold
Barnett (L. D.), 425. 176. Baronius (C.), 194. Barrere (A. M. V.), 285. Bibliotheque de 1'enseignement de 1'histoire Barrett (E.), afterwards Browning (E. B.), ecclesiastique, 334. de philosophic contem304. Bibliotheque Barrett (M.), 197. poraine, 171, 173. Barriere (F.j, 157. Bibliotheque de philosophic experimentale,
Barrili (A. G.), 323. Barrois (J.), 322. Barruel (A.), 453. Bartholomaeus of Pisa, 196. Barton (D. P.), 453. Barton (G. A.), 434. Bartsch (K.), 323. Bastide (C.), 442. Bates (K. L.), 284. Bates (O.), 436. Battisti (G.), 287. Bauckner (A.), 166. Baudissin (W. W.), Graf, 203. Baudrillart (A.), 457. Baudry (A.), 299. Bauer (A.), 435. Baumeister (E.), 298. Baux, Family of, 425.
174.
Bibliographical Society, 157. Bibliotheca historico-bibliographica, 198. Bibliotheque de 1'Ecole des hautes etudes,
Bibliotheque d'histoire benedictine, 197. Bibliotheque des Ecoles francaises d'Athenes et de Rome, 195.
Bibliotheque du XVe siecle, 316. Bibliotheque liturgique, 193. Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, 163. Bidez (J.), 179.
Bigg (C.), 172. Binyon (R. L.), 297. Birch (T.), 442. Bishop (W. W.), 165. Bismarck-Schoenhausen (Otto E.
Fuerst, 451. Bjorkman (E.), 300.
L. von),
Black (G.
F.), 284.
M.), 430.
(P.), 320.
Baxter
O. P.), 462.
(F.), 184.
Baylay (A. M. Y.) 193. Bayne (C. G.), 423. Beamont (W.), 198, 446. Beaumont (J.), 302.
Beaunier
(
(R.), 464.
Bluemner
),
200.
Beck
A.), 164.
(H.), 435. S.), 304. Boaden (J.), 299. Boas (F. S.), 307. Bock (F.), 193. Bodin (J.), 170. Boehl (F.), 186.
Blunt (W.
Boehme
(P.), 324.
Bokenam
(O.), 301.
Benett (W.), 176. Benezit (E. C. L.), 296. Bengesco, (G.), 321.
Bennett (C. E.), 328. Bentwick, (M.), 205. Benziger (C. J.), 291.
Berchem
Berger
Berlin
:
K. Museen, 429. Bernard (A. J.), 453. Bernhardi (F. A. J. von), 450. Bernhardy (G.), 329. Berry (H. F.), 439.
Bopp
(F.), 285.
Borchard
Bordier (H. L.), 320. Borenius (T.), 292, 297. Borgerhoff (J. L.), 299. Borodine afterwards Lot (M.), 319.
(R. de), 287. (G. H.), 311, 312, 313, 314. Bosanquet (E. S.), 435. Bosanquet (H.), 281. Bossert (A.j, 317.
Borron
Borrow
307.
470
:
Boston Public Library, 158. Bouchier (E. S.), 436. Bourdeau (J.), 317. Bourel de la Ronciere (C.), 457. Bourgeois (M.), 308.
de H.), 295.
Bussemaker
(T.), 460.
Butler (A. J.), 429, 451. Butler (H. E.), 329, 331. Butler (J. R. M.), 444.
183.
Byng
CABALLERO
Cabaton
Bradley
(R
H.), 169.
Brandes (G. M. C.), 173. Branford (V. V.), 277. Brassey (T.), Baron, 279.
Breal (M.), 285. Breccia (E.), 429.
Brehaut (E.), 283. Brenner (O.), 196. Bresard (M.), 453. Bretagne et les pays Celtiques, 289.
Breuil (A. L. de), 453.
Caix de Saint- Ay mour (A. de), Vicomte, 453. Calvin (J.), 176, 180.
164.
Brevint (D.), 195. Bridges (R. S.), 303, 304. Briggs(C. A.), 191. Brighouse (H.), 309.
British Academy, 189, 327, 436. British Museum, 162, 163, 429, 432.
Cambridge St. John's College, 164. Cambridge Antiquarian Society, 445. Cambridge Archaeological and Ethnological
:
Series, 425.
464. 423.
Camden
Brivois
(J.), 158.
Broadley
Brockelmann Brockelmann
Broglie
(J.
288.
(K.), 288.
Brooke
Brown (R), 191. Brown (H. G.), 279. Brown (L. R), 423. Brown (W.), 441, 450. Brown bill (J.), 446. Browne (L. E.), 190.
Browning (A.), 442. Browning JR.), 304. Browning (R. W. Barrett), 159. Bruce (R D.), 201. Bruennow (R. E.), 288. Brunot (F. E.), 286. Bryce (G.), 465. Bryce (J.), Viscount, 437, 459. Bryn Mawr College Monographs,
Canterbury and York Society, Capel (A.), Earl of Esssx, 439. Capes (W. W.), 198.
Cappeller (C.), 289.
198.
Carducci
(G.), 324.
Carlyle(A.), 310, 311. Carlyle (T.), 310, 311. Carnegie Institution of Washington, 285.
Caro (E.), 317. Carpenter (E.), 171. Carpenter (W. B.), Bishop of Ripon, 324. Carrington (C. R. W.), Marquis of Lincolnshire, 277.
302.
Buckle (G. E.), 444. Buddhaghosa, 335. Budge (E. A. W.), 183, 429. Buelow (B. H. M. C. von), Fuerst, 451.
Carrington (F.), 298. Carruthers (A. D. M.), 462. Cartailhac (E.), 291. Carter (G. R.), 277. Cart wright (R D.), 443. Cartwright (J.), Major, 443. Cartwright (Julia), 197.
Bugenhagen
(J.), 176.
(E.), 328. (E.), Viscountess Falkland, 306. (G. della), Archbishop of Benevento,
324.
Cashen (W.),
284.
Bumpus
Burke (A. P.), 427. Burke (Sir J. B.), 427. Burke (W. P.), 199.
C.), 189, 334. (C. S.), 284. Burnet (G.), 282. Burnet (J.), 172.
