TRUMPET, FOG. 



TURKEY. 



415 



amnesty, 173; moves the amnesty bill as an 

 amendment, 180, 181. 



XIII. Senator from Illinois, 137; on allow- 

 ing drawback at Boston, 142; on Louisiana 

 affairs, 179 ; on the Louisiana government bill, 

 200-203. 



TRUMPET, FOG. XV. An Austrian invention, 

 731 ; its undoubted value and capacities, 731. 



TUCKER, GEORGE. I. Birth, 695; educa- 

 tion, 695 ; public offices, 695 ; writings, 695. 



TUCKERMAN, HENRY T. XI. Birth, 741; 

 literary pursuits, 741 ; death, 741. 



TUFTS, QUINCY. XII. Obituary, 617. 



TUNGSTEN. V. Conclusions of Persoz re- 

 specting it and its' compounds, 792. 



TURKEY. IV. Its Government, 775 ; area, 

 776 ; population, 776 ; religious denominations, 

 776 ; revenue, 776 ; army, 776 ; edict relative 

 to the press, 776 ; missionary stations, 776 ; 

 Danubian Principalities, 776; legislative as- 

 semblies, 777 ; proceedings, 777 ; new Consti- 

 tution, 777. 



V. Sultan and heir-apparent, 792; area 

 and population, 792 ; privy council, 792 ; con- 

 fiscation of mosque property, 792 ; female ed- 

 ucation, 792; emigration of the Circassian 

 tribes, 793; Danubian Principalities, 793; in- 

 surrection at Bucharest, 793; Prince Couza, 

 793 ; railways, 793. 



VI. Government, 744; area, 744; popula- 

 tion, 744 ; races, 745 ; finances, 745 ; army, 

 745 ; navy, 745 ; Roumania troubles, 745 ; 

 movements of the Greek population, 745. 



VII. Present ruler, 727 ; area and popula- 

 tion, 727; finances, 727; dependencies, 727; 

 discontents and insurrections in the dependen- 

 cies, 728 ; population of Epirus and Thessaly, 

 728; relations with Russia, 728; visit of the 

 Sultan to Paris, London, and Vienna, 728; 

 publication of the " Red-Book," its contents, 

 728 ; official dispatch in the " Red-Book " on 

 Cretan affairs, 729; telegram regarding the 

 mission of Costaki Effendi and Dr. Howe to 

 Crete, 729 ; relations with Greece, 729 ; other 

 documents relating to Crete and Greece, 729 ; 

 scheme of new administration in Crete, 730 ; 

 protest against the removal of Cretan fami- 

 lies, 730 ; further documents relating to Cre- 

 tan affairs, 730; progress of liberal ideas in 

 Turkey, 730; letter of Mustapha Fazil Pacha 

 to the Sultan on the condition of Turkey and 

 her institutions, and the remedy therefor, 730, 

 731 ; letter of Zia Bey, 731. 



VIII. Area, 734; population, ' 734 ; reli- 

 gions, 734; revenue, 734; countries subject to 

 Turkey, 735 ; reform in the empire, 785 ; de- 

 cree, 735; articles, 785, 786; new Council, 

 736 ; a conspiracy, 736 ; circular to legations, 

 736; Candian insurrection, 786; Government 

 dispatches, 737; relations with Greece, 738; 

 assassination of the Prince of Servia, 738 ; re- 

 gency, 738; Parliament, 739; Montenegro, 

 739 ; Roumania, 739 ; Bulgaria, 739. 



IX. Area, 684; the sovereign, 684; min- 

 isters of state, 685 ; Council of State, 685 ; di- 

 visions of the Ottoman Empire, 685 ; general 

 governments, 685 ; population, 685 ; religion, 

 685; army, 685; navy, 686; finances, 686; 

 difficulties with Greece, 686; conference of 

 European powers in Paris, 686 ; results of the 

 conference, 686; end of the Cretan revolu- 

 tion, 686 ; animosity between the Sultan and 

 Viceroy of Egypt, 686 ; reception of Empress 

 Eugenie at Constantinople, 687; farther dif- 

 ferences between the Sultan and Viceroy, 687; 

 firman of the Sultan to the Viceroy, 687 ; en- 

 ergy and activity of the home administration, 

 687; establishment of a civil code, 688; speech 

 of the Sultan at the Porte, 688 ; speech to the 

 first Turkish Parliament, 688 ; employment of 

 Christians in the army, 689 ; policy in refer- 

 ence to foreign capital and industry, 689; 

 Roumania, 689 ; Servia, 689 ; forests and min- 

 erals, 689 ; population, 690 ; character of the 

 people, 690 ; Legislative Assembly, 690. 



X. Area and population, 259, 721 ; reli- 

 gious statistics, 721; cities, 721; finances, 

 721 ; army and navy, 721 ; shipping of Con- 

 stantinople, 722; relations with Egypt, 722; 

 with Russia, 722 (see Eastern Question} ; pas- 

 sage of the Dardanelles and Bosporus, 722; 

 fire in Constantinople, 723 ; ministerial crisis, 

 723 ; report of Mr. Barren, of the British em- 

 bassy, on the condition of the empire, 723 ; 

 Sultan's promises, 723 ; rise of power in Eu- 

 rope, 257 ; Russian influence, 258. 



XI. Relations of Sultan with Khedive, 1 ; 

 with Bey of Tunis, 1 ; relations with Egypt, 

 277, 278 ; railroads in, 676 ; area and popula- 

 tion, 742 ; debt, 742 ; length of railroads, 742 ; 

 their progress, 742; Mohammedans joining 

 Catholic Church, 742; affairs in Roumania, 

 742 ; insurrection in Albania, 742 ; Legislative 

 Assembly of Servia, 743 ; a firman issued in 

 the European provinces, 743. 



XII. Sovereign, 768 ; succession, 768 ; area 



