ROUSSEAU, LOVELL H. 



XIII. Its reigning house, 744; revenues, 

 744; army, 744; commerce, 744; legislative 

 proceedings, 745. 



ROUSSEAU, LOVELL H. IX. Birth, 622; 

 death, 622 ; early life, 622 ; career, 622. 



EOYE, E. J. XII. Obituary, 640. 



RUBEN, CHRISTOPH, a German painter. XV. 

 Biographical sketch of, 694. 



RUBIDIUM. III. How obtained, 811; feat- 

 ures, 811. 



RUCKERT, HEINRICH, a German historian. 

 XV. Biographical sketch of, 694. 



RUMELS, HARRISON C. XIV. Decease of, 

 624. 



RUMELS, cx-GoTcraor HARRISON E. XIII. 

 Obituary of, 588. 



RUNYON, Judge PETER P. II. Obituary 

 of, 591. 



RUOFF, CHARLES. XIV. Decease of, 624. 



RUSH, Right RCY. CHRISTOPHER, Bishop of 

 African Methodist Episcopal Church. XIII. 

 Obituary of, 575. 



RUSHDI PACHA. XII. Appointed Grand- 

 Vizier of Turkey, 768. 



RUSSELL, ARCHIBALD. XI. Obituary, 673. 



RUSSELL, FRANCIS W., HI. P. XI. Obituary 

 of, 600. 



RUSSELL, Earl. II. Letter on the emanci- 

 pation proclamation, 834. 



V. Letter recognizing the end of the war, 309. 



XI. Author of limited vote, 681. 



XIV. Decease of, 663. 



RUSSEL, Rev. JOHN LEWIS, A. A. S., Congre- 

 gational clergyman and scientist. XIII. Obit- 

 uary of, 572. 



RUSSEL, WILLIAM, elocutionist. XIII. Obit- 

 uary of, 571. 



RUSSEL, Colonel WILLIAM H. (" Owl Russel"). 

 XIII. Obituary of, 583. 



RUSSIA. I. Its size, 636 ; races of people, 

 636 ; Government, 636 ; causes of disturbance, 

 636 ; outbreak in Poland, 637; circumstances, 

 637 ; agronomic societies suppressed, 637 ; serf- 

 dom of Russia, 638 ; numbers, 638 ; condition 

 of serfs, 638; ways of becoming free, 638; 

 territorial acquisitions, 639 ; conduct toward 

 the United States, 639 ; finances, 639 ; inter- 

 nal improvements, 639 ; education, 639. 



II. Population, 749 ; relations with Poland, 

 749; emancipation of serfs, 750; feelings in 

 Russia, 750 ; excitement produced by the pro- 

 posed radical changes, 750 ; action of the Gov- 

 ernment, 751 ; decree of the Emperor, 751. 



RUSSIA. 



379 



III. Reigning family, 822 ; progress of 

 emancipation, 822. 



IV. The Government, 727; nobility, 728; 

 area, 728 ; population, 728 ; religion, 728 ; 

 finances, 728; commerce, 728; army, 728; 

 navy, 729; Polish Revolution, 729; statistics 

 relative to, 729 ; war in the Caucasus, 730 ; 

 pacification. of Poland and the Caucasus, 730; 

 internal reforms, 730 ; constitutional form of 

 government, 730 ; fires in the provinces, 731. 



V. Emperor and heir-apparent, 750 ; area 

 and population, 750 ; political divisions, 750 ; 

 new provinces of Toorkistan, 750 ; largest cit- 

 ies, 750 ; revenue, 750 ; public debt, 750 ; ex- 

 ports and imports, 750; movement of ship- 

 ping, 750 ; army and navy, 750 ; death of the 

 Grand-duke Nicholas Alexandrovitch, 750 ; 

 convocation of the first Provincial Diets, 750 ; 

 provincial rural courts, 750; proceedings of 

 the Provincial Assembly of Moscow, 751 ; ac- 

 tion of the Provincial Diet of St. Petersburg, 

 751 ; Assemblies of Nobles adverse to the Pro- 

 vincial Assemblies, 751 ; address to the Czar 

 of the Assembly of Nobles of Moscow, 751 ; 

 rescript of the Czar in reply to the nobles, 

 752 ; progress in Central Asia, 752 ; storming 

 and occupation of Tashkend, 752 ; measures 

 of General Tchernaieff, 752; religious tolera- 

 tion, 752 ; reorganization of Poland, 752 ; 

 measures for the extirpation of the Polish na- 

 tionality, 753 ; a new law relating to the press, 

 753 ; restrictions of the press in Finland, 753 ; 

 statistics of public instruction, 753 ; conflagra- 

 tions throughout the empire, 754. 



VI. Government, 678; area, 678; popula- 

 tion, 678; revenue, 679; attempt to assassi- 

 nate the Emperor, 679 ; congratulations of the 

 Emperor by the United States, 679 ; replv of 

 Prince Gortchakoff, 679; letter of the Em- 

 peror, 680 ; war in Central Asia, 680 ; incor- 

 poration of Tashkend with the empire, 680; 

 insurrections in the Caucasus, 681 ; emancipa- 

 tion, 681 ; Russification of Poland, 682. 



VII. Emperor and heir-apparent, 682 ; area, 

 682 ; population, 683 ; revenue and expendi- 

 tures, 683 ; public debt, 683 ; ecclesiastical sta- 

 tistics, 683 ; foreign commerce, 683 ; army and 

 navy, 683 ; forcing the Russian language upon 

 other races, 683 ; policy toward Poland, 683 ; 

 number of Poles banished, 683 ; Russification 

 of Baltic provinces, 684 ; action of the Livonian 

 Parliament, 684 ; indignation of the Prussian 

 Parliament, 684 ; privilege of Sigismund, 684 ; 