Cassola (L.), 324. Castelvetro (L.), 326. Catalina (M.), 327. Catalina del Amo (S.), 327.
Cato (M.
P.), 329.
Burkitt
Burne
(R
nian
Burnham (W.
H.), 162.
Burns (E.), 294. Bury(J. H.), 171, 423, 435. Bury (R. G.), 333, 334.
INDEX
Cestre
(C.), 443.
471
(O.), 293.
Codman
Champion
(P.), 316.
Cohn
Cohrs
Chapman
Charlanne
Cohu
Charles (E.), 172. Charles (R. H.), 189, 191. Charlton (H. B.), 283. Charlton (T. de), Bishop of Hereford, 198.
Cokayne
du
mouvement
litteraire
Charmes
(G.), 429.
contemporain, 163.
College Series of Greek authors, 184. Collignon (M.), 294.
A.), Vicomte, 453.
(V.),
Mar-
(A. G.), 173, 464. Chavannes (E. E.), 292, 462. Chazaud des Granges (A.), 278. Cheever (G. B.), 460. Cheffaud (P. H.), 307. Chenedolle (C. de), 160. Cheradame (A.), 452. Cherrier (H.), 163. Chevalier (U.), 193, 453. Cheyne (T. K.), 184. Chignell (A. K.j, 201. Child (F. J.), 302. Childers (R. C.), 289. Chinard (G.), 318. Chipiez (C.), 292.
Chater
173,
Columella (L. J. M.), 329. Colville (W. J.), 170. Comparetti (D.), 167, 434.
Comper
(F.
M.
M.), 180.
Connellan Contarini
(O.), 335.
(F.), 326.
Conybeare (F. C.), 163, Cook (Sir E. T.), 444. Cook (E. C.), 300.
Cook
(H.), 292.
Chlodwig Charles Victor, Prince, 451. Choisy (L. F.), 306. Chrystal (G. W.), 451.
Cook, afterwards Widdrington (S. E.), 458. Cooper (A. A.), 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury,
310.
Chubb
(T.), 448.
Cooper (F. T.), 281. Cope (Sir A.), 164. Copland (R.), 169. Coppenius (J.), 423.
Corbett (J. S.), 440. Cordier (H.), 158, 160, 161. Cornell University, 160.
Comely
(R.), 186.
(F. M.), 331. Cornill (C. H.), 189, 204. Cory (G. E.), 465. Cotarelo y Mori (E.), 327. Couper (W. J.), 291. Courbaud (E.), 329.
Cornford
Cours de Philosophic, 172. Courthope (W. J.), 330. Couturat (L.), 169.
Cowan
Cramb
(W.), 158.
Clemen (O. C.) 177, 196. Clement of Alexandria, 180. Clement (C. E.), 434.
Clementi
Citron
(J.
451.
Cramer-Coghill,
J. T.), 295.
afterwards
Coghill (Sir
Clermont-Ganneau
317.
Cleveland
Clissold (A.), 202. Clode (C. M.) 447. Coats (R. H.), 191. Cochran (A. S.), 288.
472
Crockett
Croft, (H.
H.
S.), 278.
Denman
Denny
Depoin
Cromwell
(O). 310.
Cross (W. L.), 308. Crosse (G.), 201. Crossland (C.), 465. Crossley (E. W.), 450.
200.
De
177.
Des Portes
Cruickshank
(B.), 464.
Destutt de Tracy (B.), 197. Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft, 428. Deutscher Verein fur Kunstwissenschaft,
167.
Cumont (R),
Cunningham
424.
De Verc
Devlin
(G.
du
C.), 293.
446.
Society, 445.
Dhorme
Dicey Dickens
DAHL
Dalman
(G.), 186.
Dalrymple (Sir D.), Bart., 443. Dalton (O. M.), 295. Dante Alighieri, 325. Daressy (G.), 430. Darmesteter (M.), 317.
Areopagite,
Daumet
(G.), 453.
Dauphiny, 453. Davidsohn (R.), 458. Davidson (T.), 281. Davies (A. C. Fox-), 427. Davies (E. O.), 188. Davies (J.), 426. Davies (J. S.), 445. Davies (M. R), 449. Davies (N. de G.), 430. Davies (R.), 296. Davis (F. N.), 198. Davis (H. W. C.), 440, 442, 451. Davis (T. M.), 430.
Doellinger
(J. J. I.
von) 196.
Dole
Dolldans
(E.), 444. (A. J.), 189. Dottin (G.), 289, 290. Doubleday (H. A.), 427.
Dorner
Douglas (J.), successively Bislwp of Carlisle and of Salisbury, 303. Douglas (Sir R.), Bart., 427. Douglas (R. L.), 297.
Doumic
282, 451.
Doutrepont
Day
Debrunner
Decharme
D6chelette
454.
Defoe (D.), 443. Delaborde (H.), Comte, 298. Delachenal (R.), 457.
Delatte (P.), 197. Dclattrc (F.), 301.
160.
Delaveau
Delaville
(H.), 459.
Le Roulx
(J.), 177.
i
(J.),
427.
Delcourt
I)
lit
DuCamp
Duck
Duevel
Duff,
/
(M.),
Ml.
(S.), 303.
/sdi
Duerr\vaechU-r(A.), 452.
(T.), 451.
Deltour (N.
F.), 321.
Duff
(J. D.),
INDEX
Dufour-Vernes (L.), 461. Dugdale (Sir W.), 287. Du Jon (F.), 170.
176. N.), 158. Feist (S.), 288. Fennell (C. A. M.), 333. Fenollosa (E. F.), 292. Fenollosa (M.), 292. 'Ferrari (G. G. de), 326. Ferrier (J. T.), 190. Ferries (G.), 190. Ferris (W. H.), 465. Festus (S. P.), 330. Feuardent (F.), 294. Feuillerat (A.), 308.
473
Dunn
(J.),
335.
Dunstan
Duval
Du
(J. E.),
319.
Dyson
orientates
vivantes,
Finsler (G.), 177. Fiorelli (G.), 434. Firth (C. H.), 423, 443.
158,
Egypt Exploration Fund, 430. Egypt Service des Antiquits, 430. Egypt Survey, 430.
:
Forman
Eliade
(P.), 462.
Fornery
454.
Elson (C.), 314. Elton (O.), 308. Elyot (Sir T.), 278.
