294 CARNEGIE INSTITUTION OF WASHINGTON. 



ford on the manuscript records of Connecticut during the eighteenth 

 century. 



Because of the dispersion of the material, the large proportion of 

 which is in manuscript, and because of the lack of satisfactory earlier 

 treatises on the period as a whole, the work necessarily progresses 

 slowly. 



Bandelier, Adolf F., New York, N. Y. Grant No. 751, allotted Decem- 

 ber 14, 1911. Completion of a documentary history of the Rio Grande 

 Pueblo Indians of New Mexico. (For previous report see Year Book 

 No. 11.) S2,000 



Since my last report I have continued my studies in public and 

 private archives in Mexico, gathering all that was accessible and 

 examining critically all documents related to my task. I have, in 

 the meantime, also paved the way for work in Spain by establish- 

 ing connections with persons who will assist us in every possible way. 



CLASSICS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW. 



Scott, James Brown, General Editor, Washington, District of Columbia. 

 Grant No. 712, allotted December 13, 1910. Preparation and publi- 

 cation of the Classics of International Law. (For previous reports see 

 Year Books Nos. 9-11.) $10,000 



The project for the republication of the Classics of International 

 Law was submitted to the Carnegie Institution of Washington in 

 my letter of November 2, 1906, and shortly afterwards I was author- 

 ized to take supervision of the work as general editor. Two of the 

 works specified in the original proposal have already been published, 

 namely: the text of Zouche entitled "Juris et Judicii FeciaHs, sive. 

 Juris inter Gentes et Quaestionum de Eodem Explicatio," edited b}^ 

 Dr. Thomas Erskine Holland, the translation of which was made by 

 Mr. J. L. Brierly. This work appeared in 1912. The very impor- 

 tant treatise of Ayala entitled "De Jure et Officiis Bellicis et Dis- 

 cipHna Militari" was edited by the late Professor John Westlake, 

 the translation was made by Mr. John Pawley Bate, and the two 

 volumes were published in the course of the present year. 



The text of Grotius entitled "De Jure Belli ac Pacis" has been 

 photographed from the edition of 1646, and the volume has been 

 issued. The translation has been made by Dr. John D. Maguire, 

 professor of Latin in the Catholic University of America, and will 

 doubtless appear in the year 1914. 



Vattel's "Droit des Gens," first pubhshed in 1758, has been repro- 

 duced photographically, and the English translation has been made 

 by Dr. Charles G. Fenwick. It is highly probable that the work will 

 be issued as a whole in the course of 1914. 



The tractate by the Italian jurist, Legnano, entitled "De Bello, de 

 Represaliis, et de Duello," written in 1360, but first published in 1477, 



