T. FISHER UNWIN, Publisher, THE STORY OF THE NATIONSA SERIES OF POPULAR HISTORIES. Each Volume is furnished with Maps, Illustrations, and Index. Large Crown 8vo., fancy cloth, gold lettered, or Library Edition, dark cloth, burnished red top, 5s. each.—Or may be had in half Persian, cloth sides, gilt tops; Price on Application. 1. Rome. By Arthur Gilman, M.A. 2. The Jews. By Professor J. K. Hosmer. 3. Germany. By the Rev. S. Baring-Gould. 4. Carthage. By Professor Alfred J. Church. 5. Alexander’s Empire. By Prof. J. P. Mahaffy. 6. The Moors in Spain. By Stanley Lane-Poole. 7. Ancient Egypt. By Prof. George Rawlinson. 8. Hungary. By Prof. Arminius Vambery. 9. The Saracens. By Arthur Gilman, M.A. 10. Ireland. By the Hon. Emily Lawless. 11. Chaldea. By Zenaide A. Ragozin. 12. The Goths. By Henry Bradley. 13. Assyria. By Zenaide A. Ragozin. 14. Turkey. By Stanley Lane-Poole. 15. Holland. By Professor J. E. Thorold Rogers. 16. MediÆval France. By Gustave Masson. 17. Persia. By S. G. W. Benjamin. 18. Phoenicia. By Prof. George Rawlinson. 19. Media. By Zenaide A. Ragozin. 20. The Hansa Towns. By Helen Zimmern. 21. Early Britain. By Professor Alfred J. Church. 22. The Barbary Corsairs. By Stanley Lane-Poole. 23. Russia. By W. R. Morfill. 24. The Jews under the Roman Empire. By W. D. Morrison. 25. Scotland. By John MacKintosh, LL.D. 26. Switzerland. By R. Stead and Lina Hug. 27. Mexico. By Susan Hale. 28. Portugal. By H. Morse Stephens. 29. The Normans. By Sarah Orne Jewett. 30. The Byzantine Empire. By C. W. C. Oman, M.A. 31. Sicily: Phoenician, Greek and Roman. By the late E. A. Freeman. 32. The Tuscan and Genoa Republics. By Bella Duffy. 33. Poland. By W. R. Morfill. 34. Parthia. By Prof. George Rawlinson. 35. The Australian Commonwealth. By Greville Tregarthen. 36. Spain. By H. E. Watts. 37. Japan. By David Murray, Ph.D. 38. South Africa. By George M. Theal. 39. Venice. By the Hon. Alethea Wiel. 40. The Crusades: The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. By T. A. Archer and Charles L. Kingsford. 41. Vedic India. By Zenaide A. Ragozin. 42. The West Indies and the Spanish Main. By James Rodway, F.L.S. 43. Bohemia. By C. E. Maurice. 44. The Balkans. By W. Miller. 45. Canada. By Dr. Bourinot. 46. British India. By R. W. Frazer, LL.B. 47. Modern France. By AndrÉ le Bon. The Franks. By Lewis Sergeant, B.A. “Such a universal history as the series will present us with in its completion will be a possession such as no country but our own can boast of.... Its success on the whole has been very remarkable.”—Daily Chronicle. BUILDERS OF GREATER BRITAINEDITED BY A Set of 10 Volumes, each with Photogravure Frontispiece, The completion of the Sixtieth year of the Queen’s reign will be the occasion of much retrospect and review, in the course of which the great men who, under the auspices of Her Majesty and her predecessors, have helped to make the British Empire what it is to-day, will naturally be brought to mind. Hence the idea of the present series. These biographies, concise but full, popular but authoritative, have been designed with the view of giving in each case an adequate picture of the builder in relation to his work. The series will be under the general editorship of Mr. H. F. Wilson, formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and now private secretary to the Right Hon. J. Chamberlain at the Colonial Office. Each volume will be placed in competent hands, and will contain the best portrait obtainable of its subject, and a map showing his special contribution to the Imperial edifice. The first to appear will be a Life of Sir Walter Ralegh, by Major Hume, the learned author of “The Year after the Armada.” Others in contemplation will deal with the Cabots, the quarter-centenary of whose sailing from Bristol has recently been celebrated in that city, as well as in Canada and Newfoundland; Sir Thomas Maitland, the “King Tom” of the Mediterranean; Rajah Brooke, Sir Stamford Raffles, Lord Clive, Edward Gibbon Wakefield, Zachary Macaulay, &c., &c. The Series has taken for its motto the Miltonic prayer:—
1. SIR WALTER RALEGH. By Martin A. S. Hume, Author of “The Courtships of Queen Elizabeth,” &c. 2. SIR THOMAS MAITLAND; the Mastery of the Mediterranean. By Walter Frewen Lord. 3. JOHN CABOT AND HIS SONS; the Discovery of North America. By C. Raymond Beazley, M.A. 4. LORD CLIVE; the Foundation of British Rule in India. By Sir A. J. Arbuthnot, K.C.S.I., C.I.E. 5. EDWARD GIBBON WAKEFIELD; the Colonisation of South Australia and New Zealand. By R. Garnett, C.B., LL.D. 6. RAJAH BROOKE; the Englishman as Ruler of an Eastern State. By Sir Spenser St. John, G.C.M.G. 7. ADMIRAL PHILIP; the Founding of New South Wales. By Louis Becke and Walter Jeffery. 8. SIR STAMFORD RAFFLES; England in the Far East. By the Editor. THE CENTURY DICTIONARYSix volumes bound in cloth, gilt lettered, sprinkled edges, per vol. £2 2s. Do. in half morocco, marbled edges, per vol. £2 16s. 24 Parts, strongly bound in cloth, per part, 10s. 6d. Bookcase for holding the Dictionary, price £3 3s. Size of each volume 13 in. × 9½ in. × 2¼ in. PRESS NOTICES. “The exceptional merits of the ‘Century Dictionary’ are beyond dispute.”—Times. “One of the most notable monuments of the philological industry of the age.”—Daily Telegraph. “It is a work of great ability, fine scholarship, and patient research in many widely different departments of learning.”—Standard. “As we turn the leaves of this splendid work, we feel acutely the inadequacy of any description apart from actual handling of the volumes.”—Daily Chronicle. “It is fuller, more complete, with fewer faults than any rival.”—Pall Mall Gazette. THE CYCLOPÆDIA OF NAMESCloth, £2 2s. net.; half morocco, £2 15s. net. Size—13 in. × 9½ × 2¼ in. PRESS NOTICES. “A book of ready reference for proper names of every conceivable kind.”—Daily News. “The ‘CyclopÆdia of Names’ deserves to rank with important works of reference, for though its facts on any given subject are, of course, elementary, they can be quickly found, and, on the whole, they are admirably chosen.”—Standard. “A most handsome and solid volume.... It will be found exceedingly useful.... It is beautifully printed.”—Daily Chronicle. “A most valuable compilation, and one which will be valued for the great mass of information which it contains.”—Glasgow Herald. “Every library of reference, no matter how richly stocked, will be the richer for having it ... may be consulted freely without the inconveniences of human haulage.”—Scotsman. 11, Paternoster Buildings, London, E.C. |