Forst-Battaglia (O.), 425. Fortescue (M. T.), 448. Fortier (A.), 466.
Emery
Endle (S.), 291. England Public Record Englund (E. B.), 333.
rary, 173.
Office, 439.
Foucart
Lib-
(P.), 203.
Fouill<e (A.), 317. Fowler (H. N.), 328. Fowler (W. W.), 203, 331.
Enriques
Erasmus
Erman
Fox Fox
(J.), 198.
(J. C.),
439.
K.), 302.
(A.), 288.
Foxwell (A.
164.
Escuriel, Madrid,
(A.), 278. (D.), 162.
Franke
Frazer Frazer
Freer
Espinas Estrada Etudes bibliques, 185. Etudes sur le xviiie siecle, 321. Eubei (C.), 196.
G.), 178.
(J.
Freemann
P. Williams-), 445.
Eucken
(R.), 177.
Eugenico
(N.), 324.
Freud
(S.), 170.
Everhart
Ewald FABER
Faguet
Faral
Fry
(R.), 295.
Furtwaengler
(A.), 435.
(E.), 319. Farquhar (J. N.), 203. Farrer (T. H.), 280. Farrer (W.), 446.
GAIRDNER
Gale (J. Gale (N.
Gallandius
(J.), 198.
S.), 284.
474
Gardiner (A. H.), 168. Gardner (E. A.), 435. Gardthausen (V.), 167.
Garfinkle
205.
Goudelin (P.), 323. Goudie (G.), 437. Goulart (S.), 195. Graesel (A.), 166.
(R. B. C.), 297. (A.), 184. Grand-Carteret (J.), 292. Grant (J.), 440.
Garrod (H. B.), 325. Garrod (H. W.), 329. Garrod (L. R), 325.
Gast6 (A.), 319. Gauckler (P.), 293. Gaullieur (E. H. A.), 318.
Gaullieur (H.), 454.
Graham
Gramatica
Graphische Gesellschaft, 298. Grass (C. C.), 200. Graves (R M.), 316. Graves (R P.), 281.
Gavanto
(B.), 193.
291.
S.), 203.
Gray (L. H.), 178. Green (R), 450. Green (S. S.), 166.
Greenwood
(A.), 452.
Greg (W. W.), 306. Gregory (A.) Lady, Gregory (J.), 158.
Grensted
Griffith,
309.
Gerber(A.), 161.
Gerhard (G. A.), 333. Gerhards (J.), 287. German White Book, 451.
(R
LL), 430.
315.
Gerrard (T. J.), 173. Gertsen (A. I.), 459. Grubb (W. B.), 201. Gervinus (G. G.), 307. Gruenwedel (A.), 462. Gesellschaft der Muenchner Bibliophilen, Grundriss der theologischen
299.
Grisy (R. A. de), 308. Groen van Prinsterer (G.), 460. Grosart (A. B.), 194.
Wissen-
Ghent University 282. Gibb (Sir G.), 277. Gibbon (E.), 462. Gibbs (Hon. V.), 427.
:
Guarini (G. B.) Oie Younger, 325. Gudiol y Cunill (J.), 182.
Guenther (G.), 300. Guenther (R. T.), 434. GueYin (H. V.), 462.
Guerrazzi (F. D.), 326.
Guiffrey (J. J.), 295. Guizot (M. G.), 331. Guigue (M. C.), 167.
Gunkel
Ginneken
van), 285. Ginzel (R C.), 423. Gioberti (V.), 458. Glasson (E. D.), 280.
(J.
291.
183.
(H.), 189. Guthrie (A. L.), 161. Guthrie (K. S.), 172. Guzman (G. de), 327.
Godet (P.). 201. Godley (A. D.), 329. Goedeke (C.), 314, 315. Goethe (J. W. von), 315.
Gogol (N.
Goldziher
V.). 193.
(I.),
HABERT
Hackl
(I.),
319.
205.
161.
Goloubew
(V.), 292.
Hadow
Gomme
Gomperz Gomperz
Haldane
Hall Hall Hall Hall Hall Hall
Gontaut-Biron
. (A. A. de) Vicomte, 454. Gonzague (L. de), 197. Goodacre (H.), 447. Goodall (A.), 425. Goodwin (W. W.), 333. Goovaerts, (L. A.), 197. Gordon (A. L.), 305. Gordon (G. S.), 328, 329.
(E. S.), 173. (F. W.), 167. (G. S.), 170. (H.), 277.
(A.). :<17.
Gordon
Halphen
(L.), I
/fi.sfo>;>
(
Gone
>.
C,.),
Gotch (R
Hamilton
(\V.).
INDEX
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, 307.
475
(E.), 425. (R.), 458. (A. P.), 277.
Heydenreich
Heynen
antiquities,
to ancient civilizations series, 290, 425. Handbuecher der alten Geschichte, 428. Handcock (P. S. P.), 425. Hannay (R. K.), 438.
(D. J.), 437. (G.), 439. (G. F.), 435. (J. S.), 426.
Hanotaux (G.), 197. Hanoteau (J.), 157. Hardy (G.), 176. Hardy (T.), 309. Hare (A. J. C.), 202. Harnack (A.), 187, 189. Harper (C. A.), 302.
Harris (J. R.), 284, 290. Harrison afterwards Spencer Harrison (J. E.), 178.
(A.), 277.
Hirth
(G.), 294. Historical Association, 440. Historical Society of West Wales, 450. Hobson (C. K.), 277. Hobson (J. A.), 278.
Hartland (E.
S.), 178.
Harvard University, 278, Harvey (G.), 314. Haskins (C. E.), 330.
Hastings
(J.), 178.
315.
Hocking (W. E.), 179. Hodgkin (J. E.), 165. Hodgson (T.), 291. Hodson (T. C.), 291. Hodgson (Mrs. W.), 295.
Hoelscher (G.), 187. Hoelscher (U.), 428. Hoesl (I.), 166.
Haughton (W.),
306.
Haumant
Haupt Haupt
(E.), 460.
(P.), 432.
(W.), 187. Hauryi(J.), 334. Hausrath (A.), 452. Hauvette (H.), 326. Havell (H. L.), 434. Haverfield (F. J.), 281. Hawkins (E. L.), 281. Hawley (W. A.), 295. Hay ward (A.), 315. Hazlitt (W. C.), 447.
