THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 



15 



LIFE AND TIMES OF STEIN, OR GERMANY 



AND PRUSSIA IN THE NAPOLEONIC AGE, 

 by J. R. Seeley, M.A., Regius Professor of Modern History in the 

 University of Cambridge. \_Iii the Press. 



THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE FROM 

 THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE ROYAL 

 INJUNCTIONS OF 1535, 

 by James- Bass Mullinger,. M.Av Demy 8vo. cloth (734 pp.), \2s. 



"Any book which throws light on the ori- 



"We have hitherto had no satisfactory 

 book in, English on the subject. . . . The.fourth 

 chapter contains a most interesting account 

 of "Student Life in the Middle Ages,'' but an 

 abstract of it would take up so much space- 

 that we must refer our readers to the book 

 itself. Our difficulty throughout has been to 

 give any adequate account of a book in which 

 so much interesting information is condensed, 

 and we must for the present give up any hope 

 of describing the chapters on 'Cambridge 

 at the Revival of Classical Learning' and 

 ' Cambridge at the Reformation,' though a 

 better account nowhere exists of one of the 

 most eventful periods of our history. . . . 

 We trust Mr Mullinger will yet continue 

 his history and bring it down to our own 

 day. " — Academy. 



HISTORY 



gin and early history of our Universities 

 will always be gladly welcomed by those who 

 are interested in education, especially a book 

 which is so full of varied information as Mr 

 MuUinger's History of Cambridge. He has 

 brought together a mass of instructive details 

 respecting the rise and progress, not only of 

 his own University, but of all the principal 



Universities of the Middle Ages We 



hope some day that he may continue his 

 labours, and give us a history of the Uni- 

 versity during the troublous times of the Re- 

 formation and the Civil War." — AthencEU7n. 

 " Mr IMullinger's work is one of great 

 learning and research, which can hardly fail 

 to become a standard book of reference on 

 the subject. . . . We can most strongly recom- 

 mend this book to our readers." — Spectator. 



OF THE COLLEGE OF ST JOHN 

 THE EVANGELIST, 

 by Thomas Baker, B.D., Ejected Fellow. Edited by John E. B. 

 Mayor, M.A., Fellow of St John's. Two Vols. Demy 8vo. 24^'. 



" It may be doubted whether there is any 

 MS. in existence which Cambridge men have 

 been more anxious to see committed to the 

 press, under competent editorship, than the 

 History of St John's by that Socius Ejectus 

 Thomas Baker, whose life Walpole desired 



to write It is perhaps well for Baker's 



reputation . . that it was reserved for so pecu- 

 liarly competent an editor as Mr Mayor to 

 give this history to the world. . . If itbe highly 

 to the credit of the Syndics of the Pitt Press 

 to have printed the book, the manner in 

 which he has edited it reflects no less credit 

 upon Mr Mayor." — Notes and Queries. 



"To antiquaries the book will be a source 

 of almost inexhaustible amusement, by his- 

 torians it will be found a work of considerable 

 service on questions respecting our social 

 progress in past times ; and the care and 

 thoroughness with which Mr Mayor has dis- 

 charged his editorial functions are creditable 

 to his learning and industry." — Athe7icpum. 



" The work displays very wide reading, 



and it will be of great use to members of the 

 college and. of the university, and, perhaps, 

 of still greater use to students of English 

 history, ecclesiastical, political, social, literary 

 and academical, who have hitherto had to be 

 content with 'Dyer.'" — Academy. 



" It may be thought that the history of a 

 college cannot be particularly attractive. The 

 two volumes before us, however, have some- 

 thing more than a mere special interest for 

 those who have been in any way connected 

 with St John's College, Cambridge; they 

 contain much which will be read with pleasure 

 by a far wider circle. IMany of the facts 

 brought under our notice are of considerable 

 value to the general historical student. . . . 

 Every member of this ancient foundation 

 will recognize the worth of Mr Mayor's 

 labours, which, as it will appear, have been 

 by no means confined to mere ordinary edi- 

 torial work. . . . The index with which Mr 

 Mayor has furnished this useful work leaves 

 nothing to be desired." — Spectator. 



THE ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY OF THE 

 UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGES OF CAMBRIDGE, 



By the late Professor WILLIS, M.A. With nmnerous Maps, Plans, 



and Illustrations. Continued to the present time, and edited 



by John Willis Clark, M.A., formerly Fellow 



of Trinity College, Cambridge. [/« the Press. 



London : Cambridge Warehouse^ 1 7 Paternoster Row. 