Hogarth
Holford
Hohmann
Holmes
(C.), 447.
Holscher
Home
(G.), 186.
Homer,
Hommel
Hooper
Headlam (A. C.), 188. Heaton (W. J.), 185. Heeren (A. H. L.), 437.
Hegel (G.
W.
Heikel (I. Heisenberg (A.), 168. Heitz (P.), 298. Helbig (W.), 434.
W. H. St. John), 445. Hopkinson (Sir A.), 283. Hoppus, afterwards Marks (M. A. M.), Horae Semiticae, 334.
Hope
(Sir
466.
Horatius Flaccus
(Q.), 328.
Helm
(R.), 179.
301.
C.), 189.
Henn
(J.),
446.
Houghton (W. S.), 309. Henriques (H. S. Q.), 204. Henry [de la Tour d'Auvergne] Discount Houssaye (A.), 297. Houtin (A.), 201. of Turenne, 457.
Henry
(F.), 302.
Howarth
Howell
Herbelot (B. d'), 462. Herbert (G.), 302. Herbertson (A. J.), 440. Herford (C. H.), 301.
Ho
Hermannsson
(H.), 160.
333.
U.), 287.
Herrmann Herrmann
186. (W.), 189. Hertz (E.), 307. Hertzen (A.), 459. Heseltine (M.), 328. Heumann (A.), 318. Heuterus (P.), 423.
(J.),
Humboldt
Hume
(F.
(M. A.
476
Hummelauer
Huston
Hutching (B.
Huth Huth
(H.), 165.
Hutton (M.), 328. Hutton (W. H.), 309, 449. Huxley (L.), 467.
Huyshe (W.),
Hyamson
Hyslop
Johnston (Sir H. H.), 464. Johnstone, (J. E. K.), 282. Jones (E.) Bard of Henblas, 336. Jones (E. A ), 294. Jones (F. W.), 430. Jones (H. T. M.), 201. Jones (Sir H.), 169. Jones (H. V.), 278. Jones (J. P.), 463. Jones (R.), 277. Jones (W. T.), 177. Jordan (L. H.), 179. Jourdan (G. V.), 196. Jowett (J. H.), 192. Joyce (P. W.), 426. Joyce (T. A.), 290, 425. Jucundus (J.), 329.
Emperor of Rome, 328. Jiilicher (A.), 189. Jullian (C.), 282, 318, 455. Junks (E. A.), 283. Juret (C ), 287. Jurien de la Graviere (J. P. E.), 443. Jusserand (J. J.), 317. Juster (J.), 204.
KAFTAN
(J.),
189.
Texts Society, 335. Irisson d'Hrisson (M. d') Comte, 454. Irvine (W. F.) 446.
Irish
JACK
Jackson (A. V. W.), 288. Jackson (G.), 192. Jackson (H.), 301. Jackson (H. L.), 191. Jacob (G. A.), 183. Jacob (Sir S. S.), 293. Jacobs (J.), 205. Jaeger (W. W.), 172, 332.
Jahn (G.), 186. James (G.), 208. James (M. R.), 164. James (W.), 173. James (W. H.), 455.
Janet (P.), 169, 317. Jansen (M.), 451.
Janson (M.
H.), 173.
Janssen (J.), 452. Janus, pseud., 196. Jaray (G. L.), 461. Jastrow (M.), 185.
King King
Kingsford (C. L.), 442. Kingsley (C.), 309. Kingsley, (F. E.), 309.
Jayne (K. G.), 424. Jeremias (A.), 206. Jerome, Saint, 177, 179. Jessopp (A.), 423. Jewere (A. J.), 427. Jewett (S ),284. Jewish Historical Society of England, 204. i^h Worthies Series, ''205. John of Damascus, Saint, 328. John le Romeyn, Archbishop of York, 441. Johnson (S. C.), 277.
.'n'michester, 195.
INDEX
Koelbing
(E.), 301.
477
Koffmane (G.), 196. Kohl (H.), 428, 451. Kohl (J. G.), 452, 453, 459. Kohler (J.), 433. Kgl. Hof- und Staatsbibliothek, Munich,
167, 168.
Leeuwen
Lefebvre
van), 333.
Kgl.
(G.), 430.
Legg
(J.
W.), 199.
(L.), 432.
Legrain
Gottingen, 179.
Koepp
(W.), 195.
(P.), 179. (A. R), 466. (F. J. L.), 460.
Koetschau
Kraemer Kraemer
Krencker
Krettek,
Leinberger (H.), 298. Leland (C. G.), 285. Leo XIII, Pope, 183.
(A.), 286.
Kronig (J. O-), 292. Krout (M. H.), 466. Krueger (H. A.), 314. Kuechler (R), 432. Kuehl (E.), 188.
Leo (F.), 329. Leonardo de Albion y Argensola (G.), 327. Leonardo de Argensola (B.), 327. Lepreux (G.), 157.
Lescarbot (M.), 465. Lescure (M. F. A. de), 157, 317. Lessing (G. E.), 315. Letronne (J. A.), 431.
(E.), 315.
Leumann
Levy Levy
(E.), 289.
X.), 433.
310.
(A. de), 295.
(A.), 317.
Lewenz (M.
A.), 451.
LABORDE
Laborde-Milaa
Lacroix (A.), 453. Lafenestre (G.), 317. La Fontaine (J. de), 319. Laigle (M.), 316. La Jonquiere {A. de) Vicomte, 461.
Lewinski (J. S.), 277. Lewis (A. S.), 188, 284. Lewis (E. A.), 450. Lewis (T.), 283. Lexer (M.), 286. Library of Historic Theology, 185. Library of Missions, 201. Liebenau (T. von), 452.
Lill (G.), 451.
Lille, 455.
La
Juilliere (P. de), 287. Lindsay (A. D.), 279. Lamartine de Prat (M. L. A. de), 319, 320. Lindsay (J.), 169. Lamartine de Prat (V. de), 320. Lindsay (W. M.), 330. Lamb (W. R. M.), 328. Lintilhac (E.), 317.
Lamberg (von) Graf, 295. Lambert (F. A.), 325. Lambert (J. M.), 449. Lamprecht (C. G.), 425, 437.
446.
Lirondelle
(A.), 336.
Landor
(A.
H.
S.), 466.
Langlois (E.), 316. Langlois (E. H.), 296, 298. La Noue (F. de) called Bras-de-Fer, 455.
Lansing
(J. G.),
289.
Lister, Family of, 426. Littledale (R. F.) 194. Littmann (E.), 436. Lloyd, Family of, 426. Lloyd (T.), 434. Loat (W, L. S.), 430. Lochmer (A.), 289. Loeb Classical Library, 327. Loebe (M.), 427. Loehr (M.), 186. Loew(E. A/, 167. Lohmeyer (E.), 187. Loisy (A. F.), 179. Lomas (S. C.), 440.
Political
W.), 283.
Layard (A.), 424. Layard (G. S.), 297. Lea (H.), 309. Lebahn (F.), b!5.
Loserth
(J.), 182.
478
Loth
Malone Society Reprints, 306. Manatt (J. I.), 461. Manchester University Lectures, 281. Louandre (F. C.), 455. Louis, Dauphin of France, Grandson of Manchester University Publications, 283. Mandeville (Sir J.), 424. Louis XIV., 457. Louis XI., King of France, 455. Mangenot (E.), 177.
(J.), 284, 336, 455. Loti (P.), pseud, [i.e. L.
Love (H. D.), 463. Lowe (W. D.), 330. Lowrie (W.), 42^.
(A.), 427.
Lowth
Ludwig (G.), 297. Luebben (A.), 286. Luepke (T. von), 436. Luetzow zu Dreyluetzow und Seedorf
H. V. von) Graf, 453.
Manutius (A. P.), 329. Marcel (J. J.), 465. Margaret [d'Angoultme], 322., Margoliouth (D. S.), 205. Marichal (P.), 457. Marie (A.), 322. Mariette (F. A. F.), 431.
Maritain
(F.
(J.), 174.
Markham
Marquiset
Marriott
Lumsden Lumsden
Luther Luther Luther
Luzac's Oriental
(C. B.), 442. (H.), 438. (B.), 205. (J.), 196. 196. (M.j,
Marsdin
Grammar
A. R.), 440. (A. C. C), 197. (A. M.), 460. (F. T.), 449. (J. B.), 460.
(J.
164.
M.
(G.), 168.
Marti
(C.) 288.
MABILLEAU
MacCall(H.
MacColl
(L.), 317.
Martin (F. R.), 167, 298. Martin (J.), 162. Martino (P.), 322. Martyrologium romanum, 194.
Masefleld
(J.),
305.
MacClymont
Macdonagh MacDonagh
Macdonell
(A. A.), 334. Macewen (A. R.), 199. Macfarland (C. S.), 191.
Macaulay
(T. B.) Baron, 204, 443. (F. J.), 456. Macdonald (G.), 438. Mackenzie (W. L.), 170. Mackey (A. G.), 281. McKilliam (A. E.), 199. Mackinder, (H. J.), 440. Mackintosh, (R.), 190.
Maspero (Sir G.), 430. Maspero (J.), 430. Masquerey (P.), 160, 332. Masson (D.), 307. Masson (J. P.), 320. Masson (R.), 307. Matthew (F. D.), 182. Matthews (B.), 307.
Mattingly (H.), 328, 429. Maturin (C. R.), 309.
MacCunn
Maude Maude
Maugis
(A.), 336.
(L.), 336.
(6.), 456.
Mavor
(J.),
459.
Mawry
Maclagan
(R. C.),284.
174.
Macler (F.), 167. Macmillan (R. A. C.), Macray (W. D.), 166.
Mayhew
Mazzini
Mead
174.
Magrath (J. R.), 448. McTaggart (J. M. E.), Magret (G.), 287.
Mearns
Maidment
Mcier-Graetc (J A.), 296. Meikle (H. W.), 438. Meinhold (H.), 205. Meissner (B.), 433.
426.
Molamed
Mena
Makower
Malkt
Mallock
Menche de Loisne (C.), Mcnou (R. de), 299. Menpes (M.), 297.
Mercier
(L. S.), 299. :h (C. M.), 279.
443.
INDEX
Merton
(A.), 167.
479
See Mueller.
(R.), 447.
Muller.
Muir
Muka
Meynell(E.),306. Meynell (W.), 306. Michaut (G.), 322. Michel (C.), 435. Michelant (H.), 319.
Micheli (L.), 461. Michigan University Studies, 286.
(K. A.), 425. (F. A.), 159, 442. Munday (A.), 327. Munke (B.) 286. Munro Lectures, 290. Muntz (W. J. S.), 188. Muratori (L. A.), 326. Muret (J. H. M.), 300. Murray (D.), 292. Murray (G. G. A.), 309, 328. Murray (H. J. R.), 299. Murray (J. H. P.), 466. Musee des arts decoratifs, 168. Mussard (P.), 192.
Mumby
Mignon
NADLER
Nairne
(J.),
314.
(A.), 188.
(F.), 464.
(J.),
Nansen
Nardi
(B.), 325.
Nasmith
445.
Minns
Mirot
National Library of Ireland, 161. National Library of Wales, 163. National Society of Colonial Dames of
America, 294.
Nau
180.
(F.), 180.
Moens (W.
Mohnike
J. C.), 456.
Naumann
(H.), 289.
(J.), 183.
Moisant (J.), 441. Molloy (J. F.), 299. Molmenti (P. G.), 297. Monkhouse (W. C.), 297.
Naville (E.), 185, 430. Navy Records Society, 440. Neale (J. M.), 194. Nestle (E.), 196, 288.
Neve
(E.), 159.
Monroe Monson
(P.), 281.
(Sir W.), 440. Montefiore (C. G.), 188. Montelius (G. O. A.), 290. Montessori (M.), 281.
Newton
194.
Nichols (J.), 291. Nichols (J. G.), 447. Nicole (G.), 294. Niedner (C. W.), 196. Niestroy (E.), 287. Nietzsche (F.), 174.
(G. C.), 184. (J. de), 429, 433. (J.) 466. (J. H.), 439. (J. P.), 295.
(C.), 293.
Noble (E.), 459. Noble (M. E.). 204. Noble (T. C.), 447. Noblemaire (G.), 425. Noeldeke (T.), 288. Noguchi (Y.), 334.
Norman
Nostredame
Nuttall
(J.
de) 323.
(Z.), 424.
OAHSPE,
Ockley O'Daly
203.
335.
(S.), 462.
(J.),
Mortimer
Moulton Moulton
Moultrie
(J.
R.), 450.
Mudie
O'Hara
(J.
M.), 334.
Mueller (A.), 205, 288. Mueller (D. H.), 436. Mueller (G.) Bishop of Munster, 193.
480
O'Looney
Petermann
Petit
(J.
Osmond
Otto (W. G.
Pettman
Pezel
Oulmont (C.), 316, 318. Ovidius Naso (P.), 328. Owen, (S. G.), 329.
Oxford University, 444. Oxford Historical and Literary Studies, 423 Oxford Historical Society, 448. Oxley (L. R.), 441. Oyler (T. H.), 446.
:
Phibbs
M.), 462.
Philip, of
But gundy,
322.
Philologische Untersuchungen, 328. Philostorgius, 179. Phoenix, of Coloplwn, 333. Photiades'(C.), 310.
Picot (E.), 317. Piccolomini (A.), 171. Pick (B.), 205. Picot (G.), 169. Pierce (T.), 180.
Pigna (G. B.), 324. Pike (C. E.), 439. Pilon (E.), 297.
Palmer (A. S.), 186. Palmer (J.), 308. Palmer (S.), 303, 331. Panofka (T.), 435.
Parigot (H.), 321. Paris Jtcole des chartes, 456. Paris (G. B. P.), 284, 317, 318.
:
Pimont
Pinches
Pindar, 333. Pinvcrt (L.), 321, 456. Pipe Roll Society, 441. Piquet (F.), 163.
Pistoleta, 287. Piton (C.), 284.
Parker Parker
Parkes, afterwards Belloc (B. R.), 456. Parkhurst (C. H.), 192.
Pasolini (G.), 196. Pasolini (P. D.) Conte, 458. Pastor (L. von), 201, 452. Patin (H. J. G.), 329, 332.
(H.), 425. (J.), 180. Paul (C.j, 323. Paul (C. K.), 311. Paul (H.), 286. Paul (Sir J. B.), 427. Paz y Melia (A.), 327. Peake (A. S.), 185. Peddie (R. A.), 160. Peele (G.), 306. Peet (T. E.), 430. Peet (W. H.), 159. Peiser (F. E.), 187. Pellissier (O.I, 307. Penn (W.), 202.
Poland
(F.), 435.
Pollard (A. F.), 442. Pollard (A. W.), 162, 331. Ponthieu, 456.
Paton
Patrick
Poole (B.), 449. Poole (R. S.), 185. Poole, afterwards Sandford (M. E.), 443. Porta Linguarum Orientalium, 287. Porter (H.), 306.
Posnansky
Potez
(A.), 291.
(H.), 320.
(A. H.), 450.
Powles
Pennsylvania University, 308. Perez Beato (M.), 159. de Montalban (J.), 321. Perkins (J. H. T.), 427. Perowne (J. J. S.) Bishop of Worcester, 184.
Perrin (B.), 328. Perrins (C. W. D.), 162, 166.
Prarond (E.), 456. Prasek (J. V.), 428. Prendergast (G. L.), 303. Preuss(H.), 191. Preusser (C.), 428. Provost de Beaulieu Persac
Price
(A.), 310. (O.), 186.
(P.), 457.
Procksch
Prothero (G.
\V.), 4H4.
of, 197.
Pruem, Abbey
INDEX
Robert (U.), 318. Roberts (R. G.), 425. Robertson (A. T.), 185. Robertson (J. M.), 301. Puukko (R), 186. Robertson (W.), 438. QUELLEN und Forschungen zur Sprach und Robins (E), 299. Culturgeschichte der germanischen Robinson (E.), 302. Robinson (R C.), 183. Volker, 289. Robinson (G. T.), 457. Quest Series, 180.
Puchstein (O.), 428. Pulton (R), 280. Purnell (C. J.), 164.
(J. E.),
481
430.
Robotham
(J.),
187, 190.
Rocheblave
(S.), 317.
Rod
(E.), 317.
280.
Rodin (A.), 293. Rodriguez Villa (A.), 459. Rogers (C.), 438. Rogers (R. W.), 433. Rohault de Fleury (C.), 194.
Rolfe (J. C.), 328. Rolle (R.) of Hamyole, 180.
Rambaud (A. N.), 460. Ramsay (Sir J. H.), Bart, Ramsay (Sir W. M.), 188. Rand (B.), 172, 310.
Ranke Ranke
(E.), 184.
Rolland
442.
(V.), 428.
(A.)
Romantische Arbeiten, 286. Romier (L.), 457. Ronciere (C. B. de la). See Bourel de
Ronciere.
321.
Rondet (L. E.), 177. Ronsard (P. de), 320. Rooker (K.), 306. Ropp (G. von der) Freiherr, 200.
Rorie (D.), 284.
Rose (J. H.), 452, 453. Rosenbach (A. S. W.), 163. Ross (E. Denison), 163.
Rossetti (G. C. D.), 305. Rossetti (W. M.), 305, 325.
Reinach (J.), 292, 317. Reinach (S.), 294, 295, 296, 435. Reisner (G. A.), 430.
Reiter
(S.), 177. (P. de) Sire de Beaumanoir, 320. Remond (A.), 171. Remppis (U.), 287. RSmusat (P. de), 317. Renouvier (J.), 169.
Rost
(H.), 200.
Remi
Rouse (W. H. D.), 327, Rousse (E.), 317. Rousseau (J. B.), 321.
Rousset
(L.), 457.
328.
Reuther (O.), 428. Revue des bibliotheques, Reyburn (H. Y.), 180.
Reynier (G.), 322. Reynolds (H. E.), 194,
Ricci (S. de), 292, 296.
157.
199.
Riccoboni
(L.), 326.
Richardson (A. E.), 293. Richardson (E. C.), 166. Richardson (J.), the Elder, 303. Richardson (J.), the Younger, 303. Richardson (M. A.), 448. Richepin (J.), 332. Richer (E.), 192.
Rietstap (J. B.), 428. Riezler (S.), 437. Riezler (W.), 295. Rigault (A.), 457. Riggenbach (E.), 188. Riley (A.), 193.
Riquetti (H. G.)
Roux (A.), 321. Rowley (W.), 308. Rowntree (J.), 172. Royce (J.), 169. Royds (T. F.), 331. Roye (W.), 181. Ruge (A.), 169.
Ruppin
(A.), 205.
Rye
Ryme
St. St.
283.
Asaph, Bishop of, 189. Saint- Yves d'Alveydre (A. de) Marquis, 170. Salas (C. I.), 163.
Salas Barbadillo (A. G. de), 327.
Comte de Mirabeau,
303.
Rivers (W. H. R.), 277. Rivoira (G. T.), 293. Rivoire (E.), 461.
(C. H.), 288. Salius (P.), 321. Sallustius Crispus (C.), 331.
Salemann
33
482
Salzmann
Sanday (W.),
192.
Seymour Seymour
Shadwell
Sanders (E. K.), 200. Sanders (H. A.), 184. Sanders (N.), 181. Sanderson (J. B.), 173.
Sandiford
(P.), 282.
Shand (A. I.), 444. Sharp (E. A.), 310. Sharp (T.), 449.
Sandwith (H.), 463. Sandys (Sir J. E.), 434. Sannazaro (J.), 326.
Sappho, 334. Sarolea (Charles), 452, 460. Sarrazin (G.), 301.
Sharp (W.),
310.
Sheil (R. L.), 308. Shelley (P. B.), 305. Shepherd (R. H.), 305.
(T.), 450. Sherrill (C. H.), 296.
433.
Sheppard
Sherwell
Sbaralea (J. H.), 198. Schafer (W.), 286. Scheel (O.), 180.
Scheil (V.), 432.
Shewan
Showerman
(G.), 328.
Scherr Schick
(J.), (J.),
452. 307.
Sidgwick (E. M.), 283. Sieglin, (E. von), 431. Sieveking (J.), 435. Sievers (E.), 286, 315. Siger de Courtrai, 174. Sihler ( E. G.), 329.
Sim
Schrenk-Notzing (A. von) Freiherr, Schroeder (L. von), 335. Schubart (W.), 168.
170.
Schuhmann
(G.), 452.
(V. G.), 279. 461. Simon (A. L.), 163. Simon (J.), 317. Simpkins (J. E.), 284. Simpson (Patrick C.), 181. Simson (Paul), 452. Simson (F. H.), 173. Siret (L.), 291. Skeat (W. W.), 285, 302, 445.
Simkhovich
Simler
Schwab
Skinner (J.), 186. Slade (W. A.), 158. Sladen (D.), 305.
Slater (D. A.), 331. Slater (G.), 277.
Scio de San Miguel (F.), 184. Scot (Sir J.) Lord Scotstarvet, 438.
Scoto
(O.), 171.
Scott (J. R.), 164. Scott (7/cm. Mrs. M.), 310. Scott (H. F.), 467. Scottish History Society, 43S. Scottish Text Society, 336. Seager (H. W.), 338.
Sledmere (E.), 446. Smith (A. L.), 196. Smith (E. G.), 197. Smith (G.), 433. Smith (G. C. M.), 314. Smith (G. E.), 430, 431. Smith (H. F. R.), 278.
Smyth
Soane
Seeberg Seeberg
(E.), 195.
Seghers
(H.), 298.
SeidenstiicUer (K.), 204. Selbie (J. A.) 178. Selden Society, 280.
Sobolevski (S.), 166. Societa bibliografica italiana, 161. Socit de 1'Histoire dc France, 457, Socit6 des anciens textes francais, 317. Soci6t6 d'Histoire et d'Arch^ologie de
Seneca
INDEX
Solloway
(J.),
483
(A. von) FreiJierr, 195. (F.), 318.
450.
Somersetshire Archaeological
&
Stromberg
Nat. Hist
Strowski
.Stuart
Sommer
(J.),
465.
Sommerville (D. M. Y.), Sonneck (O. G.), 158. Sonnino (G.), 162.
Sorel (A.), 317, 437, 457. Sorel (C.), 322.
Succo
(F.), 297.
446.
Suetonius Tranquillus (C.), 328. Surgeon-General's Office, U.S.A., 164. Surtees Society, 441. Sussex Archaeological Society, 448.
184.
C.), 305.
441.
Spelman
TACITUS (P. C.), 328. Tafrali (O.), 461. Tagore (A. N.), 204. Tagore (R. N.), 335.
Tallmadge (N.
P.), 170.
Spencer (G. d.) 2nd Earl Spencer, 440. Spencer (W. B.), 291. Spenser (E.), 302. Speyer (H.), 441.
Spiegelberg (W.), 431.
Spielmann (M.
H.), 297.
Spiro (S.), 289. Spitta (R), 187. Spottiswoode (W.), 460. Sprat (T.), 302. Springer (J.), 298.
Spuller (E.), 317.
(G. J.), 171. Tangl (M.), 166. Tapley-Soper (H.), 445. Tatham (G. B.), 199. Tayler (A.), 426. Tayler (H.), 426. Taylor (J.), 177, 181. Tello, 434.
Tamson
Ssymank (P. W.), 282. Staerk (A.), 168, 198. Staerk (W.), 186. Staley (E.), 458.
Staley (V.), 193. Stalker (J.), 190, 308.
Stapfer (P.), 317. Stapleton (H.), 199.
Statius (P. P.), 331. Steed (H. W.), 453. Steele (R.), 172.
Tennyson (A.) Lord, 305. Text and Translation Society, 334. Thackeray (H. St. J.), 204. Theakston (L. E. L.), 426. Theatergeschichtliche Forschungen, 307.
Theocritus, 334.
Theodor
Thibaut
(H.), 287.
(J. B.), 168.
Theophylactus, 181.
Thiele (E.), 196. Tholin (G.), 164.
Thomas (A.), 317. Thomas (D. R.), 199. Thomas (E.), 311. Thomas Aquinas, Saint,
182.
Thommen
(R.), 461.
Steinmeyer (E. E.), 286. Stenton (F. M.), 444. Stephens (W.), 426. Stevenson (J. H.), 428.
Sterling (R.), 289.
Steuernagel
of Baldynneis, 336. 328. Stiefel (H.), 286. Stock (St. G.), 184. Stodart (R. R.), 428. Stokes (F. G.), 458. Stokes (H. P.), 204, 445. Stopes (C. C.), 308. Stork (C. W.), 308.
(J.)
(J. A.),
Stewart Stewart
Thommerel (J. P.), 285. Thompson, afterwards Meynell Thompson (E. N. S.), 304. Thompson (F.), 306. Thompson (J. M.), 190. Thompson (H.), 168. Thompson (H. Y.), 168. Thompson (W. N.), 198. Thomson (J. A. K.), 332.
Thureau Dangin
Thurston Tiddy (R.
(F.), 434.
Toland
(J.),
304.
(F.), 434.
Storr (V. F.), 199. Stoss (V.), 298. Strack (H. L.), 287. Strassmaier (J. N.), 433. Straus (O. S.), 466. Straus (R.), 292.
Streit (Carl), 201. Strickland (W. G.), 296.
Tomassetti Tomassetti
Tomkins
Tournebize (H.
Tournoux
484
Tout
(T.
Townshend
Toynbee
Trelawny
(M. E. M. de) Vicomte, 33S, 460. Vbiture (V.), 321. Voivenel (P.), 171. Voretzsch (C.), 286.
Vbgii<
WADDING
(L.), 198.
Waddington
Wade
Walker (H.), 301. Walker (J.), 448. Turberville Walker (Janie), 301. Turner (G. Walker (K.), 446. Turner (G. Walker (W. L.), 191. Turner (L. Tyard (P. de) Bishop of Chdlons-sur-Sadne, Wallerand (G.), 174. 321. Wandesforde, Family
171. (A. S.), 423. J.), 280, 445. L.), 199. M.), 300.
of,
426.
Tyler
(R.), 439.
Types of English Literature, 302. Tyrrell (G.), 190. Tzschirner (H. G.), 196.
296.
UACA
(R), 159.
A.), 437.
P.), 199. Wardrop (J. O.), 163. Warrack (G.), 326. Warren (F. E.), 193. Warschauer (O.), 279.
Ukert (R
Ulrich,
Washington
158.
Library of Congress,
157,
319. Underbill (E.), 180. Ungnad (A.), 433. University de Paris, 300. University of Michigan Studies, 184. University of Toronto Studies, 168.
Madame,
Unwin
(R.),281.
Waterhouse (G.), 314. Waterhouse (P.), 281. Watkins (C. H.), 188. Watson (R. W. S.), 452. Watt (F.), 310. Watts (D.), 299.
Watzinger
(C.), 428.
Wauwermans
Webb
(S.), 277.
VACANT
Valeri
(A.), 177.
Weber
(R
M.), 458.
Van Bever (A.), 318. Varenbergh (6.), 460. Varro (M. T.), 329.
Vasari (G.), 293.
(W.), 429. (E.), 426. Weeks (E. L.), 462. Weeks (J. H.), 291. Weigall (A. E. P. B.), 431. Weill (G.), 280.
Weekley
Weisbach (R
H.)
H.), 432.
Vaughan
Vaughan,
Venedey (J.), 439. Venn (J.), 282. Venn (J. A.), 282.
Venturi
(A.), 293. Vcrgilius Maro (P.), 331. Verrall (A. W.), 304, 329, 332. Verrall (M. de G.), 304.
Weitbrecht (H. V.), 161. Weller (C. H.), 435. Weller (E.), 162. Wellesley (R. C.) Marquis, 444. Wellhausen (J.), 186.
Wellmann
(M.), 328.
(J.
Welpton (W. P.), 282. Welsh afterwards Carlyle Wendel (C.), 334. Wendling (E.), 188.
B.), 311.
W enger (L.),
T
168.
Viaud
Vidal
(P.), 436,
(J.
Wesley (J.), 202. Wcstcrmarck (E. A.), 284. Westminster Library, 193. Weston (J. L.), 180, 302.
M.), 195.
Wetmore
Wetter
Vigener
Villepreux (L.
d'), 457.
4fi4.
Vogt
(E.), 200.
(G. P.), 187. Weymouth (R. F.), 184. Wharton (E.), 293. Wharton (H. T.), 334. Whistler (C. W.), 441. Whitaker (T. D.), 447. White (G. F.), 459.
INDEX
White (H.), 327. White (N. J. D.), 164. White (T. H.), 303. Whitehead (G.), 202. Whitehead (R. B.), 294. Whitehouse (J. H.), 282.
Whitley (W. T.), 201, 202. Whitney (J. P.), 423. Whitwell (R. J.), 440.
(G. R.), 328. (R. M.), 193. Woolf(C. N. S.), 278. Worcester (W.), 445. Wordsworth (C.), 199. Wordsworth (W.), 306. Workman (H. B.), 198. Worsfold (W. B.), 465. Wright (C. T. H.), 164. Wright (E. M.), 285. Wright (G. H. B.), 205. Wright (W. C.), 328. Wuerttemberg, 452.
485
Woodward
Wooley
Widmann
Wiffen (B.
Wulf (M.
Wulff
(A.), 286.
Wyatt Wyatt
Wilson (A.), 308. Wilson (E. A.), 467. Wilson (J. D.) 157, 306, 310, 452. Winckler (H.), 432. Windelband (W.), 169. Windisch (E.), 441. Windisch (H.), 187. Winstanley (E. W.), 191. Winstedt (E. O.), 328. Winstedt (R. O.) 289. Wisdom of the East Series, 203, 334.
(B. R.), 467. (T. J.), 157, 159, 304, 311, 312, 313, 314. Withers (H.), 278. Wohlenberg (G.), 188. Wolf (A.), 181. Wolfstieg (A.), 160.
XENOPHON,
328.
YALE
Young
Wise Wise
IZ>
Shaddad, 464.
Wollstonecraft, afterwards 284,311. Wood (M. H. M.), 200. Woods (M. L.), 306.
Godwin
(M.),
ZAHN (T.), 188. Zeitschrift fur romanische philologie, 286. Zenner (J. K.), 186. Zhukovsky (V. A.), 288. Zimmern (A. E.), 452. Zscharnack (L.), 180. Zumbini (B.), 323. Zwingli (H.), 177, 182.
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